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MLB pushback: Republicans falsely claim Colorado’s voting laws stricter than Georgia’s

Republicans angry at Major League Baseball’s decision to relocate its All-Star Game from the Atlanta area to Denver have misleadingly likened Georgia’s new voting restrictions to laws in Colorado, whose voting system has been praised by even Republicans as the “gold standard.” 

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred announced on Tuesday that Denver’s Coors Field will host the All-Star festivities in July after the league pulled the game from Atlanta’s Truist Park “to demonstrate our values as a sport.”

Republicans pounced on the news, inaccurately suggesting that Colorado has stricter voting laws than Georgia. Though SB 202, the voting omnibus bill, expanded early in-person voting, the law severely restricts absentee voting, requires voter ID for mail-in ballots and restricts the use of ballot drop boxes. The law, passed in response to false election fraud claims by former President Donald Trump and his GOP allies, also replaces the elected secretary of state as head of the State Election Board with a legislative appointee, allows state officials to take over local elections offices, and makes it a crime to serve food or water to voters in long lines.

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., complained on Twitter that the “Wokes are at it again,” arguing that both Georgia and Colorado require voter ID and Georgia has two more days of early voting. He also noted that Atlanta is 51% Black and Denver is 9.2% Black, questioning why the game was being moved from a city that has “more day-of voting rights” than Colorado.

It’s worth noting that Truist Park, the home of the Atlanta Braves, is not actually in the city of Atlanta. The Braves moved in 2017 from majority-Black Atlanta to suburban Cobb County, which is more than 62% white. More important, the Georgia law explicitly took aim at Atlanta voters, banning the use of mobile voting buses, which were only used in Fulton County, which includes much of Atlanta.

Matt Whitlock, a spokesman for the National Republican Senatorial Committee, echoed Scott’s argument on Twitter, as did numerous other conservatives and right-wing media outlets like Fox News.

“Colorado requires voter ID to vote in person — either a driver’s license, an IRS issued ID card, a valid passport, or a valid employee card with a photo,” Whitlock wrote. “@MLB better be ready to explain why this is more acceptable than Georgia after that absurd political statement.”

CNN fact-checker Daniel Dale criticized Whitlock for a wholly incomplete list of valid forms of identification accepted in Colorado, which includes non-photo forms of ID like utility bills, and described Scott’s comparison between the two states as “absurd.”

It’s true that Colorado requires voter ID to vote in person, but as the National Conference of State Legislatures points out, the state has a “non-strict” voter ID law for in-person early voting, meaning voters can use a wide variety of identification documents, including some that do not have a photo. Furthermore, voters with no ID can still cast a provisional ballot.

Georgia, on the other hand, has a “strict” in-person voter ID law, which requires a photo ID, and only allows voters to cast provisional ballots if they present an ID within three days to a country registrar. But the major issue at hand isn’t but Georgia’s onerous new absentee voter ID requirement, which requires voters to submit a driver’s license number, Social Security number or other ID. Colorado, on the other hand, only requires ID when a voter casts a ballot by mail for the first time and allows a wider variety of ID types.

Scott’s point about the length of each state’s early voting period is also true but misleading: In-person voting is virtually nonexistent in Colorado since the state adopted an all-mail voting system. Last year, more than 99% of all primary voters cast their ballots by mail and more than 90% of voters used mail ballots even before the pandemic, a far cry from the hours-long lines Georgia voters had to endure. The state sends every eligible voter a mail ballot, which has been a boon for turnout: Nearly 87% of registered Colorado voters cast ballots last year, the second-highest turnout in the nation. Georgia’s new law, on the other hand, bans election officials from sending absentee ballot applications to registered voters.

“Here’s an easy way to tell the difference: Find a photo of Colorado voters waiting in a long line on Election Day,” quipped Washington Post reporter Dave Weigel. “Any photo from the last seven years, since all-mail voting was phased in. Good luck.”

Colorado also allows voters to submit ballots in drop boxes, which are available 24 hours a day until Election Day, while Georgia’s new law limits the number of drop boxes available, allows drop boxes only during the state’s early voting period, and restricts the hours the drop boxes are available.

Trump himself criticized Colorado’s lenient voting laws while pushing entirely fictitious claims of fraud last year.

Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, a Democrat, refuted the conservative attacks on Twitter.

“The truth is Colorado’s election model works. We mail ballots to all voters, have early voting, and same-day voter registration. Voters can participate easily in our elections, which are also the most secure in the nation. Election accessibility and security can go hand-in-hand,” she said. “We give voters ample time and options to participate in our elections. County clerks send ballots out more than three weeks ahead of Election Day. Drop boxes and voting centers open around the state soon thereafter. These various options give voters time to send their ballot back in the mail, drop it into a drop-box, or vote in-person.

“And the proof is in our voter turnout, consistently amongst the top in the nation,” she added. “We’ve got the most accessible and secure elections in the country.”

Despite the misleading Republican argument, Fox News reporter Peter Doocy questioned White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Tuesday about whether the Biden administration is “concerned” that the All-Star game will be held in Colorado, “where voting regulations are very similar to Georgia?”

“Let me just refute the first point that you made,” Psaki shot back. “Colorado allows you to register on Election Day. Colorado has voting by mail, where they send to 100% of people in the state who are eligible applications to vote by mail. Ninety-four percent of people in Colorado voted by mail in the 2020 election.”

Psaki reminded reporters that Georgia’s law was entirely the product of false claims about election fraud pushed by Trump and Republican allies, even though those claims were refuted by Trump administration officials and several Republican Georgia state officials.

I think it’s important to remember: The context here of the Georgia legislation is built on a lie,” Psaki said. “There was no widespread fraud in the 2020 election. Georgia’s top Republican election officials have acknowledged that repeatedly in interviews.”

While there was no fraud, Psaki added, there was record-setting turnout by voters of color.

“What we’re seeing here, for politicians who didn’t like the outcome, they’re not changing their policies to win more votes, they’re changing the rules to exclude more voters,” she said. “And we certainly see the circumstances as different.”

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott says he will boycott baseball after MLB pulls All-Star Game from Georgia

Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday announced he would not throw out the ceremonial first pitch at the Texas Rangers’ home opening game and would boycott any other Major League Baseball events, citing the league’s decision to pull its All-Star Game from Georgia in response to new voting restrictions there.

In a letter to a top Texas Rangers executive, Abbott said he had been “looking forward to” tossing out the first pitch “— until [MLB] adopted what has turned out to be a false narrative about the election law reforms in Georgia.”

“It is shameful that America’s pastime is not only being influenced by partisan political politics, but also perpetuating false political narratives,” Abbott said, adding that he “will not participate in an event held by MLB, and the state will not seek to host the All-Star Game or any other MLB special events.”

The MLB announced Friday it was moving the All-Star Game out of suburban Atlanta, saying the league “fundamentally supports voting rights for all Americans and opposes restrictions to the ballot box.” Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp last month signed a new law that shrinks the window for voters to request absentee ballots, imposes new voter ID requirements and bans the handing out of water and food to people waiting in line to vote.

The national uproar over the Georgia law is coming as legislation advances in the Texas Legislature to further crack down on voting in Texas. Abbott and other state GOP leaders have championed those proposals, which last week prompted public opposition from corporate giants including American Airlines and Dell Technologies.

The movement against the Texas bills is not slowing down. On Monday afternoon, top Houston-area elected officials, including city Mayor Sylvester Turner and Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, are set to hold a news conference to blast the election bills. They are expected to be joined by local business leaders as well.

The Rangers’ home opener was already drawing national attention before Abbott announced Monday he was shunning the first pitch. The Rangers’ Globe Life Field in Arlington is the only MLB stadium opening at full capacity on opening day, a move made possible by Abbott’s decision last month to lift most statewide coronavirus restrictions. President Joe Biden on Wednesday called it a “mistake” for the Rangers to open the stadium at 100% capacity.

In his letter to Neil Leibman, the Rangers’ president of business operations and chief operating officer, Abbott said his decision to skip the first pitch “does not diminish the deep respect I have for the Texas Rangers baseball organization.”

“I wish the team great success this season,” Abbott said.

Disclosure: Dell has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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

Nasim Pedrad finds her inner boy as “Chad”: “It’s such a universal notion to just want to belong”

The idea of the new high school-centered comedy “Chad” is almost as old as the title character himself. Created by and starring “Saturday Night Live,” “Scream Queens” and “New Girl” alum Nasim Pedrad, the show was first announced back in the winter of 2016. Following a string of fits and starts and network shifts, the series is finally debuting on TBS.

“Chad” follows the misadventures of an awkward Iranian-American teenager navigating an eternal quest to climb the social ladder. And the lying, crying boy at the center of the action is played by the 39-year-old Pedrad herself. The writer, actor, director and producer appeared on “Salon Talks” recently to discuss the long road to the show’s arrival, and how she found her inner Chad. You can watch the interview here or read a transcript of it below.

The following has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

We’re going to get into the journey that this show has been on, but first let’s just talk about Chad. Who is Chad?

Chad is a very awkward 14-year-old Persian American boy navigating his freshman year of high school, on a mission to become popular. 

And yeah, this project has been a real labor of love. It’s basically been the last few years of my life. This is the first thing that I created entirely on my own, as the writer, performer, producer. Usually I get to be a guest in someone else’s project. So in taking that on, I wanted to create a character that was really, really fun to play. I feel like I’ve certainly found that with this rather unhinged young man.

He’s a young boy who just wants to fit in and wants to feel like he belongs. From his perspective, everything in his life seems to be conspiring against that. I would say that’s at the core of what’s happening to him.

This is a show that has been in the works since two presidents ago, that predates the #MeToo movement. It missed the entire Trump administration, and the Muslim ban four years ago. Everything is different from when you first conceived of this project. How has it evolved? Has it changed?  

The character, or at least the pathology of the character, has remained pretty consistent from when I first cracked him and figured out who he was, what drove him and how he saw the world. But it did go from a traditional network where it was originally set up to a cable network, and I feel like it’s found the perfect home at TBS. They’ve really championed the project and have believed in it. To live in a cable space also gave me a lot of creative freedom and creative license to do things that maybe I wouldn’t have been able to get away with on network television, certainly in the pilot, and what transpires.

I’m not sure I would have been able to do that if it were at Fox or 20th. I’m able to really push the envelope and push the comedy in a direction that I feel like is a good tonal fit for the show. In terms of the content, the show is largely inspired by my life, but we are setting it in present day. It was important to get that right, although we don’t address the pandemic. In fact, we had shot all but two episodes before the pandemic. When it was safe enough to go back, we were able to pick up the last two.

It seems like that was never off the table, that you would be Chad. Tell me about that.

You’re like, “Why?”

Yeah, why?

That’s an important question. You’re asking people to suspend their disbelief enough to accept that I’m this character and I’m happy to be able to share why. For me, that was the whole DNA of the show. That was the show, the concept of an adult playing this teenage boy. The reason for that is, actual teenagers don’t know what’s so funny about being a teenager, the way that adults who have perspective distance from it do. We can reflect on how horrifying the adolescent years were now that we’re on the other side of it. I thought it would be an interesting experiment.

Again, this is a few years ago, but to have the teenager at the center of this coming-of-age story, to be an adult who’s in on the joke. I felt like you could just get away with a lot more comedically and just push the comedy a lot further, because funny moments can be funnier and less sad since you’re not sitting there laughing at an actual Iranian child going through some of these situations. You’re laughing at an adult who has some distance from it. That, to me, was the show. It certainly is a bit of a swing, but I just felt like if I could get people on board for that buying in, then they’re just hopefully on this journey with a character who gets himself into a lot of trouble.

Watching it, I was really struck that having Chad played by an adult woman gives permission for him to have a vulnerability that we don’t often get to see in real adolescent boys. Even though that vulnerability exists, we don’t see a scene of a teenage boy crying in the bathroom like we do on this show. I wonder if that’s part of it, that this really does open doors to a side of teenage boyhood that we may not otherwise be comfortable as an audience looking at.

The show touches on messy things. There’s so much messiness in adolescents and there’s so much discomfort and pain and agony, and it’s a little, maybe easier to digest knowing that it’s an adult and we’re all in on this joke, so to speak, together. That was the intent anyway. Having that perspective an adult sometimes can maybe bring more specificity to a performance, more nuance to a performance. Because I’m not an actual teenager, every aspect of the performance is quite deliberate and intentional rather than us just capturing the actual awkwardness of a teen actor. Because you understand on some level, it’s a deliberate performance and not just us exploiting the real awkwardness of a teen actor, it’s easier to look at sometimes.

It invoked for me a lot of what Louie Anderson does in “Baskets,” where that character is not played as a joke, is not played broad. That character is played as a vulnerable person. That’s what you’re doing here. It’s not a gimmick, the way that it’s done in the show.

That was really important to me. I knew that it had to feel real and grounded and it couldn’t be silly the way you get to be silly in the sketch for example on a show like “SNL.” A half-hour comedy that is supposed to sustain your interest for an entire series where you’re with the same characters, that’s a different objective, right? With that, you want people to feel invested emotionally. You want them to care about him, even if that means they’re pissed at the character if he’s more of an anti-hero. In order for people to be invested, it has to feel grounded and honest and real. Definitely, the intention is not to play the joke of me playing a boy. By saying that we’re all in on this joke, I mean, we’re all in on this conceit. This, “What if we could really buy that this grown woman is playing this teenage boy?” If we can all buy into that, how does that change our ability to take in the performance and also the world?

So how do you do that? Obviously you are a skilled, experienced, comedic actor, but you are playing a teenage boy and you do have to sell it. You can’t just put on pants and then go out. You really become this person and just your posture, your way of speaking, it’s clear hat you did the work on this. What does that work look like? Did you read particular books? Who did you study?

I know this is alarming because I didn’t obviously grow up as a 14-year-old boy, but it is so based on my own childhood. I happened to also be a complete tomboy who wasn’t interested in girlier things until much later in life. I felt like Chad in a lot of ways. I don’t think I went nearly to the extent that he does when it comes to certain things, but the character and the want of the character was very much pulled from my own life. 

When it comes to the performance, that was very inspired by just playing with it. Once I had written the character and I knew who he was, I would just begin improvising as him. That’s when I found his little idiosyncrasies or his speech patterns or the way that he would stumble over certain words.

That was happening in conjunction with designing the wig and landing on that, figuring out what the eyebrows looked like, the binder I wear under his polo shirts, the posture. All of that came together at the same time. Because I was playing a little boy, I really felt like I could disappear into the character and get as far away from myself, the actor, which obviously is imperative if you’re trying to play someone that different than who you are organically.

Did you take notes from your cast members? From the other boys around you? 

Yes, that was also so important to me to help ground the character and make him feel as real as possible. It was to populate the school with actual teenagers, most of whom were exactly around that age. They’re engaging with Chad completely earnestly, as if he really is a real 14-year-old boy, which in turn completely helped my performance. I would absolutely be observing them, even just in between takes, figuring out what kids are talking about these days. Because while the show is extremely personal to me, it is also set in present day and I’m not a teenager today. Luckily my cast actually provided a lot of critical research as well.

You have said in the past that coming to this country as a very young child, you just wanted to be a normal American kid. That is something that Chad really has in him very deeply as well. Do you think that’s the story of immigrants and first generation kids in general, or does it feel really unique at this particular moment where we are in our culture and in our country?

I would imagine a lot of immigrant kids can relate to that notion. I’m sure there are plenty that are like, “I got this.” I’ve had a lot of other people telling me, even from other cultures obviously, “I can really identify with that.” I think teenagers are already struggling to identify their identities and fit in. When you’re from this other culture and you’re an immigrant kid, it’s just one extra thing to overcome in your effort to feel like you belong. I don’t think the show is just for immigrant kids or people that can speak to that experience. It’s such a universal notion to just want to belong. Anyone can identify with that.

Most people went to high school and most people remember what it was like to just want to be able to keep your head above water and get through it. It’s an especially precarious time in our lives because the stakes of everything feel so high. As an adult, when you’re reflecting on it, you realize, “Oh my God, that was such a trivial thing that I was like completely losing my mind over or was making me spin out.” But at the time it just feels like the stakes are so high and everything has life or death circumstances.

There are these little things about, “Am I going to be invited to this thing?” or “How do I cover up for this lie that’s now spun out of control?” But the show also really takes on very, very big, very, very serious issues about family and about being different and about sex and about masculinity. You don’t shy away from really challenging stuff as well.

I wanted the show to be about things. I didn’t want to just be like, “Chad’s at the mall now.” I think because I felt like I really understood who the character was, it became interesting to tackle something like racism or sexuality, or in episode to episode and be like, “Well, how would the pathology of Chad intersect with that? How would he handle that? What would his take be? How would he navigate that?” That became a really fun aspect, especially when I was in the writers room and we were actually crafting the stories.

It becomes this moving and very dark, in a funny way, story about growing up in America.

I mean, Chad’s not always making the best decisions. In fact, he’s his own worst enemy. He’s not actively being bullied at school. His peers are generally very kind and tolerant. He gets in his own way more than anyone, but you know that it’s coming from such a desperate place that hopefully you can, you can empathize with him and laugh, hopefully, at how ridiculous he is.

As you think about this character who you’ve spent so many years of your life with now, what do you think Chad would be doing through the pandemic right now?

I think he’d be deep into TikTok and just trying to amp up that social media presence as much as possible. If he can’t garner popularity in real life, he’ll definitely try to do it online.

“Chad” premieres on Tuesday, April 6 at 10:30 p.m. on TBS. 

Why U.S. Republicans are now adopting Putin-style “managed” democracy

In the early years of the 21st century, Russian President Vladimir Putin, then a novice at his job, introduced the concept of “Managed Democracy.”

The system he installed allowed him to claim that Russia featured regular elections, as well as three branches of government and a separation of powers. 

That was the (formal) “democracy” part. But what about the “managed” part? 

Putin, democracy “manager”

Putin would not be Putin if he didn’t introduce special schemes to guarantee election outcomes that fit his political script and appetite for power. 

Thus, when it came to counting the popular vote, Putin kept the entire process under the control of his cronies and minions. 

That way, the man who has now ruled Russia for 20-plus years was always assured of two key goals for his Potemkin village democracy — a resounding victory for himself in presidential elections and a tame rubber-stamp Duma, or parliament, after each general election. 

Add to this the mass media that was controlled by his business owner-buddies and that was offering a daily diet of lies and propaganda – and you got the “Managed” part of his democracy as well.

As does Putin, so do the Republicans

Imitation is the highest form of flattery, and Donald Trump was both flattering Putin in words and imitating him in deeds. 

Fox News, the Wall Street Journal and Rupert Murdoch’s other U.S. media assets, along with numerous other media outlets even further to the right, functioned as Trump’s personal propaganda machine. They flattered the American “Dear Leader” and lied about his opponents every bit as much as Putin’s Russia Today does.

When it came to counting votes, it should be noted that Trump is currently under investigation for pressuring Georgia election officials, including Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger, to find enough votes for him to win the state in last year’s presidential election.

The Republicans’ devious anti-democratic schemes

But the sad part about the story concerning the Republicans is not even so much about Donald Trump. For now at least, he is yesterday’s news, sort of.

The Republicans know that their hold over the electorate is shaky. They are adamant to turn this lemon into lemonade. 

The Republicans want to do so by massaging the vote — in other words, deciding who gets to vote and who doesn’t. So far, their operatives have introduced legislation to limit access to voting in 43 U.S. states — or 86% of the total. At least 250 laws have been proposed to curb early voting and voting by mail, to impose voter ID requirements, to purge voter lists etc.

The U.S., a beacon of democracy?

Successive U.S. governments have been bragging for decades about the country’s democratic system, singing the praises of a nation in which everyone has the right to vote and where every vote counts.

That global image has already been shaken considerably by two U.S. presidents since 2000 (George W. Bush and Donald Trump) being elected after losing the popular vote. 

Sliding closer to a Putin-style model of democracy

As things stand, the Republican Party is not satisfied with using outdated late 18th century mechanisms to its fullest advantage. 

It isn’t satisfied either with saturating the judicial branch of the government, including the Supreme Court, where a highly unrepresentative six judges share its ideology.

None of that is enough. More than just being the Party of Trump (“POT”), the good old GOP is determined to build a Russian-style managed democracy in the United States. 

Marx as an inspiration?

In case you are wondering why this is happening in the U.S. of A., look no further than Karl Marx’s works. Marxism claims that politics is a function of economics. 

This is exactly what we have seen in Russia and what is now happening in the United States.

The entire raison d’ètre of the Republican Party in the United States is looking after the interests of rich Americans. Hence the party’s eternal drive to reduce taxes for the plutocrats, whether income taxes, inheritance taxes or allowing all sorts of tax shelters in quite a few U.S. states.

But all of that is not enough for the Republicans. To consolidate their successes and to ensure a long run for themselves, Republicans across the land are now actively subverting democracy.

Shame on the U.S. Republicans

Utilizing Putin’s playbook, Republicans make a mockery of free and fair elections. Putin, for his part, falsified election results and “managed” the electoral process by limiting who – and which parties – could actually stand for elections. 

In contrast, U.S. Republicans do their “managing” a bit more obscurely, but even more harmfully for the whole idea of democracy. They are actively engaged in a campaign to disenfranchise voters from ethnicities and geographies that are not promising “hunting grounds” for the Republicans.

This article is republished from The Globalist: On a daily basis, we rethink globalization and how the world really hangs together.  Thought-provoking cross-country comparisons and insights from contributors from all continents. Exploring what unites and what divides us in politics and culture. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.  And sign up for our highlights email here.

Alabama Amazon workers say they’re fed up and not taking it anymore

The union organizing drive at the mammoth Amazon “fulfillment center” in Bessemer, located 20 miles south of Birmingham, Alabama, has the feel of both a social and religious movement. There are 10 days until the mail-in ballots will be counted to determine whether the company’s 5,800 employees will gain union representation. On Wednesday organizers and workers gathered at the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union’s scruffy office to go over their final push and to talk to reporters from around the world who have descended upon Birmingham.

Jennifer Bates, an African American “learning ambassador” at the Amazon facility – she trains new workers – believes that her courage to fight the corporate giant comes from a spiritual source, “the Almighty, the creator of all things.” She also traces her personal strength to the civil rights movement that rocked Birmingham in the early 1960s. “I really believe that in this organizing drive we are following the foot soldiers who came before us,” she says.

Josh Brewer, the union’s lead organizer, is an ordained minister from Michigan who found his way into the labor union movement while trying to ensure his life had purpose, and he was immediately given some of the toughest organizing challenges. Brewer sees the Amazon campaign as a “David versus Goliath” battle, his biggest career challenge so far.

On this day Brewer has one eye on the office television to see if a tornado sweeping through Mississippi and Alabama is going to require moving into the basement, as he reflects on the five-month and 24-7 commitment that he has made to the unionization effort. “Black workers in the South are fed up, but so is the middle class and so is the rest of the country,” he says.

The David and Goliath analogy is appropriate. Amazon’s worldwide power combines and directs enormous economic, technological and cultural resources toward making sure that the mostly African American and female workers in Bessemer are convinced that a union is the last thing they need.

Since the union drive began five months ago, Amazon has spent millions of dollars on anti-union consultants who have deployed familiar tactics to dissuade workers from voting for the union. According to Amazon worker Darryl Richardson, the “captive audience” meetings that employees are required to attend are where the anti-union message is hammered home.

“In these meetings Amazon implies that they will close down the facility if the union comes in. They say we won’t get our pay raises and that all the union wants is dues money for themselves,” he says. “We’re working for the richest man in the world. Amazon looks good on the outside, but inside it’s a totally different story.”

* * *

In response to questions, an Amazon spokesperson claimed, “Our employees choose to work at Amazon because we offer some of the best jobs available everywhere we hire, and we encourage anyone to compare our total compensation package, health benefits, and workplace environment to any other company with similar jobs.”

Still, Amazon has been sanctioned for intimidation and violations of labor law at other facilities by the National Labor Relations Board. Organizers insist that the penalties are so minimal that there is no incentive for the company to desist.

Brewer regards Amazon’s captive meetings as the most effective strategy that the company has used to intimidate workers, a freedom U.S. companies enjoy but which is forbidden in countries that have more progressive labor laws. “These powerful corporations,” he insists, “can disregard the laws that we do have in place but face no repercussions, no fines, no jail time and they go home at night and know they will have no concerns.”

According to pro-union workers, Amazon has perfected the surveillance workplace. How many “picks” a worker can make – the pulling of products from computerized pods – is calculated by the minute. Company designated “Time Off Tasks” for going to the bathroom or getting a drink of water are also precisely measured. There are no “safe spaces” away from the lens of a camera or the oversight of a supervisor.

Richardson, who was one of the first workers to contact the union about possible representation, points to pervasive management oversight that extends even into restrooms. “They have anti-union flyers in the bathroom, in the break room and cameras over your work station and even in the parking lots.”

Bates says employees are regularly searched by security guards on the lookout for workers stealing product. “They make you empty your pockets, take your shoes off when you are going for your break. It’s a power they are using on us, and you accept it or you lose your job.”

It’s clear that support for the union is not overwhelming and that a victory for organized labor is far from certain. Sirlena Harris moved from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, six months ago to work for Amazon and is satisfied with the pay and benefits at the warehouse. At the Circle K gas station just outside the facility she expresses support for the company. “Amazon as a whole is a good company. We don’t need no union as we have everything we need there.”

* * *

The massive warehouse sits on a hill in Bessemer, a largely African American city with one of the highest poverty rates in Alabama. Bessemer is a former steel town with a rich union history. Six thousand jobs that pay in the $15 an hour range with some benefits were considered by local boosters to be a boon for the area.

Union organizer Michael “Big Mike” Foster argues that Jeff Bezos, the multibillionaire owner of Amazon, set up in Bessemer to leverage the promise of job creation in return for complete control over a desperate workforce. “Do the math,” Foster says. “Fifteen dollars an hour after taxes is roughly 20 grand. There is no place that I know of where $15 an hour for a family is enough.”

Big Mike can be found every morning at 3 a.m. with signs outside the facility’s gates urging workers leaving their overnight shift to vote yes for the union. Even though most of the ballots have already been mailed in, he wants to make sure the workers and the company know the union hasn’t gone anywhere.

From where Foster stands you can see the warehouse stretch the length of 13 football fields surrounded by a massive parking lot. At the entrance to the parking lot a Bessemer City Police Department patrol car sits watch. When asked about his presence as security, the policeman sitting in the car says he is “just moonlighting” and not on the city payroll. As for why he is driving a city police vehicle he replies, “Take it up with management who signed a contract with Amazon.” (The company would not address on the record questions about its use of off-duty police officers.)

For Bates and Richardson the organizing drive is not about wages or benefits, although Amazon has done their best to convince workers that the company has their best interests in mind. While they do believe that Amazon can significantly increase pay, health care coverage and pension benefits, for them, dignity and respect are what they are demanding and what sustains their effort.

“A guy like Jeff Bezos wants us to continue to believe that we’re not valued. And that what he’s given us is enough,” Bates says, waiting at the union office for interviews with Swiss, French and Italian journalists. Richardson, who admits to initially being afraid of losing his job when he called the union, says his fighting spirit sustained him through his doubts. “I ain’t no better than nobody else and I hate to see people getting mistreated.”

In 1963 when Martin Luther King Jr. was reflecting on the anti-segregation campaign in Birmingham, then considered one of the most racist cities in the South, he pondered what the impact of success there would mean. The effort “could, if successful, break the back of segregation all over the nation,” King wrote.

The workers and organizers see this union campaign with the same seriousness of purpose. Events of the past two years have made it clear that the convergence of issues of race, class and gender have crystalized in a symbolic and material way in Bessemer.

How much wealth and power should one person and one company have? What is the best way for African Americans and the broader working class to fight for economic and social justice? Many workers here think they know the answer to those questions.

“What is Bezos afraid of?” Richardson asks. “You know it ain’t really about the money, because he has the money. It’s about power. It’s about employees having a voice.”

Copyright 2021 Capital & Main

“I’m not talking about political contributions”: McConnell adds important caveat to corporate threat

Republicans are retaliating against corporations that have condemned Georgia’s anti-voting law, launching various pressure campaigns and weaponizing legislative threats that would affect Corporate America’s bottom line. 

Sen. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., accused corporations of siding with the Democrats, expressing that there would be “serious consequences” if companies continued to do so. 

“So my warning, if you will, to corporate America is to stay out of politics,” McConnell told reporters at a news conference on Tuesday. “It’s not what you’re designed for. And don’t be intimidated by the left into taking up causes that put you right in the middle of one of America’s greatest political debates.”

“I’m not talking about political contributions,” he quickly added. “Most of them contribute to both sides, they have political action committees, that’s fine. It’s legal, it’s appropriate, I support that. I’m talking about taking a position on a highly incendiary issue like this and punishing a community or a state, because you don’t like a particular law that passed, I just think it’s stupid.”

McConnell’s threats appear anything but idle, with numerous Republicans calling for boycotts of companies that expressed opposition to Georgia’s new law.

“For years the Radical Left Democrats have played dirty by boycotting products when anything from that company is done or stated in any way that offends them,” said former President Trump said in a statement on Saturday released by Save America PAC. “Now they are going big time with the WOKE CANCEL CULTURE and our sacred elections.” Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel echoed Trump: “Guess what I am doing today? Not watching baseball!!!!” 

GOP state senators from Georgia have announced the removal of Coca-Cola products from their Georgia statehouse offices following the company’s rebuke of the legislature’s new bill. “Given Coke’s choice to cave to the pressure of an out of control cancel culture, we respectfully request all Coca-Cola products be removed from our office suite immediately,” said several state lawmakers in a statement.  

Rising beyond that of just rhetoric, however, Republicans are also employing legislative moves to threaten Corporate America’s bottom line, signaling a cultural fissure between the GOP and Big Business, two groups that have in the past been known for symbiotic back-scratching. In 2017, for example, the GOP slashed the corporate tax rate from 35 to 21 percent, a move that likely won the GOP an army of corporate benefactors, according to Politico.  

Now, however, the GOP appears to be weaponizing the tax code. Last Wednesday, Georgia’s Republican-majority House attempted to rescind a major $35 million tax break for Delta Airlines to start collecting levies on jet fuel beginning July 1. The state Senate ultimately declined to take up the measure, but the move signals a marked break from the GOP’s corporate-aligned orthodoxy. 

Rodney Anderson, Chairman of the Dallas Republican Party, similarly tweeted but later deleted a post on Friday suggesting the cancellation of state tax breaks for American Airlines and Dell. 

“They need to stay out of politics, especially when they have no clue what they’re talking about,” Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said of corporations. “I’m sending a message to these Texas-based companies that have made the very same mistake with regard to Texas laws,” Abbott said. “We have American Airlines, we have AT&T, we have Dell Computers and others who have taken a position against the election law reforms that we made in the state of Texas where the CEOs of these companies and the leaders of these companies admitted that they had no idea what the Texas law said or what the Texas proposed law says before taking a position against it.”

Following Major League Baseball’s decision to pull its All-Star game from Atlanta in protest of Georgia’s new voting bill, several GOP members of Congress proposed that the government scrap MLB’s designation as a “sport” and not a “business,” which would eliminate the league’s exemption from antitrust laws. 

“The woke capitalists continue their campaign of retaliation & suppression against anyone who stands for election integrity,” tweeted Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo. “They tried it against me, now they’re at it in Georgia. #MLB should lose its government handout antitrust exemption.” 

Next week, Rep. Jeff Duncan, R-S.C., and 10 co-sponsors intend to introduce the “Teddy Roosevelt Fair Competition and Public Trust Act of 2021,” which would strip the MLB of its exemption status. 

Many Republicans have framed the GOP’s brigade against Corporate Americas as a populist revolt, despite having no evidence that it aligns with popular opinion.

“After two decades of the left being on offense, normal people are starting to fight back and say if these are the rules of the game, we are going to play, too,” said former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich. “I think that’s [Republicans] saying, ‘Oh, you want to pick a fight with me? This is what a fight is going to be like.'”

 

Meghan McCain rails against MLB, Joe Biden while defending Georgia’s new restrictive voting laws

On Monday’s episode of “The View,” co-host Meghan McCain had plenty to say about the conditions surrounding Major League Baseball’s highly controversial decision to change the location of their All-Star game in protest of voting legislation that critics say aims to suppress voters.

The segment began with Whoopi Goldberg asking co-host Joy Behar on her thoughts. Behar noted that after a Democratic win in Georgia, Republicans seemed to be responding with panic after losing such a solidly red state. “The Republicans know they have nothing to offer the American people. All they have is tax breaks for the very very rich people, that’s all they’ve got! They have no platforms, they’re just bitching about Dr. Seuss continuously, so they have to stop people from voting because if people vote, they will vote for the democrats.”

McCain then unloaded a barrage of complaints about the MLB’s decision.

She first claimed that there were other baseball games still planned to occur in the state of Georgia, saying that the organization should “put your money where your mouth is” by removing business from the state entirely. She also complained that protests of the bill unfairly portray the state as a “racist, deplorable, unforgivable place.” 

McCain continued by defending the legislation and claiming that the majority of people against it just had it wrong. This is of course ignoring the fact that it now needlessly puts new hurdles in the way of voters like changing locations for ballot boxes and requiring a driver’s license or other government-issued ID for those requesting absentee ballots, among many other things.

McCain claims that President Biden’s condemnation of the bill is “completely factually inaccurate” citing a Washington Post article that proves Biden’s statements specifically on the restriction of voting hours within the bill as inaccurate. However, the same article states that this mistake was likely because the President was briefed on an earlier version of the bill at the time that he had made those statements.

She also criticized Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-NY, saying that it was, “harder to vote in New York” because of similar clauses that restrict same-day voting and registration, as well as restrictions on handing out food and water to voters. Obviously, if one thing, like the New York state voting system is certifiably bad, we must ensure that everything is equally bad for everyone else.

McCain went on to say that she is “really disappointed” in President Joe Biden, questioning if his support for the MLB is “healing the soul of a nation,” as he famously vowed to do in his inaugural address. McCain complained that this is more “cultural war stuff” and argued that Biden’s stance on the issue is dividing the nation further.

To finish the rant off, McCain demanded the Biden administration boycott the upcoming Beijing Olympics, citing the alleged persecution and genocide against the Uighur Muslim population in China. Various reports rumor that the ethnic minority have been forced into labor camps and have had their human right repeatedly violated.

She claimed, “We have nothing to say about this… We’re still going to the Olympics where mass genocide is happening, but we are going to boycott everything in the state of Georgia.”

The Biden administration has, in fact, condemned the actions of the Chinese government and even issued sanctions against two top leaders, “over continued human rights abuses against the country’s minority Uyghur population.” as reported by NBC in March.

Whoopi Goldberg, who had apparently heard enough, cut McCain off by interjecting. “They do know,” she said before muttering, “oh for frog legs!”

 

Republican delusion — not disinformation — is the bigger danger to American democracy

Perhaps it was inevitable, but now it’s certain: Three months out from the violent insurrection Donald Trump incited at the U.S. Capitol, the majority of Republican voters have settled on a story that they can use to justify supporting what Trump and the rioters did. According to a poll released this week by Reuters and Ipsos, belief in conspiracy theories about the insurrection is widespread among Republican voters, with 55% claiming to “agree” or “somewhat agree” that the rioters were really “antifa” in disguise. Another 51% of Republican respondents agree or somewhat agree that the rioters — who look to have killed one police officer, violently assaulted hundreds of others, and were chanting “hang Mike Pence” as they ransacked the Capitol — “were mostly peaceful, law-abiding Americans.” And a full 60% agree or somewhat agree with Trump’s utterly false claim that Joe Biden stole the 2020 election. 

These numbers are, needless to say, terrifying, precisely because they capture a level of delusion that is truly hard to imagine.

It’s not clear how much overlap there is among adherents to the various conspiracy theories. It could be a situation where half of Republicans have thrown in with the “antifa hoax” lie and another half with the “not that violent” lie. Or it could be that a lot of Republicans believe both at the same time, even though the conspiracy theories contradict each other, as there’s no point in screaming that “antifa did it” if you’re also denying the well-documented violence of the insurrection. But research has long shown that conspiracy theorists don’t care if their theories contradict each other. For instance, people who believe Princess Diana was murdered are also more likely to believe that she’s still secretly alive. Conspiracy theories are rarely about a literal, sincere understanding of the facts, but closer to religious fables or myths — comforting narratives that a person tells themselves in order to justify an underlying belief system. 


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In this case, the underlying belief being rationalized is the Republican turn against democracy itself. Republican voters understand their ideology and party are both unpopular. They know that maintaining power means overruling the wishes of the majority of Americans. But rather than admit out loud — or possibly even to themselves — that they would rather end American democracy, they cling to these comforting conspiracy theories that let them tell a story where they’re the heroes, not the villains trying to strip rights away from other Americans. 

The reaction to the poll has largely been focused on the role right-wing disinformation campaigns run by major outlets like Fox News and Breitbart play in making Republican voters so delusional. 

There is no doubt that the firehose of lies coming from Trump and his media supporters matter. Still, it’s important to understand that Republican voters have autonomy here. They aren’t mindless ciphers, helpless to resist the allure of Fox News propaganda. They actively choose to watch Fox News and to reject truthful information. Anyone who has tried to correct a Republican friend or relative who is sharing misinformation can attest to this grim reality. They almost never thank you for setting them straight or get angry at Tucker Carlson for lying to them. They get defensive and double down on the lies. They prefer lies over truth. 

In a sense, then, it’s questionable whether Republican voters really “believe” that Trump really won the election, or that antifa was behind the insurrection, or that the insurrection wasn’t really violent. At least, they may not believe it in the usual sense that we use the word “believe” to mean a conviction that a thing is true, such as believing the sun will rise in the east or that Prince wrote “When Doves Cry” in one night. Many of them likely are asserting it more as a show of tribal loyalty and, of course, as cover for their more unspeakable but truer beliefs, like the belief that white people are the only people whose votes should really count. As David Graham argued in February at the Atlantic, “Republicans are backing Trump not in spite of the insurrection but because of it.” But they know that saying out loud that they want to overthrow democracy is bad. Instead, they cling to conspiracy theories, many of which contradict each other, that are proxies for their real but unspeakable anti-democratic beliefs.  


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Evidence that tribal loyalty and emotional desires trump empirical evidence with Republican voters was neatly demonstrated by the reaction, in the early days of Trump’s presidency, to Trump’s insistence that his inauguration crowd was bigger than Barack Obama’s. Anyone could see that it was only a fraction of the size, but when researchers asked Republican voters about this in the days after the inauguration, over 40% were willing to make fools of themselves to insist that Trump’s crowd was bigger. 

Since then, the defiance and defensiveness of Trump voters has only ratcheted up, to the point where many, if not most, will deny the sky is blue if Trump asked them to. It’s not because they “believe” the lies, so much as they believe in their own hatred of liberals, and will say or do anything in order to perform a rejection of what liberals believe. That’s how so many Trump voters talked themselves into treating the pandemic, which was obviously real, as a hoax. And why they can look at a howling mob of violent insurrectionists waving Trump flags, and deny the evidence of their own eyes. 

Misinformation is absolutely one of the worst problems in our country. The steady stream of right-wing lies is tearing this country apart. But it’s critical to understand why misinformation is so powerful. Most Republican voters believe that their rapidly shrinking tribe should hold all the power, and are willing to sacrifice democracy itself to hang onto power.

What misinformation from Fox News and other outlets does is give Republicans excuses and rationalizations for continuing to hold repulsive beliefs that they know full well can’t be justified on the merits. Fox News shamelessly pumps out lies on a nightly basis, and it’s a threat to our democracy. But what’s even scarier is that they have an audience so hungry for the lies that they would turn on even Fox News if the network ever stopped lying. 

NRA’s Wayne LaPierre hid aboard luxury yacht after Parkland shooting: Trial deposition

National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre had a particularly rough opening day in court on Monday, as the lawyer for the New York attorney general’s office called the NRA’s bankruptcy case nothing more than a “masterclass in bad faith and dishonest conduct.” The pro-gun organization was in court attempting to move forward with filing for a bankruptcy petition in Texas, in hopes of evading a lawsuit from New York Attorney General Letitia James. 

The day of setbacks for the NRA in court began with the organization starting from a not-so-great set of circumstances. Deadlocked in a war of words between James, the NRA’s former president Oliver North and former NRA advertising and PR agency Ackerman McQueen, the group had plenty of foes in court on Monday, with its future on the line. 

Law & Crime summarized ahead the legal battle Monday:

The attorney general’s suit threatens to shut the NRA down for violating New York charity law, accusing LaPierre of using the gun group as his “personal piggy bank” and funding his private jet trips to the tropics and African safaris with donor money. The bankruptcy judge was told today that donor money also paid LaPierre’s “wife’s glam squad.” 

The original falling out began nearly two years ago, after LaPierre and other NRA leaders accused North of a “failed coup attempt” alongside Ackerman McQueen. 

By the NRA’s own admission, its Texas bankruptcy petition is peculiar, since it’s not likely to run out of money anytime soon. Law & Crime’s report continues: 

When the NRA filed a federal bankruptcy petition in Texas earlier this year, the group’s website boasted of being “in its strongest financial condition in years.” The GOP power broker claims that it is “dumping New York” and “utilizing the protection of the bankruptcy court” in order to organize its “legal and regulatory matters in efficient forum.” 

In other words, as New York Assistant Attorney General Monica Connell argued before Judge Harlin Hale on Monday, “By the NRA’s own words, it is not only solvent but financially strong.” 

The NRA also took incoming fire from attorney Brian Mason, representing Ackerman McQueen,” who “argued that the bankruptcy petition had been filed in bad faith,” Law & Crime noted. “Bankruptcy courts cannot be the subject of fraud,” Mason said in court on Monday. 

Furthermore, while LaPierre’s NRA team was doing battle in court, media outlets acquired a deposition by LaPierre stemming from the case that was full of unflattering detail. LaPierre testified that in the wake of the deadly Sandy Hook Elementary and Parkland school shootings, he retreated to a 108-foot luxury yacht out of fear for his own safety, claiming he needed the protection from the outside world. 

“They simply let me use it as a security retreat because they knew the threat that I was under. And I was basically under presidential threat without presidential security in terms of the number of threats I was getting,” the New York Daily News reported LaPierre asserting in the newly revealed deposition. “And this was the one place that I hope could feel safe, where I remember getting there going, ‘Thank God I’m safe, nobody can get me here.’ And that’s how it happened. That’s why I used it.”

Responding to LaPierre’s deposition, Shannon Watts of Moms Demand tweeted, “The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good friend with a yacht?”

Following the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol siege, many gun control advocates argued that the NRA had been responsible for helping to “lay the groundwork” for that chaotic day. The next few weeks in court could well determine the NRA’s future. 

Biden to move vaccination deadline as US pushes ahead of schedule

President Joe Biden plans to announce on Tuesday that he is moving up his deadline for states to allow all adults to be eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine. Instead of being May 1, as originally planned, the deadline will now be April 19.

The president is expected to make his formal announcement at a COVID-19 vaccination site in Virginia, according to the Associated Press. During that same speech, Biden is expected to tell the American public that more than 150 million doses have been administered since he was inaugurated on Jan. 20. If vaccines continue to be effectively dispensed at this rate, Biden will achieve his goal of administering 200 million shots by April 30, his 100th day as president.

Vaccine policy was already moving in the direction that Biden is officially declaring on Tuesday. Last week the president said that 90% of adults would be eligible for either the Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson & Johnson vaccines by April 19. He added at the time that those adults would also have a vaccination site within five miles of their residences.

During his speech in Virginia, Biden is also expected to mention that more than 4 million doses of a coronavirus vaccine were administered during a single 24-hour period over the weekend, according to CNN. He also plans on discussing how America is the first country to put more than 150 million shots into people’s arms, with the number hitting 165 million doses as of Monday night. This includes more than 75% of people older than 65 having received a shot and 55% of them having been fully vaccinated, even though that had been the case for only 8% of them when he took office.

Biden has prioritized vaccinating Americans and combatting the coronavirus since he first took office. Last month he passed a COVID-19 relief bill that invested nearly $20 billion in administering coronavirus vaccinations, with the president later instructing states to make sure all adults are eligible for vaccines by no later than May 1. Biden defeated his predecessor, Donald Trump, in large part by focusing on the previous administration’s mismanagement of the coronavirus pandemic and promising to be more effective at inoculating Americans and guiding the country to an economic recovery.

While the administration has made progress in promoting scientifically approved public health measures and vaccinating millions of people, Biden’s spokespeople have also expressed concern about states reopening their economies too soon. Last month Biden’s head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Dr. Rochelle Walensky, pointed to a recent increase in COVID-19 cases as cause for alarm. She noted that, although more people are getting vaccinated than ever before, there is still the risk of another surge if the public does not exercise caution.

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

She added, “I am really worried about reports that more states are rolling back the exact public health measures we have recommended to protect people from COVID-19.” Walensky has also previously expressed concern that mutant strains of the coronavirus could be evade vaccines and make it harder to beat the pandemic.

COVID-19 put remote abortion to the test. Supporters say it passed.

Last summer, Cindy Adam and Lauren Dubey received the news they had hoped for, but hadn’t expected to get so soon. Their new telemedicine clinic would be able to offer remote medication abortion services, at least for the time being.

Medication abortion — which most commonly involves taking two medications, 24 to 48 hours apart, during the first 10 weeks of pregnancy — has been available in the U.S. since 2000. But, despite a growing chorus of advocates and experts who say remote access is just as safe as in-clinic care, the Food and Drug Administration requires providers to dispense mifepristone, the first of the two medications, inside the walls of a clinic, hospital, or medical office, citing the risk of complications. Most abortion providers interpreted this language to mean they could not mail mifepristone to patients’ homes, rendering fully remote abortion care impossible.

That changed in July 2020, when, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, a federal judge suspended the requirement, allowing remote abortion — also referred to as no-touch, no-contact, or direct-to-patient care.

Adam and Dubey, who are both nurse practitioners in California, took note. They launched medication abortion services in October 2020, as part of a telehealth clinic they called Choix. Within weeks, more than a dozen patients received medication abortions without having to leave their homes. “We hope to make it not this underground thing where you are getting medications from another country,” Dubey said in an interview last fall. “If that’s what it has to be, fine, but we want to be a mainstream source for being able to access medication pills by mail.”

Other providers raced to take advantage of the ruling, too. Just the Pill, which started seeing patients in October, offered telemedicine abortion services in Minnesota. Hey Jane launched in late 2020 with services for patients in Washington and New York.

It didn’t last long: On Jan. 12, the U.S. Supreme Court, in its first decision on abortion with Justice Amy Coney Barrett on the bench, struck down the lower court’s decision. Over a dissent from Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justice Elena Kagan, the Court’s majority argued that the lower court did not have the authority to lift the requirements of the FDA, “with its background, competence, and expertise to assess public health.” Choix suspended its medication abortion service. It was unclear if, when, or how they’d be able to offer it again.

“It definitely came as a big and devastating surprise,” Adam wrote in an email to Undark.

Their saga is the latest chapter in a long-running effort to expand the horizons of medication abortion — one that has run up against legal and regulatory hurdles for years in the United States.

Advocates say this window of time offered further evidence that fully remote abortion can work in the U.S., and that, for many patients, a visit to a physical clinic is unnecessary. Those claims draw on years of research, including data collected during the pandemic. But they’ve butted up against the objections of anti-abortion activists and the FDA policy that classes mifepristone as having “serious safety concerns,” leaving an uncertain future for this type of practice.

“For six months, medically-eligible patients were able to safely access medication abortion care through telemedicine and the mail,” Julia Kaye, a staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) Reproductive Freedom Project, wrote in an email to Undark.

“It is outrageous,” she added, “that abortion patients are once again being singled out for needless and arbitrary barriers to care.”

* * *

More than 600,000 people in the U.S. access abortion care each year. However, the ease of access varies significantly depending on a patient’s location and circumstances. Many have to travel long distances to clinics, especially in states with vocal anti-abortion movements. A majority of U.S. counties do not have an abortion clinic, and even in some cities, the nearest clinic may be more than 100 miles away.

The majority of early abortions in the U.S. are in-clinic procedures known as vacuum aspirations, which use suction to empty the uterus. But today, approximately 40 percent of abortions are induced with pills. The two-drug regimen consists of mifepristone, which blocks the hormone progesterone that is needed for a pregnancy to continue, and misoprostol, which causes contractions to push the pregnancy out.

Physicians and other experts, drawing on years of peer-reviewed research, say the combination of drugs do not typically require close, in-person medical supervision. When mifepristone was first approved by the FDA, abortion rights advocates like Elisa Wells hoped that it would ultimately improve access to abortion by moving it out of the realm of specialized abortion clinics and into common health care settings, like primary care and family medicine. Decades later, she said, that promise has yet to be fulfilled.

“It’s already been 20 years since 2000,” said Wells, the co-founder and co-director of Plan C, a campaign that aims to raise awareness about medication abortion. “For 20 years, we’ve known the pills are safe and effective,” but “access is no better.”

The principal obstacle is the FDA, which classifies mifepristone under the agency’s Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) program. REMS is meant for drugs known to have serious safety concerns. Of the 20,000 prescription drugs approved by the FDA, just 60 fall under REMS, among them powerful antipsychotics and cancer drugs.

FDA documents explain that “the goal of the REMS for mifepristone is to mitigate the risk of serious complications.”

But those regulations have frustrated many physicians, who say they are motivated more by politics than patient safety. Jessica Beaman is a primary care physician in the San Francisco Bay area who also provides abortions. Because of the FDA regulations, Beaman cannot provide medication abortion as part of her primary clinic. She has to go to a separate practice, housed on a different floor of the same building, to prescribe the pills. Beaman said that she regularly prescribes other medications — for diabetes and heart disease, for example — that have far higher rates of complication than mifepristone.

Those drugs “are high risk and necessary for patients,” said Beaman, adding that she’s “able to stock those in my clinic without any kind of additional regulations.”

The disparity between the risks of medication abortion and the intensity of the regulations around it have led to repeated calls over the years from activists and major medical associations to remove the REMS. In 2016, the FDA revisited and revised the protocol. Patients still had to be given mifepristone within the confines of a clinic, but they could swallow the pill wherever they wanted. (The FDA declined to comment for this story, citing pending litigation over the REMS designation.)

Still, it remains challenging for many clinics to stock the drugs. And, experts say, the restrictions are one reason medication abortion costs, on average, more than $500.

“Because of the REMS, there’s just hoop, hoop, hoop, hoop, hoop, after hoop, and that just adds to the cost,” Wells said.

In 2017, Graham Chelius, a family medicine doctor in Hawaii, filed a lawsuit, with the help of the ACLU, challenging the FDA’s REMS restrictions. Chelius practices on the island of Kauai, which does not have an abortion clinic. Because the REMS prevents him from stocking and dispensing mifepristone onsite at his practice, Chelius has to turn those patients away. Anyone seeking an abortion on Kauai has to fly hundreds of miles round trip flight to another island to get the pills.

Lifting the REMS restrictions would lead to “a dramatic increase in access to abortion services,” Chelius told Undark.

The case was slowly making its way through the courts when the pandemic hit and a provisional window opened for a new kind of early abortion care.

* * *

Even knowing the window was likely to be temporary, some clinic leaders took note — including Adam and Dubey. The two met in 2012 while attending a nursing graduate program at the University of California, San Francisco. After graduating from UCSF, Adam stayed in the Bay Area, working for public health organizations. She also spent a couple years working for an online service for birth control pills, where, she said, she saw the positive impact that remote health care could have on people’s lives.

Dubey moved to Los Angeles after graduation and began working for Planned Parenthood, where she also began thinking about opportunities for telehealth. Many patients traveled long distances to get to her clinic, including from neighboring states, like Arizona, where abortion was more heavily restricted. “I would frequently see patients in the clinic waiting for medication abortion for hours at Planned Parenthood because we were so busy,” said Dubey. “Sometimes they’d have to leave to go pick up their kids from school.”

In 2019, the two began to discuss the idea of building an online clinic that provided sexual and reproductive health care via telemedicine. From the outset, they wanted to provide medication abortion, but they didn’t see a clear legal way.

By the summer of 2020, Choix’s platform was gearing up to launch without abortion services. Then the district court ruling came down, which said that the FDA must temporarily suspend the dispensing requirements during the pandemic. This meant abortion providers could now mail or arrange delivery of mifepristone to patients.

 

Adam and Dubey decided to move forward with a remote model. So did Julie Amaon, who came on as medical director at Just the Pill last summer to improve access to medication abortion in rural Minnesota. She was trying to figure out a way to offer no-touch abortions when the July ruling came down.

Kiki Freedman, founder and CEO of Hey Jane, also saw an opportunity. Freedman, who has a background in the technology industry, started working on Hey Jane in 2019, as a student at Harvard Business School. “We were interested in companies like Roman and Hims, that were advertising a ton at the time, and increasing access to stigmatized products for men,” she said, referring to successful startups that ship drugs for erectile dysfunction, hair loss, and other issues. “We thought, ‘Hey, this is a model that could be applied to the abortion world.'”

At Choix, Adam and Dubey moved quickly. With some financial and planning support from Plan C, they established a supply of mifepristone and found an online pharmacy partner. They then adapted the remote care flow they had developed for other services, like birth control pills and emergency contraception, to work for medication abortion.

To use the services, patients clicked through an “abortion care” button on Choix’s website. They signed a series of consent forms and filled out a health history questionnaire, which included questions to ensure they had access to medical care, such as a nearby emergency room, in the rare event of complications.

Under most telemedicine abortion models, the patient and the health care provider participate in a secure video call. Instead, Choix offered an asynchronous approach: Patients sent in their information, and then Adam or Dubey reviewed the questionnaire. If they deemed the patient eligible for medication abortion, they sent the prescription to a digital pharmacy, which mailed the pills to the patient. Follow-ups happened through text messages, email, or phone. The whole process cost $199, with a sliding-scale payment option available for people unable to pay full cost.

Remote service does not work for all people seeking abortions, Dubey said. People who don’t have easy access to the internet, who don’t have stable housing, or whose homes lack safety or privacy may want or need to access in-clinic care, along with people who have certain medical conditions, such as a blood clotting disorder, that could lead to complications. Some patients simply prefer surgical abortions because they take less time to complete. However, advocates say, remote service has clear benefits, which Wells says boil down to “convenience, confidentiality, and control.”

Choix had provided medication abortion services to some 100 patients by Dec. 29, Adam wrote in an email at the time. Even though Choix does not ask patients about the circumstances that surround their decision to have an abortion, Adam said patients often volunteered that information and why the no-contact model worked for them.

“We heard stories from a patients who — one who has two children with disabilities and is currently managing at home during Covid without much support,” Adam said in November. “She said ‘I am so grateful I didn’t have to leave the house to do this. I can’t have another child.’ She was doing the best for her family right now.”

* * *

The push for remote medication abortion in the U.S. draws on research that stretches back more than a decade. In 2008, clinics in Iowa began offering telehealth abortion: Patients could go into a clinic and meet virtually with a doctor, who was at a different location. After the virtual visit and routine testing, supervised in-person by nurses or physician assistants, the doctor remotely unlocked a drawer that held the pills. The patient then took the mifepristone while the doctor watched on video conference, and later took the misoprostol pills at home.

Researchers analyzed data from the Iowa clinics about adverse events and outcomes, finding it was just as safe as in-person care. Data from the U.S. has been joined by studies from around the world reaching a similar conclusion. One systematic analysis published in May 2019 found that rates for surgical intervention after medication abortion were higher than expected. But the study noted this may reflect differences in local practices, and concluded that overall safety outcomes were similar between telemedicine and in-person care.

The studies did not include randomized clinical trials and most were based on self-reported outcomes. But researchers like Daniel Grossman, the lead author on the Iowa study, said that does not raise serious questions about safety.

Grossman, who directs the Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health (ANSIRH) center at UCSF, has a career that has spanned advocacy and research, including stints as a researcher at Ibis Reproductive Health, a nonprofit with a mission to “advance sexual and reproductive autonomy, choices, and health worldwide,” and as a consultant to Planned Parenthood. Studies of clinical outcomes of telemedicine, he said, consistently “show that, not surprisingly, the effectiveness of the abortion is the same,” said Grossman. “In terms of the risks, we don’t see any evidence of an increased risk of complications.”

Despite such evidence, 19 states have laws that ban telemedicine abortion. In response, researchers have worked to gather more data to demonstrate the safety of remote models. In 2016, Gynuity Health Projects, a reproductive health research group supported by donors like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Planned Parenthood, and the Population Council, launched the TelAbortion Study, with approval from the FDA, to evaluate the use of medication abortion provided by telemedicine and mail. Patients participating in the study complete a video evaluation with a provider online, visit a nearby medical facility for routine tests like ultrasounds and bloodwork if needed, and then receive the pills in the mail to take at home. One of the objectives of the study was to demonstrate that mailing abortion medication was feasible and posed no additional risks.

“Every other aspect of the medical abortion did not require the patient to be physically present in the clinic, except the dispensing of the drug,” said Elizabeth Raymond, a senior medical associate at Gynuity. The organization started the study in 2016, she added, because the status quo “didn’t seem sensible.”

The TelAbortion study is now operational in 17 states and the District of Columbia and has served more than 1,700 patients. In a March article in the journal Contraception sharing some of the study’s findings, the researchers from Gynuity and other organizations concluded that the “direct-to-patient telemedicine service was safe, effective, and acceptable.” (Both Grossman and Raymond are members of the journal’s editorial board.)

The next frontier, advocates and experts say, is the one step of the medication abortion process that cannot be done from home — lab tests and ultrasounds. Typically, before administering mifepristone, physicians check to make sure the patient is not more than 10 weeks pregnant and does not have certain conditions, like an ectopic pregnancy or a bleeding disorder, that could lead to complications.

Over the past few years, research from Gynuity, along with Grossman’s team at UCSF and elsewhere, has suggested that all this testing may be unnecessary. Grossman said multiple studies have found that most women are able to accurately confirm their pregnancies with at-home tests and to date their pregnancies, based on their last menstrual period, with great accuracy. The World Health Organization, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and peer organizations in the U.K. and elsewhere have concluded that ultrasounds to rule out ectopic pregnancy are unnecessary in people without risk factors or symptoms.

Based on this data, Grossman, Raymond, and others put together what is known as the “no-test protocol,” in which eligible patients can forego pre-abortion testing and are screened primarily based on their medical history.

“All the information we have so far certainly indicates that it’s safe and safe enough for providers to be using right now,” Grossman said of the protocol.

Research into the no-test protocol was underway before the pandemic hit. Women on Web, a nonprofit founded in 2005, has mailed abortion pills to tens of thousands of patients around the world, primarily in countries where abortion is illegal. (The organization also runs a U.S. program, called Aid Access, which has sent abortion pills to thousands of patients through unofficial channels). By necessity, the model is fully remote, and Women on Web staff only screen women by their self-reported medical history. “No serious adverse events were reported that resulted from the omission of the tests,” Raymond and Grossman, along with a group of other experts and advocates recently wrote in a commentary in the journal Contraception, reporting on the data. (Two authors of the paper are consultants for companies that manufacture mifepristone.)

During the pandemic, more providers have adopted the protocol. “The medical community is getting on board with a no-test protocol,” said Wells, of Plan C. “ACOG, the Royal College in the U.K. — everybody changed the standard of care overnight.”

Some physicians have pushed back against adoption of the no-test protocol. The Charlotte Lozier Institute, which serves as the education and research arm of Susan B. Anthony List, a nonprofit dedicated to ending abortion in the U.S. by supporting anti-abortion politicians, published a paper in July referring to the approach as “cavalier.” The paper was written by Ingrid Skop, a member of the board of the American Association of Pro-life Obstetricians and Gynecologists. In the paper, Skop wrote that the studies used by groups like ACOG to show the safety of the no-test protocol are based on biased data and under-reported complication and efficacy rates that make medication abortion seem less risky than she believes it is. (Emails to the Charlotte Lozier Institute and Susan B. Anthony List about the research went unanswered.)

Grossman contests their finding. He also said there’s little evidence that a raft of pre-abortion testing leads to improved safety. “I do agree that it will be important to collect data on how the protocol works in practice and document clinical outcomes,” he said. “Maybe aspects of the protocol will need to be tweaked or clarified to better identify the patients who would be best served by an ultrasound, but all the information we have so far certainly indicates that it’s safe and safe enough for providers to be using right now.”  

Choix, Just the Pill, and Hey Jane each adopted the no-test protocol as part of their services for patients who knew the date of their last menstrual period and showed no signs of contraindications. If patients cannot date their last period, Choix will refer them to get ultrasounds before proceeding with the process.

“This is a completely new model of care that we’re doing,” said Adam during a conversation last fall. “We have to be very careful with patients’ health and safety and require an ultrasound if they are not positive of their period date, or if there are other factors.”

* * *

The Supreme Court decision in January did not address these scientific questions, instead deferring to the authority of the FDA. In a 12-page dissent Justice Sonia Sotomayor challenged the FDA’s policy. She asked why the agency had waived in-person requirements for certain prescription drugs, including opioids, due to concerns about Covid-19, but has “refused to extend that same grace to women seeking medication abortions.” And, in the six months since the in-person requirements were suspended, she wrote, “the government has not identified a single harm experienced by women who have obtained mifepristone by mail or delivery.”

Despite the Supreme Court shutdown, advocates say the brief window of remote abortion has helped raise interest in the practice among traditional abortion providers. “The genie is out of the bottle,” said Wells. Over the past few months, Plan C has helped organize webinars about how to offer remote abortion care that have attracted hundreds of participants from across the country.

“This is the future,” Wells said. “It’s perfect during a pandemic, and it’s perfect not during a pandemic.”

Following the Supreme Court’s decision, Choix halted its medication abortion service, though Adam and Dubey say the clinic has recently begun providing mifepristone in the office. They continue to mail misoprostol. At Just The Pill, Amaon and her team reverted to their original plan and are currently delivering pills with a mobile clinic. Hey Jane, after temporarily suspending services, decided to continue operating their pills-by-mail service for eligible patients, testing a novel legal interpretation of the REMS. The interpretation, which hinges on a specific definition of the word “dispense,” is yet to be tested in court.

“The patient need right now is so salient and urgent that it wouldn’t be right for us to continue to shut down,” Freedman said.

Advocates are also calling on President Joe Biden’s administration to lift the in-person dispensing requirement for the duration of the pandemic and to direct the FDA to review the REMS for mifepristone, geared towards more permanent change. In early February, they were joined by a group of House Democrats, who asked the FDA to “immediately eliminate the medically unnecessary in-person dispensing requirement for mifepristone” in a letter.

“We absolutely think that the impact will be more long-lasting,” Adam wrote in an email, “and that this has helped move the frontier of what is possible with abortion access forward.”

* * *

Rebecca Grant is a freelance journalist based in Portland, Oregon, who covers reproductive rights, health, and justice.

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

Fauci says federal government won’t mandate vaccine passports

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the Biden administration’s chief medical adviser, said Monday that Covid-19 vaccine passports are “not going to be mandated from the federal government.”

“I doubt that the federal government will be the main mover of a vaccine passport concept,” Fauci, who heads the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in an interview on the “Politico Dispatch” podcast.  

It could be a different story, however, with individual entities like theaters or educational institutions. 

“You could foresee how an independent entity might say, ‘Well, we can’t be dealing with you unless we know you’re vaccinated.’ But it’s not going to be mandated from the federal government,” Fauci said.

The interview came amid a rising number of coronavirus cases in the U.S. for a thirdstraight week and fears of a potential fourth surge.

That surge could be prevented, Fauci said, with continued progress on Americans getting inoculated and sustained public health measures to contain the virus. Fauci pointed to the need to “put your foot on the accelerator when it comes to vaccinations”—which he called “incredibly efficacious.”  But “we can’t declare victory prematurely,” he added, cautioning against the lifting of coronavirus restrictions just yet.

Fauci’s comments came amid swirling criticism from the left and right over the idea of vaccine passports.

The effort, though, is already underway in some parts of the world, as France24reported:

Some countries have already introduced such policies, with Iceland becoming the first European nation to issue vaccine certificates in late January. Greece on Tuesday unveiled a digital vaccination certificate for those who have received two doses of the vaccine. Among the countries that are currently issuing or asking for vaccine certificates are Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Spain, and Sweden.

Across the English Channel, Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced Monday his government would consider Covid-19 “status certificates” as a pathway out of the health crisis.

In the U.S., the concept of a vaccine passport isn’t popular; just 44% of likely voters back the idea, according to a Rasmussen poll out last week. Bolstering such lackluster support are privacy concerns about vaccination documents. From PBS NewsHour:  

[T]here are growing concerns about data privacy as documents verifying Covid-19 vaccination would exist and generally be accessed digitally. These digital health records would operate outside of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, or HIPAA, which protects people’s private medical information from being disclosed by healthcare providers, health plans, or businesses. And there are instances when HIPAA allows that information to be released, such as when it is in the public interest. More broadly, some people are concerned that their data could be used against them by law enforcement, accessed by hackers, or sold to third-party vendors if regulators fail to offer appropriate oversight.

Further concerns, according to The Lancet, are that vaccine “certificates” threaten to exacerbate vaccine inequality. An editorial this month explained:

From a societal standpoint, granting vaccine certificate bearers access to select activities, venues, or international travel would undoubtedly provide impetus to the reopening of some sectors of the economy, such as hospitality, non-essential retail, and tourism. But it also risks generating hierarchical societies in which vaccinated individuals have exclusive privileges that are denied to those who have not received the vaccine. In countries where vaccine rollout is advancing rapidly, this inequity might be resolved in few months, but elsewhere it could be protracted for longer periods. And at an international level, against the backdrop of the currently limited availability of Covid-19 vaccine doses and their inequitable global distribution, the deployment of vaccine certificates for travel will afford citizens of high-income countries greater freedom of movement than citizens of low-income and middle-income countries.

At a Monday press briefing, meanwhile, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Dr. Rochelle Walensky expressed concern the nation is “entering our fourth week of increased trends and cases.” But the positive news, she said, is that an increasing number of Americans are being vaccinated against Covid-19.

“To date, more than 106 million people have received at least one dose, and more than 61.4 million, or 18.5%, are fully vaccinated,” said Walensky.

She pointed to a February event at a bar in Illinois that’s been linked to 46 Covid-19 cases as a reminder of “the continued need for layer prevention strategies,” including mask-wearing and physical distancing.

Love a jammy egg? This coconutty stew is for you

It’s the end of the long workday (or the start of an extra-long week) and we’re hungry. Like, “can’t-think-straight” hungry. Luckily, Food52 contributor EmilyC wants to do all the thinking for us. In Dinner’s Ready, her monthly column on weeknight wonders, she shares three simple, flavor-packed recipes that are connected by a single idea or ingredient. Stick with Emily, and you’ll have a good dinner on the table in no time. Today, Emily shows us how to make wholly creative dinners out of the incredible egg.

* * *

When I think of weeknight dinner superheroes, no food comes closer than eggs. They’re nutritious, filling, inexpensive, and versatile. They come to our rescue when we haven’t planned ahead. They can transform a side dish into a complete meal, be a meal themselves, or take even days-old leftovers to new heights. (The “put an egg on it” mantra has saved the day in my house about a gazillion-and-one times during the last year alone.)

But I’ll be honest — as much as I rely on eggs for quick dinners for my family, I’m pretty unadventurous. My routine goes something like this: Fry eggs over-easy and perch them on top of a salad or whatever leftovers we’re having, or blanket them with melty cheese and sandwich between mayo-slathered slices of toast — maybe with sliced avocado or bacon if we’re feeling fancy. Don’t get me wrong, I appreciate these no-recipe standbys, but many nights I want something a little more put together and satisfying.

So for this month’s column, I challenged myself to come up with three hearty, dinner-worthy egg recipes that go beyond my usual fried egg routine — ones where eggs are center stage, can satisfy a hungry brood, and come together easily any night of the week.

For starters, I wanted to highlight eggs’ range — from soft-boiled to baked to whisked and sizzled. Each meal needed to be riffable and rely on pantry and long-lasting ingredients — because, despite my old (pre-pandemic) ways, I’m not down for running to the grocery store on a Tuesday night. Lastly, I sought bold, bright and lively flavors — for preparations distinctly different from standard breakfast and brunch fare.

Below are the three recipes I came up with that happily expanded my egg horizons and left me wondering, “where have these been all my life?” They’re meals I’m now happily planning for, not just defaulting to, on weary weeknights. And while they’re hearty and satisfying enough to stand alone at the dinner table, they’re convenient and — well, eggy enough — to shake up morning and midday routines, too.

* * *

Torn Egg & Farro Salad

This is not your usual egg salad. Here, the eggs are whisked, seasoned with lemon zest and Parmesan, and cooked in a pool of olive oil — then torn into bite-sized pieces and nestled up with toasted farro and fresh, springy ingredients. (The technique is similar to the thin omelettes found throughout Asian cuisines that are flash-cooked in a wok or skillet on one side, then torn or cut into strips or noodles.) It’s a vibrant, meal-worthy salad I can’t get enough of, and leftovers hold up for days.

Sheet-Pan Eggs & Potatoes, Huevos Rotos-Style

In this play on huevos rotos (a fried egg, potato, and chorizo dish found in taverns throughout Spain), a sheet pan’s large surface area results in a mostly hands-off dinner that easily feeds a family of four. It’s hard not to fall for the ultra-caramelized coins of chorizo, the tender, spiced potatoes, and the crispy-edged greens — but the eggs, which cook quickly and evenly in the oven’s high heat, are the crowning jewels.

Moqueca-Inspired Egg Stew

This cozy, flavorful dinner takes its inspiration from Brazilian moqueca, a hearty seafood stew I turn to every year during Lent. In this weeknight, vegetarian-friendly spin, jammy-yolked eggs stand in for the seafood and are the perfect complement to a creamy, mildly spiced coconut-tomato sauce fragrant from lime. Mound over rice, and eat like a king.

 

The best way to fake a freshly cleaned kitchen

A clean house is visibly easy to spot: Everything is in place; there are no dusty corners, splatter-stained stovetops, or crumb-strewn floors. But our noses can often detect clean and dirty spaces, too. Much like the immediate comfort derived from the smells of short ribs braising or bread baking, the gratifying smell of freshly laundered linens or your favorite household floor cleaner after a morning of cleaning is hard to overstate. Conversely, pet funk, mustiness, and unwashed linen are dead giveaways of a space that needs attention.

Luckily, there is a quick way to de-stink your home and mask odors — aka, fake a clean home — in a pinch. A DIY room spray! The best part? It’s so easy to make. All you need is a dark-colored glass spritzer bottle (darker bottles protect the oils better) and three simple ingredients — water, alcohol, and essential oils. And sure, you can buy an air freshener, but who needs another reason to bring a single-use bottle, not to mention chemicals, into the home.

Plus, essential oils are fun and flexible: If you don’t have a standout favorite, you can blend and combine different oils until you find just the right fragrance to hit the right notes of a fresh home — paired with a good basic cleaning routine, naturally.

Put the spray to use on days when you wake up to the smell of last night’s dinner, on your tired upholstered furniture (just don’t drench it), or on your pillows for a better night’s sleep. Here’s how to make it.

What you’ll need:

– A 4-ounce dark spray bottle 
– 3 tablespoons water 
– 2-3 tablespoons vodka (witch hazel or rubbing alcohol are good substitutes) 
– 30-40 drops of a single essential oil such as lavender, or a combination of oils like rosemary and peppermint or lemon and lavender (combine in a bowl if you’re mixing oils)

How to make it: 

Step 1: Mix your oils in a bowl. 
Step 2: Combine the water, vodka and oil(s) in the bottle using a funnel to pour. (The bottles I use come with one.) 
Step 3: Cap the lid on tight and shake well to mix (I find that dancing while shaking helps). 
Step 4: If you’re unsure, before you use this for any purpose that involves skin contact, test it first. 
Step 4: Use it. 
Step 5: Store it in a cool, dark spot.

Note: This spray will last, however the scent might fade over time, so I’d advise you to make it in smaller batches.

Of course, there are other ways to make sure your home smells amazing: cleaning out your trash can regularly, for instance, or using a DIY scented all-purpose cleaner. A sweet-smelling grocery-store bouquet or (this is easy) scented candle will do the trick, as well. 

More cleaning tips:

White House offers rare public praise for Republican leader: “Senator McConnell is right”

Democratic President Joe Biden’s White House on Monday offered public praise for the GOP Senate minority leader.

The comment came after McConnell urged Republicans to get vaccinated.

“I saw on some program last week that Republican men, curiously enough, might be reluctant to take the vaccine. I’m a Republican man, and I want to say to everyone: we need to take this vaccine,” Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said.

The White House retweeted a clip of McConnell’s comments posted to Twitter by ABC News.

“Senator McConnell is right — and we thank him for his leadership. It’s important every American do their part and get vaccinated when it’s their turn,” the White House noted in a retweet.

Bernie Sanders has “no problem with going to West Virginia” to pressure Manchin on Biden proposals

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., urged Democrats to pressure Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., to back President Joe Biden’s policy proposals after the conservative Democrat — who has embraced his newfound role as a crucial fulcrum in the Senate — opposed a federal minimum wage increase to $15 and an increase to the corporate tax rate to pay for infrastructure investments.

Sanders told MSNBC’s Mehdi Hasan on Sunday that Democrats have done a lot of work “internally in terms of bringing the Democratic caucus together,” but acknowledged that so-called moderates like Manchin pose a roadblock to some of Biden’s most ambitious reforms.

“I have no problem with going to West Virginia, and I think we need a grassroots movement that makes it clear to Joe Manchin and everybody else in the United States Senate, including Republicans, that the progressive agenda is what the American people want,” Sanders said. “They want to raise that minimum wage to $15 an hour. They believe that health care is a human right, should be universal. They demand that the rich start paying their fair share of taxes.”

Manchin was one of seven Democratic senators to oppose raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour after Biden included the proposal in his coronavirus relief package.

“I think that every Republican wants to raise the minimum wage. Everyone’s just not in sync with Bernie Sanders at $15,” Manchin told CNN in March, even though that figure was backed by the White House and most establishment Democrats, not just the Sanders “progressive” wing of the party.

Manchin, who has also ruled out scrapping the filibuster to pass voting rights reform, on Monday vowed to oppose Biden’s proposed corporate tax hike in the ongoing infrastructure negotiations. The West Virginia senator, who in 2012 backed lowering the previous corporate tax rate from 35% to 28%, argued that Biden’s proposal to raise the current corporate tax rate from 21% to 28% was too much.

“As the bill exists today, it needs to be changed,” Manchin told West Virginia’s Metro News, arguing that the corporate rate should not be raised above 25%.

“There’s six or seven other Democrats who feel very strongly about this. We have to be competitive, and we’re not going to throw caution to the wind,” he said, adding, “If I don’t vote to get on it, it’s not going anywhere.”

The White House earlier tried to rally West Virginia voters to pressure Manchin to vote for Biden’s coronavirus relief package, deploying Vice President Kamala Harris in January to warn local news outlets of the economic calamity facing the state’s poorest residents without additional aid. The move infuriated Manchin, who reportedly “conveyed his displeasure privately” to senior White House officials before lashing out at Harris publicly for not “working together” with him on a “bipartisan pathway.” Manchin ultimately supported the package after leaders scrapped the $15 minimum wage increase, lowered weekly unemployment benefits in the bill, and lowered the income cap for stimulus checks.

Manchin has enjoyed an outsized role in the 50-50 Senate where Democrats cannot afford to lose a single vote, even when they employ the budget reconciliation process to pass legislation with a simple majority to avoid a Republican filibuster. The longtime West Virginia lawmaker has also scoffed at attempts by the party to pressure him; he has continued to win re-election despite the state’s Republican lean, and faces little threat in a primary challenge from the left.

“What are they going to do … go into West Virginia and campaign against me?” he said in an interview with The New York Times last month. “Please, that would help me more than anything.”

But White House officials have questioned Manchin’s motivations, noting to the Times that his main concern in coronavirus relief negotiations was not to direct additional money to his state, which is one of the poorest in the country, but rather to reduce the amount of overall spending in the legislation and consider Republican input — even though not a single GOP senator voted for the bill.

Manchin has wielded his newfound power after Democrats secured the slimmest of Senate majorities in January, arguing that the party would not even be in a position to pass legislation if he were not the 50th vote.

“I know one thing, Chuck, you wouldn’t have this problem at all if I wasn’t here,” he told Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., according to the Times.

Manchin’s insistence on working to find Republican support for legislation, and his opposition to scrapping the 60-vote threshold to end a filibuster, puts him and fellow filibuster supporters like Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., on a collision course with Democratic leaders, who are dead set on passing voting rights protections in the face of an unprecedented push by Republican state lawmakers across the country to pass stringent new voter restriction laws in response to baseless claims of election fraud by former President Donald Trump and his allies.

 “We’ve got 50 Democrats, [Georgia Sens. Raphael] Warnock and [Jon] Ossoff are two. Since when did Sinema and Manchin get to be more important than Ossoff and Warnock?” Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C., the No. 3 Democrat in the House, told Politico last month, noting that it was the two Georgia senators’ wins in runoff elections that got the party to 50 votes and rejecting the idea that the caucus will “do what Manchin says.”

Clyburn warned that the party would not allow voting rights to be filibustered “to death.”

“There’s no way under the sun that in 2021 that we are going to allow the filibuster to be used to deny voting rights. That just ain’t gonna happen. That would be catastrophic,” he told The Guardian. “If Manchin and Sinema enjoy being in the majority, they had better figure out a way to get around the filibuster when it comes to voting and civil rights.”

Half of Republicans think Jan. 6 siege was peaceful or staged by antifa, new poll finds

What percentage of Republicans believe the Jan. Capitol siege was either a peaceful demonstration or led by antifa, nearly three months after the riot? 

A jarring new poll conducted by Reuters and Ipsos, published on Monday, found that “about half of Republicans believe the siege was largely a non-violent protest or was the handiwork of left-wing activists ‘trying to make Trump look bad.'”

Although there is considerable evidence to support the fact that proud pro-Trump vigilantes were seen around the Capitol building in large numbers on that dark day in Washington, many Republicans appear to have created an alternative reality, or simply haven’t registered the corrections issued by conservative media. A few days following the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, one dubious report from the Washington Times was widely circulated in right-wing circles, claiming that “Antifa members” were identified in the crowd. The Times later retracted that article in its entirety, after Mediaite reported that the outlet made silent changes to the story in the dead of night. The story stoked innumerable false claims in conservative Twitter circles, which widely spread the discredited notion that antifa was behind the Jan. 6 riot. 

As for the new poll, the results are startling, even beyond the headline news that most Republican voters believe the siege was the fault of leftists or was entirely “non-violent.”

The poll results further outlined that nearly 60 percent of Republicans bought into the claim that the 2020 election was stolen from former President Donald Trump, and found that only about three in 10 Republicans think Trump is somewhat responsible for the riot of Jan. 6. “The Reuters/Ipsos poll shows a large number of rank-and-file Republicans have embraced the myth. While 59% of all Americans say Trump bears some responsibility for the attack, only three in 10 Republicans agree. Eight in 10 Democrats and six in 10 independents reject the false claims that the Capitol siege was ‘mostly peaceful’ or it was staged by left-wing protestors,” Reuters reported. 

One scholar at Vanderbilt University, John Geer, who studies public opinion, told Reuters, “Republicans have their own version of reality. It is a huge problem. Democracy requires accountability, and accountability requires evidence.” “The refusal of Trump and prominent Republicans to repudiate the events of Jan. 6 increases the likelihood of a similar incident happening again,” Susan Corke, director of the Intelligence Project at the Southern Poverty Law Center, told Reuters. 

How the pandemic ruined sex

If you think that the COVID-19 lockdowns hindered your sex life, you’re not alone. In fact, a recent scientific study examining the sexual habits of nearly 500 British adults between the ages of 18 and 32 found that, as social restrictions were increased, there was an overall decrease in sexual behaviors.

The study, which was published last month in The Journal of Sex Research, found that men tended to report higher levels of sexual desire than woman both before and during the pandemic lockdowns. Both groups also admitted to decreased levels of sexual desire during the lockdown — but the drop was only statistically significant (meaning the data reveals it did not happen by chance) for women.

“Decreases in desire often happen during times of heightened anxiety and stress, so it isn’t surprising,” Dr. Liam Wignall, a lecturer in psychology at Bournemouth University, told Salon by email. “We can only speculate about the gender difference, and one reason could be that lockdown disproportionately impacted women because research shows women are more likely to take on domestic chores and childcare even when both partners have jobs.”

Wignall also emphasized to Salon that when the scholars analyzed sexual activity, they were not only talking about literal intercourse. Other sexual behaviors were also included in their analysis including watching pornography, masturbating and participating in online sexual relationships.

In addition to finding that women experienced more of a disruption in their sexual desires than men, the scholars also found that men claimed to have more increases in sexual activity than women and “LGB people” reported more of an increase in sexual activity than heterosexuals. Wignall also observed a notable difference between people who were in serious relationships and those who were not.

“Participants in serious relationships reported more increases in sexual activity compared with people who were single or casually dating,” Wignall explained. “At one level this makes sense because people in serious relationships can have sex together, whether in person or online, but given the inclusion of solitary sexual behaviors we might not have expected to see the difference.”

Wignall also pointed out that there weren’t any statistically significant differences in sexual activity based on whether one lives alone or with other people, a fact potentially attributable to the internet. Yet, as Wignall clarified, “when participants were asked to indicate which sexual behaviors they engaged in before lockdown and then subsequently during lockdown, the number of people engaging in the behaviors decreased for all behaviors. The biggest reduction was sexual intercourse with somebody else [not your partner]’ – the amount of people doing this dropped by 88%. This is tentative evidence that generally people were following lockdown measures, at least when sex is concerned.”

Wignall and the other authors of the study constituted the decline in sexual activity as a health crisis, noting that a happy sex life is crucial for psychological well-being.

“Having a good sex life is important to people’s sense of wellbeing and happiness, and while it’s understandable that the social policy focus was on stopping COVID-19 transmission, the impact on sex is significant and warrants attention,” Wignall explained. “It’s not something we can just ignore.”


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Wignall argued that this means, in the future, social distancing measures will need to account for how people “navigate their sex lives” so that people can stay safe while still fulfilling those basic needs.

“It isn’t feasible or right to have long-term bans on sexual practice for single people or people not living with a sexual partner, so policy makers have to think more carefully about how to reduce the risks of COVID-19 transmission without banning sex for people outside the same household,” Wignall pointed out. In addition, “sexual and reproductive health services need to be prepared once lockdown measures are loosened further, dealing with people who couldn’t access their services during lockdown and for the potential for an increase in the amount of sex that goes on when lockdown measures end.”

Marjorie Taylor Greene claims Matt Gaetz scandal is “Deep State attack,” calls on GOP “to stand up”

On Monday, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., took to Twitter for an impassioned defense of Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., who is currently the subject of a federal sex trafficking investigation for possibly transporting an underage girl over state lines.

Greene claimed that the whole scandal is “a deep state attack and media smear fest to take him down” — and suggested it’s probably fake because no woman has come forward publicly to speak out against him.

The Gaetz investigation began under former Attorney General William Barr, with his knowledge and briefing.

Greene, a QAnon-curious right-wing firebrand who was stripped of her House committee assignments after social media activity endorsing the killing of Democrats and suggesting a Jewish space laser was responsible for wildfires, is one of the only members of Congress to publicly defend Gaetz. Last week, she proclaimed on Twitter that the whole thing was “another witch hunt” and demanded the FBI release supposed “tapes” proving a DOJ extortion racket.

Other than her, few Republicans have come forward to support Gaetz. Even former President Donald Trump, who viewed Gaetz as one of his most steadfast allies in Congress, has stayed silent.

To end “30-year race to the bottom,” Janet Yellen calls for global minimum tax on corporations

In an effort to end what she called the “30-year race to the bottom on corporate tax rates,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Monday urged her counterparts around the world to join her in embracing a global minimum tax aimed at preventing companies from shifting profits offshore to slash their bills.

The proliferation of so-called “tax havens” around the world in recent years contributed to the sharp decline in the average global corporate tax rate — which has fallen from around 40% in 1980 to 24% today — as countries adjusted their rates downward to either attract multinationals or prevent companies from seeking to stash their profits elsewhere.

Yellen argued in a speech to The Chicago Council on Global Affairs Monday that the “pressures of tax competition” are eroding corporate tax bases across the world, undermining nations’ efforts to establish “stable tax systems that raise sufficient revenue to invest in essential public goods and respond to crises.”

As the Washington Post’s Jeff Stein reported last month, “From 2000 to 2018, 76 countries cut their corporate tax rates, according to the OECD. Over that same period, 12 countries maintained their corporate tax level, and only six increased them. In 2000, more than 55 countries had corporate tax rates above 30 percent. Now, fewer than 20 do.”

In her address, Yellen vowed to work with G20 nations to “agree to a global minimum corporate tax rate that can stop the race to the bottom.”

“Together we can use a global minimum tax to make sure the global economy thrives based on a more level playing field in the taxation of multinational corporations, and spurs innovation, growth, and prosperity,” she added.

Gabriel Zucman, an associate professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley, applauded Yellen’s push for a global minimum tax, a proposal he has long supported as a way to eliminate incentives for offshoring.

“A high global minimum tax can change the face of globalization — by making its main winners (multinational companies) pay more in taxes, instead of them paying less and less,” Zucman said following Yellen’s remarks Monday.

While Yellen didn’t specify a preferred rate for the proposed global minimum tax, President Biden’s recently released infrastructure proposal calls for hiking the minimum tax on U.S. multinational corporations to 21 percent — up from the current 10.5% level set by the GOP’s 2017 tax law — and calculating the rate “on a country-by-country basis so it hits profits in tax havens.”

In a paper published earlier this year, Zucman and two of his colleagues offered an example of how Biden’s minimum corporate tax proposal would likely work:

In its simplest form, collecting the tax deficit of multinationals involves taxing the foreign earnings of U.S. multinationals at some minimum rate (21% in the case of Biden’s proposal), with credits given to offset foreign taxes paid. For example, imagine that Apple books $10 billion in profits in Ireland — taxed in Ireland at 5% — and $3 billion in Jersey — taxed in Jersey at 0%. The United States would tax Apple’s Irish income at 16% and Apple’s Jersey income at 21%.

More broadly, the United States would impose country-by-country taxes such that Apple’s effective tax rate, in each of the countries where it operates, equals at least 21%. In other words, the United States would, for its own multinationals, play the role of tax collector of last resort: it would collect the taxes that foreign countries chose not to collect.

This policy does not violate any international treaty. It does not require the cooperation of tax havens. It doesn’t even require new data: the necessary information exists.

Commentators in Ireland are already fretting about what the Biden administration’s push for a global minimum tax could mean for the country’s status as one of the world’s most welcoming tax havens. Cliff Taylor of The Irish Times warned last week that “the Republic’s 12.5% corporate tax rate is facing a new threat, with the United States signaling its support … for a global minimum corporate tax rate.”

“It remains to be seen what is passed by the U.S. Congress,” Taylor wrote, referring to Biden’s infrastructure plan, “but the implication is that if the bulk of this is passed, Ireland’s 12.5% rate may no longer be a significant attraction for U.S. companies looking for where to invest.”

In a report released Monday, experts at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities argued that “reforming U.S. taxes on the foreign profits of U.S. multinationals would position the United States as a global leader in international taxation, which is especially important this year as OECD countries work toward a once-in-a-century global tax deal.” More than 140 countries are taking part in the OECD talks, which began in 2017.

“Yellen has expressed a desire to engage ‘robustly’ in these negotiations, and Congress should support that effort,” the report notes. “Moreover, reforming the international tax system would raise significant revenue to invest in infrastructure and workers, which is a far better way to strengthen the economy and support innovation than continuing to permit large-scale tax avoidance by multinationals that drain U.S. revenues and encourage multinationals to locate profits and investment offshore.”

Fox News late-night host says “screw all corporations” amid criticism of GOP voter suppression bills

Fox News on Monday launched a new late-night show on Monday.

“In an unorthodox maneuver, executives at the Fox Corp.-owned cable-news outlet will explore whether jokes and satire can capture a crowd after 11 p.m. with ‘Gutfeld!,’ which debuts Monday night,” Variety reported.

“Fox News executives want people to compare Gutfeld to the late-night options already standing in his new hour: Comedy Central’s ‘Daily Show,’ TBS’ ‘Conan,’ ABC’s ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live,’ NBC’s ‘Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon’ and CBS’ ‘The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.’ Fox even went so far as to buy up local commercials for ‘Gutfeld!’ on TV stations and cable systems that run those programs, and put up a billboard for the show on Hollywood Boulevard in proximity to the theater where Kimmel tapes his show. Of course, Gutfeld will also square off with more traditional 11 p.m. rivals, like CNN’s Don Lemon and MSNBC’s Brian Williams — and may be judged more seriously on how his show performs against them,” Variety explained.

Did the new Fox show succeed at comedy during its debut?

In one clip posted to Twitter, Gutfeld sounded much like the network’s other evening hosts as he delivered an angry rant against corporations that have criticized GOP voter suppression bills.

“So screw you,” he said to Major League Baseball after MLB moved the All-Star Game to Denver from Atlanta as part of the boycott movement against the state after GOP Gov. Brian Kemp signed a controversial voting suppression bill.

“Your stupid exhibition game is about as entertaining as a match of cornhole on ESPN at 3 AM in the morning,” Gutfeld said, with an awkward pause in his delivery

“And screw Delta and screw Coke. In fact, screw all corporations, you stupid execs are cowards and bad golfers. You cheat on your taxes and you cheat on each other,” he alleged.

MSNBC’s Mehdi Hasan also criticized a second clip saying his colleague Brian Williams was on Mars.

“You could literally grab someone off the street at random and they could write funnier material than this,” he said.

Amazon illegally fired employees who spoke out against working conditions

The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) determined on Monday that Amazon illegally fired two of its employees last year, both of whom were staunch critics of the company’s climate action policies and working conditions for warehouse employees. 

The employees, Emily Cunningham and Maren Costa, were fired in April of last year for “repeatedly violating internal policies.” 

“We support every employee’s right to criticize their employer’s working conditions,” explained Jaci Anderson, an Amazon spokeswoman. “But that does not come with blanket immunity against our internal policies, all of which are lawful. We terminated these employees not for talking publicly about working conditions, safety or sustainability but, rather, for repeatedly violating internal policies.”

Cunningham and Costa, both tech designers, are founding members of employee advocacy group Amazon Employees for Climate Justice, an 8,700-strong worker-led group which has organized a series of demonstrations to pressure Amazon into developing an action plan on how to reduce its global emissions and pushed the company to address a number of other social issues related to its business practices.

During the pandemic, Cunningham and Costa spoke out against the company’s unsafe working conditions for warehouse employees, which left many frontline workers especially vulnerable to infection. 

Last January, Amazon Employees for Climate Justice organized an event attended by hundreds of employees encouraging them to openly and intentionally violate the company’s policy of speaking out against management without its approval.

In their complaint to the NLRB, Cunningham and Costa alleged that the tech giant terminated their employment due to the “discriminatory enforcement of policies or work rules, including its non-solicitation and communication policies.” The NLRB said it would be issuing a follow-up complaint if their case could not be settled, according to The New York Times. Cunningham told CNN that the board’s decision that she “couldn’t be more happy with the news today.” 

“It is a moral victory and it feels incredible to be not only on the right side of history but the right side of the law,” she said. “Amazon tried to silence workers and it hasn’t worked. We’re actually stronger than ever. Organizing continues to grow at Amazon.”

The board’s decision comes as public scrutiny on Amazon is at an all-time high. In Bessemer, Alabama, thousands of Amazon workers are voting on whether to form a union, which would be the largest labor threat the company’s management has ever been faced with. If the union effort comes to fruition, it may serve as a point of inspiration for other labor movements to follow suit throughout the nation.

 

Corporations gave $50 million to Republican lawmakers behind GOP’s war on voting

Since 2015, AT&T, Comcast, UnitedHealth Group, Walmart, and other big businesses have donated a combined $50 million to state Republican lawmakers who are currently supporting voter suppression bills across the United States—generous political spending at odds with recent corporate efforts to rebrand as defenders of voting rights.

A new report (pdf) released Monday morning by consumer advocacy group Public Citizen found that during the 2020 election cycle alone, U.S. corporations donated $22 million to Republican architects of voter suppression bills that are advancing through state legislatures nationwide.

“AT&T [since 2015] has given the most, $811,000,” Public Citizen found, citing data from The National Institute on Money in Politics. “AT&T is followed by Altria/Philip Morris, Comcast, UnitedHealth Group, Walmart, State Farm, and Pfizer. Household names that fell just out of the top 25 list… include Nationwide ($182,000), Merck ($180,000), CVS ($174,000), John Deere ($159,000), and Caterpillar ($157,000).”

“This is why you follow the money, not the good PR,” Public Citizen tweeted.

The group’s findings came after a number of prominent corporations—including AT&TComcast, and Georgia-based companies Coca-Cola and Delta—issued statements denouncing a sweeping Georgia voter suppression measure only after Republican Gov. Brian Kemp signed it into law last month.

Despite vocal demands for them to speak out and use their influence to fight the bill, those companies were largely quiet as the measure made its way through Georgia’s Republican-dominated legislature.

Between 2015 and 2020, according to Public Citizen, corporations donated more than $10.8 million to Georgia Republicans who are supporting the 26 voter suppression bills that have been introduced in the state’s legislature this year. Corporations have also donated big to voter suppression advocates in Texas, Arizona, Virginia, Iowa, Pennsylvania, and Arkansas.

“From coast to coast, politicians that Corporate America helped elect are pushing racist voter suppression laws,” Rick Claypool, research director for Public Citizen’s president’s office and one of the authors of the new report, told Common Dreams.

“No matter how many PR statements Big Business puts out, its complicity with the anti-democratic forces that want to make voting harder is clear,” Claypool added. “Corporations should keep their money out of our democracy—and Congress must put the people back in charge by swiftly passing the For The People Act.”

According to the latest tally by the Brennan Center for Justice, legislators have introduced 361 bills with vote-restricting provisions in 47 states this year, and five have become law.
 

In the wake of the January 6 Capitol insurrection by a mob of Trump supporters, many large corporations vowed to temporarily suspend all political giving as they faced backlash for financially supporting Republican members of Congress who helped provoke the attack with brazen lies about the 2020 presidential election.

But Public Citizen argued Monday that such face-saving efforts—as well as belated disavowals of voter suppression measures—”will amount to a meaningless gesture if corporations continue to bankroll the bills’ supporters with future campaign contributions.”

“The days in which corporate America can fund politicians and then claim no responsibly for their actions may be coming to an end,” the group said. “Corporations seeking to demonstrate their reverence for our democracy could best do so by ending their attempts to influence the outcomes of elections at the federal and state levels.”

Harvey Weinstein files long-anticipated appeal against rape and sexual assault conviction

Harvey Weinstein has filed a long-expected appeal in the New York State Supreme court, challenging his 2020 conviction for two felony sex crimes, the New York Times reports. On Monday, Weinstein’s attorneys wrote in the appeal that “the prosecution tried Weinstein’s character, not his conduct.” 

They said that the case — which resulted in a 23-year prison sentence for the 69-year-old Hollywood producer — relied heavily on testimony from three women who allege that Weinstein assaulted them, though he was not charged for the behavior they described. Weinstein’s legal team said this caused the jury to focus on their client’s history of allegations rather than on specific charges. 

Additionally, the attorneys argue in the nearly 170-page appeal that a testimony from a fourth woman, actress Annabella Sciorra who testified that she had been raped by Wesintein in the early 1990s, should not have been included, as well the fact that an autobiographical book by one of the jurors indicated that she was biased against Weinstein. 

At his sentencing, Weinstein was convicted of a first-degree criminal sexual act and third-degree rape. However, in total, Weinstein has been accused of sexual misconduct by more than 90 women and faces additional criminal charges stemming from two attacks that allegedly took place in 2013. 

After his guilty verdict, Weinstein’s legal team asked that he be kept free on bail due to his poor health, but the request was denied. Shortly after his sentencing, Weinstein began experiencing chest pains and was hospitalized. He later tested positive for the novel coronavirus. 

Weinstein has largely remained silent on the charges, though he has given a few self-important interviews in which he is adamant about his role in elevating women in Hollywood. 

“I feel like the forgotten man,” Weinstein told the New York Post’s Page Six in 2019. “I made more movies directed by women and about women than any filmmaker, and I’m talking about 30 years ago. I’m not talking about now when it’s vogue. I did it first! I pioneered it!”

Per The New York Times, this marks the beginning of what is likely to be a lengthy effort by Weinstein’s legal team to change his fate. However, the accusations against the producer helped spark the #MeToo movement, after several women accused him of harassment and assault. This led to global discussion of how sexual assault by men in positions of power is overlooked and unreported. 

Prosecutors will respond to the arguments in Monday’s appeal in the coming weeks.