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How to store literally every dang fruit and vegetable

Welcome to Storage Wars, a new series about the best ways to store, well, everything. From how to keep produce orderly in the fridge (or not), to ways to get your oddball nooks and crannies shipshape; and yes, how to organize all those unwieldy containers once and for all — we’ve got you covered.

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I tend to do one big farmers market trip for all my weekly produce. I set out armed with as many reusable totes as I can shove into my trusty grocery cart (which once helped me lug the contents of an entire Thanksgiving dinner, including a frozen 17-pound turkey, by subway from Manhattan to Brooklyn). After unloading the produce haul and spending several minutes admiring the colorful bounty, panic sets in: Keeping everything fresh for the week can be challenging if not done properly.

Luckily, there are plenty of tricks to keep lettuce crisp, carrots crunchy, berries un-mushed, potatoes unsprouted, herbs perky . . . and that’s only the beginning. From the best places in the kitchen to store the produce to how to store everything, there are plenty of dos and don’ts. So you never have to wonder — or bite into a limp radish — ever again, here’s our ultimate guide to the best ways to store fruits and vegetables.

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All The Alliums

Garlic

Store garlic in a dry, dark place with plenty of room-temperature to cool air circulation, in a mesh or paper bag.

6 Garlic Mistakes We’ll Never (Ever!) Make Again

Leeks

Store leeks in the refrigerator, wrapped in a damp paper or cloth towel. For extra protection, put the damp cloth inside a plastic bag (easy to reuse!). Don’t forget to wash them really well.

Leeks: A Stalk of Humble Pie

Onions

Store onions in a dry, dark place with plenty of room-temperature to cool air circulation, in a mesh or paper bag.

The Right Way to Store Onions

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Crunchy, Leafy Vegetables (Herbs, Fungi and Nightshades, Too)

Carrots

Store carrots in a plastic, mesh, or open cloth bag in the refrigerator’s vegetable bin; if you don’t have room in the fridge, opt for a dry, dark place with plenty of room-temperature to cool air circulation, in a mesh or paper bag.

What to Do with an Overload of Carrots

Celery

Store celery wrapped tightly in aluminum foil (weird, we know!) in the refrigerator’s vegetable bin; though you can reuse foil, for a more environmentally friendly option, wrap in a damp cloth towel.

The Best Way to Store Celery Might Surprise You

Cucumbers

Store cucumbers in a dry, dark place with plenty of room-temperature to cool air circulation, or in the refrigerator on a high shelf — warmer than the crisper. (Store zucchini and summer squash this way, too.)

Cucumbers and 11 of the Best Ways to Use Them

Eggplant

Store eggplant in a dry, dark place with plenty of room-temperature to cool air circulation.

Keep Your Eggplants Away from the Fridge

Fennel

Store fennel in the refrigerator, wrapped in a damp paper or cloth towel with the stalks and bulb separated, in two plastic or mesh bags.

Fennel

Greens

Store greens, unwashed until you’re ready to eat them, in the refrigerator in a container with a paper or tea towel draped over the top instead of a lid (or wrapped in a damp paper or cloth towel). For another idea, check out lettuce.

How to Store Greens

Herbs

Store herbs in the refrigerator, wrapped in a damp paper or cloth towel; alternatively, store them stems-down in a water-filled jar at room temperature (or in the refrigerator with the tops covered by a bag — store scallions and asparagus like this, too!). Basil is best left out of the fridge and used as quickly as possible, to avoid its turning brown.

How the Heck Do You Store Fresh Herbs?: A Quest

Lettuce

Store lettuce directly in the salad spinner, post-wash and spin, in the fridge with the lid on (this also works for greens).

The Best Way To Store Lettuces and Other Greens (A Controversial Method)

Mushrooms

Store mushrooms in the refrigerator (or somewhere very cool), in the perforated package they were purchased in, or in a paper bag.

How to Store Mushrooms So They Stay Fresh and Slime-Free

Peppers

Store peppers in a cool spot in the kitchen, in a container covered with a cloth towel.

What to Do with an Overload (or Not) of Peppers

Potatoes

Store potatoes in a dry, dark place with plenty of room-temperature to cool air circulation, in a mesh or paper bag. (Store sweet potatoes and beets like this, too!)

How to Store Potatoes (So They Can Live Their Best Lives)

Radishes

Store radishes (and their greens) in the refrigerator, wrapped in a damp paper or cloth towel. If they lose some of their crunch after a couple days in the fridge, soak them in ice water until they perk up.

What to Do with an Overload of Radishes

Squash

Store squash (butternut, acorn, delicata, kabocha, etc.) in a dry, dark place with plenty of room-temperature to cool air circulation.

How to Store Butternut Squash So it Lasts and Lasts (and Lasts)

Tomatoes

Store tomatoes in a cool spot in the kitchen with plenty of air circulation; to keep super-ripe tomatoes for another day or so, store them in the refrigerator. (Store peaches the same way.)

How to Store Tomatoes So They Stay Plump and Fresh for a Very Long Time

A Produce Whisperer’s Speedier Way to Make Stock

A Handy Chart for How Long Fresh Produce Will Last

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F Is For Fruit

Apples

Store apples in the refrigerator’s vegetable bin — some suggest wrapping each apple in newspaper to prevent one rotting apple from spoiling the brunch.

3 Storage Tips to Keep Apples Fresh for Much Longer

Avocado

Store avocados in a cool spot in the kitchen with plenty of air circulation. If they’re at prime ripeness, but you’re not eating them today, transfer them to the refrigerator to preserve that ripeness level for a couple days. For cut avocados, read this article for a couple ideas to prevent the inevitable browning.

How to Store an Avocado, So You Don’t End Up With Brown Mush

Bananas

Buy bananas slightly underripe, store them at room temperature until they hit ideal ripeness, then transfer them to the refrigerator to preserve that ripeness level for a couple days.

Is This the Best Way to Store Bananas?

Berries

Store berries in a container lined with paper or cloth towels, with the lid slightly open. To extend their life, first wash berries in a solution of vinegar and water, then dry thoroughly and transfer to the container.

A Trick for Storing Berries to Keep ‘Em Fresher, Longer

Citrus

Store citrus fruits (including lemons, limes, grapefruits, and oranges) in the refrigerator in a moist environment — some say to submerge them in a bowl of water; for those with less fridge real estate, store citrus in tightly sealed zip-top or silicone bags.

The Secret to Storing Lemons to Keep Them Fresher, Longer

Mangoes

Store mangoes in a cool spot in the kitchen with plenty of air circulation. If they’re at prime ripeness, but you’re not eating them today, transfer them to the refrigerator to preserve that ripeness level for a couple days.

Mangoes and the 3 Best Ways to Enjoy Them in the Winter

Need Even More Produce Advice?

For extra produce-storage tips, check out this article.

 

 

Our failing healthcare system costs us countless lives. It’s time to adopt Medicare for All

Over the past year, COVID-19 has inundated the ICU where I work. Death and suffering have become the everyday norm. But I’ve also seen how our broken health care system amplifies the catastrophes caused by the virus.

Last spring, one of my many gravely ill patients who required intubation, and who had to be put in a drug-induced coma while the ventilator breathed for her, turned the corner after many weeks. After the breathing tube was removed, her first words expressed panic – not about the constant din of alarms from cardiac and respiratory monitors or the critical illness that she had narrowly survived — but for fear of ruinous medical bills. 

She’s not alone. One in 10 respondents to a Gallup survey in April said they’d avoid treatment if they thought they had COVID-19 because they feared the medical costs. Even before the pandemic, 30 million people were uninsured, 1 in 3 Americans struggled to pay medical bills, and illness and medical bills contributed to more than half a million personal bankruptcies annually.

As our nation recovers from the horrifying second peak of COVID-19, and as it grapples with the most severe economic downturn since the Great Depression, it’s time to eliminate the scourge of inadequate health coverage – forever. It’s time to adopt Medicare for All.

Today, in the medical journal The LancetI joined colleagues in providing the first comprehensive assessment of the Trump administration’s impact on health, including in health care financing. We also make recommendations for action.

As we document, health protections dwindled under President Donald Trump. Cuts to the Affordable Care Act’s navigator and outreach programs, the growing red tape in Medicaid, and the administration’s xenophobic “public charge” rule that frightened immigrants away from enrollment in nutrition and health programs caused the number of uninsured to swell by 2.3 million, including 700,000 children – and that’s before the virus struck.

When the pandemic hit, Congress moved to cover the costs of COVID-19 testing, treatment and vaccination for those without coverage. Yet some uninsured patients with COVID-19 have still received large bills. And many – including those with coverage – continue to face financial disaster from deductibles and copayments for non-COVID-19 illness.

Meanwhile, gaps in coverage are growing. Millions of Americans have lost their jobs, and with it, their private health coverage. Many more have suffered income losses that will make copays and deductibles even more onerous.

Make no mistake: Study after study has found that lack of health coverage is often fatal. Each year, tens of thousands of Americans die because they’re uninsured and don’t get vital care.

But it’s not just the uninsured who suffer; cost barriers of any kind are medically hazardous. Deductibles cause women with breast cancer to delay starting chemotherapy by 6 months or more. Insured heart attack victims who fear the costs delay going to the ER – a potentially fatal mistake. For heart attack survivors, copays and deductibles for medications increase the risk of future heart problems. High insulin prices kill young people unable to afford that life-saving medication. And many patients with asthma and emphysema suffer unnecessary exacerbations and hospitalization because they can’t afford routine medications and care.

As we show in our wide-ranging Lancet report, most deficiencies in our health care system predated Trump.  His actions made those deficiencies more acute, however.

It’s therefore not enough to undo Trump’s legacy. We need to go further.

Urgent action to cover health care costs – including copayments and deductibles – for everyone is essential. Legislation introduced last year by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.), the Health Care Emergency Guarantee Act, would cover medical costs for the uninsured, as well as copays and deductibles for those with insurance, for the duration of the pandemic.

But a permanent solution – a Medicare for All reform – is needed in the pandemic’s wake.

Medicare for All would provide all Americans with comprehensive first-dollar coverage. It would improve health and save lives, even as it would save money. A recent analysis from the Congressional Budget Office estimated that such reform could reduce overall health spending by at least $42 billion each year; the $400 billion in annual savings from cutting out private insurer’s waste would more than pay for the costs of expanding and improving coverage.

The COVID-19 pandemic will, fortunately, end. But the ongoing suffering caused by our broken health care financing system will not – unless we take action. Nobody should ever awaken fearing medical bills, much less from a coma. The prescription is clear: Medicare for All.

12 handy organization ideas for small kitchens

My first apartment in San Francisco was a well-lit 1920s studio on California Street that had a kitchen with capacity for roughly three-fourths of one person at a time. The storage space was virtually nonexistent: I had a single, tiny wall of cabinets abutting the stove (rendering one section of shelf inaccessible), and just one cabinet next to the kitchen sink.

But a decade later, comprising a stint at Williams-Sonoma HQ, a wedding, and two increasingly larger apartments, I’d officially amassed enough kitchen gear to stock a boutique.

When my husband and I downsized to a smaller place in Los Angeles last September, we became reacquainted with the problem of space. Our previous apartment had featured an open kitchen, generous countertops, and three walls of cabinets. The new one is fully functional, but can be swept clean with three strokes of a broom. I got rid of a lot before the move to Southern California, but even my “must-haves” proved to be a tight fit for our cozy new kitchen.

Here are some of the handy tips I’ve learned to optimize our kitchen space, no matter what size.

1. Hang What You Can

Kitchen wall space can be used for hanging rails with hooks for utensils, additional shelving, or a magnetic knife strip, which can help free up drawer and counter space. If you have high ceilings, consider installing a pot rack — this makes cookware easy to access and creates an impressive looking display.

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2. Toss The Single-Function Gadgets

While packing for the move, I discovered that I owned some very specialized items. During my pie-making phase, I’d purchased a cherry pitter and apple corer. Since I can pit cherries and core apples with a knife, these kinds of items had to go. The lesson learned? Sort through your gadgets and make sure any single-task items you keep are truly necessary. (Looking at you, Hario V60.)

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3. Make Good Use Of The Space Within Cabinets

Stacking bins and shelf risers can help optimize available space within cabinets. There’s also a surprising amount of usable real estate inside all of your cabinet doors: Consider mounting vertical racks to store everything from pot lids to cleaning supplies.

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4. Use Magnetized Everything

The front and sides of your refrigerator are a perfect spot to store items that you might reach for often, like kitchen timers, measuring spoons, bottle openers, and wine keys. This magnetic rack is designed to store spices, and this one sticks to the fridge to hold paper towels, a dishcloth, oven mitts, and other odds and ends.

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5. Add Counter Space With A Kitchen Cart

A kitchen cart on wheels with a butcher block top can act as a cutting board while you cook, and the shelves underneath can provide additional storage for small appliances. Use it to store dry pantry items in acrylic canisters, or any items that don’t fit in your existing cabinets and drawers.

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6. Re-Evaluate Large Kitchen Appliances

Do you actually need a juicer or stand mixer? How many times a week do you actually use your microwave? If you do use them, make sure they’re the right size for you and take up the least amount of space possible. For items that only get occasional use, store them out of sight, or consider selling or donating them.

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7. Store Items By How Often They’re Used

If you don’t use your blender or food processor often, stow them away under a cabinet or atop your refrigerator. Lesser-used specialty cookware and kitchen utensils should go in lower cabinets and shelves, leaving the top drawers and counters for things you reach for every day.

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8. Opt For Items That Stack And Nest

Invest in items like nesting bowls and cookware sets, designed to maximize storage space. For dry goods, a matching set of stackable storage containers will ensure you get the most out of every square inch, instead of playing Tetris with an assortment of odd-sized bags and boxes in your pantry.

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9. Optimize Vertical Space

Tops of cabinets can provide more storage for lesser-used items, like large serving platters and baking pans (just make sure to wipe them down regularly). We use the top of our refrigerator to house cutting boards when they aren’t in use!

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10. Make Your Sink Double Duty

If a kitchen cart is not an option, the space where your sink sits can also act as more counter space with the right addition — try an over-the-sink drying rack or cutting board.

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11. Let Your Kitchen Expand To Another Room

One of the best things we ever did for our small kitchen was to look to adjoining spaces for more storage. We have a dining area next to the kitchen that we set up with two matching bookshelves with drawers on the bottom which now house kitchen linens, tea, and serving trivets. Part of our laundry room also serves as an extension of our pantry, holding extra canned goods, pasta, and other shelf-stable goods.

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12. Declutter Regularly

It’s really easy to make a mess in a small kitchen, so it’s important to constantly edit. Every few months, do an inventory of your kitchenware and get rid of anything you find to be unnecessary.

Trey Gowdy tells Fox News that Trump’s defense team “blew it”: “I need to hear a factual defense”

Fox News host Trey Gowdy, a former Republican lawmaker, on Wednesday said that President Donald Trump’s attorneys had botched their opening remarks at his second impeachment trial.

Gowdy made the remarks during a break in the prosecution’s arguments on the second day of trial.

“That’s why yesterday was so important,” he said. “That’s was the only chance the defense had to kind of set the tone, to raise questions or make the jury think about something all day. I mean, it is miserable to be sitting there in a courtroom and never have a chance to respond.”

“But you knew that yesterday,” he continued. “And you blew it, you whiffed it yesterday and today is a natural consequence of that.”

Fox News panelists Ken Starr and K.T. McFarland, however, argued that Democrats are failing to make the case that Trump should be convicted of inciting an insurrection on the U.S. Capitol.

“This isn’t Donald Trump on trial,” McFarland opined. “This is democracy on trial and what we’re showing the world is we’re dysfunctional.”

Gowdy disagreed with McFarland: “I am far less concerned with what the rest of the world thinks about us than how we view ourselves.”

“I think on the issue of the speech, it’s probably going to be split because there are plenty of Democrats that have used hot rhetoric in the past,” he continued. “What’s not split is the president’s lawyers need to come up with a factual defense for what was he doing once he learned the siege began.”

“Because you can act like you were shocked it happened, but once it happened you can’t claim that defense anymore,” Gowdy added. “So why the tweets afterward? Why not get more involved, more engaged. And I need to hear a factual defense and I didn’t hear one yesterday.”

You can watch the video below via YouTube

The right’s hatred of AOC isn’t just racism and sexism: It sums up the entire toxic Trump era

Last week, on the verge of Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial, Republicans and their hate media launched a coordinated attack on Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the New York progressive Democrat. Why? Because she publicly shared the emotional trauma that she and many others suffered during and after the Jan. 6 mob attack on the Capitol — and because she compared that to her personal history as a survivor of sexual assault.

As Salon’s Amanda Marcotte observed, the “targets of right-wing mockery aren’t usually people traumatized by car accidents or combat experiences, but people whose trauma is politically uncomfortable for conservatives.” Such mockery is often “leveraged against victims of sexual violence, as happened when Donald Trump made fun of Christine Blasey Ford for her story of being sexually assaulted by now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.” Marcotte continued:

Mostly, conservatives who engage in victim-mockery tend to keep it in their own spaces (Trump attacked Ford at a rally, not a press conference) where they can high-five each other for their abusive behavior without drawing the attention of others who rightfully will be grossed out by it. But after the Capitol insurrection of January 6, this habit of reflexively mocking and denying the pain of trauma victims is being rolled out for a more national audience, as Republicans frantically try to minimize the violence of that day, looking to deflect from their own complicity in both causing and excusing it.

After Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., took to Instagram to detail her horrific experiences during the insurrection, the right-wing noise machine moved into action, deploying the usual sexist stereotypes about hysterical, manipulative, deceitful women typically employed to discredit victims of rape or sexual harassment.

These most recent attacks on Ocasio-Cortez — a favorite punching-bag of the right ever since she came to national prominence — are more than an example of bullying, crude and antisocial behavior. They are an illustration of how today’s Republican Party has already embraced the worst kind of political deviance, and a warning of the even more extreme fascist and authoritarian dangers to come.

In total, the ugliness directed at one congresswoman offers insight into how Trumpist Republicans and their neofascist followers and believers see the world, as well as the type of world they want to force into existence in the near future.

Here are some of their values and beliefs.

Malignant reality. The Republican Party and the right wing more generally live in an alternative conspiracy-theory universe of their own creation. Facts do not matter. The “big lie” (and the many small lies that sustain it) are all that matter.

Support for the violent coup and its underlying ideology. The threats and violent speech by the white right are not “hyperbole.” Republicans and other members of the right really do wish harm on Democrats, liberals, progressives, nonwhite people, Muslims and others who they have identified as an enemy Other in American society.

Victimology. Despite all available evidence to the contrary, Republicans and other members of the right wing actually believe that they are the “real” victims in America. They imagine themselves to be persecuted and oppressed by “political correctness.” They believe Democrats and liberals are destroying their “traditional” America. They believe that “minorities” and immigrants are “taking their jobs.”

Republican leaders have played a key role in the victimology fantasy by telling their followers lies about “cancel culture” and spreading paranoid fictions about “the left,” antifa and Black Lives Matter.

Moreover, public opinion and other research has repeatedly shown that even though white people retain control of the country’s political, social and economic institutions, a significant percentage of white Americans (including most Trump voters) believe that they, rather than nonwhite people, are the true victims of racism in America.

The eroticization of women’s pain and fear. Fascism is a masculine political imaginary that emphasizes violence, “virility” and dominance. This is true of authoritarianism more generally as well. While many men (and women) on the right find Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s intelligence, personal strength, skin color and cultural background threatening (if not repulsive), they are also titillated and excited by her fear because in their minds it reaffirms (white) male dominance and power. This is almost the dynamic of the slasher film as applied to politics.

Victims are responsible for their own suffering. Conservative authoritarians are more likely to believe that people who are victims of assault, abuse or violence somehow deserve their own suffering. If Ocasio-Cortez or other Democrats (or disloyal Republicans) had been injured or killed in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, far too many Republicans would have convinced themselves, consciously or otherwise, that somehow “they had it coming.”

Hostile sexism and racism. Social scientists have shown that “hostile sexism” helps to explain Donald Trump’s appeal for his voters and followers. White supremacy, racism and racial authoritarianism also strongly predict support for Trump and his movement (as well as for Republicans more generally). By speaking out forcefully about her experiences during the Jan. 6 attack, Ocasio-Cortez violated the norm that women, especially nonwhite women, must be silent in the face of white male authority.

The annihilation of emotion. Fascism in its various forms involves destroying the capacity for targeted groups (the enemy Other) to experience any emotions other than fear. Chronic fear in turn creates a state of learned helplessness and lack of resistance.

By comparison, except for fear and “weakness,” the fascists (in this case, “conservatives” and Trumpist Republicans) are allowed a full range of emotions. This explains why Republicans and other members of the right can cry or become angry or even hysterical without negative professional or personal consequences.

For example, Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh cried during his confirmation hearing — and was praised for showing such “passion.” Members of the right-wing propaganda media cry and rage all the time and it is taken as evidence of their “authenticity.” Trump’s movement is rooted in white rage and white irrationality. Those emotions won Trump the White House once — and almost did so a second time.

Democrats, liberals and progressives — especially women and nonwhite people — are generally not allowed such behavior within the boundaries of America’s approved public discourse. 

White women — or at least subservient conservative white women — are to be protected, admired, adored, and honored. A thought experiment: if Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez were a white Republican, and the Capitol had been overrun by “Democrats” or “liberals” in a lethal mob assault, the response from the same voices who are mocking and condemning her now would be entirely different. This alternate-reality version of Ocasio-Cortez would be a right-wing heroine.

Donald Trump is now being tried in the U.S. Senate for the crime of encouraging an insurrection and a lethal coup attack on the Capitol. In all likelihood, Republicans will not convict Trump despite the abundant evidence of his guilt. In fairness, why should they? Whatever their personal or aesthetic objections to Trump may be, they agree with Trump’s policies, including the use of political terrorism and other forms of violence to win and keep power. In that context, the Age of Trump is best understood not as an aberration or derailment in the right wing’s embrace of anti-democratic extremism but as part of a long campaign to radically remake American society.

As seen with the attacks on the humanity of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the world the white right is trying to fully create is even more racist, white supremacist, woman-hating, pathological, anti-human and anti-democratic than this one.

In the America that exists today such values are increasingly rejected. Much of the white right wants to elevate those noxious values, because it sees them as virtues.

Ultimately, Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial is much bigger than a decision about the crimes of one man — who happened to be the worst president in American history. It is a referendum on the future of American democracy.

Amid tragic blunders, former pandemic hero Andrew Cuomo now compared to Trump: “He’s a bully”

The face of the country’s coronavirus pandemic response ignored expert advice, deflected blame amid skyrocketing infections, lashed out at journalists who tried to hold him accountable, feuded with Democratic mayors and touted hydroxychloroquine while presiding over one of the deadliest outbreaks in the world. But it wasn’t Donald Trump.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s national profile quickly rose amid the massive early outbreak in his state, earning him worldwide praise. But new reports show that his actions may have hampered the state’s response and sparked a mass exodus of health experts.

Cuomo emerged as an early pandemic hero as he took the reins in his daily news briefings while Trump repeatedly sought to downplay the virus in a futile attempt to convince stock traders the threat wasn’t real. By contrast, Cuomo took the threat seriously, closed schools and businesses, and generally behaved like an adult, offering the public data and copious charts to track the spread of the outbreak. While Trump ultimately banished medical experts from his briefings, Cuomo sat daily flanked by his top public health officials providing a sober and reassuring voice during a time of peak panic. While Trump suggested that perhaps people should drink bleach, Cuomo affably recounted his own personal experiences dealing with the unprecedented social distancing restrictions with his daughters.

Cuomo “earned respect from the public, the media did not grant him some kind of mantle of sainthood,” Rosemary Armao, an investigative reporter and journalism professor at the University of Albany, said in an email to Salon. “His earnest, honest, homey talks every day were such a huge contrast to Donald Trump’s briefings and pronouncements on the virus that you could not help but notice him. He was FDR at the Fireside, telling us the hard truths, showing empathy for victims, showering praise on front-line medical and other workers, organizing, calming.”

Cuomo’s briefings were aired nationally and sometimes even overseas, serving as the ultimate media foil to Trump’s incessant efforts to gaslight the public about the threat. Nationwide plaudits earned the governor an Emmy award, a book deal to write about his “leadership lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic,” and the adoration of countless “Cuomosexuals” — an actual name that his legions of online supporters eagerly, if regrettably, embraced. Never mind that Cuomo has now presided over one of the deadliest outbreaks in any state for nearly a year.

Cuomo’s decision to write a book in the middle of a pandemic that was far from over was “disturbing,” Armao observed. “It seemed premature with thousands still dying and new surges still highly possible. Where did he have the time to write a book if he was indeed leading so well?”

Armao noted that CNN host Chris Cuomo often hosted his brother for interviews that she now cites in her journalism ethics classes, expressing mixed views on their friendly cable news exchanges. Though CNN largely limited the discussions to public health issues, she said, the network and the governor “both profited from them.”

“Are they a blatant conflict of interest? Yep,” she said. “Were they widely and warmly received? Also yep.”

Steven Thrasher, a journalism professor at Northwestern University and a former reporter for the Village Voice, described Andrew Cuomo’s Emmy as “outrageous” and said the relationship between CNN and the governor was “ridiculous” and served as a sort of “manufactured consent” to establish him as a pandemic hero.

“He personifies a kind of liberal calmness and order that was very appealing as the opposite of Trump,” Thrasher said. But Cuomo’s decision-making led to “lots of things that made the pandemic worse,” he said, adding that it was “really disgusting that he wrote this book praising himself.”

Through it all, Cuomo has dismissed most criticism as partisan attacks and blamed Trump for many of the failings in New York’s state-level response. Mainstream media outlets seized on his criticism of Trump, ignoring critical decisions that contributed to the skyrocketing number of cases in the state last spring. By the summer, Cuomo brought out a giant foam mountain sculpture to celebrate that New York “went up the mountain, we curved the mountain, we came down the other side.” But recent reports suggest that Cuomo’s decisions made that climb more perilous than it had to be, and his latest directives risk a return to its apex.

At least nine New York health officials, including the state’s deputy commissioner for public health and top epidemiologists and disease control experts, have quit since the summer after they were “sidelined or treated disrespectfully” by Cuomo, who “has all but declared war on his own public health bureaucracy,” The New York Times reported last month.

Cuomo has not tried to conceal his disdain for health officials.

“When I say ‘experts’ in air quotes, it sounds like I’m saying I don’t really trust the experts,” he said in a January news conference. “Because I don’t.”

Cuomo defended his administration after officials said morale at the state’s health agency had plunged to a new low, arguing that health officials were overwhelmed by the scale of the pandemic.

“It’s the Mike Tyson line: ‘Everybody has a plan until I punch them in the face,'” he told the Times.

State health officials said they were not even consulted on major decisions, however, and only found out about them while watching Cuomo’s televised briefings, according to the report.

A state official told Salon that Cuomo was simply describing the reality that there are no real experts COVID-19, since the virus has only been in the U.S. for about a year. Expert advice has frequently changed as new data came in. 

New York State Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker told Salon that his agency has faced “an intense period of extraordinary stress and pressure and a different job than some signed onto.”

“The Times’ point is several staff left; true and many others joined the agency with the talents necessary to confront this new challenge,” Zucker said in a statement. “What was the result? It is factual and inarguable that the 4,500 DOH employees faced a challenge greater than any other state and went from the highest infection rate in the nation to one of the lowest when we had more cases in this state than any country on the globe; the proof is in the performance numbers.”

Cuomo’s disdain for medical experts rivaled his enmity toward journalists, with whom he has sparred for months about his decision to require nursing homes to accept recovering coronavirus patients.

“He has a very authoritarian approach to dealing with the media,” Thrasher said. “He can be very condescending. … He doesn’t like to be questioned, and if you look at the state of the pandemic there’s a lot to be answered for.”

New York Attorney General Letitia James, a fellow Democrat who is generally seen as a Cuomo ally, said in a report last month that his nursing home directive “may have put residents at increased risk of harm in some facilities.” The report revealed that Cuomo’s administration had undercounted nursing home deaths by more than 40%, bolstering allegations that the state “may have intentionally played down the number of those deaths to avoid blame” by not disclosing deaths of residents that occurred at hospitals, The New York Times reported. The state’s Department of Health updated its nursing home death total to reflect the findings hours later, though it insisted there was no evidence the policy had “resulted in additional fatalities in nursing homes.” In typical fashion, Cuomo blamed the Trump administration and “federal guidance” for the policy.

Though the state severely undercounted nursing home deaths, Zucker said that the report “is clear that there was no undercount of the total death toll,” that the policy was in line with the Trump administration’s guidance, and that the investigation “found no evidence that any nursing home lacked the ability to care for patients admitted from hospitals.” He went on to criticize the Trump administration’s “complete abdication” of its duty to manage the pandemic and oversee the reporting of data.

“There is no satisfaction in pointing out inaccuracies; every death to this terrible disease is tragic, and New York was hit hardest and earliest of any state as a direct result of the federal government’s negligence,” he said. 

State Assembly Health Committee chairman Richard Gottfried, a Manhattan Democrat, said in a statement that the attorney general’s findings were “shocking and unconscionable but not surprising” and criticized the state’s health department for refusing for months to release the number of nursing home patients who died at hospitals.

“The budget cuts proposed by Gov. Cuomo will make this situation even worse,” he warned.

Thrasher said his friend and mentor Ward Harkavy, a former editor at the Village Voice, died in March because “he was sent to a nursing home to recover” from a coronavirus infection.

“If Donald Trump were the governor, a lot of people in the media would be very critical of the record here because so many people have died,” he said. “But [Cuomo] is very close to people in the media and represents a sort of return to Clinton-Obama liberal politics, without acknowledging that those politics are a reason we had so much death,” he added, pointing to Cuomo’s cuts to hospitals and Medicaid before the pandemic.

The attorney general’s report also took issue with a waiver that Cuomo quietly snuck into the state’s budget last spring — at the urging of industry lobbyists — that granted nursing homes, as well as hospitals and other health care facilities, legal immunity over their failure to protect residents from the virus. U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell later tried to copy the language in Cuomo’s waiver verbatim while unsuccessfully pushing for a federal version of the liability protections. Many New York legislators did not even realize that the provision was added until after they voted to approve the budget. Furious lawmakers who felt blindsided by the provision partially rolled back the immunity protection so it only applies to coronavirus patients.

“These provisions were enacted by the legislature as part of the budget process,” Jack Sterne, a spokesperson for Cuomo’s administration, told Salon.

James’ office found that some nursing homes did not screen staff members for the virus, allowed coronavirus-positive patients to mingle with healthy residents, maintained dangerously low staffing levels, and forced some sick employees to come to work.

Despite the “disturbing and potentially unlawful findings” in the investigation into nursing home deaths, James said last month, “it remains unclear to what extent facilities or individuals can be held accountable if found to have failed to appropriately protect the residents in their care.”

Zucker said the findings were consistent with his department’s own investigation and policies.

“These failures are in direct violation of Public Health Law and DOH guidance that every nursing home operator was aware of,” he said. “Violations of these protocols is inexcusable and operators will be held accountable. In fact, DOH has already issued 140 infection control citations and more than a dozen immediate jeopardy citations.”

Zucker said his office would review the recommendations in the report amid the ongoing crisis.

“All of this confirms that many nursing home operators made grave mistakes and were not adequately prepared for this pandemic, and that reforms are needed, which is why we proposed radical reforms to oversight of nursing home facilities in this year’s State Budget,” he said. “We will do everything in our power to enact those reforms this year.”

State Assembly Aging Committee chairman Ron Kim, a Democrat who had immediately called for the entire provision to be repealed, told Salon that the attorney general’s report validates his months of warnings and reports highlighting the negative impact of granting legal immunity at the peak of the pandemic and the “profit motives that led to unnecessary deaths.”

Kim, who introduced a bill in response to James’ report to scrap the liability shield and allow families to sue retroactively, said that Cuomo must acknowledge the problem in order to adequately address it.

“There must be full accountability and transparency moving forward,” he said in an email. “The legislature and the public need to review the full data on fatalities and transmission patterns. We also need full honesty on who drove these policies and why they chose to only follow the advice of hospital and nursing home lobbyists.”

A state official said Cuomo’s office would review the bill if it passes the legislature but stopped short of saying he would sign it. 

Cuomo also sided with industry lobbyists when he threw out decades of planning by public health officials to roll out his own vaccination plan that relied on private hospital systems with the help of consultants from Deloitte and Boston Consulting Group and the top lobbyist for the hospital giant Northwell Health, according to the Times. He previously relied on consulting firm McKinsey to craft the state’s “Trump-proof” reopening plan. The latest move appeared to “negate 15 to 20 years of work,” former top New York City health official Dr. Isaac Weisfuse told the Times.

Cuomo argued that state and local health officials, who had worked on a mass-scale vaccination plan since the 9/11 attacks nearly 20 years ago, “had no understanding of how to conduct a real-world, large-scale operation like vaccinations,” according to the report. Cuomo did not even inform health officials of his new plan until they learned about it during a briefing.

“The state is gathering, organizing and analyzing unprecedented levels of data 24/7 as a result of this once-in-a-century public health emergency. We are taking an all-hands-on-deck approach and these consultants complement the Department of Health’s data management infrastructure,” Sterne, the governor’s spokesperson, told Salon. 

Sterne disputed that the administration had scrapped its existing plans and relied exclusively on private hospitals.

“This is an apples and oranges comparison: The COVID vaccine supply is extremely limited, there’s prioritization guidance, it requires ultra-cold storage, and is a two-shot regimen, so we could not solely rely on past planning,” he said. “The state picked the most relevant elements of prior plans that made sense here — like mass vaccination sites used during H1N1, targeted distribution to health care facilities to serve their workforce, and scalable parts of the annual flu vaccination effort such as pharmacies — and operationalized them to fit the unique requirements of COVID. As we expanded eligibility, we’ve expanded our partners.”

New York struggled early on with vaccine access, though its rate of vaccination has improved in recent weeks. Some of the difficulties were caused by restrictive eligibility and Cuomo’s threat of fines. While medical workers around the country have drawn praise for improvising when their vaccine doses neared expiration by immunizing anyone in the vicinity, Cuomo threatened $1 million fines if anyone got a vaccine before they were eligible, 10 times more than the fine he imposed on hospitals that fail to use all their allotted doses.

Dr. Celine Gounder, an infectious disease specialist at the NYU Langone medical school and an adviser to President Joe Biden, argued last week that the vaccine rollout has been slow because Cuomo “made the process too restrictive and punitive.”

“He entrusted the job to private healthcare systems, not public health,” she wrote. “Private healthcare systems don’t know how to do public health, like mass vaccination.”

A state official told Salon that the focus when the fines were announced was on vaccinating hospital employees before the winter holidays, and fines were seen as necessary to ensure sufficient availability of doses for health workers while preventing ineligible people from jumping the line. Though the state will expand eligibility to about two-thirds of New York residents by next week, the directive to issue fines remains in effect. Since there are more people eligible to be vaccinated, it is unlikely that states will have to throw out vaccines, the official said, and vaccination centers have standby lists for vaccines in case they have unused doses.

Though the state has taken steps to address its slow rollout, it still faces challenges in equitable distribution. Data released by New York City’s health department last month shows that just 11% of vaccinations went to Black residents and 15% went to Latinos, even though they make up 24% and 29% of the city’s population, respectively. Elderly Black and Latino residents have also received disproportionately fewer vaccinations than white residents statewide as well.

“Extensive red tape and unnecessary rigidity over who we could vaccinate and when — all with the looming threat of millions of dollars in punitive fines — made an extraordinarily difficult task all the more challenging in those first initial weeks of the rollout,” Avery Cohen, a spokesperson for New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, told the Times.

Sterne said that Cuomo has been working to address this issue since last year.

“For months, Gov. Cuomo has been highlighting the intolerable reality that New Yorkers of color are dying at higher rates than white New Yorkers — and he has been working to ensure vaccine distribution is equitable,” he said. “In a matter of weeks, we’ve deployed pop-up vaccination kits to over 70 public housing developments and churches statewide, which have administered shots to over 30,000 New Yorkers in communities of color, and have launched a mass vaccination site specifically for Bronx residents at Yankee Stadium. Dozens more are planned for coming weeks, along with major vaccine hubs for hard-hit communities, and we plan to stand up over 300 vaccine sites in communities of color as supply continues to increase under the Biden administration.”

Dr. Denis Nash, an epidemiologist at the City University of New York and former city health official, said a key reason for the discrepancies is the design of the state’s online-based scheduling program.

“I am very disappointed that the city and state developed a vaccine scheduling system that appears designed to prevent prioritization of those at greatest risk and those neighborhoods with the highest burden, even among those who are currently eligible,” he said in an email. “When you have limited vaccine and while community transmission is still very high, you need a plan that gives adequate attention to equity so that the program does not perpetuate or more likely worsen the existing health inequities we are seeing.”

Nash said these racial disparities should have been anticipated and built into the rollout plan instead of setting goals for total number of vaccinations.

“The system has no guard rails to prevent the very unfair early differences,” he said, adding that “it is not too late to fix it.”

More recently, medical officials have warned that additional restrictions may be required to contain the spread of new coronavirus variants coming from overseas. Despite the warning, Cuomo announced last month that indoor dining in New York City would reopen in a limited capacity by Valentine’s Day and weddings could resume with 50% capacity and “up to 150” guests by March, citing the “current trajectory” of infections. But The New York Times noted that the rate of cases in the city was 64% higher, and the rate of hospitalizations was 60% higher, when he made this latest announcement than they were in December when he shut down indoor dining. Cuomo defended the decision by displaying a chart at a briefing showing a 30% drop in positivity rates, but the numbers he used were “the highest and lowest daily numbers in January to that point, extremes that did not exactly reflect the overall trend,” the Times reported, adding that the drop in average positivity rates was about half as large as Cuomo’s numbers.

“He’s not a fighter for the people of NY,” Gounder tweeted. “He’s a fighter for his friends and monied special interests.”

A state official said that the situation remains fluid and scheduled reopenings could be rolled back in the event of a spike. The official cited a recent Buffalo Bills NFL playoff game — attended by about 6,700 people in a 70,000-seat stadium — as evidence that testing and other safety measures can be used to safely allow larger events. The official also took issue with the Times’ analysis, arguing that positivity rates are currently down 21% from early January and hospitalizations have been steady for 16 consecutive days.

Nash is highly skeptical of Cuomo’s plans to permit indoor dining and large group events. “I think this is very ill-advised,” he said. “We have a high prevalence at the moment, which pretty much guarantees indoor dining will contribute to community transmission and put restaurant employees at greater risk.”

The state official argued that this logic would have prevented the state from reopening in the first place last May, when the number of new infections was still around the same rate as they were when the state closed down but trends showed that rates were clearly dropping.

Cuomo’s aversion to lockdowns, which have been shown to significantly reduce the spread of infections, has been criticized since the pandemic hit. Cuomo, who initially compared the coronavirus to the flu, quarreled with de Blasio last March over the mayor’s call to issue a “shelter-in-place” order and feuded with the mayor over who had the power to shut down the city’s schools and businesses, before ultimately deciding to impose a lockdown after days of bickering anyway.

By the time Cuomo made that announcement, the number of new cases in the state was doubling every three to four days. Medical experts from the Imperial College in London and the University of California, Berkeley, have estimated that the state could have cut its death toll in half if they had acted a week or two sooner.

“Days earlier & so many deaths could have been prevented,” tweeted Dr. Tom Frieden, former head of both the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and New York City’s Health Department.

After the early squabbles, Cuomo’s team effectively cut de Blasio and city officials out of the decision-making process, ProPublica reported last year.

While Cuomo pushed aside local officials and experts in favor of lobbyists and private interests, he frequently channeled Trump in style, if not in substance. He touted hydroxycholoroquine, the ineffective malarial drug heavily hyped by Trump, as “promising” and pushed for the federal government to approve clinical trials before buying 70,000 doses of the drug that medical providers later stopped using after it was shown to have no effect on coronavirus patients while potentially causing significant side effects.

A state official told Salon that the governor was acting on data suggesting that the drug could be effective, but that the state stopped using the medication once clinical trials showed it was not useful.

Cuomo has at times also echoed Trump’s claim that the number of infections was increasing because the state was conducting more tests, even though testing simply identifies infections that already exist.

“The facts do not merit the level of anxiety we are seeing,” Cuomo said in a March briefing. “The number will increase because it is math. The more people you test, the more positives you are going to find. I’m a little perturbed about the daily angst when the number comes out and the number is higher. Perturbed meaning, I’m perturbed that people get anxious every time the number goes up. The number has to go up if you continue to test.”

Armao made a damning comparison that might outrage the governor’s fans: “Cuomo is Trump-like in many ways.”

“He’s a bully, kind of scary-mean, and he’s secretive and he wants to be in charge. Hubris is the word that comes to mind,” she said. “So he hides the real number of nursing home deaths and has his health department people tell journalists they are working on getting the numbers. He stalls so long the Democratic AG comes out with a damning report that has all the statistics. Then it turns out the health department has lost some key personnel because they can’t work under Cuomo’s directives, and when asked about this he retorts that he doesn’t trust the experts. This is a line out of Trump’s script.”

She concluded with a rhetorical question: “Listening to the experts, heeding the science, telling the unvarnished truth, fair treatment for all state residents, admitting to shortcomings — aren’t these the very leadership qualities the governor wrote a book about?”

Outgoing Washington Post editor finally, begrudgingly admits mistakes in Trump coverage

On his way out the door, Washington Post executive editor Marty Baron is conceding that he, the Post and other top journalists failed to sufficiently hold Donald Trump accountable for his lies.

But the admission, in which Baron used the vague pronoun “we,” was grudging. There was no sign of remorse. Baron cast journalists as the victims of a president who exploited their “good principles.” And then he insisted that it didn’t really matter anyway.

To those of us hoping that the fall of Trump would herald massive updates and upgrades to the anachronistic political reporting algorithms that served the public so poorly during his rise and rule, it is certainly disappointing that the first admission of fault from a senior newsroom leader amounts to little more than a “whatever.”

But I guess it’s something. Baby steps.

Here is an excerpt from a new interview that Baron, who is stepping down later this month, conducted with the German newspaper Der Spiegel

DER SPIEGEL: You were executive editor of the Washington Post for the entire time Donald Trump was in office. Did his lies get too much media attention?

Baron: He was president of the United States, the most powerful position in the world. He had a tremendous impact on what happened here in the U.S. and what was happening around the world. It was our obligation to cover that.

DER SPIEGEL: But in hindsight, what mistakes did journalists make in dealing with him?

Baron: We make mistakes all the time, regardless of who’s in office. We are a highly imperfect profession, like every profession.

DER SPIEGEL: We can confirm this.

Baron: Exactly. So, we have to be honest about that. We have to recognize that we have certain flaws. We’re making decisions in real time, we’re moving quickly, we don’t have time to sit back and think about a lot of the implications of what we do. We should do more of that. But things move at a very fast pace.

DER SPIEGEL: So, again, what were some of those mistakes?

Baron: We had to be much more forthright about Trump’s mendacity, his lies over the course of the administration. We needed to call them that from the very beginning. We were very much operating on good principle; and let’s be fair, he was president, he was duly elected. But he was exploiting that. He was exploiting our principles. That said, I don’t think it would have made any great difference.

DER SPIEGEL: Did you underestimate him?

Baron: People assumed that he had authoritarian instincts, but we needed to see actual hardcore evidence of it. We’re not in the business of just speculating about what he might do. We’re in the business of covering what he has done and what he’s contemplating doing. And for the longest time, we didn’t actually have hard evidence of these authoritarian instincts. Now we do. So, I don’t think that people underestimated him.

I don’t think Baron and the Washington Post were nearly as guilty as Dean Baquet and the New York Times, when it came to normalizing Trump with a nearly constant stream of credulous, euphemistic coverage of his presidency, his lies, his corruption and his assault on core democratic values including pluralism and, well, democracy.

There’s a reason my Press Watch website has an entire vertical for the New York Times, but not for the Post. 

But the Post nevertheless whiffed on Trump countless times.

Consider the Post’s crowning example of how it held Trump accountable: its Trump fact-checker database of 30,573 “false or misleading claims.” Note the absence of the world “lie.”

Good luck finding the Post calling anything Trump said a lie until the last six months or so. Editors argue that the word lie should not be used because it presumes intentionality — but Trump’s intentions were pretty damn clear. It wasn’t until about September of last year, when Trump started making noises about not respecting the election results, that the tone of the Post’s got what I would call realistic. 

Indeed, despite the occasional bold article, Post coverage during the Trump era was often marked by ridiculous credulity, as when it cast Trump as a “supporting character” in the Ukraine inquiry. Post reporters failed to call out Trump’s racist and authoritarian rhetoric, waving it off as a strategic mistake — “self-sabotage,” they called it. Even when Trump engaged in pure gaslighting — such as by claiming he had “always” taken the coronavirus seriously — they could only bring themselves to murmur that “[m]uch of what Trump has said has been contradictory or false.”

The Post also continued to employ Dan Balz as its chief political correspondent, despite his entreaties — as recently as last September — for Trump to “turn around his candidacy” by demonstrating “discipline and focus” instead of “frittering away the advantages of incumbency.”

It’s nice to hear Baron now acknowledge that the Post should have been “much more forthright about Trump’s mendacity” from the beginning. But his excuse is preposterous: that it was the Post’s obligation to broadcast Trump’s lies and that journalistic “principles” precluded calling him a liar. 

That’s reminiscent of former Post editor David Ignatius’ infamous line in 2004 about the media’s failure to challenge the George W. Bush administration’s case for war in Iraq: “In a sense, the media were victims of their own professionalism.”

But the victims in both cases were the public, not the media. In the current instance, media critics have been pointing out all along that it was habits, not “principles,” that Trump exploited — anachronistic habits formed in an era when presidents didn’t actively and constantly spread misinformation.

It was Baron’s stubbornness, willful blindness and fear of being perceived as taking sides — not journalistic principles — that Trump exploited. So shame on them all.

Baron’s suggestion that reporters lacked evidence of Trump’s authoritarian instincts is also laughable. The evidence was abundant to anyone paying attention. Certainly by the time Trump took office, news organizations should have been treating it like a national emergency. His rejection of the laws and institutions and norms that constrained him was playing out in real time. 

Had Baron listened to Muslims cut off from their families or, later on, parents separated from their children at the border, he would have had more than enough of the evidence he claimed to lack.

The most absurd part of the interview was Baron’s claim that calling out Trump’s lies wouldn’t “have made any great difference.” Elsewhere in the interview, he spoke of his hopelessness about reaching conspiracy theorists (a good reason for his retirement right there). He said it doesn’t really matter what the Post does “because we are not reinforcing people’s preexisting view of the world. And if we don’t do that, then they see us as the enemy, as liars, as paid agents of their opponents. It’s very difficult to shake people of conspiracy thinking.”

But did Baron even try? No. He stuck to the old ways of doing things, even though he knew they didn’t work. 

My view on this is clear. Namby-pamby political journalism isn’t going to reach the truth-deniers. “Objective” political reporting as practiced in newsrooms like the Post has failed. The role of the free press in the world’s leading democracy is not to sit by and watch as authoritarianism takes root, or as the very notion of truth is undermined. It’s to actively promote democratic values, remind people of the importance of constitutional checks and balances, support human rights, and advocate for a government that is responsive to the people’s needs. Most important, it’s to crusade for reality.

Going forward, as I argued in a recent piece about what Baron’s successor should tell his political team, the Post should not only call out lies — enthusiastically — but pursue consequences for lying. Because in a world with no consequences for lying, fact-based journalism has little value.

Baron famously said in 2017, “We’re not at war with the administration, we’re at work.” But he should have gone to war — against disinformation and right-wing propaganda, against incipient authoritarianism and against white supremacy.

If he had, it would have had a huge impact, not just among Washington Post readers but well beyond. I don’t think there’s any doubt that other publications would have been emboldened as well. That could have influenced the entire national debate. It could have changed everything. How can Marty Baron believe otherwise? 

Sia’s directorial debut “Music” is a baffling and patronizing cringefest of ableist minstrelsy

I am autistic and a fan of Sia‘s songs. As I watched her feature directorial debut “Music,” I felt overwhelmed with emotions . . . none of them good. 

This movie isn’t just offensive; it’s patronizing. “Music” is the cinematic equivalent of having someone who claims to be your friend pat you on the head for 100 minutes and say, “Aren’t you cuuuuute?” It cares about autistic people, I sense, but it isn’t listening to us.

The result is one of the most grotesque films I’ve ever seen, a movie that literally left me staring in shock with my mouth agape for much of its running time.

“Music” — which is directed, co-written and co-produced by the Australian singer/songwriter — tells the story of Kazu “Zu” Gamble (Kate Hudson), a former drug dealer struggling to stay sober and achieve basic adulting milestones. As hackneyed indie films are wont to do, a marginalized person becomes a plot device to help the protagonist achieve her goals; in this case it’s Zu’s teenaged autistic half-sister named Music (frequent Sia collaborator Maddie Ziegler), who is placed in Zu’s care after the unexpected death of their grandmother.

Along the way various talented actors pop in to have brief subplots that either go nowhere or build to disappointing conclusions: Leslie Odom Jr. as Zu’s love interest Ebo, Héctor Elizondo as a kindly neighbor, Ben Schwartz as a drug dealer with a heart of gold, Beto Calvillo as Music’s local friend. All of them are capable of much better than the cheesy material that the script has given them, and they do the best they can with their one-dimensional and (in some cases) offensively stereotypical characters. None are responsible for what is wrong with this movie.

No, the movie has three big problems. Each on its own would tank it, but combined they create a viewing experience that is singularly unpleasant and painful.

Ziegler’s performance as the titular character is at the top of the list. For one thing, as I’ve explained in other articles, it is problematic for a neurotypical (non-autistic) actor to be cast as someone on the spectrum, both because there are plenty of autistic actors who could be cast in those roles and because those performances can easily slip into a kind of ableist minstrelsy. Such is unfortunately the case with Ziegler, who juts out her jaw, makes bug-eyes, emits guttural sounds and wildly mugs for the camera. Her facial expressiveness — which was an asset when she danced in Sia music videos like “Chandelier” and “Cheap Thrills” — is a fatal liability here. It reminded me of the Simple Jack subplot in “Tropic Thunder,” a 2008 film in which Ben Stiller stars as an actor who tries to win an Oscar by playing a mentally disabled person and fails because his performance is so over-the-top way that it becomes cringe-y rather than compelling.

“Tropic Thunder,” incidentally, was made in an era when few in the film industry saw a problem with neurotypical people playing atypical characters, and to be fair that dynamic did occasionally produce masterpieces like “Sling Blade” and “Julien Donkey-Boy.” More often than not, though, it led to tone-deaf and cloying products that made you wince, from “i am sam” and “Rain Man” to “Forrest Gump.” (The last two won four and six Oscars, respectively; “Sling Blade” only netted one.)

Sia, for what it’s worth, claims that she cast Ziegler because she originally chose a “beautiful young girl non verbal on the spectrum and she found it unpleasant and stressful.” I find it impossible to believe that there were no other autistic thespians Sia could have picked, including a verbal autistic actor if necessary. Autism is a spectrum, and no two people present in the same way, but Sia could have chosen an actor who is at least on the spectrum, even if that person’s symptoms were not identical to those of the autistic character’s.

I can’t know for sure if Sia and Ziegler were Oscar-chasing here, but like the Stiller character in “Tropic Thunder,” Ziegler’s acting reeks of someone going too far playing a person in a marginalized group in the hope of being recognized during awards season. (Indeed, “Music” has inexplicably garnered two Golden Globes nominations, though thankfully neither are for Ziegler’s performance.) Even if that wasn’t their motivation, the central role is played in a way that had already been recognized as embarrassingly out of touch more than a decade ago. It’s inexcusable.

The second issue is that the film isn’t even particularly interested in Ziegler’s character. The focus of the story is Zu and her efforts to recover from her alcoholism and drug-filled lifestyle. Given Sia’s own past struggles with substance abuse, it makes sense that her directorial debut would center around someone fighting similar demons, but the problem is that it renders the autistic character a mere prop. Music has no character arc to speak of and, aside from some pretentious interpretive song-and-dance numbers meant to put us “in her mind,” we never get a sense of her personality or perspective. She is opaque from start to finish.

The end result is a movie not about what it’s like to be autistic, but rather how a neurotypical person perceives someone who is autistic. Sia even admitted as much when she tweeted, “The movie is both a love letter to caregivers and to the autism community. I have my own unique view of the community, and felt it is underrepresented and compelled to make it. If that makes me a sh*t I’m a sh*t, but my intentions are awesome.” Therein lies the core issue: “Music” isn’t really about an autistic person, but about a neurotypical person displaying her “awesome” intentions through an autistic character. What Sia views as a “love letter” to a marginalized group comes across as a love letter to people who think they’re writing love letters to marginalized groups.

The final problem with “Music” is arguably the most serious one, at least from a moviegoing perspective: It’s just plain boring. To be clear, its other offenses would still have been unforgivable if it had been entertaining, but at least then I might have derived something positive from the experience. Yet the story is so predictable, the characters so bland and underdeveloped, the pacing so meandering and half-hearted that I had to pause it several times because I could only endure my anguish in morsels (doing so in one giant gulp would have been unbearable).

There are also big plot holes, such as why a drug dealer and addict would be entrusted to care for a teenager or why Zu’s love interest swings from desiring to shunning her without any discernible reasons for doing so. The best thing that I can say about “Music” is that the songs themselves are catchy – Sia is a very talented singer and songwriter, after all – and the set design in the music videos is colorful and creative. Yet these aren’t strong enough for me to recommend the movie (maybe the soundtrack), and the rest of the film is so boring that I can’t suggest it as “so bad it’s good.” It’s just bad, plain and simple.

Having said all of this, do I think “Music” should be canceled, as some activists argue it should be? No, and for two reasons: First, for all of its faults, I do not get the sense that Sia made this movie with hate in her heart, and therefore I do not see Sia, her collaborators or the movie itself as deserving of the ultimate form of cultural sanction. Second, bad art can teach valuable lessons that inspire good art. “Music” can serve as an object lesson for future filmmakers dealing with sensitive subjects, reminding them to pay attention to the voices of the communities they ostensibly aspire to represent. I do not think Sia or Ziegler deserve to suffer career destruction from this movie. They do, however, need to realize what they did was wrong and hurtful. Hopefully they can make better movies in the future.

For what it’s worth, Sia has apologized for aspects of the film, such as its disturbing implied endorsement of physically restraining autistic people who suffer meltdowns (she said those scenes would be cut from future releases, although they were in the screener that I saw), and has admitted that “my research was clearly not thorough enough, not wide enough.” She has even acknowledged “being ableist to a degree; I’m not proud of it,” and says that she learned her lesson. If the chief problem with today’s world is that we don’t have enough empathy — and I firmly believe that to be the case — then I will give Sia the benefit of the doubt and accept her apologies as sincere. I don’t think it would be fair to entirely dismiss her oeuvre, or her character, because of this mistake.

Yet, aside from being an example of what not to do when making a movie, I sure as hell am not going to recommend “Music.”

“Music” is in select IMAX theaters on Wednesday, Feb. 10 and in select theaters and on demand beginning Friday, Feb. 12. 

Baby food allegedly riddled with poisonous metals—and the Trump administration did nothing about it

A new report reveals that the baby foods sold by a number of major manufacturers may be contaminated with poisonous heavy metals — and President Donald Trump’s administration, despite knowing about it, did nothing.

The House Oversight Committee released a report on Thursday based on a congressional investigation into the potential presence of toxic heavy metals — including lead, arsenic, cadmium and mercury — in baby foods. Four baby food manufacturers provided Congress with information about the amount of toxic heavy metals in their foods based on their own internal testing, including Beech-Nut Nutrition Company, Gerber, Hain Celestial Group, Inc. and Nurture Inc. Between those four companies, Congress found that the companies allow dangerously high levels of toxic heavy metals in their foods and that the foods sold by the companies frequently exceed even those standards.

“The Food and Drug Administration has set the maximum allowable levels in bottled water at 10 ppb [parts per billion] inorganic arsenic, 5 ppb lead, and 5 ppb cadmium, and the Environmental Protection Agency has capped the allowable level of mercury in drinking water at 2 ppb,” the report explains. “The test results of baby foods and their ingredients eclipse those levels: including results up to 91 times the arsenic level, up to 177 times the lead level, up to 69 times the cadmium level, and up to 5 times the mercury level.”

Three other major baby food manufacturers — Campbell, Walmart and Sprout Organic Foods — did not cooperate with the congressional investigators, leaving them “greatly concerned” about the possible toxic heavy metal contamination in their foods. Then again, as the chair of the subcommittee which conducted the investigation told Salon, the government has previously not forced these companies to be accountable for what they put in their baby food.

“They are not regulated for the most part,” Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill., chair of the House Subcommittee on Economic and Consumer Policy, told Salon. “Unfortunately, despite knowing the hazards of toxic metals — like arsenic, mercury, lead and cadmium — being present in baby foods, the FDA essentially was AWOL on these issues for years. And in fact, the Trump administration was given a secret presentation by one of the baby food makers, showing that the finished baby foods actually contain a greater metallic content than even the ingredients. And yet the Trump administration completely failed to act. Now that has to change immediately.”

He later added, “Before the Trump administration came into office the scientific community and advocacy community was discovering these baby foods had toxic heavy metals. And in the later part of the Obama administration, they started to begin promulgating standards. But even then those standards were not comprehensive enough. And then they basically came to a halt during the Trump administration.”

Heavy metals like arsenic, cadmium, lead and mercury have been linked to diseases like cancer and are particularly dangerous for babies because younger bodies are both smaller and still in a state of vulnerable development. As Krishnamoorthi told Salon, parents should be very concerned about the possibility that their babies are consuming large quantities of these metals.

“I think that parents should be concerned, and they should be vigilant on this issue, because unfortunately these particular toxic heavy metals are neurotoxins, meaning that they can really stunt a baby’s brain and nervous system growth,” Krishnamoorthi explained. “And that can cause the lifelong deficits in intelligence and learning. It can lead to other disorders such as ADHD, and it can lead to antisocial behavior and even criminal behavior. So this is something that we have to take very seriously now.”

He added, “I’m introducing legislation that will require the FDA to set stringent standards with regard to baby food and make sure that our baby food is safe.”

This is not the first time that the public has been made aware of possibly dangerous levels of toxic heavy metals in baby foods. The advocacy coalition Healthy Babies Bright Futures released a report in 2019 revealing that up to 95 percent of baby foods they tested contained toxic heavy metals that could harm a baby’s brain development, which Krishnamoorthi told CNN was the “inspiration” for their own report.

Salon reached out to the companies mentioned in the report. Happy Family Organics, which makes Happy Baby, told Salon by email that it is “disappointed at the many inaccuracies, select data usage and tone bias in this report.” Beech-Nut Nutrition Company wrote to Salon that its baby foods are “safe and nutritious” and that it is “currently reviewing the subcommittee report.” Walmart wrote to Salon that it is “committed to providing safe, quality food” and claimed to have “provided information to the subcommittee nearly a year ago and invited more dialogue on this important issue but never received any additional inquiries.” Campbell referred Salon by email to a statement in which they denied that they had not cooperated with the subcommittee and argued that heavy metals “will be present in the food to some extent” no matter what, although they insisted that they are “committed to minimizing environmental contaminants including heavy metals within our products.”

Gerber, Sprout Foods and Hain Celestial Group have not responded to Salon at the time of this writing, although each company did provide statements to CNN.

Update: Gerber sent Salon an email assuring the outlet that they “meet the standards of the FDA” and adding that “heavy metals occur naturally in the soil and water in which crops are grown. As stated in our 2019 response to the Congressional Inquiry, we take many steps to minimize their presence.”

Texas lawmakers have denounced Biden’s energy moves, but experts say they could benefit the state

HOUSTON — Surrounded by refineries and chemical plants that make up the Houston Ship Channel, the Republican leader of the U.S. House stood last week along what he called “one of America’s success stories.” A cadre of Texans in Congress flanked U.S. Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California to continue a campaign of criticisms they’ve lobbed at President Joe Biden’s climate-focused agenda.

Biden’s swift moves to combat global warming have brought equally quick criticisms from state officials that Texas oil and gas jobs are in danger. But their comments often ignore that there is a global push in the free market — not just from the White House — to limit reliance on fossil fuels. And their rhetoric belies the benefits Texas’ oil and gas sector could see from Biden’s early moves.

“Unfortunately, our economic bedrock of oil and gas is under attack by an administration that is bent on eliminating millions of jobs,” said U.S. Rep. Brian Babin, R-Woodville, one of seven Texas lawmakers who joined McCarthy last week in front of one of the busiest cargo ports in the world.

Even before Biden took office last month, Texas lawmakers had forecasted doom and gloom for the state’s energy industry, projecting the sector’s demise at the hands of the new president. And it hasn’t been a strictly partisan battle: Even Texas Democrats have swiftly pushed back against Biden’s early moves aimed at protecting the environment.

However, the percentage of jobs in the oil and gas industry had begun steadily declining, both in Texas and nationwide, long before Biden took office. In 2014, more than 2.5% of jobs in Texas were in the oil and gas, mining and quarrying industries, according to the Texas Workforce Commission. At the beginning of 2020 — before the coronavirus pandemic and a global drop in the demand for oil — the share of jobs in the Texas oil and gas field had fallen to about 1.8%.

A majority of Americans have said they are interested in a clean and safe environment. Their spending habits increasingly demonstrate that, which experts say poses a much larger threat to the Texas oil and gas industry than Biden does. And, in the short term, Biden’s moves may help Texas, some say.

“Basically every executive action Biden’s taken is good for Texas oil and gas,” said Michael Webber, energy professor at the University of Texas at Austin.

On his first day in office, Biden signed an order revoking a permit the Trump administration granted to a Canadian energy company behind the Keystone XL pipeline. The decade-old international energy project consists of a partially built system of pipelines that run from Canada into the United States.

A portion of the project has already been built through East Texas. The contract Biden yanked revolves around a proposed part of the pipeline that would stretch from Canada to Nebraska. Amy Myers Jaffe, managing director of the Climate Policy Lab at Tufts University in Boston, spent two decades working on energy issues in Texas. She said the construction jobs lost from the project’s halt won’t come from Texas.

“People have a sort of litmus test gut reaction to the cancellation of the Keystone pipeline, but the reality is it’s not likely to have an impact on Texas employment,” she said.

That hasn’t stopped Texas lawmakers from criticizing Biden. Texas U.S. Sen. John Cornyn‘s first news release of the Biden presidency was titled: “With Keystone decision, Biden kicking Texas energy workers while they’re down.”

Biden also quickly signed an order directing the Interior Department to halt extending new contracts for 60 days to companies trying to extract fossil fuels on federal lands. That practice simultaneously generates billions of dollars in royalties and revenues for local and state economies throughout the country. Any existing oil and gas production on federal lands can continue — Biden’s order only blocks new drilling on federal land.

But there is hardly any federal land drilled in Texas, so experts said the state is barely impacted by Biden’s order. Instead, states like New Mexico, North Dakota and Wyoming, where there is substantial fossil fuel extraction on federal lands, will likely be directly affected.

“Texas production will not be affected. It might affect Texas companies who are active in those states,” Webber said. “But it’s a mixed bag, because if you make production more difficult in other states it makes production in Texas more favorable. It’s one of those things where it’s probably good for Texas — Biden’s doing battle against Texas’ competitors.”

Katie Mehnert is chief executive of Ally Energy, a digital forum that lists energy jobs aimed at diversifying the industry, which in Texas is dominated by white men. She said how well Texas companies fare likely hinges less on Biden’s orders and more on their efforts to provide lower carbon energy solutions — such as solar, wind, geothermal and other cleaner energy sources.

“It depends on how the business is positioned for the energy transition,” Mehnert said.

Tim Latimer, chief executive of Fervo Energy in Houston, said many new jobs will be created as companies invest in “unprecedented amounts of construction” to meet the country’s climate goals over the next decade and beyond. But economically, the transition will be tricky and messy.

“There will not be a one for one job replacement,” he said.

Texas lawmakers have latched on to the negatives.

“2 days, 2 attacks on TX energy jobs,” U.S. Rep. Kevin Brady, R-The Woodlands, tweeted during Biden’s second full day in office.

Brady and Cornyn were joined by a chorus of their colleagues in the Texas congressional delegation criticizing Biden over energy jobs. And despite the yearslong decline of oil and gas jobs, four Texas Democrats in Congress joined Republican colleagues in criticizing Biden over energy.

U.S. Reps. Vicente Gonzalez of McAllen, Henry Cuellar of Laredo, Lizzie Pannill Fletcher of Houston and Marc Veasey of Fort Worth objected to the president’s order directing the secretary of the interior to halt new oil and gas leases on federal public lands and waters.

Fletcher represents western Harris County, where several major energy companies are located. On Thursday, she also objected to Biden revoking the pipeline permit “both on process and substance.” She said in a virtual news conference she would have liked to see a “much more thorough process” before Biden reached the decision to kill the pipeline.

While the political back-and-forth among Texas politicians over energy has been aimed at Biden, private companies have for years been adjusting to shifting consumer behaviors and demands.

BP, one of the world’s largest oil and gas companies, said in early 2020 it would cut the carbon content of its products in half by 2050. That’s a timeframe and objective scientists recommend the world needs to strive for in order to avert catastrophic effects from severe climate and environmental damage.

ExxonMobil shareholders have pleaded since at least 2019 for the company to take action on climate issues. Outgoing Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, whose company’s delivery service leaves a massive environmental impact, created a $10 billion fund to fight climate issues.

And just last month, General Motors said it would phase out petroleum-powered cars and trucks and sell only vehicles that have zero tailpipe emissions by 2035. That was seen as a massive move by one of the world’s biggest automakers that has for years made billions of dollars from gas-guzzling trucks, among many other gas-powered vehicles.

Pivoting to a focus on climate change is part of a larger global shift, Latimer said.

“But these trends don’t start with or are caused by the Biden administration,” Latimer said. “It’s about what customers want, what young people want, what international corporations want. Everyone wants a new world that’s focused on solving climate issues.”

The ongoing shift to focusing on climate issues does not, however, spell the end of oil and gas.

“We’re going to need fossil fuels,” Mehnert said. “Medicines, chemicals, everything we touch, everything we have around us, is made from petroleum base.”

Disclosure: Amazon Web Services (AWS), Exxon Mobil Corporation, General Motors and University of Texas at Austin have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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

Trump trial, day 2: Democrats employ emotion to make their case. Will Republicans be moved?

In the hours before the second day of Donald Trump’s impeachment trial, Hillary Clinton tweeted her blunt assessment of the situation: “If Senate Republicans fail to convict Donald Trump, it won’t be because the facts were with him or his lawyers mounted a competent defense. It will be because the jury includes his co-conspirators.” The House impeachment managers then spent the rest of the day proving Clinton correct — even as they insisted that they were trying Trump and not the larger GOP.

In a careful case, the Democratic House managers laid out an astonishing amount of public evidence showing that Trump spent months riling up his supporters before he sicced them on the Capitol on Jan. 6 in an attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election. It was such a slam-dunk case that, quite literally, the only reason any senator would vote to acquit is outright complicity with Trump’s insurrection

In his opening remarks, Rep. Jamie Raskin, D.-Md., argued that while Trump’s defense attorneys downplay the Capitol insurrection as though it was merely a “bad accident” or a “natural disaster,” Trump was “no innocent bystander.” 

“There was method in the madness that day,” Raskin explained, noting that Trump’s purpose in sending a violent mob to storm the Capitol was quite clearly to stop the counting of the electoral votes. He continued by pointing out how Trump “reveled” in the violence, noting that while most Americans view Jan. 6 as “a day that will live in disgrace in American history,” Trump said it was a “day of celebration,” tweeting enthusiastically to the mob: “Remember this day forever!” 

Raskin was followed by Rep. Joe Neguse of Colorado who laid out evidence — from social media, videos from the riot, and court documents — that proves that the insurrectionists “were doing what [Trump] wanted them to do.” 

The entire afternoon was a devastating display of the evidence.

Rep. Joaquin Castro of Texas quoted Trump insisting that “there won’t be a transition of power,” but a “continuation.” He played a video that showed how Trump supporters tried to turn those words into reality by trying to shut down vote-counting centers. Rep. Eric Swalwell of California laid out how Trump “was saying anything he could to trigger and anger his base” with his lies about the election. Rep. Madeline Dean of Pennsylvania tied Trump’s campaign of threat and intimidation against state election officials to his violence. Del. Stacey Plaskett of the Virgin Islands played the video of Trump instructing the Proud Boys to “stand back and stand by,” a message she said these violent groups “heard loud and clear,” as evidenced by the way they adopted the words as a slogan and organized carefully prior to the insurrection. 

And that’s just a sample. 

The second day of Donald Trump’s second impeachment included an overwhelming amount of videos, photos, quotes, and other evidence House managers gathered to show that Trump cultivated a violent following he encouraged at every turn. Particularly distressing was previously unreleased footage that showed how angry and vicious the mob was — and how close they often were to the fleeing Congress members. The jury of senators was shown how rioters broke down a door into a room where Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s staff was fearfully hiding under a table. Plaskett carefully showed, from multiple angles, how U.S. Capitol officer Eugene Goodman lured the mob down one hall, mere feet from then-Vice President Mike Pence’s hidden location. In another video, Goodman runs to rush Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah away, barely avoiding the murderous crowd. Romney later told reporters that he didn’t realize how close to the mob he got that day. 

“I was very fortunate indeed,” Romney noted after Democrats concluded for the afternoon. 

It’s not a surprise that Trump’s rioters believed that they would be safe from consequences. In sending them to the Capitol, Trump literally said, “you’re allowed to go by very different rules.” 

Reportedly, the House managers want this case to implicate Trump, but not the larger Republican caucus. As the New York Times reported on Sunday, “managers were wary of saying anything that might implicate Republican lawmakers who echoed or entertained the president’s baseless claims of election fraud,” hoping that ignoring the subject of GOP complicity might lure more Senate Republicans towards voting to convict. 

These efforts to draw a distinction between Trump and the Republican officials who egged him on continued on Wednesday. During his portion of the afternoon arguments, Rep. Ted Lieu of California emphasized how Trump repeatedly attacked members of “his own party” — particularly Pence — in an effort to distinguish between Trump and Republicans generally. 

But the ugly truth of the matter is that the majority of Republicans are complicit — or, as Clinton said, co-conspirators. Indeed, the strength of the case that Democrats have been bringing in the impeachment trial proves it. There’s no way to be an honest judge of this case and conclude that Trump deserves to be acquitted.

And yet, barring some miracle, it’s clear that the vast majority of Senate Republicans — likely the 44 out of 50 who pretended to believe this trial is unconstitutional — plan to vote to acquit Trump. It isn’t because they think Trump is innocent, something no one could sincerely believe. It’s because they’re complicit in Trump’s insurrection. So much so, we should not hesitate to imagine they’d be supporting Trump right now if he had successfully pulled it off. Some aren’t even hiding that fact: 

Ultimately, it might not matter that House Democrats indulged this gentle fiction that Senate Republicans aren’t complicit. It’s a good faith effort to get GOP votes, one that is bound to fail. As Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times said, “House impeachment managers are bending over backwards to let Republicans separate themselves from Trump’s worst behavior and Republicans are totally uninterested.”

But after the vote is taken, all ambiguity should be erased. Trump is guilty. And anyone who shields him from consequences is doing so because they approved of his violent insurrection. And that includes the majority of Senate Republicans, except in that unlikely event that they change their plans to vote to acquit Trump. 

“Buffy” star Charisma Carpenter accuses creator Joss Whedon of “abusive” behavior in lengthy post

Actress Charisma Carpenter, best known for her role as Cordelia Chase in the hit series “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and spinoff “Angel,” released an extensive statement Wednesday detailing the alleged abuse she endured from series creator and director, Joss Whedon.

In the post shared to Carpenter’s Twitter and Instagram accounts, she recounted the “hostile and toxic” workplace Whedon’s behavior created.

“Joss Whedon abused his power on numerous occasions while working together on the sets of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel,” Carpenter wrote. “While he found his misconduct amusing, it only served to intensify my performance anxiety, disempower me, and alienate me from my peers. The disturbing incidents triggered a chronic physical condition from which I still suffer. It is with a beating, heavy heart that I coped in isolation, and at times, destructively.”

Carpenter then continues to detail the alleged harassment she faced from Whedon: calling her “fat” before knowing she was pregnant while working on “Buffy” spinoff “Angel” —  and asking if she was “going to keep it” in reference to her unborn child. She also alleged a grueling work schedule that caused her to experience complications with her pregnancy. Despite receiving doctor’s orders to reduce her work hours, Carpenter felt she was kept on this schedule as retaliation.

The actress also described an encounter during which Whedon confronted her about being pregnant.

“He proceeded to attack my character, mock my religious beliefs, accuse me of sabotaging the show, and then unceremoniously fired me the following season once I gave birth,” she said. 

Carpenter shared the difficulty she faced as a single mother and breadwinner for her family, all while dealing with a director whom she described as “mean and biting.” 

“Unfortunately all this was happening during one of the most wonderful time[s] in new motherhood,” Carpenter wrote. “All that promise and joy sucked out. And Joss was the vampire.”

This is not the first time Whedon has faced allegations of abuse in the workplace.

Ray Fisher, an actor known for portraying Cyborg in “Justice League” posted a then-viral tweet in the summer of 2020, saying, “Joss Wheadon’s on-set treatment of the cast and crew of Justice League was gross, abusive, unprofessional, and completely unacceptable.”

“He was enabled, in many ways, by Geoff Johns and Jon Berg,” Fisher continued. “Accountability>Entertainment”

Fisher’s claims are part of the reason why Carpenter finally spoke out.

“I believe Ray to be a person of integrity who is telling the truth. His firing as Cyborg in The Flash was the last straw for me,” she said. “Although I am not shocked, I am deeply pained by it. It troubles and saddens me that in 2021 professionals STILL have to choose between whistleblowing in the workplace and job security.”

Read Carpenter’s full statement below:

Later on Wednesday, “Buffy” costars also spoke out in support of Carpenter’s allegations. Sarah Michelle Gellar, who played the title character, responded with a post on Instagram, saying, “I stand with all survivors of abuse and am proud of them for speaking out.” Michelle Trachtenberg, who portrayed Buffy’s younger sister Dawn, reposted Gellar’s statement to her own Instagram adding that Whedon’s behavior was “not appropriate” for when she was a teenager. She did not detail specific behaviors but did add, “”There was a rule [saying] he’s not allowed in a room alone with Michelle again.”

In a tweet, Amber Benson, who played Tara, alleged that the show “was a toxic environment and it starts at the top . . . There was a lot of damage done during that time and many of us are still processing it twenty plus years later.” Clare Kramer, who played the villain Glory, also weighed in on Twitter in support of all the people “who have the strength to come forward with their truth. A lot of this industry needs a reset.”

Variety reports that a representative for Whedon declined to comment on Carpenter’s allegations.

Meghan McCain: Marjorie Taylor Greene will be president if Democrats “keep demonizing” Republicans

“The View” co-host Meghan McCain warned conspiracy-mongering Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) would get elected president if Democrats didn’t stop making fun of Republicans.

McCain has made similar threats in the past about former president Donald Trump, who she now thinks should be impeached for inciting the Capitol insurrection, but now she’s got a new cudgel.

“I don’t understand how anyone could vote against impeachment, but the politics — the logic I don’t understand — but the politics is they want to move on, and they want to walk the fine line of being attached to Trump and not being attached to Trump,” McCain said. “Nikki Haley said maybe in the most disgusting language I’ve ever heard, ‘Give the guy a break.’ Well, it’s hard for me to give President Trump a break when our vice president could have been killed because of the things he was saying, and I think that I would love to see more Republicans come out and do the right thing ethically, but politics is going to come in the middle of this, and one final thing.”

Trump appears likely to be acquitted because not enough GOP senators are willing to acquit him, but McCain said Democrats ultimately bear much of the burden for preventing the next corrupt kook from entering the White House.

“I’m trying to do my part in putting positivity in the world and meet in the middle on this show as much as I possibly can because I ultimately can only control myself,” McCain said. “I really call to the rest of you on this show and to everyone in America to all of us collectively come together and really try to amp down this temperature as much as we can because I don’t want to see any more violence, and I’m actually scared about what the future holds, and if we just keep demonizing each other, and attaching all Republicans with those lunatics on Capitol Hill, we’re going to end up with a Marjorie Taylor Greene as president, and I’m more fearful of that than anything else facing us in the future.”

You can watch the the video below via YouTube

How “House of Cards” prepared Robin Wright to direct “Land,” a moving tribute to nature & resilience

Robin Wright makes an accomplished feature directorial debut with “Land,” in which the actress-turned-filmmaker plays Edee Mathis, a woman whose method for coping with trauma is to go live on her own in a cabin in the woods. She struggles to survive at first, eventually befriending Miguel (Demián Bichir), who teaches her to hunt. (She dubs him “Yoda.”) Even though she does not want to be around people — “I’m here because I choose to be,” she insists — she appreciates Miguel’s kindness. 

Wright gives a tough, determined performance in what ultimately is a very moving film. Edee spends much of her screen time alone in the first act, experiencing setbacks and almost dying as she is unprepared for some of the challenges she faces. As Miguel helps her adapt to her new environment, Edee focuses more on her goals and less on her pain, which helps her work through her trauma. 

“Land” is beautifully filmed and shot in Alberta, Canada, and Wright captures the isolation and desperation Edee experiences along with her growing sense of home and peace with noticeable aplomb. 

During the recent Sundance Film Festival, Wright spoke with Salon about “Land.”

Why make this film as your feature directorial debut? Do you feel a pressure to create your own opportunities at this stage in your career? 

This film resonated with me because I thought about how people find their way when they have lost their loved ones, the life they knew, and wouldn’t know again. This character comes into her life and she has a renewed sense of faith and hope and resilience. 

I have so much more to explore about directing, but being on “House of Cards” I was able to physically do it while I was learning about framing and cinema. Being an actor for so many years you bite your tongue wanting to direct a scene, so it is in the recesses of the mind. I knew I wanted to do it, and “House of Cards” gave me education, confidence, and a platform to explore and feel it out, and the crew was eager to help me. Collaborating with teams of people, its invigorating to create and hear ideas; everybody is directing this movie with you. You get more creative minds and ideas to bring to your original vision. 

Did you have a Yoda to guide you in making the film?

[Laughs]. I had Miguel! 

I admire the physicality of your performance and that you are on screen almost the entire time. What can you say about learning to hunt and survive in the wilderness? Are you into roughing it?

What Edee decides to embark on — that’s real roughing it. My family grew up camping. We had a VW Vanagon Westfalia, and we would camp. We lived outside of the house almost as much as in it.

Is there a creature comfort you can’t live without? 

We do live in this world of devices and necessities. I feel like once you get rid of those annoyances, addictions — if you were to do what Edee does — you can adapt quickly. She wouldn’t have gotten cell service. She did bring manuals.

What about being alone and loneliness, which is something we all can identify with these days? We see Edee alone through much of the film. How do you spend time alone?

It’s almost like fuel, a different kind of essence. We are around the same people or isolated in the same house or location. Being alone is difficult for some people, but it’s also therapeutic to go out in nature and be alone. 

Nature is so much a character in “Land.”

We talked about that a lot when we were developing the script, how and when she first arrives, she doesn’t notice the majesty because she is so locked in a bubble of pain and grief, and she is there to technically survive. Once this beautiful person [Miguel] comes and says, “You have to respect nature, and live off the grid properly,” she communes with nature. That’s such a successful thing to have done. Nature is such a beast with unpredictable weather and animals. 

I want to talk about the framing and your use of space as a filmmaker. I felt the warmth, cold, and briskness of the fresh air; the isolation and beauty, but also the silence and the sound of the river. Can you talk about your compositions?

I think it helped that we were living what we were shooting. We lived on top of the mountain in our trailer, at base camp behind the cabin. Our cinematographer, who probably lives in a tent all year round, stayed in Edee’s sleeping bag so he could catch all of the beautiful images at all hours of the night, and at sunrise and sunset. Alberta has unpredictable weather.

What about pacing? The film has a structure that shows her experiencing the stages of grief.

That is how we broke it down. We really needed to balance the timing of each so viewers could be engaged and take this journey with this character and see how one person experiences and deals with an unfathomable event that changes her life. The dream was to live there, and I feel her [escape] was an homage to that, to honor that wish to live on the mountain in a cabin.

What observations do you have about Edee’s relationship with Miguel? I was really moved by their exchanges.

It was always in the original script that it would be just a platonic friendship. He happened to cross her path and felt it was his duty — you help other people.

What qualities do you value in other people?

Kindness. It allows for more trust if you have an open, beautiful soul like Miguel. He’s pure and frugal with words and actions. He speaks and shows up when necessary.

Are you stubborn like Edee? 

Yes. I would probably do the same thing, think that I could survive if I read enough books, learn more while I’m there, and figure it out. And then nature kicks your butt. 

What observations do you have about her fragility and vulnerability?

I thought about how did we want to open the film? Do you show her past life or the event that happened, or keep the mystery?  I chose to keep the mystery because then you are going on the journey rather than knowing and rolling back. I kept going to the word “erase” — that Edee’s old self can never be anymore because of this event that changed her life. She needed to depart and find a new way and a new self. That’s the intention of the character and then you say it is one person’s experience about how they find their way. 

What appeals to you about the story of “Land”?

The message around those ideas, but that was stronger for the visuals. That was a beautiful addition, that nature got to be a character. Really, it was the powerful message that we need each other and need to be connected so healing can occur when you think there is no light at the end of the tunnel. I wanted that message out there because we’ve been through so much hardship with the last four years and the pandemic. It was so kind, sweet, loving and that was a time we need to share that message. 

“Land” plays in select theaters beginning Friday, Feb. 12.

How to make perfectly tender cauliflower rice that still has texture

I tend to bristle when I see food articles framed as “you’ve been making [insert dish] all wrong your entire life.” But, in the case of cauliflower rice, I’ve known for a while that I wasn’t exactly hitting the mark. I’ve jumped on and off the riced cauliflower train more times than I can count. Initially lured by the promise of adding extra vegetables to my diet — which will be presented in the form of my favorite starch — I’m subsequently disappointed when the texture veers from passably rice-like into something more akin to gruel. 

Obviously, I was making riced cauliflower all wrong. And that’s where Palak Patel, chef at the Institute of Culinary Education, comes in. 

Patel likes to use cauliflower rice in a variety of dishes — in biryani, as a vehicle for curry, a substitute in kheer — but the key to making those recipes work is a better base. Here are her three expert tips for making riced cauliflower that’s tender but still has texture. 

Pulse, don’t process

There are a lot of methods for “ricing” floating around online, which includes methods like using a box grater or a paring knife. Patel’s first tip is simple: Ditch your food processor. 

“I absolutely do not like the food processor method,” she says. “Because if you have a really small piece and a really large piece, they’re not going to process at the same time. So, generally what happens is the smaller pieces go through the ‘blending process’ a lot more than they larger pieces, and you’ll end up with cauliflower mush and a couple bigger chunks.” 

That’s not great for texture. Instead, Patel recommends that you give a head of cauliflower a rough chop, ensuring that you pick florets which are roughly the same size. 

“Then my absolute preferred method at that point is to fill a blender with two-thirds of water and the cauliflower in there and then pulse,” she says. “The reason I like this method is because the cauliflower never actually hits the blade multiple times [per pulse]. The water keeps the cauliflower circulating at an even speed. Also, when you’re doing it in a blender, you can actually visibly see all of the cauliflower.” 

Patel said the entire process should only take about 30 seconds. 

Beware of excess water 

Moisture is the enemy of cauliflower rice, so Patel’s next tip is to make sure that yours is as dry as possible before going into a pot or pan. In the case of the pulsed rice, be sure to strain it once, removing it from the water-filled blender. If you’re using bagged and frozen cauliflower rice, allow the bag to thaw, and then similarly strain the vegetable. 

If you really want to double-down, you can also spread the riced cauliflower on a kitchen towel and allow it to fully drain, Patel says.

Don’t crowd the pan 

As with any good relationship, if you love your cauliflower rice, you’ve got to give it a little space. 

“Do not for any reason stockpile your pan with tons of cauliflower rice,” Patel says. “If you add a whole lot of cauliflower to a small pot, it generates steam — and steam is going to make the whole thing mushy.” 

Patel recommends using either a very large flat-bottomed pan or simply working in batches over high heat. At that point, you can allow it to cool slightly and then season. 

“Before seasoning, cauliflower is bland, but that also makes it versatile, right? Patel concludes. “That means that it can take on any flavor profile.” 

More creative uses for cauliflower

Impeachment sends Republican senators scrambling: Trump makes the GOP squirm with a flailing defense

Tuesday was the first day of Donald Trump’s impeachment trial for inciting an insurrection, and, frustratingly, the day was devoted to the question of whether it was legal to even try Trump, now a former president, in the first place. The whole thing was a dog-and-pony show for Senate Republicans, who don’t want to be caught looking supportive of an insurrection that failed. But they also don’t want to offend their voters, who are still largely enthused about fascist insurrections and want to give Trump an A for effort. And so Republicans have settled on pretending they’re springing Trump on a technicality — even though no one really believes such a technicality exists — in a pathetic bid to have it both ways. It felt like a waste of time because no one actually believes this trial is unconstitutional.

But there’s one silver lining: The Democrats who are arguing the case as the House managers so thoroughly smoked Trump’s defense that even Trump knows it.

Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland introduced a devastating video underscoring how Trump very deliberately sent an angry mob to storm the Capitol on Jan. 6 — telling them, “you’re allowed to go by very different rules” than the usual expectations of non-violence — and highlighting the horrors of the insurrection, which left five people dead and multiple police officers seriously injured.  

Raskin ended the House managers’ arguments with a terrifying description of his own experiences that day, breaking into tears as he recounted the terror of his family members who were visiting him following the funeral of his young son the day before. 

In contrast, Trump’s lawyers presented arguments that were equal parts smug and incoherent. His first lawyer, Bruce Castor, condescendingly suggested that because people are understandably emotional about the insurrection their arguments are rendered irrational. It’s an especially offensive argument to be made in defense of Trump, a man who is all id and no rationality. Castor’s patronizing tone was made all the more annoying by the fact that his arguments were erratic and inconsistent nonsense. That’s especially so compared to the devastating case made earlier in the afternoon by Rep. Joe Neguse of Colorado, who painstakingly laid out why the trial was constitutional and that no one doubted it before they needed a convenient excuse to let Trump off the hook.

But hey, don’t take my word for it that the House managers left Trump’s defense team a smoking crater. Trump himself reportedly believes it. 


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“Mr. Trump, who often leaves the television on in the background even when he is holding meetings, was furious, people familiar with his reaction said,” Maggie Haberman of the New York Times reported. “On a scale of one to 10, with 10 being the angriest, Mr. Trump ‘was an eight,’ one person familiar with his reaction said.”

CNN’s Kaitlin Collins corroborated the account. “I’m being told by two people familiar with former President Trump’s reaction, he was deeply unhappy with that performance and borderline screaming,” Collins reported. 

“The former president — monitoring the trial on television from Florida — had expected a swashbuckling lawyer and instead watched what was a confusing and disjointed performance,” Ashley Parker and Josh Daswey at the Washington Post wrote

“As [Trump’s lawyers] droned on, he grew increasingly frustrated with the sharp contrast between their muted response and the prosecution’s opening salvo,” Gabby Orr and Meredith McGraw at Politico reported. 

To be fair to Castor and David Schoen, Trump’s other lawyer who argued on Tuesday, their task is impossible. There’s no way to mount a convincing defense of Trump, who spent months publicly inciting his followers to violence in incredibly unsubtle ways. But Trump, ever the believer in the magic of bullshit, clearly believes there’s some way to spin this so he looks like the good guy. And why not? “The Apprentice” used TV stratagems to trick Americans into believing Trump was a successful businessman. He successfully bamboozled 74 million Americans into thinking he was qualified to be president. Why shouldn’t he imagine that a little razzle-dazzle would work this time around? 


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In any world where Senate Republicans gave a crap about justice, rationality, good argumentation, or even reality, Trump’s conviction would be a done deal. Sadly, however, Republicans care for none of those values. Only one Republican, Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, was so embarrassed by how bad Trump’s legal arguments were that he switched from opposing the trial to supporting it, joining only five other Republican senators who are acceding to reality on this one. The other 44 Republicans spent the trial looking away, doodling, faking interest in paperwork, or otherwise distracting themselves from their own choice to self-humiliate by pretending to believe a word of Trump’s stupid defense arguments. 

Still, the former president’s fury tells us something.

Trump is a profoundly stupid man, but he has an animalistic instinct for what makes for watchable TV. He clearly understands that the House managers trying the case are making him look bad. That is all the more reason why Democrats shouldn’t want to hurry this trial along, but draw out the pain by calling witnesses. Republicans are too cowardly to convict Trump. Democrats only have one chance of humiliating him so badly that he withdraws from politics for good. It very well might be a faint chance, but it’s a better bet than expecting the majority of Republican senators to grow a spine and vote to convict. 

Heralded as key to returning to normal, digital “vaccine passport” plans prompt Orwellian concerns

Those who are planning to travel abroad in 2021 might need to pack more than just their paper passport. As many countries peg freedom to travel to immunity proof or a negative COVID-19 test, the concept of a so-called vaccine passport of some kind is being floated as an international solution to a public health problem.

Earlier in February, Denmark shared its plans to develop its own digital vaccine passport that would identify those who have received the COVID-19 vaccine. “In three, four months, a digital corona passport will be ready for use in, for example, business travel,” Denmark’s Finance Minister Morten Bødskov told AP News.

Denmark’s vaccine passport will live on one’s phone, and will essentially serve as documentation that the holder has received a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine. Bødskov said that Denmark will “be among the first in the world to have it.” The idea is that this digital document will ease travel restrictions for international travelers by allowing them to bypass a mandated quarantine, or perhaps avoid having to take a COVID-19 test prior to departure and upon arrival.

Denmark isn’t alone in considering such a solution as a means to open up countries and revive tourism as soon as possible. Sweden is also considering implementing their own digital “vaccine passport” program. And this month, Estonia announced it will allow passengers arriving into the country with a designated certificate of COVID-19 vaccination to avoid quarantine requirements. On Monday, news broke that Greece and Israel made a deal that will allow vaccinated people who hold a so-called “green passport” to travel more freely between the two countries, once travel restarts. 

Specific details about a standardized certificate proving inoculation are still being hashed out, but the groundwork is being laid. In the United States, the Biden Administration issued an order requesting an assessment of the “feasibility of linking COVID-19 vaccination to International Certificates of Vaccination or Prophylaxis” and producing a digital certificate.

The concept of a “digital vaccine passport” or “green passport” aligns with what the World Health Organization (WHO) is creating, something they call a Smart Vaccination Certificate. WHO recently put together a working group of experts to reach a consensus around security, authentication, and to develop guidance and best practices on how and when these certificates can be used.

While many details still need to be hammered out, health experts do expect a digital vaccination certificate that will allow people to bypass quarantine restrictions and other bureaucratic barriers will be a normal part of our lives in the near-future. Litjen Tan, Chief Strategy Officer of the Immunization Action Coalition, told Salon that WHO will likely set the standards of what will be globally accepted.

“The idea is there’s a digital vaccination certificate that has key specifications, key standards that everyone will support and use and it will operationalize a global version of vaccination certificate,” Tan said. “And I think that’s exactly where a lot of policymakers are going.”

Dr. David Studdert, a professor of medicine at Stanford University, agreed.

“I think they are going to be pretty broadly adopted for certain activities, and it looks like air travel will be one of the first,” Studdert said. “I think there’s a certain inevitability to them, but the question that I think many of us are wondering about is whether the government will get involved here, and offer some sort of public program.”

Studdert said he thinks “in some countries that’s going to happen,” but it’s not clear that it will happen in the United States. Studdert added that he forsees the private sector in the U.S. will “lead the way.”

Such an undertaking will be no easy task. And there are already concerns around how mass distribution of a digital vaccine passport can be accomplished in a way that would be accepted around the world, protect privacy and remain accessible to people regardless of their socioeconomic status.

Requiring a vaccine to enter some countries isn’t new; proof of a yellow fever vaccine is required to travel to many countries in Africa. However, requiring everyone around the world to get the COVID-19 vaccine in order to reconnect the planet would be a much larger undertaking.

Tan said there are pros and cons to digitizing the vaccine certificate. One benefit is that a digital version of a vaccine passport certificate is harder to manipulate, and will be easier to mass distribute.

“I think it’s easy to create a fraudulent copy with paper,” Tan said. “Then the second [benefit] is the idea of expiration date, we don’t know how long the duration of immunity is going to be with the vaccine — but the great news is that if it’s digital the moment that we know we can continue to update the status.”

Tan speculated that if immunity only lasts for one year, the expiration can be immediately updated on a person’s digital certificate and then a person can be easily notified that they need to get an update on the vaccine. A digital vaccine certificate is also much harder to lose.

But what about people who don’t have smartphones? Indeed, some experts fear that consigning a vaccination passport to one’s smartphone raises equity concerns.

“Digital certificates require some sort of digital device that you can use,” Tan said. “I don’t disagree that that’s the best way to do this, but we need to make sure that people of lower socioeconomic status will have that access as well.”

In May, Dr. Alexandra Phelan warned in an article in The Lancet that “immunity passports” granting privileges to the inoculated and immune could “pose considerable scientific, practical, equitable, and legal challenges.”

“Immunity passports would impose an artificial restriction on who can and cannot participate in social, civic, and economic activities and might create a perverse incentive for individuals to seek out infection, especially people who are unable to afford a period of workforce exclusion, compounding existing gender, race, ethnicity, and nationality inequities,” Phelan wrote. “Such behaviour would pose a health risk not only to these individuals but also to the people they come into contact with.”

Another lingering concern relates to who precisely is immune. Indeed, it is still unclear if people who are vaccinated can transmit the coronavirus to others not.

“There’s a concern that people could get the vaccine and feel like they are safe, but they could be actually infected with the virus and carry it in their nasal passages and in their airways,” said Bryn Boslett, MD, an infectious disease expert at the University of California, San Francisco. And because they’re feeling safe, they might be less cautious and actually spread the disease.”

If vaccinated people still spread COVID-19, digital vaccine passports used to restart international travel will likely not be effective in stopping the spread of the coronavirus. 

Studdert said there will need to be “regulations” around a digital vaccine passport program in order to maintain equity.

“I do see risks, but I don’t think it’s inevitable that this would unfold as discriminatory or a regressive program,” Studdert said. “If it were done in the right way, in fact, it could be the opposite.”

Dominion says it pursued Sidney Powell “across state lines” after she “evaded” $1.3B suit for weeks

Attorneys for Dominion Voting Systems said in a court filing on Tuesday that the company was forced to hire private investigators to track down former Trump attorney Sidney Powell to serve her with a $1.3 billion lawsuit.

Dominion sued Powell last month, along with Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, for pushing a baseless conspiracy theory alleging that Dominion voting machines had switched votes from former President Donald Trump to President Joe Biden in a communist plot involving the late Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez. But the company was unable to serve Powell with the lawsuit for three weeks, attorneys said.

The company’s lawyers said in the court filing that Powell had “evaded service of process for weeks, forcing Dominion to incur unnecessary expenses for extraordinary measures to effect service, including hiring private investigators and pursuing Powell across state lines.”

The filing came in response to a motion from Powell’s lawyers asking for more time to respond to the lawsuit. Dominion’s lawyers said in their filing that Powell had “refused to respond” to requests from the company’s lawyers that would have allowed her more time in the first place. 

Howard Kleinhendler, an attorney for Powell, disputed the allegation, arguing that she “regularly travels as part of her work.”

“Unfortunately, for the past several months Ms. Powell has had to take extra precautions concerning her security, which may have made serving her more difficult,” he told Politico. “Ms. Powell had no reason to evade service as she looks forward to defending herself in court.”

Dominion ultimately tracked down the Texas-based attorney in North Carolina, and apparently called in local police as witnesses when Powell was served, according to court records and a police call log posted by CNN’s Katelyn Polantz.

Powell, who previously represented former national security adviser and QAnon enthusiast Michael Flynn, was a member of Trump’s legal team following the election, at least until the president and Giuliani cut ties with her as her unsubstantiated claims grew more outlandis. She filed multiple unsuccessful error-ridden lawsuits seeking to overturn several states’ election results and reportedly urged Trump to appoint her as a special counsel to investigate unfounded voter fraud claims and order the seizure of voting machines.

In Dominion’s court filing on Tuesday, the company said it would not oppose Powell’s motion to delay her response to the suit until March 22. The lawsuit accuses Powell of waging a “viral disinformation campaign” that “irreparably damaged” Dominion’s reputation and cost it hundreds of millions of dollars in contracts.

“During a Washington, D.C. press conference, a Georgia political rally, and a media blitz, Powell falsely claimed that Dominion had rigged the election, that Dominion was created in Venezuela to rig elections for Hugo Chávez, and that Dominion bribed Georgia officials for a no-bid contract,” the lawsuit said.

“Far from being created in Venezuela to rig elections for a now-deceased Venezuelan dictator,” the complaint added, “Dominion was founded in Toronto for the purpose of creating a fully auditable paper-based vote system that would empower people with disabilities to vote independently on verifiable paper ballots.”

Powell, who was kicked off Twitter for spreading QAnon-related content, doubled down on her election conspiracy theories in a Friday federal court filing in Michigan, where state Attorney General Dana Nessel filed a motion to sanction Powell and other attorneys who had filed election lawsuits without evidence.

Dominion has also sued Giuliani and sent letters to social media networks asking them to preserve posts by others who spread the conspiracy theory, suggesting more lawsuits may be coming. The letters named Flynn, Trump legal adviser Jenna Ellis, pro-Trump attorney Lin Wood, Fox News and several of its hosts, along with other conservative news outlets like Newsmax and One America Network. The letters also named MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who just last week aired a three-hour documentary detailing the baseless conspiracy theory on OAN.

“Mike Lindell is begging to be sued,” Dominion spokesman Michael Steel told CNN after the broadcast, “and at some point we may well oblige him.”

The voting software firm Smartmatic, which was inexplicably tied to the Dominion conspiracy theory even though the companies appear to have no ties and its software was used in a single California county’s election, has also filed a $2.7 billion lawsuit against Powell, Giuliani, Fox News and the Fox hosts Lou Dobbs, Maria Bartiromo and Jeanine Pirro. Fox News, which has recently aired multiple segments debunking claims about the company previously made on its shows, cut ties with Dobbs last week.

“They needed a villain,” the lawsuit said. “They needed someone to blame. They needed someone whom they could get others to hate. A story of good versus evil, the type that would incite an angry mob, only works if the storyteller provides the audience with someone who personifies evil. … Without any true villain, defendants invented one. Defendants decided to make Smartmatic the villain in their story.”

Hawley blasted for allegiance to Trump after arguing impeachment trial is “unconstitutional”

Donald Trump may be out of the White House but Sen. Josh Hawley’s (R-Mo.) unrelenting support of the disgraced former president serves as an indication of how firm grip Trump’s grip still is on the Republican Party. Now, Hawley is facing backlash for his latest defense of Trump. 

During an interview with KTVO, Hawley weighed in on the forthcoming impeachment trial in the Senate. Although Democratic lawmakers do have substantial evidence to support their claims of Trump inciting the insurrection on the U.S. Capitol, Hawley still argues that the trial is “unconstitutional,” reports Newsweek. 

Hawley even went a step further insisting that the U.S. Constitution would not allow the trial even though it is moving forward. “The Constitution doesn’t allow it,” the Republican lawmaker said, adding, “The Constitution doesn’t give the Senate the power to try and convict private citizens. I mean, it just doesn’t.”

He added, “Our founders made the choice not to do that, to limit the power of the Senate, and you can see why because if ex-presidents can be tried and convicted once they are out of office, my goodness, every time we have a switch in party, you’re going to see now the majority party coming in and saying let’s try the ex-president.”

As reports about Hawley’s remarks circulated on social media, Twitter users began firing back at the Republican lawmaker for his continued support of the president’s attempted coup. One Twitter user wrote, “The problem with [Hawley] remaining a Trump lackey; is that he can’t tell the difference between a conservative agenda and lapdog allegiance. Josh Hawley does not serve the Constitution, but his ego.”

Twitter users’ wrath comes amid Hawley’s latest vow to vote against every one of President Joe Biden’s Cabinet nominees — another decision that has led to backlash.

Trump’s biggest Fox News cheerleaders think his impeachment lawyers are doing a terrible job

Donald Trump’s lawyers put forth such a flimflam argument to open the Senate’s impeachment trial that his biggest sycophants in the right-wing media didn’t even bother trying to spin in the disastrous first day. 

On Wednesday, Sean Hannity pressed Trump lawyer David Schoen on his team’s performance. “I’m not attacking your partner. I don’t know him at all, but I like focused arguments.”

As Hannity’s show closed, Ingraham told her colleague that she was glad to see him press Schoen on Castor’s argument. 

“Yeah, a little meandering, a little free-associate…” Hannity said of Castor’s cringeworthy defense. 

Ingraham cut him off. “It was terrible. I’m sorry, it was,” she said to Hannity. “You’re way too charitable. If you hired that guy in a case that you were paying the bills on, it woulda been like…”

Hannity admitted that he was “a little nervous” at the beginning of Castor’s defense. 

“How much time can he spend praising the democrats?” Ingraham asked. “The whole thing was, like, a walk down memory lane.”

“Sorry,” Ingraham continued, “I’m pretty worked up about given what’s at stake for the Constitution and the country.”

On “Fox & Friends” the next morning, co-host Brian Kilmeade offered a similarly dissatisfied review. 

“These are not helpful things that was happening on the president’s behalf,” Kilmeade spoke for the former president who has gone curiously silent since being booted from Twitter. “You wouldn’t blame him if he was upset, but it might’ve been the president’s fault for firing his other attorneys that were doing all the preparing.”

 

 

How to build a better noodle soup, one bowl at a time

Gazing into a brothy noodle bowl always elicits delight, comfort, and anticipation to mix and match the array of textures and flavors within. I always say, especially at this time of year when it is cold out, a steaming bowl feels like the ultimate nourishment.

At a noodle bowl’s foundation is a warming, flavorful broth. Whether doctored up store-bought or homemade, both are legit, especially if you plan to add layers and hues and make your noodle bowl chock-full of eat-the-rainbow, punchy elements. If you go the route of using boxed stock, consider first adding aromatics such as garlic and ginger, chile pepper, or dried mushrooms to infuse the broth for a further hit of umami or zest. Each ingredient helps add more depth of flavor towards the dazzling end result. Think of building a broth you might enjoy drinking as an elixir all on its own (like savory, comforting tea!).

Adding on to the broth foundation is the equally important — and more broadly lusted after — noodles! Depending on the cuisine destination of your noodle bowl of the moment, there is an exciting array from which to choose. From vermicelli to capellini, wontons to ramen to soba to ditalini, there is a perfect match for chewy and slurpable noodles to go with your chosen elements.

There are a multitude of ingredients to personalize your noodle bowl: Perhaps you’re riffing to accommodate available ingredients. Maybe your bowl is a full-on curated event. As long as you keep in mind eating the rainbow and flavor and texture layers, you’re bound to have a wonderful experience.

Eating the rainbow is just what it sounds like. Foods such as carrots, sweet potato, corn, and squash fulfill the yellow-orange end of the spectrum and provide the body with carotenoids. Orangey foods supercharge our eyesight, distilling vitamin A, known as the “vision vitamin” to our systems. Orange and yellow foods also boost the immune system, so they really are good for you.

Green foods are all-around superstars. Broccoli, pea shoots, snap peas, green beans, kale (and other dark leafy greens), chard, bok choy, spinach, peas, asparagus, and more, green foods are packed with nutrients. They help various internal workings, from our bones to blood, to the overall health of our cells. It’s a good rule of thumb to incorporate as many green foods as possible given the boost they deliver.

Purple and red foods are food for the brain and heart. The nutrients in these foods hone brain function, inhibit inflammation, and help protect against heart disease and cancer. The deeper the color, the more nutrient- dense the food is. Purple foods that work great in a noodle bowl? Roasted eggplant, pickled cabbage, and steamed, roasted (or pickled!) beets.

Red foods also aid heart function — foods such as red peppers, cabbage, red onion, and tomatoes, for starters. They’re packed with phytonutrients, chemicals that help regulate our blood pressure, reduce the likelihood of contracting viruses, inflammation, and fight cancer. Obviously, that makes them an important aspect in the prism of eating the rainbow.

Now let’s talk about flavors. And textures. There really are limitless combinations, and it’s up to you as to how to prepare them. I find this approach helpful: What elements emulate the below and bring nourishment — and joy — from combining them? Try to include each category for a richly layered experience . . .

Recipe: Rainbow Noodle Bowl With Garlicky-Gingery Broth

Meaty

Sweet potatoes, mushrooms, eggplant, tofu, custardy soft cooked egg or just yolk, avocado

Pickly

Umeboshi, kraut, dill or other veggie pickles, pearl onions, pickled seeds

Spicy

Sliced fresh chiles, kimchi, harissa, or other chili sauce

Bright

Basil, micro shoots, radish, cilantro, scallions, mint, lime, ginger

Crunchy

Daikon, radishes, bell pepper, tatsoi, scallions, peanuts, carrots

Juicy

Green beans, cucumber pickles, bean sprouts, tomatoes, broccoli, turnips

Crispy

Fried shallots, sesame seeds, puffed buckwheat, aguashte, gomasio, nori, toasted coconut

Umami

Bonito flakes, fish roe, furikake or seaweed, chili oil, dried mushrooms, fish sauce

I don’t know about you, but now I’m hungry. Time to mix and match and make an amazing brothy bowl full of goodness. Remember, roasting or searing foods always deepens their flavor. Pickling a thing makes for an especially bright and punchy result. And if this just gives you too many choices, pack your brothy bowl with all the colors, since we all eat with our eyes first.

Are conservative policies shortening American lives?

In 2013, a research team comprised of some of the nation’s top epidemiologists and demographers compared the health of Americans with the health of people in other high-income nations. They summarized their findings in the report’s title: “U.S. Health in International Perspective: Shorter Lives, Poorer Health.”

Compared to 16 other nations, the U.S. ranked dead last in life expectancy for males and second-to-last for females. Beyond that, the nation ranked at or near the bottom in nine broad areas, including injuries and homicides, drug-related deaths, heart disease, and diabetes. Lung disease was both more common and more deadly in the U.S. than in most of the comparison countries, while older adults were more likely to have arthritis than people in the United Kingdom, Europe, and Japan. The U.S. surpassed all other nations in its rate of infant death. It had the highest rate of new AIDS cases. American young people were more likely than their international peers to die in traffic accidents.

A “catalog of horrors,” as a writer at the Council on Foreign Relations summed up the report. Newspaper coverage included words like “stunned” and “surprised.” “It is now shockingly clear that poor health is a much broader and deeper problem than past studies have suggested,” read an editorial in The New York Times.

Since the report’s publication, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the World Health Organization, and others have continued to document the ongoing slide in U.S. health compared to other countries. “As bad as things were then, they’ve only gotten worse,” said Steven Woolf, a physician and public health researcher at Virginia Commonwealth University who chaired the panel of experts behind the Shorter Lives study.

Indeed, as of 2019, the U.S. ranked 36th in the world in terms of life expectancy at birth, behind Slovenia and Costa Rica, not to mention Canada, Japan, and all the rich countries in Europe. And new research published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in December found that, although White people living in the nation’s highest-income counties have better health outcomes than the average U.S. citizen, even they fare worse on infant mortality, maternal mortality, and deaths after heart attacks than the average citizens of Norway, Denmark, and other developed countries.

In retrospect, the 420-page report was a harbinger of things to come, and many experts now say it foreshadowed the U.S. experience with Covid-19. “The abysmal performance of the U.S. — leading the world in death counts and unable to mount the kind of national response that so many peer nations achieved — adds a fresh twist to the U.S. health disadvantage,” Woolf said.

His research team was convened by the National Academy of Medicine and the National Research Council to suss out why the U.S. suffers the “health disadvantage” that it documented, but it was unable to do so. Common explanations — obesity, lack of access to health care, health disparities between White and Black people — were all at play, but the exact cause, or combination of causes, was not clear.

The troubling portrait of America’s health did not spur action to paint a better one. Two presidential administrations have ignored it, as has Congress, mirroring a lack of interest shown by the wider public. Still, some social scientists have not stopped asking: What’s causing the U.S. health disadvantage? Recent work points to a surprising culprit: conservative policies.

This idea stems from a new line of research focusing on individual states, rather than the country as a whole, which has found that states with more liberal policies have longer life expectancy rates than those with more conservative policies. If all states adopted policies similar to those of Hawaii, for example — including on labor, tobacco, and the environment — U.S. life expectancy would increase to such an extent that it would be on par with other high-income countries, according to Jennifer Karas Montez, a sociologist at Syracuse University and lead author of the new research.

Of course, the findings do not definitively prove that a given set of state policies causes people to live longer; rather, they suggest a statistical association between a state’s policies and the health of its residents. And not everyone is convinced that transposing one state’s policies onto other states’ populations will lead to better health outcomes. Still, public health researchers say the question is worth pursuing — though the next step will be a tricky one: getting the public and their political representatives on board.

 

* * *

In 2002, Ravi K. Sawhney moved to Washington, D.C. to look for any job that would allow him to work in health policy. An orthodontist by training, Sawhney describes himself as a person who likes to fix things. He chose orthodontics because he liked the way braces fixed his own teeth. Then he studied molecular and cellular biology to better understand how teeth move and develop ways to improve orthodontics. “But I started to realize that we’re not suffering from a lack of good orthodontists or molecular biologists,” he said. “It’s that we have weird policies that aren’t working to make health better.”

After two jobs on Capitol Hill, he landed in Building One, the Office of the Director of the National Institutes of Health campus in Bethesda, Maryland. The NIH, the largest biomedical research organization in the world, includes the National Cancer Institute, the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Mental Health, and 24 other institutes or centers. Its 2020 budget was almost $42 billion. The Office of the Director, which oversees the entire enterprise, is comprised of dozens of administrative units, including the Office of Science Policy. That’s where Sawhney was working when, in 2006, he learned of some new research findings that became his obsession.

By then, the U.S. had been losing ground on life expectancy, relative to other countries, for decades. The disparity had been attributed to America’s high poverty rate and racial inequality. But that reasoning became more complicated when a research team stumbled upon the fact that White Americans are significantly less healthy than the British. “It was a bit of a big shock,” Michael Marmot, a professor of epidemiology and public health at University College London who led the research, said in an NPR interview at the time. “I just didn’t imagine we’d find it consistently across the board, with worse health in the United States compared with England.”

Marmot — actually Sir Marmot, having been knighted in 2000 for his extensive research into health inequalities throughout the world — and three colleagues were trying to find out why poor people are less healthy than rich people. Because they were exploring how income and education influenced health independently of other factors, they looked only at non-Hispanic White people aged 55 to 64 in the U.S. and England. What they learned: In both countries, people with less education and income had worse health than their more advantaged countrymen. Writing in the Journal of the American Medical Association, they reported that White Americans had worse health than their British peers at all rungs of the socioeconomic ladder.

In Sawhney’s view, that should have prompted some introspection at the NIH. But in the ensuing years, Sawhney grew frustrated that America’s health disadvantage did not get high-level attention, even though additional research showed that older Americans were not just less healthy than their British counterparts, but less healthy than other Europeans as well. “When you find out that every other rich country in the world — without better technology, without more spending on biomedical research — is healthier, it undermines your case that what you are doing is right,” he said.

So he spearheaded the effort to get a bigger set of eyes focused on the issue. The National Academy of Medicine (then known as the Institute of Medicine) is a nonprofit organization that, as part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, is authorized by Congress to advise the federal government on medical and public health issues. Its members are elected because of their important contributions to their fields, and it undertakes big-picture research studies on a contract basis along with the National Academies’ research arm, the National Research Council. In this case, the NIH funded research to review health data for all ages of life, not just older people.

Woolf was recruited to chair the panel; other members were primarily academic experts in epidemiology, demography, and economics. Many had spent their careers looking at international health comparisons, but none had ever seen the data for all health conditions in one place before. “There were many of us, including myself, who expected we would outperform some countries in some disease areas and underperform in others,” Woolf said. “But what was so stunning to us was that, with very few exceptions, we were consistently underperforming.”

Laudan Aron, now a senior fellow at the Urban Institute, a Washington D.C.-based think tank, was the Shorter Lives study director, responsible for editing and writing the report along with Woolf. Panel members were struck, she said, by how consistently the U.S. health disadvantage washed across Americans from all subsets of the population — rich and poor, highly educated and not, old and young. Members of some racial and ethnic minority groups have much worse health than their White compatriots, but even well-to-do, highly educated White people with health insurance suffered a health disadvantage because they lived in the U.S.

There were some bright spots. Americans who manage to reach the age of 75 live longer than their peers in other countries. The U.S. also has higher rates of cancer survival, better blood pressure and cholesterol control, lower stroke mortality, and lower smoking rates. But, compared to peers in other rich nations, many Americans do not live to see old age; since 1980, the U.S. has consistently had the first or second lowest probability of surviving to age 50.

As the report neared publication, the research team wanted to make sure that the public and, even more importantly, policymakers in a position to take action were aware of the Shorter Lives findings. “We just took it upon ourselves to start contacting reporters that we knew and draw attention to this,” Woolf said. Their efforts were reciprocated with a flurry of colorful headlines. To take just one example, an op-ed in The Washington Post announced: “The United States needs to see the doctor.”

* * *

What happened next? “Disappointingly little has been done since that report,” said John Haaga, who retired as director of National Institute on Aging’s Division of Behavioral and Social Research last year. “The level of interest in how we are doing relative to other countries is very low.” The NIH has continued to fund studies that compare health and health systems across countries, noted William T. Riley, director of the agency’s Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (OBSSR). But some experts say it hasn’t funded projects that would identify what other healthier countries are doing differently — a key recommendation of the Shorter Lives authors.

Robert M. Kaplan was director of OBSSR, the main funder for Shorter Lives, when it was produced, and he remains enthusiastic about it all these years later. “I can go on and on about this report — it’s one of my favorite topics,” said Kaplan, now the director of research at Stanford Medical School’s Clinical Excellence Research Center. In his view, the report should have changed the way the NIH invests in health research. But the report was not popular among many NIH leaders, he said, because the findings refute the idea that more funding for basic biomedical research — the thing NIH is famous for — translates into better health.

At its inception, the NIH was focused not on biomedical research, but on public health — the science of protecting and improving the health of a population. It traces its roots to 1887, when a one-room laboratory was created to help test ship passengers arriving in the U.S. for cholera and yellow fever. In the ensuing decades, it went through different names and an expanding mission, which included regulating the production of vaccines, investigating diseases caused by polluted water, and discovering the source of an anthrax outbreak. In 1930, Congress renamed the agency the National Institute of Health (it wouldn’t become plural until 1948) and authorized it to research basic biological and medical problems.

Since then, the NIH has grown to become the largest public funder of biomedical research in the world, responsible for breakthroughs that are undeniably important. One of its major neuroscience initiatives recently helped figure out how to create speech from brain signals. The Cancer Moonshot, launched in 2016, is working on cancer prevention and early-stage detection. The All of Us Research Program is collecting health records and DNA samples from 1 million volunteers to advance precision medicine. Those initiatives are an easy sell for congressional funding, Haaga said. “It’s all very exciting — I love that stuff,” he added. “It’s just that it hasn’t been connected to health improvements for American people as promised.”

Haaga means “connected” by evidence that Americans, as a whole, are living longer, healthier lives than people in other wealthy countries that are not investing as heavily in biomedical research. This rhetorical connection between NIH research and the nation’s health is a key part of its official messaging. “Americans today are living longer and healthier,” the agency’s website reads, crediting NIH-funded research for the fact that “life expectancy in the United States has jumped from 47 years in 1900 to 78 years as reported in 2009.”

That’s a stretch, Kaplan said, considering that the NIH did not start its research grant programs until 1946. In the first half of the 20th century, mortality rates declined dramatically because of improved sanitation practices, better nutrition, and the discovery, by a British scientist, of antibiotics. Life expectancy at birth saw its greatest increase — from 47.3 years to 68.2 years — between 1900 and 1950. “That is when the real acceleration was,” Kaplan said.

Sawhney, who has a doctorate in biology, believes NIH leaders may find the Shorter Lives conclusions easy to dismiss because the agency favors bench scientists over social scientists. “Anything that comes out of epidemiologic research — like the health disadvantage — is suspect,” he said.

* * *

By documenting the health disadvantage of living in the U.S., Shorter Lives raises the obvious question: Why? Explanations are both easy and hard to come by. “If you ask really top, smart medical or public health scientists, they will immediately tell you they know the answer,” Sawhney said. “And they will all give you different answers.”

He rattles off the usual suspects — stress, food portion sizes, lack of exercise, and others. The National Academies research panel reviewed evidence for many possible culprits, ranging from lack of access to medical care to seatbelt use to poverty. Nearly half of the Shorter Lives report is devoted to exploring that evidence, but the researchers concluded that no single factor fully explains the U.S. health disadvantage.

Shorter Lives did refute some easy assumptions. “When you talk to the general public, they say, ‘We want people to live longer so let’s invest more in medicine,'” Kaplan said. “Health care certainly is a contributor to life expectancy, but the report did a very good job of clarifying that achieving better health requires more than just providing health care.”

Researchers also looked at the effect of individual behaviors. For example, eating a high-fat diet in early life can lead to obesity, which can cause diabetes and heart disease. But why is there so much childhood obesity in America? Shorter Lives points to government policies that encourage production of cheap, fattening foods; school district decisions about high-calorie cafeteria menus and vending machine contracts; business decisions about where to locate grocery stores and fast-food outlets; the marketing of electronic devices to children; and neighborhoods that are too unsafe for children to play outside. “Choices may not always be made ‘freely’: they are made in a societal and environmental context,” the report said.

As it took in the whole picture, the research committee was of two minds on how to discuss the issue of why, Woolf said. One argument was to address each problem independently: Why does the U.S. have so many unwanted pregnancies? Why so many car accidents? “But there were a number of us who felt like there’s something too coincidental going on here,” Woolf said. “Something about the way we go about doing things here in America is probably responsible for the structural factors — what you might call the ’causes of the causes.'”

Woolf and his colleagues became convinced that the answer to why lay not only with biology and medicine, but with governance and political decision-making. Political scientists who compare the decisions that countries make about social welfare and other programs were brought in to help the committee think through the issues. That led to an extra Shorter Lives chapter, not originally planned, that explored how policies and societal values may be influencing American health.

Among other things, it discussed how five “iconic American beliefs” may encourage policies and individual behaviors that hurt our health. On the surface, it may seem absurd to claim that an illness like heart disease might stem from individual freedom, free enterprise, self-reliance, the role of religion, and federalism. But the authors offer possible explanations.

For example, the constitutional right to bear arms reflects the American value of personal freedom. Firearms are more available in the U.S. than in peer countries, and homicide rates are higher. A 2011 study of 23 high-income countries found that the U.S. rate of firearm homicide was 19.5 times higher than the average for the other countries. Similarly, Americans prize self-reliance, prompting many to believe individuals should solve their personal problems without “handouts,” so raising taxes for state-financed health programs is often unpopular. Six years after the Affordable Care Act went into effect, 12 states have not expanded Medicaid, despite the federal funding that would cover at least 90 percent of the cost.

The Policies and Social Values chapter was “kind of fringy or too political or philosophical,” Kaplan said, and it didn’t get much attention. But its basic tenet — American values may be hurting our health — has been on his mind lately as he conducts survey research about Covid-19 protocols.

“Boy, does this come up a lot when we talk about mask requirements and whether the government has the right to track you,” he said. “I actually do think we’re different than other countries.”

* * *

Even if America’s policies and core values explain why U.S. health is so poor, that explanation does not directly help with a related question: What should be done?

Shorter Lives made six recommendations, none of which directly tackled any possible root causes for poor health. Four are related to the need for more research or better research methods; one calls for a media campaign to inform the public about the U.S. health disadvantage; and one advocates for pursuing national health goals that had been previously established. Still, Woolf thinks Shorter Lives makes it obvious that America’s social problems contribute to its health problems and should be addressed immediately. “If your house is on fire, you don’t say, ‘Hold up with all those hoses, let’s first demonstrate that there’s evidence that the water is going to extinguish this fire,'” he said.

 

Racial bias, for example, is associated with greater disease prevalence, unequal access to quality medical care, and other health disparities between Black and White people. W.E.B. Du Bois documented the disparities and tied them to societal inequities back in 1899; more than a century later, a Black American will live about three fewer years on average than a White person with the same income. “That’s the product of systemic racism — there’s no biological reason for it,” Woolf said. “That really needs to be addressed if we are going to solve this.”

Health disparities are the differences between subgroups, such as Black and White people, in a population. The U.S. health disadvantage, on the other hand, extends to all Americans in comparison to people in other countries. Haaga, trained as a demographer, does not think addressing health disparities is the best way to tackle the health disadvantage of living in the U.S. “Yes, we’re violent; yes, we’re too individualistic; yes, we’re racist,” he said. “But we were those things before 1975, and somehow that was not incompatible with being among the healthiest people in the world.”

He wanted Shorter Lives to explain why “the rot set in” in the mid-1970s, sending the U.S. in a downward health and mortality spiral in comparison to other countries — and to provide a to-do list for improvement. “We should work on all of these systemic issues and cultural issues but, by golly, there must be something we can do,” he said. “If we’re falling behind Portugal and they are spending way less [on health] than we are, what are they doing? What can we do?”

Research published in September may offer some clues. Instead of asking, “Why is life expectancy in Portugal three years longer than in the U.S.?” Montez and her colleagues decided to ask, “Why is life expectancy in Hawaii seven years longer than in West Virginia?”

The researchers based their work on a dataset created by political scientist Jacob Grumbach to document policy polarization across the states. Grumbach used an established system to score 135 policies in 16 domains — including abortion, civil rights and liberties, education, gun control, immigration, and taxes — on a conservative-to-liberal continuum for every year between 1970 and 2014. Viewed together over time, the data show how individual states became more conservative or liberal during the 45-year study period.

Montez and her colleagues — including Woolf, chair of the panel behind Shorter Lives — merged the state policy data with life expectancy data for each of the 45 years to see whether there was any association. Their finding: States that implemented more conservative policies were more likely to experience a reduction in life expectancy.

The study shows statistical associations, rather than causal relationships, between policies and life expectancy rates, and Montez says the work should be considered “suggestive evidence” that needs to be replicated. That said, the findings are consistent with other research that has demonstrated the effect that an individual policy can have on health and longevity. “Studies on minimum wage, for example, show that a minimum wage change can have an effect on infant mortality rates within a year,” she said.

The researchers also looked into other factors that might be driving the decline in life expectancy. For example, they explored whether state-specific economic conditions — as measured by unemployment rates each year — altered their findings; they did not.

Life expectancy rates between states have increasingly diverged since the early 1980s, shortly after the federal government began transferring policymaking authority to the states, giving them more influence over programs like Medicaid and welfare. More recently, state-level power has grown via preemption laws, in which states curtail local authority over smoke-free ordinances, nutrition labeling in restaurants, and other issues. In 2000, only two states prohibited local jurisdictions from raising the minimum wage; today, 25 states do so.

As states have gravitated to more liberal or conservative sets of policies, their life expectancy rates have taken different trajectories. For example, Connecticut and Oklahoma had the same life expectancy in 1959, but by 2017, Connecticut had gained 9.6 years while the more conservative Oklahoma had gained just 4.7 years. Policies on tobacco, labor, immigration, civil rights, and the environment appear to be particularly influential for life expectancy. “We know states that we can look to: What is Connecticut doing? What did New York state do?” Montez said. “We can also look to the states that are declining and say, ‘What did they do wrong?'”

Thus, the U.S. offers 50 individual case studies that show how policies are linked to health, Montez said.

So should states with conservative policies become liberal to improve their citizens’ health? It’s not that straightforward, Haaga says, because state-level policies generally reflect the values and individual behaviors of the state’s voters. Kentucky, for example, has the second-highest smoking rate in the nation and the 35th lowest tobacco tax. “One of the unhealthy behaviors is you vote for people who don’t pass laws or make regulations that support healthier behaviors,” he said. “Whenever you’re looking at specific policy impacts, you have to remember that a lot of these things go together, especially when politicians are competing for the votes of people who want to believe that they can smoke however they want.”

Some advocates say the problems documented in Shorter Lives demand a national response from the very top of government. Shortly after the report was published, Ronald Bayer, a professor at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, and three colleagues made that call to action in Science. “Mobilization of an unprecedented kind is now necessary in the United States,” they wrote. “It requires a campaign to remove the public veil of ignorance about the evidence.” They called for then-President Obama to create a National Commission on the Health of Americans to hold public hearings and determine “vigorous” next steps.

Obama did not pursue that suggestion, and other elected officials also took a pass. “I would have thought that congressional representatives and senators would have picked it up and said, ‘We need to do something — this is really bad,'” said medical sociologist David V. McQueen. “‘Why do we spend so much money and get so little impact?'”

* * *

Will a government agency lead an effort to eradicate America’s health disadvantage? The NIH’s Riley has ideas about what needs to happen next. “The first step is to quit saying that we have the ‘best health care in the world’ and acknowledge that we have serious health care and public health weaknesses that need to be addressed,” he said in a written response to Undark’s questions. From there, Riley suggests that the U.S. needs a strong public health system integrated with social policies that support good health.

In fact, America’s public health agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, boasts that no other organization in the world has its skills and capacity. McQueen held several top leadership positions there before he retired. Just as the NIH has a primary focus on biomedical research, he said, the CDC is focused on its own top priority: controlling infectious diseases. “The kind of work that came out of Shorter Lives was not a leading interest of senior people, except for a few,” he said.

And maybe America’s health problem is just too hard, as suggested in Shorter Lives itself: “[T]he largest obstacle to addressing the U.S. health disadvantage is not a lack of evidence or uncertainty about effective interventions but limited political support among both the public and policymakers to enact the policies and commit the necessary resources to implement them.”

McQueen sees a “kind of general anti-intellectualism” in the nation’s unwillingness to address economic and social factors underlying poor health. “We like to see solutions that are proximal and simple,” he said. A medicine that lets a patient live with diabetes is a simple solution; changing food policy so that fewer people develop diabetes is not.

None of this lets the NIH off the hook, in Haaga’s view. By 2040, the U.S. life expectancy is expected to drop to 64th in the world, trailing Algeria, the Dominican Republic, and Sri Lanka, according to projections done by researchers at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington. “I semi-seriously proposed that we have a separate fund at NIH and out of every $100 dollars, $1 would be put into the ‘Hey, how come nobody’s healthy?’ fund,” Haaga said. “And that would be a big increase on the amount of money we spend to research that seemingly basic question.”

At the time Shorter Lives was published, baby boys born in the U.S. on average could be expected to live 3.7 fewer years than if they had been born in Switzerland. For baby girls born in the U.S., life expectancy was 5.2 fewer years than those born in Japan. When Woolf presented those and other Shorter Lives findings to congressional committees, he found that they did not always resonate with lawmakers.

He says that Sens. Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren were enthusiastic about the revelations, but neither was particularly influential at the time, and nobody else seemed to care much. Even rich White Americans are dying at higher rates than their international peers, he pointed out, but it did not make an impression. “There’s a certain amount of denial among the policymakers,” he said. “What we were explaining ran so counter to the narrative that many politicians have of American exceptionalism and too many believe that, if you’re a corporate executive or a billionaire, you’re fine.”

His assessment would not surprise Stephen Bezruchka, a professor at the University of Washington. A physician by training, Bezruchka has devoted the past three decades to educating the American public about the country’s poor health status relative to other countries. He developed the concept of the “Health Olympics” to help people visualize how the U.S. lags behind Malta, Chile, Barbados, and many other countries in life expectancy.

Last June, Bezruchka was the keynote speaker at a conference at which he presented the facts about America’s health. The event was held virtually because of the pandemic, and reviewing the online chat afterwards he recalls being struck by a post that read: “But this is still the greatest country in the world.”

That perspective leads to cognitive dissonance when Americans hear the bad news about our health, Bezruchka said. James Banks and James Smith, two of Marmot’s collaborators on the 2006 JAMA study, pointed this out when they published an international comparison of health status for older adults in 2012. The U.S. ranked 12th out of 13 rich countries in life expectancy at age 50 but a greater percentage of Americans reported their health to be “excellent” than the residents of all but two of those countries. The authors’ summed up the paradox: “The United States ranks poorly on all indicators, with the exception of self-reported subjective health status.”

Haaga has seen a “profound lack of interest in a lot of American audiences” to consider international health comparisons. Wouldn’t Americans be intrigued to learn that U.S. health status compared favorably to that of Canada in the 1970s, but has slipped considerably since then? “I made this kind of a feature in my public speaking,” he said. But, he added, “I found that audiences just glaze over.”

McQueen sees the same tendencies in the Covid-19 era. Other countries have emphasized quarantine, contact tracing, and other practices to limit the spread of disease. In the U.S., however, prevention efforts have been controversial, and the priority has been on developing vaccines and medical treatments.

“Even with Covid, the U.S. sees itself as a particular model and what happens elsewhere is kind of irrelevant,” said McQueen. “We are, after all, the greatest country in the world, the richest and the greatest with the greatest health care system — which, of course, is not true, but people believe that.”

* * *

This article was written with the support of a journalism fellowship from The Gerontological Society of America, The Journalists Network on Generations, and The Gannett Foundation.

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

Trump’s lawyers make a mockery of Republican senators: Impeachment trial makes GOP complicity clear

The second impeachment trial of Donald Trump opened with a bang.

Lead House manager, Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, spoke a few words and then went to the tape. The senators serving on Trump’s jury and everyone watching over broadcast then saw 13 minutes of anarchy, violence and fear that made vivid the detailed events of January 6th, starting with Trump offering one final incitement to the crowd at his “Stop The Steal” rally and culminating with his congratulatory tweet issued later that evening which asked the mob to “remember this day forever!”

Missouri Republican Sen. Roy Blunt said viewing that video was “the longest time I’ve sat down and just watched straight footage of what was truly a horrendous day.” Sadly, however, it wasn’t horrendous enough for Blunt to recognize that the impeachment trial is a constitutional necessity. Blunt voted on Tuesday with the majority of his fellow GOP colleagues to not proceed with the first-ever trial of a former president. So as harrowing as the opening footage was, it likely won’t result in enough votes to impeach Trump and bar him from holding office in the future. The vast majority of Republicans from the national leadership to the Party committees all over the country to the average, everyday voter, simply do not think what happened that day was anything to get worked up about. And they are certainly not prepared to admit that Donald Trump did anything wrong at all. At this point, you have to assume that Trump’s famous quip that he could shoot someone on 5th Avenue and not lose any votes is literally true.

That hasn’t deterred the Democrats from trying Trump before the Senate, however, in hope that there is at least a record of what happened. House Managers Rep. Joe Neguse of Colorado and Rep. David Cicilline of Rhode Island methodically laid out their argument that impeachment of a president under these circumstances is not only constitutional but historically well documented. Raskin presented the opening argument making the case that what happened on that day was so dangerous that the former president must be impeached and barred from ever holding federal office again. He shared his own horror, revealing that his own family was at the Capitol that day, in stark emotional terms illustrating the human dimension of that incursion into the building.

It was an impressive first day for the managers but it was not quite as auspicious for the former president’s defense team.

It’s probably wrong to be too critical of them since they have the worst client in the world and they just took on the case a little over a week ago after the president’s former lawyers abruptly quit. So, when his new lawyer Bruce Castor took to the podium it was with the understanding that they might not be fully up to speed. But no one expected anything as bad as what Castor delivered. He rambled and meandered and seemed to not have any point other than compliment the House managers, suck up to the senators and admit that Trump lost the election even suggesting that it might be better to prosecute him in a court of law rather than the Senate. His employer was reportedly apoplectic and yelling at the TV. He did the one thing Trump did not want him to do.

Trump’s other lawyer, David Schoen, was more polished but much more disturbing. His delivery was frenetic and hostile, barely able to contain his contempt for the process and threatening repeatedly that the trial was going to “tear the country apart,” which no doubt soothed his boss after Cantor’s bizarre performance. His half-baked arguments against the constitutionality of the process were nothing more than window dressing since more than 40 Senators had already signaled that they would buy anything he said so there would be no conviction regardless.

The fact of the matter is that the two of them could have come out and done an interpretive dance to “YMCA” and it wouldn’t have made any difference. The fix was in on this from the beginning and everyone knows it.

Nonetheless, the Democrats did get one more Republican over to their side than was expected. Louisiana Sen. John Cassidy voted to go ahead with the trial along with the other five Republicans who were expected. It’s a long way from the 17 they would need to convict but it does show that a handful of them have too much pride to pretend to believe the nonsense Trump and his allies are trying to force them to swallow. It’s obvious what Trump did and the Democrats have the evidence, a legal case backed up even by prominent conservative lawyers and academics, and the historical precedents. They also have the advantage of the reality of what we all saw with our own eyes that day and all the video that’s emerged since then, not to mention the hundreds of arrests of insurrectionists Trump said he loved and believed were “very special” as they sacked the Capitol.

It boggles the mind that these Republican senators would defend this. People died that day, including police officers whom the MAGA followers purport to love, and many others were grievously wounded. This lame “process argument” about the unconstitutionality of the trial, does nothing more than confirm that they will do anything to protect their seats. If they had any integrity or loyalty to their oath, this one would not be a hard call.

I checked in with Fox News to try to get a sense of how the right-wing media is covering Trump’s second impeachment trial and it was predictably dismissive.

Tucker Carlson proudly said he didn’t watch it and called it a distraction “from something that is actually important” — such as his apparent belief that the COVID vaccines aren’t safe. Sean Hannity called in Donald Trump Jr to rev up the audience to “play hardball” which seems stupendously idiotic in light of what Trump is being impeached for. Perhaps Junior is up for another run at the Capitol? No Fox News viewers saw that 13-minute video during prime time. Across the board, the word to the Trump followers was, “don’t worry, Trump did nothing wrong. The Democrats are just persecuting him, as usual.” If they haven’t ventured beyond their right-wing bubble they do not know what really happened that day.

But the senators were all there. They experienced it personally. They saw that footage and heard the arguments and they have no excuses. Neither does the right-wing media, which continues to perpetuate the MAGA mentality even now that Trump is no longer in office. I suppose it’s too much to expect any of them to speak truth to power. But you might have thought more than a small handful would summon the guts to speak truth to someone who no longer has any. As Trump would say: “Sad!” 

How to make creamy, dreamy almond milk

There are some food that I will never attempt to DIY: cereal, yogurt, my favorite seedy sourdough (sadly, my starter died of neglect months ago.) Still, there are other grocery list staples that I will never buy again. Fluffy hummus, crunchy, steaming English muffins, and almond milk that’s creamier — and way more flavorful — than my go-to tetra pack. But not all homemade almond milk is created equal. It can be gritty, bitter, or watery if made wrong. As a lifelong lactose intolerant, I’ve garnered my fair share of tips for the absolute best almond milk at home. Follow these steps and you may never want to go back to the store-bought stuff.

Back to basics

Let’s start with the basics: the nuts themselves. You must start with skin-on, raw, unsalted almonds. But I already have a bulk bag of salted, roasted almonds from Costco! I know, I know, but save those for snacking. To get a subtly sweet, ultra-creamy final product, raw nuts are paramount. Soaking roasted nuts brings out their bitterness, and because they’re drier to begin with, they yield a gritty milk. (Soaking nuts also won’t remove any flavors, so unless you want Thai chili- or salt and vinegar-flavored almond milk, use unseasoned almonds.) Another reminder: Nuts are full of oil and can go rancid at room temperature; unsurprisingly, rancid almonds will make sour almond milk. Before you put the effort in, do yourself a favor and taste one to ensure the nuts are fresh, especially if they’ve been in your pantry for a while.

Go for a soak

Now that you’ve got your nuts, it’s time to give them a nice long bath. As is the case with all nut milks, almond milk starts with a soak. The ideal ratio is 4 cups of water to 1 cup nuts. Though tap water is probably fine, since the soaking water is also the liquid component of this almond milk, I’d recommend filtered water for the best-tasting final product. Soak them in the fridge in a bowl, reusable container, or directly in the pitcher of your blender, since you’ll be using that later.

Soaking nuts allows them to absorb water and hydrate from the inside out so that they blend into a smoother final product. Soaking them thoroughly will also yield more liquid (almond milk) and less pulp (almond meal — but more on that in a bit). My general rule of thumb is to soak almonds for at least 12 hours and up to 48 hours — any longer and your almonds may start to spoil or sprout.The easiest way to do it is simply to set up the soak before bed and let them sit overnight. You’ll have creamy, dreamy almond milk just in time for your morning cup of coffee.

Some say you can cut the soaking time down to a few hours by using boiling or very hot water; Others claim you can skip the soak entirely by blending nuts with very hot water. I have tried both and still find the longer you soak, the creamier the milk. Short soaks make creamy enough milk, but we’re going for the creamiest possible milk.

Blend and strain

My personal adaptation of “Legally Blonde’s” “bend and snap.” (not sure if it’s an 83% return rate, but my DIY almond milk has certainly landed me a brunch invitation.) Transfer the nuts and the water to a large blender or food processor (it’s best to use the most powerful tool you have for this job), and process on high speed for several minutes. If using a high-powered blender it’ll take about two minutes; in a lower-power blender or food processor give it up to three or four minutes. Well-blended almond milk should look opaque and uniform, and the nuts completely pureed. For security, scrape down the sides of the blender with a spatula and blend for another minute.

Once you have a homogenous mixture, set a colander or mesh sieve on top of a large bowl. Fold a big piece of cheesecloth so that you have a sheet made up of at least 3-4 layers, or use an open nut milk bag and place it on top of your colander. (Though the bags are washable and easy to find I prefer to use cheesecloth because I typically already have it on hand.) Pour over the almond milk, letting the liquid drain through the cloth- or bag-lined colander into the bowl below. Once it’s stopped draining, gather the edges of the cheesecloth or nut milk bag and squeeze to extract as much liquid as possible.

Whatever you do, don’t throw out the stuff left in the cloth, also known as almond pulp. It’s very similar to almond meal (coarsely ground almond flour made from raw almonds that’s often called for in recipes, like this tender cake), which you can replicate most closely by dehydrating and then blending the pulp. I like to follow Minimalist Baker’s guide for the most technical example, but if that’s too much effort you can also just add the pulp directly to this granola, blend a spoonful into smoothies for a bit of nutty flavor, or add it to homemade crackers like these by swapping pulp for cornmeal.

Sweeten the deal

Now you have a super-creamy, albeit fairly simple, almond milk. Think of almond milk as a blank canvas, yourself an artist preparing to make a masterpiece: Get creative and experiment with spices, sweeteners, and flavorings. I nearly always start by blending in a half teaspoon vanilla extract, plus a pinch of salt to accentuate the almonds’ natural sweetness. For sweetened milk, I like to blend in two pitted Medjool dates or 1-2 tablespoons of maple syrup, honey, or agave syrup. Taste the milk, then add more until it’s sweetened to your preference. I also like to add 1/4 teaspoon of cinnamon, plus a dash of cardamom or nutmeg for nuance. Pro-tip: I learned from Carla Lalli Music: You can actually flavor your almond milk before you blend by adding spices and sweeteners to the soaking liquid. Lalli Music adds cinnamon sticks or whole pitted dates to the water when preparing the nuts to soak. By the time you blend the milk, it’s deeply infused with flavor.

You’ve now made almond milk so delicious you can (and should!) drink a glass of it simply as is. It’s also a great base for smoothies, baked oatmeal, or any plant-based recipes you’re cooking. I love to use it in overnight oats or my favorite chia seed pudding. Add it to your morning coffee or matcha, or if you’re not a caffeine-drinker, add turmeric and spices to make a warming golden milk latte (or smoothie!). You can also leave the almond milk plain, unsweetened and unflavored, and use it to ‘veganize’ any savory recipes, like rich pasta sauces and creamy soups.

Storage tips

Transfer your almond milk to a jar or pitcher and store in the fridge. Homemade almond milk lacks emulsifiers that keep commercially-produced nut milks homogenized. Fat and oil famously do not mix, so it’s natural for DIY almond milk to separate. Always give it a good shake or stir before using. Also, without added stabilizers it will last about 2-3 days in the fridge so with that in mind, only make as much as you’ll use in that time.

Go nuts

One final note: As far as nuts and other ingredients used to make non-dairy milk go, almonds are one of the most taxing on the environment. While they still pale in comparison to the environmental impact of cow’s milk, almonds do require more water to produce than crops like oat or soy. and ultimately have a bigger footprint than other alternative milks. For that reason, when I make nut milk I like to mix various nuts like cashews, hazelnuts, pecans — really whichever nuts were on sale at the store. I also try to opt for organic when I can, since growing without pesticide is better for the environment (and the bees!) The technique stays the same, so go forth on your nut milk adventure, and don’t be afraid to experiment. I like playing around to find my favorite combinations for the best taste and maximum creaminess. Any way you make it, you’re bound to end up with something delicious—and likely, no trip to the grocery store is required.

Have you made DIY almond milk? What’s your favorite way to drink it? Let us know in the comments!

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