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Panpsychism, the idea that inanimate objects have consciousness, gains steam in science communities

Dr. Martin Picard is an associate professor of behavioral medicine at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, specializing in both psychiatry and neurology. Together, expertise in these two fields suits one well to understanding the essence of what makes one human. Picard is particularly knowledgable about mitochondria, a structure found within nearly all cells that have a nucleus. They provide most of the chemical energy that cells use in their various biochemical tasks, and are sometimes likened to batteries.

Picard sees something else in mitochondria, too. Last year, he and a Swiss scientist named Dr. Carmen Sandi published a paper in the journal Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, which posited that mitochondria do not merely keep us alive, but in many ways, have lives of their own. And, perhaps, are even “social” creatures.

“Sociality has profound evolutionary roots and is observed from unicellular organisms to multicellular animals,” Picard and Sandi write. “In line with the view that social principles apply across levels of biological complexity, a growing body of data highlights the remarkable social nature of mitochondria.”

They continue: “Similar to individuals among social networks, mitochondria communicate with each other and with the cell nucleus, exhibit group formation and interdependence, synchronize their behaviors, and functionally specialize to accomplish specific functions within the organism. Mitochondria are social organelles.”

Of course, if mitochondria are conscious beings, that would mean we have trillions and trillions of these brainless beings chilling throughout literally every cell of our bodies. That idea may seem absurd until you consider a scientific concept which could explain it: Panpsychism, or the idea that consciousness is inextricably linked to all matter and simply grows stronger as a physical object become more complex.

This, emphatically, is not what Picard and Sandi had in mind when they wrote their article (Picard told Salon that “I do not know enough about panpsychism to make an informed comment.”) At the same time, their discovery is just one more piece of fascinating scientific trivia that could be explained by this revolutionary theory.

Panpsychism’s appeal may stem partly from the fact that scientists currently can not explain what consciousness – the thing that gives you a mind and makes you self-aware — actually is. During the 17th century Enlightenment, philosopher René Descartes famously argued for a so-called “dualist” approach to explaining how our mind interacts with our body. He argued the physical matter of our bodies and whatever substance creates a mind are separate entities (perhaps connected by the pineal gland), with our flesh essentially serving as a house for our souls. This argument holds that if science could explain everything, it should be able to quantify a mind/soul — visually describe it, hear it, feel it, measure and record it. None of that has happened; indeed, the very notion of it happening seems nonsensical.

This may be partly why, although most scientists and philosophers today are monists (meaning they believe our mind directly comes from our physical bodies), dualistic ideas are still quite prevalent in our culture.

“The problem is a lot of regular people, who are not philosophers, are dualists, because they believe in the mind or the soul as a separate entity from their physical being, their physical body,” David Skrbina, a philosopher and author of the book “Panpsychism in the West,” told Salon. “And so a lot of people for religious reasons, and just ‘common sense’ reasons, tend to think in dualist or Cartesian terms without really even understanding it. And so when we talk to the public at large, we are sort of stuck dealing with the Cartesian question, even though most philosophers, I think, do not give it much credibility at all.”


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That said, those who believe our minds come directly from our bodies are also facing some logical challenges.

“They have to accommodate mind and consciousness within a physicalist framework, which is arguably quite difficult,” Skrbina explained. “And that’s been sort of one of the central challenges today, is to figure out how to not be a dualist, but still explain the reality, the evident reality of mind and consciousness.”

In other words, there is no equation, no theory that would account nor explain our conscious feelings, the everyday state of awareness and thought that constitute life and existence. There is nothing in physics or chemistry or biology that accounts what it is like to be

That’s not to say that scientists haven’t tried to explain consciousness through science. The most obvious approach would be to find physical features that correspond to states of consciousness. For instance, if you could figure out which parts of the brain are associated with feeling happy, sad, inspired or bored, you could in theory follow that lead to ultimately learn about how the brain itself “produces” consciousness.

“It has not been successful,” Skrbina pointed out. “This has been one of the major frustrations, I think, in the scientific community, is to actually find the physical correlate of the various states of consciousness. As far as I can tell, and the latest research I’ve seen, they have been unable to do this, which suggests that consciousness is either a deeper or a more complex phenomenon than most of our scientists have thought and maybe are willing to admit.”

This is where panpsychism fills in the void. It offers an explanation for consciousness that doesn’t try to do an end run around the known laws of the physical world, but assumes consciousness is an intrinsic part of it.

Besides — as Luke Roelofs, a philosopher of mind at NYU’s Centre for Mind, Brain, and Consciousness, told Salon — the most popular framework for explaining consciousness does not hold up to scrutiny.

“The biggest motivation is dissatisfaction with the mainstream approach to explaining consciousness, which is to identify it with some sort of complex information processing structure,” Roelofs explained by email. “Panpsychists generally think that structure alone can’t do the job: taking completely non-conscious ingredients and arranging them in a complicated way seems compatible with the whole system remaining completely non-conscious.” Because the human brain is made up of the same basic matter as everything else in existence, “the most natural view seems to be that [consciousness] is a general feature of matter.”

Hence, panpsychism — and hence the idea that matter, in general, is conscious, regardless of whether it is an organism or not.

As for the opposition to panpsychism? One problem is that skeptics feel it is ludicrous at face value.

“I think that mostly comes from more basic differences in how people think about consciousness,” Roelofs told Salon. “Panpsychists think that thought, reasoning, decision-making, vision and hearing and smell and all of our cognitive complexity: none of those are the same thing as consciousness. Consciousness is just subjectivity, just ‘is there something it’s like to exist right now?’ And so they think it makes sense for consciousness to exist in simple forms without thought, without reasoning, without vision or hearing or smell. A lot of critics think that’s just a mix-up: they think that once you take away thought, reasoning, etc. that’s it, there’s nothing left to talk about.”

The obvious next question, then, is: what is conscious? And how does it separate itself? Would a rock or a table have a single unified conscious — or perhaps something bigger, like a planet, or even a solar system?

For those questions, too, panpsychists have ideas. 

“Panpsychism typically does not take all things to be conscious as a whole, or to have their own unified consciousness,” Hedda Hassel Mørch, a philosopher and associate professor at Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, told Salon by email. “Fundamental particles would have simple, unified consciousness. Sometimes, this simple consciousness ‘combines’ or unifies into more complex forms. This happens in the human brain—we have unified consciousness as whole. But it probably doesn’t happen in e.g. tables and chairs—these things are mere collections of independently conscious particles.”

Another criticism, which Roelofs acknowledged at least addresses the idea on its own terms, is that panpsychism does not necessarily answer all of the questions that it poses.

“Panpsychists think you can’t explain human consciousness by putting together lots of non-conscious things in the right structure; okay, but is it actually easier to explain it by putting lots of conscious things in the right structure?” Roelofs asked. “Does it even make sense for a group of minds to combine into one bigger mind?” He added that he has written extensively on this subject, “investigating why combining minds seems so puzzling, and whether we can make sense of it anyway. But it remains a genuinely difficult challenge to panpsychism as a view.”

On the other hand, science is equally stuck when it comes to explaining the subjective experiences that we can embrace when we listen to music, enjoy delicious food, watch a movie or fall in love. There is something unquantifiable about the joys of life, a reality that is not encompassed when we try to reduce emotions to hormones.

This brings us to Philip Goff, associate professor of philosophy at Durham University, who told Salon that there is another philosopher whose ideas we must challenge, one who lived in the same period as Descartes — Galileo Galilei.

“What Descartes was making very rigorous was the philosophy of Galileo,” Goff explained, citing his book “Galileo’s Error.” He argued that because consciousness could not be explained in the qualitative and mathematical terms that Galileo’s deemed essential for something to be scientific, the great scientist concluded it had to be decoupled from the scientific process and explained through other intellectual disciplines.

“Consciousness involves quality — the redness of a red experience, the smell of coffee, the taste of mint,” Goff said. “These qualities that can’t be captured in a purely quantitative vocabulary of mathematics. So Galileo said that if we want mathematical science, we need to take consciousness out of the domain of science. In Galileo’s worldview, there is this radical division in nature between the quantitative mathematical domain of science and the physical world, and the qualitative domain of consciousness with its colors, and sounds, and smells and tastes.” 

Panpsychism, by its very premise, would make it possible to merge the two disciplines.

Panpsychism also has radical implications for religions, since so many focus on questions of what happens after we die. It is likely that our brains still comprise the bulk of our identity (so when the neurons which store your memories die, the memories most likely die forever along with them), but panpsychism allows for the possibility that your conscious “self” lives on in some form. It does not even entirely preclude the possibility that we take some of our identity with us; to paraphrase Stanley Kubrick when he directed “The Shining,” the seemingly horrifying prospect of ghosts existing at least means that death is not final.

If true, panpsychism would raise questions about other substances and the degree to which non-human things are self-aware. Does that mean inanimate objects are also self-aware? Do a chair, a pair of pants and a rock have the capacity to think as a human, a dog and a pig? What about more primitive organisms like bacteria and viruses?

“Panpsychism does suggest that there may well be some level of consciousness everywhere in nature,” Roelofs explained. “Panpsychists all accept dog-consciousness, but some might not want to accept chair-consciousness: they might say that each particle making up the chair is conscious, but it’s not constructed the right way for these to ‘add up’ to anything. Others might think that chairs have consciousness, but of an incredibly diffuse sort: because there’s no brain or nervous system, there’s no order or structure to the chair’s experience, just an undifferentiated blur.”

Ultimately, he added, “The impact of panpsychism isn’t so much to answer these questions, but to suggest continuity: don’t expect to find a discontinuous boundary somewhere between the simplest animal that is conscious and the most complex animal that isn’t.” Roelofs says there isn’t a line that one could draw: “even if some sorts of consciousness are so simple that it’s more useful for us, in practice, to treat them as ‘mindless’, nevertheless the differences are ultimately just matters of degree.”

In the end, it may prove impossible to ever definitively ascertain whether panpsychism holds water. After all, without some way to visually or otherwise physically identify consciousness, we can’t precisely say whether an inanimate object has any rudimentary “consciousness” in it. It’s not like you can ask a virus or chair if they are self-aware.

“Scientifically speaking, we’re in quite a bind with consciousness in particular and with the mind in general, just because of the nature of what it is,” Skrbina told Salon. “It is not the kind of thing that is really, like I say, subject to scientific analysis.”

Community, creativity and caffeine: What coffee shops reopening means to New Yorkers

On a mid-June evening, Buunni Coffee in Inwood, New York City, was packed with people for an open house to debut their new Ethiopian menu. Shop owners Sarina Prasabi and Elias Gurmu, who are from Nepal and Ethiopia, respectively, bustled through the crowd with bright smiles and samples of free food. 

For many of the customers, it’s the first time they’d been back inside a coffee shop since the pandemic started. 

The pandemic hit coffee shops hard. According to an industry study by the London-based Allegra World Coffee Portal, “the US branded coffee shop segment to be valued at $36 [billion], a decline of 24% over the last 12 months predominantly due to Covid-19 disruption.” Shops suffered an $11.5 billion decline in sales. Jeffrey Young, Allegra Group Founder and CEO, remarked, “the US coffee shop market is enduring the worst trading environment in living memory.”

That’s one of the reasons why this gathering at Buunni feels especially meaningful, for both the owners and the customers. Coffee shops are more than just a place to grab a quick drink. They are a real “third place” where visitors can be creative, relax and build relationships. 

According to Prabasi, the reopening of coffee shops across New York means reuniting communities and allowing the businesses centered around serving them to regain some of their identity. 

“Ethiopian coffee is really about gathering,” Prabasi said. “So, when we started the business, that was the feeling. We want to bring that hospitality, that community feeling. When the pandemic started, and we couldn’t have people here, for us, it was really hard, because not only are we losing business, but the whole identity of the business.”

For many people who go to coffee shops, being able to gain access to them again after the lockdown simply means having a place to be productive and away from distractions. Simek Shropshire, 25-year-old  paralegal, says that she and her roommate missed the atmosphere of coffee shops. “We both worked from home, so it would be nice to have a change of scenery,” Shropshire said. 

For other New Yorkers, the reopening of coffee shops has creative benefits. Karen Lowe is an artist who has also worked in retail fashion catalogue design. 

“I think we are a social group of people, I think we are people watchers,” Loew said of New Yorkers. 

Having worked in retail fashion catalogues, Loew also can’t help noticing what people wear; in coffee shops, she sometimes imagines people’s lives behind their clothes. Loew’s husband, Paul Backalenick, who is a novelist, says that watching people in coffee shops sometimes helps him describe people realistically. 

“I sometimes see somebody who might be a character in one of my books or short stories,” Backalenick said. “I will notice how they dress, speak, or how their hair is, or their build, because I can use that as a character.”  

And for some customers, being back in coffee shops feels like an immediate mental health boost. Arline Cruz, a 37-year-old health program director, says that visiting cafes has made her enjoy the diversity of the city. 

“I saw girlfriends sitting together, catching up, I saw couples having dinner,” she said. “Just to see life in the city, especially because I have been working at home in front of my computer, to see people, to be around people, it feels good.” 

Read More from Salon’s Coffee Week

Of course Trump stalled the Brett Kavanaugh probe: Republicans never cared about #MeToo

It may be hard to remember after the roller coaster of a news cycle we’ve all been riding for the past few years, but during the 2018 confirmation hearings for Donald Trump’s Supreme Court appointee Brett Kavanaugh, Republicans actually bothered trying to create the appearance that they took allegations of sexual assault seriously. Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee were clearly concerned about looking like they were being dismissive or rude to the woman who stepped forward to accuse Kavanaugh of attempted rape in high school, Christine Blasey Ford. They were so worried, in fact, that the male-only Republican side of the panel hid behind a female interlocutor, Rachel Mitchell, who was hired to question Blasey Ford for them. 

The whole thing was just an act, of course. That was obvious at the time, because the Republican-controlled Judiciary Committee, while allowing Blasey Ford to testify, refused to call other potential corroborating witnesses, including a woman who claimed to have had a similar encounter with Kavanaugh in college. But a new report this week underscores the phoniness of Republican claims to take allegations of sexual assault seriously.

The supposed FBI investigation of Kavanaugh that the Trump White House and Senate Republicans ordered — and then used to claim Kavanaugh was exonerated — is looking more sham-like. The newest revelation is that, while the FBI got over 4,500 calls on their tipline about Kavanaugh, the ones deemed relevant were merely passed onto Trump’s White House, who almost certainly tossed them in File #13. 


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“If the FBI was not authorized to or did not follow up on any of the tips that it received from the tip line, it is difficult to understand the point of having a tip line at all,” a group of Democratic senators, led by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, wrote in a letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray. Whitehouse followed up with a Twitter thread, making clear how much he believes this “investigation” was a hatchet job:

In the months and years after the Kavanaugh hearing, it’s become common wisdom on the right that Kavanaugh was done dirty and that the whole situation was proof that the #MeToo movement had gone “too far”. But, critically, not because conservative America believed Blasey Ford was lying. It was much more that they didn’t care if she was telling the truth. That’s why they didn’t bother to find out, either way. The grim reality is that, as a general rule, Republicans simply don’t think it matters in many cases if a man has a history of sexual abuse. This wasn’t a “we don’t believe he did it” situation. This was a “who cares if he did it?” situation. 

The Potemkin investigation of Kavanaugh’s background illustrates this ugly reality. Republicans believed it was politically important to look like they care about sexual assault, so they made a big show of “investigating” it. But they do not actually care about sexual assault and have nothing but contempt for people who do care about the issue. And so it was about propping up an illusion of concern, while not actually doing anything substantive at all. 

No surprise, of course. These are the same folks who backed Trump — and not just in 2016 and 2020, either. They are gearing up to put him on the ballot again in 2024. As a reminder, this is a man has not only been accused of sexual assault and abuse by 26 women, but two — his first wife Ivana Trump and journalist E. Jean Carroll — of them told harrowing stories of rape. (Ivana Trump later recanted the word “rape” during the nasty, lawyer-heavy divorce.) 

Even for those who refuse to believe women, no matter how many steps forward, the case against Trump is about as ironclad as it gets, due to the completely voluntary taped confession he made to Billy Bush on the set of “Access Hollywood” in 2005. You know the one, of course, where he brags about how he likes to “grab ’em by the pussy” and that, “When you’re a star, they let you do it.” 

The fact of Trump’s history of sexual assault isn’t really up for debate, but his support has only grown among Republicans in the five years since the “Access Hollywood” tape came out. Most of them don’t even pretend to believe it’s all a frame job, because again, taped confession/bragging session. They simply don’t care. Being a sexual predator does not disqualify men from having positions of incredible political power, in Republican eyes. And the fact that Trump bragged about it is a reminder that some men even see assaulting women as something to be proud of. 


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The idea that Kavanaugh is the victim of overzealous feminists and opportunist Democrats has less to do with a belief that he’s innocent and more about a belief that it shouldn’t matter if men do things like this. It’s all tied up with the ongoing outrage on the right about “cancel culture” and “wokeness.” The anger flows from a conservative sense of entitlement to do and say awful things without having to face any consequences for it. You see a similar dynamic in the fights over what the right falsely describes as “critical race theory.” Few deny that the U.S. has a history of slavery, segregation, or lynching. Conservatives just want liberals to quit talking about it, because, ultimately, they don’t see why it should matter. And, in fact, they’re annoyed that “woke” people keep insisting that these things do matter. 

On a similar front, conservative commentator Bill O’Reilly is waging a war to silence Andrea Mackris, who accused him of sexual harassment when they were both working at Fox News and settled out of court in 2004. No one mistakes this as a situation of an innocent man trying to clear his name. This is just one of at least five sexual harassment lawsuits that Fox News settled on O’Reilly’s behalf. And legal documents have lengthy transcripts from conversations Mackris apparently taped with O’Reilly.

This fight isn’t about the facts. Letting women go on TV to tell their stories of being victimized is signaling that women matter and that sexual abuse is serious, and that, above all other things, is what people like O’Reilly cannot countenance. 

It’s good that Whitehouse and his fellow Democrats have stayed on this scandal, even as most D.C. power players have moved on. The #MeToo movement was, indeed, a seismic shift in how our country talks about sexual abuse, and a lot of people really did wake up to the fact that it’s much more common than they thought. But it’s important to remember that, for all that progress, we still have a sizeable number of Americans who flat out do not think most sexual abuse is a serious issue and resent people who say otherwise. Changing that attitude is going to require a lot more than education about the facts. 

Trump’s PAC raises $75 million, spends $0 on election audit efforts

Former President Trump gathered $75 million from his political action committee in the first half of this year as he bandied baseless allegations of widespread election fraud – but not a dime of the PAC funds have been spent on any GOP-backed efforts to back up the Big Lie that there was fraud in the 2020 election. 

The revelation, first reported by The Washington Post, centers on Trump’s Save America PAC, which the former president launched back in November of last year just six days after his historic defeat. According to sources familiar with the matter, Trump has his PAC only to expense personal costs, like plane flights, legal services, and staff payroll. The Post learned that Trump has not pumped PAC money into any of the leading GOP efforts to unveil the apparent fraud that was embedded in the various state elections. 

More specifically, Trump opted out of donating a single dollar to the GOP-led Arizona audit, an increasingly inane affair that has dragged on for months with no end in sight. Salon reported last June that the audit is being bankrolled by a number of Trump allies, including One America News Network anchor Christina Bobb, former Trump attorney L. Lin Wood, Arizona state Rep. Mark Finchem, and former chief executive of Overstock.com Patrick Byrne.

According to the Post, Trump is likely saving his financial resources for his much-anticipated 2024 presidential bid, a move which the former president has strongly hinted at but not formally committed to. 

Tim O’Brien, a Trump biographer, told the Post the Trump’s PAC “is probably the most lucrative thing he’s had in terms of cash flow since the Plaza casino in Atlantic City,” adding: “He has recognized because of what happened after the election — he can make money as a candidate.”

Since his presidential defeat last year, the former president has rhetorically backed election fraud conspiracies in a number of different states like Georgia, Arizona, and Pennsylvania, personally meeting with GOP officials from all three to advance his claims. Both Georgia and Pennsylvania are currently conducting their own election audit, though neither has found evidence of widespread fraud. 

In Pennsylvania, acting Secretary of State Veronica W. Degraffenreid on Thursday decertified the voting machines currently under the custody of Wake TSI, a West Chester-based auditing firm contracted by pro-Trump lawyer Sidney Powell to conduct the recount. The company, much like the Arizona audit’s Cyber Ninjas, has “no knowledge or expertise in election technology,” according to Degraffenreid.

Despite failing to finance his efforts to prove election fraud, Trump has repeatedly solicited donations through email and social media under the pretense of “securing” democracy, as the Post noted. 

“We need you to join the fight to SECURE OUR ELECTIONS!” one Facebook ad tells Trump supporters. 

Though Trump is not currently funding any election audits himself, a Trump adviser told the Post that it’s possible the president will decide to do so “at some point down the road.”

Republicans’ anti-government chickens have finally come home to roost

Ronald Reagan, the most beloved president of the modern Republican Party (before Donald J. Trump, anyway) had a very famous saying:

“The nine most terrifying words in the English language are: I’m from the Government, and I’m here to help. “

It was a clever comment that the leaders of the conservative movement never took seriously, of course. The Republicans were always big boosters of first responders, cops and the military who are generally the ones who literally say “I’m from the government and I’m here to help.” But the anti-government sentiment worked well for the wealthy benefactors who paid these politicians handsomely to keep their taxes low and regulations scarce.

They also used that message to persuade voters that the government was trying to oppress them with everything from creeping communism to affirmative action and women’s rights. In other words, everything these people already hated was blamed on Big Government by the very people who ran it. The subtext of much of this was race, of course, as the cynical conservatives managed to convince people that the government was doling out handouts to the “undeserving” (and I think you know who they were talking about) in the form of welfare, while the hard-working Real Americans were paying the freight and getting the shaft.

Over time they were able to demagogue the issue so thoroughly that average Republicans routinely voted against their own interests out of a reflexive hostility to anything the government tried to do (other than wage war, which they loved.) When the financial crisis hit in 2007 and the government was required to intervene or risk the whole economic system going into free fall, it was clear just how successful they had been.

Almost immediately, a rebellion against the government helping “irresponsible” homeowners became the rallying cry of the anti-government right and the Tea Party was born. The GOP knew that government intervention was necessary but they made sure that the banks and the wealthy were taken care of while forcing everything else to be done on the cheap. The result was a very slow recovery and long-term damage to the average American household, which worked out well for them politically and further discredited government in the minds of many Americans.

The Obamacare wars flowed naturally from that, with half the country hysterical at the idea the government was going to choose their doctors and decide who lives or dies. Their fears were stoked by right-wing politicians who suspected that the program might work and restore people’s faith in the government to deliver needed benefits. Then where would they be?

There were dozens of conspiracy theories floating around from “death panels” to implanted microchips, to a giant government database that was going to house every personal piece of health information on every American. All of this inane resistance was fueled by the right’s decades-long anti-government propaganda campaign.

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Fast forward to 2020 and the first global pandemic in a hundred years with an incompetent narcissist in charge. Between his ineptitude and self-serving desire to pretend that the crisis didn’t exist and the years of mistrust in the government, the U.S. ended up with an epic disaster and half the population refusing to acknowledge it existed. Today, we’re facing a situation in which tens of millions of people are refusing vaccines because they believe in daft conspiracy theories or are convinced the government is lying to them even in the face of over 600,000 deaths.

Throughout all this, most Republican officials have either been actively hostile to medical experts and their advice or they have been strangely passive, simply shrugging their shoulders as if this is just a normal part of life and everyone just needs to buck up. They refused to wear masks and social distance, they’ve egged on protesters and encouraged the right-wing media, which has been feeding snake oil, lies and conspiracy theories to their voters since the pandemic began.

Fox News has been particularly egregious in its objectively pro-COVID propaganda. Their headliners Tucker Carlson, Laura Ingraham and Sean Hannity have all taken slightly different approaches. Carlson has gone with his patented dark conspiracy-mongering, playing off of the right’s new “Deep State” narrative to suggest that the government is forcing people to take vaccines against their will and that the shots are killing people. Ingraham has been an inveterate pusher of quacks and bogus cures while blaming it all on immigrants as usual while Hannity has been playing both sides, telling people to take the virus seriously in one breath and skepticism in the other. (One suspects this relates to his close relationship with Donald Trump, who similarly twists himself into a pretzel on this subject, wanting credit for the vaccines but being unable to buck the conspiracy addled anti-vax sentiment of his followers.)

Most of the rest of the right-wing media have followed the same trends — at least until this week.

Suddenly, we have been seeing members of Fox News breaking with their stars and making heartfelt PSA’s exhorting people to get the vaccines, something we’ve never seen before: Watch the latest video at foxnews.com. Newsmax CEO, and friend of Trump, Chris Ruddy wrote a glowing op-ed complimenting President Biden on his vaccine program. One of the House leaders, Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La, a vaccine holdout, very ostentatiously got vaccinated and told anyone who’d listen that they should do it as well. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis actually went out and urged his constituents to get vaccinated now that his state is being overrun with COVID. Again.

The question on everyone’s mind is, “What happened?”

Obviously, it’s tied to the new surge of cases as the highly transmissible Delta variant runs through the population of unvaccinated people who are, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation, heavily tilted toward Republicans. As of the end of last month, 86% of Democrats had at least one shot compared to 52% of Republicans. And it’s not getting any better.

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Have they seen polling indicating that they are losing ground with their own voters over their lack on engagement? Are they suddenly worried that their base is going to die and leave them short of needed votes? It’s hard to say. But I think MSNBC’s Chris Hayes was on to something when he suggested that they had thought they could stick with the base and its anti-vax, anti-Big Government attitude about this (continuing to reap the rewards that brings to them politically) and let Joe Biden’s administration do the heavy lifting of getting their states vaccinated — at which point they would swoop in and say what a terrible job he did. (This works for them every time a GOP administration leaves the country in shambles and the Democrats have to clean up their mess.)

The problem is that the virus is spreading, restrictions have been lifted and the Republican base is refusing to save itself. The anti-government chickens have finally come home to roost — and they’re killing Republicans. 

“Danger to the world”: 1,200+ scientists denounce Boris Johnson’s plan to end UK COVID restrictions

More than 1,200 scientists from around the world have condemned British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s plan to lift nearly all Covid restrictions in the United Kingdom on Monday, with some of the experts holding an emergency summit on Friday to warn that prematurely ending public health precautions in the country would lead to a surge in infections that could enable vaccine-resistant variants to develop and spread rapidly around the world.

During Friday’s summit, epidemiologists and physicians compared Johnson’s decision to proceed with so-called Freedom Day on July 19th despite a sharp uptick in Covid-19 cases to the pursuit of “herd immunity by mass infection,” The Independent reported

Forgoing almost every mandatory rule on mask-wearing and social distancing before the pandemic has been contained poses a “danger to the world,” they warned.

William Hasteltine, a leading AIDS researcher and chair of Access Health International, said that he was “extremely dismayed to see the very rapid rate of increasing infections in a population” that is as vaccinated as the U.K.

Roughly two-thirds of the U.K.’s adult population has been fully inoculated, according to government figures, but cases, hospitalizations, and deaths have increased by 34.9%, 43.4%, and 57.4%, respectively, in the past week. 

“I believe that the strategy of herd immunity is actually murderous,” Hasteltine continued. “I think that’s a word we should use, because that is what it is. It is knowledge that you are doing something that will result in thousands, and in some cases tens of thousands of people dying.”

“It is a disastrous policy,” he added. “It’s been clear that that’s been the case for some time, and to continue to espouse that policy is unconscionable.”

Earlier this month, Chris Whitty, the U.K.’s chief medical officer (CMO), predicted that “we will get a significant amount more long Covid, particularly in the younger ages where the vaccination rates are currently much lower.”

Deepti Gurdasani, an epidemiologist at Queen Mary University of London, emphasized that “this isn’t inevitable. This is the path our government has chosen with the support from our CMO.”

“Our government,” she added “is taking steps to maximally expose our young to a virus that causes chronic illness in many.”

Public health experts explained Friday that because Britain plays a central role in international transportation networks, the U.K. government’s support for a laissez-faire approach provides ample opportunities for the emergence of vaccine-resistant variants, which are likely to “rapidly spread around the world,” The Guardian reported.

Jose Martin-Moreno, a professor of public health at the University of Valencia in Spain, said that “U.K. policy affects not only U.K. citizens, it affects the world.” He added: “We cannot understand why this is happening in spite of the scientific knowledge that you have.”

Government officials from around the globe were among those who raised alarm about the Tories’ soon-to-be-implemented policy.

“In New Zealand, we have always looked to the U.K. for leadership when it comes to scientific expertise, which is why it’s so remarkable that it is not following even basic public health principles,” said Michael Baker, a professor of public health at the University of Otago and a member of the New Zealand ministry of health’s Covid-19 technical advisory group.

Stephen Duckett, secretary of the Australian health department, stressed that before governments loosen restrictions, they should ensure that viral transmission has been suppressed and that the population has been sufficiently protected through vaccination.

“If you open up when either one of those is not the case, you are doomed to an exponential rise in cases,” he said.

As The Independent noted, Friday’s summit came one day after Whitty admitted that the number of Covid-19 hospitalizations in the country is “currently doubling about every three weeks and could reach ‘quite scary numbers’ soon.”

Although Whitty said Thursday that he doesn’t “think we should underestimate the fact that we could get into trouble again surprisingly fast,” he still defended Johnson’s reopening plan, claiming that there is “no clear evidence” that prolonging Covid restrictions in the U.K. would reduce transmission of the virus.

Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of the esteemed medical journal The Lancettold the newspaper that Whitty’s minimization of the risks associated with prematurely lifting nearly all public health precautions in the U.K. was “willfully misrepresenting scientific opinion.”

More than 1,200 international experts, including most of the participants at Friday’s summit, have endorsed a letter—first published last week in The Lancet—that denounces the U.K.’s upcoming policy changes.

Titled, “Mass infection is not an option: we must do more to protect our young,” the letter describes the Tories’ decision as “dangerous and premature.”

“We believe the government is embarking on a dangerous and unethical experiment, and we call on it to pause plans to abandon mitigations on July 19, 2021,” a group of researchers wrote. 

“Instead,” they added, “the government should delay complete reopening until everyone, including adolescents, have been offered vaccination and uptake is high, and until mitigation measures, especially adequate ventilation (through investment in CO2 monitors and air filtration devices) and spacing (e.g., by reducing class sizes), are in place in schools.”

Watch the summit:

8 of the biggest ways the Summer Olympics are different in Tokyo this year

After being delayed by a year because of the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 Tokyo Olympics are finally taking place, with the opening ceremony scheduled for July 23. But even as many people around the world hope to use these Games to take a mental break from real-world anxieties and recapture some form of normalcy amidst the chaos of the pandemic, the truth is the world has changed, and is still changing, as a result of everything we’ve gone through over the last 18 months. And the Summer Olympics, which will run through Aug. 8, are no different. 

The 2020 Olympics are going to be unlike anything we’ve seen before, and not just because Michael Phelps has finally hung up his goggles and Serena Williams, a four-time gold medalist, has opted out. In addition to the introduction of several new sports and the return of a couple old ones, COVID-19 has also forced the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to revamp several aspects of the Games. These are the eight biggest ways the Summer Olympics will be different in Tokyo.

1. Many familiar faces won’t be returning

This one seems rather obvious — and almost silly — given that new athletes come of age and compete every four years, but it truly feels like Tokyo is the beginning of a new era in Olympics history. Not only are these the first Summer Games since 1996 to not feature Phelps, a 23-time gold medalist and the greatest Olympian of all time (he has 28 medals overall), but Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt, a three-time Olympian known for his confidence as much as his speed, and Russian gymnast Aliya Mustafina, a two-time Olympian and seven-time Olympic medalist, have also retired since the Rio Games.

Meanwhile, there are some big names who tried but failed to make Team USA during the Olympic Trials. Diver David Boudia flubbed a dive during the finals and failed to make his third Olympic team as a result, while Ryan Lochte — whose excellence in the pool over the last 15 years often pushed Phelps to even greater heights — also failed to score a spot on the roster. Nathan Adrian, a cancer survivor and an integral member of the 2008,  2012 and 2016 Olympic squads, also narrowly missed out on making his fourth Olympic team when he came in third in the 50m free behind Michael Andrew and Caeleb Dressel. Elsewhere, beach volleyball player Kerri Walsh Jennings, gymnast Laurie Hendandez and wrestler Jordan Burroughs all fell short in their own endeavors. 

It’s unfortunate to see so many beloved athletes we’ve now come to associate with Olympics success have to watch the Games from home like the rest of us, especially when it comes to people like Adrian, a respected athlete whose experience and leadership would have been an asset to younger Olympians. But it’s also a natural part of the Games. As veterans are overtaken by their younger cohorts, we’re reminded that time marches on and this new generation will hopefully carry on a legacy of success as we head into a new era.

2. The U.S. has a younger and less experienced swim team 

One sport in which Team USA will be younger and less experienced than in previous years is swimming. Eleven of the 53 swimmers are still in their teens, while 35 are making their Olympics debut in Tokyo. This is compared to 31 newcomers in 2016 in Rio, 28 in London in 2012 and 26 in Beijing in 2008. Why does this matter? The U.S. is a heavyweight when it comes to swimming, having won 556 medals in Olympics history, the most of any country. When you consider that Phelps and Lochte have 40 medals between them, it’s easy to see why having so many veterans has helped the U.S. maintain its dominance in the sport over the last couple decades. But now it’s up to those who are returning for their second, third or even fourth Olympics — including Katie Ledecky, Abbey Weitzeil, Allison Schmitt, Simone Manuel, Ryan Murphy, Chase Kalisz and Lilly King — to step up and fill the shoes of those who came before them while welcoming the new swimmers and preparing them for what could be their own long tenure in the sport.

3. Japan has banned spectators and protesting

Although the show is going on amid the pandemic, Japan has implemented a number of rules meant to curb a new wave of COVID-19 infections. In June, shortly after the country declared a state of emergency that will run through Aug. 22, Olympics organizers banned spectators from the Olympics. International spectators had already been barred, but domestic crowds would have been allowed to attend in venues that were capped at 50% capacity. Now we’ll see no fans in the stands. There will be no crowd noise, likely not even artificially, like when MLB pumped crowd noise into empty baseball stadiums last summer to mimic a typical game experience. This means the Olympics are going to be an eerie sight, one that some say will only further highlight the brutal excess of the Games themselves

But spectators are not the only item on the banned list in Tokyo. A new rule for the 2020 Games also bars athletes from protesting or engaging in any kind of “demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda” while in an Olympic site, venue or other area. This means athletes cannot raise a fist like Tommie Smith and John Carlos did during the Mexico City Olympics 1968, nor can they take a knee like Colin Kaepernick did during the national anthem in 2016 to protest police brutality and racial injustice.

At least two Olympians participating this year – hammer thrower Gwen Berry and fencer Race Imboden – are known for their protests on the medal podium and previously had been put on 12-month probation by the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC). If they should advance to the podium this time, would they be able to restrain themselves? More importantly, should they?

This rule is said to be an attempt to preserve “the neutrality of sport at the Olympic Games and the neutrality of the Games themselves.” In July, the IOC released additional guidelines that explain when and where athletes are allowed to express themselves, though, including during press conferences, in interviews and other interactions with the media. 

4. The medal ceremonies will be a bit lonelier

Other changes to the Olympics involve new rules for the medal presentation ceremonies in an effort to better protect everyone involved. Rather than having medals placed around their necks by presenters, the gold, silver and bronze medalists will each pick up their gift and medal from a tray offered by a presenter. They will then place the medals around their own necks without ever touching the presenter. Meanwhile, the podiums will also have extra modules between the gold, silver and bronze medalists to allow for social distancing. Group photos will also not be taken, which means these Olympics might look a bit lonelier than others when we look back at them years from now.

5. An openly transgender athlete will be competing for the first time

The IOC recently came out in support of New Zealand’s selection of Laurel Hubbard, a 43-year-old weightlifter, to its team, marking the first time an openly transgender athlete will compete in the history of the modern Olympics. “The rules for qualification have been established by the International Weightlifting Federation before the qualifications started,” IOC President Thomas Bach said during a press conference in Tokyo on July 17. “These rules apply, and you cannot change rules during ongoing competitions.”

Technically, trans athletes have been allowed to compete in the Olympics and Paralympics since 2004, but Hubbard is the first to qualify under the current rules, which the IOC updated in 2015 and state that trans women’s testosterone levels must be below 10 nanomoles per liter of blood for at least 12 months prior to their first competition. (It should be noted, however, that there is little scientific evidence that supports the idea that testosterone increases performance in elite athletes.)

6. Baseball and softball will be played for the first time since 2008

Baseball and softball officially became Olympic sports in 1992 and 1996, respectively, but both were dropped from competition following the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Now they’re making their triumphant return to international competition in Tokyo because of the popularity of the sports in Japan (they won’t be played in 2024 at the Paris Games). 

However, don’t expect to see Shohei Ohtani, Fernando Tatis Jr., Jacob DeGrom or any of the other big names in baseball playing in Tokyo. MLB prevents any player on a 40-man roster from competing for any team at the Olympics because it would require pausing the season or forcing teams to go without their best players for several weeks. So the U.S. baseball team, which could medal but is not the heavy favorite to win, is made up of free agents and athletes at the AAA or AA level. The women’s softball team, though, is looking to reclaim the gold medal after a loss to Japan in 2008 forced them to have to settle for silver after winning three straight golds from 1996 until 2004. If there’s a team to watch this year, it’s the U.S. women’s softball team.

7. Four new sports making their Olympics debuts

Four new sports will be making their debut in Tokyo: skateboarding, sport climbing, surfing and karate. In skateboarding, athletes can compete in one of two disciplines: park or street. Sport climbing, which is on the rise around the world, features a combined format that includes three events: bouldering, speed climbing and lead climbing. Meanwhile, surfing will feature only short boards, and karate will feature two different disciplines. The first, known as kata, is a solo event focused on form and technique, while the second, called kumite, involves sparring between two individuals.

8. The Karolyis are not involved in any way

Much like swimming, women’s gymnastics is one of the most popular sports of the Summer Olympics. The U.S. has won the team gold three times (1996, 2012 and 2016) and has captured the all-around title five times, with four of those being consecutive wins from 2004 until 2016 (Carly Patterson, Nastia Liukin, Gabby Douglas and Simone Biles). Bela and Marta Karolyi, who coached Romania’s Nadia Comaneci before defecting in the 1980s, have been widely credited with transforming the U.S. into a gymnastics powerhouse. The 2020 Games will be the first time since 1988 that neither of the Karolyis will be involved in the women’s team.

Bela was named the head coach of the Olympic team in both 1988 and 1992, and Marta took over beginning in 1996, leading the Magnificent Seven to the team gold in Atlanta. After 15 years as the U.S. national team coordinator, she retired following the 2016 Games in Rio. While it’s hard to argue the Karolyis coaching methods didn’t achieve results, allegations of verbal and psychological abuse from several former gymnasts were made against the duo over the years. This, in addition to the fact their infamous ranch in Texas — which had been named the women’s national training center in 2000 and an Olympic training site in 2011 — was the site of numerous sexual assaults perpetrated by former team doctor Larry Nassar, has left a stain on their legacy.

Heading into Tokyo, the U.S. women are still expected to dominate, and they’re doing it without the influence of the Karolyis. Led by Simone Biles — regarded by many as the greatest gymnast of all time and the only returning member from Rio — the team also includes Sunisa Lee, Jordan Chiles and Grace McCallum. Two others — Jade Carey and MyKayla Skinner — will compete individually and not part of the team. While the Karolyis helped to pave the way to greatness, these six women will ultimately determine their own fate in Tokyo, beginning a new chapter in American Olympic gymnastics history in the process.

Catch all the action from Tokyo across NBC’s many channels, including NBC, USA, CNBC and Golf Channel, or stream them via Peacock, the NBC Sports App, and NBCOlympics.com. A full schedule of events can be found on the Olympics website and NBCOlympics.com.

Mike Lindell promises his “cyber symposium” will be bigger than Elvis’ 1973 Hawaii concert

Nearly a year and a half ago, I began covering MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell. He’s an oddly charismatic character, a former crack addict and fervent evangelical Christian willing to preach the word of God at the drop of a hat. He became a star in TrumpWorld nearly overnight after speaking at the White House alongside former President Donald Trump in March of 2020. 

Lindell reminded me of my own Uncle Bob, a Vietnam War veteran with a greased-lightning demeanor who bears the horrid wounds of Agent Orange. Bob has a similar physique to the pillow tycoon, also rocks an old-school walrus mustache and isn’t afraid to tell you what’s on his mind. Uncle Bob and Mike Lindell would, without question, get along. 

We are now drawing near the climactic moment of Lindell’s career as top exponent of Donald Trump’s “election fraud” theories: A much-publicized “cyber symposium” event in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, which will allegedly bring to light evidence that will cause the scales to fall from America’s eyes. The Supreme Court, or so Lindell believes, will uproot the results of 2020 election by a 9-0 vote (on what grounds and by what mechanism remains mysterious), leading to the immediate reinstatement of President Donald Trump. 

With this high-stakes event, on which Lindell’s reputation seems to rest, fast approaching, Salon gave him a ring to check in on his progress. And in true Lindell fashion, he didn’t disappoint.

Relishing in the glory of “crushingthis Salon reporter at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) event two weekends ago in Dallas, Lindell struck a different tone than in his often combative and utterly baseless claims of widespread voter fraud in last year’s election. Instead, he was positively jovial, wanting to make sure Salon would attend his South Dakota “cyber symposium.” 

“Are you coming? And the cyber guy?” Lindell asked. “We just sent out the invites, we’re getting flooded with them.”

He continued with a note of concern. “Get it in right away if you can, Zach, I do want you there, because I want the bad media that writes discrediting things, so they can actually write apologies to the whole country. That will be nice!”

Lindell went on to promise Salon that if his evidence doesn’t provide the goods he has long promised, this reporter and his “buddy” might be the ones to take home his $5 million jackpot. The “buddy” Lindell referenced is indeed a “cyber guy” (who has requested anonymity), a highly qualified expert who advises this Salon reporter on data science and technological matters.  

Lindell then complimented Salon for covering his Wednesday announcement that journalists, politicians and “cyber experts” are eligible to win his $5 million bounty if they can prove his 2020 election data is not legitimate.

“That was nice. You wrote an article,” Lindell said. “I actually retweeted one of your articles — that’s the first time in history I retweeted [one].” Then he had to clarify: Since he’s banned from Twitter, he instead posted it to Facebook. 

Lindell then made an ambitious prediction: His August event will attract more eyeballs than Elvis Presley’s “Aloha From Hawaii” concert, which was beamed around the world by satellite on Jan. 14, 1973, and witnessed by a billion people.

Elvis Presley in 1973,” Lindell reminisced. “Over a billion people watched that ‘Aloha From Hawaii’ because at that time, it was epic. This is going to be so important for the whole world to see — I’m hoping the word keeps spreading so that everybody at least tunes in,” he added.  

A devoted Elvis fan, Lindell wasn’t shy about the prospect of upstaging the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll. Asked whether his event could really be bigger than the legendary Elvis concert — one of the first global satellite pay-per-view spectacles — Lindell expressed optimism. “I’m hoping it is. I just hope a lot of people see it,” adding earnestly that no matter your political party, by the final day of the gathering, the entire world will be convinced to “right the wrong” of the 2020 election. 

“This is so important to the world. To the world!” Lindell added. “I believe that if we get the word out, it’s going be seen by — not millions. I’m hoping a billion, and I’ve used that correlation to Elvis. I am hoping that. I’m hoping that!”

Salon pushed forward with a series of questions about the details of Lindell’s August event. According to the King of Restful Sleep, the symposium will feature a “mock election” every two hours, in which a hacker “flips votes” while a “cyber guy” goes into a “soundproof room with headphones on” and reappears moments later to decipher the meaning of packet captures.

“He’s going to say, because packet captures — you can’t change, can’t alter, 100%. He’s gonna say: ‘You flipped 20 votes!'” Lindell explained. 

Near the end of our friendly 20-minute conversation, Lindell reported he had to adjourn for a cable interview on One America News, then sternly told this reporter that I should contact Fox News to ask whether they will be present in Sioux Falls for the big event. “Ask Fox!” he demanded. “Shame on Fox that they haven’t come. You should reach out to them!” 

Gaining a second wind and apparently no longer concerned about his OAN cable news hit, Lindell took a few more swings at Fox News for ignoring his entire election-fraud enterprise his $5 million jackpot. Fox’s nonexistent coverage of his efforts, Lindell said, were part of “the biggest cover-up this country’s ever had in history.” 

A Fox News spokesperson did not return Salon’s request for comment. 

Wrapping up the interview, Salon asked Lindell about the Smartmatic, ES&S and Dominion voting machines he claims to have in his possession. “We’ve had machines for, I don’t know, months now,” he said. “You realize you can buy them on eBay, right?” Lindell asked. 

When asked if that’s how he acquired them, Lindell responded, “No, no, and I’m not gonna say how we got them. You know, we were — we didn’t take them, we were given them.” Asked if these machines were with him now, or still in an undisclosed location ahead of the big event, he said, “I don’t carry machines around with me!” 

A few minutes after we hung up, Salon received a text message from Lindell, featuring a TikTok video. That cleared up an important question: Lindell’s CPAC beef with Salon has been squashed, since he has unblocked this reporter’s phone number.

America’s history wars get serious: Texas GOP wants to dump MLK, whitewash KKK

In the infamous 1857 Dred Scott decision, Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Taney proclaimed that Black people have “no rights that the white man is bound to respect.” Today’s Jim Crow Republican Party, and the white right more broadly, have taken the spirit of those words and updated them for the 21st century, effectively by arguing that “white people are not bound to respect historical truth or established facts — at least not as they pertain to Black and brown people in America”.

As the next step in their war against multiracial democracy, the Republican Party and its allies have launched a moral panic about “critical race theory.” Of course, their version of “critical race theory” is a type of racial bogeyman or psychological projection, a function of white racial paranoia about the “browning of America” and the threat of “white genocide.”

Facts do not matter in the right-wing echo chamber. It is of no importance that the white right’s version of “critical race theory” has nothing to do with the scholarly paradigm of the same name.

As the truism holds, history is written by the victors. To that end, in dozens of states across the country, the white right is engaging in an Orwellian campaign of rewriting school curricula to prevent the teaching of “critical race theory” — which in practice means stopping any serious engagement with America’s real and often uncomfortable history of racism and white supremacy.

The white right’s campaign against the teaching of real American history involves actual thoughtcrimes.

For example, in Florida, a law was recently passed mandating a survey of students and faculty in public colleges and universities to determine their political beliefs. Of course, Florida has also banned the teaching of “critical race theory.”

Fox News personality Tucker Carlson, perhaps the single most influential voice on the white right, recently suggested that cameras should be placed in classrooms to ensure that no teachers will deploy “critical race theory” or other facts and arguments deemed to be “unpatriotic.”

The Republican-controlled Texas Senate recently passed a bill eliminating a requirement that the history of the civil rights movement and other human rights struggles be taught in public schools. The bill also removed a condemnation of the Ku Klux Klan from course requirements as well.

As Yahoo News reports, the requirements removed from the state’s curriculum include two speeches by Martin Luther King Jr., any mention of Latino labor organizers Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta, and any mention of Thomas Jefferson’s long-term relationship with Sally Hemings, an enslaved teenage child who bore six of his children. The bill bars any use of the New York Times’ 1619 Project and “prohibits teaching that slavery was part of the ‘true’ founding of the United States” and removes the requirement to study the “history of white supremacy, including but not limited to the institution of slavery, the eugenics movement, and the Ku Klux Klan, and the ways in which it is morally wrong.”

This Republican legislation has been met with widespread outrage. But that reaction should just be the beginning. The next step involves doing the harder work of understanding why so many other (mostly white) Americans actually believe that “critical race theory” and the teaching of America’s real history should be banned. Understanding these beliefs and motivations is essential to defeating American neofascism and its white supremacist social and political project.

Many Americans have been propagandized by their schools, news media, the internet, churches and other social institutions to believe in a large set of interlocking lies and myths about the country’s past and present. To intervene against these lies often causes emotional pain and/or narcissistic injury to those who hold such beliefs.

This dynamic is especially powerful for those who are emotionally, psychologically, financially and politically invested in defending and protecting white privilege and white people’s control over almost every aspect of American life. In that context, the personal truly is political: Whiteness, as a concept and a social force, has become linked at an individual level to the maintenance of white power.

How does this right-wing fantasy machine work? The Root has exhaustively documented how some of America’s most widely used history textbooks misrepresent the real history of the color line and distort such topics as chattel slavery, the Civil War, the civil rights movement and social injustice more generally, through the use of what sociologist Joe Feagin has called the “white racial frame.”

Michael Harriot offers this analysis:

So when Mitch McConnell and 38 Republican senators sent a letter to the secretary of education decrying the ghastly prospect of white students having to learn actual facts about slavery, it was not unexpected. For centuries, this country’s schools have perpetuated a whitewashed version of history that either erases or reduces the story of Black America down to a B-plot in the American script. It’s why they hate Critical Race Theory, The 1619 Project and anything factual — because the white-centric interpretation of our national past is so commonly accepted, white people have convinced themselves that anything that varies from the Caucasian interpretation must be a lie. …

This is why they oppose expanding the historiography of our national story. American schools have never taught a version of history that wasn’t racialized. But, apparently, it’s perfectly fine if the racial narrative skews toward whiteness. They can’t be opposed to learning a different historical perspective because they never learned history; they were spoonfed fiction in bite-sized morsels.

To be fair, it’s understandable why they are so adamant about what they believe in.

Imagine you are a white man. Now imagine what it’s like going through 12 years of school, four years of college, graduate school and an entire career that made you one of the most powerful people on the planet. Now imagine a group of Black journalists, led by a Black woman, told you that you don’t know shit.

To that point, the right-wing echo chamber consistently repeats neo-Confederate “Lost Cause” myths, such as the oft-repeated lie that the Civil War was fought over “states’ rights” rather than white-on-Black chattel slavery.

The right obsessively depicts the Democrats as “the party of the Ku Klux Klan, Jim Crow and slavery”. This is a deliberate distortion of history because the pro-slavery, pro-segregation faction of the Democratic Party became solid Republicans after the enactment of civil rights legislation in the 1960s.

Right-wing propagandists also love to claim that Martin Luther King Jr. was a “Republican,” or at least espoused Republican values. This is a ludicrous allegation: In contemporary terms King was a democratic socialist or  progressive who opposed racism, poverty, military adventurism and injustice of all kinds. King would have viewed the modern-day conservative movement as a great force for evil in American society and the world.

Black conservative propagandists play an important role in the right-wing echo chamber, validating racist fantasies that slavery was a “gift” to Black people because it brought them to America. In this twisted perception of history, chattel slavery is understood as a “necessary evil” because it gave Black people Christianity and taught them the value of “hard work”.

These same Black conservatives love to repeat the vicious lie that the Democratic Party is a type of “plantation.” In reality, the plantations of the antebellum South were prison camps, charnel houses and places of torture, rape, suffering and death. Black conservative propagandists frequently announce that they are special and uniquely capable of “thinking for themselves,” as compared to the vast majority of Black people who support the Democratic Party and are therefore deemed to be ignorant or uninformed.

The campaign against “critical race theory” — and against teaching America’s real history — must be understood as part of a larger fascist strategy of attacking public schools and other institutions of learning with the aim of creating compliant followers and a public that is not equipped to participate in democracy — or to defend it.

This plan involves placing white supremacists, QAnon conspiracists, Trump supporters and other right-wing extremists  — to the degree those categories of people can be separated — on local school boards and library advisory councils, banning “controversial” books, and the surveillance or intimidation of teachers deemed too “liberal” or suspected of “politicizing” the classroom, i.e., by refusing to teach right-wing dogma and other lies.

The fascist assault on education and critical thinking also involves think tanks, right-wing activists and advocacy groups, along with a network of wealthy funders committed to remaking American society to fit their racist, theocratic and plutocratic vision.   

The Texas Republicans’ attempt to literally whitewash the Ku Klux Klan out of American history is so ridiculous that it approaches parody. That doesn’t make such historical erasure and distortion any less dangerous. Those dangers are further amplified by the crisis of democracy caused by the Jim Crow Republicans and ascendant neofascist movement.

As historian Timothy Snyder warned in a recent essay in the New York Times:

Democracy requires individual responsibility, which is impossible without critical history. It thrives in a spirit of self-awareness and self-correction. Authoritarianism, on the other hand, is infantilizing: We should not have to feel any negative emotions; difficult subjects should be kept from us. Our memory laws amount to therapy, a talking cure. In the laws’ portrayal of the world, the words of white people have the magic power to dissolve the historical consequences of slavery, lynchings and voter suppression. Racism is over when white people say so.

We start by saying we are not racists. Yes, that felt nice. And now we should make sure that no one says anything that might upset us. The fight against racism becomes the search for a language that makes white people feel good. The laws themselves model the desired rhetoric. We are just trying to be fair. We behave neutrally. We are innocent.

When viewed in the aggregate, these attacks on “critical race theory” and the teaching of America’s real history echo some of the worst aspects of the country’s past. In his book “Trouble in Mind”, historian Leon Litwack details how history was taught during the Jim Crow reign of terror:

The history to which Black children were exposed in the classroom and the primers made a virtual gospel of the superiority of Anglo-Saxon institutions and ways of thinking and acting…. What little they learned of their own history consisted often of disparaging caricatures of Black people as the least civilized of the races — irresponsible, thoughtless, foolish, childlike people, satisfied with their lowly place in American life, incapable of self-control and self-direction. The history of Black people was a history of submission gladly endured and of services faithfully rendered. Transported from the darkness of heathen Africa to the civilized and Christian New World, grateful slaves found contentment and happiness…. The treatment of emancipation depicted Blacks passively waiting for Massa’ Lincoln to strike off their shackles. And Reconstruction saw the enthronement of Black ignorance and inexperience, with the Ku Klux Klan in some account redeeming Anglo-Saxon civilization from alien rule. The history lessons taught in public schools were calculated to produce patriotic citizens, albeit with a distinctive southern bias.

The Jim Crow Republicans and the white right view this approach to American history as admirable, something to be resuscitated from the dustbin of the country’s past.

In the self-serving stories told by the Ku Klux Klan, that terrorist organization had noble origins, represented “Christian values,” did charity work and helped the poor, served the community by dealing with drunks and other miscreants, and protected “white families” as well as the “good Blacks”. This is the fake history that the Jim Crow Republicans want to see taught to America’s young people.

The neofascist movement understands that if it wins the battle over the teaching of the past, it can in turn control the future. In total, the right wing’s moral panic over “critical race theory” resembles the kind of hearts-and-minds indoctrination favored by the great villains of history. Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, Hitler and Goebbels would be proud to see their legacy continued.

The saga of Dennis Kucinich: When one man stood up to corporate power — in 1970s Cleveland

The Division of Light and Power,” by Dennis Kucinich, like Robert Caro’s “The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York,” is a gripping, moving and lucidly written account of the hidden mechanisms of corporate power in the United States and what happens when these corporate interests are challenged. It is essential reading, especially as we face an intensified corporate assault, done in the name of fiscal necessity following the financial wounds imposed by the pandemic, to seize total control of all public assets.  

Kucinich warns that this assault is more than the seizure of public assets for private gain. These corporate forces, which function as a shadow government in Washington and cities across the country, threaten to achieve a monolithic lock on all forms of power and extinguish our anemic democracy. As Kucinich discovered throughout his career, these corporate forces will deploy every weapon in their arsenal against those brave or foolish enough to defy them. “The Division of Light and Power” is destined to become a classic text for those who seek to understand the corporate coup-d’état that took place in the United States in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

“People who say, ‘You can’t fight City Hall,’ don’t know where it is,” writes Kucinich, who battled Cleveland’s big banks and corporations as a member of the city council and as mayor. “You have to find it before you can fight it. City Hall was not only the Doric gray stone temple on East Sixth and Lakeside Avenue in downtown Cleveland. City Hall was the boardroom of Cleveland’s banks, its investor-owned utilities, its real estate combines — and the mob. In Cleveland, City Hall was in the shadows, a giant specter invisible to the people of the city. I brought the invisible City Hall to light, with great consequences for my city, my family, my friends and myself. I was the Mayor and I fought City Hall.”

Kucinich, a diminutive 23-year-old, who was often mistaken for the paperboy when he campaigned door to door, had just been elected at the opening of the book to be the new Councilman from Ward Seven. Kucinich grew up in Ward Seven in extreme poverty. His family struggled to pay rent and utility bills. They endured evictions and at one point were forced to sleep in their car. Ward Seven was, he recalls, where “I went to high school, where church spires and pipe-organ smokestacks reached to a smudged sky. A neighborhood populated by a steely league of nations who spoke Polish, Greek, Slovak, Ukrainian, Russian, Arabic, Spanish, and occasionally English. A neighborhood of narrow streets lined with old men wearing white shirts and suspenders, and old ladies wearing babushkas and carrying shopping bags that dangled just above their socks, paraded up and down the small commercial district on Professor Avenue.”

Because he would not abandon his neighborhood, his people, he was on a collision course with the monied elites who ran the city.

The seasoned politicians in City Hall assumed that Kucinich, like themselves, would sell out the voters for his own political and economic advancement. No one thought he was serious about defending those who elected him. They welcomed him to the cynical club of our bought-and-paid-for political class and explained the inner workings of our system of legalized bribery. He was young. He was talented. He would go far, the political hacks assured him, if he did the bidding of the real centers of power.

“These pros knew that every one of the thirty-three Cleveland City Council seats were won with campaign contributions from banks who held city deposits, money from phone, gas, and electric interests, or downtown real estate developers who never lost an election because they always bet on both sides,” Kucinich writes.

One middle-aged Councilman, an attorney from a neighboring ward, let’s call him Richard, befriended me, confiding, “Dennis, there are a lot of legitimate ways you can make money in politics. Nothing dishonest, mind you. Opportunities come to people who hold office,” he said.

“Opportunities?” 

“You know, you do favors for people. They do favors for you.”

“Favors?” I didn’t understand. 

“Attorneys elected to Council get law business thrown their way. Insurance salesmen get policies. Travel agents book trips for people they help. Real estate guys get commissions from property deals called to their attention,” he shared. “It’s all legit.”

A “rotund, cigar-chomping and irascible” councilman named James H. Bell told Kucinich that all he wanted was a little ice cream. “He opened his mouth, lolled his tongue, and with child-like abandon licked an imaginary cone, his diamond pinky ring sparkling in the bar lights,” Kucinich writes. “‘Just a little ice cream. I’m not a pig,’ he repeated. ‘I want what’s mine. Some ice cream.'”

The rules were clear from the start. Serve the interests of big business and the city’s rich — by granting tax abatements, 99-year franchises, monopolies and bond financing for big, often unnecessary multi-million dollar projects — and thrive. Defy those interests and face political oblivion. 

“City Hall reeked of mendacity, of checking one’s spiritual beliefs at the door like a beat-up coat and entering into circumstances where unseen forces were dictating decisions, demanding consensus, and meting out punishment to those who denied the deal-making, was, after all, politics, the dominion of amorality, where personal advancement relied on pragmatism operating in shuttered light, without the imposition of conscience,” Kucinich writes.

Once it was clear the elites could not buy him off, they set out to destroy his political career, slander and intimidate him, and, after he was elected mayor in 1977, wreck the city’s finances and finally attempt to assassinate him. The ruling elites play for keeps. And this is why a politician like Kucinich, with integrity and undaunted courage, is an anathema in the deeply corrupted world of American electoral politics where nearly all who flourish, in city, state and national politics, do so because they have a price. 

The battle royale, which would see the business elites force the city into default to remove Kucinich from the mayor’s office, centered around the schemes by CEI (Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co.) to crush the public utility, Municipal Light, or Muny Light, founded in 1907 by then-Cleveland Mayor Tom L. Johnson. CEI sought a monopoly so it could jack up rates for the city’s residents. CEI orchestrated blackouts by blocking Muny’s access to backup power and exhausting the patience of Muny customers to force them into the hands of CEI. The fight to save Muny was, Kucinich knew, more than a fight to protect a public utility. 

Johnson said when he founded the public utility, “I believe in public ownership of all public service monopolies for the same reason that I believe in the municipal ownership of waterworks, of parks, of schools. I believe in the municipal ownership of these monopolies because if you do not own them, they will in time own you. They will corrupt your politics, rule your institutions and finally destroy your liberties.”

Kucinich, like Johnson, realized the danger the privatization of public assets presents and, unlike most politicians, was willing to sacrifice his political career to protect those, like his family, who struggled under the onslaught of predatory corporations and the rich. 

But it was not only Kucinich the business elites targeted. They destroyed the careers of the handful of reporters who attempted to investigate and make public the dirty machinations of CEI and the ruling elites. Kucinich watched as one honest reporter after another was silenced by his or her employer, beholden to the money and power of advertisers. Kucinich discovered that the press was not only docile, but complicit. He realized he would have few allies in the public arena. When the war against him began in earnest, the press dutifully amplified the lies spun out by the public relations departments of the corporations against Kucinich. The city was saturated with constant news and editorials touting the benefits of privatizing the utility, although customers with Muny Light had one of the lowest electric rates in the country.

When Steve Clark, the top radio news commentator in Cleveland on WERE radio, for example, decried CEI’s spending over $7 million for promotions and advertising, or about $11 per customer, and announced that CEI had realized a net profit of $40 million, or more than 16 cents for each dollar of operating revenue, at the same time it was demanding a 20 percent rate increase from the Ohio Public Utilities Commission, which would generate an additional $54 million annually for the company, his career was finished. The radio station received at least $70,000 a year from CEI in advertising. The owners did not intend to lose it. Clark was fired. 

“News reporters covering the Council meeting were a sketch of supine immobility, a confession of the futility of expression without independence,” Kucinich writes. “If CEI worked to influence editors, the editors in turn would place limitations on their reporters. I could not expect any help from the ‘free press.'” 

“I dispensed a long time ago with the idea that my political advancement depended upon currying the favor of newspapers, or by agreeing with their editorial or news policy, which wasn’t really theirs, but that of interest groups they were fronting,” he adds.

The Muny Light wars exposed the lengths corporate power and the mob bosses, who Kucinich also fought, will go to destroy anyone who threatens their unchecked pillaging. Cleveland was known at the time as “America’s Bombing Capital” because of a war by crime syndicates for control of Cleveland rackets. The city endured 30 mob-related bombings and periodic assassinations. There were also several attempts to kill Kucinich that were narrowly thwarted by luck or timely police work. Mayor George Moscone and City Supervisor Harvey Milk were shot and killed at San Francisco City Hall while Kucinich was in office. Chapter 28 in his book is titled “City Hell.” 

The business elites orchestrated a recall election, which he narrowly survived, threw the city into default, orchestrated electrical blackouts, especially during the Christmas holiday, and used a compliant press to blame Kucinich for the chaos they spawned. When Kucinich threw out the first pitch at a Cleveland Indians game, forced at that point to wear a bulletproof vest and travel with police snipers, the crowd booed and yelled, “Kill the bum.” Kucinich was defeated for reelection in 1979, the celebrated political phenom now treated as a national punchline. 

(Nearly two decades later, after wandering the political wilderness — and the country — yet still supported strongly by the working class of Cleveland, Kucinich made an unexpected political comeback when he was elected to Congress in 1996. However, in 2010 the Democratic Party machine in Ohio drew up a redistricting plan which moved his Cleveland home address into the Toledo-based district of another incumbent, all but assuring his defeat in 2012.)

Through his besieged two years as mayor, Kucinich was acutely aware that if he capitulated to the sale of the public utility his political future would be instantly assured. He writes:

My political future would be guaranteed, with the swipe of a pen. The endless calls to sell would end. The media trumpeting the so-called deficiencies of Muny Light would stop their barrage. The equation of the sale of Muny Light with the avoidance of default would end. If I sold the electric system under these intricately-contrived circumstances, the people of Cleveland would never know I did not have to sell. They would be offered a fictional tale of a happy outcome, agreed upon by the media, the business community, CEI, the banks, and the political establishment. It would be the fairy tale of a young Mayor who finally came to his senses and did the “right thing.” 

But I knew the truth.

The people would end up paying millions of dollars in higher taxes to the city for street lighting and other services. Without competition, CEI would continually raise rates. People in the city would pay millions more in higher electric bills. Yes, the city would have credit. It could borrow money and go deeper in debt. If I agreed to sell, no one in Cleveland would ever know what happened in this boardroom. Today the world’s attention was briefly on the impending default in a major American city. If I sold, tomorrow the big story would be ‘The Escape from Default,” the bookends of a complete political soap opera. Only I would know that Muny Light was stolen. I would have to conceal that knowledge, as I rocketed to political stardom with my newfound friends. I’d wave from a high platform at “the people.” Unaware, they would think they were the ones who sent me to higher office.

His enemies did not forgive him once they removed him from office. He and those who worked in his mayoral administration were blacklisted by the city’s elite, often unable to find work. Kucinich was meant to be an example to all who thought of defying the system.

“Most of those who worked for me could not find jobs, blackballed by the Cleveland establishment,” he writes. “Several members of my team had to travel many miles out of town to find work. Most found themselves at a significant financial disadvantage. One, a brilliant city planner who had courageously challenged developers’ schemes to extract millions from the taxpayers, committed suicide. It was my decision, and I paid a price, but regrettably, others also paid.”

“After I left office, I had time to absorb what had happened to me in Cleveland, my ten-year climb to become Mayor, my collision with corrupt interests amidst the highest of hopes for the city,” He writes. “However hard I tried, I could not find a moral to the story. I was shattered, not so much from losing an election, as from the pillorying of the ethical signposts of my life: Right was wrong and wrong was right. The inversion of reality was particularly shocking. The banks, the business and political establishment had now constructed, and the Cleveland media carried forth, a new fictitious narrative. The city on its way to recovery … from me.” 

Nevertheless, Kucinich, sacrificing his position as mayor, had indeed, with the support of a grassroots army, saved the city’s public utility.

Near the end of his first term in Congress he was invited to attend a meeting of the Cleveland City Council on Dec. 14, 1998, the eve of the 20th anniversary of the city’s default. The council presented him with a resolution of recognition. It read: 

…Today the City of Cleveland has one of the fastest-growing municipal electric systems in America. Currently, Cleveland Public Power is expanding to provide low-cost electricity to more and more people, providing power for city facilities and streetlights, thereby helping to keep taxes low and encouraging economic development. None of this would have been possible had Mayor Kucinich not refused to sell the City’s electric system on December 15, 1978 . . .  now, therefore . . . BE IT RESOLVED, that Cleveland City Council hereby extends its deep appreciation to Dennis J. Kucinich, for having the courage and foresight to refuse to sell the City’s municipal electric system, which has saved the people of Cleveland over $300 million since that time.

— Cleveland City Council

Members of the city council stood and applauded.


How Fox News profited from vaccine makers while pushing anti-vax rhetoric

Fox News, especially Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham, has been full of bogus anti-vaxxer claims at a time when COVID-19’s delta variant is infecting countless unvaccinated people in red states. Journalist Justin Baragona, this week in an article published by the Daily Beast, argues that vaccine makers themselves are helping to finance those anti-vaxxer claims by being major advertisers on Fox News.

Baragona explains, “With increasing regularity over the past few months, Fox News has peddled vaccine skepticism — and at times, outright resistance — to its millions of viewers, leading critics to accuse the network of ‘killing people’ as large swaths of conservatives refuse to get vaccinated. And it turns out that such dangerous rhetoric has, in effect, been sponsored by the pharmaceutical giants involved in developing, manufacturing and distributing the very vaccines that Fox News hosts and pundits have railed against on a near-daily basis.”

Citing data from Media Matters, Baragona notes that “some of Fox’s top advertisers include Johnson & Johnson, GlaxoSmithKline and Novartis AG.”

“Other top vaccine manufacturers, like Pfizer and AstraZeneca, have run hundreds of commercials on the network since the start of the year and rank among the cable network’s top 150 sponsors,” Baragona observes. “Most of the commercials were not for the drugmakers’ vaccines, but rather, direct-to-consumer advertisements for their prescription or over-the-counter medications. Johnson & Johnson, which has administered nearly 13 million doses of its one-shot COVID-19 vaccine in the United States, is currently one of Fox News’ top advertisers, ranking in the top 15 to date.”

Baragona adds that as of July 16, Johnson & Johnson had “run 1579 commercials during Fox News programming.”

To be sure, pharmaceutical companies do a lot of advertising on cable news — and not only Fox News and Fox Business. CNN and liberal-leaning MSNBC are full of pharma ads.

It’s no coincidence that pharma companies do so much advertising on Fox News, Fox Business, CNN (both English-language CNN and the Spanish-language CNN en Español) and MSNBC. The cable news audience, on the whole, leans older, and someone who is 50 or older is more likely to need a drug for high blood pressure or Type 2 diabetes. And pharma companies will gladly sell their products to liberals who watch Rachel Maddow and Joy Reid on MSNBC as well as Republicans who watch Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham on Fox News.

In the U.S., three COVID-19 vaccines have been approved and distributed: Moderna, Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson. This journalist received both doses of the Moderna vaccine earlier this year and experienced no side effects.

On Fox News, Carlson has claimed that President Joe Biden and his allies want to punish Americans who don’t get vaccinated for COVID-19 — which of course, is not something Biden has advocated. Biden has never said that anyone who doesn’t get a COVID-19 vaccine deserves to be punished, although he has repeatedly stressed that the more Americans are vaccinated, the sooner the U.S. will be able to achieve some type of herd immunity and start to get back to normal.

“Two of the network’s most influential and widely viewed stars, Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham, have been at the forefront of Fox News’ anti-vaccine coverage for months,” Baragona notes. “The pair and their guests have openly said that the vaccines are dangerous, questioned whether they work at all, and justified Americans’ refusal to get their shots.”

Baragona points out, however, that according to reporting on FiveThirty Eight, Fox News viewers are more likely to be vaccinated than viewers of One America News or Newsmax TV — both of which pride themselves on being to the right of Fox News and Fox Business. Nonetheless, Newsmax CEO Christopher Ruddy recently wrote an op-ed that surprisingly, praised Biden for his COVID-19 vaccination program and hailed the vaccines as saving lives.

Matt Gaetz and MTG’s new fundraising committee is losing money — big time

At a time when Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida is facing a federal sex trafficking investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia has jumped to his defense and joined forces with him for a fundraising tour. The far-right MAGA Republicans are both aggressive fundraisers, repeatedly stressing their unwavering devotion to former President Donald Trump. But according to Daily Beast reporter Roger Sollenberger, the Gaetz/Greene tour has “spent four times as much as” it has raised.

Sollenberger explains, “Since Gaetz and Greene kicked off their joint fundraising committee with a May 7 event at The Villages in Central Florida, their campaigns and joint fundraising committee have posted a combined loss of $342,000. And according to recent filings with the Federal Election Commission, that joint fundraising effort, ‘Put America First,’ reported only $59,345.54 in contributions. That sort of meager haul would be fine for a dinner or one-time event, but Gaetz and Greene have repeatedly held high-profile events and spent a whopping $287,036.19 to hold them — meaning they’re in the hole by more than $225,000.”

Greene is great at earning small-dollar donations for her own war chest; she brought it $3.2 million during 2021’s first quarter. When Greene says or does something controversial and is called out for it — which happens a lot — the pro-QAnon congresswoman often paints herself as a victim of persecution from Democrats, the Deep State, Never Trump conservatives and RINOs (Republicans in Name Only). And Greene is an expert at playing the MAGA grievance card in her fundraising e-mails.

But the Greene/Gaetz tour, according to Sollenberger, has been operating in the red.

“Both Gaetz and Greene contributed $150,000 apiece from their own campaigns to the joint fundraising committee,” Sollenberger observes. “And they’ve raised money almost entirely from small-dollar donors. Only four people gave $500 or more to the shared committee. But their campaign tour of some of the most Trump-friendly areas in the nation has been inordinately expensive.”

Sollenberger stresses that as a combination, Gaetz and Greene haven’t been able to match what they have been able to bring in as individuals.

“Individually, Gaetz and Greene raised $1.34 million and $1.31 million in the second quarter of 2021, respectively,” Sollenberger observes. “Those totals are certainly impressive, and Gaetz and Greene could argue that the publicity from their circuit is helping them fundraise individually. Except, they’re not making that argument, and both candidates have actually raised less in this most recent quarter than they did in the first.”

Regardless, it appears that the tour is going to continue.

According to Sollenberger, “Greene, who has shown GOP leadership her value as a fundraising powerhouse, still apparently sees reason to go forward, at least according to the Gaetz campaign. A spokesperson for the Florida Republican told the Daily Beast that Greene had personally committed to future events.”

Ben & Jerry’s in middle of firestorm following boycott of Israel’s “occupied Palestinian territory”

A boycott campaign propelled by GOP officials in several states sprung up this week against ice cream maker Ben & Jerrys, after an earlier decision by the company to stop selling its products in Israeli occupied territory.

The Vermont-based brand, which has a long history of taking socially conscious stances, put out a statement saying it was “inconsistent with our values for Ben & Jerry’s ice cream to be sold in the Occupied Palestinian Territory,” which included the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

According to the Associated Press, “Israel annexed east Jerusalem after the 1967 war and considers the entire city its undivided capital, though the annexation is not internationally recognized. It says the West Bank is disputed territory and says its final status should be resolved in negotiations. The international community, however, widely considers both areas to be occupied territory.”

Both of the company’s founders, Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield, are Jewish.

Ben & Jerry’s has a rather unique agreement with its parent company, the international behemoth Unilever, which allows for the board to take controversial stances. To date, the decision is one of the strongest stances an American company has taken against Israel, traditionally one of America’s closest allies.

The backlash was swift, and harsh. 

In response to the move, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett issued a threatening statement, vowing to “act aggressively” against the company — even going so far as to call the targeted boycott “a new form of terrorism.”

The decision to stop selling ice cream in what Israel calls “disputed territory” also incensed elected officials in both parties — Biden’s White House lamented that Ben & Jerry’s was “unfairly” targeting Israel — but especially conservative lawmakers and pundits, who have aggressively aligned themselves with Israel in recent years. 

Texas and Florida, run by two of the GOP’s most well-known governors, said they are currently exploring harsh actions like a coordinated divestment campaign or even an outright ban.

Both leaders wasted no time decrying the company’s original statement.

“Ben and Jerry’s decision to boycott parts of Israel is disgraceful and an insult to America’s closest ally in the Middle East,” a statement from the office of Texas Gov. Greg Abbot Tuesday night read. “Unilever, Ben and Jerry’s parent company, must reverse this ill-conceived decision.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis placed Unilever under state review, saying “Florida has long had a strong relationship with the State of Israel,” adding that, “As a matter of law and principle, the State of Florida does not tolerate discrimination against the State of Israel or the Israeli people, including boycotts and divestments targeting Israel.”

More than 30 U.S. states have laws on the books prohibiting pension funds from investing in companies that refuse to do business with Israel — though it’s unclear if Ben & Jerry’s action this week qualifies, legally speaking. In its original statement, the company said it would not renew its local license with a longtime Israeli partner — but agreed to continue selling its products in the rest of the country “through a different arrangement.”

Nevertheless, Republican officials in both Florida and Texas both said they were discussing what recourse to pursue against the ice cream maker, including a potential divestment of state resources. Texas State Comptroller Glenn Hegar even went so far as to suggest a statewide ban of the company’s products. 

Fox News also repeatedly railed on Ben & Jerry’s for the action, with many hosts calling for viewers to stop purchasing the brand.

“I wish we could return to the days where companies sold products instead of virtue signals,” Fox host Tomi Lahren lamented. “I don’t believe in cancel culture, but it is time to look at these companies and say, ‘what exactly are you standing for?'”

It wasn’t the first time the network has railed against the staunchly progressive company, with another recent controversy igniting over Ben & Jerry’s Colin Kaepernick-named ice cream, which sought to celebrate the former NFL player’s protest against police brutality. 

AirBnB also found itself in a similar situation just a few years ago when the online home rental company announced in 2018 that it would no longer list properties in the occupied West Bank. The company reversed its decision just a few months later in the face of harsh criticism.

Eric Clapton refuses to play venues that “discriminate” by requiring COVID vaccine proof

English musician and frequent conspiracy theorist Eric Clapton announced on Wednesday he’ll no longer perform at any venues that require attendees to show proof of vaccination. The announcement comes after UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s mandate that “vaccine passports” be required for entrance into nightclubs and venues by the end of September.

In Clapton’s statement, he refuses to play at “any stage where there is a discriminated audience present.”

“Following the PM’s announcement on Monday the 19th of July 2021 I feel honor-bound to make an announcement of my own,” Clapton said. “I wish to say that I will not perform on any stage where there is a discriminated audience present. Unless there is provision made for all people to attend, I reserve the right to cancel the show.” 

Along with his statement, he also re-shared a link to his anti-COVID lockdown musical collaboration with Van Morrison, “Stand and Deliver,” in which the artists sing: “Do you wanna be a free man / Or do you wanna be a slave?”

It wouldn’t be the first time basic public health precautions have been deceptively and offensively equated with slavery, or other devastating human tragedies throughout history. Here in the U.S., earlier this year, US Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene stoked controversy even within her own party when she compared vaccine passports and requirements to the Holocaust.

Clapton’s latest pledge comes after the three-time inductee to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has spent most of the pandemic condemning basic precautions to protect people from COVID, first criticizing the lockdowns instituted around the world. After being vaccinated, Clapton helped stoke fear and conspiracy theories about the vaccine by recounting negative experiences with the AstraZeneca shot on social media, and suggesting the side effects had been so “severe” that he was unsure he’d be able to play guitar again. 

Lucky for us, that did not turn out to be the case, and Clapton is still performing — just not for venues that “discriminate” against the unvaccinated.

To be clear, contrary to Clapton’s claims about the long-term “dangers” of the vaccine, research has shown side effects are often finished within the first days of being vaccinated, and the overwhelming majority of new COVID cases are among unvaccinated populations

In either case, Clapton’s next UK shows aren’t scheduled until May of next year, Rolling Stone reports. He does, however, have several scheduled across North America this September.

There’s a psychological explanation for why the super-rich are obsessed with space

Evidently not content to merely rule Earth, humanity’s billionaires have begun sparring over outer space. On Tuesday, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos blasted into space on his own spacecraft made by his company Blue Origin; Bezos’ feat comes nearly a week and a half after Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson, who rescheduled his own company’s high-altitude flight in order to beat Bezos to space by nine days. The tacit third contestant in the space oligarch business is CEO of SpaceX Elon Musk, who has been publicly stating for years that he and his company intend to colonize Mars. 

The news of Bezos and Branson’s flights drew a lot of attention, and not necessarily all of the positive kind that perhaps the billionaires had hoped they would receive.

“Amazon Billionaire Jeff Bezos Rode A Dick Into Space And The Jokes Make Themselves At This Point,” BuzzFeed’s headline blared. Commentators seized on Bezos’ tone-deaf comment at the launch press conference, in which Bezos thanked Amazon workers for making money for him that allowed him to travel to space.

Indeed, the billionaire space race has illustrated how disconnected these two men, who have a collective estimated net worth of nearly $210 billion ($205 billion of which is Bezos’), are from everyday life for the vast majority. In a moment of historic income inequality, amid a pandemic, as droughts, wildfires, and extreme flooding are destroying communities across the globe, a few billionaires are competing over their ability to take low-Earth orbit trips. As one Twitter user put it: “Jeff Bezos going into space for 3 minutes for funzies when he could’ve ended world hunger feels dystopian.”

As dystopian it may feel to some— clearly not to those who have purchased nearly $100 million worth in tickets to hitch a future ride on a Blue Origin suborbital space trip — there appears to be a strong correlation between being ultra-wealthy and desiring to explore or conquer space, as though wealth begets space ambitions. Bezos and Branson are all entrepreneurs. None of them began their careers as astronauts or astronomers, and they certainly aren’t interested in doing science up there. Is something happening psychologically that induces this strange desire in the uber-rich? Are they bored with Earth? Or is it a symbolic, masculine power play, an illustration of their dominance expressed through literal giant phalluses?

Psychologists tell Salon it’s probably not a coincidence that billionaires appear to be obsessed with going to space, so much so that they’re willing to spend billions of dollars of their own money to make it happen.

Michael Kraus, a social psychologist who specializes in the study of inequality at Yale University, told Salon that while there “exists variation in all strata in terms of personality,” including the wealthy, the social context of being very wealthy can make a person relate to the world in a more self-centered way. Hence, worrying about issues that more immediately face this Earth aren’t top of mind for them.


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“It’s worthwhile to think for a bit about what that context might be like,” Kraus said of how wealth distorts one’s psychology. “Money can reduce external sources of threat [and] discomfort.” Likewise, many rich people surround themselves with yes-men, perhaps unintentionally. “People will say yes to your ideas because of the money,” Kraus added. “All of this makes more things possible for you than for other people, and that then warps your worldview.”

Kraus said this warped worldview makes it more difficult for some wealthy people to see what’s happening all around them on Earth.

“Why they choose space, in particular, seems fairly straightforward about positive media attention, new places to make profits and a straightforward way to benefit from government funds,” Kraus said. “It’s also an expression of this self-centrism.”

Dacher Keltner, a professor of psychology at University of California-Berkeley and author of “The Power Paradox,” said the billionaire obsession with space follows a historical trend of people with power, privilege and resources trying to give off “an almost mystical appeal”; for example, when powerful men commission statues of themselves. Space, Keltner noted, is “mystical,” and it’s not a coincidence that three of the world’s billionaires are trying to break barriers associated with the unknowns of the universe.

“They love to gravitate to things that give them this singular status in the world, and I think that’s one of the massive problems of privilege,” Keltner said. “They just want to be at the top and want everybody to be marveling at what they do, so they go out and they don’t think about advancing the mundane concerns of ordinary people — they think about flying in space, living forever, building islands in the sea where only they can play golf.”

Indeed, power and status have something to do with this obsession with space. Similar to Bezos’ sheer determination to make everything deliverable, not just books, clinical psychologist and author Dr. Ramani Durvasula said it makes sense that he would turn his focus to space. Self-made billionaires like Bezos are often obsessed with the next thing, especially when their wealth and status has shaped their identity.

“There’s no end game . . .  people ask, ‘why do they keep pushing, they have everything?”  But everything is never enough, there’s always one more thing,” Durvasula said.  “And that’s the megalomaniacal piece of this, and again it comes back to that bigger conversation about what is the social responsibility that is supposed to accompany wealth?”

Suniya Luthar, professor emerita Columbia University’s Teachers College, said the “hedonic treadmill” could be at play here, too. The term “hedonic treadmill” is a positive psychology theory that states that even after an individuals’ goals are achieved, that person will return to their baseline level of happiness.

“When people get used to a certain level of wealth or comfort or possessions and so on, they quickly get used to it and then they want the next level up,” Luthar said. “You have an individual who’s basically bought all that money can buy, or has had all that money can buy, then, what’s next?”

Luthar added that she’s cautious to criticize Bezos, as that any human with such wealth and resources might do something similar.

“It’s human nature to be envious of people whom you know, are way more successful and have way more possessions and fame or whatever it is that you want,” Luthar said. “Also, as we’ve all been through so much stress and pain, this often comes out in anger or resentment.  We’re all looking for someone to blame, the anger has to land somewhere”.

“The Good Fight” makes the Kafka-esque dream of a People’s Court a reality

Since its second season, each set of episode titles on “The Good Fight” draws its inspiration from other corners of the known universe. Season 2’s titles are named after days in Donald Trump’s presidency,  as if the characters are ticking down a prison sentence. Third season titles are inspired by “Friends”; the fourth’s are styled after “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” episodes.

In contrast, the fifth season purposefully adopts a literary vibe, likely because of its spirit coalesces around a piece of literature prized and recommended Mandy Patinkin’s “Judge” Hal Wackner: Franz Kafka’s “Before the Law.”

Wackner is a new character in this universe, a regular guy with no formal legal training who presides over a makeshift courtroom dubbed “the 9 ¾ Judicial Circuit.” It is as unofficial as a court gets, situated behind a copy shop and devoted to theatric binding arbitration hearings.

Chicagoans who know about this pop-up version of the People’s Court seek justice there because Wackner strives to be fair, actually fair, as opposed to ruling based on legal loopholes and precedent. 

Reddick, Lockhart, and Associates partners Diane Lockhart (Christine Baranski)  and Liz Reddick (Audra McDonald) would never have heard of Wackner’s experiment if not for one of the firm’s lawyers being mysteriously summoned, only to discover that other attorneys are actually playing along. It’s easy to see why. Wackner is entertaining, a kind of Boomer poet who makes his plaintiffs and defendants shake hands after the resolution of each case and tell the other person, “I respect and love you.” 

But the lawyers who play along also supports his heartfelt if absurdist interpretation of how the justice system should work as opposed to how it actually does. “A real lawyer will look for reasons why not,” Wackner says at one point. “I need someone to look for reasons why.”

Hence his advice to a doubting would-be counselor is to seek answers and inspiration in Kafka’s puzzling parable, a short work that opens like so:

Before the law sits a gatekeeper. To this gatekeeper comes a man from the country who asks to gain entry into the law. But the gatekeeper says that he cannot grant him entry at the moment. The man thinks about it and then asks if he will be allowed to come in later on. “It is possible,” says the gatekeeper, “but not now.”

The TL;DR summary of the rest is that the man peeks through the gate to see what’s on the other side, only to be thwarted by the gatekeeper, who warns the man that he’s powerful. So the man waits until his life is spent, bribing the gatekeeper with everything he has along the way. With his final breath he asks why, if everyone seeks justice under the law, has no one tried to pass through the gate except for him. The gatekeeper replies that the entry was assigned only to the man and tells him he’s going to close it. 

Only Kafka knew the true meaning of “Before the Law,” but the most common interpretation is that legal systems are designed to be impenetrable, to the point that most people would rather accept injustice as a byproduct of an unfair society or bypass it entirely. One of the saddest lines in the work hangs upon a simple, sane notion: “The man from the country has not expected such difficulties: the law should always be accessible for everyone, he thinks . . .”

Every season of “The Good Fight” sends Diane and Liz through a crucible that closely relates to whatever is happening in reality. Season 5 places them at odds due to personal and professional struggles impacting their firm’s ecosystem – a workplace enduring the same racial reckoning seizing the rest of the nation.

Neither Judge Wackner nor the 9 ¾ Judicial Circuit appear at all in this week’s episode, this season’s fifth, but its precepts echo through the main storyline concerning unequal healthcare apportioning during the height of pandemic.

In the season premiere,  “Previously On…”, we learn that firm’s top investigator Jay Dipersia (Nyambi Nyambi) became severely ill with COVID-19 complications, was hospitalized and nearly died. Jay recovers, but now he’s a long hauler who occasionally hallucinates, typically manifesting visions of Frederick Douglass and Karl Marx.

Within those hallucinations are real memories of being left to die on a gurney with other patients in what is essentially a holding pen. An overhead shot shows the common denominator among those as ill as Jay: every person is either Black or brown, and all are gasping for breath as masked, hazmat suited men and women check on them occasionally without administering much help.

A case involving a Latinx woman who died of COVID-related illness triggers Jay’s memories as he assists in the deposition. Other developments along the way remind him of his unequal status even among his Black co-workers. In other words, this subplot isn’t an illustration of the law failing but justice itself falling down.

Other partners starting to rebel against the fact that Diane, a white woman, is one of the two remaining name partners of an African American firm that built its legacy on fighting for civil rights. During Trump’s presidency having Diane aboard served as a somewhat insulating effect, despite her being targeted by his cronies.

Diane’s whiteness is part of the problem, amplified by her husband Kurt McVeigh’s alleged involvement in the Jan. 6 insurrection and the careless financial calculus driving their multinational owners STR Laurie. Series creators Robert and Michelle King don’t shy away from the bitter irony of a white woman heading a Black firm; in fact, upcoming episodes place the ordinarily empathetic Diane on a self-serving, divisive course of action.

“The Good Fight” plays personal arcs in concert with themes bedeviling the larger world, one in which the Kings’ fictional firm and in its people exist. Liz and Diane (and, when they were still with the firm, Lucca and Adrian) sell themselves as champions of progressive values, but plenty of their wealthiest clients exploit people like Kafka’s man from the country.

New associate Carmen Moyo (Charmaine Bingwa) does such a bang-up job in representing a crime lord that he gets his sentence overturned. Even Wackner has a questionable backer in David Cord (Stephen Lang) a fictional version of one of the Koch brothers. Cord talks good game, and hires Liz and Diane’s firm along the way, but he has a long history of pumping money into destructive political causes. Still, he sees Wackner’s court as a start-up opportunity.

Reddick, Lockhart, and Associates accept such business for the same reasons that other top law firms do: to maintain a certain level of cred in the legal community, and for the money, which is the main reason for Diane’s name partner status.

Wackner’s courtroom is therefore more of a spiritual remedy than a legal one, one part of a larger season arc casting an eye on what justice and injustice look like in the world beyond courtrooms.

Current episodes of “The Good Fight” premiered before the Supreme Court handed down rulings that gutted the Voting Rights Act and weakened unions, each mere previews of how they’ll land in upcoming cases involving abortion rights and LGBTQIA+ protections.

As millions of us reel from the implications this sharply conservative court will have on the United States legal system for generations, this new season offers a type of intellectual escapism – specifically, through Wackner’s part of the story.  The 9 ¾ silliness lightens the overall mood, what with Wackner’s insistence that plaintiffs and defendants wear head to toe costumes to prevent unconscious bias from influencing his decisions. But that’s also in line with “The Good Fight” dedication to providing catharsis to its politically exhausted viewers.

This new season’s episode titles, by the way, link together as a larger fable. “Once There Was a Court . . .,” “And the Court Had a Clerk . . ,.” “And the Clerk Had a Firm . . .” “And the Firm Had Two Partners . . .” Writers recognize this as a story spine, a means of organizing concepts into a workable narrative, or simply breaking through creative blocks.

Kafka employs a version of that structure in “Before the Law” while obscuring any single obvious moral. Maybe that was his way of acknowledging that sanctioned justice systems never work neatly.

Seizing onto Wackner’s takeaway is more optimistic. The law should always be accessible for everyone, and true justice along with it. Most of “The Good Fight” demonstrates the ways these elude us, despite Diane and Liz’s noblest efforts. Can you blame them for daring to believe in Wackner’s fantasy of how an ethical and righteous world should behave?

New episodes of “The Good Fight” debut Thursdays on Paramount +.

“He lied”: Black activists shame Biden’s new filibuster defense as “magical thinking”

President Joe Biden drew backlash from fellow Democrats on Wednesday after defending the filibuster in the face of a Republican assault on voting access that he compared to “Jim Crow on steroids.”

A recent college graduate pressed Biden on his defense of the filibuster rule during a CNN town hall in Cincinnati Wednesday, citing a nationwide Republican push to enact new voting restrictions that Biden himself has called “the most dangerous threat to voting in the integrity of free and fair elections in our history.”

“While you have condemned these attacks, you and congressional members of your party have done little to actually stop these assaults,” the graduate said. “If these efforts are really the ‘most dangerous in our history,’ isn’t it logical to get rid of the filibuster so we can protect our democracy and secure the right to vote?”

Biden said he stands by his comments on the voting restrictions, pointing out that Georgia’s recently-enacted law could have allowed the state legislature to block his election win in the state. And he acknowledged that “the abuse of the filibuster has been pretty overwhelming,” noting that segregationist senators who used the filibuster had to hold the floor and speak for hours straight to sustain its use in the past.

“If it’s a relic of Jim Crow, it’s been used to fight against civil rights legislation historically, why protect it?” pressed CNN moderator Don Lemon.

“There’s no reason to protect it other than you’re going to throw the entire Congress into chaos and nothing will get done,” Biden replied. “Nothing at all will get done.”

The comment drew intra-party ire from Democrats who have argued for months that eliminating the filibuster to pass voting rights legislation was their only hope of preventing Republican state lawmakers from subverting elections.

Former Obama White House aide Jon Favreau, who now hosts the podcast “Pod Save America,” said Biden’s response “makes no sense to me.”

Republicans have already used the filibuster to block debate on the For the People Act even after Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., suggested a compromise offer to water down the legislation and add a national voter ID law to appease GOP critics. The filibuster likewise stands in the way of top Democratic priorities like the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, the union-boosting PRO Act, the civil rights-expanding Equality Act, immigration reform, and statehood for Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico.

Biden’s defense of the filibuster undercuts his voting rights push and suggests “the entire speech was a lie,” argued Cliff Albright, a cofounder of the Black Voters Matter Fund.

“He expects community activists—particularly Black activists—to simply recreate the Herculean effort that it took to mobilize voters in 2020,” Albright tweeted. “And to do so in spite of historic new voter suppression. He lied when he said he’d have our backs.”

Former Obama White House ethics chief Walter Shaub, a senior fellow at the Project on Government Oversight, fumed at Biden’s remarks.

“These old white guys who’ve spent their lives in politics are never going to get it,” he tweeted. ” Racism and oppression just don’t matter that much to them. They know they’ll survive fascism. The camps won’t be for them. And their goofy kids can sell art for half a mil a pop,” an apparent reference to Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, and his recent foray into the art world

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., laughed when she was asked about Biden’s suggestion that eliminating the filibuster would cause “chaos.”

“Right now, Mitch McConnell uses the filibuster to veto any forward progress he doesn’t like,” she told reporters. “We have to be realistic how the filibuster is used.”

Biden argued during Wednesday’s town hall that he wants to “bring along Republicans who I know know better” and that he does not want to get voting rights “wrapped up” in a debate over the filibuster.

“But isn’t that the only way you’re going to get it done right now?” Lemon asked.

“No, I don’t believe that. I think we can get it done,” Biden replied.

It would be a surprise to anyone paying attention if Biden can find 10 Republican votes in the Senate to defeat a filibuster and advance voting rights legislation — a situation that looks increasingly unlikely.

Every Republican member of the Senate voted to block debate on the For the People Act just last month and only Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, has backed the Voting Rights Advancement Act.

“What are their names? Name the Republicans who know better,” Sherrilyn Ifill, the president of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, said in response to Biden’s claim. “This is not a strategy. The time for magical thinking is over.”

“The Ugly Cry” reveals the pain and humor of growing up “Black and weird”

Released in June, “The Ugly Cry” isn’t a light beach read, but that doesn’t make it any less compelling or easy to read. At times devastating, but always brilliant, the new memoir by first-time author Danielle Henderson effortlessly achieves the authenticity every writer strives so hard for. 

Framed by pathos and abuse, the book elegantly balances the author’s experience growing up Black in a mostly white town, and her very funny take on how her unforgettable and fiercely protective grandmother raised her when her mother left. In fact, the entire story is really an ode to Henderson’s grandmother, who made Henderson who she is today. “Thank you for saving me. Thank you for teaching me how to save myself,” Henderson writes in the book’s acknowledgements. 

When you read her story, you can see why. As a child Danielle was, “Black and weird (before weird was cool),” according to the blurb. And though it took a long time and lots of therapy, Henderson realized being “weird” and surviving trauma and explicit racism helped her develop the kind of worldview and humor against the odds.

Her journey might have also have enabled her ability to successfully write difficult fictional television relationships. A former Los Angeles TV writer whose credits include “Maniac,” “Divorce” and “Difficult People,” Henderson recently returned to her home town of Warwick, New York. There, she says, she bought a farm with a host of creatures “not paying rent” that she’s learning to deal with, and is retrofitting her house with elder-accessible features so she can look after her elderly grandmother. 

Watch the “Salon Talks” episode with Danielle Henderson here, or read a Q&A of our conversation below.

The following interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

This book was really touching and special. This is an ode to your grandmother who raised you. You say in the book that she was no kind of storybook elder though, which means the type who bakes cookies, gives advice, gives hugs, right? Yet, you credit her for making you who you are today. You wrote in your acknowledgements, “Thank you for saving me. Thank you for teaching me how to save myself.” Please tell us about her and why you choose to frame your narrative story this way?

I chose to frame it this way because it’s just the truth of who she is and who I am. I think that when I kind of credit her for shaping me, it’s because even though her love was very tough and sometimes brutal, her goal was always to make me an independent, kind of fiercely independent person who made her own decisions and trusted her own opinions. She succeeded in that way. I don’t know what my life would have been like without her because as I write in the book, my mother wasn’t present in the same way. I wasn’t getting that kind of guidance in my life from anywhere else.

You have so many wonderful, I don’t even want to call them anecdotes, that’s weird, like real life great moments with your grandmother and your brother Cory. Her take on horror movies and her tough love. I think even one time your brother burned himself and she blamed him because it was past his bedtime. Which were one or two that really stuck out to you so people can get a real feel for the types of things in the book if they haven’t read it?

I feel like her response to my emotions when I ran home after I had punched my friend in the face because she was changing the rules while we were playing kickball. I was so frustrated with her and I popped her in the face and her nose started bleeding and I ran home crying. My grandma was like, “Go back out there and finish the fight. What are you doing in here?” That is her to a T, “Why are you crying? Why didn’t you finish?”

But then on the flip side, I think that her response to when I was a teenager and I told her, not only that I was depressed, but that the reason I was depressed was rooted in the sexual abuse I had suffered, I didn’t really know how she would respond to that. Her fierce love really came through in that moment. Her kind of collecting me and hugging me and telling it was okay and it wasn’t my fault. She was the first person to kind of set me on that path of healing. I think those are two of the most prevalent examples to me of who my grandmother is as a person.

Wow. She’s still alive today. Tell us about her now?

She’s still alive. She’s 88 years old. I just purchased a house in my hometown and the reason is that she’s going to be moving in with me. She does have dementia and she’s still pretty with it, but she kind of gets stuck in her repetitive loop sometimes. Her short-term memory isn’t so great. She’s very quickly getting to a point where she can’t live on her own anymore. No one else in my family is really equipped to take care of her so I thought, “Okay. I’ll come back to New York and you can live with me.” That’s how I ended up back in my hometown because she’s still here.

Feels very full circle in a way now. Did you have that feeling? Elder care, especially for an elder with dementia, is exceedingly difficult, which I’m sure you already know. What was it that made you feel like this is the time to do that?

Well, I had hired an in-home care aid for her last year. Actually, it’s been almost a year and a half now. It’s just this wonderful woman who comes and hangs out with her every day for a few hours, make sure she has her medication and kind of is okay for most of the day. But my grandma again, is so independent that she’s like, “I don’t want somebody here all day, every day. I want family or nobody else.” Just kind of seeing the position that she was in and trying to help her navigate her independence, while realizing that that’s not going to be realistic for too much longer, that really helped prompt the decision. The pandemic helped. Being away from her for a year and a half was awful. It was terrible. 

I was just ready to get out of LA. LA is a great place for a lot of different people. I never quite fit in. I lived there for almost five years and I just felt like a total loser the whole time. All I did was work. That’s all I did. I had no personal life there. It’s very hard to have a personal life there. When you’re in your 40s, it’s difficult. I felt like most of the people I met there were very transactional. They instantly wanted me to help them get them work in television once they found out what I did. That’s not the basis of a long-lasting friendship for me. I really shut down, because I’m like, “I’m sick of people asking me to get them work,” because one, I’m not powerful enough to do that. I’m just a writer. I can’t hire anybody. But also, I just want a friend. Can we just get a cup of coffee and not have it be so transactional? It was time for me to leave for lots of reasons. I’ll still have my jobs there. I’ll probably still have to go to LA quite a bit for work, but I feel much better not living there. I already, in the last three weeks I’ve been here, have a better social life than I had for the last five years.

I also started out as a freelance writer. More recently, obviously you had success in television where you created these emotionally complex characters. What made you feel ready at 44, you’ve shared your age so I don’t feel bad, or 40s, to write a memoir? 

I’m exactly the age I am. There’s no getting around it and I’m proud of it. I don’t mind at all. I asked myself that a lot and I’ve been asked that a couple of times. I think the most realistic answer is that I’ve done so much work in therapy and I’ve done so much work on myself to get to a point where I wasn’t really denigrating my story, which I did for a long time. I kind of felt like people have it worse, people go through other things that are so much more complicated than this. This doesn’t matter. I got through it. I’m over it. I did that for a long time and thought, “This wasn’t something that people needed to read or waste their time on,” right?

Then as I got older and as I got more self-esteem and kind of decided to really approach my life with intention, I realized that the way I was raised was so unique and completely the reason why I am the way I am now. When people ask, “How did you get here?” I now have a book I can hand them and say, “This was the start. If you grow up like this, then you might get where I am. This is one pathway to where I am.” I wrote it as an explanation for myself, as a way to kind of, really just come to terms with where I am in my life. I wrote it at a point where I was evolving and I thought that that evolution needed to be kind of marked in some way.

Writing about that evolution in long form feels very different I’m sure than writing scripted television and feature pieces for media outlets. How did you experience that?

Writing a book is wild. It is wild. I thought, “I’m a writer. I know how to do this. I’ve written so many things.” Even the process of it is so different. I think that’s what took me the longest time to adjust to, not just because I’m accustomed to writing in a solitary way. I’m accustomed to being edited. But the format of the book, it was overwhelming at times to think about putting so much information out there, the structure of it and how to make it make sense.

I’m extraordinarily grateful to my editor and truly my entire team at Penguin and Viking because they helped tremendously. My editor is Andrea Schulz. After I sold the book, we sat down right away and she said, “Just tell me what stories you’re interested in telling.” I gave her a few stories and she was like, “This is great. This is great. This is great. Maybe we should structure it this way.” She didn’t change anything that I wanted to write. She just kind of helped me figure out the path, and that is what I needed more than anything. I’m really glad that we have that kind of relationship where I could call her and say, “I’m having a lot of trouble with this. I don’t know if this is the right story to tell.” Then we would talk it through and figure out some of the stuff, but it was more collaborative than I thought it would be, but it was also much more solitary at times than I thought it would be.

I’m really good at just kind of banging stuff out. I’m not really the kind of writer who sits and noodles too much. I try not to be too painstaking about it. If it’s not happening, it’s not happening. I’ll just go do something else and come back to it. I really felt at times that I had to be that kind of writer. I had to do these edits. I had to figure out the story. It helped me grow as a writer to write this kind of long form book. It removed the fear of the process, which is again, something that comes very easily to me to be freaked out about something and decide that I’m not going to be good at it. I was really happy to get through it and realize that, “Oh yeah, this is a different process, but I can do this.”

A lot of this stuff is framed with humor. That is one of the hardest things to write, so I really admire it, but it is very sad and very difficult. Some of these experiences, you mentioned sexual abuse, abandonment, things that you wisely have pursued so much therapy for over the years, are very difficult. Was it difficult to sit down at that 4AM space and write, even though you had prepared yourself and this was the time to do it?

No. I was gentle with myself during those more difficult parts. It wasn’t hard to sit down and write it, only because I’ve had so much practice over the years, just telling my story to friends and family members and therapists. It felt more like I was reporting the things that were happening then I was reliving them. It felt actually very empowering to be able to do that because I didn’t know what was going to happen when it came time to writing these more difficult parts of my life. I was prepared to be devastated, but I was happy that I just kind of reported it and got through it.

The thing that I was worried about in terms of the structure of the narrative tone is I didn’t want it to feel like I was removing myself from the process because so much of the book I’m writing with such deep emotion and remembering the emotions that I felt, which is what kind of has always helped me bolster my memories. I didn’t want these parts to feel like I was robotic or I wasn’t telling something with as much passion or an artistic voice. I was kind of pleased with how it came out, that I was able to still tap into those emotions, but not be leveled by them. It wasn’t really cathartic because I think again, I’ve kind of dealt with the emotions already. It felt more like just an acknowledgement of a time that was formative for me, but wasn’t the only thing that formed me.

I didn’t write chronologically all the time. I kind of would jump around a little bit because I had a really great outline. Again, my editor is fantastic. I had a great outline that I was working from. That’s kind of how I prefer to write everything I write. I do longhand first. I’ll take my longhand notes, and then I’ll jump in and start writing. If I wasn’t feeling it that day, I would kind of dip around and do something else, but I didn’t push it. I didn’t push it too hard.

There were actually quite a few months where I couldn’t write at all because I was going through the motions of trying to heal and trying to prepare myself to write these chapters. I was generous with myself, but I think that my publisher was also very generous with me. Viking was really thoughtful about not pushing those hard deadlines when I felt like, I just really can’t today. This is a time when I can do this. I think that being able to communicate that is what I also feel proud about for myself because I haven’t always been able to communicate my needs or my feelings. It was just a really good relationship overall and it just helped me get through those times when I was writing about really intense stuff.

My therapist, she kind of constantly, when we first met, she said, “I realize that you’re someone who uses humor to mask a lot of her pain,” and I laughed and then I immediately burst into tears. I was like, “Oh my gosh, she’s a witch. What is going on?” I think that was also the thing that I wanted to make sure hit well in tone of the book, is that I do gravitate towards humor. That purely comes from my grandmother as well. She always would say like, “If we don’t laugh about it, we’ll cry about it and nobody wants to be doing that.” I do gravitate towards humor, but I didn’t want that to detract from the intensity of what everything else that was happening. It was a balance that was kind of hard to strike for the book, but the only way that I could do it was just to write in my own voice and see if it would work.

I’m sure that your publicist and your publisher are proud of how this came out. The book is doing well, and your grandmother, she must be proud. Did she ever know that you wanted to be a writer? Has she ever said anything to you about that?

Oh, completely. She used to constantly tell me when I was a kid, “Somebody should write about this family.” She would say in her moments of deepest frustration because I think she’s a creative person who never really had that kind of outlet. She would crochet and do kind of handiwork kind of things and craft work. She never tried to express herself in another way, and I think she would have been brilliant at it. Instead, she kind of saw that I had that spark and she really pushed me towards it. She’s so proud. She’s so proud. That’s something that just fills me with joy.

For a lot of women in America, particularly woman of color, their grandmother is their mom, as was the case for you for a variety of reasons. It was that experience, there was a lot of that in my family, that really grabbed my attention as well, your experience of growing up with a family of color in America, especially in a predominantly white town. How important was it for you to convey this piece, that part, that element of your life to the readers?

It was very important because I think that the friction I’ve always felt as a kid and as a person in the world, was born here. The handful of Black kids who were in my school didn’t accept me. The white kids didn’t accept me. I was kind of widely shunned, let’s just say. It was a huge part of my foundational process of learning who I was because I think that culturally, I didn’t necessarily fit in my family. I knew I was Black. I didn’t deny it. I didn’t want to deny it. I just didn’t want to be Black only in one way. I think that exploring art and exploring Black culture in a deeper way as I got older and as I became a teenager was crucial to me understanding how I would be perceived in this world and finding my place in my own culture and finding my place in any culture.

I think the other thing that was important about writing this is that, two different things. One, is that the racism that I experienced was often so subtle. I think that when people think racism, they think of nooses and white supremacists groups. Sometimes it’s as subtle as your teacher saying that they didn’t think you would be that smart to understand a book. It’s very subtle. That was really important for me to convey, but also that I’m kind of weird anyway. I was always gonna be into heavy metal and I was always gonna be into classical music and art and Caravaggio and all these things. I’m just a curious person. That was more important for me to convey, that in telling my own story, helping people recognize that Blackness is not monolithic. There are so many different ways to experience Blackness and to be Black. That was incredibly important to me, because it took me too long to understand that in my own life.

How to make a Silver Gin Fizz, the simple and delicious cocktail you need in your repertoire

Today, give yourself permission to focus on what replenishes you. Start with a self-check: Are you in need of restoration — physically, mentally, emotionally? You can only give so much of your energy and focus to work, school, family and friends before you run dry. In cocktail terms, if you drink too much the night before, the next morning’s going to be rough on your body and will. Life’s demands can also take a lot out of you. What might get you back to equilibrium?

Consider the Fizz, a category of cocktail that mixes citrus juice with liquor and sugar, served neat in a 6 to 8 oz. narrow-mouthed glass and topped with seltzer or club soda. My 1947 copy of Trader Vic’s Bartenders Guide gets right to the heart of it in the Fizz chapter, calling it “an early morning drink with a definite purpose — a panacea for hangovers.” News to those who weren’t aware there were restorative properties unleashed by club soda, I suppose. David Wondrich’s essential cocktail history “Imbibe!” cites the Fizz as hangover cure “par excellence” dating back to 1876.

Trader Vic’s intro to Fizz recipes even cautions the bartender playing it fast and loose with freshness and proportions, in light of the customer’s presumptive delicate constitution, with a little post-war light sexism as a garnish: “You have a man’s life in your hands, so take it easy. You don’t want him to peter out before noon, do you? That’s scotch-and-soda time.” (If you say so, Don Draper!)

(For the record, there are probably more prudent solutions, like hydration and a pledge to moderate in the future.)   

There’s one way I can see a Fizz taking on those magical restorative powers — and that’s with the addition of an egg. It’s still a cocktail, sure, but with the addition of some protein, it’s now also a second breakfast. Add an egg white to a basic Fizz to make a Silver Fizz; throw in an egg yolk to create a Golden Fizz; or shake in a whole egg, and it becomes a Royal Fizz.

Here’s how making a Silver Gin Fizz replenishes me, and it’s not as a hangover cure: Before I started making these, I had never worked with egg whites in cocktails before. It seemed like an ingredient best left to the professionals behind the craft cocktail bar — not something I should attempt at home. But learning replenishes me — my persistence, my patience and ultimately upon success, my confidence. And like many things that seemed more daunting before I tried them, it’s really not that complicated. I recommend a dry shake first to really whip up the foam — 30 seconds should do — then add ice to the shaker for a vigorous 15-second second shake to thoroughly chill the drink before pouring. 

A Gin Fizz is a simple and delicious cocktail, sort of a cousin to a Tom Collins, less bracing than a gin and tonic and less alcoholic than a French 75. Shake lemon juice, gin and superfine sugar or simple syrup over ice, then strain into the tall glass and top with seltzer. The addition of an egg white doesn’t change the flavor, but it does add a silkiness to the drink that smooths out the gin and lemon, softening its edges somewhat, taking it even one step further from a Collins and into more subtler, sophisticated territory. 

If you’re concerned about food safety and salmonella from egg whites, or avoid eggs for any reason, you can substitute aquafaba, a chickpea-based foam that approximates the effect of egg whites. (Salon’s Ashlie D. Stevens has a handy guide to making your own; sub in an ounce and a half of aquafaba for one egg white.)

There are so many spins on the basic Fizz formula — if you prefer rum, brandy or whiskey to gin, there’s a Fizz for you, too — but you can’t go wrong with a basic Silver Gin Fizz. 

Ingredients:

Serving size: one beverage

  • 2 or 3 oz. gin (choose your strength!)
  • 1/2 oz. fresh lemon juice
  • 1/2 tablespoon of superfine sugar
  • 1 egg white
  • Seltzer or club soda
  • Ice for shaking
  • Fresh sprig of thyme for garnish, if you’re feeling fancy

Gear:

You don’t need any specialty equipment to mix a simple cocktail. Improvise with what you have; take a hammer to a baggie of ice if you want. But here’s what I keep at hand:

Instructions:

Dry shake first: Add lemon juice (fresh squeezed is best), sugar, gin and egg white to a shaker and shake vigorously for 30 seconds. Add cracked ice and shake for another 15 to 20 seconds to thoroughly chill; then strain into a Collins, fizz or other tall, thin glass and top with seltzer. Dress it up with a garnish if you like — I recommend a sprig of thyme. Not into the egg white at all? Just eliminate it and the dry shake, and follow the rest of the recipe. 

Variations:

If you want a sipper on the rocks, go for a Tom Collins. Explore the many types of Fizz, from the dairy-fortified Ramos to the famous Sloe Gin. For a deeper thyme flavor, try infusing simple syrup with thyme (add a handful of fresh thyme to 1 part sugar to 1 part water, boil until the sugar dissolves, then steep the thyme for 30 minutes in the hot syrup before straining and cooling). 

More Oracle Pour:

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Trump-loving Republicans snatch up “magacoins” — and quickly fall victim to data breach

More than 1,000 people — including Republican leaders and conservative media personalities — have already signed up for the pro-Donald Trump cryptocurrency magacoin.

Poor security on a website associated with the cryptocurrency exposed users’ personal information, including passwords and IP addresses, and revealed that the vast majority of the magacoin produced has gone to its self-described creator Marc Zelinka, a Trump-loving consultant, and a Super PAC associated with him, reported The Guardian.

A self-described hacktivist shared the website’s data with the newspaper, showing that most users have only 100 magacoins, but at least some of them have taken advantage of an offer of 1,000 free magacoins to certain radio hosts, media personalities, bloggers and grassroots groups who agree to promote the cryptocurrency.

Right-wing talk radio host John Rush holds 1,500 magacoins, according to the leaked data, and hosted Zelinka, whose Colorado-based used car company Carmart Inc. applied for a trademark for the currency and administers a Facebook page for it.

Zelinka, however, insists he no longer controls magacoin and had handed off the cryptocurrency project to pro-Trump political operative Reilly O’Neal, who appears to control Super PACs funded in part by the cryptocurrency intended to support “MAGA candidates” around the country.

A 10-million magacoin gift from an email address associated with O’Neal’s political consulting firm Tidewater Strategies was made to the Magacoin Victory Fund that appears to be controlled by the North Carolina-based GOP operative, while another 2 million magacoins came from an account that appears to be controlled by Zelinka.

O’Neal has worked on the losing campaign for accused pedophile judge Roy Moore, and he reportedly has a stake in the right-wing conspiracy website Big League Politics.

His Tidewater Strategies was paid by pro-Trump Republican candidates in the last election cycle, but most of them lost.

25 years of “The Daily Show”: Here’s 5 ways it permanently changed U.S. satire

In 2004, former Fox News pundit Bill O’Reilly kept calling viewers of “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” “stoned slackers.” He even repeated the epithet to Stewart’s face when Stewart appeared as a guest on O’Reilly’s show in September of that year: “You know what’s really frightening?” O’Reilly said. “You actually have an influence on this presidential election. That is scary, but it’s true. You’ve got stoned slackers watching your dopey show every night, and they can vote.” 

In 2004 John Kerry was running against George W. Bush. So, we know that “The Daily Show” didn’t change the outcome of that election. But we do know that by 2004 the show had already begun to permanently change the role of political satire in the United States.  In fact, in the face of the O’Reilly insults, executives at Comedy Central decided to ask Nielsen Media Research check on whether or not O’Reilly was right in demeaning the audience of “The Daily Show.” Rather than confirm O’Reilly’s insult of Stewart’s viewers, they found the opposite. Far from being slackers, viewers of Jon Stewart’s show were more likely to have completed four years of college than those who watched “The O’Reilly Factor.”

That was only the beginning of research that showed the positive and powerful impact of “The Daily Show” and the politically informed, engaged, and savvy qualities of its audience.

This week marks the 25th anniversary of “The Daily Show,” which launched on July 22, 1996. The first host was Craig Kilborn, who held the spot for two years before Jon Stewart took over and turned the show towards more political satire. Stewart hosted for 16 years and it is during his tenure that he not only redefined the show, but also redefined the role of satire in U.S. politics.

In 2015, Stewart stepped down as host and was replaced by Trevor Noah, who initially suggested he would be a less political host, but eventually has become at least as politically engaged, if not more so. Since taking over as host Noah has offered his own unique contributions to the social relevance of satire and continues to make “The Daily Show” one of the most significant sources of satire today.

These days the relevance of political satire to public dialogue is almost taken for granted. Candidates regularly appear on late-night comedy shows, satirists frame issues of social relevancestories get “broken” by satire news shows, and comedians go beyond joking to address their audiences on issues all the time. But it’s important to remember that this was not always the case. Comedy icons like Johnny Carson and David Letterman were not regularly engaged in politics. And those comedians who were, like Lenny Bruce or George Carlin, didn’t have the impact that a show like “The Daily Show” has had.

As we celebrate 25 years of “The Daily Show,” let’s look back on five central ways that the show permanently changed US satire.

Satire news becomes the news

As Geoffrey Baym chronicles in From Cronkite to Colbert the turn of the millennium marked significant shifts in the ways that broadcast news was reported. News became increasingly more sensationalized, more focused on punditry than information, and more desperate to keep viewers glued to their show in order to watch the next crisis. As these shifts took place, Stewart’s “The Daily Show” was offering viewers both a critique of the news media and an alternative form of news.

In 2004, the same year O’Reilly was ranting about Stewart’s “stoned slacker” audience, The Pew Research Center released a study that showed that 21% of people under age 30 said they regularly learned about the campaign and the candidates from comedy shows like “The Daily Show.” That number was up from 9% in 2000. Overall, over 50% of those polled in 2004 suggested they learned at least some of their political information from comedy. The point is that O’Reilly was right to worry, yet he was wrong about what to worry about: “The Daily Show” viewers weren’t stoned slackers, but they were a threat to shows like his. Young viewers were increasingly pivoting to comedy shows like “The Daily Show” for their political reporting. 

But, perhaps, what is most interesting is the fact that in 2004, “27% of all respondents under age 30 [said] they learn things about the candidates and campaigns from late night and comedy programming that they did not know previously.” That self-reporting mirrors research conducted by Julia R. Fox, Glory Koloen, and Volkan Sahin, who found that in 2004 the “amount of substantive information in ‘The Daily Show with Jon Stewart’ and the broadcast network newscasts was the same.” The difference was that “The Daily Show” mixed substance with entertainment; whereas the news combined substance with hype.

Considered this way, it isn’t surprising that over the years “The Daily Show” – and other shows like it – have only become more central in attracting viewers as a source of news and no longer just ironic commentary on it.

The public trusts comedians

Over the years, when Stewart would be confronted with these shifting attitudes and habits, he would regularly insist that his main job was to tell jokes and he didn’t want to be a journalist. Yet he often signaled that he felt compelled to step in because the mainstream news was doing such a lousy job.

Perhaps one of the most famous instances of this took place in 2004 when Stewart criticized Tucker Carlson on CNN’s “Crossfire” and asked him why he was doing such a lousy job. “You’re doing theater when you should be doing debate,” said Stewart. “What you do is not honest. What you do is partisan hackery.”

He then went on, “You’re on CNN. The show leading into me is puppets making crank phone calls. What is wrong with you?” CNN canceled the show shortly thereafter.

In 2007, Stewart was tied with Dan Rather, Tom Brokaw, Anderson Cooper and Brian Williams for “Most Admired News Figures.” What made that ranking exceptionally weird was the idea that Stewart — a comedian -– was even included on the list of “news figures” in the first place. The results clearly showed that he had changed the public relevance of satire news.

Then, when Walter Cronkite died in 2009, Jon Stewart was voted in an online poll by Time magazine as “America’s most trusted newscaster.” What’s more, the result wasn’t even close: Stewart carried 44%  of the vote, leaving NBC’s Brian Williams (29%), ABC’s Charles Gibson (19%) and CBS’ Katie Couric (7%) in the dust.

These trends continued well after Stewart stepped down. When Donald Trump was elected, we witnessed satirical comedians increasingly stepping in to defend institutions, rather than just critique them.  Seth Meyers schooled Trump on how to be presidential, Hasan Minhaj lectured him on the First Amendment, and Michael Moore revealed his fascist tendencies.

Satire viewers are informed and engaged

It isn’t just that “The Daily Show” changed the role of satirical comedians; it is also that it changed its viewers. Over the years various studies have shown that viewers of satire news are educatedintelligentinformedpolitically engaged and politically active.

One 2012 study by Fairleigh Dickinson University showed that viewers of “The Daily Show” were some of the most informed and viewers of Fox News knew less than viewers of no news.

Even better, it is common to worry that consuming satire makes one cynical and apathetic. But no research confirms that satire makes its audience apathetic. In fact, quite the opposite. A study by Hsuan-Ting Chen, Chen Gan, and Ping Sun showed that the link between cynical anger and political satire was directly tied to citizen engagement. The researchers found that when “people consider an issue personally important and anger serves as a motivating factor, exposure to cross-cutting political satire can transform people into active citizens.”

What has yet to be thoroughly proven, but seems to be backed by a number of correlating studies, is the fact that the unique blend of satirical critique, commitment to democratic institutions and modelling of political engagement found on “The Daily Show” under both Stewart and Noah and on similar shows like those of Samantha Bee, John Oliver, Stephen Colbert and others has arguably created a new type of satire viewer who has an even higher propensity to not just enjoy the ironic wit of satire, but to also want to make a difference fighting the source of the folly. 

Satire doesn’t just critique; it leads

Mark Twain once testified before Congress. So, the idea of a satirist testifying at Congress in the hopes of influencing policy is not exactly new. But the degree to which contemporary satirists regularly engage in direct political influence and leadership is new.

Stephen Colbert started his own Super PAC (Political Action Committee) in order to teach viewers about campaign financing. Stewart and Colbert held a rally on the National Mall hoping to encourage voter turnout in 2010. Jimmy Kimmel used his show to draw attention to healthcare reform. Samantha Bee has helped raise funds for the U.S. Postal Service and raised money to support Puerto Rico.  Hasan Minhaj’s “Patriot Act,” which aired on Netflix, regularly offered shows with political impact. And John Oliver is considered to have moved satire news to a level far beyond “just” comedy. 

What’s amazing about this list is that all but one of the comedians worked with Jon Stewart. Stewart offered a form of political satire that really cared about offering the public leadership. The idea was to do more than get the audience to engage intellectually and think critically; it was to ask them to get involved and to show them ways to do it. For example, Stewart, himself, became a strong advocate for the health care needs of 9/11 first responders and was instrumental in getting a bill passed to support them.

Satire news goes global

It wouldn’t surprise us to know that there are satirical news shows in the U.K., but what about in Nigeria? Or Iraq? Over the years that Stewart was hosting “The Daily Show” we saw a boom in satire news and current affairs programs in countries as varied as Bosnia and Herzegovina, Iraq, Kenya, North Macedonia, Nigeria, Serbia, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe. Okey Bakassi hosted the popular “The Other News” in Nigeria, and Chumel Torres, referred to as Mexico’s Jon Stewart, hosted a satire news show on YouTube that eventually migrated to HBO before being canceled in 2020. In 2018 Taiwanese comedian Brian Tseng launched the first ever political satire news show in Mandarin.

In fact, the current list of satire news shows is quite long.

So, what’s up with all of these seemingly copycat shows to “The Daily Show”? The answer is that, as is the case in the United States, there is increasing skepticism across the globe of traditional news outlets. Satire news ends up seeming more transparent to viewers, which, in turn, offers these shows greater potential impact on the political conversations in their countries.

In mid-June, Noah announced he was taking a break from “The Daily Show” until mid-September. Noah suggested that when he returned the show would be different but has yet to reveal in what ways. While we wait for the newer version, there is one thing we can be sure of: the social significance of political satire created by 25 years of “The Daily Show” is here to stay.

Amazon sales of a transphobic book revives greater free speech debate

Just one month after Pride in June, the American Booksellers Association, Amazon and Target are in hot water over their promotion of a controversial book that presents transgender identity as a mental illness. Their complicity in the growing popularity of “Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters” by Abigail Shrier is raising fierce debate about the responsibility of book publishers and sellers when it comes circulating transphobic, inaccurate and dehumanizing content.

On July 14, ABA released a statement apologizing for including “Irreversible Damage” in its July white box, which promotes new titles for booksellers and buyers across the country. In its statement, the nonprofit apologizes for its inclusion of “an anti-trans book.”

“This is a serious, violent incident that goes against ABA’s policies, values, and everything we believe and support. It is inexcusable,” the ABA said in a tweet. “We apologize to our trans members and to the trans community for this terrible incident and the pain we caused them. We also apologize to the LGBTQIA+ community at large, and to our bookselling community.”

But the ABA isn’t the only book or publishing entity facing heat for appearing to promote the book that markets itself as a guide to help parents “inoculate” a “generation of girls” from the “trans epidemic.” NBC reports that hundreds of Amazon employees have rallied in opposition to Amazon selling the book, which is the No.1 bestseller in the LGBTQ+ Demographic Studies section at a time when anti-trans violence and legislation targeting trans youth are on the rise. According to NBC, 467 Amazon corporate employees have filed tickets involving complaints about the book, and at least two employees have resigned over the matter.

Target has also been embroiled in the controversy for selling the book, pausing its sales in the face of controversy from LGBTQ advocates, and then resuming its sales in the wake of conservative backlash, TIME reports. Shrier alleges that Target has once again halted sales. 

But Amazon especially is facing heat over its defense in selling the book, despite how doing so runs in direct opposition to a letter the e-commerce giant sent to Republican Senators in March, stating it has “chosen not to sell books that frame LGBTQ+ identity as a mental illness.” In a stark reversal of this previous stance, an Amazon spokesperson told TIME earlier this month. “As a bookseller, we believe that providing access to written speech and a variety of viewpoints is one of the most important things we do, even when those viewpoints differ from our own or Amazon’s stated positions.”

The inequality of the free speech defense

What statements like this and the transphobic takes in defense of “Irreversible Damage” ignore, is the reality that words and ideas are often more than that — they can be violent when they strip people of their humanity. The thought experiments of privileged bigots aren’t just innocent hypotheticals when they come at the expense of trans and marginalized people’s safety, dignity and humanity.

The nod to the mythic, libertarian marketplace of ideas ignores vastly unequal access to this marketplace on the basis of our intersecting identities. From Shrier to “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling, how many vocally anti-trans writers are empowered with opportunities and platforms to spew transphobic misinformation and hate? In contrast, how many actual trans writers and thinkers are elevated in the same way? 

Such cisgender authors with transphobic beliefs face fewer barriers and are more likely to have networks of support within elite publishing and bookselling platforms, compared with trans authors. In contrast, transgender people and especially those of color face some of the highest rates of poverty, rampant and violent discrimination, and even have a dramatically lower life expectancy than cis people. It’s impossible to talk about “access to a variety of viewpoints” without the necessary context of whose viewpoints are and aren’t going to be picked up, heard, and respected, based on who is sharing them 

The debacle surrounding “Irreversible Damage” is a symptom of a greater issue when it comes to how we discuss and culturally litigate free speech in society. All too often, publishers, platforms and book sellers that know they stand to profit from peddling “controversial,” dehumanizing ideologies and conspiracy theories do so under the guise that they have some sort of obligation to platform hatred in the name of free speech and the First Amendment. 

But seeing as they’re often private entities, they simply don’t — they have total decision-making power over who they wish to confer space and influence upon. And if these platforms are going to confer this power upon transphobes who don’t seem to care whether trans folks live or die as a result of the violent spread of their ideas, they should be honest that it’s their choice to do so.

Who bears the responsibility for a book’s content?

Free speech, censorship and so-called “cancel culture” are wildly popular topics of debate right now. All too often, conservatives who claim to loathe big government and celebrate privatization are the same people who are up in arms at the idea that Twitter, Amazon and other media entities and publishers don’t have the obligation to platform hatred. Mainstream discussions of free speech often spiral into toxic both-sideisms, and false equivalencies that both water down the trauma and dehumanization of marginalized experiences, and whitewash the consequences of platforming bigotry.

It’s precisely this thinking, that anyone and everyone — but especially white men and bigots — is entitled to a platform, that tells us to sympathize with a person accused of rape who’s dropped by their publisher, but not the women who say they were harmed. It explains the furor over the  Woody Allen memoir and a recent book written by an officer involved in the shooting death of Breonna Taylor. Although Simon & Schuster dropped its plans to distribute the latter book after intense backlash, independent publisher Post Hill Press claims that its plans to publish will continue.

Publishers’ and sellers’ responsibility for their choices in content to promote has been a fundamental legal and moral question for decades if not longer. The technology of today has added a new dimension to the conversation, regarding social media and online shopping conglomerates like Amazon. The dangerous fumbling of the matter of Shrier’s “Irreversible Damage” shows that many of those in power continue to fundamentally misunderstand their responsibilities to marginalized people.

“There was a lot of love”: Trump gushes about Jan. 6 crowd in newly released audio

In newly released audio, former president Donald Trump once again restated his claims that the 2020 presidential election was rigged against him and described supporters who heard him speak at the Stop the Steal rally on Jan. 6 as a “loving crowd.”

Speaking in an exclusive interview for the new book, “I Alone Can Fix It: Donald J. Trump’s Catastrophic Final Year,” Washington Post journalists Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker shared audio clips of their two hour interview with Trump conducted in late March at his Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach, Fla.

“There was a lot of love. I’ve heard that from everybody. Many, many people have told me that was a loving crowd,” he said.

The former president said of the event: “Personally what I wanted is what they wanted. They showed up just to show support because I happen to believe the election was rigged at a level like nothing has ever been rigged before.”

He went on to say the mob was “ushered in” by Capitol police and that the police were “hugging and kissing” them.

Trump also reiterated his disappointment in then-Vice President Mike Pence, discussing his role in the Jan. 6 attack after he refused to reject the results of the Electoral College.

If Trump runs for another term in 2021, he also suggested that Pence might not be his chosen running mate saying, “I’m not locked into anything.”

Progressive pundit launches campaign against Fox News: “Something more needed to be done”

Dean Obeidallah, radio host and regular contributor to Salon, filed a complaint on Tuesday against Fox News for coordinating a “misinformation campaign” around COVID, suggesting that the channel has systematically downplayed coronavirus and sowed doubt around the efficacy of the vaccine. 

The complaint, first announced in an MSNBC op-ed, alleges that Fox News violated the COVID-19 Consumer Protection Act, a December law which “​​makes it unlawful under Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act for any person, partnership, or corporation to engage in a deceptive act or practice in or affecting commerce associated with the treatment, cure, prevention, mitigation, or diagnosis of COVID–19.”

Obeidallah’s legal action comes on the heels of a bombshell Media Matters report from last week, which found that Fox News has “relentlessly undermined the effort to get Americans vaccinated against the COVID-19 disease.” 

According to the report, of the 129 vaccine-related segments Fox aired between June 28 through July 11, 57% of them bandied claims that “undermined or downplayed immunization efforts.” To boot, nearly 40% of them included language that framed the vaccine as “unnecessary or dangerous.”

“I felt that given the spike in COVID cases and deaths – plus the report by Media Matters that came out Friday that quantified the lies by Fox News over the past two weeks on the vaccine – that something more needed to be done than simply yelling about it on my SiriusXM radio show,” Obeidallah told Salon over email. 

“So I did research over the weekend and discovered the recently enacted COVID-19 Consumer Protection Act, which appears perfectly designed to address Fox News deceptive information,” he added. “The goal of that law is to protect the public from deceptive info by those seeking to profit from peddling COVID related lies. Fox News is a for-profit business that sells information. Clearly, it’s a business decision by the executives at Fox News to allow lies and other deceptive COVID vaccine info to repeatedly appear on its air.”

Obeidallah also told Salon that he has yet to receive a response from the FTC, but he hopes the opens a probe into the network and “takes steps to stop Fox News hosts and others who appear on the air from misleading Americans about the COVID vaccine.” The columnist additionally instructed his followers on how to file their own complaints in his newsletter

Over the past month, Fox News has come under intense scrutiny by pundits and politicians alike for its now-blatant pattern of peddling misinformation and bogus science surrounding the COVID crisis.

Asked about Fox News during a Saturday interview, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading Covid expert, told CNN: “If we had the kind of false information that’s being spread now, if we had that back decades ago, I would be certain that we’d still have polio in this country.”

On Monday, former Fox News reporter Carl Cameron described the network’s viewers as “lemmings running to their own slaughter.” 

“Whoever gets the most clicks on social media, makes the most money, gets the most fame, gets the most attention and that type of activity is not journalism,” Cameron argued during a CNN interview. “It’s not news. It’s gaslighting. It’s propaganda.”

At the helm of Fox News’ anti-science propaganda has been host Tucker Carlson, who has repeatedly likened the Biden administration’s vaccine rollout to an authoritarian regime, where Americans will be compelled to get the jab against their will. 

Carlson, meanwhile, has refused to reveal whether he himself has been vaccinated, despite his on-air rhetoric. 

This week, CNN found that Fox Corporation – Fox News’ parent organization – has quietly implemented its own version of a “vaccine passport.” Fox has reportedly “developed a secure, voluntary way for employees to self-attest their vaccination status,” according to employee emails obtained by CNN business. 

The company has apparently encouraged its employees to self-attest in an effort to “assist the company with space planning and contact tracing.