Spring Sale: Get 1 Year, Save 58%

Michael Flynn says Trump could seize every voting machine across the country and “rerun” election

Former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn said that President Donald Trump could use the military to force a new election in certain “swing states” while pushing debunked conspiracy theories about the vote.

Flynn, who was recently granted an unusually broad pardon by Trump, denied that he was urging the president to declare “martial law” but certainly came close during an interview with Newsmax host Greg Kelly, who has for weeks stoked a fantasy that Trump has not lost the election.

“There is no way in the world we are going to be able to move forward as a nation. He could immediately, on his order, seize every single one of these [voting] machines, on his order,” he said, citing a conspiracy theory pushed by his attorney, Sidney Powell, claiming a plot financed by China, Cuba, Venezuela and others to flip votes from Trump to President-elect Joe Biden.

“He could order the, within the swing states, if he wanted to, he could take military capabilities, and he could place those in states and basically rerun an election in each of those states,” Flynn added.

Flynn insisted that he was not calling for “martial law” even as he touted its use in the past.

“I mean, it’s not unprecedented,” he said. “These people are out there talking about martial law like it’s something that we’ve never done. Martial law has been instituted 64 times, Greg. So I’m not calling for that. We have a constitutional process.”

The federal government has not declared martial law in nearly eight decades, when the FDR administration implemented it following the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941.

Flynn’s comments came as he pushed Powell’s bizarre unfounded conspiracy theory that Dominion voting machines, which are used across much of the country, flipped votes from Trump to Biden but got caught because their algorithm “broke” because Trump received such an overwhelming number of votes. Powell has also claimed that the CIA was involved in the plot and that Republican Gov. Brian Kemp was paid off to stay quiet in the scheme. She has provided no evidence of her claim and was severely criticized by Fox News host Tucker Carlson and radio host Rush Limbaugh for failing to show any evidence of her outlandish allegation.

Powell led a horribly sloppy legal effort parallel to Trump’s legal team, which ousted her after pushing the conspiracy theory, seeking to overturn the elections in contested states that he lost, but courts rejected every single one of them. Despite a complete lack of evidence, Flynn declared that the Senate runoffs in Georgia were a “fake election.”

“You can’t have another election on the same system,” Flynn told Newsmax. “It’s a broken system, and we cannot allow a system that’s tied to foreign powers to be used to vote for the president or any election, any elected office in our country.”

Republicans have worried for weeks that the Trumpworld attacks on Georgia’s election and Republican officials could hurt their chances of keeping their Senate majority.

Dominion Voting Systems threatened to sue Powell for defamation for pushing the baseless conspiracy theory.

“Your reckless disinformation campaign is predicated on lies that have endangered Dominion’s business and the lives of its employees,” the company said in a letter to Powell. “…Your outlandish accusations are demonstrably false. While soliciting people to send you ‘millions of dollars’ and holding yourself out as a beacon of truth, you have purposely avoided naming Dominion as a defendant in your sham litigation — effectively denying Dominion the opportunity to disprove your false accusations in court.”

Flynn, who has sworn allegiance to QAnon, the deranged conspiracy theory upended by Trump’s election loss, has pushed similar calls for Trump to use the military in an effort to reverse an election he lost by significant margins. He shared a message earlier this month calling for Trump to “temporarily suspend the Constitution” and impose martial law.

Steve Vladeck, a national security law expert at the University of Texas School of Law, said that Flynn’s latest “insane rant” relied on pre-Civil War implementations of martial law, “almost all of which were repudiated” by the Supreme Court in 1866 when it ruled that it “can never be applied… where the courts are open and their processes unobstructed.”

Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., described Flynn as a “treasonous felon” calling for Trump to “become a dictator.” Rep. Don Beyer, D-Va., added that “this fascist should be in prison.”

I am a bartender who loves rum and Coke. Here’s why you should, too

Do guilty pleasures even exist? Is there such a thing?

I’d understand how a pleasure could be “guilty” if that pleasure was, say, heroin, or if you enjoyed spending your weekends setting strangers on fire, but as long as it’s not actively harming anyone, where is the guilt? There is an almost tautological absoluteness to taste; whatever you enjoy, there’s a reason you enjoy it, and that reason should render your enjoyment un-guilty. There’s no “should” or “shouldn’t” in preference. You like what you like.

Anyway, because I manage a fancy cocktail bar, people look at me sideways whenever I talk about Rum & Cokes. I don’t care. I love Rum & Cokes. And because everyone’s always making the category error of assigning moral, intellectual, or gendered value to one mixed drink or another, I often feel called upon to defend it. Which I have no problem doing. I will die on this delicious hill.

Read more Robb Report: The 25 Best Bourbons of the 21st Century (So Far)

To explain why rum and Coke are so great together, let’s talk for a second about why cocktails work. Sour cocktails in particular follow an easy template: A hugely sour ingredient (citrus juice) clashes against a hugely sweet ingredient (simple syrup), and their battle is so fierce that an 80+ proof spirit—usually defined by its volatile intensity—can just slide right by. That’s why Margaritas and Pisco Sours work, and also why things like water or iced tea or even orange juice don’t make very good mixers: the sweet-sour tension just isn’t strong enough to distract from the ethanol burn.

You know what else is extremely sweet and extremely sour? Coca-Cola Classic. You don’t think of Coke as particularly acidic because of the sugar and salt, but it’s there: the pH of Coke is 2.37. Lemon juice, for comparison, has a pH of 2.25. And seen through that lens, Rum & Coke has more in common with a Tom Collins than a Vodka & Soda. It’s got the sweetness, it’s got the acidity, it’s got the bubbles and the flavors just work.

No one knows what unnamed genius first put those two flavors together, but we’re pretty sure it happened in Cuba (this gives the Rum & Coke it’s other name, a common toast on the island during and after the Spanish American War: the “Cuba Libre”). From there, Florida, and then the South, and then the country, and then the world. During World War II, domestic whiskey and gin distilleries were ordered to stop production to help the war effort, and rum—frequently low-quality rum—filled the void. Coca-Cola proved then and now to be prodigiously talented at pairing with (and masking the flaws of) rum, and the mixture achieved a level of fame it’s never really let go of since. Nor, I insist on adding, should it.

Read more Robb Report: First-Class Fromage? 8 Gourmet Cheese Collections You Can Have Delivered Right to Your Door

So now we’re left with only one question: what kind of rum?

The short answer is, whatever rum you want. Rum & Cokes aren’t precious—that’s the whole point. Insisting on a specific rum is kinda like insisting on a specific cacao percentage in your chocolate chip cookies. I will say white rum doesn’t work quite as well, so grab something with a little age and color. Spiced rum, aged rum, Spanish style, English style, it all works… the vanilla of Captain Morgan & Coke will always have a nostalgic place in my heart, but if I had to pick a favorite now, mine would be the Chairman’s Reserve Spiced Rum, from the island of St. Lucia—more orange and dried fruit than baking spices, it’s a touch more complex but still inexpensive and uncomplicated and everything a Rum & Coke should be.

Offering a recipe feels silly because the name is the recipe. Add liquids together in a glass with ice. More rum, less rum, whatever you want. That’s one of its most enduring charms: A Rum & Coke is easy to make, easy to drink, and easy to like, so squeeze a lime in there, sit back in your chair, and put on, I don’t know, Real Housewives of Potomac or Justin Bieber or whatever it is you enjoy, for the sheer and simple fact that you enjoy it.

Read more Robb Report: Watch How Pastry Chef Zac Young Makes His Showstopping Christmas PieCaken

A return to fake right-wing outrage: Without Trump, Republicans run back to sexist resentments

Needless to say, 2020 was quite the year — and not just for people who believe in preserving democracy and containing deadly pandemics. 

For Republican politicians and right-wing media, whose careers are centered around feeding silly victimization narratives to the right-wing base, there was all manner of made-up nonsense to get the rubes riled up. For months, the right-wing narrative was focused on claims that the coronavirus pandemic and/or measures to contain it were all a giant conspiracy aimed at tanking Donald Trump’s re-election chances. The fall was then consumed by similarly bonkers conspiracy theories about “voter fraud” and Joe Biden somehow “rigging” the election. 

And while both narratives are still being pushed by right-wing media — and Trump himself is still raving like a madman on Twitter with his election conspiracy theories — it’s becoming clear to many in the right-wing media that it’s time to move on. There’s going to be a Democrat in the White House, and it’s time to put to bed the grievance narrative of “deep state trying to take a good man down!”

So the right is returning to the strategy of the Barack Obama years, churning out a steady stream of fake outrage over supposed Democratic transgressions — remember how angry they were that Obama wore a tan suit? — all to feed their metanarrative that Democratic governance is inherently illegitimate. And they know that the quickest way to stir the furies of right-wing America is to tell them stories about how all those Democratic women are out of control. Who do those b*tches think they are? 


Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics? Subscribe to her newsletter Standing Room Only.


This past week saw a deeply unpleasant return to the long-standing Republican practice of firing up the base by bashing Democratic women for supposed sacrileges against ladylike behavior.

First, the Wall Street Journal threw out bait by running an op-ed by Joseph Epstein in which he addressed Dr. Jill Biden, the incoming first lady, as “kiddo” and argued that it’s “fraudulent, not to say a touch comic,” for her to use the title of “Dr.”, even though, objectively, she has a doctorate. Epstein has been playing this game as far back as 1970, when he wrote in Harper’s that “I would wish homosexuality off the face of the earth” and other grotesqueries about gay people. 

The op-ed was dumb and misogynist, so of course, Tucker Carlson of Fox News was drawn to it like ants to a puked-up Long Island Ice Tea. For multiple nights this week, Carlson hosted unhinged segments full of maximum umbrage, screeching that Biden is “borderline illiterate,” dismissing her career as a high school and community college English teacher. The rest of conservative media is following suit:

The purpose of these hysterics isn’t mysterious. It’s about triggering resentment in men who cannot accept the idea that women might not only be smart, but smarter than they are. It’s also sexist policing, insisting that it’s Biden’s duty to hide her intelligence and achievements to preserve the tender feelings of insecure men. Barack Obama got the same kind of response from racists, including Trump, who spent years insisting that his many academic achievements (a bachelor’s degree from Columbia and a law degree from Harvard) must be either fake or the result of cheating.

Also this week, another sexist storm of feigned offense swirled up after Jen O’Malley Dillon, Joe Biden’s campaign manager and incoming White House deputy chief of staff, correctly described Republicans in Congress as “a bunch of f*ckers.”

The quote was in a Glamour interview in which O’Malley Dillon actually defends her boss’ promise to make efforts towards bipartisan cooperation, but Republicans like Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida nonetheless erupted in feigned outrage, whining about the name-calling. While Trump is still actively pouring out lies and accusing not just all Democrats but a big chunk of Republicans of stealing the election from him, causing material harm — such as in Houston, where a deranged conspiracy theorist held up an air conditioning repairman with a gun to accuse him of smuggling fake ballots — the fake indignation from Republicans is just further proof that O’Malley Dillon was, if anything, understated in her assessment of their collective characters. 


Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics? Subscribe to her newsletter Standing Room Only.


Obviously, none of this faux pique was actually about the use of curse words or insults, both of which flow like a river from Trump. It’s just sexism. Tantrum-throwing over women behaving in ways that would be treated as unremarkable from men is a way to signal that women don’t really belong in politics, that they are only being barely tolerated and can be ejected for the slightest, or in this case made up, offense. 

Unfortunately, O’Malley Dillon gave into the pressure and apologized for her word choice. That’s because, as it was when Hillary Clinton was being held up to these same ridiculous and impossible standards in 2016, the media is still controlled by sexist men. Many of the worst offenders in 2016 — Matt Lauer, Charlie Rose, Mark Halperin — lost their jobs because their sexist coverage on-air was reportedly being matched by sexual harassing behaviors behind closed doors. But we’re still saddled with the likes of Jonathan Swan and Hans Nichols at Axios, who were so eager to tame themselves a shrew that they shook the branches until they found some anonymous “Democratic donors” who they claimed wanted an apology

Note that over 4 million Americans donated to Biden’s campaign in 2020. Getting a couple of those four million people to say they don’t like ladies cursing isn’t exactly hard to do. But that’s why these sexist fake scandals have so much power — there are still so many men in high powered positions in the media who are willing to run with sexist narratives, even if the cost of doing so is wildly distorting the political realities. They are the same types, after all, who made “Hillary’s emails” a major scandal, even though the emails showed no real wrongdoing, and even though her opponent was an admitted sexual predator and serial fraudster who attempted to openly collude, on camera, with a Russian conspiracy to interfere with the election

This is what we have to look forward to for the next four years: One fake “scandal” after another about women in Biden’s orbit who transgress against 19th-century ideas of what constitutes ladylike behavior. As with everything else they do, Republicans and the media enablers are focused on finding any way they can to distract from their unpopular policies. Male resentment over women’s growing power is and will remain a favorite go-to, because apparently that well isn’t close to running dry yet. 

Ina Garten has an unusual ingredient she adds to her grilled cheese sandwiches

We’ve been eating grilled cheese since we were kids, and the recipe usually went a little something like this: butter two slices of Wonderbread, add a slice of Kraft American cheese, toast in a pan and call it a day. We’re not saying that such a simple, nostalgic meal isn’t good eats, but now that we’re older, we like our grilled cheese to have a little more substance to it. If you’re in the same boat, look no further than Ina Garten‘s grilled cheese recipe. If anyone could elevate this simple sammie, duh, it’s the Barefoot Contessa!

It’s not the cheese itself that makes this sandwich such a standout – it’s the special add-ins.

The first notable inclusion is the spread Garten slathers on the inside of each slice of bread. It’s a mixture of mayonnaise, Dijon mustard and grated Parmesan cheese. Not only does this spread add big flavor to the bread before the melting cheese is even involved, but it also keeps the sandwiches from tasting dry. The tanginess of the mustard also helps cut through the richness of the cheese, for a more balanced bite.

Next, Garten makes these sandwiches truly worthy of dinner time by adding diced cooked bacon to each one – just a few small pieces on each sandwich. After all, “It’s a cheese sandwich, not a bacon sandwich!” as she says in the video.

The bacon adds a smoky, savory flavor to each sandwich that plays well with the cheese, and that smokiness is extra delicious when paired with a bowl of Garten’s signature tomato soup.

For the cheese, you can forget about those store-brand American singles languishing away in your deli drawer. Garten opts for a blend of grated white cheddar and grated Gruyere. The cheddar is sharp and bold, and the Gruyere is an amazing melter with a sweet, nutty flavor. Don’t be afraid to add more cheese than you think will fit on each sandwich – that cheese will melt and ooze out of the bread, becoming crispy around the edges.

Garten uses a panini press to make her grilled cheese sandwiches, buttering the exterior of the bread so it becomes toasty and golden brown (but you could also user her favorite cast iron skillet).

The end result? A crispy on the outside, melty on the inside grilled cheese sandwich that’s at once cheesy, smoky, meaty, tangy and buttery, and just begging to be dunked into a bowl of hot soup.

Our mission at SheKnows is to empower and inspire women, and we only feature products we think you’ll love as much as we do. Please note that if you purchase something by clicking on a link within this story, we may receive a small commission of the sale.

Read more SheKnows:

  1. The Best Ina Garten-Approved Kitchen Gifts for Foodies
  2. 17 Holiday Main Courses You Can Make Right in Your Slow Cooker
  3. Don’t Miss These Incredible Ina Garten Holiday Recipes & Gift Ideas

Pfizer says Trump admin stalling millions of vaccine doses after rejecting offer for millions more

Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer said on Thursday that it has “millions” of vaccine doses waiting for delivery instructions from the Trump administration after governors complained that their shipments would be drastically cut. Governors in more than a dozen states reported that the CDC informed them that next week’s shipments of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine would be significantly smaller than expected. The agency did not offer any explanation.

Officials in California Washington, Hawaii, and Nevada said that the CDC notified them that their allocation would be slashed by about 40%, The Associated Press reported. Michigan, Missouri, Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, and Indiana were also told to expect fewer doses than expected.

Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak, a Democrat, said that states were not offered “any explanation whatsoever” for the cut, calling it “disruptive and baffling.”

“This is disruptive and frustrating,” Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, a fellow Democrat, said on Twitter. “We need accurate, predictable numbers to plan and ensure on-the-ground success.”

While the Trump administration has pointed to production issues, Pfizer says that is not the case. 

“We have millions more doses sitting in our warehouse but, as of now, we have not received any shipment instructions for additional doses,” a Pfizer spokesperson said in a statement.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican and Trump ally, also blamed a “production issue” on Tuesday after announcing shipments to the state were “on hold right now.”

“We don’t know whether we will get any or not,” he said.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar claimed in an interview with CNBC on Thursday that Pfizer had to cut its production from 100 million doses by the end of the year to 50 million. Azar told reporters that the company had recently informed HHS “about various challenges they may have in their manufacturing.” A senior Trump administration official also told The Washington Post that because the company’s production was slashed, fewer doses would be available.

But the company disputed the administration’s line.

“Pfizer is not having any production issues with our COVID-19 vaccine, and no shipments containing the vaccine are on hold or delayed,” a spokesperson explained in a statement.

The Trump administration told the AP that states would still receive their full allocations but “misunderstandings about vaccine supply and changes to the delivery schedule may be creating confusion.” One official told the outlet that initial projections were estimates, not official allocations and claimed that some state officials may have “misunderstood” that.

“They will get their weekly allocation, it just won’t come to them on one day,” an official said.

The officials told the AP that it planned to distribute only 2.9 million doses right away, which it did last week, while another 2.9 million doses were to be held at the company’s warehouse to guarantee that second doses of the two-dose vaccine would be available in four weeks for people that were vaccinated this week.

The Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed aims to deliver 20 million first shots by the end of the year. Azar and other officials stressed that Pfizer’s vaccine was not the only one, with a similar vaccine from Moderna approved by a Food and Drug Administration panel on Thursday ahead of an expected emergency use authorization from the agency. About 5.9 million doses of the Moderna vaccine are expected to be rolled out next week if it is authorized.

Pfizer has committed to providing the US with up to 50 million doses by the end of the year and 100 million doses by the end of March. The company has said that the Trump administration turned down another 100 million doses. When officials tried to buy those doses later, the company said it had already committed them to other countries.

The Trump administration is now negotiating with the company to secure another 50 million doses, about half of the original amount, across spring and summer.

But this latest round of confusion has upended states’ plans.

Officials in Maine said their 40% cut meant they could not fully launch its program to vaccinate all long-term elderly care facility residents. “It’s 40 percent less than we were originally thinking,” Washington state Health Secretary John Wiesman told the Post. “We thought we were getting 74,100 and now we are planning for 44,850 doses.”

HHS spokesman Michael Pratt told the Post that Operation Warp Speed “will let states know how many doses are available to order against for the coming week.”

Wiesman said the weekly timeline meant that states cannot plan for long-term distribution. “We need to have some sense of what regular production is going to be, what the throughput of the manufacturer is so we can look more than a week ahead,” he told the outlet.

Senate Democrats have also criticized the administration’s handling of the vaccine rollout, notably its decision to pass on the additional 100 million Pfizer doses.

“We are concerned the failure to secure an adequate supply of vaccines will needlessly prolong the COVID-19 pandemic in this country,” a group of senators said in a letter to Operation Warp Speed letters, according to Politico, “causing further loss of life and economic devastation.”

Chrissy Teigen shares her 1-dough-3-cookies recipe for holiday baking

Baking holiday cookies is something we look forward to all year long, but the sheer number of cookie dough recipes to make can be kind of overwhelming. We only have so many bowls, and washing the KitchenAid mixer is a pain in the butt so we like to minimize switching between recipes as much as possible. But we don’t want to be left with six dozen of the same exact cookie – where’s the fun in a cookie plate that only has one type of treat on it? In past years we’ve just had to grin and bear it, but this year, celebrity cook and personality Chrissy Teigen has the ultimate solution: she’s created one cookie dough recipe that makes three different holiday cookies. It’s what we’ve been needing for years!

The base dough is pretty simple, a seven-ingredient sugar cookie dough. The idea is to split that dough into three portions, saving one third to make classic sugar cookies (with ombre icing, a la Chrissy), then mixing spices into one of the thirds for spice cookies, and mixing peanut butter into the other third to serve as the base dough for peanut butter and jelly thumbprint cookies.

The spice cookies sound delicious, sort of like a cross between ginger cookies and snickerdoodles. The spice blend includes cinnamon, ginger, and nutmeg and then just a pinch of cayenne pepper to add some zing. The cookies are rolled in crunchy demarara sugar and spices before baking, and they come out of the oven crisp around the edges, a little soft inside and covered in a delightful sugar and spice blend.

The peanut butter and jelly thumbprint cookies are easy, too. You just add a few tablespoons of peanut butter to the cookie dough, roll your balls of cookie dough in crushed salted peanuts, then press your thumb into the center of each cookie and add a spoonful of jam in the hole left behind. Bake them up and you’ve got peanut butter and jelly cookies that’ll bring you back to your favorite school lunches. Santa would probably love these with a glass of ice cold milk!

You can also make regular sugar cookies with the dough, which can be decorated and iced any way you like. Teigen favors a bright, neon ombre icing technique, but classic red and green sanding sugar would work, too.

Display your cookies on a beautiful serving tray, like this one from the Cravings by Chrissy Teigen line at Target, for maximum visual impact.

You could also package them up and ship them to someone you love – maybe the folks you’d normally do an in-person cookie swap with would like to get a shipment of home-baked love this year by mail.

Either way, you’ve got one cookie dough recipe that will result in three cookies that everyone in your life is sure to love.

Our mission at SheKnows is to empower and inspire women, and we only feature products we think you’ll love as much as we do. Please note that if you purchase something by clicking on a link within this story, we may receive a small commission of the sale. 

Read more SheKnows:

  1. The Best Ina Garten-Approved Kitchen Gifts for Foodies
  2. 17 Holiday Main Courses You Can Make Right in Your Slow Cooker
  3. Don’t Miss These Incredible Ina Garten Holiday Recipes & Gift Ideas

How to use up the rest of a can of sweetened condensed milk

My mornings these days start off with a cup of freshly brewed coffee and a scoop of thick sweetened condensed milk. I skip the cream and sugar all together, since sweetened condensed milk — milk that’s been concentrated and heavily sweetened; its viscosity is like molasses or honey and it moves just as slowly — gives creaminess and sweetness in one product.

My mother always had a can in the pantry at any given time. It was a staple in our home. We baked with it, sweetened Jamaican cornmeal porridge with it, and my mother used it in her tea. Once I’ve opened a can, I store the remaining milk (poured out of the can) in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to a week. (And if you want to make it yourself, Stephanie Le has a simple recipe for making a batch of sweetened condensed milk of your own.)

But what to do with an open can of it besides stir it into coffee? Here are a few practical uses for a leftover sweetened condensed milk:

Additional suggestions from the Food52 editors:

  • Make dulce de leche! David Lebovitz’s genius recipe is as simple as 1) pouring sweetened condensed milk into a pie plate with a bit of salt, 2) setting the plate in a water bath, 3) covering with foil and baking until caramelized.
  • If you have Café Du Monde with chicory (or any dark roast coffee, really) and some sweetened condensed milk, you’re just a few steps away from Vietnamese iced coffee. The super-strong, sweet, and slightly nutty (if you’ve got the chicory additon!) drink is a killer way to beat any sleepiness.
  • A batch of Thai iced tea, the creamy drink of black tea seasoned with star anise, crushed tamarind, and cardamom, mixed with whole and sweetened condensed milk poured over ice is all I want on a hot afternoon.
  • Add a hefty splash of sweetened condensed milk to your favorite fruit smoothie, like this berry-banana-oat number. It will no longer be vegan, but it will be an ice cream-less fruity milkshake.
  • This dreamy Pakistani Firni, also known as ground rice pudding, made with cardamom, saffron, and rose water, gets its sweetness from sweetened condensed milk.
  • Super-simple, sweet-tart key lime pie wouldn’t be the same without sweetened condensed milk.
  • It doesn’t need to be Passover to make a batch of pillow-centered, craggy-edged macaroons, which call for ¾ cup of sweetened condensed milk. I like to dunk them in dark chocolate and finish with flaky salt.
  • Cocktail writer Erik Lombardo has a tip for eggnog fans: the Puerto Rican version known as Coquito, which is made with sweetened condensed milk and coconut milk.

Donald Trump has real reason to be worried: Democrats are pursuing accountability this time

I have been chronicling the atrocities of the Trump era almost daily for five years and I’m exhausted. I don’t think I’m alone. One of Trump’s most insidious talents is to dominate the spotlight to such an extent that you can’t look away even if you want to. He’s everywhere. There is just so much, more than we can fully absorb, so we just keep watching, waiting for the spectacle to end, paralyzed and psychically drained.

And now it’s almost over.

Aside from some short appearances in the press room to declare himself the winner, a couple of desultory interviews with friendly cable news hosts, one low energy rally in Georgia and the extended, puerile whine of his Twitter account, Donald Trump has been blessedly out of sight for most of the past five weeks. There’s been no chopper talk, no televised Cabinet meetings with sycophantic tributes to his greatness, no crude insults toward reporters, nothing.

If one didn’t know better, one might assume that the president is ashamed because he lost the election and doesn’t want to face the public. But that would be wrong. If there’s one thing we know, it’s that Donald Trump has no shame.

We don’t know if Trump will fire more people, pardon himself and his family, start a war or simply continue to sit in the White House raging against his enemies and tweeting out lies about the election but the fact is that this long national acid trip is winding down at long last. Unfortunately, the hangover is going to be titanic. Unless the nation sobers up quickly and takes action, we may never recover.

The good news is that we are seeing signs of life in the U.S. Congress in this regard.

Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, gave notice this week that his committee intends to pursue the subpoena of former White House Counsel Don McGahn. You will recall that McGahn was not allowed to testify before Congress on the basis of a novel legal concept called “absolute immunity” which, if allowed to stand, would render congressional oversight practically impotent.

So while Democrats continue to pursue the subpoena as a means to push back against a legal principle that attempts to usurp their oversight powers, they will undoubtedly follow up on just what happened with all of that obstruction of justice Trump committed. They may not be able to sanction Trump for it, but they need to build the record — after all, this guy may try to bust his way back into power in four years.

Meanwhile, we have also learned that the Manhattan District Attorney and the New York Attorney General’s cases are proceeding apace. These cases are beyond the scope of any federal pardon, as you know, so Trump may be seeing the inside of a courtroom whether he pardons himself or not.

But is any of that enough? It can’t be, particularly when the New York Times and Politico reported earlier in the week something so shocking that it would be a crime not to investigate it.

Two political appointees at the CDC admitted that they had been instructed to slant pandemic advice according to guidance from people such as Ivanka Trump and Kellyanne Conway. And it’s now quite clear that the administration did adopt a herd immunity strategy to deal with the pandemic and lied about it. One incompetent adviser actually wrote “we want them infected” in an email.

We knew this, sort of. Trump had been quoted early in the pandemic wondering why we didn’t just let it “wash over the country” which Dr. Fauci, the head of infectious diseases at the National Institute of Health, explained would result in a horrible death toll. Still, Trump clung to that notion and ended up hiring a radiologist he first saw on Fox News, Dr. Scott Atlas, who promoted the concept. These new reports show the extent to which this policy filtered through the government and negatively affected the response. It was a conscious decision. Now over 300,000 people are dead and counting, many of whom might be alive today if Donald Trump were not the president of the United States when a pandemic hit our shores.

The Atlantic’s James Fallows took a look at the problem of accountability for what’s happened and I think his ideas for how to deal with it make a lot of sense. He suggests that the Biden White House steer clear of most of that work except for the important job of trying to make the executive branch work properly again. Obviously, he should remain hands-off any criminal investigations that might come through the Department of Justice, his only obligation there would be to appoint someone with credibility and integrity to handle whatever cases may already be percolating. So that leaves the Democrats, who control the congressional committees in the House, to create a Good Cop—Bad Cop dynamic between Biden and Nadler which might just be effective if the Democrats stay strong and don’t react to bad faith caterwauling from the Republicans.

Fallows also believes that Biden should appoint three commissions, which I think are vital and I really hope that someone in the administration is listening.

The first would be a commission to look at the pandemic response. This won’t be the last time we face such a crisis and this one was so much worse than it should have been. The country needs to know how it happened and understand how to ensure it doesn’t happen again.

The second commission Fallows recommends would look into the cases of family separation at the border, with an immediate task to find the children and then document meticulously exactly how such a program came to be implemented. As Fallows points out, this didn’t happen by executive fiat. There was complicity at all levels and it has to be exposed and dealt with. This grotesque policy is right up there with the pandemic in terms of sheer cruelty.

And finally, Biden needs to appoint a commission to investigate the Trump administration’s assault on democracy itself. He didn’t invent it, of course, but he’s taken it to a level that is in danger of permanently damaging our election system and people’s faith in their democracy. And he’s done so on the basis of crude lies and propaganda.

Biden doesn’t have to be personally involved in any of this. He can stay above the fray and concentrate on doing the job he was hired to do. But these commissions would go a long way toward reassuring the majority of Americans who are still shell-shocked by what has happened in these four years that at least there will be a public airing and permanent record of what went wrong. Most people are hungry for the truth and while I doubt Trump’s followers will want to hear it, we need the truth for the history books. At some point, their children or grandchildren may want to know what really happened.  

Donald Trump’s herd immunity: Who’s the real “enemy of the people”?

Coronavirus fascism has forced a new clarity of vision on the American people.

For those Americans who choose to see more clearly, the following truths cannot be reasonably denied: Today’s Republican Party and the right-wing movement more generally are the greatest threat to America and the world’s safety, security and survival today. In fact, Trump and the Republican Party do not care if the American people live or die.

However horrible an authoritarian’s public behavior is, what is revealed after their regime is removed from power will be even worse. In that light a new report from Politico about the Trump regime’s philosophy of coronavirus “democide” — under the euphemism “herd immunity” — should not in any way be a surprise. Cruelty is the norm for authoritarians, autocrats and fascists.  

Dan Diamond reports for Politico on the Trump appointee at Health and Human Services who vigorously argued for allowing “millions of Americans to be infected” by the coronavirus:

“There is no other way, we need to establish herd [immunity], and it only comes about allowing the non-high risk groups expose themselves to the virus. PERIOD,” then-science adviser Paul Alexander wrote on July 4 to his boss, Health and Human Services assistant secretary for public affairs Michael Caputo, and six other senior officials.

“Infants, kids, teens, young people, young adults, middle aged with no conditions etc. have zero to little risk … so we use them to develop herd. … We want them infected …” Alexander added.

“[I]t may be that it will be best if we open up and flood the zone and let the kids and young folk get infected” in order to get “natural immunity … natural exposure,” Alexander wrote on July 24 to Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen Hahn, Caputo and eight other senior officials. Caputo subsequently asked Alexander to research the idea, according to emails obtained by the House Oversight Committee’s select subcommittee on coronavirus.

Alexander was not a peripheral figure in the Trump regime. Diamond describes him as, “a top deputy of Caputo,” personally installed by Trump in April to lead communications efforts at HHS. Officials told Politico they believed that Alexander had the backing of the White House: 

“It was understood that he spoke for Michael Caputo, who spoke for the White House,” said Kyle McGowan, a Trump appointee who was CDC chief of staff before leaving this summer. “That’s how they wanted it to be perceived.”

Of course, the Trump regime could not resist its racist compulsions, in this case a willingness to sacrifice the lives of nonwhite people in an effort to bolster Trump’s re-election campaign. Alexander “spent months attacking government scientists and pushing to shape official statements” to favor Trump. In May, he reportedly described a CDC draft statement on the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on nonwhite people as “very accurate,” but then cautioned that “in this election cycle that is the kind of statement coming from CDC that the media and Democrat [sic] antagonists will use against the president.”

What cannot be lost or forgotten is that Alexander’s commands were part of a larger strategy motivated first and foremost by Trump’s authoritarianism impulses, and by an associated desire to see his political enemies suffer and even die. The Trump regime also sabotaged and otherwise interfered with coronavirus relief efforts for major American cities with large populations of Democrats and nonwhite people.

On its own, the Trump regime’s democidal attacks on the American people through “herd immunity,” and the lies and machinations intended to conceal that policy, are a crime against humanity. Beyond the immediate outrage, the Trump regime’s efforts must also be seen in the broader context of lethal behavior by Republicans and the right-wing movement as a whole.

Across a range of issues, from gun safety to the environment, racism, the death penalty, the social safety net and public health, and worsening social and economic inequality, the Republican Party has for decades advanced policies that cause literal death and harm to the American people. Despite its hypocritical language about reproductive rights, the Republican Party is effectively anti-life.

Dr. James Gilligan details the partisan connections between public policy and violent deaths from suicide and murder in his book “Why Some Politicians Are More Dangerous Than Others.” Here is one striking passage:

[E]ach party and each administration can be seen as a package containing many different ingredients, some toxic and some salubrious for public health, social and mental (as measured by rates of suicide and homicide), just as cigarettes are a package containing a variety of ingredients that add to their lethality, and regular exercise is a package containing a variety of ingredients that prolong life. The implications of the research reported here for American politics is rather stark: the Republican Party functions as a risk factor for lethal violence and the Democratic Party functions as a protective factor. … And since the two parties have diametrically opposed effects on the rates of lethal violence, the choice between electing Republicans and Democrats to the White House is a choice between life and death, and not just one death but thousands of them, year after year.

In the Trump era, the right-wing movement has taken this politics of death to the extreme. Trump and his allies repeatedly encourage lethal political violence against Democrats, liberals, progressives, nonwhite people, and others deemed to be their enemies. Trump’s agents, allies, and supporters are nearly a literal death cult, willing to sacrifice the lives of the American people on the altar of capitalism and “the economy.”

The Trump regime’s economic policies during the pandemic have further siphoned resources away from the commons, the general welfare and the American people upward to the richest individuals and corporations. While the American people are enduring a wave of death, economic immiseration and human destruction, Trump and the rest of the plutocrat class have become wealthier and more powerful than they were before the pandemic began. As decades of research shows, wealth and income do not “trickle down” to the rest of society. Instead, extreme wealth and income inequality diminishes life opportunities — and the literal lives — of the American people.

With knowledge comes the ability to organize and resist, with the goal of holding elites responsible and making a more democratic, free and humane society. To that end, the American people must educate themselves about the vast scale of the right-wing movement’s campaign against their health, safety, security and prosperity.

The American people will need to internalize concepts such as “necropolitics” (the literal politics of death, in which the state decides which individuals and groups live or die); “pathocracy” (the idea that American culture is unhealthy on a fundamental level, which generates antisocial behavior among the public as a whole and empowers dangerous leaders like Donald Trump); “the culture of cruelty” (an interlocking system of institutional power relationships and norms that create human misery across society); and “gangster capitalism” (neoliberalism), which prioritizes profits over people.

In all, the American people need a vocabulary of resistance to take what they know instinctively to be wrong and then to translate that understanding and energy into collective action.

*  *  *

President-elect Joe Biden is continuing with his pleas for “unity,” urging Americans to “come together” and “move forward” as a nation after the Trump nightmare ends. Beyond the absurd demand that his voters and other decent Americans should embrace Trump’s deplorables, Biden may even include some Republicans in his administration to show “middle America” that their concerns are being “heard.” 

In too many ways, Biden is choosing to back away from the confrontation that is required to force a national reckoning with the evils of Trumpism and the harm it caused America. At a minimum, there should be a truth commission and public hearings to expose the Trump regime’s crimes. If merited, Trump himself and other members of his regime should face criminal prosecution.

Unfortunately, if Donald Trump’s misdeeds, and those of his inner circle, are never confronted directly, it is all but inevitable that a more dangerous American fascist will rise to power. Every era faces world-historical events, turning points in history. Joe Biden’s presidency, at this intersection with the Age of Trump, is one such moment. Biden can choose to lead or choose to be dragged along by the toxic currents of our time. To behave as if Donald Trump’s criminal regime should face no accountability is to choose the latter path — one that does not end well for Joe Biden’s presidency or America’s future.

Did Mitch McConnell block relief bill for months because of a Kentucky nursing home mogul?

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has for months stonewalled a new round of coronavirus emergency relief, specifically digging in on liability protections for businesses as a “red line” in negotiations with House Democrats and the Trump administration. But with a government shutdown looming at midnight on Friday, negotiations on a new bill have in recent days inched forward, with McConnell signaling he would yield on his key sticking point, apparently in part because he fears another failed attempt would damage the two Republican senators facing tight runoff elections in Georgia early next month.

Still, McConnell will almost certainly not abandon his crusade for corporate immunity, which for months has stood in the way of much-needed relief for tens of millions of Americans struggling under the health and economic burdens brought about by the woefully uncontained coronavirus pandemic.

During that time, the issue has stymied talks not only with House Democrats, but also with the Trump White House. Observers expect that even if McConnell relents on the demand for now, he’ll pocket it for leverage in future negotiations under Joe Biden’s administration.

Last week, Rep. Katie Porter, D-Calif., attacked McConnell’s demands as callous.

“These lawsuits represent the worst of the worst examples of disregard for human life — cases filed on behalf of nursing home patients and grocery store workers who died because the company in charge of keeping them safe prioritized cutting costs over protecting them,” Porter wrote on Twitter. “The same McConnell who said that President Trump is ‘100% within his rights’ to pursue baseless lawsuits alleging election fraud is now refusing to pass urgently-needed relief unless it strips those same rights from the most vulnerable among us. This must be exposed.”

The same question was also raised in May, in a New York Times op-ed written by a trial lawyer, entitled, “Why Is Mitch McConnell Protecting Nursing Homes?”:

While thousands of Americans perish daily from Covid-19, the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, has chosen a scapegoat to distract from our government’s failures. Claiming that the disease will become “the biggest trial lawyer bonanza in history,” Mr. McConnell is drafting legislation to protect the nursing home industry from lawsuits — even though home residents and workers represent a third of the country’s coronavirus deaths.

In October, the man who affectionately calls himself the “Grim Reaper” made a show of securing an extra $5.3 million in emergency relief for long-term care facilities in Kentucky. Just last week he announced that nursing homes in the state would see another $10 million.

“With promising signs of a vaccine on the horizon, now is not the time to lose focus on slowing the spread of this virus. I’m proud my CARES Act is continuing to invest in protecting Kentucky seniors and frontline workers,” McConnell said in a statement.

In all, Kentucky nursing homes have received more than $180 million in federal coronavirus relief funds.

This issue, it turns out, happens to be of particular concern to one of McConnell’s most loyal and longstanding allies: a prominent businessman and Republican donor in Kentucky named Terry Forcht.

Forcht is the founder and CEO of Forcht Bancorp, one of the largest financial conglomerates in the state, and he casts a long shadow in Kentucky Republican politics. His empire, the Forcht Group, is the parent company of 95 entities and employs more than 2,400 people, stretching to commercial real estate, insurance, retail and radio stations. He has a sprawling horse farm just outside Lexington.

The self-made multimillionaire has thrown money at local, state and federal conservatives for years, racking up well over a million dollars in contributions in that time. But perhaps even more important than the cash is Forcht’s influence in the Republican stronghold of eastern Kentucky, home base to the Forcht enterprise, as well as his political connections to national heavyweights, including McConnell and legendary GOP strategist Karl Rove.

Forcht has been one of McConnell’s top backers for decades, and in 2014 the majority leader offered a tribute to Forcht on the Senate floor. In fact, the two men are so close that McConnell penned the foreword to a biography of Forcht published earlier this year, a propaganda piece co-written by the Forcht Group’s chief marketing officer. In it, the U.S. Senate’s leader lauded Forcht as “a model Kentuckian and indeed, a model American.”

One former Kentucky Democratic official described Forcht to Salon as “a devil of a motherfucker — as rapacious, insistent, hardcore a right-wing Republican as you can get.”

“That’s not an unexpected characterization,” another state Democratic official told Salon. “He’s no Joe Craft,” the official continued, referencing a powerful Kentucky coal magnate, “but he’s certainly plugged in. He can get a phone call answered any time.”

That description seems accurate. The Louisville Courier-Journal reported in 2014 that Forcht’s family and employees had given $1.1 million in political donations over the previous 11 years, almost exclusively to Republicans. Forcht contributed $3 million to create the Forcht Center for Entrepreneurship in the School of Business at the University of Louisville, and donated another $300,000 to finish a set of murals in the State Capitol rotunda in Frankfort.

In 2010, when Rove’s American Crossroads super PAC had to set up its first checking account, it did not turn to a major national institution or a familiar bank in Washington, but went with regional Forcht Bank. According to a contemporaneous report in the Washington Post, the decision fell to Rove associate Mike Duncan, a former Bluegrass State banker and chair of the Republican National Committee.

The true font of Forcht’s political influence, however, is his nursing homes. He started his first one in 1972 and today owns nine of them, but even at age 81 is by all accounts in no danger of needing to move into one himself. Forcht reportedly wakes up at 3 a.m. every day but Sunday, when he rises at 5. For his epitaph, Forcht has said he’s considering: “I wish I could have worked one more day.”

As of 2009, those nine homes were still Forcht Group’s largest income stream. But in the era of the COVID pandemic, those facilities, as well as Forcht’s insurance outfits, suddenly loom large as liabilities — especially in Kentucky.

“He would certainly want to limit his exposure. He’s in both long-term care and insurance, so he’s got a keener awareness for the dynamics,” a Kentucky Democratic official told Salon. “And he’s vertically integrated, with the homes, the banking and insurance. He built his empire like that over time, owning these franchises in rural areas, then slowly moving into Lexington. He’s pleasant, and portrays himself as a homegrown east Kentucky guy, but he’s got a patrician air.”

Earlier this month, with McConnell dug in on liability protections, 96 residents and 42 staff members tested positive amid an outbreak at a Forcht home in Hazard, Kentucky, which had already seen at least four deaths. State statistics and national Medicare database show that Forcht’s facility in Williamsburg has seen at least 66 cases and 12 deaths so far. Forcht’s Knott County facility has reported at least 45 cases and eight deaths, while another in Hillcrest registered at least 198 cases and nine deaths. This fall, Forcht homes saw a series of outbreaks that have made Kentucky news.

Troublingly, one outbreak in Knox County this October led to a spike of cases in the greater community, which continued for weeks.

There has already been at least one large, multimillion-dollar negligence civil suit filed against an elderly care facility in the state. Additionally, the price of nursing home care in Kentucky this year rose faster than national trends, and business costs and risks are expected to lead to rate hikes in 2021, according to an annual survey from Genworth, an insurance firm that specializes in long-term care.

All the while, Mitch McConnell has held a national relief package hostage to five-year extended business liability protections.

Although Forcht’s multiple insurance assets also stand at increased risk, nursing home liability is an especially sore spot — his facilities have a troubled history.

In 2010, when Karl Rove’s American Crossroads opened its Forcht Bank account, then-Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway was investigating allegations of sexual abuse at one of the facilities. Conway, a Democrat, was concurrently challenging Republican nominee Rand Paul for an open U.S. Senate seat — a race Paul would go on to win, boosted by the nearly $2 million that American Crossroads poured into attacking Conway, including radio spots. (Forcht owns 22 radio stations.)

On separate occasions in 2009, two male residents in Forcht’s Hazard Health and Rehab home sexually assaulted a 91-year-old Alzheimer’s patient, once within sight of one of the home’s supervisors. The home escaped criminal liability by paying a $20,000 fine. In the same home, a dementia patient fell 11 times, breaking a hip before she was moved out. Another Hazard resident died in 2006 with “a gaping pressure ulcer and bedsores,” according to the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting.

The cases went to court. One was settled for an undisclosed sum. A jury awarded the family of the dementia patient $300,000, including $225,000 for the home’s “reckless disregard.”

In another negligence case, also settled in 2010, a jury awarded $7 million to a former resident of Forcht’s Hillcrest Health & Rehab who ruptured fresh sutures around her knee when she fell trying to reach the restroom. A home employee had reportedly refused to help her, and placed the call button out of reach.

“The nurse who came in and found her said that it was a horrific sight,” said an attorney representing the resident, who had to be resuscitated due to blood loss and spent two months in the hospital.

Following that spate of suits, Forcht tried to change the state’s medical liability laws. For the next several years, he pushed Republican lawmakers to pass legislation that would require all claims to be vetted by panels of “health care providers.”

In 2017, he got his wish. But it didn’t last: One year later, the Kentucky state Supreme Court struck down the law as unconstitutional.

“Republicans in the state have sort of kept a distance from him since then,” a Democratic official told Salon. “They feel a little burned, a little embarrassed at how quickly that fell apart.”

That did not diminish Forcht’s influence in the state. In 2019, amid outgoing Republican Gov. Matt Bevin’s spree of more than 400 pardons and commutations, Forcht helped convince Bevin to pardon convicted murderer Patrick Baker — and his involvement made national news.

“Letters show Forcht twice recommended Baker for a pardon and Bevin obliged, over the advice of former state Rep. Denny Butler, an investigator looking into Baker’s case on Bevin’s behalf,” according to The Courier Journal.

Forcht had hosted a fundraiser for Bevin in March of that year at his London, Kentucky, home, which raised $33,150. Four years earlier, he had contributed $100,000 to Bevin’s 2015 inaugural.

Asked about the decision in an interview on Kentucky’s WHAS, Bevin praised Forcht as a philanthropist and “one of the most generous people in Kentucky.”

“Why vilify a guy like that simply because he had an opinion of somebody who was incarcerated?” Bevin wondered.

McConnell, by that time back on the ballot for the 2020 election, expressed disgust at what he called the “completely inappropriate” pardons, which extended to rape, murder and drug offenses.

“I expect he had the power to do it, but looking at the examples of people who were incarcerated as a result of heinous crimes — no, I don’t approve of it,” he said.

Two months later, however, McConnell attended his own campaign fundraiser at Forcht’s home.

Richard Beliles, chairman of Common Cause Kentucky, a group that advocates for accountability and equity in government, has stood opposite McConnell on most issues for decades, specifically campaign finance. He told Salon that Forcht and McConnell likely have a broader long-term goal, and may be trying to wrap otherwise untenable liability protections in the bunting of the pandemic.

“These liability protections might help someone like Forcht, but many more people who may be accidentally injured, they’re sort of out of luck,” Beliles said.

Indeed, McConnell wants the shield to last for five years, longer than even some of his Republican colleagues, though last week he appeared to back off. If Republicans and Democrats can’t come together on a package by midnight on Friday, the government will shut down, with only a month to go until President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration.

“I’m hoping that maybe now, with Biden coming in, [McConnell] can do everything right for this issue that affects the needy in this country,” Beliles said. “I know we really need it, the people of Kentucky need it.”

“I guess I sound like an optimist, in terms of cooperation between the Democrats and Republicans,” Beliles added. “But if we’re this close, I don’t want to offend him.”

Neither the Forcht Group nor McConnell’s office replied to Salon’s requests for comment.

From the desk of Pete Buttigieg (corrected)

Being a careful proofreader, I provided some volunteer assistance to Mayor Pete:

———- Forwarded message ———
From: Pete Buttigieg <info@wintheera.com>
Date: Wed, Dec 16, 2020
Subject: Thank you

Hi there,

Earlier today I stood on stage with President-elect Biden, where I was humbled to be paid off by being nominated to serve our nation as Secretary of Transportation.

Of course, as I look forward to taking on this new challenge and serving some of my most devoted paymasters on Wall Street, I can’t help but reflect for a moment on the road we’ve traveled together to block the big, bad socialist, Bernie Sanders — and to feel a deep sense of gratitude for this community of supporters and especially for the corporate elites who made my presidential campaign so strong.

Whether you joined back when we were four people working out of a tiny office in downtown South Bend or signed up last week — to everyone who has been a part of this effort, talking to your family and friends, posting on social media, or chipping in when you could — I want to say thank you for ignoring my corkscrew double talk about health care and my overall misuse of my prodigious intellect to pander in highly circuitous ways.

Through it all, we’ve stuck to our Rules of the Road, well aware that the path to Pennsylvania Avenue power requires sucking up to corporate power — and Chasten and I are so grateful for the kindness you’ve shown to us at each step. You’ve proven that a politics built around who we can call to our side, where everyone can find belonging, isn’t just possible — it’s here. My solidarity with Amy and Beto to support Joe at the crucial moment is paying huge dividends.

Below are my remarks from today’s event. And I wanted you to know I’m looking forward to when our paths will cross again when I try once again to bamboozle the public into believing I’m highly principled as I seek higher office and to seeing all the ways I know you will stay involved to help win the era to come — and to generate ever more creative propaganda from the “center” that has gotten us into calamitous situations that now afflict so many people in our nation.

Best,
Pete

On the first day of Christmas, teachers got a headache over blurred line between church and state

During a school year disrupted by pandemic-related closures, students across the U.S. will soon be absent for a scheduled reason: the annual Christmas break.

In New York City, the U.S.’s largest school district, children will be off from Dec. 24 to Jan. 1. Officially called “winter” recess, the December hiatus coincides with Christian celebrations, adding to the number of approved days that many students take off from school on religious holidays, including Eid al-Fitr and Yom Kippur.

As an academic who writes and teaches on education and the law with a special interest in church-state issues, I find it fascinating to note how religious holidays came to be acknowledged in public schools. But these traditions also pose a legal challenge in the classroom and concern over blurring the line of separation between church and state. The reality is that in the lead-up to the winter break — or the “December dilemma,” as some call it — public school officials walk a fine line when it comes to what they can and can’t display in classrooms in relation to Christmas.

Holy days and holidays

The observance of selected religious holidays in public schools has a long history in the United States. When compulsory attendance laws emerged in the mid-19th century, they were heavily influenced by the religious beliefs and practices that followed the earliest European settlers to the American colonies.

In a piecemeal fashion that varied from one state to the next and even among school systems in the same states, school board officials recognized and broke for the Christian holidays of Christmas and Easter, including Good Friday.

The unofficial religion of American public schools until well into the mid-20th century was Protestantism and typically followed the teachings of the locally dominant Protestant churches.

Because Catholic immigrants — and their children — were often unwelcomed in the 19th-century United States, a meeting of bishops at the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1884 decreed that all parishes had to maintain schools to which parents were obligated to send their children. As a result, time off for Christmas and Easter became firmly set in Catholic schools as it was in public schools.

Christianity remains the largest single faith in the United States. But growing religious diversity has seen more religious holy days being marked in public schools. Still, few school boards nationally close in honor of the Jewish holidays. And, until very recently, the holy days of other faiths were completely ignored. New York City was one of the earliest, acknowledging Muslim holidays from the 2015-16 school year.

Similarly, in 2017-18 six suburban school districts in New York state declared a holiday on the Hindu festival Diwali.

But these are the exception rather than the rule. A study of the 2017-18 school year, found that of the 20 largest school systems in the U.S., only New York City, Philadelphia and Palm Beach, Florida, closed for Rosh Hashana, and only New York City closed for Yom Kippur and Eid al-Adha. None of the school systems closed for Diwali.

Things are changing in the face of growing religious diversity in the U.S. Educational leaders and lawmakers in states such as New York and Michigan have taken recent steps to ensure that the religious holy days of other faiths are commemorated in public school.

Mixed legal messages

Meanwhile the status of how religious holidays can be marked in class remains unclear. The Supreme Court has yet to address such a case directly. Arguably, the leading case on religious holidays arose 40 years ago, when the Eighth Circuit upheld guidelines that a school board in South Dakota developed for use in connection with religious observances, most notably Christmas.

The court suggested that explanations of historical and contemporary values relating to religious holidays were permissible, as was the use of religious symbols as examples and the integration of music, art, literature and drama with religious themes if they were presented objectively as a traditional part of the cultural and religious heritages of holidays.

Other rulings have teachers walking a fine, but murky, line. While the Supreme Court has ruled that educators cannot allow overt religious activities such as prayer and Bible reading in schools, justices added that “nothing we have said here indicates that such study of the Bible or of religion, when presented objectively as part of a secular program of education, may not be effected consistently with the First Amendment.”

The court has yet to set clear parameters about how religious holidays can be celebrated in public schools and whether granting access to all faith traditions is either constitutionally necessary or acceptable.

To gift or not?

Classroom activities present three special concerns. Courts agree that public school teachers cannot permit religious activities such as prayer or the use of religious music in class absent curricular connections. The Sixth Circuit in 2008 went so far as to affirm that a fifth grader in Michigan could not sell candy cane Christmas tree ornaments he made as part of a school project if they were attached to religious cards “promoting Jesus.”

But a federal trial court in Texas two years later allowed students to sell “holiday” cards with biblical messages because doing so was not disruptive to school activities.

A second concern — the displays of religious art such as Nativity scenes or paintings — is trickier. Again, while there is no Supreme Court judgment in regard to K-12 schools, an argument can be made from lower court orders. One such case from South Dakota found that religious art in schools may be permissible as parts of larger displays but that it cannot be overtly Christian and must emphasize the secular aspects of the season. Under this interpretation, placing Nativity scenes or displaying religious objects or paintings alone in schools, regardless of the time of year, likely violates the First Amendment by endorsing Christianity.

A case illustrative of the confusion over classroom displays arose in New York City in 2006. The Second Circuit decided that public school officials could allow displays of menorahs during Hanukkah and stars and crescents during Ramadan because both were deemed multicultural secular symbols. But the court forbade the display of a Nativity scene due to its explicitly religious nature.

Gift-giving during the holiday season represents a third concern. Educators probably can permit “secret Santa” exchanges as long as they are secular in nature and do not invoke any references to Christmas. However, courts largely agree that teachers cannot allow students to exchange identifiable Christian gifts, such as candy canes or pencils with attached religious messages, while in class.

Teachable moments

What can be lost in this legal quagmire is, I believe, the chance to engage children in religious literacy. If educators and the courts prohibit students from learning about the religious traditions of their peers, especially when teachable moments emerge during holidays, one must wonder how children can develop tolerance of — and respect for — faiths different from their own.

The challenge, then, for public school educators is walking the fine line by exposing children to religious celebrations while steering clear of violating the Constitution by making certain that they teach about religion rather than proselytize a particular form of belief.

Charles J. Russo, Joseph Panzer Chair in Education in the School of Education and Health Sciences and Research Professor of Law, University of Dayton

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

Senate Republicans throw the brakes on timing for Becerra hearings

Senate Republicans are signaling they will delay considering President-elect Joe Biden’s nominee to run the Department of Health and Human Services, threatening to slow the Biden administration’s response to the pandemic that has killed more than 283,000 Americans.

On Monday, Republican spokespeople for the committees responsible for vetting HHS nominations said the Senate may not hold hearings on California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, Biden’s pick to lead the department, until the Senate approves committee assignments and other organizational details for the new Congress.

Republicans, who will hold at least 50 seats next year, remain in control of the Senate until Jan. 20. But Georgia has two Senate runoff elections scheduled for Jan. 5, and those results will determine which party controls the chamber in the new, 117th Congress.

Political observers say the results could take days or even weeks.

“Every day is a wasted day,” said Kathleen Sebelius, who served as President Barack Obama’s first HHS secretary. (Sebelius is on the board of KFF, and KHN is an editorially independent program of KFF.)

On Monday, Biden announced he has asked Becerra to serve as HHS secretary. Becerra mounted a vigorous defense of Democratic health laws against the Trump administration and other Republicans. He led the effort by 20 states and the District of Columbia to fight a suit brought by Republican state officials and supported by President Donald Trump to overturn the Affordable Care Act. That case was argued before the Supreme Court last month.

The early reaction from Republicans signaled Becerra could face strong political opposition to his nomination, with critics like Arkansas Sen. Tom Cotton citing Becerra’s opposition to abortion restrictions and calling him “unqualified” to lead HHS.

“I’ll be voting no, and Becerra should be rejected by the Senate,” he wrote on Twitter. Becerra also supported single-payer health care reform.

In addition, Biden intends to name Dr. Rochelle Walensky, chief of infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital, as the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and private equity executive Jeffrey Zients to be his COVID “czar” heading up a task force in the White House. Those jobs do not require Senate confirmation. Biden is nominating Dr. Vivek Murthy as surgeon general, who must face hearings before the Senate.

Becerra would be the first Latino to lead HHS. Before becoming attorney general, he served in the House of Representatives, representing Los Angeles for 24 years. There, he was a member of Democratic leadership and served on the Ways and Means Committee, the House committee charged with writing health-related tax policy.

Becerra returned to California in 2017, replacing the outgoing attorney general who had just been elected to the Senate — now Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.

The HHS secretary is responsible for one of the federal government’s largest departments, coordinating not only the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services but also the Food and Drug Administration and the CDC — agencies critical to the nation’s pandemic response.

Although Biden has created his own task force to address the pandemic, the White House lacks many of the powers of the HHS secretary — including the authority to implement its own recommendations, said Donna Shalala, who served as HHS secretary under President Bill Clinton for eight years.

“Any delay [in confirmation] delays COVID, despite a strong White House coordination,” Shalala said, “because you’ve got to get the agencies in sync and you can’t do that from the White House.”

In 2009, as H1N1 flu began to spread and Obama’s first HHS pick withdrew from consideration, the administration was forced to improvise. With no confirmed health secretary, Obama turned to Janet Napolitano, the Homeland Security secretary, to coordinate a plan to distribute vaccines with the CDC.

Sebelius was sworn in as HHS secretary in late April, two days after the Obama administration declared H1N1 a public health emergency.

It would be hard to mount a pandemic response without a secretary, she said. “That pressure falls on Congress,” Sebelius said. “There’s just a sense we can’t screw around with this.”

She also added that the Obama administration did not pursue any lower-level health appointments before confirming the secretary, a protocol that left many offices vacant. She expects Biden will follow the same process.

The Senate can, and often does, begin considering nominees before a new president is sworn in, in particular by arranging one-on-one meetings for senators and examining a nominee’s qualifications and background. Presidents Donald Trump and George W. Bush’s nominees for HHS secretary both received confirmation hearings before Inauguration Day, though Democrats later fought Trump’s nominee, then-Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.), by boycotting his committee vote.

Republicans say that until the Senate approves what is known as an organizing resolution, which formalizes details like which senators sit on which committees, they cannot move forward with confirmation hearings.

A further complication is that while Republicans already control the two committees tasked with vetting an HHS secretary, neither chairman is staying in that job next year. Sen. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, who runs the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, is retiring from Congress. And due to term limits, Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, who runs the Finance Committee, will move to a different committee.

Senate Democrats, who would take control of the confirmation process next month should they win both of Georgia’s Senate seats, praised the selection of Becerra and promised to push for a speedy process.

Becerra “has been a staunch defender of affordable health care and preexisting condition protections in the face of Trump’s attacks in court and federal regulation,” said Oregon Sen. Ron Wyden, the Finance Committee’s top Democrat. “I look forward to Attorney General Becerra’s hearing in the Finance Committee as soon as possible next year, so he is on the job quickly.”

“Xavier Becerra is a highly qualified nominee, and I will be pushing for a swift, fair confirmation so we can get to work on the serious health issues our nation faces,” said Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, the HELP Committee’s top Democrat.

If Democrats win both of the Georgia elections next month, the Senate would be evenly split 50-50, likely leading to debates about how to divide control and distracting senators from nomination hearings.

When that happened in 2001, Senate Democrats held the majority for a couple of weeks until Bush was sworn in, making Vice President Dick Cheney the tie-breaking vote and giving Republicans the majority on Jan. 20. Bush’s first HHS secretary, Tommy Thompson, was confirmed four days later.

Bill Dauster, who advised Democrats on the Senate’s procedural rules for decades, said that the split took a long time to negotiate in 2001 but that it left behind a model that senators can use today.

Senate Republicans could follow the precedent of holding hearings before the inauguration, especially due to the urgency of responding to the pandemic, Dauster said.

“If they don’t, it will clearly be foot-dragging,” he said.

Kaiser Health News (KHN) is a national health policy news service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

Biden quietly adds Goldman Sachs veterans to transition team

President-elect Joe Biden’s transition team in recent weeks has quietly brought aboard alumni of Wall Street titan Goldman Sachs, tech giants Google and Facebook, and notorious consulting firm McKinsey, heightening alarm among watchdog groups that have urged the incoming administration to steer clear of the corrupting influence of corporate America.

Without the public announcements that accompanied the president-elect’s cabinet picks and original members of the transition, Team Biden has added to its agency review groups Monica Maher, vice president for cyber threat intelligence at Goldman Sachs; Eric Goldstein, an 18-year Goldman Sachs veteran; and Josh Zoffer, a former engagement manager at McKinsey who now works at private equity firm Cove Hill Partners.

On or around Thanksgiving, Politico reported, Biden’s transition also “quietly added four Facebook and Google employees to its agency review teams,” despite pressure on the president-elect to resist Big Tech’s efforts to “co-opt” his administration. As Reuters pointed out earlier this month, there are currently “more tech executives than tech critics on Biden’s transition team.”

Eleanor Eagan, research assistant at the Revolving Door Project (RDP), an initiative that scrutinizes executive branch appointees, told Common Dreams Tuesday that the Biden team appears to have been counting on “people not paying quite as much attention” to later additions to the transition team.

“This move by the transition team to slip in these revolving-door figures later in the game certainly is a troubling indication of what could be to come” as Biden begins staffing lower-profile but powerful positions in his administration, said Eagan.

As part of its ongoing effort to shine light on industry influence on the upper reaches of the federal government, RDP on Tuesday morning unveiled a Personnel Map that aims to visualize and track “the breadth and depth of corporate America’s interest in the executive branch.”

News of Biden’s latest additions to his transition team “fits very well with what we’re trying to highlight with the Personnel Map,” said Eagan.

“Corporate America is meticulous in its pursuit of influence over the executive branch, targeting not only the highest profile spots but the full slate of relatively obscure, powerful positions beneath them,” Eagan added in a statement. “The Revolving Door Project believes it is time for groups with the public interest at heart to think just as expansively about executive branch governance.”

With Biden’s cabinet beginning to take shape following his picks to lead the State Department, the Pentagon, the Agriculture DepartmentHousing and Urban Development, and other key agencies, progressives are growing increasingly concerned about the corporate ties and business-friendly records of several of his nominees.

Tom Vilsack, Biden’s pick to lead USDA, is a dairy industry lobbyist; retired Gen. Lloyd Austin, the president-elect’s nominee for defense secretary, currently serves on the board of Raytheon, one of the largest military contractors in the world; and Antony Blinken, Biden’s secretary of state pick, co-founded a consultancy firm that has worked on behalf of corporate clients in the tech, finance, and arms industries.

“I think there are some red flags or, in this case, some discouraging blue flags,” Norman Solomon, national director of the progressive advocacy group RootsAction.org, told the Associated Press over the weekend, pointing specifically to Neera Tanden, Biden’s pickto lead the Office of Management and Budget.

Progressives have also been vocalizing their frustration with what they view as a lack of representation among the president-elect’s nominees thus far. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) told Axios last week that given the significant role it played in Biden’s decisive victory, “the progressive movement deserves a number of seats—important seats—in the Biden administration.”

“Have I seen that at this point? I have not,” the Vermont senator said. “I’ve told the Biden people: The progressive movement is 35-40% of the Democratic coalition. Without a lot of other enormously hard work on the part of grassroots activists and progressives, Joe would not have won the election.”

Evan Weber, political director of the youth-led Sunrise Movement, told the Washington Post over the weekend that “we cannot move forward in a new direction with just the same people, including some of the people who are responsible for the mess we are in.”

“We would like to see more young progressives in roles in the Biden administration,” said Weber.

Taylor Swift moved her album release date for Paul McCartney

Paul McCartney was interviewed on The Howard Stern Show earlier this week, where he revealed that he and Taylor Swift made sure that their respective albums — Swift’s “Evermore” and McCartney’s “McCartney III” — didn’t come out on the same day.

Read more from Rolling Stone: See Dave Grohl, Greg Kurstin cover Velvet Underground’s “Rock ‘n’ Roll”

“I did the Rolling Stone cover with Taylor Swift, and she just emailed me recently, and she said, ‘I wasn’t telling anyone, but I’ve got another album,'” the former Beatle recalled. “And she said, ‘So I was going to put it out on my birthday.’ . . .  And then she said, ‘But I found out you were going to put [yours] out on the 10th. So I moved it to the 18th.’ And then she found out we were coming out on the 18th so she moved back to the 10th. So I mean, you know, people do keep out of each other’s way. It’s a nice thing to do.”

Read more from Rolling Stone: Ozzy Osbourne writing 9-minute “Really Crazy Journeys” for new album, producer says

“McCartney III” will be released on December 18th, provided there are no further setbacks caused by other blockbuster albums. Like Swift, McCartney recorded his latest album largely in isolation during the Covid-19 pandemic, working with his collaborators remotely.

Read more from Rolling Stone: Paul McCartney delivers a playful gem with “McCartney III”

During his interview with Stern, McCartney also discussed the process of writing music at a young age, being labeled “the cute one” out of the Beatles, and what McCartney III means to him personally.

“Mandalorian” star Pedro Pascal hopes to appear in upcoming “Star Wars” shows

If Pedro Pascal gets his way, “The Mandalorian” won’t be the only time the actor gets to portray his beloved bounty hunting hero on Disney+.

Pascal discussed his Mando character during a recent interview with Comicbook.com shortly after Disney announced that a myriad of other “Star Wars” shows would premiere on the company’s streaming service over the next few years. Pascal said that he hadn’t been briefed by Disney’s higher-ups about Mando appearing in other shows but noted that he was keeping his hopes up for opportunities to reprise his role in other “Star Wars” shows.

Read more from IndieWireThe podcasts of 2020: A tribute

“Man, fingers crossed. How could you not? This is like, this is something that’s so much bigger than all of us, and we’re all a passenger to it in a great way,” Pascal said. “And so, I find out, as it is decided and shared.”

There’s certainly a precedent for upcoming “Star Wars” shows to feature popular characters: “The Mandalorian” has boasted plenty of cameos from famous fan favorites such as Boba Fett and Ahsoka Tano, and Disney has already found immense success via character crossovers in its lucrative Marvel Cinematic Universe franchise. Furthermore, two of Disney+’s upcoming shows — “The Rangers of the New Republic” and an untitled Ahsoka Tano series — have been billed as spinoffs of “The Mandalorian.”

Read more from IndieWireBest Christmas gifts for movie lovers

Disney announced a slew of new “Star Wars” shows earlier in December, including a Lando Calrissian series that will be helmed by “Dear White People” creator Justin Simien. The company also announced that the Ewan McGregor-led “Obi-Wan Kenobi” series will see Hayden Christensen will return as Darth Vader and stated that a new series about “Rogue One” character Cassian Andor, portrayed by Diego Luna, has just begun production and will debut in 2022.

As for Pascal, “The Mandalorian” isn’t the only high-profile title the actor will appear in before the year’s end. Pascal will portray supervillain Max Lord in Patty Jenkins’ upcoming “Wonder Woman 1984.” (In turn, Jenkins was recently revealed to be the director of Disney’s next “Star Wars” film, which will premiere in late 2023.)

Read more from IndieWireGal Gadot says experience with Joss Whedon “wasn’t the best one”

“The Mandalorian” Season 2 is streaming on Disney+. The show’s season finale is slated to premiere Friday, December 18.

George Clooney responds to Tom Cruise COVID-19 speech: “He didn’t overreact”

George Clooney responded to Tom Cruise’s on-set outburst about Covid-19 restrictions, saying he understood why Cruise was so upset, but that the speech “wasn’t his style.” Clooney was pushed to reveal his thoughts while visiting “The Howard Stern Show” in order to promote his new movie “The Midnight Sky,” which debuts on Netflix December 23. “He didn’t overreact, because it is a problem,” Clooney told Stern. “I have a friend who is an AD on another TV show who almost had the same thing happen, with not quite as far out a response.”

Read more from IndieWire: The podcasts of 2020: A tribute

After audio of Cruise’s rant went viral this week, the movie star received criticism for speaking disrespectfully to his employees. The actor and producer scolded the film’s crew for breaching coronavirus safety protocols on the set of “Mission: Impossible 7,” the Christopher McQuarrie-directed Paramount movie that was hit with a one-week production delay in October after 12 people on set in Italy tested positive for COVID-19. Cruise can be heard swearing at crew members who were standing too close together at a monitor, telling them: “We are not shutting this f***ing movie down! Is it understood? If I see it again, you’re f***ing gone.”

Read more from IndieWire: Best Christmas gifts for movie lovers

Clooney said he would have taken a different approach were he in the same position, but added that he didn’t know the full situation.

“I wouldn’t have done it that big, I wouldn’t have pulled people out. You’re in a position of power. It’s tricky, you do have a responsibility for everyone and he’s absolutely right about that,” he said. “If the production goes down a lot of people lose their jobs. People have to understand that and be responsible. It’s just not my style to take everybody to task that way.”

Read more from IndieWire: Gal Gadot says experience with Joss Whedon “wasn’t the best one”

“It doesn’t help necessarily, to point to specific people in that way, but everybody has their own style,” Clooney continued. “The people who were on that shoot will tell us more about it. I understand why he did it, he’s not wrong at all, I just don’t know if I would have done it quite that personally. But I don’t know the circumstances, maybe he had it 10 or 15 times before.”

“The Stand” is barely alive enough to capture this year’s “end of the world as we know it” vibe

“The Stand,” Stephen King’s epic journey of 1,152 pages, has enthralled millions. This is proven in the fact that back in the day millions of commuters enthusiastically carted around paperback versions of this doorstop around with them on public transportation, on walks and on trips. Read it and you’ll get it: once you’re well inside of the story, it is hard to put it down and walk away.

The same can’t be said of subsequent attempts to bring it to screen, first in 1994 on ABC and again in 2020 on CBS All Access. But then, that’s a common feature among TV adaptations of King’s work. The best are watchable due to outstanding components as opposed to the work as a whole; HBO’s “The Outsider” comes to mind. Similarly I have no qualms with Hulu’s recent adaptation of “11.22.63.” The lesser of them are . . . disappointing, if not complete jokes, like ABC’s “Rose Red.”

The new nine-episode version of “The Stand” capitalizes on some aspects of its ’90s predecessor that made its existence memorable if not its substance, mainly its top-tier cast. James Marsden, likable in just about everything he does, plays Stu Redman, the prototypical King antagonist. Which is to say, he’s small town gentleman from good stock who finds himself at the center of disaster.

This one is entirely manmade and nicknamed “Captain Trips,” a super-lethal strain of influenza developed as a bioweapon that escapes and quickly spreads. Some seven billion people drown in a sea of green mucus and swollen throats, with very few facial tissues in sight. Exactly what viewers want to sit through during the height of an actual pandemic, am I right?

At first Redman is taken into custody and examined by military scientists. Inevitably the virus breaches the facility and Redman is released and left to make his own fate. Or . . . can he? Supernatural forces hailing from the sides of light and darkness call Stu and scores of others to strongholds in Colorado, where the “good” guys gather around 108-year-old holy prophet Mother Abigail (Whoopi Goldberg), and Las Vegas, home of debauchery, killing pits, strippers and endless champagne brunches courtesy of Randall Flagg (Alexander Skarsgård), who may or may not be Satan.

As you may conclude upon reading those celebrity names, the casting of “The Stand” defies criticism. One should expert nothing less from an adaptation whose previous version starred Gary Sinise, Molly Ringwald, Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee and Rob Lowe.

The new version casts a combination of known faces and up-and-comers and enacts a few gender-switches. In the place of the novel’s memorably named Rat Man, we have a Rat . . . queen! Not dark but beautiful and terrible as the . . . nah, she’s just Rat Woman now, and played by Fiona Dourif.

Jovan Adepo as the tortured pop star on the good guy team, Larry Underwood, is a more inspired choice, as is the decision to cast Amber Heard as Nadine Cross, making her a good bit more vampish than the novel’s version. Greg Kinnear further ennobles the place as Glen Bateman, a retired professor who had the good sense to stock lots of potato chips, caviar and smokables in case of apocalypse. And the list of names goes on, including Heather Graham as Rita Blakemoor and Owen Teague as moody incel Harold Lauder, giving us a creepy energy that’s a complete about-face from his sensitive 19-year-old suitor in HBO’s “Mrs. Fletcher.”

A person doesn’t have to be familiar with these actors to appreciate what they bring to “The Stand” (and actually, the most affecting performance comes from Henry Zaga, playing Mother Abigail’s deaf-mute champion Nick Andros), but over the long run it helps if only to appreciate the aptness of the casting director’s choices here.

There may be no better or less problematic representative of good will and common sense that Goldberg, a figure synonymous with keeping “The View” tethered to sanity on any given day. Skarsgård will forever be associated with the brooding vampire noble Eric Northman on “True Blood” and Nicole Kidman’s abusive husband Perry on “Big Little Lies.” His Randall Flagg vibrates on the same level, and because of them we’re primed to understand his character’s seductiveness and brace ourselves for blithe acts of lethality.

In reading this you may get a sense of this adaptation’s downside and its eventual unraveling: forging a connection with the characters carries the series to a point, but it only takes a few episodes to realize that there isn’t much to build toward in the lead-up to the story’s inevitable confrontation between good and evil.

King envisioned “The Stand” in part as an epic on par with J.R.R. Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, and on the page the story lives up to its promise. Nevertheless, the simplicity of its odyssey is masked by the author’s extensive development of a slew of character backstories. Such devotion to detail facilitated our connection to more than two dozen characters, heightening our response to their suffering and triumphs. But it also sacrificed its narrative momentum at times.

Onscreen this plays out as a bunch of survivors played by a raft of talented people taking a long time to get to the point of it all and making unnecessarily dunderheaded mistakes as they flail about. This also describes “The Walking Dead” during the energetically moribund season on Hershel Greene’s farm, but at least that scenario offered the exciting (and also gooey) threat of zombie hordes shambling around in the woods.

Flagg is a menace because he’s the devil, and has a nasty habit of attacking people with murders of angry crows or snarling wolves. This is scary to a point but about five episodes in you’ll be hankering for the story to get on with the nuclear showdown already – and that’s after we’ve gotten an eyeful of the skin-sational sex-and-violence festival that is Flagg’s Vegas outpost.

I recognize that despite all of this, there are enough King fans around whose faith cannot be shaken and who will hungrily devour “The Stand” because of these highlights, cosmetic though they may be. Who am I to begrudge anyone for seeking out joy in the midst of a pandemic even if that joy starts with a slimier, sweatier depiction of another pandemic? Besides, even those who aren’t convinced may be curious to see how the new ending King has written for this version pans out.

Otherwise “The Stand” functions as a reminder that sometimes the greatest blessing the creators of a novel’s TV adaptation can bestow upon fans is to diverge from the source material in a way that makes it spellbinding to watch, maintaining enough of its elements to capture the essence of the story’s greatness.

“The Lord of the Rings” not only survived Peter Jackson’s interpretation, it thrived off of the films’ popularity. King famously had issues with the artistic license Stanley Kubrick took in his interpretation of “The Shining,” but that took nothing away from either the novel or the film’s iconic stature. Someday someone will have the creative bravery and skill to pare down “The Stand” into a solidly watchable made-for-TV effort. Hopefully we won’t be 108 by the time that happens.

The premiere of “The Stand” is currently streaming on CBS All Access. New episodes drop weekly on Thursdays. 

Rand Paul and Newt Gingrich openly fret people voting will “affect the outcome” of Georgia runoffs

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., on Thursday joined a growing chorus of Republicans complaining that making it easier for legal voters to cast ballots will cause Republicans to lose elections.

Paul, who has falsely claimed the election was “stolen” from President Donald Trump without any evidence, warned that increased voter turnout in Georgia could cost Republicans the Senate majority and urged Republican state officials to stop encouraging people to vote.

“They’re mailing out a solicitation to vote by mail. This is not in the state law,” Paul complained in an interview with Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo, who has also pushed fantastical fraud conspiracies without evidence. “I’m very, very concerned that if you solicit votes from typically non-voters, that you will affect and change the outcome,” Paul said, even though non-voters are ineligible to receive a ballot even if they do request one and their votes would not be counted in a would-be fraud scheme since ballots are checked against voter registrations. In other words, there is no risk of nonvoters voting, and there has been no evidence of people using dead or other registered voters’ information to cast ballots.

Paul’s comments come one day after he declared without any evidence that the election was “in many ways stolen” from President Donald Trump during a Senate hearing with former DHS official Chris Krebs, who refuted Paul’s claims.

“The fraud happened. The election in many ways was stolen and the only way it’ll be fixed is by, in the future, reinforcing the laws,” Paul claimed, even though the Trump campaign and its allies have been unable to prove any widespread fraud or irregularities in court.

Paul claimed that courts “never looked at the facts” and “stayed out of it” by ruling that the plaintiffs did not have standing to bring the lawsuits, even though numerous judges did review these lawsuits and rejected them on the merits. Paul’s comments raised speculation that he would break with the rest of the Republican Party to join Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala., in a futile effort to block Congress from affirming the Electoral College results.

Attorney General Bill Barr said earlier this month that the Justice Department did not find any evidence of fraud that would affect the election result and Republican election officials from Georgia to Pennsylvania have rejected the claims pushed by Trump and his allies.

But the Republican complaints long predate the actual election and any potential fraud. Trump and his allies have argued for months that expanding voting access would hurt Republicans. Barr argued before the election that expanded mail voting raises the possibility of voter fraud, despite its use by numerous states before the pandemic, though he ultimately determined that was not the case in the 2020 race.

“Let me be 100% clear,” Josh Douglas, an election law expert at the University of Kentucky, told the Louisville Courier-Journal. “Sen. Rand Paul is lying about it. He is lying, and all of these politicians who are claiming massive fraud in mail-in voting are lying because they have zero evidence. It’s just patently false.”

Paul and Trump are not the only ones.

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., erupted at Wednesday’s Senate hearing to declare he has no “doubt” that there was “fraudulent votes and ballot stuffing” in the election. Johnson, along with Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., also appeared to echo former Trump lawyer Sidney Powell’s otherworldly conspiracy theory that voting machines were rigged to switch votes from Trump in a plot financed by Venezuela, China, and others that ultimately got her booted from Trump’s legal team. Johnson cited “corruption of voting machines and software” while Scott claimed that his constituents think the election was no “different than what [Nicolas] Maduro is doing” in Venezuela.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., also complained on Twitter over the weekend that Georgia Secretary Brad Raffensperger’s effort to expand ballot drop boxes would “make it harder for Republicans to win,” even though Republican voters would have increased access to submit their votes.

“You’re busted Newt,” former Attorney General Eric Holder said in response to Gingrich. “Making it easier for more people to vote in a pandemic (the usual fraud claims have been exposed as nonsense), resulting in more people voting ‘makes it harder for Republicans to win’. Guess you think you have to suppress the vote to win. What a disgrace.”

But Gingrich’s bizarre complaint was echoed in a lawsuit by the Georgia Republican Party and the Republican National Committee, which is seeking to limit the use of ballot drop boxes in the state’s Senate runoffs.

Although Raffensperger has drawn praise for standing up to attacks from Trump and other Republicans to dispute their baseless fraud allegations, he has also pushed to limit voting access in future elections since the election. Republicans in the Senate and state legislatures in Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Texas have also seized on Trump’s voter fraud lies to push for laws restricting voting access.

But some election experts warned that Republican attacks on voting could backfire.

“Recent polling shows that many of the innovations adopted for the 2020 election are popular with voters of all partisan persuasions, making some changes potentially difficult,” Robert Stein, a voting expert at Rice University, told Salon earlier this month. “There is ample evidence that states that attempt to adopt restrictive election laws produce a backlash effect, especially among nonwhite voters.”

“In non-pandemic times, it’s not at all clear to me that restricting mail-in voting would hurt Democrats more than Republicans,” added Justin Levitt, a constitutional law expert at Loyola University.

Republicans have worried for weeks that the attacks on Georgia’s election could depress turnout in the pivotal Senate runoffs. Raffensperger argued that Trump’s baseless claims cost him the state in the presidential race, noting that 24,000 people who voted in the Republican primary did not vote in the general election.

“He would have won by 10,000 votes,” he said last month. “He actually depressed, suppressed his own voting base.”

A healthcare worker explains what it’s like to get the Pfizer vaccine

Dr. Maria Raven’s morning started a little differently Thursday.

Instead of immediately jumping into a regular day at the University of California-San Francisco’s emergency room, Moffitt Long, she stood in a socially distanced line to get her first dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine. As Raven eagerly waited for her name to be called to enter the inoculation area, a classroom, she chatted with colleagues about how exciting it was that this day had finally arrived. Twenty minutes later, Raven’s name was called.

“Then, they write down your name on a whiteboard, they have our pharmacy students administering the vaccine, so that was kind of cool,” Raven said. “And they just ask you to roll up your sleeve and they give it to you.”

A separate person immediately wrote the time down on the whiteboard as soon as the student administered the vaccine. For the next 15 minutes, they monitored Raven in case she had an immediate allergic reaction. One healthcare worker in Alaska had an anaphylactic reaction that required an overnight hospital stay this week, similar to what happened with two health workers in Britain last week. A second worker in Alaska experienced eye puffiness and lightheadedness within 10 minutes; fortunately, this reaction was not considered anaphylaxis. Pfizer’s trial did not find any serious adverse events caused by the vaccine.

Raven wasn’t scared during the 15-minute monitoring period. Instead, she felt “excitement” and “relief.”

“Just the idea that we’re going to be immune is a huge game changer,” Raven said. “It’s a huge morale booster.”

Raven received one of the 2.9 million doses that will be delivered to more than 1,000 locations by the end of the weekend.

At UCSF, a randomized lottery alerted frontline workers this week who would be the first to be inoculated. Raven received an invitation to make an appointment herself on Sunday. Frontline workers were only notified this week since the Pfizer vaccine has a shorter shelf life of five days after being transferred from ultracold storage to a refrigerator because of its mRNa (synthetic messenger RNA) content. Raven was surprised to receive the notification. At first, she didn’t know that only 975 workers would receive it during the first round of the roll-out.

The Pfizer vaccine is given in a series of two doses, meaning Raven isn’t fully protected from the coronavirus yet. And since she’s only received the first dose, she left the vaccine site with a pink stick donning a number “1” on it to refer to her status of being a recipient of the first dose.

In three weeks, Raven will receive the second dose.  One week after that, according to the FDA, she will be likely be immune to the coronavirus.

As Salon has previously explained the Pfizer vaccine is a relatively new technology, but a quantum leap for biotech. When a person receives the first shot of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, a bespoke version of mRNA is injected into the body which causes cells to produce proteins to recognize the SARS-CoV-2 Spike. Ultimately, these proteins are training the immune system to fight COVID-19. A second dose is akin to a booster.

According to the studies on Pfizer’s clinical trials, there have been very few side effects after the first dose. About a quarter of people after the second dose feel very subtle symptoms.

“It seems that about a quarter to one-third of people had either a headache, muscle aches or a fever, symptoms that we think of sometimes as mimicking some aspects of a viral illness, and that’s your body mounting its immune response,” Raven said. “It may cause you to need to take a day off from work, but you sort of know what it is and so it’s not much more serious than that and would just be symptomatic treatment.”

Raven felt fine after her first dose and went back to business as usual during her day.

Pfizer expects 25 million doses will be available by the end of the month, just enough to cover the estimated 21 million health care personnel and 3 million long-term care residents across the country. The Moderna vaccine, which is biologically similar to the Pfizer one, is also expected to be approved by the FDA this week. The main difference between the two is that Pfizer vaccine needs to be kept at –70°C; Moderna’s vaccine candidate can be kept at –20°C and can remain stable for up to one month at consumer refrigerator temperatures. Pfizer’s second dose occurs three weeks after the first; Moderna’s is four weeks.

Currently, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) does not have an answer on when people can stop wearing masks and social distancing.

“Experts need to understand more about the protection that COVID-19 vaccines provide before making that decision,” the CDC states. “Other factors, including how many people get vaccinated and how the virus is spreading in communities, will also affect this decision.”

While life won’t immediately go back to how it was before the pandemic after vaccination, Raven said receiving the vaccination today was a symbol of hope.

“I think even if it doesn’t immediately change our practice in terms of our needs with PPE – which is difficult to do over a long shift to have an N95, a face shield and all that, and not have your patients be able to see what you look like, and smile – it’s very symbolic that there’s a light at the end of the tunnel,” Raven said.

Should your kidney doctor have a financial stake in dialysis?

When Jeffrey Berns first began practice as a nephrologist in the late 1980s, kidney disease in the U.S. was in the early stages of a stratospheric rise. In 1972, Congress had passed legislation that made anyone with end-stage renal disease, or ESRD — the current formal medical diagnosis for kidney failure — eligible for Medicare. Unlike private insurance, which rarely covered dialysis at the time, Medicare did, and the nation was at the dawn of a dialysis demand boom. The only question for the marketplace was: Who was going to step in to meet that demand?

The answer wasn’t immediately obvious. People with ESRD present some of the most complex cases in all of medicine, says Berns. They often have a variety of co-occurring conditions, from anemia to diabetes to heart failure, and this makes managing their care time-consuming — something that many doctors say isn’t adequately reimbursed in the Medicare fee for a basic appointment.

Independent and hospital-based dialysis clinics began popping up in the 1960s and 70s, but thanks to an aging population and rising rates of diabetes and high blood pressure, the ESRD population grew so quickly that the dialysis industry couldn’t keep up. Although the dialysis industry was incredibly lucrative, startup costs were, and still are, steep, according to Deepak Jasuja, a nephrologist with Columbus Regional Health outside Indianapolis.

What emerged was the joint venture, an entrepreneurial arrangement that lets two or more individuals share in the risks and benefits of a business. In the case of kidney disease treatment, two key services were in play: the diagnosis and management of care for the patient, including prescribing dialysis, by a nephrologist and the delivery of mechanical dialysis itself, where the filtering that would normally be done by the kidney is done by machine.

It proved a winning solution, and in the decades since Berns entered the field, the number of dialysis clinics has exploded. By 2008, the average zip code in the U.S. had 1.2 dialysis clinics, with some having as many as seven. The problem, says Berns, is that no one outside the two big chains that own most dialysis clinics has any idea of how many are operated as joint ventures, and how that arrangement can influence medical decision making.

Berns — who before decamping in 1999 to the University of Pennsylvania and a career in academic medicine was briefly part of a practice in Virginia where other doctors had a joint venture arrangement — says that patients often don’t know that their doctors might have a financial stake in the dialysis clinics to which they are referred. Among other important issues, Berns suggests, the arrangement leaves many nephrologists with a financial incentive to steer patients to their co-owned clinics for dialysis, even when other, perhaps even better or more appropriate interventions like medication and lifestyle changes are available. And worst of all, Berns argues, most of his colleagues in the wider medical community seem largely unconcerned about the potential conflicts of interest.

“If you really look at the corporation’s obligation to shareholders and you take that seriously, and you take the obligation to patients seriously, I think they’re fundamentally incompatible,” said Klemens Meyer, a nephrologist and director of dialysis services at Tufts Medical Center. “And I think that this is whitewashed over.”

Not everyone shares this sense of alarm. The rise of joint ventures has helped greatly expand the number of dialysis clinics in the country, which has given patients more options and the ability to be treated closer to home. This is a huge benefit to people who typically have to travel to treatment three times a week, rain or shine, says nephrologist Alvin Moss at West Virginia University. (While Medicare announced a new program this fall that seeks to increase the number of patients using at-home dialysis, for now, the majority continue to receive treatment in a clinic.)

Of joint ventures, Moss doesn’t deny that the potential for conflicts of interest is real, but he says that with guidelines and institutional oversight these physicians can still put their patient’s interests ahead of their own.

But Berns is convinced that the problem is significant enough that he — alongside a small cadre of likeminded experts — has made it a mission to expose and address what he considers to be the inherent and too-often ignored conflicts that underpin the delivery of dialysis treatment in the United States. Along the way — and using the federal Freedom of Information Act to obtain records on the more than 7,500 dialysis clinics in the U.S. — he has earned a reputation as a gadfly and the ire of many of his professional colleagues. That’s fine, Berns says, if a little light can be shed on an otherwise opaque marketplace.

“People can study whether or not for-profit dialysis has different outcomes than not-for-profit dialysis because it’s public knowledge,” he said. “But you can’t do a study of joint venture because no one knows which ones are and aren’t.”

* * *

No sooner had the Seattle Artificial Kidney Center opened its doors on January 1, 1962 than its anonymous seven-member admissions and policy committee faced an awesome decision. Their task was to decide which of the Pacific Northwest’s thousands of kidney failure patients would receive treatment on one of the center’s three new dialysis machines. The contraptions were inefficient and it took an overnight stay for a single machine to filter toxins from the blood of a patient. And despite being cobbled together from spare parts from nearby hospitals and a local soft serve ice cream machine manufacturer, they were still quite costly.

Of the first 30 patients referred to the committee, only 17 met the stringent pre-screening medical criteria. The committee selected 10 of these patients for dialysis; the other patients died from kidney failure.

Even as late as the early 1980s, as kidney disease rates were mounting their historic climb, dialysis services could be hard to come by. Moss, then a nephrologist in Morgantown, West Virginia, recalls many of his patients driving upwards of two hours each way to the closest clinic. For the standard thrice-weekly regimen of treatments, travel was a huge burden on patients, Moss says — and that’s partly what helped drive the joint venture model. “Before they were everywhere,” Moss said, “nephrologists were getting involved in joint ventures to try and get dialysis centers more widely available.”

The arrangement is, in many respects, a natural and obvious one. The intimate relationship between nephrology and dialysis, combined with the challenges of coordinating the complex medical needs of ESRD patients, means that nephrologists have a built-in incentive to open their own dialysis clinic, even independent of the fact that it can be highly profitable.

But while nephrologists have the medical expertise needed to care for patients in kidney failure, they can benefit from having business partners who know more about balancing the books and managing complex income streams. A joint venture allows each contributor to play to their own strengths, explains Nick Hernandez, a consultant who specializes in advising physicians.

Joint ventures have become a mainstay in medicine for a variety of other reasons, says Hernandez. Perhaps most importantly, a joint venture allows participants, who may include multiple physicians who might otherwise be competing against one another, to pool their resources to get a new dialysis clinic up and running, sharing in both the risks and the rewards. It can take $3 million or more in startup costs to get a new clinic off the ground, an amount that would be shared among the joint venture participants, and if more cash is needed at any point, the participants share proportional responsibility in raising that capital.

And the ownership structure of joint ventures is flexible. Investing more money at the outset means that person is taking on a greater risk, Hernandez says, but it also means they will take in a larger share of the rewards, whether it’s the clinic’s profits or payouts if the small startup clinic is bought out by a larger dialysis chain. Physicians see additional rewards from joint venture dialysis clinics, since these facilities also provide a steady source of patient referrals for nephrologists, according to Jasuja. In all, he said, “it’s a big chunk of financial revenue that can potentially come from these sources.”

A July 2019 report from the research firm Marketdata estimates that the more than 7,500 dialysis clinics in the country today pull in more than $3 million in receipts annually on average, with an estimated net profit margin of 18 percent. In a health care market where profit margins like this are increasingly rare, dialysis clinics can be attractive investment options for young nephrologists, explains Hernandez.

DaVita’s webpage on joint ventures and acquisitions showed that the number of joint venture clinics partly owned by the company has risen from 259 in 2008 to 671 in 2018, equaling one-quarter of the chain’s 2,625 outpatient dialysis centers in the U.S. at the time.

In the 1980s, when dialysis clinics were relatively rare and the need for such centers far outstripped their supply, Moss said that the possibility of sharing in the profits from treatment provided much-needed incentives for nephrologists to build more dialysis centers. “There were so few downsides,” he said.

The number of outpatient dialysis centers nearly doubled between 2001 and 2011, but with the boom came a wave of consolidation, and today some 70 percent of all dialysis clinics in the U.S. are owned by just two firms: Denver-based DaVita, and Fresenius, which is headquartered in Bad Homburg, Germany.

Joint ventures have evolved with this vastly different dialysis landscape. According to Hernandez, this arrangement helps mitigate some of the risk of opening an independent clinic, and with parts of the country still underserved by dialysis centers, Moss says the model continues to provide incentives for entrepreneurially-minded nephrologists to meet this need. DaVita’s webpage on joint ventures and acquisitions showed that the number of joint venture clinics partly owned by the company has risen from 259 in 2008 to 671 in 2018, equaling one-quarter of the chain’s 2,625 outpatient dialysis centers in the U.S. at the time.

The problem is that for many early career nephrologists, joint venture dialysis clinics are the only way they can stay afloat, says Nelson Kopyt, a nephrologist at Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Competition from hospitals and large nephrology group practices can make it all but impossible for young nephrologists to run a small, independent practice. With six-figure medical school debt and facing a specialty choice with long hours and relatively low pay, owning a piece of a dialysis clinic is a lifeline, he says.

And it’s these benefits that DaVita emphasizes in its own promotional literature on the subject. Of the six reasons it provides nephrologists to consider a joint venture, only one has to do with improving patient care. The other five concern financial benefits for the investing physician.

As a joint venture participant during his early career, Berns knows all of this well. Especially for young nephrologists, joint venture dialysis clinics can seem like the only viable path. Large dialysis providers like DaVita and Fresenius are equally attached to this model, he says. “Dialysis facilities prefer that because the nephrologist has some skin in the game,” Berns said. “And it’s a way for nephrologists to have a revenue stream that’s not directly related to seeing a patient.”

 

Because physicians have their own money on the line, they may have an additional incentive to see that the clinic provides good care so that it is profitable, acknowledged Berns. It’s something that patients may also see as a plus, if they trust their doctor and their recommendations. But Moss said that physicians don’t generally need a financial motivator to provide quality care, and acknowledged that these same financial incentives could also cause a physician to subconsciously steer patients towards their own clinic and away from options that might be more beneficial.

It’s a classic case of conflict of interest, says Matthew McCoy, a colleague of Berns’ at Penn. “If you own a share in the facility,” he said, “there’s financial incentives to get patients there and keep them there.”

Berns began thinking about these potential conflicts several years ago when the University of Pennsylvania sought his advice about their hospital’s financial participation in an ESRD Seamless Care Organization (ESCO). Pioneered by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, an ESCO is a partnership between dialysis clinics, physicians, and hospitals to innovate and improve the care of patients in kidney failure. In his conversations with hospital executives, Berns outlined some of his ethical concerns about the hospital system entering a joint venture ESCO. Even if the hospital didn’t deliberately steer patients towards receiving care at Penn’s own ESCO, employees could feel subconscious pressure to do that.

As he increasingly thought about conflicts of interest and joint ventures, Berns realized that physicians who co-owned dialysis clinics as part of a joint venture could also feel that pressure. Even more problematic was the fact that doctors aren’t required to tell their patients about joint venture participation.

“As employees of the dialysis facility, we’re having conversations with patients about whether or not they should continue dialysis,” he said. “It made me sort of unsettled to think that an employee of a dialysis company that stands to benefit if that patient starts dialysis is having that discussion with the patient and not divulging that fact.”

It’s a classic case of conflict of interest, says Matthew McCoy, a colleague of Berns’ at Penn. “If you own a share in the facility,” he said, “there’s financial incentives to get patients there and keep them there.”

But joint venture dialysis clinics provide a steady source of patient referrals for nephrologists, according to Deepak Jasuja, a nephrologist in Indianapolis. In all, he said, “it’s a big chunk of financial revenue.”

* * *

That physicians should prioritize the interests of their patients above all else, including their own financial benefit, forms one of the central tenets of medicine. But in reaction to reports of widespread Medicare and Medicaid abuse and fraud, in 1989 Congress enacted what came to be known as the Stark Law to prevent doctors from referring patients to other clinics in which they have a financial relationship.

Joint venture dialysis facilities take advantage of certain exceptions written into Stark Law rules, but a closely related federal law, the Anti-Kickback Statute, prohibits payments for patient referrals. So when David Barbetta, an accountant with DaVita, noticed that the company was selling physicians shares in existing dialysis clinics at below-market rates and buying shares in new joint ventures at artificially inflated rates, he believed something shady was happening. What Barbetta uncovered was DaVita giving kickbacks to nephrologists but disguising the payouts as profits from joint ventures.

So Barbetta filed a whistleblower lawsuit in 2009, the proceedings of which were eventually unsealed in 2015. The lawsuit alleges that when Barbetta approached DaVita executives about his concerns, they brushed him off. He recalled one telling him not to “give me any of that ethics nonsense.” For Eric Havian and Jessica Moore, Barbetta’s attorneys, the case was relatively straightforward.

“We immediately looked at it and said, you know, this is just a plain old kickback scheme,” said Havian. “This is just a way for DaVita to put a lot of extra money in doctors’ pockets in exchange for doctors referring patients to their dialysis clinics.”

After the Department of Justice joined the suit and initiated an investigation into DaVita’s practices, the company agreed in October 2014 to pay $350 million to resolve the allegations that they paid illegal kickbacks, plus an additional $39 million to settle other claims. At the time the settlement agreement was announced the company said in a press release, “it is our belief there was no intentional wrongdoing.”)

The American fee-for-service medical system is rife with potential for these types of kickbacks and conflicts, says Meyer of Tufts Medical Center. It’s why, he said, “if you have the stock market sucking away resources, you just have a mess left over to take care of the patient, even though the people on the ground at the bedside may all have the best intentions and be very, very devoted.”

Berns and McCoy also wanted to know how these joint ventures impacted patient care.

For years, the U.S. government has gathered reams of data on dialysis clinics, most of which is available through the United States Renal Data System. But the database didn’t include any information about which dialysis clinics were joint ventures, let alone the parties that owned them. So Berns filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act in 2016 with the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Surely, he felt, they would be able to tell him whether a dialysis clinic was a joint venture, given the detailed information they collected about these facilities. It took more than a year for Berns to get a response. When he finally did, Berns assumed that data on every dialysis clinic’s joint venture status would only be a click of a mouse away. But when Berns and McCoy pored over the files given to them by CMS, they found nothing about joint ventures.

“That’s what we asked for and we didn’t get,” Berns said.

The pair realized that if CMS didn’t know which dialysis clinics were joint ventures, then patients didn’t know, either, and this raised its own ethical quandaries. Over the past decade, a variety of laws had been passed to allow patients to see whether their doctors had received money from pharmaceutical companies, but no such law existed about physicians disclosing their financial interests in dialysis clinics.

Berns, McCoy, and Penn bioethicist Aaron Glickman formally raised these concerns in a 2018 article in the New England Journal of Medicine. They acknowledged that participating in a joint venture doesn’t mean a physician is inherently unethical, but they argued that patients have a right to know if their doctor has a financial stake in their dialysis care. “This lack of transparency not only poses a major barrier for evidence-based health care policy,” the authors wrote, “but also deprives patients of critical information.”

Seeking data on the number of joint venture dialysis clinics, Berns filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act. The files sent back were silent on the issue. “That’s what we asked for and we didn’t get,” Berns said.

Berns points to the New Jersey endoscopy clinic where he himself is a patient. On the wall, he said, is a sign that clearly indicates who the owners are. Dialysis clinics should have something similar, he said.

Both Meyer and Moss shared Berns and his colleagues’ concerns, as did many other physicians who responded to the NEJM article, Berns says. Others, however, were less convinced. In a blog post, nephrologist Terry Ketchersid, now an executive vice president at Fresenius, penned a detailed response, calling Berns and his colleagues naive and short-sighted. “[T]he authors are living in the dark ages, hanging on to vestiges of a transactional fee-for-service framework, and penning perspectives that might have been relevant when I was a teenager,” he wrote. “I suspect it’s easy to sit in the confines of this particular institution and cast stones at ethical, hardworking nephrologists who care for some of the sickest patients on the planet.”

Ketchersid declined to speak with Undark, but Berns regarded reactions like these to be an indicator that the issue was important and worth investigating further. In a follow-up piece published earlier this year, Berns, Glickman, and UCLA nephrologist Eugene Lin argued that the lack of openness around joint ventures in nephrology was also interfering with the federal government’s ability to change how it pays providers for dialysis treatment. With everyone profiting from the current arrangement except for patients, dialysis clinics have little incentive to change. If CMS doesn’t account for these potential conflicts of interest when it tries to implement payment reforms for dialysis, it risks making the problem even worse, the trio argued.

“It’s hard to simply eliminate these kinds of financial incentives with the snap of a finger,” McCoy said.

Berns repeatedly emphasized that he wasn’t implying that financial conflicts of interest mean that a physician is unethical and in it just for the money. Berns says that for all he knows, joint ventures could potentially improve patient care, but since the government doesn’t collect that data, he and other researchers have no way of knowing. It’s something he has found frustrating to the point of maddening.

So Berns has begun the laborious task of contacting every clinic on the list he received from his FOIA request to determine whether it is a joint venture, so he and his colleagues can determine if and how this arrangement impacts factors like transplant rate, infection, and death.

“No one can do studies on the question of physician ownership because the information is so hard to obtain,” Berns said. “Patients and their families should have a right to know who has an ownership stake.”

This story was produced in partnership with Scientific American.

* * *

UPDATE: An earlier version of this piece, along with a photo caption, imprecisely described Dr. Jeffrey Berns as having previously been a partner in a dialysis joint venture. While Berns was part of a practice in Virginia where the other doctors had a joint venture arrangement, he was not himself a partner. Separately, the original version of this piece stated that DaVita had declined to comment on a whistleblower lawsuit filed against it, but included a quote from a statement the company made at the time the suit was settled in 2014. In fact, DaVita was not offered an opportunity to comment during the reporting process. In follow-up phone calls and emails with DaVita post-publication, a spokesperson said the company had no comment beyond what was offered in the statement. The piece also originally described Nick Hernandez as a certified financial planner. He is a consultant.

This series was supported in part by the National Institute for Health Care Management Foundation.

Carrie Arnold is an award-winning freelance science journalist based in Virginia. In addition to Undark, her work has appeared with Scientific American, STAT, National Geographic, Wired, and The New York Times, among other publications.

Larry C. Price is a two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning documentary photographer and multimedia journalist based in Dayton, Ohio. He previously produced award-winning photography and video footage for Undark’s Breathtaking series on air pollution, which won a George Polk Award for Environmental Reporting in 2018.

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

Cookbook author Alison Roman won’t return to New York Times after flap with Chrissy Teigen

Alison Roman, the author of the cookbooks “Dining In” and “Nothing Fancy,” revealed on Wednesday that she won’t be returning to The New York Times. The announcement came seven months after her food column was placed on “temporary leave” in the wake of controversial comments she made about Chrissy Teigen and Marie Kondo in an interview with The New Consumer.

In an Instagram post, Roman expressed gratitude that her Caramelized Shallot Pasta recipe had scored the top slot in The Times’ “Most Popular Recipes of 2020” list, published Sunday.

“Feels like a good time to formally mention I won’t be returning to NYT Cooking,” Roman wrote on Instagram. “I’m proud of the work we made together but excited for this new chapter which includes more recipes, videos and writer over on A Newsletter and beyond.” 

RELATED: Chrissy Teigen and Alison Roman’s fight reveals a deep well of women’s insecurity about cooking

In May, Roman told The New Consumer that “what Chrissy Teigen [had] done is so crazy to me.” 

“She had a successful cookbook. And then it was, like: Boom, line at Target. Boom, now she has an Instagram page that has over a million followers where it’s just, like, people running a content farm for her,” Roman said at the time. “That horrifies me and it’s not something that I ever want to do. I don’t aspire to that. But like, who’s laughing now? Because she’s making a ton of f**king money.” 

Elsewhere in the interview, Roman also criticized Marie Kondo, the author of “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up” and the host of the subsequent Netflix series “Tidying Up,” by alleging that she had  “f**king sold out immediately” by launching a product line associated with her brand. 

The backlash to Roman’s comments was swift, with many pointing out that she had singled out two women of color. The conflict kicked into overdrive after Teigen said, “I don’t think I’ve ever been so bummed out by the words of a fellow food-lover…I just had no idea I was perceived that way, by her especially.”

“When women bully other women for being honest about money and how much they do or do not make, well, that’s amore,” Roman initially responded on Twitter. 

The cookbook author eventually issued an apology to both Teigen and Kondo. “I’m not the victim here, and my insecurities don’t excuse this behaviour,” she said. 

The controversy sparked a larger conversation within food media about the ways in which global dishes are whitewashed. Some pointed to Roman’s viral 2018 chickpea and coconut milk stew, which was soon dubbed #TheStew by the internet, as a clear example. 

“Is #thestew really just a curry? (Roman has insisted it’s not, but others beg to differ),” Eater’s Navneet Alang wrote in her essay “Stewed Awakening.” “And are all curries just stews? It’s precisely the ambiguity of what separates one from the other that makes neat assertions of cultural appropriation unhelpful, but also lets the issue linger.” 

Roman’s Times column was suspended soon after on on May 19. The publication told Insider at the time that “it was always the plan for Alison’s leave to be temporary . . . her column will return.” But Roman announced several days later that she would revive a newsletter she began years earlier.

Simply titled “A Newsletter,” the weekly newsletter already has thousands of subscribers. Proceeds from paying subscribers benefit a different food-based charity or nonprofit every month. 

A spokesperson from The Times told Page Six on Wednesday that Roman had left the publication of her own volition. “Alison decided to move on from The Times, and we’re very thankful for her work with us,” they stated. 

How to make a perfect Hot Toddy, the whiskey cocktail to keep you warm this winter

The Hot Toddy is the perfect cocktail for this moment.

Now, I know many of you read that last sentence and gave a little internal scoff at the idea that I’m referring to the present. “This moment?”, you say. “Are you sure you’re thinking of this moment and not mistaking it with a covered-wagon moment, or a Grover Cleveland moment or a moment during which settlers wore buckles on their goddamn hats?”

Nope. This moment. Yes, it is true that the Hot Toddy predates America. Yes, it is true that your great great grandmother probably gave one to your great grandmother to mollify her when she contracted mumps. But as we lumber into the final month of this miserable year, when the sun sets in the early afternoon and it’s so cold you wear slippers to bed, who’s come back to save us? That’s right—the Hot Toddy.

As anyone with young kids can tell you, alcohol can be inherently medicinal. This is especially true and especially wide-ranging, of the Hot Toddy, a drink that is recommended almost exclusively for its palliative effects. There are hundreds of recipe sites, for instance, that make the somewhat amusing (and not yet formally disproven) claim that Hot Toddy’s are healthy and can help cure a cold. Many others call it the perfect nightcap: Mark Twain, according to David Wondrich’s Imbibe, took one for years before bedtime, calling it “the only soporific worth considering.”

Mostly, though, it is deployed when blankets and coats just don’t quite do it, the cocktail like an internal medicine, to be taken as needed when the chill reaches your bones. It’s the closest thing to an inner embrace that’s available to us without some kind of religious experience and in this moment, our moment, when the Holidays are mostly/completely canceled and the only safe way to see anyone is to do it outdoors in December, the Hot Toddy has dusted itself off to remind us why we, as a civilization, loved it in the first place.

A Hot Toddy is like whiskey chicken soup, the perfect drink to displace any physical or emotional chill. It is uniquely suited for a conversation with a friend or neighbor on a front porch and in any case can feel like precious comfort, when you prefer your comfort both liquid and silent. And, almost as a bonus (a fact that is often omitted in write-ups of the Hot Toddy): when properly prepared, it’s absolutely delicious.

Hot Toddy

  • 2 oz. whiskey
  • 0.75 oz. lemon juice
  • 0.75 oz. honey/ginger
  • 4-6 oz. boiling water

Boil water. Pour boiling water into a mug, to pre-warm it. After a minute, empty water, add ingredients (see below), top with boiling water and garnish with a lemon or orange slice studded with cloves and/or a cinnamon stick.

Notes on ingredients

WhiskeyI personally prefer Scotch or Irish whiskey here, but American whiskey works as well. As does Japanese whisky, if you’re made of money. If I could choose any brand, it would be Redbreast 12-year Irish whiskey. It’s pot-stilled, which means it’s fuller and richer. One of the Hot Toddy’s main dangers is being too thin and a single malt scotch or pot-still Irish whiskey helps offset that.

Lemon Juice: Fresh juice. Actually, the original Toddy didn’t have lemon juice at all and was essentially just a Hot Old Fashioned: whiskey, sugar and hot water. That is good but can be a little dull unless you pick a whiskey of some serious character (like a smoky scotch), so making it a hot whiskey sour with some lemon juice adds some much-welcome tension and complexity.

Honey/Ginger: Honey is a great way to add body to this drink. You don’t need to add ginger, but I find it adds a delightful spice. For my honey ginger syrup, I bring 2 cups honey, 1 cup water and about a 4 to 6 oz. piece of ginger (chopped) to simmer in a pan for 5 minutes, before straining the solids out.

Hot Water: You want to do everything in your power to serve this as hot as possible. The only way this drink goes seriously wrong is if it’s a Lukewarm Toddy, so pre-warming your glass is important, as is using boiling water. Additionally, it would be worth your time to preheat your ingredients: If you have 3.5 oz. of room temp ingredients and 4 to 6 oz. of boiling water, it will average out to be tepid, which is not good.

The solution: fill a large shaker tin or bowl halfway with boiling water and then place a smaller shaker tin or metal bowl inside it, creating a kind of bain-marie. Add lemon juice, honey/ginger and whiskey to the smaller vessel and stir to gently heat it for about one or two minutes, before pouring it into your pre-warmed mug and topping with boiling water.

Also, a PSA: Do not heat it on the stove. Direct flame under pure spirits is an exceedingly bad idea.

Read more Robb Report:

“I was wrong to remove my mask at the White House”: Chris Christie films moving PSA after ICU stint

Former Republican governor of New Jersey Chris Christie, who was hospitalized in October after contracting the coronavirus at the White House, released a public service announcement advertisement on Wednesday in which he expressed regret for not wearing a mask, and urged others to not let the issue divide the country.

“This message isn’t for everyone. It’s for all those people who refuse to wear a mask. You know, lying in isolation in ICU for seven days I thought about how wrong I was to remove my mask at the White House,” Christie says in the PSA. “Today, I think about how wrong it is to let mask wearing divide us, especially as we now know you’re twice as likely to get Covid-19 if you don’t wear a mask. Because if you don’t do the right thing, we could all end up on the wrong side of history. Please wear a mask.”

Since his hospitalization, Christie, who in May urged the country to reopen the economy because there will be “deaths no matter what,” has repeatedly endorsed masking guidelines. A week after his recovery, he published a personal essay in the Wall Street Journal, titled, “I Should Have Worn a Mask,” in which the former Garden State governor condemns the social divide over face coverings as “one of the worst aspects” of political discourse today.

“One of the worst aspects of America’s divided politics is the polarization of something as practical as a mask,” Christie wrote. “It’s not a partisan or cultural symbol, not a sign of weakness or virtue. It’s simply a good method — not a perfect one, but a proven one — to contain a cough or prevent the virus from getting in your mouth or nose. Wear it or you may regret it — as I did.”

The former GOP presidential hopeful announced his COVID-19 diagnosis after spending several days in a debate prep room with President Donald Trump, campaign manager Bill Stepien and former spokesperson for LifeLock brand identity theft protection services Rudy Giuliani, none of whom wore masks. That same weekend, Christie attended the White House nomination ceremony for Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett, an event now thought to lead to an outbreak that infected more than two dozen White House staff.

All debate prep attendees but Giuliani later tested positive for the virus, and Christie, who suffers from asthma and has struggled for years with weight loss, checked himself into a hospital the same day as Trump. Giuliani was hospitalized after contracting the disease earlier this month.

Christie later cited those two White House events specifically in a New York Times interview, but explained that at the time he had believed the executive mansion was “a safe zone,” thanks to testing that he and “many others” went through each day.

The White House has never in the last two months replied to Salon’s multiple questions about how often Trump was tested in the weeks leading up to his diagnosis.

According to CNN, the new ad is reportedly bankrolled by COVID Collaborative, a foundation co-founded by Ray Chambers, a former financier and wealthy philanthropist in New Jersey, Christie’s home state, who worked for several years at the United Nations and currently serves as an ambassador for global strategy at the World Health Organization. The Trump administration withdrew from the agency and cut U.S. funding earlier this year, alleging the group had been shielding China from blame for the pandemic.

Christie’s PSA will air on Fox News, SiriusXM Radio and Newsmax, a far-right cable network which has peddled conspiracy theories about the pandemic and regularly criticizes mask mandates.