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A “massive grift”: Republican congressman calls out GOP’s refusal to accept Trump’s election loss

Rep. Denver Riggleman (R-VA) said he’s “sick” of his own party’s refusal to acknowledge President-elect Joe Biden’s win over President Donald Trump in the 2020 election, calling the move a “massive grift” that’s “just money-making for the 2024 election.

“I’m so damn sick of it,” Riggleman said. “I’m sick of it.”

In an interview with Forbes published Saturday, Riggleman took aim at Trump, the GOP and General Services Administration head Emily Murphy for holding up the Biden transition to soothe Trump’s ego and appeal to the Republican base.

“She should’ve done this well before she did it,” Riggleman said of Murphy’s delay in authorizing funds for the Biden transition. According to Forbes, Riggleman said the move was made out of “fear of losing your tribe.”

“Really speaks to where your intelligence level is… to believe in that type of operation,” Riggleman said of Trump’s “true believers” who parrot the president’s unfounded claims of widespread voter fraud.

“[Trump] got so desperate to retain power that he forgot he was serving people and not himself,” Riggleman said.

“We will exterminate you”: Proud Boys and Trump diehards confront counter-protesters in Raleigh

A band of COVID deniers, neo-Confederates and pro-Trump diehards, augmented by a 50-strong Proud Boy security detail, marched around the Governor’s Mansion in downtown Raleigh on Saturday, firing up a far-right coalition to carry on the fight as their president faces the reality of leaving office.

The post-Thanksgiving rally was co-organized by Joshua Flores of Stop the Steal NC and Latinos for Freedom, who brought in Reopen NC to help him promote it on Facebook. But the Proud Boys — referenced by Flores as his “private security” in a Facebook Live video two days prior to the event — took the most prominent position in the rally as they spread out along a block of East Jones Street and taunted antifascist counter-protesters.

Flores had promoted the Thanksgiving potluck as a family-friendly event, and urged attendees to not engage with counter-protesters, warning that they would be asked to leave if they failed to honor the request, and adding that “the Proud Boys” would also “have the authority to kick you out.” He also suggested, “Try not to use major cuss words, if you don’t mind.”

The request was almost farcical considering the Proud Boys’ history of inciting conflict through profanity-laced taunts that are often barbed with misogyny and homophobia.
True to form, a Proud Boy named Jeremy Bertino picked up a bullhorn a couple minutes after the official 11:30 a.m. start time and addressed the counter-protesters across the street.

“America will never be a communist nation — never!” Bertino said as fellow Proud Boys lined the sidewalk wearing tactical vests and trademark yellow and black gear. “Your side will lose. We will exterminate you like the rats you are…. Exterminate you!”

Bertino kicked off a chant of, “Fuck antifa.”

Another Proud Boy wore a patch with the letters “S-B-S-B,” a reference to Trump’s infamous election-debate directive: “Proud Boys — stand back and stand by.”

Bertino wore a patch with the letters “R-W-D-S” — short for “right-wing death squads.” Mass killing of political opponents is a theme widely promoted by Proud Boys and other far-right extremists who celebrate Chilean dictator Augosto Pinochet’s grisly practice during the 1970s of disappearing opposition activists by dropping them out of helicopters.

Previewing the in-real-life showdown on Saturday, Bertino posted a photo of North Carolina antifascist Lindsay Ayling on the Parler social media platform, encouraging followers to make a contest out of Photoshopping her image, while making a violent and misogynistic claim that “she has an affinity for alpha males and helicopters” and hash-tagging the post #antifawhore.

Bertino told Raw Story he was merely “trolling” Ayling, but the Proud Boys’ goofball presentation — naming cereals during their initation rite, for example — conveniently provides plausible deniability for any expressed fantasies of violence.

Bertino also denied that his “extermination” remarks were personally directed at the counter-protesters, although his own words say otherwise.

Throughout the four-hour event, unidentified men with bullhorns stood behind the Proud Boys and excoriated the counter-protesters.

“You guys are making lists,” one of the men said. “We’re making lists, too.” He added a reference to “9mm” ammunition that was otherwise inaudible. Another time, the man addressed the counter-protesters, saying, “You are in a very dangerous position. You are in the vast minority.” Bertino told Raw Story he did not hear the comment and could not identify the speaker.

Another unidentified man told the counter-protesters: “Donald Trump has stirred the pot. You think you’ve captured him. But all you’ve done is woken us up. You think this is gonna end? No!” The speaker also called the counter-protesters lazy and accused them of not understanding Christianity.

The right-wing group, which broadly expressed defiance of COVID restrictions and loyalty to Donald Trump, out-numbered counter-protesters almost two to one.
Drawn from Raleigh activists who have been protesting against police brutality since late May, along with antiracists and antifascists who are veterans of efforts to remove Confederate monuments, the counter-protesters responded in kind with taunts toward the Proud Boys. One sign held by a counter-protester read, “Proud Boy Thugs: 21st Century Nazi Brown Shirts.” Another showed a depiction of a Confederate flag, a swastika and the name “Trump,” concluding, “3 generations of losers.”

“For individuals to still be conducting ‘Stop the Steal’ protest/rallies essentially 25 days after Election Day even after Gov. [Roy] Cooper has been declared the winner is in the same vein as the Confederate supporters still showing up places waving Confederate flags,” Kerwin Pittman, a field organizer with Emancipate NC, told Raw Story. “They just can’t accept the fact they lost. They must be called out on their denial and confronted when they attempt to sow seeds of intimidation in any community.”

Pittman was appointed by Cooper, a Democrat, to serve on the North Carolina Task Force for Racial Equity in Criminal Justice. Pittman served time in prison on conspiracy to commit murder, and he has been open about his past. All the same, North Carolina neo-Confederates never miss an opportunity to loudly confront him about his record, and on Saturday a detractor from Alamance County jeered Pittman, daring him to say the name of the man murdered in the case.

Around 1 p.m., Tara LaRosa, an MMA fighter, led an advance team of Proud Boys into the street, with Bertino and others acting as marshals as the larger group of right-wing activists marched around the governor’s residence. It’s unclear whether they had a permit for the march.

The marchers chanted “Reopen NC,” “No more masks,” “We are the republic,” and “Silent no more.”

Reopen NC leader Ashley Smith and her husband, Adam Smith, addressed the crowd with a bullhorn at the entrance of the Governor’s Mansion as the right-wing activists held the street, with tight security from the Proud Boys. At the direction of one of the co-organizers, the Proud Boys ejected two reporters, from Raw Story and INDY Week.

The right-wing activists staked out an alternate reality, with one woman insisting to reporters: “Donald Trump won the election.”

Jay Thaxton, a North Carolina Proud Boy, blocked a reporter’s camera. He said, “When you guys start writing real news, we won’t have a problem with you.”

A couple wearing shirts promoting QAnon — a conspiracy theory that posits Trump as a hero working beyond the scenes to vanquish an elite global cabal of pedophiles — strolled through the cordon of Proud Boys to join the rally. The man, who declined to give his name, told a reporter: “I pray that God would help you see both sides of the issue, not being right or left. We have a Bill of Rights.”

Earlier in the rally, before the right-wing activists broke out covered dishes for their defiant potluck, Reopen NC leader Ashley Smith addressed them.

“I’m just so thankful to see so many patriots and people who love freedom and love America,” she said. “Yes, we are here once again to stand in the face of tyranny and all that would destroy everything that we hold dear and love. And I’m here again to say, ‘No, you cannot have my America. You cannot have my North Carolina.’

“Right now, we’re going to have some food,” Smith continued. “We’re gonna hug our neighbors and say the Pledge [of Allegiance].”

In anticipation of Thanksgiving, on Nov. 10, Gov. Cooper issued an executive order limiting the number of people at indoor gatherings to no more than 10. On Nov. 23, he followed up with another executive order requiring masks in all public indoor settings.

As justification for the restrictions, the most recent executive order cited record high COVID-19 daily case counts and hospitalizations in North Carolina.

“We are at a critical point, and I am writing to update you on the worsening surge of COVID cases in our community and health system, and to share the actions we are taking,” wrote Cone Health Chief Operating Officer Mary Jo Cagle in a memo to staff on Nov. 20.

Cone Health serves Greensboro, North Carolina’s third largest city. Cagle said that during the previous week, the number of COVID patients in the hospital system leapt by almost 50 percent, from 95 to 142. She warned that the Green Valley facility, Cone’s special COVID hospital, was nearing capacity.

Like the Proud Boys, Adam Smith, the husband of the Reopen leader, has expressed a willingness to resort to violence to uphold his belief system.

In May, he carried a rifle through downtown Raleigh while marching alongside a boogaloo-inspired group that flouted North Carolina’s law against carrying dangerous weapons during a demonstration. The politically varied group included an array of Second Amendment hardliners, including a neo-Nazi, an avowed anarchist and self-described constitutionalists. One of the armed men who participated in the walks, Benjamin Ryan Teeter, is now facing federal charges of attempting to provide material support to Hamas.

In May, Adam Smith posted a Facebook Live video saying that people must be willing to kill, if necessary, to resist emergency orders — or what he described as “tyranny.”

“But are we willing to kill people? Are we willing to lay down our lives?” he asked. “We have to say, ‘Yes.’ We have to say, ‘Yes.’ Is that violence. Is that terrorism? I’m not trying to strike fear in people by saying, ‘I’m going to kill you.’ I’m gonna say, ‘If you bring guns, I’m gonna bring guns. If you’re armed with this, we’re going to be armed with this.'”

On Saturday, Lindsay Ayling, the antifascist activist, said she observed a Proud Boy point her out to Smith. Then, she said, Smith said, “Lindsay, I’m going to kill you.”

Smith responded by text to Raw Story: “Of course I didn’t say that!… That’s ridiculous.”

Ayling insisted that she heard the statement clearly and confirmed with another person that they heard it, too. She posted a video on Twitter showing Smith pointing in her direction and then wiggling his fingers in a motion that suggests pulling a trigger. Smith was standing next to Bertino at the time, and just before making the gesture, Smith yelled, “We are the people. We are the power.”

As Trump’s political and legal options for hanging onto the presidency evaporate, the Raleigh event and other rallies at state capitols are helping to maintain the tenuous alliance of violent nationalists, Christian-right extremists and conspiracy-mongers that are intent on preventing a left turn as Biden takes office. At the moment, much of that energy is focused on a planned pro-Trump rally on Dec. 12, two days before Biden’s election is made official as states cast their electoral votes. The Proud Boys have promoted the event through their Telegram account, and the gathering is expected to be a reprise of the chaotic Millions for MAGA march on Nov. 14, which Proud Boys and other far-right groups treated as a moment of triumph.

Bertino stood at the side of Proud Boys Chairman Enrique Tarrio at the Washington Monument that night as Tarrio exulted after a clash with left-wing opponents.

“I mean, we practically cleaned the streets right there where they’re sitting at BLM Plaza,” Tarrio said. “They’re corralled in, and there’s like a hundred of ’em, when usually there’s thousands of ’em. And you know who we have to thank for that?

“All of us,” he continued. “And this right here shows you the power when we the right-wing unite, and we get together. And we don’t bicker about stupid shit.”

Appeals court rejects Trump’s attempt to block certification of Pennsylvania’s election results

Voting rights advocates expressed excitement and relief on Friday after a federal appellate panel upheld a lower court’s ruling rejecting a request from President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign for an emergency injunction to overturn the certification of election results in Pennsylvania.

After Pennsylvania certified its results earlier this week—the state was among those that helped deliver President-elect Joe Biden’s historic and decisive victory—Trump continued to deny the outcome, saying that “this election has to be turned around, because we won Pennsylvania by a lot.”

The Third Circuit Court of Appeals panel of three Republican-appointed judges unanimously denied the campaign’s injunction request, with Judge Stephanos Bibas writing: “Voters, not lawyers, choose the president. Ballots, not briefs, decide elections.”

“Free, fair elections are the lifeblood of our democracy,” added Bibas, a Trump appointee, in the 21-page opinion (pdf). “Charges of unfairness are serious. But calling an election unfair does not make it so. Charges require specific allegations and then proof. We have neither here.”

Advocacy groups—including Black Political Empowerment Project, Common Cause Pennsylvania, League of Women Voters of Pennsylvania, and NAACP Pennsylvania State Conference—were intervenors in the case, along with eight impacted voters represented by the state and national ACLU, Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, Public Interest Law Center, and the law firm Covington & Burling LLP.

“Once again, this court decision is a win for voters,” declared Suzanne Almeida, elections adviser for Common Cause Pennsylvania. “We’re glad that this court, also, recognized the lack of evidence and lack of merit in this lawsuit. In America, voters choose our elected officials. Pennsylvania’s voters made a collective decision, weeks ago, and that decision needs to be honored.”

Derrick Johnson similarly said that the NAACP is “pleased with the court’s decision to uphold democracy and allow the people’s will to prevail in the face of ridiculous suppression efforts. We must remain resolute and committed to protecting millions of Americans’ votes as the Trump campaign attempts to undermine our democracy.”

Johnson was far from alone in condemning the president’s recent attacks on democracy—from his seemingly endless lies about voter fraud to a series of failed legal challenges.

“While Trump’s lawsuit is legal farce, his intent to overthrow American democracy is dangerous fact,” said Witold Walczak, legal director of the ACLU of Pennsylvania. “The voters have spoken in record numbers, and it is time to end this painful chapter in American history.”

Mimi McKenzie, legal director at the Public Interest Law Center, concurred that “the Trump campaign’s attempts to subvert democracy have been deeply concerning. But it is reassuring that yet again a court has outright rejected their efforts to disenfranchise Pennsylvania voters.”

Sophia Lin Lakin, deputy director of the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project, also agreed. As she put it: “The Trump campaign should end its pathetic and futile attempts to subvert democracy and ignore the will of the people. The voters have spoken.”

Despite the loss on Friday and calls for an end to the lawsuits, Trump campaign attorneys Jenna Ellis and Rudy Giuliani responded to the panel’s ruling by promising to plow ahead to the U.S. Supreme Court—to which the president has appointed three justices.

“The activist judicial machinery in Pennsylvania continues to cover up the allegations of massive fraud,” said Trump’s attorneys. “We are very thankful to have had the opportunity to present proof and the facts to the PA state legislature. On to SCOTUS!”

Trump, for his part, continued to tweet baseless claims of “massive voter fraud.” The ruling came a day after the president berated a journalist as a “lightweight” for asking if he would concede if the Electoral College votes in favor of Biden.

“Don’t talk to me that way,” Trump said in response to the questioning from Reuters White House correspondent Jeff Mason. “I’m the president of the United States. Don’t ever talk to the president that way.

Despite Trump’s tantrums and lies since his defeat, some advocates are optimistic.

Tim Stevens of the Black Political Empowerment Project said that “as the founder of an organization that advocates that African Americans vote in each and every election and that our votes count, I am elated that our system of democracy worked in the midst of the most serious threat to that democracy that I have witnessed in my lifetime. Hopefully, the healing can now begin, and our commonwealth and our citizens will never again witness such an assault on who we are as a nation.”

As Terrie Griffin of the League of Women Voters of Pennsylvania said: “Today’s decision affirms one thing: every vote matters.”

Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of Lawyers’ Committee For Civil Rights Under Law, wondered on Friday: “How many losses are President Trump and his allies willing to endure in their futile and baseless attempts to use the courts as a forum to rewrite the election outcome?”

“Once again,” Clarke added, “the court has made clear that there is no legal basis to subvert the will of voters.”

The internet has become captured by the right. The Gravel Institute is trying to take it back

YouTube has for years been a fount of right-wing misinformation, with its biased recommendation algorithm steering millions of users over the years toward factually inaccurate reactionary videos. Ideologies like white supremacism, anti-feminism and anti-immigration have all gathered steam on YouTube, while the left seems to be constantly playing catch-up. 

Part of the problem is money — how much of it the right has, and how they use it to produce slick misinformation. Consider organizations like PragerU, which was founded by conservative radio talk show host Dennis Prager and screenwriter Allen Estrin in 2009 to create short videos promoting right-wing ideas. (Despite the “U” in the name, it is not a university — though the letter seems intentionally placed to give the appearance of gravitas.) By 2018, videos produced by the group had reached one billion views and as of 2020 it has provided a regular platform for prominent right-wing personalities like Ben Shapiro, Candace Owens and Jordan Peterson. At the time of this writing, a Shapiro video called “Why Has the West Been So Successful?” has 2.8 million views, an Owens video called “Playing the Black Card” has 5.5 million views and a Peterson video in which he “educates” a climate activist has 1.4 million views.

“Right now they say 4.3 billion are using on their website,” Henry Williams, co-founder of The Gravel Institute, told Salon. Williams said PragerU’s influence cannot be underestimated: PragerU’s surveys of their readers and studies on their viewership said that 70% of people said their mind were changed on at least one issue. Williams cautions that it’s important to take these numbers with “a grain of salt,” while noting, “I don’t think that it is unreasonable to say that a percentage — perhaps not as high as 70%, but maybe between 10% and 60% of people who watched a video of theirs — some portion of those people’s minds have been changed.”

The Gravel Institute is a nonprofit organization named after former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel, a Democrat who served in that body from 1969 to 1981 and ran for president in both 2008 and 2020. The organization hopes to offset the influence of groups like PragerU by creating its own informational videos from a left-wing perspective. It is, in other words, a leftist antidote. 

Though it only started producing videos in the past few months, The Gravel Institute is dreaming big — and has amassed some of the world’s most renowned intellectuals, celebrities and politicians to contribute. Contributors include philosophers Cornel West and Slavoj Zizek, presenters like Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, whistleblower and activist Chelsea Manning, economist Richard Wolff and comedian H. Jon Benjamin. The organization itself promotes left-wing causes like wealth redistribution, opposing imperialist wars and transitioning into direct democracy, meaning a system in which American voters directly make laws through national initiatives.

“The issues that we’ve so far focused on were, on the one hand, drawn from looking at PragerU topics and countering them,” Williams explained. He mentioned that this has included creating videos debunking claims like the idea that so-called “small government” enhances personal freedom, or that capitalism is synonymous with freedom.

As Williams explained, “These kinds of free markets/free people dogmas are very deeply baked into the kind of crypto-libertarian ideology of PragerU videos. Those are very influential. I think that they’re almost populist in a way. People just kind of have those viewpoints or it’s connected to their personal grievances about paying taxes. PragerU very effectively weaponizes those issues.”

He also noted that PragerU’s success can be in part attributed to its ability to move with trends in political discourse. Even though it started out as “a sort of pet project for Dennis Prager, who is a major conservative radio host,” Williams explained that “they adapted to the internet and they very much learned from and worked with the evolution of YouTube as a platform. And they’ve done quite a lot to optimize their videos for YouTube, to optimize the money that they spend on ads for YouTube and Facebook, and to really extend their reach into new audiences. They are putting a lot of work into it and that’s why I think they are uniquely dangerous.”

Journalist Katherine Stewart, author of “The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism,” shared an anecdote with Salon about how those kinds of videos can be successful. She described how, while she was doing research for “The Power Worshippers,” she visited a California megachurch which aired PragerU videos to indoctrinate its audience with right-wing economic and social opinions. She specifically observed audience response to a a video by Gloria Álvarez, a Guatemalan libertarian radio host.

“The activists who organized the event understood perfectly well that breaking the link between Latinos and the Democratic Party requires undermining the economic message that voters are hearing from unions and other progressive sources,” Stewart wrote to Salon, recalling how the audience “murmured its assent” when Álvarez argued that Democrats try to trick Latino voters by offering “free stuff” and that Republicans are not threatening to send back immigrants by enforcing immigration laws.

“The core of the influence of right-wing internet has been its ability to stoke the sense of grievance among its audience, and to sow massive distrust of essentially all legitimate information sources,” Stewart wrote to Salon. “So while they certainly weaponize ‘culture war’ issues and promote the idea that the Democratic Party has been taken over by the ‘radical left,’ they have also succeeded in getting their audience to discount sources of fact that would draw them away from extreme positions.”

Stewart also told Salon that the left-wing has been at a disadvantage when it comes to fighting right-wing misinformation online for three reasons. One is the prevalent belief among many in the media that in order to report on the truth, “you have to give both sides equal weight in an argument. That opens the door to the idea of a ‘false middle,’ or both-sidesism.” The second is that it is “easier to communicate a simple lie than a complicated truth.” Finally she noted that organizations which disseminate right-wing misinformation have wealthy backers in ways simply not seen on the left.

“There is far more money invested in persuading people of certain right-wing dogmas,” Stewart explained. “Certainly people on the right complain that universities have a ‘bias’ when they support, say, scientific or sociological research whose findings tend to affirm liberal positions. But when you consider the money invested in trying to appeal to a sense of fear and grievance, it is largely coming from the right-wing lane.”

She added, “One of the big myths the hard right promotes is that is that billionaires on both sides are spread equally across the spectrum. They do that by talking all the time about George Soros or Bill Gates. But when you look systematically, as people have done, at where those with deep-pockets contribute their money, it systematically tilts to the right.”

Sam Husseini, the founder of VotePact.org, told Salon by email that part of the problem facing the American left is that it simply does not stand up for its principles.

“The authentic left is largely invisible, or rendered so even by so-called liberal or progressive media,” Husseini wrote to Salon. “Plowshares activists are facing months and months in jail for challenging nuclear weapons and there’s largely silence on the issue. The left is marginal because it falls in love with opportunistic politicians rather than getting behind real self sacrificing activists pressing for concrete change.”

Noting that “much of ‘progressive thought’ is an appendage of the DNC [Democratic National Committee], or an appendage of an appendage,” Husseini pointed out that “the DNC is dealing a rigged game and offering a world of perceptual dominance by corporate power (especially Wall Street and Big Tech) with some tokenistic identity politics attached. MSNBC et al have filled many heads with xenophobia regarding Russia, almost analogous to Trump’s bigotry toward immigrants and Muslims. These competing bigotries effectively leave US power unscrutinized.” That scrutiny, of US imperial power, is something that The Gravel Institute has sought to combat in its engaging and informative YouTube videos. 

Yet the ways in which the right has captured much of the internet remain indelible. Donald Trump was so successful at carving a career out for himself based on lies about everything from Barack Obama’s place of birth to being able to build a US-Mexico border wall, while platforms like Twitter and YouTube ennobled him to disseminate his falsehoods. Companies like Facebook, which finally bowed to pressure and slapped warning labels on Trump’s lies about there being 2020 election fraud, still admit a noted right-wing bias in their posts that they have not addressed.

The Gravel Institute is unlikely to solve all of these problems overnight. But it is a start.

Use leftover cranberry sauce to make these two delicious, low-effort desserts

Growing up, we were a two cranberry sauce household on Thanksgiving. Some family members preferred the sauce made with real berries that had been boiled down and sweetened. Others like the Ocean Spray jellied variety — the sliceable kind that comes out of the can. Me? I like both. 

Cranberry sauce is the underrated MVP of the holiday table. It provides some much needed acidity and tartness to a meal that’s basically layers of butter, cream and animal fat. But it’s also one of those sides that is better in small doses, so there tends to be a lot of cranberry sauce, especially the full berry variety, left the next day. 

Sure, you can toss it on a killer leftover sandwich (here’s our guide to making the perfect one, by the way), but you can also reserve some for two delicious baked goods that won’t feel like a rehash of Thanksgiving.

They’re also both pretty low-effort — the no-bake cheesecake requires one bowl and no oven time, and the cranberry muffins come together in less than 30 minutes — which is a welcome after all the preparation for the big meal.

***

RECIPE Cranberry and Lemon No-Bake Cheesecake 
Serves 6 to 8

  • 1 pre-packaged graham cracker pie crust
  • 1 8-ounce package cream cheese, room temperature
  • 8 ounces of mascarpone cheese, room temperature
  • 1 ¼ cups of sweetened condensed milk
  • 3 tablespoons of lemon zest
  • ¼ cup fresh lemon juice
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • ½ cup of leftover cranberry sauce
  • Whipped cream for serving

1. In a large bowl, whip together the cream cheese, mascarpone cheese, sweetened condensed milk, orange zest, lemon juice and vanilla extract together until fully combined and fluffy.

2. Fold the mixture into the graham cracker crust. 

3. Take dollops of the cranberry sauce and spoon them onto the top of the cheesecake. With the end of a spoon, swirl the dollops together slightly to create a marbled effect.

4. Place the cheesecake in the freezer for at least two hours. Remove, slice and serve with whipped cream. 

RECIPE: Cranberry and Orange Muffins 
Makes 12 muffins 

  • 1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
  • ⅔ cup sugar
  • ¾ teaspoon baking powder
  • ¾ teaspoon baking soda
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 cup sour cream
  • 5 tablespoons butter, melted
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 3 tablespoons of orange zest 
  • ½ cup of leftover cranberry sauce

1. In a large bowl, combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Combine the egg, sour cream, butter, zest and vanilla. 

2. Stir the wet mixture into the dry ingredient, then fold in the cranberry sauce. 

3.. Fill greased or paper-lined muffin cups three-fourths full. Bake at 350° for 18 to 20 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Cool for 5 minutes before removing from the pan to a wire rack.

 

“Fargo” season 4 has spun a complex, compelling American fable of race and crime

The fourth-season cast of "Fargo" is expansive. Chris Rock and Jason Schwartzman may be the marquee names top-lining the series' 11 episodes, but Noah Hawley and his co-writers build the season in a way that highlights a number of players in its Kansas City mob war.

But what may have been forgotten along the way is that the tale begins as a history report by Ethelrida Pearl Smutny, an exceptionally intelligent 16-year-old played by E'myri Crutchfield. She's the biracial daughter of a white father and Black mother who run a funeral home, a handy business to have in a town with a significant body count. Hawley writes Ethelrida as a quiet witness whose eyes are wide open and who sees the characters coming in and out of her orbit very plainly.

In this very loud crime story of a season and its focus on a mob war between Schwatrzman's hotheaded Josto Fadda and the Italian mob, and Rock's Loy Cannon and his syndicate, it might have been easy to forget Ethelrida's role in the narrative. In the premiere, the only episode featuring her in voiceover as its narrator, she delivers a history report. Her subject isn't her own history, she explains, "but our history."

The history we see is how Irish organized crime usurped the underworld from the Jewish mob, and then how the Italian mafia supplanted that structure. She points out that in their respective heydays, none of these groups were considered white – not Jewish immigrants, not the Irish, not the Italians.

But if American is a definition of immigrants, she asks, how does one become American? Illustrating this point is the season's inciting crime: Josto Fadda and his father are turned away from a whites-only hospital, and at the hospital that finally accepts the Fadda patriarch, he dies.

Season 4 is a mob tale rendered in lacy dialogue. As is alwas true of "Fargo," one's ears either attune themselves to its verbosity straightaway or turn elsewhere; in my view this doesn't get in the way of how fun the story has been. True to form, Hawley introduces a web of subplots that intersect with one another at various points, and finds a way to tie everything off as it should be in the end.

Behind this artistically splendid cloak, however, is a gently-told story not only about race in America, but one that positions the unspoken founding principle of white supremacy as an ever present phantom — always there, only sometimes accounted for and very rarely seen. This makes "Fargo's" fourth saga both timely and a satisfying view of the American dream as a flawed fable.

Originally, Season 4 of "Fargo" was expected to debut in April, much earlier than its late September premiere. Those who subscribe to the belief that everything happens for a reason might say that this season was supposed to arrive in the fall of 2020, right when Americans were grappling with the possibility and then the reality of our first Black woman vice president.

If a vote is a reading of how a nation truly feels about its identity, ours divided along a line where slightly more than half of the country is fine with Kamala Harris being second in line to the presidency. The other half isn't, at least on some level. It breaks down into subsets from there, of course. Some folks will simply never vote for a Democrat; others will never vote for a woman.

Among those who have a problem with Harris being a Black woman, however, you can find a variety of flavors, almost none of them willing to admit that their decision has to do with the obvious facts about her race, but nearly all providing coded excuses that let you know that, actually, that's exactly what it's about.

One popular reason alludes to a fear that Harris will somehow control her running mate and administration partner, President-elect Joe Biden — let's call that the Sapphire excuse, to call upon the term derived from the "Amos n' Andy" character exemplifying the angry and controlling Black woman.

The other is a version of the birther lie, in which Harris' Americanness is brought into question since she's the daughter of two immigrants, one from Jamaica and the other from India. 

Both of these are means of questioning Harris' legitimacy, her excellence, her Americanness. "Fargo" digs into all of this separately and together through subplots and through specific characters. It plays out in the story of Ben Whishaw's Rabbi Milligan, the son of an Irish gangster raised within the Fadda family but still treated like a second-class citizen. That is, until he escapes with Loy Cannon's son Satchel and makes a stop in the town Liberal, Kansas, seen in the ninth episode, "East/West."

Nearly the entire episode is in black-and-white, a loose homage to "The Wizard of Oz," in which Satchel and Rabbi check into a boarding house owned by a pair of sisters, neither of whom have an affinity for "coloreds" but one of whom tolerates Satchel.

This is seemingly out of spite for her sister. The title describes the quirk of the house in that the sisters split the guest rooms between east and west, with the marginally more lenient sister claiming ownership over the west side. Upon check-in, guests are asked three questions to determine which room they'll get: Plymouth Rock, or Sutter's Mill? McCarthy or Eisenhower? Old Testament or New?

This place is about as "liberal" as Liberal, Kansas, gets. Outside the sisters' lodgings, Satchel is harassed and threatened by a cop as he sits in Rabbi's car, but the policeman relents when Rabbi shows up. In the Kansas City underworld, Rabbi may be less-than, but beyond the places where he's known, he enjoys the benefits of whiteness, like walking down a small town's street without being bothered or threatened. Satchel and the rest of the Cannons could never do that and never will — and they were not just born in America but come from families who have lived here for generations.

Throughout this season, Hawley treats American racism the way polite white Americans tend to treat it — which is to say as subtext, save for the turns when the story obligates it to become text, as when Jessie Buckley's eccentric angel-of-death nurse, Oraetta Mayflower, is introduced.

Oraetta easily claims her victims and keeps getting hired at different hospitals because she plays the part of a God-fearing woman obsessed with politeness, and never utters epithets even while being free and easy with her racist views. She takes on Ethelrida as her "project" after her white father introduces her as his daughter.

This becomes Oraetta's undoing since, like everyone else, the nurse underestimates the teenager who soon discovers her secret hobby. (Oddly enough, a phantom that's terrorized Ethelrida's family ends up saving her: Her mother explains that a member of each generation inherits the ghost of Theodore Roach, the captain of the ship that brought her ancestors from Africa. Ethelrida's great-great-grandfather strangled Roach, and his spirit has been with them ever since. They simply can't get rid of him.)

If Crutchfield's portrayal of Ethelrida feels realistic, it's because the actor drew upon personal parallels in creating the character. When I spoke with her in January — not long after Harris had suspended her presidential run, I should add — she said she commiserated with her character's quiet frustration.

"People don't expect her to be educated. My mom herself took pride in putting me into private schools, Catholic schools, wanting nothing but the best for me. With me being an actor, she put me with a speech coach because she wanted me to be the best," Crutchfield said.

The effort it takes for her character to maintain her composure despite all shots being taken at her, Crutchfield said, is substantial. She's felt it herself. "Sometimes you want to tell someone off, sometimes you want to stoop to some people's level, but then again, you have to be the bigger person. You do it because it would be held against you if you don't keep your composure, which sucks because I'm the victim, I have every right to react with anger. But I have to keep my composure because of who I am, where I am, what I look like and the history of just everything that's going on in the world."

The view from Kansas City in 1950 and 1951 bears too many similarities to the modern age.

In the season finale of "Fargo," a character describes the contortions that anyone seen as an "other" must engage in for some hope at being considered American. "We change our names, we eat each other. We forget. Don't you get it? … This is the ladder, but there's nowhere to go."

Supposedly this nation offers everyone an equal shot at the fairytale ending of America written into its founding document: life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Depending on the skin you're born into, the attainability of the second and third terms shifts and shrinks, and historically many of the people who seek them out must readjust their expectations.

This "Fargo" chapter is distinct in that it takes a supposedly "true" crime story and widens the lens to spin a fable of American identity. The dream realized in Harris and other people of color who forged a path before her and will follow in her wake is that in the future, no one will be forced to make such adjustments and can step into the broadest range of American possibility

The season finale of "Fargo" airs Sunday, Nov. 29, at 10 p.m. on FX, and streams the next day on FX on Hulu.

Coronavirus mutates rapidly in mink and ferrets. Should we be afraid?

2020 has been an unpredictable year, but it’s safe to say that even the most cynical doomsday preppers didn’t anticipate checking off “dead, coronavirus-infected mink rising from their graves” from their figurative 2020 bingo cards.

Yet that is precisely what has happened in Denmark, as thousands of mink have been killed and buried in shallow graves to halt the spread of SARS-CoV-2, according to The Guardian. Thankfully the mink did not rise up because they had been resurrected; the more innocuous, though still disgusting, explanation is that their bodies were bloated with decomposition gases and rose to the surface naturally because they had been buried en masse just below the surface.

This is not to say that the deceased mink — or their living counterparts — are not potentially disease vectors. Earlier this month Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen was compelled to announce the mass killing of mink, and an end to mink farming for the foreseeable future, after health officials in that country discovered a cluster of SARS-CoV-2 mutations among both farmed mink and people. Scientists have long held concerns that mutations in the virus could limit the effectiveness of any potential coronavirus vaccine.

Less than two weeks later, Danish scientists revealed that they had taken genetic and experimental data on the mutations and found no evidence that they enabled the virus to be transmitted more easily among human beings. They also said that the data also did not indicate that the virus would be more deadly.

Despite these findings, however, scientists still determined that a mass culling of mink was necessary because the virus has been so prevalent among mink farms, with a resulting increase in the number of COVID-19 diagnoses in regions with mink farms.

Denmark is the world’s largest producer of mink pelts, but mink and other mustelidae like ferrets are renowned for their abilities as virus mutation factories. Because ferrets are the animals most like humans in terms of how their immune systems respond to influenza, scientists have experimented with them to make existing viruses more deadly, a biowarfare concept known as “gain of function” research. As The New York Times reported in 2012, “Working with ferrets, the animal that is most like humans in responding to influenza, researchers found that a mere five genetic mutations allowed the virus to spread through the air from one ferret to another while maintaining its lethality.”

It added, “A separate study at the University of Wisconsin, about which little is known publicly, produced a virus that is thought to be less virulent.”

Specifically, virologist Ron Fouchier of the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, revealed in 2011 that he was able to take an influenza virus that did not seem to be transmitted by air, and infected enough ferrets with it that it mutated to the point where it could be airborne. As Science Magazine reported at the time, “The virus is an H5N1 avian influenza strain that has been genetically altered and is now easily transmissible between ferrets, the animals that most closely mimic the human response to flu. Scientists believe it’s likely that the pathogen, if it emerged in nature or were released, would trigger an influenza pandemic, quite possibly with many millions of deaths.”

There was some less ominous news this week involving a study led by University College London researchers of virus genomes from more than 46,000 people with COVID-19 from 99 countries. As revealed in the scientific journal Nature Communications, scientists found that the mutations which have occurred so far in the novel coronavirus have not made COVID-19 spread more rapidly.

Maria Bartiromo hit with conservative backlash following Trump interview

Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo was buried under an avalanche of criticism on Sunday morning after she allowed Donald Trump to spew outrageous assertions about 2020 election interference unchecked in what one conservative called an “infomercial” chock full of unfounded claims.

With the president ranging far afield — at one time saying the FBI and his own Justice Department was involved in the conspiracy to deny him a second term — the Fox host sat by, occasionally encouraging the president on.

According to Amanda Carpenter, a former speechwriter to Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), Bartiromo’s behavior with the president is a problem for the Fox News family.

“Let’s be clear. Maria Bartiromo is not interviewing the President rn. She is providing him a free platform to feed his base talking points uncontested. (Yum yum!) This is propaganda,” she tweeted before adding she would be on CNN to discuss the Fox host. She then added, “Watching Maria is like watching an infomercial. ‘Can you tell me more about how, how this blender could really make me a smoothie? Please show me how!’ This is the level of questioning we are seeing here. Whew Maria went all in on at least three different conspiracies at the 10:42 min mark. She’s way off the deep end. This isn’t a Trump problem, it’s a Fox problem.”

Carpenter was not the only one to bury Bartiromo, as critics piled on after the interview as you can see below:

 

Congress can wait: How Biden can reshape our future with executive action

Ever since Joe Biden was declared president-elect, a new subgenre of stories has appeared about his forthcoming use of executive actions, in the New York Times, the Washington Post, NBC, CNN, NPR, The Hill, Mother Jones, Voxetc. Some of these stories are standard issue — executive action is part of any new administration making its mark on the world, and prominent issues tend to draw special attention. But this year, the stories are more complicated, given the combination of Donald Trump’s legacy, the sheer number of outstanding crises and the gridlocked, uncertain state of government. 

Yet most, though not all, of these accounts tend to miss one crucial point: Biden has enormous power to shape a governing agenda, regardless of anything Congress might do — not just in one or two areas, but across the entirety of government. This point was first forcefully made 14 months ago, when the American Prospect rolled out what executive editor David Dayen dubbed “The Day One Agenda.” This power does not reside primarily in the showy executive orders that Trump is so fond of signing, but rather in the matter-of-fact texts of laws passed by Congress over the long course of American history — specific grants of authority that are just sitting there, waiting to be exercised. 

Not only is there tremendous agenda-setting power at the president’s disposal, but a more recent Day One Agenda article, “Joe Biden’s Four-Year Plan,” underscored how such actions could help create a new governing coalition of engaged voters, much as Social Security and Medicare did in previous generations. Of all the articles published about executive action recently, Dylan Matthews’ “10 enormously consequential things Biden can do without the Senate” in Vox stands out for grasping the breadth of possibilities, and explicitly drawing on the Day One Agenda. But it retains a typical Vox “here’s some stuff” tone — it’s absorbed in policy details, and divorced from the practical political considerations that have motivated the Day One Agenda all along. 

Dayen told me in a recent interview that the idea started with “understanding the function of a president.” He continued, “You go to Article II [of the Constitution], and you read what the job description of the president is, and other than being able to make treaties and being the commander in chief of the military, the main thing is that that they take care that the laws are faithfully executed. It’s not that they have a legislative agenda or that they work to pass policy,” he explained. “The idea is that Congress writes the laws and the president then implements the laws. Over the last 240-odd years, we’ve had a lot of laws written, and there’s a rich tapestry within that set of laws that allows a president to put together an agenda that can make progress for people in really significant ways.”

Not only is that what the Constitution clearly says, it’s how things generally worked until the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932 — an issue we’ll return to below. That’s certainly not how the political establishment sees things today. In campaign debates, “The questions are all ‘What are you going to do as president in terms of getting a legislative agenda passed?’ and so seldom are the questions, ‘What are you going to do to implement the laws that are already on the books?'” Dayen said. At the time, “Progressives were thinking in terms of a little bit of despair, because even if a progressive president were elected, Mitch McConnell would still either hold the Senate or have enough votes to frustrate any kind of a major bold policy shift,” he said. “My whole goal was to counteract that and say, ‘Look, here is an entire agenda, just sort of sitting there within the statutes waiting to be implemented.'” 

What Dayen’s publication found was a set of 30 meaningful executive actions with staggering potential, as he wrote at the time: 

Without signing a single new law, the next president can lower prescription drug prices, cancel student debt, break up the big banks, give everybody who wants one a bank account, counteract the dominance of monopoly power, protect farmers from price discrimination and unfair dealing, force divestment from fossil fuel projects, close a slew of tax loopholes, hold crooked CEOs accountable, mandate reductions of greenhouse gas emissions, allow the effective legalization of marijuana, make it easier for 800,000 workers to join a union, and much, much more.

Along with his overview, the American Prospect published detailed articles on specific policies, which included feedback from the leading Democratic primary candidates. After the primary was over, the Prospect examined the Biden-Sanders unity task force document of policy recommendations and found 277 policies that Biden could implement without congressional action. 

“On their own, none of these 277 policies will fully solve any of the interlinked crises we now face,” wrote Max Moran. “But they can go a significant way toward immediate harm reduction. Some can even solve long-standing problems, simply by enforcing or fully implementing laws already on the books. Perhaps most important, all of these policies are ideas that leaders in the moderate and progressive wings of the party broadly agree on, and that Biden should have no excuse not to enact, save for his own policy preferences. There is no hiding behind Congress on these topics.”

I asked Dayen about the relationship between the two lists, and he said the first represented “the most impactful ones,” “the real high notes,” that could be found in existing law, while the second culled everything that has been specifically agreed to. One important aspect here was to underscore the distinction between executive orders and executive action. Trump issued “a ton of executive orders” most of which “sounded good but they didn’t really do anything,” Dayen said. But he did wield real power through executive action, for example, giving farmers billions of dollars to compensate for losses from his ill-conceived trade war, when “he used a law from the New Deal called the Commodity Credit Corporation.” 

Trump’s use of New Deal legislation is ironic on multiple levels. As noted before, Dayen’s account of presidential and congressional power describes how things generally worked until the election of FDR in 1932, in the midst of the Great Recession — a cataclysmic catastrophe for which existing laws were clearly insufficient, and which Congress was clearly unable to deal with through its accustomed means. Roosevelt’s famous “100 days” fundamentally altered how we saw presidential leadership — and extending well beyond the first 100 days. We came to expect presidents to initiate legislation, rather than simply sign or veto it. And the Constitution allowed for that to happen, simply because it wasn’t forbidden. 

Many conservatives objected to the New Deal, complained that it had resulted in a “Constitution in exile,” but when they finally elected one of their own — Ronald Reagan — half a century later, they cheered him on for doing the exact same sort of thing. In truth, they just didn’t like content of the New Deal, which tended to help out the wrong sorts of people, from their point of view. It was Trump, ironically enough, who has much more fundamentally upended Roosevelt’s constitutional order. Aside from his tax-cut bill — some version of which any Republican president would have proposed — he hasn’t passed any major legislation at all. He has been a model “constitutional,” pre-New Deal president. Even his “destruction of the administrative state,” to use Steve Bannon’s phrase, is perfectly in line with what Reagan claimed to promise when he declared that government itself was the problem.

This does not suggest that conservatives were right and the New Deal was all a tragic, unconstitutional mistake. Quite the opposite: It was an absolutely necessary response to the crisis we faced at the time. We face a similar state of crisis today, although it has multiple different dimensions: the COVID pandemic, climate change, the racial justice struggle and worsening economic inequality, just to name a few. What we need is some way out of the polarization and gridlock we’ve drifted into over the course of the last several decades. The prospect of compromise-legislating our way out of this crisis is dim, to say the least. Just look at how long it’s been since the last COVID relief bill was passed. We need to start where we are — with executive power that depends on nothing else. 

This is the thread picked up in the aforementioned article, “Joe Biden’s Four-Year Plan,” by Jeff Spross. His argument there is simple: Trump is gone for now, “but the shadow of the 2024 election already looms,” with a Trump-shaped Republican Party that “will eventually win power again,” probably with a more competent authoritarian candidate. “The only way to avoid that fate is for Democrats to use this time to win domination over government for an extended period, forcing the GOP to fundamentally change its political course and character to maintain its own national viability,” Spross argues, just as it was forced to moderate in the wake of the New Deal.  

Dayen and Spross see things similarly. “My feeling on the election,” Dayen told me, “is that enough people thought Donald Trump was ridiculous enough to throw him out of office, but they didn’t necessarily trust Democrats to give them the keys to the car. The only way that you’re going to earn that trust is by making progress with people. Now, that sounds kind of silly, because some people say, ‘You can’t really make progress unless you get the keys to the car, right?’ But we’ve identified some ways we could make progress, in fact, and then build on that and build a coalition.”

Spross speaks in generally similar terms. “You need to pass policies that have a very concrete effect on people’s lives that they can notice quickly and that will have this effect for as broad a swath of the population as possible,” he told me. “I talk about Social Security and Medicare as two premier examples of this. Social Security is literally a check you get from the government on a regular basis. You know it comes from the government. You know it’s because the government wants to take care of you, to make sure you have a decent income in retirement. It’s a significant sum of money, and makes a big difference. So it’s transparent. It’s a meaningful contribution to a person’s well-being, and at this point it’s something like 60 to 70 million recipients.” 

The political effect of that huge benefit is also huge, Spross observed, citing Andrea Campbell’s book “How Policies Make Citizens,” which showed “how Social Security changed the political engagement of seniors,” who hadn’t previously been a significant political force.  

“The argument is basically, if you give people a benefit, a base level, they will be grateful for it,” Spross said. “That will be a sign to them that government cares about them, that it’s engaged with them, that it is concerned about their well-being. They in turn will be engaged with government: They will want to protect that benefit, they will want to expand it. And beyond that, the fact they have more income means more resources, which means more free time. That all equates to more opportunity to engage with politics.”

So the trick is how to do something similar, using the tools at hand — in other words, with laws already on the books. Spross does consider the possibility of legislation passed through reconciliation — which would avoid the filibuster — should Democrats win the Georgia Senate runoffs and hold a bare majority. One example he cited in conversation was a universal child allowance, “something like Social Security for children,” which could obviously have a tremendous impact. But he doesn’t depend on passing new legislation. In the article, he argues that Biden must pick his spots: “Not just any executive action will do, however. The Biden White House would need to focus on those changes that, again, could deliver broad, meaningful, and recognizable benefits as quickly as possible.”  

As examples from the Day One Agenda, Spross cites canceling student debt, lowering prescription drug prices (two different laws allow for this), and initiating postal banking services (full-fledged universal services would require legislation, but targeted services and pilot projects wouldn’t). He also cites removing marijuana from the schedule of controlled substances, helping hundreds of thousands of workers unionize, beefing up enforcement of worker safety laws, and possibly raising the federal poverty line, “which would automatically expand existing welfare benefits to many more American families.”

There are lots of other things that need to be done — particularly when it comes to the climate crisis, an existential threat to all of us. They don’t necessarily have the kind of quick constituency-building potential that Spross has focused on. That doesn’t mean they should be ignored — that would be profoundly irresponsible. Rather, it means that those most concerned about those major issues should recognize that these constituency-building policies are pragmatically crucial to their work as well. The more one delves into the Day One Agenda, the more one comes to see political possibilities in a new light. That light, in turn, can help illuminate a way out of our current political deadlock, and all the crises that have stemmed from that.

I ditched my microwave three years ago and never looked back

As I unpacked the kitchen in my new house three years ago — the first place I’d ever moved into on my own — I went down a mental checklist. Plates? Check. Silverware? Check. Rice cooker? Check. A single sauce pan? Check.

I felt like something was missing and I realized — I didn’t own a microwave. Microwaves — a staple of my lifestyle and most kitchens — had always been conveniently available to me, either via a roommate or built into the cabinets of the place I was renting.

Now, I considered if I really needed to drop $80 on a reliable machine. Maybe I could get by without one for a while. Or maybe I didn’t need one at all. 

I’d been reliant on microwaves since my time as a latchkey kid, punching buttons more and more frequently after I left my parents’ home with very little knowledge about how to cook for myself. And over all of those years, the microwave had become a tool and scapegoat for an endless variety of disordered eating practices.

The microwave was, after all, the key component for meals that promised pre-portioned sections of the food pyramid, calories carefully measured to curb your carb intake but not your hunger. 

When those failed, the pendulum would swing to the other side. The microwave quickly warmed up a plate of lackluster frozen wares — pizza rolls, pre-cooked chicken, faux-gourmet bags from the bins at Trader Joe’s, and anything that could be reasonably called a hot sandwich. 

I’d make myself a subpar meal and, unsatisfied, convince myself that I was still hungry, falling victim to a bingeing habit I hadn’t fully identified yet. And then I’d be miserable after, uncomfortable and regretful and still not happy with what I’d eaten.

I considered the alternative to my microwave:  the oven. Would life be worse if I had to wait 20 minutes for pizza rolls, instead of two? No, I decided — if I really wanted them, I’d be willing to wait through the preheat for them. Besides, they’re better crispy from the sheet pan than soggy and stuck to the plate.

I didn’t buy the microwave.

* * *

The en masse adoption of the microwave and other appliances to American households helped to liberate women from the kitchen. And with parents in the workforce, the microwave let kids like me fend for themselves after school, falling into a familiar rhythm each day as we shut the door on a bowl of leftovers from the night before and punched in the set of beeps that preceded the whirr of the machine. But it also helped to create a distance between us and what we eat — glutinous masses of food under frosty film that we puncture tiny holes into with our forks before tossing them onto a revolving glass tray and hoping for the best. 

Like throwing out the DVD player you haven’t used in years, saying goodbye to my microwave was a surprisingly easy adjustment. I really didn’t need it. It’s not that much more difficult to heat things up on the stove or under a broiler than it was to pop it in the microwave and then have to negotiate the uneven, unpredictable temperatures afterward. And it’s now been years since I’ve bitten into something to have it sear into my skin while simultaneously finding that it’s frozen on the inside.

And I’ve learned a few tricks along the way, like to pour water into a hot pan and cover it for just a few minutes to steam my meal while it sears underneath, reheating it from all sides. I’ve learned to reheat on the stove in an oven-safe pan, in case I want to finish it off under the broiler — that way, it’s like it’s not even leftovers, but a fresh course. I purchased an electric kettle that heats water just as quickly as the microwave, and at some point I realized that even if something from the grocery only has microwave instructions on it, that doesn’t mean it can’t be cooked in an oven — you usually just have to visit the product website for the oven directions.

And I continue to learn. This week I realized that the glass IKEA containers that I use to store leftovers are oven safe and that I have been needlessly dirtying pans for years. The next time I need to stock up on storage containers, I’ll know what to look for.

I was never particularly thoughtful about my food when I had a microwave, taking for granted that most of the meals I picked up in the grocery had the promise of a pretty photo and an ingredient list too long to be reasonably made from scratch. But as I became a better home chef — motivated by a desire to understand what I was eating, as well as how satisfied I actually was by each meal — it became second nature to reheat each meal just as I’d originally cooked it. Each serving as good as, or better than, the first.

What if I’d filled my freezer with frozen prepared meals, waiting to burn my tongue and leave me dissatisfied day after day spent alone in my home? Cooking has been both a way to pass hours and hours in quarantine, as well as a way to have some control over my own healthy choices, even as the year has shown us that our own health is not always under our own control.

As I’ve spent the year observing stay-at-home orders and subject almost totally to my own cooking, and my own cooking alone, I’m thankful that I weaned myself off the microwave when I did and made an effort to learn how to cook exactly the food I wanted and needed.

How would my body feel now, eight months in, if I’d never learned to roast a vegetable every once in a while, or to puree it into a lovely sauce? Even Thanksgiving leftovers offer a more appealing promise than years prior — stuffing reheated and toasted just a little bit in the oven, instead of a lump of mush the day after — for me and my roommate as we give thanks quietly together in our shared bubble.

 

WATCH: Trump voters turn on RNC Chair Ronna Romney McDaniel, threaten boycott of Georgia runoffs

Saturday, at a campaign stop in Marietta, GA, Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel struggled to explain to voters why they should cast ballots in the upcoming Senate runoffs when, as one voter expressed, “it’s already decided.”

McDaniel was appealing to voters to return to the polls on January 5 and cast their ballots for incumbent Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler. If Democrats defeat those candidates in Georgia, the party will control the House, Senate and White House at the onset of President-elect Joe Biden’s presidency.

But Republican voters, who’ve faced an ongoing effort by President Donald Trump and his allies to delegitimize the results of the 2020 election, cornered McDaniel about the alleged vote rigging the leader of her party has continuously insisted occurred.

One voter pressed McDaniel about “switching the votes” as she took questions from the crowd.

“We go there in crazy numbers and they should have won—” the attendee said.

“Yeah, we haven’t seen that in the audit,” McDaniel replied. “That evidence, I haven’t seen, so we’ll wait to see on that.”

“How are we going to spend money and work when it’s already decided?” Another demanded.

“It’s not decided!” McDaniel insisted. “This is the key. It’s not decided.”

“How do we know?” another asked.

The event highlighted a key issue Republicans face as the president digs in his heels on his refusal to acknowledge Biden’s victory. As the party hopes to maintain control of the Senate, the president continues to undermine the very system that will allow them to do so.

“Well, I told [Perdue and Loeffler] today, I think you’re dealing in a very fraudulent system,” Trump said during a press conference Thursday. “I’m very worried about that.”

Saturday, McDaniel attempted to tamp down the president’s complaints about the electoral system, urging voters “to focus on the mission at hand” and promising to deal with the allegations of widespread voter fraud in the future.

“We’ve got to focus on January 5th right now,” McDaniel said. “We can deal with those other things later.”

You can watch the clip below:

Federal judge bars Trump-appointed head of U.S. media agency from interfering in news coverage

President Donald Trump’s appointed head of the U.S. Agency for Global Media is barred from making any further editorial or personnel decisions following a series of injunctions issued by a federal court late Friday, in what journalists called a major rebuke of the Trump administration’s attempt to reshape government-funded news broadcasters. 

In Washington, D.C., Chief U.S. District Judge Beryl A. Howell ruled in favor of five USAGM executives who were fired or suspended in August at the direction of CEO Michael Pack, who took the helm of the agency in June and promptly dismissed several career officials in what was called a “Wednesday night massacre.”

Current and former USAGM employees applauded the ruling, with chief strategy officer Shawn Powers tweeting that Pack “has repeatedly and intentionally violated the First Amendment rights” of journalists at the agency.

The five former employees sued to stop Pack, a close associate of former White House adviser and Breitbart News executive Steve Bannon, from interfering in the editorial affairs of Voice of America (VOA), Radio Free Asia, and other broadcasters which operate under the USAGM.

The lawsuit was filed after Pack opened an investigation into VOA‘s chief White House reporter, Steve Herman, over unspecified concerns that he displayed an anti-Trump bias. The plaintiffs and many other critics inside and outside of the agency said Pack violated the “firewall” between political appointees and the broadcasters’ newsrooms which is meant to keep the organizations from becoming mouthpieces for the White House. 

Progressive critics have long considered VOA a vehicle for U.S. government propaganda overseas, promoting American-friendly coverage of world events. However, the overt takeover by a Trump loyalist has raised alarm since June.

A month after being confirmed by the U.S. Senate in a party-line vote to run the agency, the USAGM announced it would not renew visas for foreign journalists, potentially sending dozens of reporters who have worked for VOA and other broadcasters for years, back to countries where they could be persecuted. The decision was attributed by many critics to the Trump administration’s “xenophobia.”

Under Howell’s order, Pack will no longer be able to make personnel decisions for the remainder of his tenure, which is set to end in January when President-elect Joe Biden takes office. He also will not be permitted to communicate directly with editorial teams or investigate editors or their news stories. 

Howell said Pack’s investigation of Herman imposed “an unconstitutional prior restraint not just on Herman’s speech, but on the speech of [Herman’s editors] and journalists at VOA.”

NPR media correspondent David Folkenflik called Howell’s ruling a “tremendous rebuke” of Pack’s actions during his five months at USAGM.

 

“Shameful and concerning,” says AOC as Rahm Emanuel floated for role in Biden cabinet

Progressives are vocally making clear that any cabinet post for Rahm Emanuel — no matter how low-profile or obscure the position — is unacceptable amid reports that President-elect Joe Biden is considering a spot in his administration for the left-punching former mayor of Chicago, who is notorious for his role in covering up the 2014 police murder of 17-year-old Laquan McDonald.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., was among the progressive lawmakers who responded with alarm and outrage to fresh reporting from the local newspaper, Crain’s Chicago Business, which said Emanuel has been floated as a potential candidate for U.S. trade representative, a “less visible” position than the top spot at the Transportation Department that he has reportedly been lobbying for behind the scenes.

“What is so hard to understand about this? Rahm Emanuel helped cover up the murder of Laquan McDonald. Covering up a murder is disqualifying for public leadership,” Ocasio-Cortez tweeted Monday. “This is not about the ‘visibility’ of a post. It is shameful and concerning that he is even being considered.”

The New York Democrat’s unequivocal rejection of any cabinet spot for Emanuel — a fervent opponent of progressive policy objectives — was echoed by other members of the so-called “Squad,” including one of the informal group’s newest members.

“The thing about covering up the murder of Laquan McDonald is that it disqualifies you from holding any type of public office. Forever,” tweeted Rep.-elect Cori Bush, D-Mo., whose involvement in campaigns against police violence fueled her decision to run for Congress.

Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., and Rep.-elect Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., also spoke out on Twitter:

Given his reputation as an “egomaniac,” some raised the possibility that the swirling rumors about a potential cabinet role for Emanuel are coming from the former Chicago mayor himself, who did not hesitate to viciously attack denigrate progressives during his tenure as Obama’s chief of staff.

“I strongly suspect that Rahm is generating most of this copy himself, and team Biden is happy to have Rahm hanging out there so his other picks get less scrutiny,” tweeted The American Prospect’s David Dayen.

But no matter the source of the rumors and media reports, progressives are using their growing numbers in Congress to attempt to exert influence over Biden’s cabinet picks and establish that they will not quietly fall in line for nominees who are hostile to their popular policy agenda.

“Imagine thinking it’s ‘divisive’ to want someone other than the guy who covered up a murder to lead a department or agency,” said Rep.-elect Mondaire Jones, D-N.Y.

Five ways Joe Biden can “de-DeVos” U.S. education

Teachers and other education advocates are feeling giddy at the possibility of moving forward a progressive agenda that the current education secretary, Betsy DeVos, stopped dead in its tracks four years ago. President-elect Joe Biden campaign’s policy director, Stef Feldman, told the Education Writers Association that as president, Biden would “get some big, bold education legislation passed and certainly immediate relief for our schools and our educators,” and said Biden would take executive actions as well. Many of those executive actions, education advocates hope, will de-DeVos the Department of Education.

Here are some of the likeliest ways public education will change in a Biden-Harris administration.

Enforce all students’ civil rights 

Earlier this year, Betsy DeVos announced sweeping revisions to the federal civil rights law Title IX, which prevents discrimination on the basis of sex in federally funded schools. As a result, a judicial-like process is now used to investigate sexual harassment complaints, giving the accused a right to cross-examine accusers in a live hearing. Student advocates have said this would deter survivors from reporting assaults, which were already underreported.

Biden has also vowed to restore Obama-era civil rights guidance letters, which were rescinded by DeVos. Those include allowing transgender students to choose their own restrooms, addressing the disproportionate disciplining of Black students and pressing for diversity in colleges and K-12 classrooms.

“The good news is that Secretary DeVos has been more effective at doing damage to Obama-era policies than at creating anything new,” Kevin Welner, director of the National Education Policy Center, told Capital & Main. “So the first and easiest items on the Biden education checklist should be reissuing — and perhaps even strengthening — Obama-era guidance letters. I call this process ‘de-DeVos-ing.'”

Spending on K-12 will increase

For several years Trump/DeVos proposed major federal spending cuts to education that were rejected by Congress, including zeroing out the budget for after-school programs for needy youth. In a Biden administration, Congress will likely be asked to approve increased education spending.

Biden has promised to triple Title I aid for low-income schools, with requirements for higher teacher pay, and vowed to double the number of psychologists, counselors, nurses and social workers in schools. He has promised to invest in school infrastructure to address health risks and dramatically increase funding for special education. Unlike DeVos, Biden also wants the federal government to fund universal prekindergarten for all 3- and 4-year-old children, make community college debt-free, and double Pell grants for low-income and middle class students.

Paying for college may become easier

For four years in a row, DeVos proposed dismantling the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program, which was created in 2007 with bipartisan support. She has also proposed slashing subsidized federal student loans, work-study funding and parent PLUS loans.

In addition to promises to shore up these programs, Biden said he supports canceling $10,000 of debt per student — far less than what rivals for the Democratic nomination had advocated — as well as making community college free, doubling Pell grants and making public colleges tuition-free to people earning under $125,000 annually.

The new administration is likely to prioritize the immense backlog of loan forgiveness claims that DeVos let pile up, and reverse denials of assistance to students claiming to be cheated by for-profit colleges. As attorney general of California, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris sued the now-defunct Corinthian Colleges for fraud and predatory practices.

School districts to have more guidance on education regulations

Educators championed the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), which replaced the widely disparaged No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) in 2015, but according to National Education Association president Becky Pringle, the Department of Education under DeVos gave states, cities and districts no guidance on how to implement it. (Disclosure: The NEA is a financial supporter of this website.)

“[DeVos] was not interested in it,” said Pringle. ESSA, she added, reformed NCLB “to focus on equity and access to education and parent voices to help all students have access to quality counselors and teachers and digital tools. ESSA rolls back emphasis on testing and focuses on the whole student, a holistic approach. States were to develop different assessment systems but they needed leadership and it wasn’t there.”

Shrink the digital divide

COVID-19 has exposed the digital divide among schoolchildren — and possibly widened it. But a new COVID relief package could remedy this. The HEROES Act, passed by the Democratic House but ignored by the Republican Senate, called for $1.5 billion through the Federal Communications Commission’s E-Rate program, plus $4 billion to states and cities to connect low-income families with broadband.

More COVID relief is likely, though it’s not clear what form it would take. This week both Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer have agreed to take on a new bill, though McConnell has said it must be “highly targeted” (i.e., much smaller). Still, Democrats are pushing for the $4 billion for e-learning technology.

In addition to urging Congress to pass a COVID relief bill with money earmarked for broadband, Biden has pledged to work with Congress to pass legislation to connect more Americans with broadband, and to increase funding for Community Connect Grants to rural America.

Could Congress scuttle Biden’s plans?

Some plans, like rolling back DeVos’ Title IX changes, can be done by executive order, but Congress must approve any changes involving the budget. If Republicans win the two Georgia Senate runoff races in January, the Senate will be led by McConnell, who is already scolding Democrats about the budget deficit.

Still, Pringle thinks that if any president can twist Republican arms, Biden can. “Biden knows how the Senate works,” she said, “and he lives up to his word and has demonstrated willingness and temperament and determination to help us move forward.” But Pringle cautioned that activists must also pressure representatives to fund Biden’s initiatives: “We had a record level of activism to get a new president. But we can’t just get people elected. We must show up daily with a grassroots push to help Biden-Harris.”

Several of the president-elect’s cabinet picks, including, possibly, secretary of education, will be announced Tuesday, according to Biden’s chief of staff Ron Klain. 

Copyright 2020 Capital & Main

New science tempers hope for life in Venus’ clouds — but nothing is ruled out just yet

In September, news about the possibility of floating, cloud-based life on Venus caused a storm in the science world as tumultuous as the sulfur clouds that rain acid down on the second planet from the Sun.

A paper published in Nature Astronomy by a group of international astronomers explained how they detected phosphine (PH₃), a gaseous molecule composed of one phosphorus and three hydrogen atoms, in the upper atmosphere of Venus. Researchers saw phosphine’s signal in spectrograms from two radio telescopes they used to capture the data, and estimated there were 20 parts per billion of the compound in Venus’ clouds.

This discovery, the astronomers stated, was believed to be a “promising” sign of life, as phosphine on Earth is created in the gaseous emanations of anaerobic life. Could it be that, high above among the mountains, craters, thousands of volcanoes and thick atmosphere, little microbes flitted about the Venusian sky?

“If no known chemical process can explain PH₃ within the upper atmosphere of Venus, then it must be produced by a process not previously considered plausible for Venusian conditions,” the authors of the paper stated. “This could be unknown photochemistry or geochemistry, or possibly life.”

On Earth, phosphine is produced as a waste byproduct of simple anaerobic bacteria, and they are a notorious signature of the uncommon gas. The researchers struggled to figure out any other way that the gas could be produced on Venus, geologically or in the atmosphere somehow, but came up empty.

But quickly after astronomers published the initial paper, more research papers followed questioning the observation of phosphine—both its presence and the abundance of the compound. In one critique of the original study, researchers suggest that the signs of phosphine were coming from another common gas in Venus’ clouds, sulfur dioxide, which has a similar spectrogram. Another critique focused on how difficult it is to extract a phosphine signal out of the data that the initial group of researchers used, according to Nature. Subsequently, the same team of astronomers of the initial paper re-examined their data and cited a processing error and recalculated its estimate to 5 parts per billion. In other words, if there’s phosphine there likely isn’t as much of it. Their results were published in a preprint posted on 17 November to arXiv.

So, does that mean that life on Venus has been ruled out?

“If phosphine indeed exists at the claimed abundance of ~5 ppb [parts per billion], then this abundance is still orders of magnitude larger than what one can get out of plausible volcanic activity on the planet based on what we know from Earth,” Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb told Salon over email. “But although we know that phosphine originates from life on Earth, we do not fully understand the detailed path by which it is produced (namely which microbes make it and how).”

Loeb said there is still a lot of research that needs to be done in order to land on a definitive answer to whether or not there’s life on Venus or not— like going to Venus and collecting some microbes in a probe, say.

“We will not be convinced that life exists on Venus until microbes are found by scooping the Venusian clouds,” Loeb said. “The claimed detection of phosphine plays the important role of motivating a mission that will go there.”

Notably, Loeb added that the over-reported estimate of phosphine wasn’t a “mistake.”

“I would not call it a mistake but an overestimate, for now, until proven wrong by better data,” Loeb said.

As luck would have it, NASA’s DAVINCI+ (Deep Atmosphere Venus Investigation of Noble gases, Chemistry, and Imaging Plus) mission is one contender to study the upper atmosphere of Venus. According to Forbes, NASA is due to make a decision next year on whether or not the mission will move forward. If phosphine is indeed abundantly present in Venus’ atmosphere, this mission would be able to detect it.

“DAVINCI+ will measure the compositional and dynamic context for interesting gases such as phosphine—and likely others not yet discovered,” Dr. James Garvin, Chief Scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and the principal investigator of DAVINCI+, told Forbes. “We do not have enough information to rule out more exotic processes potentially responsible for unanticipated phosphorous gases such as phosphine; DAVINCI+’s proposed measurements could directly provide essential chemical context.”

NASA hasn’t paid much attention to Venus since the 1990s, when the Magellan mission mapped out the planet’s surface. But as Loeb told Salon, the “claimed detection” of phosphine “plays the important role of motivating a mission that will go there.”

In other words, the planet Venus could be undergoing its own kind of renaissance in the planetary science world.

When asked if there’s more potential interest in missions to Venus, Loeb said “definitely.” He added that the original report inspired members of his own research group to write two more papers on the subject.

Therese Encrenaz, an astrophysicist at LESIA, Paris Observator, told Salon via email that she is convinced that “there are still many open questions regarding the photochemistry and meteorology of its atmosphere.”

“Venus has been forgotten for too long, relative to the space exploration of Mars,” Encrenaz said. “There is no need for phosphine to be interested in Venus! I am very happy to see potential space missions on Venus being in the competition for future selections, at ESA [European Space Agency] and NASA; I hope at least one of them will get selected.”

As Noam Izenberg, a planetary scientist at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory and deputy chair of NASA’s Venus Exploration Analysis Group, previously told Salon, even if there ends up not being phosphine or life on Venus, the search alone “highlights how much we don’t know about Venus, and that fundamental new discoveries […] await us next door.”

Why employers find it so hard to test for COVID

Brandon Hudgins works the main floor at Fleet Feet, a running-shoe store chain, for more than 30 hours a week. He chats with customers, measuring their feet and dashing in and out of the storage area to locate right-sized shoes. Sometimes, clients drag their masks down while speaking. Others refuse to wear masks at all.

So he worries about COVID-19. And with good reason. Across the U.S., COVID hospitalizations and deaths are hitting record-shattering new heights. The nation saw 198,633 new cases on Friday alone.

Unlike in the early days of the pandemic, though, many stores nationwide aren’t closing. And regular COVID-19 testing of those working remains patchy at best.

“I’ve asked, what if someone on staff gets symptoms? ‘You have to stay home,'” said Hudgins, 33, who works in High Point, North Carolina. But as an hourly employee, staying home means not getting paid. “It’s stressful, especially without regular testing. Our store isn’t very big, and you’re in there all day long.”

To the store’s credit, Hudgins said the manager has instituted a locked-door policy, where employees determine which customers can enter. They sanitize the seating area between customers and administer regular employee temperature checks. Still, there’s no talk of testing employees for COVID-19. Fleet Feet did not respond to multiple requests to talk about its testing policies.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued guidance to employers to include COVID testing, and it advised that people working in close quarters be tested periodically. However, the federal government does not require employers to offer those tests.

But the board overseeing the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health, known as Cal/OSHA, on Thursday approved emergency safety rules that are soon likely to require the state’s employers to provide COVID testing to all workers exposed to an outbreak on the job at no cost to the employees. Testing must be repeated a week later, followed by periodic testing.

California would be the first state to mandate this, though the regulation doesn’t apply to routine testing of employees. That is up to individual businesses.

Across the nation, workplaces have been the source of major coronavirus outbreaks: meat-processing plants, grocery stores, farms, schools, Amazon warehouses — largely among the so-called essential workers who bear the brunt of COVID infections and deaths.

The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration inspects workplaces based on workers’ complaints — over 40,000 of which related to COVID-19 have been filed with the agency at the state and federal levels.

Workers “have every right to be concerned,” said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an epidemiologist at the University of California-San Francisco. “They are operating in a fog. There is little economic incentive for corporations to figure out who has COVID at what sites.”

Waiting for symptoms to emerge before testing is ill-considered, Chin-Hong noted. People can exhibit no symptoms while spreading the virus. A CDC report found that, among people with active infections, 44% reported no symptoms.

Yet testing alone cannot protect employees. While workplaces can vary dramatically, Chin-Hong emphasized the importance of enforcing safety guidelines like social distancing and wearing face masks, as well as being transparent with workers when someone gets sick.

Molly White, who works for the Missouri state government, was required to return to the office once a week starting in July. But White, who is on drugs to suppress her immune system, feared her employer’s “cavalier attitude toward COVID and casual risk taking.” Masks are encouraged for employees but are not mandatory, and there’s no testing policy or even guidance on where to get tested, she said. White filed for and received an Americans With Disabilities Act exception, which lasts through the end of the year, to avoid coming into the office.

After a cluster of 39 COVID cases emerged in September in the building where she normally works, White was relieved to at least get an email notifying her of the outbreak. A few days later, Gov. Mike Parson visited the building, and he tested positive for COVID-19 soon after.

Following pressure from labor groups, Amazon reported in a blog post last month that almost 20,000 employees had tested positive or been presumed positive for COVID-19 since the pandemic began. To help curb future outbreaks, the online retailing giant, which also owns Whole Foods, built its own testing facilities, hired lab technicians and said it planned to conduct 50,000 daily tests across 650 sites by this month.

The National Football League tests players and other essential workers daily. An NFL spokesperson said the league conducts 40,000 to 45,000 tests a week through New Jersey-based BioReference Laboratories, though both organizations declined to share a price tag. Reports over the summer estimated the season’s testing program would cost about $75 million.

Not all companies, particularly those not in the limelight, have the interest — or the money — to regularly test workers.

“It depends on the company how much they care,” said Gary Glader, president of Horton Safety Consultants in Orland Park, Illinois. Horton works with dozens of companies in the manufacturing, construction and transportation industries to write exposure control plans to limit the risk of COVID-19 outbreaks and avoid OSHA citations. “Some companies could care less about their people, never have.”

IGeneX, a diagnostic testing company in Milpitas, California, gets around 15 calls each day from companies across the country inquiring about its employer testing program. The lab works with about 100 employers — from 10-person outfits to two pro sports teams — mainly in the Bay Area. IGeneX tests its own workers every other week.

One client is Tarana Wireless, a nearby telecommunications company that needs about 30 employees in the office at a time to operate equipment. In addition to monthly COVID tests, the building also gets cleaned every two hours, and masks are mandatory.

“It’s definitely a burden,” said Amy Beck, the company’s director of human resources. “We are venture-backed and have taken pay cuts to make our money extend longer. But we do this to make everyone feel safe. We don’t have unlimited resources.”

IGeneX offers three prices, depending on how fast a company wants the results: $135 for a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test with a 36- to 48-hour turnaround — down to around $100 a test for some higher-volume clients; one-day testing costs $250, and it’s $400 for a six-hour turnaround.

In some cases, IGeneX is able to bill the companies’ health insurance plan.

“Absolutely, it’s expensive,” said IGeneX spokesperson Joe Sullivan. “I don’t blame anyone for wanting to pay as little as possible. It’s not ‘one and done,’ which companies are factoring in.”

Plus, cheaper, rapid options like Abbott’s antigen test, touted by the Trump administration, have come under fire for being inaccurate.

For those going into work, Chin-Hong recommends that companies test their employees once a week with PCR tests, or twice a week with the less sensitive antigen tests.

Ideally, Chin-Hong said, public health departments would work directly with employers to administer COVID testing and quash potential outbreaks. But, as KHN has reported extensively, these local agencies are chronically underfunded and overworked. Free community testing sites can sometimes take days to weeks to return results, bogged down by extreme demand at commercial labs like Quest Diagnostics and LabCorp and supply chain problems.

Hudgins, who receives his health insurance through North Carolina’s state exchange, tries to get a monthly COVID test at CVS on his own time. But occasionally, his insurance — which requires certain criteria to qualify — has declined to pay for it, he said.

“Being in the service industry in a state where numbers are ridiculously high,” he said in an email, “I see volumes of people every day, and I think getting tested is the smart and considerate thing to do.”

It’s not the first time that an outgoing president refused to work with an incoming one

After President Donald Trump allowed General Services Administration head Emily W. Murphy to begin a transition into the administration of President-elect Joe Biden on Monday, the Biden team reported that the White House has also begun to schedule a meeting between the former vice president’s people and those of the outgoing administration. Biden has described the Trump team’s efforts as “sincere.”

I certainly hope that this is true and, if so, that Trump continues making sure Biden is ready to lead America when he takes over on Jan 20. Trump is nothing if not mercurial, and if he reverts back to his earlier practice of not cooperating with Biden on the pandemic, historians will likely rank him along with James Buchanan as one of the worst presidents of all time. More to the point, Trump and Buchanan have one big historical similarity: both men refused to accept the results of elections that did not favor them, instead punishing the American people during a period of great crisis by refusing to work with their successors.

Most forebodingly: In Buchanan’s case, his pigheadedness during his lame duck period heralded the outbreak of the Civil War. And Trump’s parallels with Buchanan — who is regularly ranked as one of the worst presidents of all time — are particularly striking.

Let’s compare the two situations, starting with Trump. As of today, Trump continues to deny that Biden legitimately defeated him in the 2020 election and makes numerous claims of voter fraud, all of which are without merit. As part of this unwillingness to accept the voters’ verdict, Trump’s administration has up to now refused to work with Biden’s team when it comes to addressing the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. At the time of this writing that pandemic has infected nearly 12.6 million people in the United States with the novel coronavirus and led to roughly 260,000 fatalities from the disease it causes, COVID-19. A recent study projects that the number of people who develop COVID-19 could nearly double between now and Biden’s inauguration.

Even if Trump hadn’t shirked his responsibility to work with Biden’s people in responding to the pandemic, his post-election behavior would be unprecedented. Indeed, he is alone among sitting presidents who were denied an additional term by voters in refusing to accept the election results.

How does this compare to Buchanan? Buchanan, though not up for reelection himself in 1860, was deeply unhappy with the fact that Republican candidate Abraham Lincoln prevailed in that contest over his own vice president, Southern Democratic nominee John Breckinridge, or one of the other major candidates. Unlike Lincoln, who had been elected on a platform of restricting the expansion of slavery in the United States, Buchanan was pro-slavery despite hailing from the antislavery state of Pennsylvania. During his presidency Buchanan inappropriately encouraged the Supreme Court to rule in the notorious Dred Scott decision that African Americans held no rights of any kind (which it did), packed his Cabinet full of unapologetic racists who argued slavery was good for America, and repeatedly sided with the South when it advocated for imperialist wars (which would help slavery) and tried to expand their evil institution throughout the country. When the South rejected Lincoln’s election by threatening to secede, Buchanan refused to work with the incoming administration to assuage their fears.

Indeed, quite to the contrary, Buchanan took the position that the federal government should not intervene if a state decides to secede from the Union. While Lincoln believed that secession was illegal and slavery was immoral, Buchanan declared in his December 1860 State of the Union message that attempts to stop slavery were actually wrong, and argued that if the North refused to allow slave states to have their way, “the injured States, after having first used all peaceful and constitutional means to obtain redress, would be justified in revolutionary resistance to the Government of the Union.”

From that point on Buchanan did as little as he could get away with while state after state seceded to form the Confederacy, ultimately leaving Lincoln with no option but to wage the Civil War by the time he took office.

Until Trump refused to work with Biden on the coronavirus pandemic, Buchanan was the only president to ever behave this badly in his administration’s final lame-duck months. Sure, there had been outgoing presidents who responded petulantly after stinging electoral repudiations: Both John Adams and John Quincy Adams refused to attend their successors’ inaugurations out of spite, while Herbert Hoover wasted time clashing with Franklin Roosevelt about how to address the Great Depression. But only Buchanan matches Trump when it came to a combined refusal to work with an incoming administration in order to save lives and a bitterness over an election result that (directly or indirectly) rejected them.

These aren’t the only parallels between Buchanan and Trump. Both administrations were packed with officials who had conflicts of interest and were thus riddled with corruption, although Buchanan himself was able to narrowly avoid being impeached. Each one was overtly racist (obviously) and both abused their executive powers to violate the rights of racial justice advocates, whether it was Trump sending secret police to kidnap protesters in Portland or Buchanan tacitly supporting violence against abolitionists in Kansas and trying to extort lawmakers into taking pro-slavery positions. Each inherited a good economy and then failed to bring about recovery when there was an economic crash. And, most notably, each was at best allegedly guilty of treason, with many Buchanan officials actively supporting the Confederacy after he left office. (The only president to indisputably commit treason is John Tyler, who as a former president sided with the Confederacy and was elected to the Confederate House of Representatives.)

This isn’t to say that the analogy between Buchanan and Trump is perfect. While both men were incompetent presidents, Buchanan actually had extensive prior government experience as a congressman, senator, diplomat and secretary of state. In addition, Buchanan never threatened to stay in power past his term (although this was easier for him since he was not on the ballot in 1860). By contrast, whatever else may be said of Trump, he at least theoretically has an opportunity to redeem himself between now and the end of his term. His team’s decision to work with Biden on addressing the pandemic could be an early sign of precisely that. 

Indeed, by working with Biden on the pandemic and other important transition-related matters, ending his public displays of bitterness over the election results and walking back his previous violent rhetoric to guarantee a peaceful transition of power, Trump could avoid a Buchanan-esque reputation.

There’s even an uncanny parallel in that each one-term presidents’ missteps wrought hundreds of thousands of deaths: 235,000 Americans have died of COVID-19 (so far); 600,000 Americans died during the Civil War.

If there is any silver lining here, it is that Trump’s actions up to this point have not been entirely unprecedented. The republic survived Buchanan and it can survive Trump too.

Forget about “moving on” from Trump — the nation can’t heal without accountability

Donald Trump’s coup was still ongoing when the takes preaching the value of forgiveness and letting bygones be bygones started to come out. 

“We would remain bitterly divided,” law professor Randall Eliason wrote in a Washington Post op-ed arguing against prosecuting Trump for his many likely crimes. “[C]riminal prosecutions can’t bind up this country’s deep political and social wounds.”

“There is an opportunity to rediscover our common ground with one another — and the way forward does not involve relitigating the last four years in federal criminal court,” argues Michael Conway, former counsel to the House Judiciary Committee, in an NBC News opinion piece arguing that Joe Biden should actually pardon Donald Trump, for the love of heaven — the incumbent president who’s still sending his minions to court, trying to steal the election. 

Unfortunately, Biden is living up to every stereotype of the quisling Democrat and taking this advice seriously. Reports suggest that in the interest of national “unity,” Biden is discouraging the idea of prosecuting Trump

This is a serious mistake. Words like “unity” and “forgiveness” sound great in the abstract, but are utterly meaningless in the current political context for one reason: The sole responsibility for all this healing is being foisted, once again, on the backs of liberals. Conservatives can’t be bothered. They’re too busy working on their next moves to undermine democracy, sow division and create chaos. 

This pattern — Republicans screw everything up and are allowed to get away with it in the name of “unity,” and take that as permission to go even further the next time — has been playing out since Richard Nixon first snagged his post-Watergate pardon. In a recent feature in the New York Times Magazine, Jonathan Mahler laid out the frustrating pattern in teeth-grinding detail:

When President George H.W. Bush pardoned six Reagan White House officials who were involved in the Iran-contra affair, he warned of “a profoundly troubling development in the political and legal climate of our country: the criminalization of policy differences.” Bush was sparing members of his own party. President Obama created what is perhaps an even more relevant precedent for Biden by choosing not to prosecute members of the George W. Bush administration who had authorized the unlawful torture of detainees; his nominee for attorney general, Eric Holder, used the very same phrase — the criminalization of policy differences — when the issue came up during a 2009 congressional hearing.

Mahler also notes that this goes back to Gerald Ford’s pardon of Richard Nixon, which was justified in the name of “healing.”

But can a wound really heal when one party is busy applying bandages, while the other lurks in waiting, ready to stab the victim again? Of course not. And that’s the problem we’re facing. The “unity” isn’t unity at all. It’s a fake unity in which one side — the side that did not cause the damage wrought by Trump or Bush or Reagan or Nixon — does all the work, while the other side keeps looking for new opportunities to cause trouble. If anything, conservatives grows ever bolder in their corruption, realizing they will never face consequences for their actions, and in fact can count on the left to clean up all their messes for them. 

This is all very reminiscent of the mentality around domestic violence in the bad old pre-feminist days, when wives whose husbands beat them were told to suck it up, walk on eggshells and take the abuse in silence. Only when feminists started setting up domestic violence shelters and pressuring the justice system to start holding abusers accountable did things finally start to change.

Biden himself should understand this, as he was the original sponsor of the Violence Against Women Act, which codified and mainstreamed this notion that abusers should face consequences and victims should be allowed to walk away. Biden’s legislation worked: Domestic violence decreased by 67% and murders by men of their female partners declined by 35%. It turns out turning the other cheek was just an invitation to abusers to continue the violence. But introducing consequences for abuse — lost marriages, jail time — saved lives. 

It’s time to employ the same logic here. Democrats have tried reconciling with Republicans again and again, but since the work was wholly one-sided and the responsibility for “unity” held only by those who had done the least to destroy it, the result was failure. Instead, Republicans doubled down and doubled down again, escalating from Watergate to Iran-Contra to the Iraq War to now, with a president who is literally trying to steal an election. 

All this anxiety around the question of what to do with Trump has little to do with Trump himself. Even those who are waxing poetic about healing and unity are forced to admit Trump is a monster who deserves absolutely nothing. But the fear is that by holding Trump accountable, Biden’s administration would be implicitly passing judgment on the millions of Americans who voted for him. 

To which I say, good. Consider, for instance, this year’s Republican National Convention, a lengthy whine session about “cancel culture” from the various speakers. These were people so unused to facing consequences for their actions that the idea of lost dinner-party invitations seems like a painful price to pay for trying to to end democracy. Trump’s voters thrilled to this, enraptured by the idea that they are entitled to lash out at anyone they like, and should never pay even the slightest price — not even a disapproving look from a liberal — in response. They’ve grown soft and childish in this environment of no consequences, unwilling to take on even the slightest responsibility to their neighbors in the midst of a pandemic. 

It’s time to stop coddling the easily hurt feelings of conservatives and instead turn our attention toward the nearly 80 million people who turned out — despite extensive efforts at disenfranchisement — to bring the Trump presidency to an end. What do we owe those Americans, the ones who actually did their part to save this country? Instead of demanding that they do more to pander to conservatives’ injured feelings, why not, for once, repay them for their hard work with justice? After all Trump has put this country through, that’s the least those who stood up and resisted him deserve. 

Poland’s anti-abortion push highlights pandemic risks to democracy

Hundreds of thousands of Poles have taken to the streets since late October, defying bans on mass gatherings and risks from the COVID-19 pandemic to protest the government.

An immediate concern for protesters is the implementation of abortion regulations that would in effect end a woman’s choice to terminate a pregnancy in almost all cases.

But the demonstrations also, I argue, mark a concerted effort to protect Polish democracy from a deliberate attack by the ruling United Right coalition, led by the right-wing Law and Justice party known as PiS.

PiS has sought to tighten Poland’s already restrictive abortion laws since coming to power in 2015. After repeatedly failing to pass new abortion legislation, the party bypassed the democratically elected parliament and appealed to the unelected Constitutional Court to reinterpret the existing law. That court, packed with Law and Justice loyalists, criminalized abortion even in cases of severe fetal deformities on Oct. 22.

The latest move, according to members of the opposition and nonpartisan human rights observers, was an effort to push forward with a highly contentious agenda under the cover of COVID-19 restrictions. Hillary Margolis, senior women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch, said: “The chaos and anxiety surrounding COVID-19 shouldn’t be used as a distraction from harmful attempts to push through dangerous legislation.”

As a scholar who studies efforts to undermine democracy and has spent several years in Poland, I see echoes of PiS’s behavior elsewhere. Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, various authoritarian leaders, including Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Cambodia’s Hun Sen, have been accused of using the global health disaster as a convenient tool to grab more power. The Poland case demonstrates how even purported democrats may be willing to use the emergency to push their agendas at a time when people’s democratic right to protest may be curtailed over concerns over the spread of disease.

Indeed, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki suggested that in protesting, those against the new restrictions were putting their mothers and fathers at risk from the disease.

Road to restrictions

PiS rose to power in the mid-2000s by claiming postcommunist elites had a stranglehold on the state and its various institutions. It was an anti-establishment party that promised to liberate ordinary Poles and embrace traditional Catholic values long associated with Polish identity. PiS’s decision to align itself closely with the church plays especially well in its nonurban base.

While PiS had its first taste of governing in a coalition that lasted from just 2005 to 2007, it was in 2015 that PiS won its first parliamentary majority. The party’s rise was fueled by its anti-migrant policies and promises to counter the “destructive ideology” of the LGBTQ community.

Since then, PiS also gained popularity by lavishing its constituents with generous welfare benefits, including higher pensions, tax breaks for low-income earners and a policy that pays parents to have more children. Thanks to these policies, PiS maintained its parliamentary majority in the 2019 elections, assisted by the support of the church.

Over its five years in power, PiS has been accused by critics of methodically attacking the basic liberal institutions Poland once so confidently modeled for others in the region. For example, the government has been accused of harassing nongovernmental organizations and limiting media freedoms.

It has also weakened state institutions, particularly the courts. At the start of this year, a group of Polish judges led thousands of people in a march against government efforts to undermine judicial independence. The judges were unable to stop PiS from stacking the Constitutional Tribunal with judges loyal to the party – and, it turns out, ready to implement the government’s abortion policies.

The abortion agenda

Poland’s democracy has remained vibrant enough to prevent PiS from successfully pushing through unpopular policies, including the legislation of a more restrictive abortion law. Although PiS holds a majority in the powerful lower house of parliament, for example, the opposition narrowly controls the weaker upper house.

Up until last month, Poland allowed abortions only as a result of fetal abnormalities, as well as rape, incest or a direct threat to the mother’s health. PiS attempts to tighten the laws in 2016 and 2017 failed amid public protests. Fewer than half of Poles support the draconian abortion rules pushed by PiS. This reflects the reality that while most Poles identify as Catholics, only a fraction are deeply religious.

This spring, in the run-up to presidential elections, legislators on the right acknowledged as much. Rather than fight for restrictions, they quietly sent a pending abortion bill back to committee. After President Andrzej Duda — supported by PiS — was reelected in July, lawmakers adopted a new strategy. They would skirt the democratically elected legislature and instead ask the Constitutional Tribunal they had stacked to reconsider the country’s existing 1993 abortion law.

Concerns over how PiS has changed the Polish judiciary — through measures including taking over the council that appoints judges and banning judges from criticizing the government — have grown in recent years. Earlier this year, Małgorzata Gersdorf, first president of the Supreme Court, went as far as to say that Poland is no longer “a democracy based on the rule of law.”

The Oct. 22 court decision to ban almost all abortions, even in cases of severe fetal deformities, ignited the opposition.

Democracy on the line

The timing of the decision — coming just as citizens were being advised to socially distance because of the pandemic — was, observers say, no mistake. The hundreds of thousands of Poles who took to the streets did so at great risk. With bans on public gatherings, protesters risk not only their health, but also fines of 5,000 to 30,000 złoty (nearly US$8,000). Hundreds were punished in the first days for disobeying the ban on gatherings and many more have been punished since.

The move to bypass democratic institutions amid a pandemic is eerily familiar to authoritarian watchers. Numerous authoritarian regimes have used COVID-19 to silence critics. What’s different is that Poland is still a democracy, albeit a flawed one. It is not authoritarian China, not even semi-authoritarian Hungary, where the country’s illiberal prime minister has severely undermined democracy during his decade in power.

And Poland is not the only democracy where leaders have been accused of trying to push through agendas while people may be distracted with fighting the pandemic.

In India, the ruling right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party has fueled conspiracy theories that the Muslim minority is intentionally spreading COVID-19. The United States has been accused of using the outbreak as an excuse to unlawfully expel unaccompanied migrant children. Israel has begun using data designed to track potential terrorists to track everyday citizens. And Australian police arrested Black Lives Matter participants protesting the deaths of aboriginal people in custody on the pretext that they breached coronavirus protection measures.

The risk is that as the coronavirus crisis drags on through the winter, leaders in democracies will continue to use the pandemic to take nondemocratic shortcuts to achieve their goals. They may be tempted to respond to public anger as the Polish prime minister did: “I am asking for these protests to be canceled because of the epidemic.”

The silver lining

Still, the recent Polish demonstrations — the largest since the trade union-led umbrella movement Solidarity’s showdown with Communists in the 1980s — demonstrate democracy’s potential resilience.

Indeed, democracy appears to be winning. After a week of protests President Duda suggested he might reintroduce less severe abortion legislation. A few days later, the government promised it would delay implementation of the ban. The cover of COVID-19 may not be enough for PiS to overcome democratic checks and balances in Poland, especially in the face of sustained protest and plummeting support.

Brian Grodsky, Professor of Political Science, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

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

What Joe Biden needs to know about addiction, drug rehab and whiteness

Joy stared into my eyes with enough enchantment to transform a man’s sandbox-like insecurities into an iceberg of god-like ego. Naked and sitting upright in bed with me and another woman, we shared jolts of sexual chemistry upheld by ice cold lines of cocaine.

My coke sniffing debut unfurled over ten years ago. The spoken words that detonated my self-destructive actions were never analyzed or critiqued. The lyrical prose that formed my life was too complex, and too numerical for my left-sided brain. So, I abandoned the very listening sessions which held ammunition to a healthy lifestyle. Flat surfaces topped with mountainous piles of cocaine substituted positive reaffirmations and strenuous yet appropriate conversations with myself and loved ones. The tangled psychological complexities were further knotted with every line of coke that I inhaled.  

Joy rarely sniffed coke. Our time together was sexually and intellectually exciting. The hope that stirred our conversations provided, for the time being, a bridge to our uncertainties. Our platonic freestyle sessions also added to the euphoria of our sexual adventures. Behind the dark walls of bliss, Joy saw that pieces of Darryl were lost in blighted areas of history. There were times when Joy would just stare into my eyes; no words, no movement, only invisible energy. “I’m just trying to connect to your soul. I can tell that you’re far from home ” she’d say. Her attempt to dissect the unfinished project before her was met with Jerome Bettis-like stiff arms. 

Once the sex was no longer satisfying, and cocaine failed to get me high, a violent full-blitz of emotionally painful episodes imploded my soul. For days, everything that had ever caused me hurt, and discomfort played on repeat. Literally, a three-decade long motion picture dubbed: “Here, Hold All of This Hurt” rolled on a reel for 24 hours a day. It’s maddening and stifling  Depression would last for days. Hopelessness so thick that I would contemplate suicide, or invite enemies to fight.  

Addiction will rock your world. 

* * *

Hunter Biden, the son of President-elect Joe Biden, has been open about his struggle with addiction. During a 2019 interview with the New Yorker, Hunter admitted that he struggles with alcohol, cocaine and cigarettes. “Look, everybody faces pain. Everybody has trauma. There’s addiction in every family. I was in that darkness, I was in that tunnel — it’s a never-ending tunnel. You don’t get rid of it,” Hunter said during the interview. 

In an effort to combat drug abuse, Biden plans to invest $125 billion in treatment, prevention and recovery services. Biden is also continuing the fight to make sure that everyone has access to health care. 

Rehab facilities have been instrumental in combating addiction. But there isn’t one shoe that fits all when it comes to fighting addiction. And for Black people especially, drug rehab facilities can be problematic and discouraging. Rehab programs speak from a POV that says drug addiction is caused by poor emotional management and underdeveloped self-reliance skills. And part of the rehab process is getting clients to submit to the idea that they are mentally and emotionally cracked, split and broken into a million pieces. 

The broken-self narrative has been used to uphold white patriarchy, slavery and other hierarchal institutions. Adopting a morally bankrupt narrative can be an huge obstacle for Black addicts, even if it means saving ones’ life. It’s dispiriting to enter a rehab facility only to be met with rhetoric that says, “you aren’t capable of functioning in society without guidance,” or “you are emotionally and morally broke and you need someone to manage your life.” Mobility of Black life hasn’t been limited to racial segregation. Disturbing rhetoric, even symbolic language, places barriers on ones’ mobility. Racism is so layered, and has been part of America’s fabric for since colonization, it’s damn near impossible to discern between rehab employee offering sincere rhetoric or speaking from a racially historical viewpoint. 

Studies have shown that most Blacks in rehab fail to complete treatment because language barriers proved to be too discouraging. Research also shows that white men are more likely to accept the “broken-self” label, enabling them to complete rehab.  

* * *

Less than three hours after being released from a three-month stay in a court mandated rehab, I was alone in a Harlem hotel with two grams of cocaine piled onto a book. Not being able to get inside my apartment (because my keys were locked inside of an office during COVID-19 lockdown) combined with the heaviness of early recovery, and trepidation of living sober encouraged my relapse. So, I disappeared. For three days, I ran my nose over lines of cocaine until the piles of coke turned to dust. 

My confidants were accustomed to the disappearing acts. Sometimes I would vanish for weeks. They didn’t fuss, deny me access to them, or flood my iPhone with disparaging text messages. They listened to my silence, and hugged me with space and warm words, sent sporadically through text messages: “Darryl, pick yourself up. Get up.” and “Yo fam, holler at me. You don’t have to go through this alone. I love you, bro” and “Yo bro, I love you. When you come back, I’m here and ready to continue fighting with you.” and “Hey Darryl, checking on you. Call me when you get up.” Their love and understanding stirred the pot that simmered with ideas of sobriety. By day three of my relapse, I made the decision to get up. For me, a three-day binge was progress. 

Rehabs aren’t in the business of giving agency to clients. A three-day relapse can result in a jail sentence or an increased stay at an institution. There’s a hierarchy within institutions, and everyone has a job to do. Situations do arise where a client’s recovery progress doesn’t align with an employee’s job. This happened to me. 

The job of my former lawyer and court advocate was to police me through rehab and post-rehab and keep the judge informed. White men employed by the state of New York parading over my life did not sustain my recovery process. Heavy policing further convinces white men that their whiteness equates dominance. Whiteness relies on controlling  subduing, and harming. Me not answering my phone was an act of rebellion against being controlled. This was a jab followed by a vicious right hook to my lawyer’s whiteness, and enough disrespect to encourage him to send the police to my apartment, disguised as a wellness call. My lawyer said he thought I was dead. 

As a lawyer, he’s fully aware that had I been home when the police came to my apartment, one of two things would’ve happened: there would’ve been a murder, or I would have gone to jail for possession of cocaine. America has fooled white men into believing that it’s cool to subdue Black life for not answering the phone, talking a walk to the store, going for a jog, or selling CDs. 

Blacks also recognize the power of whiteness. A former associate was upset with me, because, according to her, I manipulated her by withholding “pertinent” information about my addiction. She was well aware of my legal troubles. My attempts to have a conversation with her about our issues were met with her calling my lawyer and court advocate asking them to intervene in our relationship or she would call the police on me. My former associate asking my lawyer for “help” validated his whiteness, leading him to cuss at me. 

* * *

“You are so interesting, but I can tell that you are a long way from home” — Joy

After realizing that my lawyer’s job came before my recovery, and he declined my invitation to fight, mentally I traveled to my high school bedroom where I first began wrestling with lyrics, metaphors, feature stories and books that gave color, and guidance to my life. Home is where I first began using hip-hop as conduit to rewrite my narrative. 

I began visualizing Gucci Mane and Mike Tyson’s breakthrough with addiction, which they detailed in “The Autobiography of Gucci Mane and “Undisputed Truth,” respectively. Following their examples, I developed an exercise and writing schedule, and began reconstructing the sentences and thoughts that led to my addiction. I studied Royce da 5’9”s “Book of Ryan,” an album which dubs as a working draft of his addiction and eight years of sobriety. I sat with Jay Electronica’s “A Written Testimony,” which reintroduced me to Islam, and my relationship with God. 

For the first time since my addiction, I could actually see myself living life without cocaine. I fought through intense urges. Urges so intense that I’d curl into a fetus position and cry. The emotion — emotions that I never felt before — which came with battling urges were like reading incomplete drafts sent to an editor. It’s embarrassing and brings forth the realization that I’ve been on a suicide mission. But I kept rewriting, analyzing, and fighting through urges — even if me fighting  urges interfered with a deadline or a meeting. I was determined to have a smile like Guwop,  the quiet happiness and sagaciousness of  Mike Tyson and Nickel Nine, and the confident mystique of Jay Elect. My system and support group ushered me through three months of sobriety. Three months of sobriety through sheer self-will is different than being sober because of a court mandated program.  

“When you an addict, it’s easy for a motherfucka to bring you down” — Royce da 5’9″ 

Three months into rewriting my life’s draft, and giving an honest ear to the lyrics that created my addiction, whiteness decided to show its face again. My lawyer wanted to talk about sending me to another rehab. I asked him not to contact me unless the judge specifically orders me to do something. I told him that his energy activates my urge to relapse. My court-appointed therapist also asked him to “ease off of me” because I was focused, sober, and doing everything I needed to do. But the construction of whiteness is strenuous in its effort to strip peace from Black lives. Under his attempts to talk about other rehab options, I relapsed. I binged on cocaine for two weeks. Once the coke-infused depression set in, I again invited him to fight, and wished sexual assaults on him and his wife. Mike Tyson used to talk like this. Tyson later admitted that his horrific verbal assaults occurred while he was coming down from cocaine. 

Shortly after my two-week binge, I received a long email from my former associate who admitted that she only involved my lawyer and court advocate and threatened to call the police on me because she understood that “as a Black man” police officers are my Achilles heel. Police violence, or the threat of police violence, is how America responds to Blackness. Blacks are not allowed to express honest emotion, watch birds, or play hip-hop in their cars. I believe she knows this. Her energy, attempting to have an electronic conversation with me, and her willingly using whiteness to control my Blackness rolled out a bloody red carpet of unwelcome emotions. I relapsed again. I couldn’t stop. And for the next 30 days I used cocaine every single day. During my depression, I fired off a fusillade of texts telling her that I hated her for seeking help from white men when I have never disrespected her, called her out of her name, or made her feel unsafe. Then I futilely asked to fight her brother or one of her male friends. I can’t square-up with a woman, so her innocent brother was the next option. 

Can you imagine using cocaine everyday for a month straight, and not being able to stop? 

You can imagine knowing that cocaine can, and will destroy your career, schooling, relationships, and even kill you, but you still can’t stop? 

Cocaine addiction is like serving a life sentence in prison where you are surrounded by 100 men on the cellblock. No space. No privacy. Every second of your life is chaotic and crowded, leaving no room to breathe.  Biden’s plans to combat addiction is encouraging, but the rhetoric and heavy policing used within  rehab has proved problematic for many Blacks. It would be of great service if Biden were to implement a plan, and explore alternative ways to combat addiction.  

If I tell you that I haven’t relapsed since bouncing back from my month-long binge, I’d be lying.  However, the two relapses since my month-long binge have been so small that I refuse to count them. They were akin to one misspelled word in the final draft of a 2,000 word story. Yes, it’s a typo, but a very minor one, and doesn’t take away from the story of progress. In rehab, small relapses can send you to jail, or increase your stay at an institution, or met with police violence. This interruption, which follows the tired history of social constructs, can discourage the authentic progress of a recovering addict.  

Election spending in 2020 doubled to $14 billion — 3 takeaways from a campaign finance expert

Individuals and companies spent a record US$14 billion trying to get politicians elected in 2020, according to the latest estimate, more than double the $6.5 billion expended in 2016.

What do donors get for parting with all that cash?

Some of those who put large sums toward supporting a winner, such as President-elect Joe Biden, may be rewarded with government positions or the chance to meet with members of the administration. But most donors, no matter how much they give, get nothing more than the satisfaction of having someone who shares their values and priorities in a position of power.

I study the effects of campaign finance laws on the behavior of politicians and interest groups. In fact, there’s surprisingly little evidence of quid pro quo corruption in American politics — that is, a direct exchange of money for some government reward.

Political scientists like me have drawn three basic conclusions from the actions of campaign donors over the years.

1. The problem isn’t corruption — it’s illicit favors

President Donald Trump raised the prospect of favoritism in the first presidential debate when he alleged without evidence that Biden does deals for Wall Street executives in exchange for campaign contributions and suggested he himself could raise a lot more money if he did the same.

It is certainly not hard to find anecdotal evidence of this kind of donor influence. Many people who become ambassadors or Cabinet officials, for instance, contributed money to the presidents who later appointed them. But then again, we can’t be sure that they got these positions because of their contributions. And many other political appointees give little or nothing.

The most obvious instances of political corruption stand out because they are illegal — they consist of illicit favors like paying for a candidate’s daughter’s wedding or giving a candidate large sums of cash. These favors are illegal because they are personal gifts to these legislators, not contributions to their campaigns.

2. Small donors aren’t always better

In fact, most campaign donors give very little and so have very little influence.

The latest campaign finance data show that about 45% of the $596 million that went to Trump’s campaign committee came from small donors who gave $200 or less. For Biden, 39% of the $938 million he raised came from small donors.

Many of the year’s most competitive Senate campaigns also drew extensive support from small donors as well.

Candidates often tout their small average donation size as a sign that they are not beholden to anyone. The problem, however, is that research has found that people who make these meager donations are more ideologically extreme than those who make large ones. That means that candidates of any party who successfully appeal to such voters could be more ideologically extreme as well.

Larger donors, then, can be a moderating force, even if these contributions are more likely to be self-interested.

3. Distorted priorities

But even large donors don’t appear to get all that much for their money.

The majority of direct donations to both Trump and Biden were more than $200 but at or below $2,800, the federal limit. These large donors often do have contact with candidates, who typically solicit money from them directly at social events. As such, they have the opportunity to let candidates know why they are contributing.

The biggest donors give most of their contributions to super PACs, which can raise and spend unlimited amounts of money as long as they don’t coordinate what they are doing with the candidates themselves. As of Sept. 30, the latest data available, 97 people had given more than $3 million to candidates, parties or groups active in the 2020 election. The list includes billionaires such as Sheldon Adelson, Michael Bloomberg and Steven Spielberg.

While these donors certainly influence elections far more than regular donors, many of the most prominent super PAC funders have clearly stated ideological or philanthropic reasons for their contributions. In other words, they are not generally seeking or getting personal favors — legal or otherwise — in return for their cash.

Even often vilified political spenders such as Charles Koch or George Soros have made a compelling case that they have a philosophy that guides their giving. And most of their spending has not been on contributions to politicians but on advocacy for their point of view.

The real problem with large donations is something else. Studies of campaign contributors have consistently warned that the biggest danger of large contributions is not corruption or favoritism so much as the possibility that it distorts legislators’ perceptions of public opinion. The more time a legislator spends courting large donors, the more likely he or she will assume that the priorities of very wealthy people are shared by other Americans. This is why Washington frequently has pitched battles over issues such as carried interest or inheritance taxes, which affect only a small number of the wealthiest Americans.

Campaign contributions may sometimes influence policy, but politicians will always have an incentive to do favors for major employers in places they represent, for influential local lawmakers or for other people who support their candidacy. That’s not corruption; that’s just democracy.

Robert Boatright, Professor of Political Science, Clark University

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

As Texas grows, communities face an unwelcome neighbor: concrete companies

Peggy Watson noticed a few months ago that one of her neighbors was clearing his 78-acre plot of land. It was a matter of time, she thought. Her rural and “eclectic” neighborhood outside Austin was getting more valuable by the day as the city grew.

But it wouldn’t be an apartment complex that would occupy the unrestricted land in Oak Hill, as she and her neighbors anticipated. They soon learned it could be a concrete batch plant to service the construction of Oak Hill Parkway, a Texas Department of Transportation plan to widen Highway 290. The owner was courting TXDOT’s contractor to make it happen. (Laurie Simmons, a spokesperson for Colorado River Constructors, confirmed that the landowner had reached out to the company but said the plant site still hasn’t been selected.)

Watson was even more surprised to learn that there was little in the way of legal protections to stop the plant from being built next door — a patchwork of state and local environmental laws, she said, has left her neighborhood few options.

“It just seems like we’re in this Bermuda Triangle of responsibility and accountability,” said Watson, 64, a retired head of a birdwatching tour business turned anti-concrete batch plant activist. “Because we’re not in the city, the city defers to the county on transportation. And, the county defers to the city on environmental issues. It’s like the Wild West.”

Watson’s neighborhood faces an increasingly familiar problem for rural and urban homeowners alike across Texas. As the state’s population continues to grow, so too does the need for roads, bridges and sidewalks. It’s driving demand for the dusty business of concrete, cement, sand and other aggregate materials, which are being stored, transported and mixed closer and closer to residential areas.

At the same time, those in the industry say that locating operations far from construction projects is expensive and argue that the state’s environmental laws are adequate.

The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality’s process “is very protective” of public health and the environment, said Josh Leftwich, president and CEO of Texas Aggregates and Concrete Association, an industry group for concrete, cement and aggregate companies in the state. “Companies do try to work hard with the community.”

But some Texas lawmakers are seeking to address the issue of batch plants being near homes and have filed a handful of bills for the 2021 legislative session.

State Rep. Jarvis Johnson, D-Houston, whose district includes Houston’s Acres Homes, a neighborhood north of downtown that successfully fought a planned concrete plant, has filed legislation in past years to limit concrete batch plant operations near homes. They didn’t gain much traction, but he says this session could be different because the state’s continued growth has put more neighborhoods in the way of construction projects.

“As these communities grow, as these cities grow and as people are relocating to Texas every day, it’s going to come and find its way to your doorstep at some point,” Johnson said. “It’s important to protect all people [from industrial development], not just people who have the financial means.”

How regulation works

TCEQ issues permits to regulate concrete and aggregate companies’ emissions of particulate matter, which can increase the risk of asthma attacks and cardiac arrest if too much is inhaled, according to the federal Environmental Protection Agency. TCEQ also regulates the water runoff from the sites. Cities regulate other aspects — including where the plant is allowed to locate, how much noise it can make and the damage allowed from heavy trucks operating on roads.

That’s why residents in areas like Oak Hill, which is outside city limits, and neighborhoods throughout Houston, which has no city zoning, say they fall into a blind spot. There’s little local authority to restrict the placement of the businesses in Texas, and areas without zoning regulations have seen concrete batch plants pop up near homes, schools and churches. State law requires a 440-yard buffer from those sensitive areas.

The number of air permit applications for concrete batch plants in Texas has increased 25% from 2014 to 2019, according to data provided by the TCEQ. Of the 227 applications submitted last year, 86% were approved by the state agency, 12% were withdrawn and a handful were denied or voided.

Neighborhoods are increasingly fighting the facilities’ permit applications. In an unincorporated area southeast of Fort Worth, an administrative judge this month ruled in favor of Tarrant County homeowners in a dispute over a concrete batch plant’s application to operate in their neighborhood. Residents now await the TCEQ’s final decision.

And in Houston earlier this year, years of community organizing and public pressure by residents of the Acres Homes neighborhood stopped a concrete batch plant from being permitted near homes and across the street from a park, the Houston Chronicle reported. The company eventually withdrew its environmental permit application.

Johnson said the Acres Homes dispute in his district renewed his focus on preventing a similar instance in the future. His bills would double the distance requirement from 440 yards to 880 yards statewide and require a stricter permit for plants that operate in municipal areas that lack zoning — in other words, the city of Houston. Another one of Johnson’s bills would require written notice of a permit application to each household within 880 yards of a proposed plant.

Other legislation includes a bill by state Rep. Armando Walle, D-Houston, that would require companies to include a more detailed site plan in their permit application and a bill by state Rep. Nicole Collier, D-Fort Worth, that would expand the list of people who could request a hearing on concrete batch permits to include representatives of schools, churches, day-care centers, hospitals and other medical facilities. Right now, the TCEQ may only consider requests from those who live within 440 yards of a facility.

“There are places you can put these facilities where they don’t impact communities,” said Corey Williams, research and policy director of Air Alliance Houston, an environmental group focused on air quality in Houston. He said he hopes legislators will seek to address the issue for all communities, regardless of whether they’re within city limits or not.

“It’s becoming an issue everywhere, and there aren’t adequate land-use controls,” Williams said.

Companies’ efforts

Leftwich, of TACA, and others in the concrete industry don’t deny that being located in residential areas create some headaches for everyone involved.

Bill Heath, a co-owner of Easy Mix Concrete Services and manager of the company’s Signal Hill site, just outside of Austin, drives past anti-Easy Mix signs that say “Protect our neighborhood!” every day. He said the company’s stone yard, which stores sand, rock and other aggregate material for transfers onto trucks, isn’t causing the environmental damage that the neighbors complain about, it’s just plain old NIMBYism.

“They don’t like the fact that we’re here to begin with,” Heath said. “People dislike the fact that their neighborhood is changing.”

He added, “We’re not breaking any laws by being here.”

Signal Hill, southwest of Austin, is a mixed-income area — some mobile homes and some ranch homes — primarily residential and rural. In recent years, Easy Mix and others have moved to the area because of its proximity to the city. It’s just far enough outside city limits to find unrestricted land.

But Lynn Ross, 71, who has lived in the neighborhood since 1972, says that the runoff from washing dust and aggregate materials out of the trucks is clogging up creek beds behind her house. She worries about the impact to wildlife — the last time her stock tank filled up, she found dead frogs floating in it.

“I’ve never seen that in my years being here,” she said. “I used to have migratory birds out here all the time. I no longer have animals back there, I don’t see geese anymore.”

She said she’s contacted regulators several times since 2014 to raise her concerns. TCEQ has visited her property on more than one occasion, she added, but the situation hasn’t improved.

“I’ve really just been going in circles and wasting a lot of my time,” Ross said. “It’s just been a really hard battle. There’s no checks and balances.”

Heath said the facility uses silt fences and gabion, or heavy materials bound by wire, retaining walls to control runoff.

“This is not an environmental issue, it’s a land-use issue,” he said. “People need concrete, they need roads and pools and sidewalks.”

Tim Peery and his wife, who has cancer, moved to the neighborhood a decade ago. The noise from the stone yard makes it hard for her to rest, he said. They’re tired of the dust and nuisance.

“It’s been extremely difficult realizing how powerless we are to do anything about an obvious problem,” said Peery, who has also been working with Texans for Responsible Aggregate Mining, a coalition of landowners opposing such facilities. “It shouldn’t be in a residential area.”

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

The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

Win the holiday baking swap with this spirited new take on classic raspberry thumbprint cookies

For Salon resident pastry chef Meghan McGarry, the holidays have long been synonymous with one thing: cookies. When the Buttercream Blondie owner reflects upon her earliest memories of Christmas, she fondly recalls spending hours in the kitchen with her Nan baking confetti cookies with green and red sprinkles. Those were one of the classic bakery treats that the dynamic duo would pack neatly into tins to gift to family and friends.  

“The best holiday gifts I’ve ever received are cookies,” McGarry told Salon from her Buttercream Blondie headquarters in Nashville. “There’s nothing that shows someone you care about them more than something that’s baked with love.” 

After becoming a member of the over 21 club, McGarry began to reimagine the classic cookies and desserts from her childhood with a spirited twist. Now, she’s busy preparing to launch nationwide shipping of her beloved boozy bakes. McGarry recently took a break from the road to launch to share some of the recipes from her very own kitchen with Salon readers as part of a virtual holiday bake-off.

All of this comes on the heels of her successful fall baking series for Salon Food, which included retro apple and pumpkin staples. Over the next four weeks, McGarry will help Salon readers get in the holiday spirit with her signature dessert makeovers. And if there’s one thing everyone needs in there life right now is a way to keep baking through it. 

RELATED: These spiked apple crisp cheesecake bars are better than any pumpkin dessert you’ll have this fall

One cookie that’s truly synonymous with the holidays is the thumbprint cookie, which you may have left out for Santa as a kid. McGarry’s version tastes like nostalgia: Her raspberry almond thumbprint is a shortbread cookie, so it’s incredibly buttery and tender at the same time. It has a hint of almond extract in the cookie, which brightens the flavor. 

But what’s sure to leave Santa extra happy is the icing on the cake — or, in this case, cookie. McGarry has elevated this iconic cookie with the addition of her timeless amaretto icing, which enhances the almond notes in the cookie. The addition of the beautiful glaze across the pop of seasonal red from the jam almost makes these cookies too beautiful to eat — almost. 

RELATED: This no-fuss cinnamon swirl quick bread is better than any cinnamon roll you’ve ever tasted

There are two pro-tips you’ll want to jot down before you turn on the oven. First, make sure your cookie dough is cold when it hits the oven. Chilling it first will ensure that your cookies maintain their traditional, round shape. And speaking of shape — thumbprint cookies are traditionally formed by using your thumb to create a circular indentation, or pocket, to hold jam. For a more polished look, McGarry recommends using the handle of a wooden spoon instead instead of your fingers. 

As always, McGarry’s recipes are easily adaptable to the tastes of your audience. If you’re baking for a fan of apricot jam, use that instead. Any flavor works — the key is to use seedless jam so you don’t detract from the buttery smooth texture of the cookie. If you don’t have amaretto on hand, Chambord is another great option, because it will amplify the raspberry flavor in the jam.

RELATED: Bring the bakery home: These classic butter cookies will melt in your mouth

We’re baking at home now more than ever, so what better time to put your newfound culinary skills to use than by winning this year’s cookie swap. Stay tuned for more ways to continue baking spirits bright throughout the holidays at Salon Food

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Recipe: Raspberry Almond Thumbprints

Yield: 31 cookies

Ingredients:

Thumbprint Cookies

  • 8 ounces unsalted butter, room temperature
  • 2/3 cup sugar
  • 1/2 tsp. pure almond extract
  • 1/4 tsp. vanilla extract
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 tsp. salt
  • raspberry jam for filling

Instructions:

  1. In the bowl of an electric mixer, cream butter and sugar on medium speed until light and fluffy, about 5 minutes.
  2. Add almond and vanilla extracts and continue to mix.
  3. Add flour and salt, scraping down the bowl as needed.

Click here to access the remainder of Meghan McGarry’s raspberry almond thumbprints. And don’t forget to follow @ButtercreamBlondie on Instagram for more ways to bake through the holidays. 

The trick to perfect cornbread is letting the cornmeal, corn flour, and buttermilk sit overnight

This cornbread recipe is a testament to what happens when multiple folks put their heads together and collaborate on a seemingly simple project. The fantastic team at Willa Jean and I dissected cornbread— what we love about it and what we don’t—and became absolutely maniacal about creating a version that spoke to all the different things we imagined the perfect cornbread to be.

First and foremost, it’s about achieving great corn flavor. But almost equally important is texture— we hate dry cornbread. This version—the best version ever—blurs the lines between the texture of traditional cornbread and that of a tender quick bread. Then there’s the issue of sweetness, about which there is an ongoing decades-long debate. Some folks believe that cornbread is just cake if you add sugar to it. Folks in the South are real serious about their position on this. I can tell you that I’ve debated it a hundred times over (and often with the same folks over and over again), and I will stand behind and defend my stance: I like a little sugar in my cornbread. But in truth, I believe there is room in this world for all the cornbreads!

RELATED: Cookies can be chewy and crispy at the same time. James Beard winner Kelly Fields shares the secret

At the end of the day, I think the real jewel is the cornbread that you can and will eat all by itself for breakfast, lunch, or dinner, and that you are equally happy crumbling on top of things like red beans and chili. The trick to this perfect cornbread is letting the cornmeal, corn flour, and buttermilk sit overnight; this allows the corn flour to fully hydrate, while the acid from the buttermilk tenderizes the cornmeal, helping to create a tender, almost cakey bread that still retains that slightly gritty texture you expect. The beauty of this cornbread is that you can leave the fully prepared batter in the refrigerator for 2 days before baking it.

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Recipe: Willa Jean Cornbread

Makes one 10-inch round or one 9 by 5-inch loaf

  • 3⁄4 cup corn flour (I like using Bob’s Red Mill)
  • 3⁄4 cup coarse cornmeal
  • 2 1⁄3 cups buttermilk, at room temperature
  • 3 tablespoons plus 1 1⁄2 teaspoons unsalted butter, melted
  • 2 1⁄3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 4 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1⁄4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons granulated sugar
  • 2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons dark brown sugar
  • 4 eggs, at room temperature
  • 2 1⁄2 tablespoons honey
  • 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • Butter for serving
  • Cane syrup for serving (optional)
  1. In a medium bowl, using a wooden spoon, stir the corn flour and cornmeal with the buttermilk until there are no dry pockets remaining. Cover and refrigerate overnight (or for as little as 1 hour if you want to make the cornbread right now).
  2. Preheat the oven to 375°F. Coat a 10-inch cast-iron skillet or 9 by 5-inch loaf pan with the 1 1⁄2 teaspoons butter. In another medium bowl, whisk the all-purpose flour with the baking powder and baking soda. In a large bowl, whisk the granulated sugar and brown sugar with the eggs, honey, and salt. Whisk in the cornmeal mixture until well combined. Add the flour mixture, stirring just until combined, and then stir in 3 tablespoons of the butter.
  3. Pour the batter into the prepared skillet or pan. Bake for about 35 minutes, if using a skillet, or 50 to 55 minutes if using a loaf pan, rotating the skillet or pan after 25 minutes, until the cornbread is golden and irresistible and a knife inserted in the middle comes out clean.
  4. Slather with butter and cane syrup, if using, cut, and enjoy immediately. Store leftovers loosely wrapped in foil at room temperature for up to 3 days.

Cornbread Pancakes

To make cornbread pancakes, whip 3 egg whites until medium stiff peaks form and fold them into the batter. Voilà! Pancake batter. To cook, lightly oil a skillet and heat over medium heat until hot. Spoon approximately 1⁄2 cup of batter into the skillet. Cook for about 1 1⁄2 minutes, until you see bubbles popping on the surface, and then flip and cook the other side until golden brown. This batter makes about 16 large pancakes.

Cornbread Waffles

Drag out that waffle iron and turn the batter into waffles. Whip 5 egg whites with 2 tablespoons granulated sugar until soft peaks form, then fold them into the cornbread batter. To cook, follow your waffle iron’s directions. A standard waffle iron uses about 3⁄4 cup batter per waffle and takes about 31⁄2 minutes to cook each one. This batter makes 8 waffles.

Cornbread Fritters

To make fritters, just add some fresh corn kernels to the batter and deep-fry for delicious little fritters. To make savory corn fritters, stir 2 cups fresh corn kernels, 1 cup sliced scallions, 1⁄4 cup minced jalapeño, 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon kosher salt, and 2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper into the cornbread batter. In a separate bowl, whip 4 egg whites to soft peaks, then fold them into the batter. Set a brown paper bag on a baking sheet. Fry dollops of the batter in 350°F vegetable or peanut oil for about 2 minutes, until golden. Transfer the fritters to the brown bag to drain, then serve hot. This batter makes about 32 fritters.

Cornbread Croutons

If you have any leftover cornbread after a couple of days, turn it into cornbread croutons for chili or salads. Cut the cornbread into cubes, store in a resealable bag at room temperature for up to 3 days or in the freezer for up to 1 month, and then toast on a baking sheet in a 325°F oven for 7 to 10 minutes, stirring after 4 minutes for even toasting, until light brown on all sides. If frozen, toast straight from the freezer; no need to thaw.

Click here to purchase a copy of “The Good Book of Southern Baking.”