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GOP senators target abortion access, trans athletes in proposed changes to COVID relief bill

Republican senators are using a massive coronavirus relief measure now working its way through Congress to advance two major culture-war issues that are central to the GOP political agenda but completely unrelated to the pandemic: restricting affordable access to abortions and punishing schools that allow transgender athletes to participate in women’s sports.  

Republicans claim to be vehemently and unanimously opposed to the $1.9 trillion package under consideration because of its cost and Democrats’ inclusion of “wish list” items unrelated to the public health crisis. That has apparently not deterred them from attempting to pass their own irrelevant provisions.

“The unrelated liberal policies are simply endless,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said in a floor speech Friday. “It’s like they’ve forgotten we have a pandemic to fight.”

Finding ways to restrict or deny abortion access has been a central Republican tactic for years. But in a larger context, the targeting of women’s sports represents a relatively new front in the culture war, one that Republicans apparently feel confident will be a winning issue at the polls in a post-Trump world. The topic has received unrelenting attention from conservative media and national Republicans, including from former President Trump himself at last week’s Conservative Political Action Conference in Orlando.

These amendments have no political viability in the COVID legislation or anywhere else, given the Democratic majority in both houses. Congress’ makeup. But they mark a miniature opportunity for Republicans to force the fight to the forefront by using the Senate’s procedural rules and forcing lawmakers to take official stances on the underlying issues.

Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., filed an amendment that would prohibit “funding for schools that allow transgender
athletes in female sports.” Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., filed a nearly identical one, demanding: “No funds for schools that allow biological males to compete in girls’ sports.” Republicans in a slew of states have tried to prevent trans athletes
from participating in female sports, including through congressional legislation. An executive order from President Biden, shortly after taking office, put protections in place against discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

Marshall, along with GOP Sens. Mike Braun of Indiana and John Thune of South Dakota, filed separate amendments that seek to limit accessibility to abortions by preventing certain pots of money from funding health care plans or medical institutions that provide the procedure.

Thune, the minority whip, filed an amendment to modify the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to forbid pre-taxed money in health savings account to be used to pay for abortion services. That proposal mirrors a bill filed by Thune earlier this year, which is co-sponsored by 19 of his GOP colleagues, and a separate one pushed by Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., in 2017.

Braun’s amendment would bar federal funding for continuing health care coverage under COBRA to go toward abortions. He and other Republicans introduced a similar proposal under the previous Congress that was backed by 32 other GOP senators.

Marshall’s amendment would prohibit small-business loans through the Paycheck Protection Program from going to abortion providers, such as Planned Parenthood. The nonprofit reproductive health care provider was embroiled in controversy last year after its individual chapters received some $80 million, prompting demands from congressional Republicans and even the Small Business Administration to return the taxpayer funds over allegations it was too large an entity to qualify.

The organization stood by its need and qualifications for the loans, chalking up the outrage to a “clear political attack.” The group argued that its individual chapters acted independently, and therefore met the requirements.

More than two dozen Republican senators, including Braun, penned a letter in January to the SBA demanding the return of the money.

Braun, Tuberville and Thune’s offices did not respond to Salon’s requests for comment. 

A spokesperson for Marshall said that both of his amendments “certainly align with COVID.”

“The first one even references PPP in the title, which is a program that was created due to COVID,” the spokesperson said. “On the other one, with the amount of money in the overall bill going to education ($170 billion), Sen. Marshall wants to ensure equal opportunity for female high school and college athletes.”

“Coming 2 America” takes the crown, delivering a sequel worthy of & less patriarchal than the first

Thirty-three years separate “Coming to America” and its sequel “Coming 2 America,” more than enough time for anyone who hasn’t seen the original in a while to forget nearly everything about it.

Sure, a few strangely unforgettable lines from the 1988 film stick with us. Eddie Murphy and Arsenio Hall partner well as co-stars, but the many distinct personas they brought to life with the help of layered prosthetics, spirit gum and wigs ended up being most of the show. Sometimes the actors’ faces were completely unrecognizable under all that latex augmentation.

But makeup magic alone isn’t enough to carry a sequel; besides, I’d wager more of us recall laughing at the mention of Sexual Chocolate, simultaneously the best and the worst name of all time for a soul band, than the name of its lead singer played by Murphy. (That would be Randy Watson.)

To justify a comeback, one would have to expand on the original’s virtues and sharply correct its mistakes. “Coming to America” glows with charm, which is why a lot of people harbor a lasting fondness for it. We can also admit that a number elements that didn’t age well. The quintessentially ’80s gratuitous boob shots, for one. The royal bathers’ devotion to cleaning the prince’s royal penis. Akeem’s father, King Jaffe Joffer (James Earl Jones), gleefully admitting he screws the royal bathers. It’s a whole thing, the royal bathers, and their emphasis exemplifies the casual sexualization of many of the women we see in the film other than Shari Headley’s virginal lead Lisa McDowell.

This is the case even though Murphy’s noble Prince Akeem Joffer, heir to the throne of Zamunda, holds distinctly progressive views compared to his father. Akeem declaring he wants a wife that challenges his intellect as well as stirring his loins, an equal marriage partner. Jaffe arranges for his son to marry the daughter of an adjacent kingdom’s general who has been raised from birth to be pathologically compliant. Akeem orders her to hop up and down on one foot and bark, and that’s the last we see of her.

“Coming 2 America” doesn’t run away from any of this. Instead it evolves the jokes that worked more than three decades ago to create a story that honors its predecessor while making them over with modern, more equitable comedy that skewers outdated patriarchal traditions, both in Zamunda and in America.

As the story resumes Prince Akeem is on the verge of ascending to his kingship and with Lisa and his three daughters, Princesses Omma (Bella Murphy), Tinashe (Akiley Love) and Meeka (KiKi Layne), at his side. All of them strong, smart, respected and beautiful young women. Meeka, being the eldest, has been training to be queen her entire life even though Akeem’s father reminds him that the throne can only pass to a male heir.

With King Jaffe on his death bed, Akeem’s rule is threatened by General Izzi (Wesley Snipes, hamming it up to degrees not seen in some time) the vengeful brother of the fiancée Akeem left behind and in an uncomfortable state. Izzi, the ruling dictator over the adjacent nation of Nextdoria – seriously – is eager to depose Akeem and seize Zamunda’s wealth for his own nation.

Akeem would be in a bind if not for a twist surgically implanted in the story thanks to special effects magic that rolls back the years on Murphy’s and Hall’s faces. The long and short of it is that thanks to Akeem’s best friend Semmi’s (Hall) horniness, the royal had a sexual interlude while blacked out resulting in a son he’s never met: Lavelle (Jermaine Fowler), who is now 31 years old and living with his mother Mary (Leslie Jones) and uncle (Tracy Morgan) in Queens.

Murphy’s acting style has matured, as people saw with his work in “Dolemite Is My Name,” and so has his portrayal of Akeem. There’s very little of the youthful clownery in this iteration of his royal, which leaves more room for other players to take up space. 

By expanding its ranks to feature more famous comedy performers with large personalities “Coming 2 America” broadens its joke tapestry beyond everything Hall and Murphy serve up, and that makes the setups edgier and more plentiful. Jones plays beautifully off of Morgan and Luenell, another member of Lavelle’s Queens family, but she also gives Headley’s Lisa a chance to have more fun this time and break free of the behavioral constraints placed on her in the first movie.

And this revitalized energy doesn’t solely reside in the palace – narrating the political instability created by the royal succession drama is a cable news anchor played by, who else, Trevor Noah.

This is a decidedly post-“Black Is King,” post-“Black Panther” sequel mindful of details and callbacks without being beholden to them to the point of rehashing old jokes and reprising previous roles in a way that checks boxes off of a list.

More to the point, it’s also a post-“Black-ish” version of this story, owing to that show’s creator Kenya Barris joining forces with the team behind the original, Barry Blaustein and David Sheffield. Barris’ touch along with Murphy’s makes all the difference here, creating a story that feels more up-to-the-minute than vintage “Saturday Night Live.” (Blaustein and Sheffield were writers during Murphy’s heyday on the sketch series and wrote some of his biggest movie hits, including “Boomerang,” “The Nutty Professor” and “The Nutty Professor II.”)

Flamboyant, boisterous musical numbers amplify the energy throughout, and the cameos sprinkled throughout are love letters to the original movie’s fans. Yes, the royal bathers are still part of palace life, but this time everyone gets to be in on that joke. 

Model and actor Garcelle Beauvais also returns for this one, still a royal rose bearer as she was in the first film, one of her earliest movie roles ever. Other celebrity appearances aren’t reprised roles but ones that echo the time from which the original hails. Salt-N-Pepa, En Vogue, Gladys Knight all get to play in the royal court, but it’s the lesser known faces who return to the scene that pack a wallop into the punchlines they represent.

The ornate sets and Ruth E. Carter’s staggering costumes realize the image of Zamunda as a kind of lotusland of the Black diaspora – like Wakanda without the underground vibranium stash, but with a beloved fast-food restaurant owned by Lisa’s father Cleo McDowell (John Amos) that is definitely not McDonald’s and for some reason still employs Louie Anderson‘s Maurice.

Fowler picks up enough of Murphy’s style of delivery and movement to make the audience believe Lavelle is related to Akeem while creating his own distinct personality. Layne’s Meeka and Lisa and Akeem’s other two daughters end up outshining Akeem, which is intentional. Where “Coming to America” was about a prince forging his own identity and seeking an equal partner in romance, the second movie critiques the ways age fades youthful ambition to change the world and break traditions that fail to make the most of everyone’s strengths, regardless of their gender..

By recapturing the original’s beats and crazy characters and remixing them to make sense in 2021 “Coming 2 America” telegraphs to the viewer that it knows exactly what it is and what it’s doing. The writers make the most of their understanding that that the fairy tale they’re peddling is utterly ridiculous, but no more than any romantic fable about princes finding love among the peasantry.

They’re also having a hoot with building out this fictional African nation’s story and convincingly linking it to the real world, guaranteeing the laughs come from a real and solid place.

Instead of redrafting old gags that don’t fit modern sensibilities or worse, straining to recapture past glory, “Coming 2 America” confidently moves to the comedy rhythms of where we are now. And because of its willingness to transform it is a smarter, funnier and ultimately sweeter movie than the legend that begat it.

“Coming 2 America” is currently streaming on Amazon Prime.

Humanity’s distant primate ancestors likely co-existed with dinosaurs, according to study

It may not have been like “Jurassic World,” but a new study suggests that a distant ancestor of human beings may have existed in the late Cretaceous period — that is, at the same time when dinosaurs roamed the Earth.

In a paper published last month by the journal Royal Society Open Science, scientists revealed that fossils discovered in Montana in the 1980s had been identified as belonging to the earliest primates known in the fossil record. The creature, which came from a group of primates known as plesiadapiforms, would have resembled a modern rodent like a squirrel or a rat. It would have lived within roughly 100,000 years after a mass extinction event — most likely an asteroid or comet colliding with the Earth — wiped out all of the nonavian dinosaurs 66 million years ago.

Dr. Gregory P. Wilson Mantilla, a biologist at the University of Washington who co-authored the paper, explained to Salon by email that this discovery could have major implications for our understanding of the ultimate evolution of human beings.

“We like every other creature on the planet is shaped by evolutionary history, and evolutionary history is shaped by context,” Mantilla wrote to Salon. “So the evolution of our lineage was undoubtedly shaped by co-existence with dinosaurs. Living in trees, eating fruits and insects are primitive traits of our lineage that are also shaped by the rise of flowering plants at around the same time and all this led to the great diversification of primates and ultimately you and me.”

“First of all, it is worth noting that this is not direct evidence of primates living in the Cretaceous with dinosaurs,” Dr. Stephen Chester, an anthropologist at Brooklyn College and co-author of the paper, told Salon. “In order for us to know that with confidence, we would need to actually have fossils of primates dated during the Cretaceous. But the reason that we think this might be the case is that we actually have two species of these early primates that are dated from this time period.” That fact proves that the species shared a common ancestor which would, in turn, have to be an early primate.

“Given our sense of how long it takes for species to evolve, we’re assuming that that ultimate ancestor might have been present during the Cretaceous with dinosaurs,” Chester explained.

Salon also asked Mantilla and Chester if this discovery tells us anything about the mass extinction event that marks the boundary between two geologic epochs.

“Really it tells us more about the recovery from this extinction event,” Mantilla explained. “It tells us that their were some animals that took advantage of the opportunity presented by the loss of large predators and the burgeoning flowering plants and their fruits. Within a geologically short amount of time, primates and the group leading to hoofed mammals seem to become dominant in North America.”

“We’ve had a general sense of how, following the extinction of the dinosaurs, mammals started to evolve, diversify and get larger through time,” Chester told Salon, noting that both he and Mantilla also worked on a 2019 scientific paper that focused on fossils found in Colorado that were traced to the first million years after the extinction event. “We’ve documented how mammals in general, have evolved following the extinction event. We have a pretty good sense of how that happened, but in that study, for example, there were no primate fossils. These are, again, the oldest primate fossils in the record, and therefore it gives us a much better sense of how primates specifically evolved right after the extinction event.”

Rep. Katie Porter on how the stimulus package “penalizes” single parents

On Wednesday, President Biden agreed to place stricter income limits on the next round of stimulus payments — the latest concession in the Biden administration’s ongoing attempt to push through the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill. Specifically, the $1,400 stimulus checks in the Senate’s version of the plan will start to phase out at $75,000 in income for single Americans, $112,500 for single parents, and $150,000 for joint filers. An estimated 8 million people who would have received payments under the House bill will lose them now due to the stricter thresholds that favor those who are married. 

Currently, the House-passed bill for the relief package has a similar tier-based system for parents to receive a tax credit if they have children. The proposed plan will increase the child tax credit from $2,000 to $3,000 per child. But again, households that qualify for child tax credit are based on incomes that are “tiered” by marital status. The enhanced tax break would begin to phase out at $75,000 on single returns, $112,500 on head-of-household returns and $150,000 on joint returns.

Representative Katie Porter (D.-Calif.) calls this the “single parent penalty.” As she tells Salon, she has been asking this question of her colleagues: Why are single parents, who make just as much money as married couples, less apt to be qualified for the stimulus payments and child tax credits?

Salon spoke exclusively to Rep. Porter about her campaign to raise awareness about this flaw in the stimulus package. As always, this interview has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Can you explain briefly to our readers how single parents are at an unfair advantage in the current iteration of the federal relief package?

So with regard to the expanded child tax credit, there is an income threshold set at which that income tax credit phases out and then becomes unavailable. And the threshold — even though the purpose of this is to address the cost of raising a child, particularly the increasing cost of child care, including during the pandemic — the way that this is done is that a child in a single-parent household will receive less child tax credit than a child living in a married household.

And this makes no sense, and we refer to this as the “single parent penalty.” The point of the tax credit is to make sure that the child has access to nutritious food, to high-quality childcare and to adequate housing. There is no discount on the costs of raising a child. And so the amount of the child tax credit shouldn’t be conditioned on the marital status of that child’s parents. 

You said that the whole purpose is to make sure that the child has access to nutritious food and high-quality childcare and it seems like people are being rewarded for being married. You’ve been talking about this a lot and raising awareness in the media. What has the response been to your concerns from your peers on Capitol Hill? 

We definitely have a lot of interest both in terms of other members of the House and the Senate, and also talking to the legislative staff — who year after year, Congress after Congress, are helping to draft legislation and helping Congress to think about this. My colleague Ayanna Pressley [D-Mass.] has been my co-lead on this, and we do lots of media interviews, MSNBC and CNN print interviews.

One of the most meaningful things to me has been starting to hear from and gather the stories of and listen to the voices of single parents who are saying, “this is really a problem for me. I don’t have enough, I need more childcare than my peers who were married.”

I’m wondering if you think this is a single parent issue, or a single person issue, too?

Yeah, I mean I think the question we need to be asking ourselves is, “What is the problem that we are trying to address?” Rather than just reflexively creating these tiers in which singles are the bottom and married and filed jointly are at the top, and somewhere in between there is the head of household . . . Instead we need to ask what is the point of this. What is the point of this program? What is the problem we are trying to solve?

In the case of the child tax credit, we’re trying primarily to address the cost of childcare. Those costs aren’t lower for single-parent families. If you think about some of the other kinds of things that we might be trying to address, there may be ways in which different kinds of family statuses have different needs. But in general, every bit of research shows that people who are married, on average, are better off economically than people who are single over their lifetime.

I’m thinking about people who were married and maybe lost their spouse.

Well, let me give you one example that I think is relevant to the pandemic. One of the problems we’ve been trying to solve is people losing their employment, and then therefore, losing their health insurance. If you’re part of a married couple, there is a higher likelihood that if one of you loses your job, then you can get on the other person’s insurance and the law provides for that as a special circumstance. Single people when they lose their job, there is no other employment plan to get on. They are simply uninsured when they have to go out into the private marketplace to get insurance. 

So that’s an example, when we think about insurance, I think that insurance instability and upheaval in the employment market, loss of income is loss of income and can be a problem for both. But the insurance problem I think is even graver for single people than it is for married people, because of the inability to get family coverage.

What do you think needs to be done to change this tax structure that’s based on a person’s legal, marital status? We have a long history of it. 

I think a lot of it is to really begin to call this out and to ask for justification. Why are you structuring it this way? What is the assumption that you are making that is beneath this idea that there’s this perfectly even stepping upward between single people, single-parent households and then married people? Definitionally, a head of a household has a dependent and therefore, for example, needs more living space.

I think that the goal here is to really push people to justify and explain why they’re using these particular cutoffs. It’s not clear to me, for example, that married people have double the expenses of single people. 

And going back to the child tax credit, I’m wondering what is your proposed solution to that right now?

What we’ve argued what they should do is set the income threshold at the same level of $150,000 for the eligibility for the child tax credit regardless of the tax filing status of the parent. So rather than having a cut off at $75,000 for single and $112,500 for heads of household, and $150,000 for married people would just be $150,000 across the board. 

What would you tell single parents right now who are upset about this, too?

I think it’s really important that single parents make their voices heard. You know, we know that people in Congress historically and still today disproportionately are married. Last term while I was in Congress I was the only single parent of young children, now there are a few others. But I think it’s really important that single parents speak up and make their voices heard to make sure that they’re getting the help they need.

Bernie Sanders sticks Senate colleagues in the hot seat, promptly sees $15 minimum wage defeated

Despite a tough legislative setback posed by the Senate parliamentarian last week, Sen. Bernie Sanders, D-Vt., announced that he will not back down in his fight to include a $15 minimum wage in the $1.9 trillion COVID relief package, ultimately losing a forced vote on his amendment to the bill Friday afternoon. 

Originally, Senate Democrats intended to push through the wage hike via budget reconciliation, a process that circumvents the Senate supermajority needed to ratify the bill. However, last week the unelected Senate parliamentarian, Elizabeth MacDonough, shot down the maneuver on the grounds that it did not comply with the rules surrounding the legislative process. 

The ruling proved a fatal blow for progressives like Sanders looking to buoy people out of poverty under the weight of the pandemic. “The idea we have a parliamentarian that is elected by nobody,” said Sanders during an interview on Wednesday, “who is simply a Senate staffer, making a determination that 30 million Americans are not going to get a pay raise is to me, unacceptable. So we’re sticking with $15 an hour and I believe we are going to pass that.”

Nevertheless, Sanders has encouraged the American people to stay optimistic. “I don’t want anyone out there to think that we have given up,” he said at a virtual Town Hall last Friday.

On Monday, some Democrats signaled a withdrawal from the fight for $15, instead opting to get the relief bill passed as quickly as possible. “Senate Democrats will move forward with a version of the relief bill that does not attempt to raise the minimum wage,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., in a statement on Monday. 

Meanwhile, House Democrats and various progressive groups have called on the Democratic Party to not back down. Earlier this week, Sen. Sanders formulated a “Plan B” with Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., to impose higher taxes on corporations that would not comply with the $15 increase. However, the plan was quickly discarded due to fears that corporations might turn full-time employees to independent contractors in an effort to avoid the additional tax burden. 

Now, Sanders plans to tack on the wage hike in an amendment to the relief bill during a legislative period called “vote-a-rama,” in which Senators are obliged to introduce a number of amendments after debate has concluded. Sanders said Monday that “there will be a roll call vote, and we’ll see who votes for it and doesn’t,” putting pressure on any Democrats who might elect to break rank. 

The White House has not expressed clear support of the amendment. Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill, Senate Democratic Whip, rejected the idea of fighting MacDonough’s ruling. “I don’t think that’s going to work,” he said. “I hope that we think very seriously about dealing with the minimum wage in a different venue.” 

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a key Biden ally, told Politico that “the minimum wage will be raised, “it’s just a question of how much.” He continued, “The House may come up with $15 an hour, but I think when it comes to the Senate one way or another it will be cut back.”

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., said in a press release: “Senators in both parties have shown support for raising the federal minimum wage and the Senate should hold an open debate and amendment process on raising the minimum wage, separate from the COVID-focused reconciliation bill.”

On Sunday, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said on “Fox News Sunday” that the Biden administration will have to “spend the next several days or even weeks figuring out what the best path forward is” regarding the minimum wage, but stressed that the President is “committed” to it.

https://twitter.com/ChrisCoons/status/460810827881144321

On Friday, the Senate voted 58 to 42 against Sanders’ attempt to waive a procedural objection to adding the wage hike as a provision the relief bill. A group of seven Democrats and one independent –– Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., Jon Tester, D-Mont., Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., Chris Coons, D-Del., Tom Carper, D-Del., and Angus King, I-Maine. –– shot the waiver down. Every Senate Republican also voted against the increase.

Speedy one-skillet chicken dinners, because we could all use a win right now

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 never-boring, totally-simple chicken dinners in one pan.

***

You know that little skip in your step you get on a day when something good happens? Maybe you get good news from a friend or a family member, or a project at work comes to a successful close, or it’s a good hair day even though you haven’t had a cut in months. (It’s the small things, right?)

This is exactly the way I feel when I make a good weeknight dinner — especially on nights when I resist the temptation to order take-out and instead pull together a meal with ingredients I have on hand. The first bite of something warming and hearty and flavorful is an instant pick-me-up — no matter what has happened in my day up to that point.

And when that good dinner comes together all in one pan and saves me from a sink full of dirty dishes . . . Well, that’s true weeknight happiness in my book.

I’m a huge fan of one-pan cooking (from Instant Pot to soup pot to sheet pan), but recently, I’ve had one-skillet chicken dinners on repeat in my kitchen. They’re not only simple to prepare, the number of directions you can take your favorite cuts of chicken in a skillet (whether cast-iron, nonstick, or stainless steel) never fails to surprise me.

One night, I can sear bite-sized morsels of boneless thighs hot and fast on the stovetop — then use the golden, rendered fat to char greens or another quick-cooking vegetable. Another night, I can slather drumsticks in a boldly flavored rub or marinade, perch them on top of beans or root vegetables, and let my oven work its magic. In this current cycle of cooking day in and day out, these types of sure wins are not only appreciated but essential.

Below are three of my latest one-skillet chicken creations that are perfect for this final stretch of winter — or any time of year. All are easily customizable, can go from kitchen to table in under an hour, and are hearty and satisfying enough to stand alone. They’ll make you feel accomplished given how easily they come together (no one needs to know that but you!). Think of them as instant mood boosters at the end of a long day.

* * *

One-Skillet Chicken and Cabbage with Soy Butter

Marinate bite-sized pieces of chicken in soy sauce, toss them in cornstarch, and fry in butter until golden and crispy — then char chopped cabbage and scallions in the same skillet with more soy and butter until tender. Sprinkle with furikake or sesame seeds before digging in, and marvel at your winning weeknight dinner.

One-Skillet Crispy Chicken with Brothy Beans

This simple dinner reinforces two things: Canal House’s “Genius” technique for cooking skin-on chicken thighs yields the best, most shatteringly crispy skin every single time. Also, the slick of rendered fat that’s left behind in the skillet is liquid gold. In this warming meal, it’s used to add rich, savory dimension to brothy white beans strewn with chopped tomatoes and leafy greens.

Tahini-Rubbed Roast Chicken with Chickpeas and Dates

This bold and brightly spiced chicken comes complete with caramelized dates, tangy lemon slices, sweet-and-sour onions, and schmaltz-y chickpeas (all in a single skillet!). If those reasons aren’t compelling enough, the tahini marinade cooks down into a sticky, savory, ridiculously good pan sauce while it roasts.

March 4 was a dud — but QAnon will persist because it is fueled by white entitlement

The day of “The Storm” keeps moving for QAnon, the loosely-affiliated cult that sprang up online with Donald Trump as its god-like savior figure. At first, the belief was January 6 was the prophesied day when Trump would supposedly ascend to his true power and have all their political enemies, who QAnon adherents believe are blood-drinking pedophiles, arrested. After all, Trump himself repeatedly signaled that January 6 was “go” time and the faithful did as they were told, storming the Capitol in an effort to turn the prophecy into reality.

That failed and many QAnoners found themselves in handcuffs while their leader, Trump, escaped without consequence. But while some got disillusioned and dropped off, many more just did what cultists do and moved the day of the prophecy down the calendar, to March 4 as the new day for Trump would ride into town and kick Joe Biden out of the White House, kicking off “The Storm” for real. 

As Giovanni Russonello reports in the New York Times, however, as March 4 grew closer, the QAnon ringleaders started to get cold feet, knowing as they did that “reports” that Trump would take the White House that day were pulled directly out of their nethers. Many of them “started throwing cold water on the March 4 idea, though it had been theirs in the first place,” he reports. They realized “it might not be wise to bring a group of fervid supporters to Washington for the arrival of a leader who doesn’t show up,” and started instead to float conspiracy theories blaming “antifa” — which is the bogeyman they blame most things on — for stirring the pot around the March 4 date in the first place. 


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The concern is quite clearly that, if another prediction fails to pan out, the QAnon cult will start to grow disillusioned and dissipate, which means that these ringleaders will lose the cash stream they’ve generated by churning out an endless supply of prophecies and “bread crumbs” to the deeper conspiracies for their followers to gobble up. But, in truth, these grifters shouldn’t worry too much. While the prophecies make QAnon exciting, at the end of the day, that’s not why people get caught up in the cult.

There’s a reason why so few of them left after their failed January 6 coup and why few will leave now that it is clear March 4 was a dud. Much has been written about the phenomenon of people not leaving cults, even after the dates of splashy prophecies come and go without the predicted events happening. A lot of it comes down to rationalization and an unwillingness to admit that they spent so much time and energy on something that turned out to be fake. But a lot of it has to do with the reasons they joined the cult in the first place, whether it’s seeking meaning or community or excitement. Those desires don’t disappear just because the prophecies failed. And so the believers will continue to find excuses to stick by the cult and continue deriving what they see as a benefit of belonging. 

What drives people to the QAnon cult  — as well as the other groups, such as the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, that contributed to the January 6 insurrection — is ultimately a grotesque mix of wish-fulfillment fantasies and an abiding sense of white entitlement. These are folks who are absolutely certain that they deserve to be in charge, no matter what, and that belief feeds their attachment to increasingly complex conspiracy theories that promise that there’s a “secret” rule or law that can be activated that will allow them to overcome a democratic election and install their preferred president in his place. They are in a search of a cheat code to defeat the big boss, if you will, and in this case, the big boss is democracy. 

The entitlement wafting off the QAnoners is both funny and unbelievable, creating a constant churn of can-you-believe-these-people stories about those arrested for their role in the January 6 insurrection. Just this week, for instance, Richard Barnett — the insurrectionist who proudly let himself be photographed while vandalizing Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s office — threw a childish temper tantrum in court upon hearing his court date would be set for May.

It’s “not fair” he shouted at the judge, complaining that the “government keeps dragging this out and letting everybody else out” and he doesn’t want to be in jail for another month. The whole thing was so ridiculous that Rachel Maddow even acted out the transcript on her show Thursday night

Similarly, clips from a “60 Minutes+” interview with Martha Chansley, the mother of “QAnon Shaman” Jacob Chansley, have gone viral because she is every inch of that terrible mother who believes her baby can do no wrong and will say any fool thing she needs to defend him. (“Him,” in this case, being a grown man, not that you’d know it from her mama bear act.) She continues to insist her son is an innocent lamb and was merely enjoying his “right to free speech and to stand up for what you believe is right.” She also defends the cause, claiming, falsely, that the election “was won fraudulently.”


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These stories are so compelling because they underscore the off-the-charts sense of entitlement that drives people into QAnon and various other Trump cults. Many of these people really do think they’re above the law, and shouldn’t have to deal with things like consequences for their actions or the results of a lost election. They are always seeking a cheat code they know must exist, just for people like them, that allows them to peace out of the normal rules that everyone else has to follow. And one thing QAnon, with all its intricate conspiracy theories, feeds is this sense of entitlement and the belief that there’s a secret button that adherents can push that will make all those annoying problems — like that Democrats have the right to vote and hold office — just go away. One such conspiracy theory, in fact, was driving the push to define March 4 as the new day for “The Storm.”

As explained by Shayan Sardarizadeh at the BBC, QAnoners developed this theory that the “real” inauguration day is March 4 by leaning on cockamamie theories, drawn by the “sovereign citizens” movement, that the United States ceased to exist as a legal nation in 1871, and therefore all laws and constitutional amendments from then on are invalid. The sovereign citizens movement is a long-standing far-right push by people who have long believed they have found the secret loopholes in American law that allow them to declare themselves above paying taxes or fulfilling other duties as a citizen. Their alignment with QAnon, in retrospect, was entirely predictable.

The whole thing is held together by a bunch of white people believing themselves superior to others and therefore entitled to be above the law, which drives them towards increasingly bonkers “theories” to justify this feeling. It’s why so many of the January 6 rioters didn’t even think to conceal their identity, and why they keep seeming to think that they’ll wake up any day now and all those consequences will evaporate. It’s why they love Trump, who spent his political career bragging about how he knew his way to work around any system and convinced them he had some secret plan to overturn the election. 

So, no, QAnon is not going away any time soon. The people who believe it simply need it too much. They need it to justify their racism, their sense of entitlement, and their childish unwillingness to admit they aren’t, in fact, secretly superior to everyone else. As long as the cult keeps feeding those feelings, the QAnoners will stick around, no matter how many prophecies fail. 

Trump appointee arrested in connection with Capitol riot, charged with beating a police officer

On Thursday, the FBI arrested a Trump appointee suspected of charging the Capitol on Jan. 6. It’s the first arrest implicating someone directly from the Trump administration in the insurrectionist attack. 

Federico Klein, 42, was detained on multiple felony charges by federal officials in his Virginia home on Thursday, according to the FBI’s field office. Klein worked as a U.S. Department of State aide, and as of last summer, was listed as a special assistant in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere, which supports the implementation of U.S. foreign policy in the West. At the time of the Capitol riot, Klein was still employed as a staff assistant at the State Department.

According to a former colleague, Klein also worked in the Brazilian and Southern Cone Affairs –– which manages relationships with Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay –– and was later transferred to an office that processes Freedom of Information Act requests. Before his time in government, Klein was employed as a “tech analyst” in Trump’s 2016 campaign.

Klein also had a top-secret security clearance, according to his LinkedIn profile, and had been an active member of the Republican Party since 2008. He also worked at the conservative advocacy organization, Family Research Council, which lobbies against pornography, abortion, divorce, and LGBT rights. 

Klein’s criminal complaint alleges that the aide “physically and verbally engaged with the officers holding the line.” He also reportedly defied police orders to retreat and beat an officer with a riot shield, which he used to prop open a door leading into the Capitol building. In a video, Klein can be seen rallying for additional support from rioters behind him, shouting, “We need fresh people, need fresh people!”

In an interview with The Washington Post, Klein’s mother told the Washington Post that her son alleged he’d been at a mall during the time of the insurrection. She came away with the impression that Klein had been in D.C.; however, she was not aware that her son breached the Capitol.

“Fred’s politics burn a little hot,” she said, “but I’ve never known him to violate the law.”

Klein resigned from his post at the State Department on Jan. 19, the day before President Joe Biden’s inauguration. Klein now faces multiple felony charges, including knowingly engaging in any act of physical violence against any person or property in any restricted building or grounds.  

So far, over 300 people have been arrested in connection with the Capitol riot on charges, which include entering a restricted area, obstruction of Congress, and assaulting a police officer with a dangerous weapon.

Cuomo staff hid higher COVID death toll as New York governor sought to profit from book: reports

Several New York lawmakers are calling on New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo to resign after reports surfaced late Thursday that top aides to the Democrat omitted the true figures related to nursing home deaths in a state Health Department report from July — just as Cuomo was set to release a book on his handling of the pandemic. 

Citing a number of official documents and interviews with people familiar on the matter, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal reported that there was a concerted effort carried out by Cuomo aids –– including Melissa DeRosa, the governor’s top aide; Jim Malatras, a top adviser; and Linda Lacewell, the Superintendent of the state’s Department of Financial Services –– to only count New Yorkers who died in long-term care facilities, but not those who got sick in the facilities and later died in a hospital. 

Sources familiar with the coverup alleged that the 6,432-person death toll released by the Cuomo administration back in July severely undercounted the actual figure, which hovered around 9,000 “just as Mr. Cuomo was starting to write a book on his pandemic achievements,” the Times reportedState officials currently estimate that number to be around 15,000, which includes every death since March of last year.

On March 25, Cuomo issued a state directive ordering that nursing homes cannot reject patients recovering from the virus. The aforementioned July report was initially released to stave off concerns that Cuomo’s directive had contributed to the spread of the virus. However, according to a January 2021 investigation by the attorney general’s office, Cuomo’s mandate “may have put residents at increased risk of harm in some facilities.” 

Health officials on Thursday maintained that edits were made to the report in the interest of accuracy.

“While early versions of the report included out of facility deaths,” said Department of Health Spokesperson Gary Holmes, “the COVID task force was not satisfied that the data had been verified against hospital data and so the final report used only data for in facility deaths, which was disclosed in the report.” Beth Harvey, a special counsel and senior adviser to Cuomo, also alleged that “out-of-facility data” was omitted for this very same reason.

However, DeRosa, the governor’s top aide, insisted earlier this month that the true figure was omitted because the administration feared it might have been weaponized by the Trump administration, which had already launched a DOJ probe into the nursing home matter.

“Basically, we froze,” she admitted, “because then we were in a position where we weren’t sure if what we were going to give to the Department of Justice or what we give to you guys, what we start saying was going to be used against us while we weren’t sure if there was going to be an investigation.”

Prior to January, when a court and a state attorney general ordered that Cuomo acknowledge the nursing home death toll was higher than estimated, Cuomo had fought vociferously against releasing the real numbers. Health officials reportedly felt that Cuomo was attempting to simplify the effects of the virus, but worried that they might lose their jobs if they spoke out. 

Thursday’s revelations are just the latest in a slew of scandals besetting by the governor.

Three women came forward in recent weeks with allegations of sexual misconduct against Cuomo, who is now under an independent investigation led by the state attorney general.

Giada De Laurentiis’ one-pan chicken Marsala is a quick and delicious weeknight meal

Chicken Marsala is a savory Italian-American dish that unites pan-fried chicken cutlets and mushrooms in a sweet wine sauce. Though it may be a dish you associate with dining out at your local Italian joint, Giada De Laurentiis has once again shown us just how simple and delicious making dinner at home can be. 

Giada recently shared a one-pan chicken Marsala recipe that’s dairy free and can be easily adjusted to fit your dietary needs. Instead of using butter, she subs in olive oil for a healthier twist that doesn’t sacrifice on flavor. Giada also recommends an AP wheat flour, which you can swap with rice flour to make this dish gluten-free.

On her Instagram, she writes, “This super easy one-pan Chicken Marsala is a go-to. Serve it up with roasted potatoes, risotto, pasta, greens… It’s all good.”

To achieve perfectly even chicken cutlets like the ones in the picture, Giada instructs us to first cut two chicken breasts in half horizontally. That’s all the protein you need to feed a family of four!

From there, pound the chicken using a meat tenderizer. If you don’t have one of these kitchen tools at home, you can use the bottom of a (preferably heavy) pan instead. In addition to achieving eveness of cut, pounding the chicken thin also reduces the overall cooking time of this dish. That means your one step closer to dinner!

This is a true one-pan meal, which means clean-up is going to be a breeze. In the same skillet where you cooked the chicken, you’ll begin to prepare the sauce. Shallot, salt, garlic and Cremini mushrooms are the first ingredients that combine with the juices of the chicken. Then comes the namesake ingredient: sweet Marsala wine.

Fresh thyme and low-sodium chicken broth round out the flavors of this savory sauce. What you’re left with is a fresh (and light!) spin on a classic weeknight dinner. All things considered, the most difficult part of this dinner may be settling on what side to pair with it. Full recipe here.

For more of our favorite recipes from Giada, check out: 

Democracy on the line: Senate Democrats can’t let Trump’s Big Lie become a zombie lie

One of the more revealing political moments of recent times was when the Republican Party decided they weren’t going to bother writing a platform for the national convention in 2020. They simply announced that they supported President Trump and pretty much left it at that. It’s not that platforms necessarily guide the party’s agenda, but they are an indicator of its priorities, philosophy, ideology, etc. Yet the erstwhile “party of ideas” didn’t think it was important enough to even make a half-baked stab at writing them down ahead of the last election. That’s because they don’t have ideas anymore, at least any that could possibly be translated into a legislative program.

Maybe it’s the influence of Donald Trump or the fact that the right-wing media’s culture war machine is permanently turned up to 11, 24 hours a day, but the right has clearly decided that turning politics into a non-stop circus is all they need to do. That’s why we have Republicans in Congress refusing to negotiate in good faith on the COVID relief bill and pulling stunts like forcing the clerk of the Senate to read the bill aloud for no good reason other than to delay the process.

And that’s just Congress.

Out in the states, Republicans are a beehive of activity, putting all of their energy wherever they have any power to roll back voting rights. This isn’t new, of course. Conservatives have been trying to suppress the vote of their political opponents and racial minorities literally for centuries. But we had made some progress in the latter half of the 20th century with the enactment of the Voting Rights Act, which the Supreme Court recently ruled meant that we no longer needed the federal government to protect the right of those who’ve traditionally been disenfranchised.

Democrats knew that would unleash a wave of voter suppression and in the last Congress, the House passed H.R.1, the For The People Act, which would expand voting rights, change campaign finance laws to reduce the influence of money in politics, limit partisan gerrymandering, and create new ethics rules for federal officeholders. Needless to say, the Senate under the leadership of Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., never took it up because they weren’t in the business of doing anything but confirming judges, appearing on Fox News and golfing with the president if they were lucky.

Trump’s Big Lie that the election was stolen has now allowed Republicans across the board to go into overdrive, fatuously insisting that they must pass hundreds of laws all over the country making voting as difficult as possible for poor and working people, students, racial and ethnic minorities and people who live in dense population areas, in order to “restore faith” in our elections. Lie blatantly about a stolen election and then use that as an excuse to steal future elections. You have to admire the chutzpah.

H.R.1 once again passed the House this week on a party-line vote and the Senate will take it up once the Republicans get tired of putting on a sideshow and the COVID relief package is finally finished. This bill cannot be dealt with through the reconciliation process that allows for only a simple majority to pass so it is subject to the filibuster and the Democrats are going to have to do a very serious gut check. This is an existential battle for the party and for American democracy. The Atlantic’s Ron Brownstein puts it this way.

If Democrats lose their slim majority in either congressional chamber next year, they will lose their ability to pass voting-rights reform. After that, the party could face a debilitating dynamic: Republicans could use their state-level power to continue limiting ballot access, which would make regaining control of the House or the Senate more difficult for Democrats—and thus prevent them from passing future national voting rules that override the exclusionary state laws.

Perhaps that’s why former Vice President Mike Pence popped his head up for the first time since he was evacuated from the U.S. Capitol on January 6th to argue against this bill, accusing Democrats of trying to “give leftists a permanent, unfair, and unconstitutional advantage in our political system,” which is laughable considering the state of our tattered democracy.

The Democrats currently hold 50 Senate seats but represent 41,549,808 more people than the 50 Senate Republicans. GOP presidents appointed six of the nine Justices of the Supreme Court while winning the popular vote only once in the past seven elections. Of course, the anachronistic Electoral College can grant a Republican president the White House even though he or she might actually lose by millions of votes, and partisan gerrymandering in red states consistently benefits Republicans.

Unless Democrats can persuade centrist Sens. Joe Manchin, D-WV, Kyrsten Sinema, D-Az, and institutionalists like Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., that U.S. democracy is in dire straits and the filibuster has to either be eliminated or “reformed” in some way, H.R.1 and the upcoming John Lewis Voting Rights Act will not pass and this barrage of voting restrictions and gerrymandering may very well cement GOP minoritarian rule permanently. Not passing these bills really isn’t optional.

The U.S.-funded NGO Freedom House, which has been around since 1941, recently released its annual report on democracy around the world. The outlook is not good.

Democratic governments have been on the decline for 15 years and it’s not getting any better. But the most startling finding is that the U.S., once the exemplar of modern democracy, has declined by 11 points on Freedom House’s aggregate Freedom In The World score, placing it among the 25 countries that have suffered the steepest declines over the past 10 years.

The report discusses the long term degradation of America’s democratic norms but focuses on the accelerating decline in U.S. freedom scores during the Trump years, “driven in part by corruption and conflicts of interest in the administration, resistance to transparency efforts, and harsh and haphazard policies on immigration and asylum that made the country an outlier among its Group of Seven peers.” But it reserves its harshest criticism for Trump’s attempt to overturn the election which it rightly characterizes as his most destructive act. And even more concerning was the fact that “nationally elected officials from his party backed these claims, striking at the foundations of democracy and threatening the orderly transfer of power.” That is not something any of us would have expected to read in a Freedom House report.

The Democrats have a small window of opportunity to prevent this undemocratic movement from gaining steam and securing minority rule for the foreseeable future. Trump himself is not out of the picture and his party is single-mindedly focused on attaining power by any means necessary. Democrats must act decisively now and make sure that all 50 Senators understand the stakes and do what is necessary to pass H.R.1.

I would hope that neither Kyrsten Sinema or Joe Manchin want to be remembered as the Strom Thurmond of their time, but that’s exactly who they will be if they allow the filibuster to once more stand in the way of ensuring voting rights for all Americans.

The best produce storage containers to reduce food waste

Whether it’s a big CSA delivery of seasonal produce or an overzealous haul from the weekend farmer’s market, we’ve all been there. You find yourself with an abundance of beautiful produce, and not enough time to enjoy it all before it starts to lose freshness, or worse, begins to go bad. According to the USDA, food waste at the retail and consumer levels can be as high as 31%. You can control food waste in your own kitchen by learning what your produce needs to live its best, longest life, and by having the best produce storage containers on hand to help.

We tested a number of popular products, and narrowed down our favorites for storing all the fruits and vegetables in your kitchen.

Refrigerator storage

Produce and herbs kept in the refrigerator will all require different storage solutions, depending on their individual needs. Some benefit immensely from air circulation to maintain optimal freshness, while others should be kept airtight. Sometimes moisture needs to be whisked away, while others should be kept in water (like cut flowers).

When it comes to delicate fresh berries or soft leafy greens, the key to preventing food spoilage is keeping moisture at bay. I found the FreshWorks Produce Saver collection from Rubbermaid to be a well-designed solution. These containers come with a fitted tray inside to lift the produce from the bottom, and help keep moisture from accumulating around them. They also come with a vent filter in the lid that helps regulate the flow of oxygen and carbon dioxide, creating an ideal environment for longevity.

Some produce, especially items that have been cut, need airtight solutions like these Zwilling glass containers to keep them fresh and to prevent unwanted odors from assaulting your nose every time you open the refrigerator (we’re looking at you, Brussels sprouts and cauliflower).

The life of fresh herbs and asparagus can be extended by storing them in a small amount of water. This Herb Savor Pod from Prepara is perfectly designed to fit right in the refrigerator door. There’s an easy access filler cap where the water can be changed every three to five days. This not only triples the typical lifespan of fresh herbs, it also keeps them fresh and crisp. The hard shell window offers easy access when you need something fresh to liven a dish, but it also allows the herbs to breathe at optimum hydration levels. Plus, it protects the leaves from being crushed by other items in the fridge. As someone who has bought (and re-bought) delicate fresh dill more times than I can count, investing in this storage solution has ultimately cut down on the grocery bills.

Avocados can be a challenge. You keep them out on the countertop until they have reached that perfect, fleeting moment of ripeness. Then once you slice it open to enjoy, there’s always that other half to save and enjoy later. All too often, of course, that beautiful shade of green will turn brown before you even get a chance. I’ve found that the Avocado Hugger works wonders. It fits perfectly snugly around a sliced avocado with the pit still attached, and keeps it fresh for up to two days—a relative impossibility using a traditional plastic container or plastic wrap. There are also Food Hugger solutions for cut lemons, onions, and bananas.

I have been searching for a solution for onion odors for years. There is nothing worse than trying to save the other half of an onion only for the pungent aroma to infiltrate all the other items in your refrigerator (particularly if you’re a baker like me). I also like to get a head start on meal prep by chopping onions or garlic ahead of dinner time. Smelly Proof bags are a game-changer. I was able to prepare the entire mise en place for the next evening’s dinner, and couldn’t smell even the faintest whiff of onion when I opened the refrigerator the next day.

The bags are washable and reusable, but I would recommend labeling the outside of the bag and reusing it only for the same items. As much as these bags keep the odor out, the inside of the bag can retain remnants of what it contained (especially when it comes to more pungent ingredients).

Room temperature storage

Some produce is best kept out on the countertop at room temperature, in the pantry, or in other cool, dark place.

Bananas are the best example of a fruit that should be stored at room temperature to allow them to develop proper flavor and texture as they ripen. One of the most effective ways to lengthen the life of a banana bunch is to hang it from a banana stand (which is not a container, of course, but still the best product by far for storing them). By hanging bananas from a hook, the ethylene gas released from its stems works more slowly, ultimately ripening the bananas more evenly all the way around. I love this copper banana holder because it is just as chic-looking as it is effective.

Potatoes, onions, and sturdy root vegetables like rutabagas and turnips are best kept in a cool, dark place, like the back of your pantry. Breathable cotton vegetable storage bags are a great choice for “long haul” produce like these items. I like these bags from Eddingtons because they have a convenient “first-in, first-out” system. Simply fill from the drawstring opening at the top, then take what you need from the zipper opening at the bottom. The bags also have blackout linings to keep food fresher for longer.

In the end, I have found that it’s certainly worth investing in a few clever, sturdy tools upfront in order to cut down on food waste later. All of these products were built to last for years, have found permanent spots in my kitchen, and will pay for themselves in no time.

Sen. Ron Johnson, worth $40 million, derided as “face of the opposition” to COVID relief

As the Senate began to officially debate the latest coronavirus spending measure on Thursday, a wide-ranging package worth roughly $1.9 trillion, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., drew sharp criticism from his Democratic colleagues for positioning himself as the central figure standing in the way of aid swiftly reaching struggling Americans.

The Wisconsin Republican has vowed to delay the pandemic relief that includes provisions like individual $1,400 checks, extended unemployment benefits and housing assistance because of its size and scope. One of his tactics was to force Senate clerks to read the bill’s more than 600 pages in its entirety — and force stenographers to retype the whole package — which could take up to 10 hours.

“I feel bad for the clerks who are going to have to read it, but it’s just important. So often we rush these massive bills that are hundreds, if not thousands of pages long,” Johnson told reporters. “All I’m trying to do is make this a more deliberative process and obviously shine the light on this abusive and obscene amount of money that’s going to further mortgage our children’s future.”

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and others derided Johnson, who is estimated to be one of the top 20 wealthiest members of Congress, with a net worth of nearly $40 million, for deciding “to make himself the face of the opposition.”

The former CEO of a polyester and plastics manufacturer before his 2010 election to the Senate, Johnson has emerged as one of the chamber’s most extreme Republican ideologues, despite his mild Midwestern demeanor. He has repeatedly rejected the scientific consensus on climate change, describing it as “lunacy,” and as chair of the Senate Homeland Security Committee last year invited several witnesses to expound on discredited fringe theories about COVID-19. He was staunchly loyal to Donald Trump throughout the former president’s term, launching half-baked investigations he claimed would prove Joe Biden’s “unfitness for office” and spreading incoherent rumors about an anti-Trump conspiracy within the Department of Justice and FBI.

Schumer tried to look on the bright side, despite ripping into Johnson for going to “ridiculous lengths” to obstruct the relief bill and for promoting various false narratives about the 2020 election and the Jan. 6 insurrection. (Johnson did not admit that Trump had lost the November election for more than six weeks, and has suggested that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was somehow to blame for the attack on the U.S. Capitol.)

The majority leader also accused Johnson and many of his fellow Republicans of hypocrisy by their willingness to dish out money under the past president but changing their tune for the current one. “We are delighted that the senator from Wisconsin wants to give the American people another opportunity to hear what’s in the American Rescue Plan,” Schumer said. “We Democrats want America to hear what’s in the plan.”

The relief legislation, which was released in revised and presumably final form at the start of debate on Thursday afternoon, is moving through Congress via reconciliation, a budget process that would allow the bill to pass without any Republican support, on a 50-50 tie to be broken by Vice President Kamala Harris. But with that avenue comes a hellish process known as a “vote-a-rama,” where any number of senators can offer an unlimited number of amendments and further stall the final passage.

Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., for example, has said he plans to force votes on all of his nearly two dozen amendments. Johnson distributed a sign-up sheet to Republicans so they could take shifts to ensure enough of their members would be on the floor at all times to further extend the marathon effort.

Some GOP senators, such as Rand Paul, R-Ky., have said they would make the vote-a-rama last indefinitely, if they could. But the expectation and goal of those like Johnson is to at least draw out the session until Sunday.  

“It will come to an end,” said Majority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill. “I don’t know if it will be one day or five days, but it will come to an end. There will be a vote.”

Johnson’s ultimate goal is to sour the public’s opinion on the relief package, which has unusually high bipartisan approval from voters, considering that so far the bill has not received the support of even one Republican senator. He has apparently modeled his strategy on the battle over a 1993 supplemental appropriations bill, which remained on the floor for 12 days and was significantly decreased in cost. 

“I don’t think we need any additional authorization right now when you have [money that] hasn’t been spent yet,” Johnson said. “Spend that first before you authorize any new dollars, but that’s not what the Democrats want to do.”

FBI urged to probe Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis over “red carpet vaccine distribution”

Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried on Thursday accused Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, of staging “red carpet vaccine distribution for donors” and called for the FBI to investigate the matter.

Citing her experience as a public defender, Fried, the state’s highest-ranking elected Democrat, said, “The fact pattern is simply just too clear to avoid: give campaign contribution, big dollars, get special access to vaccines — ahead of seniors, ahead of our teachers, ahead of our farmworkers, and so many of our residents here in the state of Florida.”

“If this isn’t public corruption, I don’t know what is,” said Fried, whose office is also the state’s consumer watchdog.

“I will not stand by and let our vaccines be used as political gain … to be auctioned to the highest bidder,” she said.

Fried’s call for an FBI probe followed reporting by the Miami Herald that nearly all those over 65 in the wealthy Key Largo community of Ocean Reef Club received vaccines by mid-January.

The Herald noted Wednesday that Ocean Reef is “home to many wealthy donors to the Florida Republican Party and GOP candidates, including Gov. Ron DeSantis” and added that “the only people from Key Largo who gave to DeSantis’ political committee live in Ocean Reef.”

Citing the Florida Division of Elections, the Herald reported that 17 residents of the community had given DeSantis contributions of $5,000 each through December of 2020.

One of the Ocean Reef residents is former Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner, a Republican, who on Feb. 25 “increased his contribution and wrote a $250,000 check,” according to the Herald.

In fact, “Since DeSantis started using the state’s vaccine initiative to steer special pop-up vaccinations to select communities,” the Herald reported, “his political committee has raised $2.7 million in the month of February alone, more than any other month since he first ran for governor in 2018, records show.”

More evidence of DeSantis is playing politics with vaccine distribution came weeks earlier.

As the Orlando Sentinel reported Thursday:

The Herald report comes after weeks of controversy over whether the wealthy communities targeted by the DeSantis’ vaccine “pods” were influenced by political considerations.

Three communities in Charlotte, Manatee, and Sarasota counties developed by Republican fundraiser Pat Neal were chosen by DeSantis for pop-up sites. Neal contributed $125,000 to DeSantis in 2018 and 2019.

Only two ZIP codes were eligible at the Manatee site, and County Commissioner Vanessa Baugh included herself and the development’s CEO on a VIP list.

Those events prompted Rep. Charlie Crist, D-Fla., to call for a Justice Department investigation.

In a letter to Acting Attorney General Monty Wilkinson dated Feb. 21, Crist expressed concern about DeSantis “setting up ‘pop-up’ vaccination sites to deliver doses to select communities” and wrote that in “several cases, these sites seem to be targeted to wealthy communities with whom Governor DeSantis has clear political connections, allowing some to skip to the front of the line in counties with existing waitlists.”

“I request that the Department of Justice determine if the governor’s blatantly political vaccine distribution decisions, which do not seem to be in the public’s best interest, violate federal law, and merit a full federal investigation,” he wrote.

DeSantis, for his part, has rejected the accusations of wrongdoing, saying at a press conference Thursday, “I’m not worried about your income bracket, I’m worried about your age bracket.” He further asserted that the the state “wasn’t involved in [the Ocean Reef distribution] in any shape or form.” 

Fried, in her remarks Thursday, put the access to vaccines in a global context.

“This is an international health care pandemic and we’re supposed to all be in this together,” she said, “and so getting to the front of the line because you have access and you have the financial ability is just unacceptable.”

Trump and Biden’s secret bombing wars: One thing that hasn’t changed

On Feb. 25, President Biden ordered U.S. air forces to drop seven 500-pound bombs on Iraqi forces in Syria, reportedly killing 22 people. The U.S. airstrike has predictably failed to halt rocket attacks on deeply unpopular U.S. bases in Iraq, which the Iraqi National Assembly passed a resolution to close over a year ago. 

The Western media reported the U.S. airstrike as an isolated and exceptional incident, and there has been significant blowback from the U.S. public, Congress and the world community, condemning the strikes as illegal and a dangerous escalation of yet another Middle East conflict. 

But unbeknownst to many Americans, the U.S. military and its allies are engaged in bombing and killing people in other countries on a daily basis. The U.S. and its allies have dropped more than 326,000 bombs and missiles on people in other countries since 2001 (see table below), including more than 152,000 in Iraq and Syria. 

That’s an average of 46 bombs and missiles per day, day in day out, year in year out, for nearly 20 years. In 2019, the last year for which we have fairly complete records, the average was 42 bombs and missiles per day, including 20 per day in Afghanistan alone.

So, if those seven 500-pound bombs were the only bombs the U.S. and its allies dropped on Feb. 25, it would have been an unusually quiet day for U.S. and allied air forces, and for their enemies and victims on the ground, compared to an average day in 2019 or most of the past 20 years. 

On the other hand, if the unrelenting U.S. air assault on countries across the greater Middle East finally began to diminish over the past year, this bombing may have been an unusual spike in violence. But which of these was it, and how would we know?

We don’t know, because our government doesn’t want us to. From January 2004 until February 2020, the U.S. military kept track of how many bombs and missiles it dropped on Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria, and published those figures in regular, monthly Airpower Summaries, which were readily available to journalists and the public. But in March 2020, the Trump administration abruptly stopped publishing U.S. Airpower Summaries, and the Biden administration has so far not published any either. 

As with the human casualties and mass destruction that these hundreds of thousands of airstrikes cause, the U.S. and international media only report on a tiny fraction of them. Without regular U.S. Airpower Summaries, comprehensive databases of airstrikes in other war zones and serious mortality studies in the countries involved, the American public and the world are left almost completely in the dark about the death and destruction our country’s leaders keep wreaking in our name. The disappearance of Airpower Summaries has made it impossible to get a clear picture of the current scale of U.S. airstrikes.

Here are up-to-date figures on U.S. and allied airstrikes, from 2001 to the present, highlighting the secrecy in which they have abruptly been shrouded for the past year:

These figures are based on U.S. Airpower Summaries for Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria; the Bureau of Investigative Journalism’s count of drone strikes in Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen; the Yemen Data Project‘s count of Saudi-led airstrikes in Yemen; the New America Foundation’s database of foreign airstrikes in Libya; and other published statistics. Figures for 2021 are only through January.

There are several categories of airstrikes that are not included in this table, meaning that the true numbers of airstrikes are certainly higher. These include:

  • Helicopter strikes: Military Times published an article in February 2017 titled, “The U.S. military’s stats on deadly airstrikes are wrong. Thousands have gone unreported.” The largest pool of airstrikes not included in U.S. Airpower Summaries are strikes by attack helicopters. The U.S. Army told the authors its helicopters had conducted 456 otherwise unreported airstrikes in Afghanistan in 2016. The authors explained that the non-reporting of helicopter strikes has been consistent throughout the post-9/11 wars, and they still did not know how many actual missiles were fired in those 456 attacks in Afghanistan in the one year they investigated.
  • AC-130 gunships: The airstrike that destroyed the Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, in 2015 was not conducted with bombs or missiles, but by a Lockheed-Boeing AC-130 gunship. These machines of mass destruction, usually manned by U.S. Air Force special operations forces, are designed to circle a target on the ground, pouring howitzer shells and cannon fire into it, often until it is completely destroyed. The U.S. has used AC-130s in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Somalia and Syria.
  • Strafing runs: U.S. Airpower Summaries for 2004-2007 included a note that their tally of “strikes with munitions dropped … does not include 20mm and 30mm cannon or rockets.” But the 30mm cannons on A-10 Warthogs and other ground attack planes are powerful weapons, originally designed to destroy Soviet tanks. A-10s fire 65 depleted uranium shells per second to blanket an area with deadly and indiscriminate fire, but that does not count as a “weapons release” in U.S. Airpower Summaries.
  • “Counter-insurgency” and “counter-terrorism” operations in other parts of the world. The United States formed a military coalition with 11 West African countries in 2005, and now has a drone base in Niger, but we have not found a database of U.S. and allied air strikes in that region, or in the Philippines, Latin America or elsewhere.

It was clearly no coincidence that Trump stopped publishing Airpower Summaries right after the February 2020 U.S. withdrawal agreement with the Taliban, reinforcing the false impression that the war in Afghanistan was over. In fact, U.S. bombing resumed after only an 11-day pause. 

As our table shows, 2018 and 2019 were back-to-back record years for U.S. airstrikes in Afghanistan. But how about 2020? Without the official records, we don’t know whether the withdrawal agreement led to a serious reduction in airstrikes or not.

President Biden has foolishly tried to use airstrikes in Syria as “leverage” with Iran, instead of simply rejoining the Iran nuclear agreement as he promised during the election campaign. Biden is likewise trailing along in Trump’s footsteps by shrouding U.S. airstrikes in the secrecy that Trump used to obscure his failure to “end the endless wars.” 

It is entirely possible that the highly publicized Feb. 25 airstrikes, like Trump’s April 2017 missile strikes on Syria, were a diversion from much heavier, but largely unreported, U.S. bombing already under way elsewhere, in that case the frightful destruction of Mosul, Iraq’s former second city.  

The only way Biden can reassure the American public that he is not using Trump’s wall of secrecy to continue America’s devastating air wars, notably in Afghanistan, is to end this secrecy now, and resume the publication of complete and accurate U.S. Airpower Summaries.

Biden cannot restore the world’s respect for American leadership, or the American public’s support for our foreign policy, by piling more lies, secrets and atrocities on top of those he has inherited. If he keeps trying to do so, he might well find himself following in Trump’s footsteps in yet another way: as the failed, one-term president of a destructive and declining empire.

Donald Trump calls out Fox News for struggles “in the ratings department” as he attacks Karl Rove

Former President Donald Trump issued a 700-word statement on Thursday complaining about Fox News analyst Karl Rove.

“Karl Rove has been losing for years, except for himself,” Trump began.

“Karl Rove’s voice on Fox is always negative for those who know how to win. He certainly hasn’t helped Fox in the ratings department, has he?” Trump asked.

“Never had much of a feeling for Karl, in that I disagreed with so many of the things he says. He’s a pompous fool with bad advice and always has an agenda. He ran the campaign for two Senators in Georgia, and did a rotten job with bad ads and concepts. Should have been an easy win, but he and his friend Mitch blew it with their $600 vs. $2,000 proposal. Karl would be much more at home at the disastrous Lincoln Project. I heard they have numerous openings!” he wrote.

“If the Republican Party is going to be successful, they’re going to have to stop dealing with the likes of Karl Rove and just let him float away, or retire, like Liddle’ Bob Corker, Jeff “Flakey” Flake, and others like Toomey of Pennsylvania, who will soon follow. Let’s see what happens to Liz Cheney of Wyoming,” he said.

“Karl Rove is all talk and no action! Next time Karl, save your Election night phone call and keep doing a great job for the Democrats. Fox should get rid of Karl Rove and his ridiculous ‘whiteboard’ as soon as possible!” Trump wrote.

Astronomers hone a new way of searching for alien civilizations in the stars

NASA’s Perseverance rover landed on Mars last month in a mission to, in part, search for signs of ancient microbial life on our neighboring planet. If any evidence of such extraterrestrial organisms — likely long dead — is found, it will be a massive development in astrobiology and humanity’s understanding of its place in the universe. But when people are honest, they tend to admit that fossilized remains of ancient microorganisms aren’t what gets them excited in the search for alien life. What really fires the imagination is the search for intelligent alien life and extraterrestrial civilizations.

A recent paper, though, flagged by astronomer and writer Phil Plait at SyFy, offers surprisingly promising developments in that branch of space exploration. Working at UCLA, a group of astronomers published findings on a new method of searching for signs of technological civilizations in the stars.

“We selected 31 Sun-like stars,” they explain, “because their properties are similar to the only star currently known to harbor a planet with life.”

And to be upfront about it, they unequivocally found no sign of civilization. But Plait argued that they showcased a promising method for pursuing the search.

Basically, the technique entailed using the Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia to scan for radio signals. Many scientists hopeful about searching for intelligent alien life think that the most likely way we’ll uncover it is by receiving radio transmissions from non-human sources. Radio signals are easy to create, they can travel the long distances between solar systems, and they can encode detailed information. And if there are any civilizations out there listening, they may have already picked up many of our own transmissions.

But the universe is filled with radio signals naturally, so the key is to detect those that appear to be artificial. And inconveniently, most of the artificial radio signals we detect while looking at space have a mundane source: humanity.

That’s where the UCLA researcher’s novel work comes in. They’ve developed an algorithm to weed out extraneous signals in the data, pinpointing those most likely to be caused by aliens. Plait explained:

Finding a sharp, narrow radio signal isn’t that hard. But if there are a lot close together in frequency some search algorithms can get confused, and only find the brightest one in the pack.
What they did instead was search using what is called topographical prominence. This is a concept used when mapping mountains, and it quantifies how tall a mountain is relative to the terrain around it. You can get a tall mountain, for example, that’s easy to spot if it’s relatively isolated (like Kilimanjaro, for example) but more difficult to ID if there are lots of slightly smaller mountains all around it.
By measuring the prominence of narrow radio signals they were able to find signals that were still interesting but unlikely to be found using standard search methods. They wound up finding something like 200 times as many candidate signals as other methods this way.

After scanning each of the stars for five minutes twice one year apart, they found more than 26 million signals. But the algorithm let the researchers screen out more than 99% of those signals as human-made. Another 90% were also clearly from radio signals, and after all that, 4,539 were left over. Checking through them one-by-one, the researchers were able to conclude these, too, were from human sources and not evidence of alien technology. A disappointment, to be sure — but the real point was to hone the technique.

They also did a neat trick to check their methodology. In a separate part of the study, they injected fake technological signals into their raw data to see if their algorithm could pick them out. And they found:

We make a first step towards the implementation of this tool and show that our current pipeline detects 93% of the injected signals over the usable frequency range of the receiver and 98% if we exclude regions with dense RFI. In addition, our pipeline correctly flagged 99.73%of the detected signals as technosignature candidates. Although our current implementation requires additional work to fully capture the end-to-end pipeline efficiency, it can already illuminate imperfections in our and other groups’ pipelines and be used to calibrate claims about the prevalence of other civilizations . . .

If aliens are hanging out in the galaxy communicating by radio signals, “this process would find them,” said Plait. “I don’t know if we’ll ever find aliens, let alone how. Unless faster-than-light travel is possible (and I’d bet against it right now) it’s really hard to go from star to star. Not impossible, just hard, and it’s far easier to just send radio signals instead. So this does seem like a decent bet.”

“Racist disinformation”: Fox News host Jeanine Pirro falsely blames immigrants for spreading COVID

Fox News was called out on Thursday after Jeanine Pirro went on an angry tirade blaming immigrants for spreading coronavirus.

“You listen to me,” Pirro shouted at Geraldo Rivera.

“They’ve got COVID, they’ve got all kinds of diseases, they are being released into the United States,” she loudly argued.

Univision anchor Fernando Espuelas called out the network for Pirro’s rant.

“Blaming undocumented people for COVID is the new Stop the Steal. It’s extremely dangerous- will spike anti-Latino violence,” he posted to Twitter.

“Fox News must be held responsible for allowing the spread of racist disinformation on their platform,” he said.

You can watch the video below via Twitter

Prosecutors focus on money man in Trump probe: “He knows where all the financial bodies are buried”

Trump Organization executive Allen Weisselberg represents an existential threat to former President Donald Trump — and his three oldest children, a Trump biographer explained on CNN on Thursday.

The New York Times is now reporting that Manhattan prosecutors are focusing on Trump’s top money man, Allen Weisselberg, who, for more than two decades, served at the Trump Organization’s financial gatekeeper,” CNN’s Brianna Keilar reported Thursday.

For analysis, Keiler interviewed Trump biographer Tim O’Brien.

“How central is Allen Weisselberg to the former president’s dealings?” Keiler asked.

“He’s as central as anyone can be, Brianna. He grew up in the Trump Organization. Donald Trump’s father, Fred Trump, hired Allen in the 1970s to become the accountant, sort of the chief accountant for Fred Trump’s company. He and Donald are the same age, they grew up together in the company, and — Donald Trump eventually made Allen his chief financial officer,” O’Brien explained.

“He knows where all the financial bodies are buried,” he continued. “There wasn’t a deal that went through the Trump Organization that Allen Weisselberg didn’t sign off on. In that regard he was much more crucial to the president’s thinking than any of his children were, and really almost any other adviser in the organization.”

“And he knows where the money is, and in the midst of a financial fraud investigation, that means he’s as about as existential a threat to the president as he could be,” he explained.

Keiler asked if Weisselberg might flip.

“Well that question, that’s the, you know, billion dollar question, Brianna, is, ‘will he cooperate?’ It is a classic prosecutorial tactic to begin squeezing people at the bottom of the ladder in order to get to the top, and if you get to Allen Weisselberg and he flips then you get to Donald Trump. I would suspect that there’s more than just an interest in speaking to Allen Weisselberg here. He’s a cog in a machine.”

“They are street smart. They have historically been loyal to one another, but are not sophisticated. If Allen Weisselberg’s loyalty to Donald Trump evaporates, then you’re going to see a series of other people possibly start to cooperate and that could get, put a lot of pressure on Trump and his children,” said O’Brien.

You can watch the video below via YouTube:

More money for the Pentagon in the pandemic moment?

This country is in a crisis of the first order. More than half a million of us have died thanks to Covid-19. Food insecurity is on the rise, with nearly 24 million Americans going hungry, including 12 million children. Unemployment claims filed since the pandemic began have now reached 93 million. Given the level of damage to the less wealthy parts of this society, it’s little wonder that most Americans chose pandemic recovery (including the quick distribution of vaccines) as their top priority issue.

Keep in mind that our democracy is suffering as well. After all, former president Donald Trump incited an insurrection when he wasn’t able to win at the polls, an assault on the Capitol in which military veterans were overrepresented among those committed to reversing the election results (and endangering legislators as well). If you want a mood-of-the-moment fact, consider this: even after Joe Biden’s election, QAnon followers continued to insist that Trump could still be inaugurated to his second term in office. Addressing economic and political instability at home will take significant resources and focus, including calling to account those who so grossly mishandled the country’s pandemic response and stoked the big lie of questioning the legitimacy of Biden’s election victory.

If, however, you weren’t out here in the real world, but in there where the national security elite exists, you’d find that the chatter would involve few of the problems just mentioned. And only in our world would such a stance seem remarkably disconnected from reality. In their world, the “crisis” part of the present financial crisis is a fear, based on widespread rumors and reports about the Biden budget to come, that the Pentagon’s funding might actually get, if not a genuine haircut, then at least a trim — something largely unheard of in the twenty-first century.

The Pentagon’s boosters and their allies in the defense industry respond to such fears by insisting that no such trim could possibly be in order, that competition with China must be the prime focus of this moment and of the budget to come. Assuming that China’s rise is, in fact, a genuine problem, it’s not one that’s likely to be solved either in the near future or in a military fashion (not, at least, without disaster for the world), and it’s certainly not one that should be prioritized during a catastrophic pandemic.

While there are genuine concerns about what China’s rise might mean for the United States, it’s important to recognize just how much harm those trying to distract us from the very real problems at hand are likely to inflict on our health and actual security. Since the beginning of the pandemic, in fact, those unwilling to accept our failures or respond adequately to the disease at hand have blamed outside forces, most notably China, for otherwise preventable havoc to American lives and the economy.

Trump and his allies tried to shirk accountability for their failure to respond to the pandemic by pushing xenophobic and false characterizations of Covid-19 as the “China virus” or the “kung flu.” In a similar fashion, the national security elites hope that focusing on building up our military and building new nuclear weapons with China in mind will distract time and energy from making needed changes at home. But those urging us to increase Pentagon spending to compete with China in the middle of a pandemic are, in reality, only compounding the damage to our country’s recovery.

Militarizing the Future

Given the last two decades, you won’t be surprised to know that this misplaced assessment of the real threat to the public has a firm grip on Washington right now. As my colleague Dan Grazier at the Project On Government Oversight pointed outrecently, confirmation hearings for Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin III and Deputy Secretary Kathleen Hicks included more than 70 (sometimes ominous) mentions of China.

So again, no surprise that only a few weeks after those hearings, Biden announced the creation of a new China task force at the Pentagon. As the press announcement made clear, that group is going to be a dream for the military-industrial complex since it will, above all, focus on developing advanced “defense” technologies to stare down the China “threat” and so further militarize the future. In other words, the Pentagon’s projected threat assessments and their wonder-weapon solutions will be at the forefront of Washington thinking — and, therefore, funding, even during this pandemic.

That’s why it’s easy enough to predict where such a task force will lead. A similar panel in 2018, including lobbyists, board members, and contractors from the arms industry, warned that competition with China would require a long-term increase in funding for the Pentagon of 3% to 5%. That could mean an almost unimaginable future Department of Defense budget of $971.9 billion in fiscal year 2024. To pay for it, they suggested, Congress should consider cutting social security and other kinds of safety-net spending.

Even before Covid-19 hit, the economic fragility of so many Americans should have made that kind of recommendation irresponsible. In the midst of a pandemic, it’s beyond dangerous. Still, it betrays a crucial truth about the military-industrial complex: its key figures see the U.S. economy as something that should serve their needs, not the other way around.

Of course, the giants of the weapons industry have long had a direct seat at the table in Washington. Despite being the first Black secretary of defense, for instance, Lloyd Austin III remains typical of the Pentagon establishment in the sense that he comes to the job directly from a seat on the board of directors of weapons giant Raytheon. And he’s in good company. After all, many of the administration’s recent appointees are drawn from key Washington think tanks supported by the weapons industry.

For instance, more than a dozen former staffers from, or people affiliated with, the Center for a New American Security (CNAS) have joined the Biden administration. A recent report by the Revolving Door Project found that CNAS had repeatedly accepted the sort of funding that went comfortably with recommendations it was making that “would directly benefit some of the think tank’s donors, including military contractors and foreign governments.” When it came to confronting China, for instance, CNAS figures urged the Department of Defense to “sustain and enhance” defense contractors so that they would become ever more “robust, flexible, and resilient” in a faceoff with that country. 

Sadly, even as the Pentagon’s budget remains largely unchallenged, there’s been a sudden reawakening — especially in Republican ranks — to the version of fiscal conservatism that looks askance at providing relief to communities and businesses suffering around the country. Recent debates in Washington about the latest pandemic relief bill suggest once again that the much-ballyhooed principles of “responsibility” and “fiscal conservatism” apply to everyone — except, of course, the Pentagon.

Putting Covid-19 Relief Spending in Perspective

The price tag for the relief bill presently being debated in Congress, $1.9 trillion, is certainly significant, but it’s not far from the kind of taxpayer support national security agencies normally receive every year. In 2020, for instance, the real national security budget request surpassed $1.2 trillion. That request included not only the Pentagon, but other costs of war, including care for veterans and military retirement benefits.

Over the years, such costs have proven monumental. The Department of Defense alone, for example, has received more than $10.6 trillion over the past 20 years. That included $2 trillion for its overseas contingency operations account, a war-fighting fund used by both the Pentagon and lawmakers to circumvent congressionally imposed spending caps. Reliance on that account, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office assured Congress, only made it likelier that taxpayers would fund more expensive and less optimal solutions to America’s forever wars.

In the past, the justification for such excessive national-security spending rested on the idea that the Defense Department was the key to keeping Americans safe. As a result, the Pentagon’s ever-escalating requests for money were approved by Congress year after year without real opposition. Disproportionate funding for that institution has, however, come at a significant cost.

Caps on non-defense spending under the Budget Control Act of 2011 meant that civilian agencies were already underfunded when the pandemic hit. As the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities pointed out, “Overall funding for programs outside veterans’ medical care remains below its level a decade ago.” The consequences of that underspending can also be seen in our crumbling roads and infrastructure, to which, in its last report in 2017, the American Society of Civil Engineers gave a D+ — and the situation has only grown worse since then.

Job protection is the other common refrain for those defending high funding levels for the Pentagon and, during a pandemic with such devastating employment consequences, such a concern can hardly be dismissed. But studies have consistently shown that military spending is a remarkably poor job creator compared to almost any other kind of spending. Some of us may still remember World War II’s Rosie the Riveter and mid-twentieth-century union support for defense budgets as engines for job creation. Those assumptions are, however, sorely out of date. Investing in healthcare, combating climate change, or rebuilding infrastructure are all significantly more effective job creators than yet more military spending.

Of course, non-military stimulus spending has been far from perfect. Even measuring the effects of the first relief package passed by Congress has proven difficult, especially since the Trump administration ignored the law when it came to reporting on just how many jobs that spending either preserved or created. Still, there’s no question that non-military stimulus efforts are more effective, by orders of magnitude, than defense spending when it comes to job creation.

Needed: A New Funding Strategy to Weather Future Storms

The uncomfortable truth (even for those who would like to see a trillion dollars in annual Pentagon spending) is that such funding won’t make us safer, possibly far less so. Recent studies of preventable military aviation crashes indicate that, disturbingly enough, given the way the Pentagon spends taxpayer funds, more money can actually make us less safe.

Somewhere along the line in this pandemic moment, Washington needs to redefine the meaning of both “national security” and “national interest.” In a world in which California burns and Texas freezes, in which more than half-a-million Americans have already been felled by Covid-19, it’s time to recognize how damaging the over-funding of the Pentagon and a myopic focus on an ever more militarized cold war with China are likely to be to this country. As the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft’s Stephen Wertheim has argued, it’s increasingly clear that an American strategy focused on chasing global military supremacy into the distant future no longer serves any real definition of national interest.

Vanderbilt law professor Ganesh Sitaraman recently pointed out at Foreign Affairsthat “the coming era will be one of health crises, climate shocks, cyberattacks, and geoeconomic competition among great powers. What unites those seemingly disparate threats is that each is not so much a battle to be won as a challenge to be weathered.” While traditional defense threats still loom large in what passes for national debate in Washington, the most likely (and potentially most devastating) threats to public health and safety aren’t actually in the Pentagon’s wheelhouse.

Weathering those future crises will continue to require innovation and creativity, which means ensuring that we are investing adequately not in the hypersonic weaponry of some future imagined war but in education and public health now. Particularly in the near term, as we try to rebuild jobs and businesses lost to this pandemic, even the Pentagon must be forced to make better use of the staggering resources it already receives from increasingly embattled American taxpayers. Rushing to produce yet more useless (and sometimes poorly produced) weapons systems and technology will only increase the fragility of both the military and the civilian society it’s supposed to protect.

Make no mistake: the addiction to Pentagon spending is a bipartisan problem in Washington. Still, change is in order. The problems we face at home are too overwhelming to be ignored. We can’t continue to let the appetites of the military-industrial complex crowd out the needs of the rest of us.

Copyright 2021 Mandy Smithberger

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Can cult studies offer help with QAnon? The science is thin

Days before the inauguration of President Joe Biden, at a time when some Americans were animated by the false conviction that former President Donald J. Trump had actually won the November election, a man in Colorado began texting warnings to his family. The coming days, he wrote, would be “the most important since World War II.” Trump had invoked the Insurrection Act, the man believed, and he was arresting enemies in the Vatican and other countries. Predicting turbulence ahead, the man urged his wife and two adult children to begin stockpiling essential goods.

“Watch how the world and the United States are saved!” he wrote.

The man had shown an affinity for conspiracy theories in the past, according to one of his sons, who shared the text messages with Undark, requesting that his name and other identifying characteristics of his family be withheld because he feared exposing his father to public ridicule. Recently, however, his father’s preoccupations had taken a more hard-edged and political turn — often following the twisting storylines of QAnon, a collection of right-wing conspiracy theories that describe Trump and his allies battling an international cabal of liberal pedophiles.

His father’s texts about preparing for national upheaval worried the man, and he says he began checking corners and closets in the house to see if his father was indeed stockpiling supplies. He also ordered a book by Steven Hassan, a mental health counselor in Massachusetts who calls himself “America’s leading cult expert.” And he began looking — mostly, he said, just out of curiosity — for resources on “deprogramming” a loved one whom he worried had been brainwashed.

He is far from alone in trying anew to make sense of conspiracist thinking. Since Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, many carrying signs and wearing clothing emblazoned with references to “Q,” deradicalization experts who cut their teeth on studies of militant Islamic ideologies have turned their attention to Trump-aligned right-wing extremists. Social psychologists who study conspiracy theorists and misinformation have also seen a sudden spike in interest in their work.

But some Americans have also begun using the language of cults and turning to specialists in cultic studies to make sense of the surge of online disinformation and conspiratorial thinking that have accompanied Trump’s rise.

“It is not hyperbole labeling MAGA as a cult,” the progressive activist Travis Akers wrote on Twitter in late January, referring to Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan, and adding that hard-line Trump supporters “are sick and need help.” Television journalist Katie Couric asked “how are we going to really almost deprogram these people who have signed up for the cult of Trump?” Democratic U.S. Representative Jamie Raskin, the lead impeachment manager during Trump’s second trial, recently compared the Republican Party to a cult. And in a Reddit group where anguished relatives of QAnon adherents gather for support, or to swap various anti-cult strategies, there are many references to Hassan’s and other experts’ work.

“I’m inundated, daily, with families freaking out,” said Pat Ryan, a cult mediation expert in Philadelphia. Daniel Shaw, a psychoanalyst in the New York City area who often works with ex-group members, also described an uptick in interest. “I’ve been receiving many, many inquiries from terrified family members about a loved one who is completely lost — mentally, emotionally — in the rabbit hole of conspiracy theories,” Shaw said.

Hassan, Ryan, and Shaw are part of the small field of cult experts who focus on the experiences of people who join intense ideological movements. Some are trained psychologists and social workers; others are independent scholars and uncredentialed professionals. Many identify as former cult members themselves. But for families hoping to “deprogram” a QAnon-obsessed loved one, it’s unclear how much evidence there is behind the methods of these practitioners.

 

There’s broad agreement that “some groups harm some people sometimes,” said Michael Langone, a counseling psychologist and the director of the International Cultic Studies Association. But members of the field have sometimes clashed with academic experts, and even among themselves, especially over the notion that otherwise healthy people who subscribe to unorthodox belief systems are victims of a mental hijacking. Such thinking has received scant scientific reinforcement since sociologists, psychologists, and religious studies scholars first started pushing back on anti-cult hysteria in the U.S. decades ago. And while few cult specialists today claim to do the sort of deprogramming that gained popularity in the 1970s, some anti-cult practitioners — and licensed psychiatrists — do still embrace the idea that brainwashing and mind control pose real threats, and that they apply to online conspiracies.

Despite this, many other researchers today say that these notions simply discount human agency. For the most part, they say, people gravitate to ideas and assertions they’re already inclined to believe, and those disposed to get enthusiastic or obsessive about things will do just that, of their own volition. Still, for families divided over political conspiracy theories — and even over belief systems involving left-wing, Satan-worshipping child sex rings — many cult experts ultimately settle on advice that makes restoring and cultivating relationships the primary focus.

“Number one: Do not confront. It absolutely does not work,” said Steve Eichel, a clinical psychologist in Delaware and specialist in cult recovery. And number two: “Maintain your relationship with that person no matter what.”

* * *

The anti-cult movement emerged in the 1970s, as a wave of new religious groups attracted young followers in the U.S. These included the Rajneeshees, whose rise in Oregon was the subject of a viral 2018 Netflix documentary; the International Society for Krishna Consciousness, better known as the Hare Krishnas; and the Unification Church of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon. These were joined by radical political organizations like the Symbionese Liberation Army, which gained national attention for the kidnapping of Patricia Hearst, an actor and heir who went on to participate in an armed bank robbery with the group.

In some cases, adherents made dramatic changes to their lives, espousing beliefs that many of their friends and relatives found to be bizarre. Some groups took extreme paths: In particular, more than 900 followers of the Peoples Temple, a group based in San Francisco, died in 1978 at Jonestown, the compound their leader had built in Guyana, most from drinking a cyanide-laced punch.

Some alarmed parents and commentators labeled many of these movements cults. They described what happened to their children as brainwashing, and even as a new kind of pathology. “Destructive cultism is a sociopathic illness which is rapidly spreading throughout the U.S. and the rest of the world in the form of a pandemic,” Eli Shapiro, a doctor whose son had joined the Hare Krishnas, wrote in the journal American Family Physician in 1977. Symptoms of the pathology, Shapiro wrote, included “behavioral changes, loss of personal identity, cessation of scholastic activities, estrangement from family, disinterest in society, and pronounced mental control and enslavement by cult leaders.”

In response, people began to organize. The American Family Foundation, launched in 1979, offered resources to families in distress. More hard-line groups, like the Cult Awareness Network, helped arrange deprogrammings of group members. In some cases, deprogrammers would kidnap a group member, detain them for hours or days, and use arguments and videos to try to undo the brainwashing.

The anti-cult movement soon ran into opposition from many sociologists and historians of religion, who argued that the anti-cultists often targeted religious movements that, while exotic to most Americans, were doing nothing wrong. They also questioned the very idea that brainwashing and deprogramming were real phenomena. In one landmark study, Eileen Barker, a sociologist at the London School of Economics, spent close to seven years studying members of the Unification Church, whose members are sometime called Moonies, after their leader. Barker followed people who entered church recruitment seminars, and she gave them numerous personality tests to measure things like suggestibility.

Barker argued that, far from experiencing brainwashing, the large majority of people who attended recruitment seminars opted not to join the Unification Church. Those who joined and stayed, she found, actually appeared to be more strong-willed and resistant to suggestion than those who had walked away. People who joined such groups, Barker told Undark, did so because they found something that, for whatever reason, “fitted with what they were looking for and lacked in normal society.” In other words, they were members because they wanted to be members.

Today, scholars like Barker tend to eschew the term cult because of its pejorative connotations, instead sometimes referring to groups like the Unification Church as new religious movements, or NRMs. In response, some cult experts have accused sociologists and scholars of religions of whitewashing the behavior of abusive groups. But the brainwashing model also failed to gain the endorsement of many psychologists. In 1983, the American Psychological Association convened a task force to investigate the issue. The group’s members — mostly clinical psychologists and psychiatrists involved in anti-cult work — argued that groups did indeed draw members in through “deceptive and indirect techniques of persuasion and control.” But the APA’s expert reviewers were skeptical. One complained that sections of the draft report the group produced in 1986 read like an article in The National Enquirer, rather than an academic study.

“In general,” the members of the APA’s ethics board wrote in a letter rejecting the task force’s findings, “the report lacks the scientific rigor and evenhanded critical approach necessary for APA imprimatur.” (Clinical psychiatrists have been warmer toward the idea of brainwashing than research psychologists; since 1987, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, an authoritative source for the field, has warned of “identity disturbance due to prolonged and intense coercive persuasion” that can result from “brainwashing, thought reform, indoctrination while captive,” and other traumas.)

The cultic studies field evolved. The hard-line Cult Awareness Network was bankrupted by legal actions, including a lawsuit stemming from a botched intervention in which deprogrammers seized an 18-year-old Christian fundamentalist, restrained him with handcuffs and duct tape, and held him captive in a beach house at the behest of the man’s mother. Today, Eichel said, deprogrammings are no longer done “by anyone ethical.”

The American Family Foundation began to make peace with the sociologists. The organization also renamed itself the International Cultic Studies Association. And while differences remain among people who study cults and NRMs, Langone, who has run the organization since 1981, said he is now friends with Barker and other scholars who once clashed with his organization.

Michael Kropveld, who runs the Center for Assistance and for the Study of Cultic Phenomena, or Info-Cult, in Montreal, got his start in the field in 1978, when he helped organize the deprogramming of a friend who had joined the Unification Church. Since then, his approach has mellowed — the organization long ago abandoned deprogramming, and Kropveld said that he now finds the concept of brainwashing to be lacking.

“Using terms like brainwashing or mind control tend to imply some magical kind of process that goes on that happens to people that are unaware of what’s happening to them,” he said. Kropveld believes that techniques of influence exist, but he thinks the reasons people gravitate to groups tend to be more complicated and individualized.

Still, he acknowledged, ideas like brainwashing have an appeal. “Simplistic messages” with vivid labels, he said, “are the ones that get the most attention.”

* * *

Some cult experts continue to find ideas like brainwashing to be useful. One of the most prominent is Steven Hassan, a former member of the Unification Church and the author of “Combating Mind Control.” In the past, Hassan has described the internet as a vehicle for mind control and “subliminal programming,” and he recently alleged that transgender “hypno porn” is being used as a form of “weaponized mind control” to recruit young people into gender transitions.

Watching Trump run for office in 2016 led to “a bizarre kind of déjà vu,” Hassan wrote in his most recent book, “The Cult of Trump.” “It struck me that Trump was exhibiting many of the same behaviors that I had seen in the late Korean cult leader Sun Myung Moon, whom I had worshipped as the messiah in the mid-70s.”

In the days since the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, Hassan has offered expert analysis for CNN, The Boston Globe, Vanity Fair, and other outlets, and he has fielded questions from a popular Reddit group for people whose loved ones are QAnon adherents. (Through an assistant, Hassan declined requests for an interview with Undark, citing a busy schedule.)

Some people outside the cultic studies world have also made similar arguments, including Bandy X. Lee, a forensic psychiatrist and consultant for the World Health Organization who, until recently, taught at Yale. In an email to Undark, Lee, who has helped promote Hassan’s work, wrote that a segment of Trump’s followers resembles cult members and suggested that the former president had cultivated a kind of mass psychosis.

She applies that analysis to a wide range of right-wing positions. Asked in a phone interview whether someone who believes that climate change is overblown and that progressive tax policy is a bad idea could be said to have an individual pathology, Lee demurred. “No,” she said, “I describe them as being victims of abuse.” Specifically, she explained, they suffered from “the abuse of systems that politics and industry have employed to psychologically manipulate the population into accepting policies that undermine their health, wellbeing, and even livelihood and lives.”

Not all experts in the cultic studies world buy this. Langone, the ICSA leader, specifically praised Hassan’s contributions to the field, but acknowledged that he’s skeptical of describing Trump followers as cultists. “I can understand why people don’t like Trump,” Langone said. “But to jump from not liking Trump to Trump as cult leader, I think, is a bit of a leap.” He also fears the cultic element of QAnon is “overplayed by some of my colleagues in this field” and that the influence of QAnon itself may be overstated by media coverage.

Allegations of brainwashing are also out of step with some recent psychology research on misinformation and conspiracy theories. “How much of someone going down that rabbit hole is due to that person’s need, in a way — or this misinformation or this activity, this community — rather than these methods being pushed by whatever person is in charge?” asked Hugo Mercier, a cognitive psychologist at Institut Jean Nicod in Paris and author of the 2020 book “Not Born Yesterday: The Science of Who We Trust and What We Believe.”

Mercier argues that the brainwashing model often gets the process backward: Rather than tricking people into harmful thinking, effective propaganda — or even pure misinformation — gives them permission to openly express ideas they already found appealing.

Gordon Pennycook, a social psychologist at the University of Regina in Canada, also argues that, while it may seem to relatives that someone has changed suddenly as they fall down a rabbit hole, such accounts typically misapprehend the sequence of events. “It’s not that their minds are being taken over,” he said. “Their minds were susceptible to it in the first place. What’s been taken over is their interests, and their focus, and so on.” People who gravitate to conspiracies, Pennycook says, have consistent personality traits that make those ideas appealing. “It’s not the conspiracies that are causing them to be overly aggressive and resistant to alternative narratives,” Pennycook said. Instead, those traits are “the reason they are so strongly believing in the conspiracies.”

Many scholars of new religious movements are also skeptical of the idea that disinformation and conspiracy theories should be understood as somehow hijacking people’s minds. Megan Goodwin, a scholar of American minority religions at Northeastern University, said she has heard people describe outlets like Fox News as brainwashing. “People who are watching it are adults who are making choices to consume that media,” said Goodwin. Similarly, she said, “the people who mounted an armed insurrection to take over the Capitol are adults that made choices.” An idea like deprogramming, she added, “makes it sound like, okay, well they’ve had their agency and their faculties taken from them.”

She sees no evidence that’s the case, even if, she said, that narrative can be comforting. “They make shitty choices,” she said. “People you love are going to make shitty choices.”

* * *

Some families have gravitated toward cult specialists in the hopes that they can, indeed, help rescue a loved one from the tangled communities that grow around online conspiracy theories — and there are such specialists who say they can offer useful guidance, even if they can’t stage a full extraction. One of those is Ryan, the cult mediation specialist in Philadelphia. Raised in Florida, Ryan joined the Transcendental Meditation movement in his late teens and spent more than a decade as an avid practitioner of the popular global meditation movement, which was founded in the 1950s. Eventually, he came to believe he was part of a cult and left.

Whether it’s to field worries about a conspiratorial loved one or to mediate disagreement over membership in a religious movement, families who work with him fill out long questionnaires and may eventually participate in sessions that involve Ryan, his business partner, and a licensed psychiatrist. (Ryan, who has a degree in Eastern philosophy and business from Maharishi International University in Iowa, is not a licensed mental health counselor. That lets him intervene in “a way that it would be difficult for me to do given my professional license,” said Eichel, the Delaware psychologist, who sometimes refers families to Ryan.)

Ryan stressed that interventions are rare; usually, the extent of their work is helping families develop strategies to maintain a relationship. When Ryan and the family do decide on an intervention, it involves months of preparation. They sometimes employ elaborate ruses to coax the person into the room for a conversation with their relatives and Ryan.

Whether such methods are reliably effective is difficult to ascertain, and, practitioners acknowledge, there is little research on outcomes. “You can be simplistic, and lucky, and get the person out,” said Langone, the ICSA head, stressing that people’s reasons for joining and leaving groups are often highly individualized. “There are not good statistics on the effectiveness of exit counseling,” Langone said.

During a conversation in late January, Ryan estimated that, within the past year, he had consulted for roughly 20 families dealing with loved ones who had gone deep into QAnon or a similar community. He has not recommended formal interventions to any of them. “The basis of what we would recommend is to stay connected, and how to do that,” said Ryan. “Because to influence someone, you have to have a relationship with them.”

For now, the son of the Colorado conspiracy theorist said he’s gotten adept at finding ways to exit uncomfortable conversations, and he does what he can to lay low and avoid confrontation. He thinks anything else is likely to be ineffective. “I think it’s just going to ride itself out,” he said earlier this month.

He’s now less confident that will happen — especially since after the inauguration his father moved on to sharing anti-vaccination theories with his family — and he’s unsure of what the future will hold. “I just I don’t know where any of this is going to go,” he said, “with the way that there’s just so much crazy going on right now in the United States.”

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

Why some New Age influencers believe Trump is a “lightworker”

Lorie Ladd gazes into the camera with glossy eyes, a look that mimics the long stare one gets after meditating. She’s about to give one of her sermons, one of the “most challenging” ones she’s ever had to make, she explains. Ladd says she’s received a message that needs to be shared from “higher dimensional consciousnesses,” what she refers to as the “Galactic Federation of Light.” But before revealing the message, Ladd, a self-described “ascension teacher,” advises her viewers to shed the stereotypes that have been “programmed” into them — “polarities,” she calls them, like “Democrat” and “Republican” — and listen to her message: Donald Trump is a “massive and powerful lightworker.” 

“To say that I was shocked was an understatement,” Ladd tells her nearly 139,000 YouTube followers of her revelation. “I have been digesting information from my guides about what this lightworker in human form looking like Donald Trump has been doing for the human collective; this man has more charge around him than any other human on the planet right now.”

Ladd goes on to explain that her video isn’t a “political one,” but a “consciousness one,” and that she’s not talking about “voting,” but “ascension.” Trump, as she explains in the next half hour, is here to help assist humans in what many in the New Age and spiritual communities refer to as a great “awakening” of consciousness. The idea behind the awakening is that human consciousness is approaching a “fifth dimension,” which will eventually bring humans closer to the “Source.” 

A lightworker, as defined by well-being magazine Happiness, is someone who feels “an enormous pull towards helping others.” The term, they say, can be interchangeable with “crystal babies,” “indigos,” “Earth angels” and “star seeds”; “these spiritual beings volunteer to act as a beacon for the Earth, and commit to serving humanity,” the story continues. The magazine states that the term was first coined by the New Age author Michael Mirdad.

This rhetoric might sound cultish, but these phrases don’t belong to any one specific religious sect. Indeed, such belief systems are part of a larger, more diffuse New Age culture embraced by the ever-increasing number of Americans leaving organized religion in droves — or who were never religious in the first place — and turning to conspirituality by way of many self-described spiritual and wellness influencers online.

Conspirituality, the term that defines this movement, was coined by researcher Charlotte Ward. She describes conspirituality as “a rapidly growing web movement expressing an ideology fueled by political disillusionment and the popularity of alternative worldviews.” There is no official indoctrination video, no book to read; the hundreds of thousands of people who embrace these New Age-like beliefs find them on YouTube vlogs like Ladd’s, as well as Instagram and Facebook. Recently, conspiritualists have begun to overlap with the far-right conspiracy theory QAnon.

[Related: Meet the spouses whose marriages were destroyed by QAnon.]

This notion that Trump is a lightworker shares obvious parallels with the belief, held by some evangelicals, that Trump is comparable to Jesus; similarly, some QAnon followers believe that Trump is the “world leader” whose mission is to “save the children.”

Yet what makes the lightworker theory especially odd is that it has emerged from a demographic that would have previously been described as apolitical, or even far-left.

However, as the January 6 insurrection on the Capitol showed, QAnon and Trump adherents are no longer just middle-aged, conservative white men like the Republican Party of yore. Many of those who embrace right-wing fringe beliefs are yogis, and love-and-light types, too. Take Jake Angeli for example, the so-called “QAnon Shaman” who donned a horned hat and spear-tipped American flag as he stormed the Capitol building on January 6. The 33-year-old, who identifies as having “shamanistic” beliefs, was recently granted the right to be fed an all-organic diet in jail in line with his religious practice.

Ladd’s declaration that Trump was a lightworker sent shockwaves through conspiritual and self-help communities. (Salon reached out to Ladd for comment, but did not receive a response.) Some spirituality and consciousness bloggers vehemently disagreed. But many influential figures in the community thought Ladd was onto something, including Christiane Northrup, a physician and best-selling author who has been spreading anti-vaccination rhetoric and has embraced QAnon

Matthew Remski, a co-host of the Conspirituality podcast and a cult dynamics researcher, described Northrup as a “conspirituality aggregator” who feeds what she finds most interesting to her followers, of which she has many.

“What I think is really brilliant about this particular iteration of QAnon — or ‘soft’ or ‘pastel Q,’ you could call it — is that it’s really effective at evading content moderation,” Remski said. “To only really say something positive about the person who’s at the head of QAnon mythology and sort of soft-pedal all of the aggression and triumph that is going to be involved in his mission is a really good way of brand-washing QAnon for the wellness set.”

Indeed, while social media companies like Twitter and Facebook have suspended many accounts sharing QAnon-related disinformation, the wellness influencers remain. Dr. Ronald Purser, a professor of management at San Francisco State University and the author of “McMindfulness,” said that in uncertain times, societies see a rise of “occultures,” meaning “groups of people who are attracted to strange occult and esoteric ideas, mixing them in unforeseen ways with political movements.”

“A common theme in such movements is the need for purification, purifying and purging unwanted elements – toxins, impurities, or anything foreign or other,” Purser said. “This is why we see so many New Age yoga practitioners seduced by QAnon.”

Purser said there are parallels between the rise of “occultures” now and the role spirituality and mysticism played in Nazi Germany. Notably, the Third Reich appropriated the swastika, a symbol used by Hindus, Buddhists and Jains; the word means “well-being” in Sanskrit. 

“Consider Hitler, who was obsessed with the occult, was a vegetarian, used astrologers [and] oracles,” Purser said. “The Nazi Heinrich Himmler, head of SS, was enamored with Eastern mysticism, and he sent an expedition to Tibet in search of lost remnants of a secret and pure Aryan race; Hitler was seen as a ‘light worker’ [as in someone who’s saving humanity] that would purge Germany of Jews.”

Purser added that Trump and his enablers have “mastered the ability of weaponized mass delusion through social media.”

“Many of the New Agers drawn to QAnon are probably suffering from unresolved trauma – like many in Trump’s base as well,” Purser said. “It’s easier to look to a savior and to find scapegoats than to face one’s own fears and pain.”

When asked about the term lightworker, and where it derives from, Remski said he first heard it when he was in a “Course in Miracles cult” from 1999 to 2003. The name is a reference to a book, titled “A Course in Miracles,” that was published by Helen Schucman in 1976; Schucman claimed the book had been spoken to her via “inner dictation” from Christ. Remski said the word “light” appears in the text frequently. 

“Light is not only the sort of keynote of this Manichaean universe in which things are either light or shadow, they’re either good or bad, it’s also like schizotypal as a universe, it is given this materiality as well,” Remski said of Schucman’s book. “Light is said to be something that can fill a person up, it can blow a person apart, it can enter a person, and I think it probably overlaps with some pre-modern ideas like prana or ch’i — those kind of folk medicine ideas of vital force — but it’s also associated with an absolute truth, an ontological transformation . . . like once once light enters into you, you are forever changed.” 

Remski believes the conspiritual rhetoric around “light” started after the book was published. While the book “A Course in Miracles” doesn’t include the term “lightworker,” the theme of light itself runs throughout. “The key is only the light that shines away the shapes and forms and fears of nothing,” a typical passage reads. 

One prominent figure who was deeply influenced by “A Course in Miracles” is former presidential candidate Marianne Williamson. In 1996, Williamson wrote a book, “A Return to Love: Reflections on the Principles of ‘A Course in Miracles,'” that was structured as a reflection on the original text. Williamson, too, has used the term “lightworker” before; in a 2013 Facebook post, Williamson wrote, “A light-worker is not someone who ignores the darkness; it’s someone who transforms the darkness.”

Obviously, Williamson and Trump are political opposites; Williamson, a Democrat, came down hard and repeatedly on Trump’s policies during her 2020 campaign. Salon asked Williamson what she thought about the term “lightworker” being used to describe Trump. She replied via email: “I think it’s insane. . . . Like many others, I don’t understand it but I find it deeply disturbing.” 

When asked why he believes people have been so eager to embrace this belief that Trump is a “lightworker,” Remski said that it is because it can “offer all of the benefits of the conspiratorial mindset, without a lot of the drawbacks.”

“Because you’re saying something kind about him,” Remski said, “as the social psychologists basically repeat over and over again.”

Remski believes conspiracy theories are attractive because they “satisfy epistemic needs.” “Like, ‘I’m now I’m going to know something that nobody else knows,’ or ‘I’m going to meet my survival needs, meaning this information is going to help me tolerate what’s happening, but also maybe even preserve me from danger,'” he said.

But as the social media spread of the “lightworker” theory illustrates, conspiracy theories also open up their adherents to communities of people that they can hang out with, Remski mused.

*This story was updated at 10:01 pm ET to clarify Remski’s quote.

Australia, fighting Facebook, is latest country to struggle against foreign influence on journalism

Facebook has barred Australians from finding or sharing news on its platform, in response to an Australian government proposal to require social media networks to pay journalism organizations for their content. The move is already reducing online readership of Australian news sites.

Similar to what happened when Facebook suspended Donald Trump’s account in January, the fight with Australia is again raising debate around social media networks’ enormous control over people’s access to information. Australia’s prime minister, Scott Morrison, says his country “will not be intimidated” by an American tech company.

My research in the history of international media politics has shown that a handful of rich countries have long exerted undue influence over how the rest of the world gets its news.

Facebook has 2.26 billion users, and most of them live outside of the United States, according to the company. India, Indonesia, Brazil, Mexico and the Philippines are home to the most Facebook users outside the U.S.

Facebook’s share of the global social media market is staggering, but the company is not alone. Eight of the world’s 11 most popular social media companies are based in the U.S.. These include YouTube and Tumblr, as well as Instagram, which is owned by Facebook.

The geographic concentration of information technology puts these billions of non-American social media users and their government officials in a subservient position.

The business decisions of Big Tech can effectively dictate free speech around the world.

Imperial origins of international news

Reliance on foreign media has long been a problem in the Global South – so-called developing countries with a shared history of colonial rule.

It began, in many ways, 150 years ago, with the development of wire services — the news wholesalers that send correspondents around the world to deliver stories via wire feed to subscribers. Each service chronicled news in its home country’s respective colonies or spheres of influence, so Britain’s Reuters would file stories from Bombay and Cape Town, for example, and France’s Havas from Algiers.

The Associated Press, based in the U.S., became a force in the global news business in the early 20th century.

These companies cornered the global market for news production, generating most of the content that people worldwide read in the international section of any newspaper. This meant, for example, that a Bolivian reading about events in neighboring Peru would typically receive the news from a U.S. or French correspondent.

The news monopolies of former colonial powers continued into the 20th century. Some Latin American countries, such as Argentina and Mexico, developed their own strong newspapers that reported on local and national events, but they could not afford to send many correspondents abroad.

In the 1970s, North Atlantic wire services still provided as much as 75% of international news printed and broadcast in Latin America, according to my research.

Cold War problems

Separately, many world leaders outside of the U.S. and Europe also worried that those foreign powers would intervene in their countries’ domestic affairs by covertly using their countries’ media.

That happened during the Cold War. In the lead-up to a 1954 CIA-supported coup in Guatemala, the agency secretly used the Guatemalan radio waves and planted local news stories to convince the Guatemalan military and public that the overthrow of their democratically elected president was inevitable.

After Guatemala, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, many leaders in the “third world” – countries that aligned with neither the U.S. nor the Soviet Union – began creating news and radio services of their own.

Cuban leader Fidel Castro established a state-run international news service, Prensa Latina, to allow Latin Americans “to know the truth and not be victims of lies.” He also created Radio Havana Cuba, which broadcast revolutionary programming across the Americas, including in the U.S. South. These were government agencies, not independent news organizations.

Global South leaders also wanted to shape the international portrayal of their countries. North Atlantic news services often depicted the third world as backward and chaotic, justifying the need for outside intervention.

This tendency was so common that it earned the moniker “coups and earthquakes” journalism.

Taking control

Global South leaders also lacked full access to communications technology, especially satellites, which were controlled by the U.S. and Soviet-dominated organizations.

In the 1970s, Global South leaders took their concerns about information inequities to UNESCO, lobbying for binding United Nations regulations that would prohibit direct foreign broadcasts by satellite. It was a quixotic quest to persuade dominant powers to relinquish their control over communications technology, and they didn’t get far.

But those decades-old proposals recognized the imbalances in global information that remain in place today.

In recent decades, other countries have created their own news networks with the express aim of challenging biased representations of their regions.

One result is Al Jazeera, created in 1996 by the Qatari emir to challenge U.S. and British depictions of the Middle East.

Another is TeleSur, founded by Venezuela in partnership with other Latin American nations in 2005, which aims to counterbalance U.S. influence in the region. It was created after the 2002 coup attempt against Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez, which was supported by the U.S. government and powerful Venezuelan broadcasters.

Why media matters

State-sponsored media outlets have faced accusations – some well-founded – of coverage biased in favor of their government sponsors. But their existence nonetheless underscores that it matters where media is produced, and by whom.

Research suggests this concern extends to social media. Facebook and Google, for example, produce algorithms and policies that reflect the ideas of their creators — who are primarily white, male and based in Silicon Valley, California.

One study found that this can result in racist or sexist search engine search results. A 2016 ProPublica investigation also discovered that Facebook allowed advertisers for housing to target users based on race, violating the Fair Housing Act of 1968.

All of this raises doubts about whether Facebook, or any international company, can make rules regulating speech that are equally appropriate in every country they operate in. Deep knowledge of national politics and culture is necessary to understand which accounts are dangerous enough to suspend, for example, and what comprises misinformation.

Facing such criticism, in 2020 Facebook assembled an independent oversight board, colloquially referred to as its Supreme Court. Comprising media and legal experts from all over the world, the board has a truly diverse membership. But its mandate is to uphold a “constitution” designed by the American company by evaluating a handful of appeals to Facebook’s content removal decisions.

Facebook’s current fight with Australia suggests that equitable control of international news remains very much a work in progress.

Vanessa Freije, Assistant Professor, Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

How to make a classic daiquiri — all you need are three simple ingredients

Perhaps you have planned your life according to a timeline, with events scheduled to unfold in a certain order. And when you reach a pre-determined milestone — you have been offered the perfect job, or you have made your body look a certain way, or you have achieved some near-mythical state of balance, heretofore just out of your reach — you will allow yourself some pleasure you desire, and not a moment before. Everything in its right place, in the right sequence. Congratulations! This is a very tidy way to live. 

Yes, a reward for meeting a goal helps mark the achievement in a tangible way. And yet, delaying gratification until the timing is just right can also reinforce the notion that pleasures need to be justified, that a body in motion only realizes its full value upon arrival. And sometimes, the closer we are to meeting that goal, the more we need to treat ourselves to a small sample of what life will be on the other side of it to help us power through. 

The same can be said for these in-between times we’re in. Perhaps a sleeveless, sunny day with a tropical drink in your hand feels far away right now. Forget a vacation — even a carefree patio or poolside afternoon feels like a fantasy. It’s not the season for it, it’s not in the budget and health and safety concerns make such an event feel like science fiction, anyway. But look around — are you still burrowed in January’s hibernation? The palest of green tendrils are unfurling from a newly-thawed earth.

This is a call to honor the liminal spaces in our lives, and not to put off into the future that which will bring us joy today. Meet that carefree, warm afternoon halfway with a classic daiquiri made with dark rum — the tropical taste of summer delivered with a warm hug designed for shoulder season, for the transitory spaces between the before and the new normal. 

If your experience with daiquiris runs toward the super-sweet machine-churned blender style, the sublime simplicity of the classic daiquiri might surprise you. (No whipped cream and cherry on top. Save your paper umbrellas for Tiki Tuesday.) The classic daiquiri is a shaken cocktail served up, made with three simple ingredients. And in this variation, we’re swapping out the customary light rum for dark rum, that’s all. 

Keep in mind that your dark rum doesn’t have to be a super-dark rum like Gosling’s Black Seal — unless you want it to be. I wouldn’t suggest the kind of premium aged rum normally reserved for sipping neat, like Ron Zacapa 23 or Don Q Gran Reserva. A medium-aged rum along the lines of the 8-year Bacardí Reserva Ocho (a solid choice for a simple, spirit-forward cocktail) will bring forth enough of those complex flavor layers that make this drink so welcome in cooler months. 

Ingredients:

Serving size: one beverage

  • 2 oz. dark rum 
  • 1 oz. fresh lime juice
  • 1/2 oz. simple syrup (add 1 cup of sugar to 1 cup boiling water, simmer until dissolved, cool))
  • Lime wheel for garnish
  • Ice for shaking

Gear:

You don’t need any specialty equipment to mix a simple cocktail. Improvise with what you have. But here’s what I keep at hand:

Instructions:

Shake the rum, lime juice and simple syrup with ice until chilled. Strain into chilled cocktail glass and serve with a lime wheel garnish. 

Variations:

The standard classic daiquiri uses silver rum, which you can always elect to do here. You can also make a more complex syrup for your sweetener, like a honey syrup, or a toasted coconut-infused simple syrup. Just don’t overthink it. 

More Oracle Pour:

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