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Susan Collins lashes out at Dem challenger as she fights the toughest battle of her political career

Sen. Susan Collins of Maine has gone from being one of the most popular Republicans in New England to fighting for her political survival. In the past, Collins was reelected in double-digit landslides; in 2020, she is in danger of being voted out of office. And the Maine Republican discussed her frustrations during an interview with Politico.

Recent polls have shown Collins’ Democratic challenger, Maine House Speaker Sara Gideon, with single-digit leads over Collins. A poll by the Bangor Daily News showed the race to be very close, with Gideon ahead by only 1%. But other recent polls have found Gideon ahead by 4% (Colby College) or 5% (Boston Globe/Suffolk University and New York Times/Siena).

Collins’ political problems can be summarized in three words: President Donald Trump. Gideon and many other Democrats have argued that Collins is too supportive of Trump’s far-right agenda, and countless Democrats are still furious with Collins for voting to confirm Justice Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court in 2018.

Collins, during her interview with Politico, said of Gideon, “She will say or do anything to try to win. This race is built on a foundation of falsehoods — and trying to convince the people of Maine that somehow, I am no longer the same person.”

The Maine senator slammed Gideon during the interview for “defaming my reputation and attacking my integrity” and pointed out that Gideon is from Rhode Island, not Maine.

Collins told Politico, “I grew up in Caribou, I’ve lived in Bangor for 26 years. My family’s been in Maine for generations. She’s been in Maine for about 15 years and lives in Freeport. That’s a big difference in our knowledge of the state.”

Democrats all over the United States have been donating to Gideon’s campaign in the hope that Collins will be voted out of the U.S. Senate. As far away as California and Washington State, Democrats haven’t forgiven Collins for the Kavanaugh vote — or for voting “not guilty” on two articles of impeachment during Trump’s impeachment trial in the Senate. And Collins noted how much support Gideon is receiving from outside of Maine.

“It’s very frustrating because it’s backed by so much money,” Collins told Politico. “And it’s been going on for two years now: non-stop negative ads. That eventually it pulls you down.”

Collins, who did not vote for Trump in 2016, has not endorsed anyone in the 2020 presidential race. And when Politico asked her about that race, she would not say whether she plans to vote for Trump or former Vice President Joe Biden.

“My personal presidential preference, I do not believe, is an important factor in this race,” Collins told Politico. “I’m not saying that the left is not trying to tie me to Donald Trump…. They clearly are…. (But) my independence is the same as it’s always been.”

However, Maeve Coyle, a Gideon spokesperson, vehemently disagrees that Collins has maintained her “independence.” Coyle told Politico, “Sen. Collins’ votes for 181 of Trump’s far-right judicial nominees, for the corporate tax giveaway that put Mainers’ health care in jeopardy — and her continued refusal to stand up to Mitch McConnell and Donald Trump show just how much she’s changed after 24 years in Washington. Her desperate, misleading attacks on Sara make clear that she’s willing to do anything to stay there.”

Private GOP survey shows Trump losing ground in solidly red states like Kansas: NYT

President Donald Trump’s polling numbers are looking very grim ahead of the upcoming presidential election, and even internal Republican data show he’s struggling mightily.

The New York Times reports that “private G.O.P. surveys” show that Trump “is trailing not just in must-win battlegrounds” but is “repelling independents to the point where Mr. Biden has drawn closer in solidly red states, including Montana, Kansas and Missouri.”

Trump’s standing among voters has made Republicans particularly worried about the so-called “Sun Belt” states where they have been politically dominant for decades, including Georgia, Texas, and Arizona.

All of these states, notes the Times, have been hit particularly hard by the novel coronavirus pandemic.

“Many of the Sun Belt states seemingly within Mr. Biden’s reach resisted the most stringent public-health policies to battle the coronavirus,” the paper writes. “As a result, states like Arizona, Georgia and Texas faced a powerful wave of infections for much of the summer, setting back efforts to revive commercial activity.”

The Times also writes that a loss in this region could finally force the GOP to rethink its approach to electoral politics.

“If Mr. Trump loses across the South and West, it would force a much deeper introspection on the right about Trump and Trumpism — and their electoral future in the fastest-growing and most diverse part of the country,” the paper writes.

“A shameless stunt”: Inside Trump’s push to use government funds to save his campaign

If President Donald Trump loses to former Vice President Joe Biden in this year’s presidential election, two of the main reasons are likely to be his response to his COVID-19 pandemic and his health care policy — specifically, Trump’s push to eliminate the Affordable Care Act and its protections for people with preexisting conditions. One desperate move that Trump is making in the hope of saving his campaign is promising senior citizens drug discount cards, and Politico’s Dan Diamond is reporting that Trump wants them to be available before November 3.

Diamond reports:

Caught by surprise by President Donald Trump’s promise to deliver drug-discount cards to seniors, health officials are scrambling to get the nearly $8 billion plan done by Election Day, according to five officials and draft documents obtained by Politico. The taxpayer-funded plan, which was only announced two weeks ago and is being justified inside the White House and the Health Department as a test of the Medicare program, is being driven by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, the officials said.

The $200 cards, Diamond notes, “would resemble credit cards” and “would need to be used at pharmacies” — and they “would be paid for by tapping Medicare’s trust fund.”

Politico has obtained a copy of a draft proposal for the plan that has been circulated in the White House, and according to the proposal, “The goal is to begin the test by distributing cards starting in October 2020.”

Trump’s idea for drug discount cards for seniors comes at a time when many polls are showing his support among seniors falling. And Rep. Frank Pallone, the Democrat who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee, isn’t the least bit impressed by the proposal. Pallone told Politico, “It’s a shameless stunt that steals billions from Medicare in order to fund a legally dubious scheme that’s clearly intended to benefit President Trump’s campaign right before Election Day.”

An official for the Department of Health and Human Services, quoted anonymously, told Politico, “It’s turning into this last-minute, thrown-together thing.” And another HHS official interviewed by Politico said, “This is a solution in search of a problem and a bald play for votes in the form of money in pockets.”

Stacie Dusetzina, a professor at Vanderbilt University who has studied Medicare’s drug program, went over the draft proposal — and Dusetzina told Politico, “There are a lot of things that seem problematic. It’s an incredibly large amount of money to be spending, (and) it’s not really solving any systemic problem.”

Twitter has had plenty of reactions to Diamond’s article and Trump’s drug card proposal. Juliette Cubanski, deputy director of the Program on Medicare Policy, tweeted, “A lot of people with Medicare might appreciate receiving a $200 drug discount card, but this doesn’t do anything to address the persistent problem of rising drug prices. And for those taking expensive drugs who struggle to pay their monthly copays, $200 won’t go very far.”

Twitter user @ColorFiend wrote, “Trump is bribing seniors to vote for him, while Therese Walsh (editorial director of Writer Unboxed), posted, “Too bad he kneecapped usps, huh?” — a reference to problems in the United States Postal Service that have occurred under Trump’s postmaster general, Louis DeJoy. And another Twitter user, Gordon G. Forbes, wrote, “Any voter that can be bought for $200 is a cheap date, or an easy mark. But Trump knows his base.”

Give your breakfast a seasonal touch with Andrea Bemis’ pumpkin and sage frittata

The beauty of a frittata is that you can use any mix of seasonal vegetables and any type of eggs — chicken, duck or goose — that you’ve got on hand. There are no rules. I love this fall frittata, because it celebrates some of my favorite ingredients. The pumpkin, sage and nutmeg bring warming flavors to every bite, and the goat cheese becomes melt-in-your-mouth delicious. Leftovers are equally good and can be eaten warm, room temperature or even chilled. 

***

Recipe: Pumpkin and Sage Frittata 

Serves 6

  • 8 tablespoons of cooking fat
  • 1 (2-pound) pie pumpkin, halved, seeded and cut into ¼-inch cubes (no need to peel, about 4 cups)
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper 
  • Hefty pinch of freshly grated nutmeg
  • 1 small yellow onion, halved and very thinly sliced
  • 1 tablespoon minced sage, plus 4 or 5 sage leaves for topping
  • 10 large eggs
  • 3 tablespoons heavy cream
  • 8 ounces goat cheese, crumbled

1. Place an oven rack 5 inches below the heat and preheat the broiler. 

2. Warm 2 tablespoons of the cooking fat in a 10-inch cast-iron pan over  medium-high heat. Add half of the squash, season it with salt, pepper, and  nutmeg, and cook, stirring occasionally, until it softens and begins to brown,  about 7 minutes. Transfer it to a bowl and repeat with the remaining squash,  again using 2 tablespoons of the cooking fat. 

3. Warm another tablespoon of the cooking fat in the pan. Add the onion,  season it with salt and pepper, and cook, stirring occasionally, until it is  tender and beginning to brown, about 7 minutes. Transfer it to the bowl  with the squash. 

4. Reduce the heat to medium and melt 2 tablespoons of the fat. Add the  minced sage and cook until it is bright green and lightly crisp, about 2 minutes. Remove it from the pan and set it aside. Then add the whole sage  leaves to the pan and repeat the same process to crisp them. Set them aside  and wipe out the pan. 

5. In a large bowl, whisk together the eggs and cream. Stir in the cheese,  pumpkin, onion, and minced sage. 

6. Place the remaining 1 tablespoon of fat in the pan over medium heat. When  it is warm, add the egg mixture and cook, using a rubber spatula to lift the  cooked edges and allow the uncooked eggs to flow underneath, 3 to 4 minutes. Top the frittata with the whole sage leaves and continue to cook 3 to  5 minutes longer or until the eggs are set. 

7. Place the pan in the oven and broil the frittata until it sets and puffs up slightly,  2 to 3 minutes. (Watch the frittata carefully to ensure it doesn’t burn.) 

8. Cut into wedges and serve. 

Localize It

Use any variety of  winter squash — butternut, acorn, delicata — or even a sweet potato. If you do use the pie pumpkin, there’s no need to peel. 

Like this recipe as much as we do? Click here to pre-order Andrea Bemis’ “Seasonal Recipes for Eating Close to Home”

“I was never going to use the N-word”: “Fargo” seeks to examine our racist past without new injury

Language. The fourth season of “Fargo” is a prose buffet, heavy and lyrical, and depending on how you feel about the balance between showing and telling in your TV series, Noah Hawley’s latest chapter either seduces you with its wordplay or sends you packing.

This is both understandable and the self-exile’s loss, since even a less-than-stellar episode of the FX series remains one of the best hours of television. And the new season is nothing if not ambitious, a crime drama pitting an Italian mafia family against a Black syndicate in 1950 Kansas City headlined by Chris Rock and Jason Schwartzman in a rumination on what it means to be American.

But while wandering through this portion of the “Fargo” mythology there’s one word that’s conspicuously and purposefully absent.

“I was never going to use the N-word in the story,” Hawley said in a recent phone conversation. “I never want to use that word. Nor do I think you need to use that word to tell the story, because unfortunately people are going to hear that word in their head, whether we say it out loud or not, you know what I mean?”

Knowing Hawley and his approach to “Fargo,” this isn’t at all surprising. (And frankly, there’s more than enough of it captured and broadcast in horrifying videos in 2020 for its absence to be noted and not missed in this period piece.)  His take on the universe inspired by the Coen Brothers’ 1996 film is one purely driven by the moral concepts and quandaries as opposed to the felony or misdemeanors at the center of each season.

The Kansas City section of his take on American history is not about a single transgression but one that begets new violence generation after generation between clashing groups of people, as told by a sprawling cast of characters nursing individual motivations, many at odds with those of others.

Hawley designs this particular “true” story to speak to the hypocrisy of the melting pot myth by bringing two sets of othered people, immigrants and native-born Americans descended from Africans forced into slavery.

“It’s not that long ago in which things were just really different to the degree that we don’t really acknowledged the difference anymore. Do you know what I mean?” Hawley explained. “I mean, we can all watch [Martin Scorsese’s 2002 film] ‘Gangs of New York’ and see Leo DiCaprio go down to the docks and yell at the next boat of immigrants coming into America because the last one in the door is always at the bottom rung of the ladder.”

“But I thought it was interesting to tell that story in which you have a power struggle between two groups, neither of whom really has power,” he continued. “If you put these two groups on the outside of the mainstream economy, they’re going to generate their own economy and their own sense of hierarchy and their own sense of power to try to get respect in the world.”

Even so, Hawley stresses that he didn’t set out to position this season as an exploration of race and racism. “You see that in Jason Schwartzman’s character the thing that bugs him the most for the whole season is not really the battle he’s in with Chris Rock’s character. It’s the fact that he and his father got thrown out of a hospital for being Italian instead of being white,” he points out.

In telling this story Hawley inevitably must contend with the reality of race and racism in America, which he primarily processes through Timothy Olyphant’s Mormon U.S. Marshal Dick “Deafy” Wickware, a God-fearing man who announces his racist viewers in his introductory monologue. But the hallmark of Deafy’s character is his insistent politeness – he doesn’t swear or use epithets in reference to Rock’s Loy Cannon or any of his associates, or refer to Schwartzman’s Josto Fadda in derisive terms.

“The biggest issue as I figured out how to tell the story, and one that I’ve been interested to watch in shows like ‘Watchmen’ and ‘Lovecraft Country,’ is how do you present the world as it is without creating new injury?” Hawley said. “How do you have you create scenes to show the racist past, without putting characters into scenes in which they’re the victims of such overt racism that it feels like it’s something you’re doing to the actors? How do you do it without creating new injury to the characters, to the audience?”

His answer is to allow his characters to behave as they would in that era, which means wearing a mask of civility over their bigotry. Along with Deafy, this season features Oraetta Mayflower (Jessie Buckley), and Angel of Death figure who takes an interest in her young neighbor Ethelrida Pearl Smutny (E’myri Crutchfield), a biracial girl she decides to make her “project.” If a viewer didn’t know better they’d see Oraetta’s offer as kindly and generous, when in reality, it’s quite condescending and sinister; she doesn’t see Ethelrida as a young friend but a curiosity to be solved and dominated.

When we’re speaking of “Fargo,” this subtlety aligns with the series’ overall approach to the American tale. The world Hawley and his writers create is one formed by finding meaning in landscape and detail with dialogue heavily accessorizing atmosphere. The drama’s signature dialogue can be too much for some people to process, but for those who have an ear for it ride its musicality as part of the experience. To view it that way an offensive insult isn’t merely common or lazy. For Hawley, it’s out of tune with the rest of the show.

Hawley references “the scenes we dread because we know they’re coming and we know exactly what’s going to happen in them. Do you know what I mean? The racist sheriff pulls you over and says the racist things and does the racist things that we all know he’s going to do. And on one level, you are capturing reality. On another level, you’re showing people a scene that they already know how it’s going to go, which does not historically make for surprising drama.”

More than this, it allows him to expand upon a thought he had in Season 3. “What I found then, and what I was exploring here is this sense of irony without humor. Where it’s like the setup to a joke but it’s not funny, if that makes sense,” he said. “Which is not to say the show’s not funny, but this idea of racial injustice, this idea of anti-immigrant fervor, this idea that we’re a nation of immigrants telling new immigrants that they can’t be American, there’s an irony to that, right?”

“I mean, it’s so obviously a joke and yet it’s not funny,” he added. “And irony without humor is just violence, because if you say that your country believes in justice, but justice isn’t available to everyone. Yeah. When people say there’s no justice, you yell at them for being un-American that’s irony without humor. That’s just violence.”

“Fargo” airs Sundays at 10 p.m. on FX and streams the next day on FX on Hulu.

Will New Jersey be the next state to legalize marijuana?

New Jersey looks set to be the next state to legalize marijuana. It’s on the ballot come Election Day on November 3, the polls are looking good, and while it’s not the only state with marijuana legalization on the ballot, the others—Arizona, Montana, and South Dakota—are all out West, and the Garden State should beat them by a few hours.

The New Jersey legalization initiative, Public Question 1, would amend the state constitution to legalize the recreational use of marijuana and its cultivation, processing, and retail sale by a person who is at least 21 years old. It also designates the existing Cannabis Regulatory Commission (CRC), which currently handles medical marijuana, to regulate all legal marijuana commerce. Retail marijuana sales would be subject to the state sales tax of 6.625 percent, but any other state sales taxes would be prohibited. The initiative authorizes the legislature to let local governments add a 2 percent local sales tax.

It also leaves it up to the legislature and the CRC to address unresolved issues. Those include whether and how home cultivation would be allowed, how much weed people could possess, and detailed retail regulations.

If the measure passes, New Jersey will not only be the first to legalize marijuana this Election Day, it will also be the first mid-Atlantic state to do so, and the first to legalize it via a legislatively initiated voter referendum. Of the 11 states (and the District of Columbia) that have so far legalized marijuana, nine did it through citizen-based ballot initiatives, while in the other two, Illinois and Vermont, legislatures passed legalization bills.

But even though Governor Phil Murphy (D) campaigned on marijuana legalization in 2017 and vowed to get it passed in 100 days, legislative infighting, opposition within the Legislative Black Caucus, and bickering over revenues blocked the legislature from ever getting it done. As a last resort, Senate President Stephen Sweeney (D) and marijuana reform champion Senator Nick Scutari (D) filed the resolution giving the voters the final decision. It passed with overwhelming Democratic support over strong Republican opposition in December 2019.

And the polls have consistently shown it winning this November. An April poll by Monmouth University of registered voters had the measure winning 64 percent of the votes, while a July Brach Eichler Cannabis Poll shows that 67.6 percent of likely voters showed strong support or somewhat support for legalization via the ballot. An August Brach Eichler Cannabis Poll had support at 66 percent, a barely noticeable decline, and still a number to warm the hearts of legalization supporters.

That latter poll also had a large majority (74 percent) saying the state should make sure that “minorities have fair and equal access to this business opportunity,” while another large majority, 71 percent, wanted tax revenues to be used for drug awareness and education. More than half (55 percent) wanted to see higher marijuana taxes.

“The Brach Eichler Cannabis Poll shows that as we get closer to the November election, public awareness and support for the legalization of adult cannabis use is steady or growing,” John D. Fanburg, co-chair of the Cannabis Law Practice at Brach Eichler, said in a press releaseaccompanying the poll. “Additionally, we can see that voters are recognizing the importance of addressing the social justice impact of disproportional enforcement and arrests against New Jersey’s minority population.”

For Ken Wolski, RN, executive director of the Coalition for Medical Marijuana—New Jersey (CMM-NJ), supporting the initiative is a no-brainer. Wolski and CMM-NJ are part of a broader coalition, NJ CAN 2020, that is working with HeadCount’s Cannabis Voter Project to end marijuana prohibition in the Garden State. Other coalition members include the ACLU-New Jersey, Doctors for Cannabis Regulation, the Latino Action Network, the Law Enforcement Action Partnership, the NAACP New Jersey State Conference, and the New Jersey CannaBusiness Association.

“Legalizing marijuana is the best way to get the right medicine to most people,” Wolski told Drug Reporter in an email exchange. “Legalization will make it much easier for adults to take advantage of the tremendous therapeutic potential of cannabis. No longer will adults need a specific diagnosis and multiple visits to physicians to obtain cannabis. Adults in New Jersey will be able to purchase cannabis over the counter like they purchase aspirin now. NJ currently has some of the most expensive medical cannabis in the country, but increased competition will bring down those prices. Home [cultivation] should also come into play. Easily available marijuana will improve public health,” he said.

Wolski is counseling reefer radicals who don’t think the measure goes far enough to think again. There will be opportunities to further shape what legalization looks like down the road, he said.

“Unfortunately, some marijuana reform advocates oppose the amendment because it does not address their specific concerns about guaranteeing home cultivation, ensuring that ex-felons can participate in the new legal industry, ensuring reparations for individuals and communities harmed by the war on marijuana, etc.,” Wolski explained.

“To those who say the question does not go far enough, I point out that the CRC must follow the regulatory process, which ensures input from the people of the state,” Wolski continued. “The CRC will hold public hearings before they draft the regulations, then there will be a public comment period before they adopt the regulations. This will be the time to make opinions about home grow, social equity, affordable licenses, etc., known. The entire process will be transparent. If some of our demands are not met in the first go-round, we can immediately file to amend the regulations. The very first step is to give whole-hearted support for the ballot question, without which, there will be no reform of marijuana laws in New Jersey for the foreseeable future.”

And he will be fighting for home cultivation, he said.

“We anticipate arguments in civil and criminal courts that the amendment does, in fact, allow home cultivation,” Wolski explained. “We plan to work with the CRC in the development of regulations to ensure that home cultivation is part of [legalizing] cannabis in New Jersey. At the same time, we will continue to work with legislators for a bill to specifically allow New Jersey medical marijuana program patients and caregivers to grow a limited supply of cannabis for their medical needs.”

But first, the measure needs to win.

“If the ballot question fails, the war on marijuana will be business as usual, and we will be that much further away from home cultivation, legalization, expungement, social justice, etc.,” Wolski warned. “The first step is [a] victory in November that we can build on. We encourage New Jersey residents to join us in our efforts to pass this ballot question.”

Mike Pence’s handling of COVID is straight out of the Christian Right playbook

Hours before Wednesday’s vice presidential debate, one of the nation’s leading medical journals released a scathing and unprecedented plea for voters to reject Trump and Pence’s reelection bid, calling their leadership on COVID-19 “dangerously incompetent.”

Sen. Kamala Harris echoed that language in her strongest moments of the debate, ripping Pence for allowing more than 200,000 people to die of COVID. “The American people have had to sacrifice far too much because of the incompetence of this administration,” she said.

After Harris expressed skepticism about Trump’s efforts to expedite a vaccine without adequate approval or testing from the medical community, Pence said, “Stop playing politics with people’s lives.”

Though Pence directed that line toward Harris, it could more appropriately be recast as a description of the true nature of the Trump administration’s failures. These failures are not mere incompetence; they are part of an ideological project to consolidate power while attempting to deceive people into accepting the loss of their own rights, health and safety. And they are part of a playbook that Mike Pence has been developing for his entire career — one that he honed while attacking reproductive and LGBTQ rights in Indiana.

In its editorial Wednesday, The New England Journal of Medicine accused the Trump-Pence administration of eviscerating the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, sidelining experts at the National Institutes of Health and politicizing the Food and Drug Administration. That pattern — sideline the experts, ignore the science, politicize and defund the regulatory agencies — will sound all too familiar to those who follow the Christian Right. Since well before COVID, anti-choice politicians have eroded access to reproductive and LGBTQ health care by circulating lies about people seeking abortions because of a fetus’s race, spreading the outrageous myth that rape can’t result in pregnancy and pretending that medication abortions can be reversed. The Food and Drug Administration has made ideologically motivated decisions before, including imposing onerous “black box” restrictions like those used for narcotics on the abortion-inducing medication mifepristone, despite studies showing it is safe.

The tendency to lie to advance an agenda is not something Pence needed to learn from Trump. In 2001, when Pence first ran for Congress, he sided with tobacco and fossil fuel companies, claiming that “smoking doesn’t kill” and “global warming is a myth.” Fifteen years later, Pence again sided with toxic industry against the people in its path when he turned his back on residents of the lead-poisoned city of East Chicago, Indiana — most of whom are people of color. Years of lead and chemical production had left people living in a public housing complex around lead levels that were more than 200 times the federal safety threshold. In one of his final acts as governor, Pence rejected a plea from the city’s mayor imploring him to issue a state of emergency to help people sickened by lead and arsenic. He claimed the declaration was unnecessary “given the level of coordination among federal, state and local agencies.” But his successor, Republican Eric Holcomb, reversed that decision a month after taking office.

When Pence left Indiana after four years as governor, he had been poised to lose his reelection bid in part because of the unpopularity of his attacks on LGBTQ rights. In 2015, in a closed-door ceremony surrounded by figures from the Christian Right, Pence signed a law that enabled businesses to discriminate against LGBTQ people, a move he claimed was done to preserve “religious freedom.” A national outcry ensued, businesses threatened to boycott the state, and The Indianapolis Star ran a front page headline that read “Fix This Now,” prompting Pence to sign revisions to the law.

Under Pence’s leadership, Indiana also became a cautionary tale for the criminalization of pregnancy when Purvi Patel was sentenced to 20 years in prison after prosecutors claimed she induced her own abortion; she was later released after a court overturned her feticide conviction. Pence signed one of the nation’s most extreme anti-choice laws, HEA 1337, which banned abortions motivated by fetal race, sex or genetic anomaly, and required burial or cremation of all miscarried or aborted fetuses.

Pence revealed his willingness to circulate misinformation and lies in the service of his extreme anti-choice agenda during the portion of the debate dedicated to the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. “Joe Biden and Kamala Harris support taxpayer funding of abortion all the way up to the moment of birth,” Pence falsely claimed. In reality abortion at the “moment of birth” isn’t abortion, it’s infanticide, which is illegal — and certainly not something Biden or Harris have supported. Biden actually supported the long-standing federal ban on public funding of abortion until last June, when mounting public pressure forced him to reverse his position.

Few people bear more responsibility for the catastrophic toll of COVID-19 in the United States than Mike Pence, who, as head of the White House Coronavirus Task Force, was charged with overseeing the federal government’s response to the pandemic. Instead, he gave false assurances that the administration was “winning the fight” against COVID-19 and pressed states to reopen. When he appointed Pence to the task force, Trump cited the vice president’s record on health care in Indiana. But as with much of Pence’s career, that record involved ignoring the experts and pursuing ideology at the expense of vulnerable people. As governor of Indiana, Pence oversaw the rollout of what The Atlantic called “the most conservative Medicaid expansion program in the country.” Hundreds of thousands of people lost health care coverage, never enrolled, or were shifted to a weaker plan because they failed to meet state requirements for paying premiums. The architect of this plan, Seema Verma, is now an administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and part of an administration that is attempting to repeal the Affordable Care Act in the middle of a pandemic.

Perhaps the closest parallel to this pandemic that Pence faced while governor of Indiana was the outbreak of HIV due to drug usage in Scott County, where more than 200 people were infected in the town of Austin, which has a population of just 4,000. When the outbreak began in 2015, experts urged Pence to allow needle exchanges, but Pence again rejected science in favor of ideology, and refused. “Pence instead told people he was going to pray on what to do,” The Guardian reported. While he did so, dozens more people were confirmed to have the virus. Ultimately, Pence relented and approved the exchanges.

Despite his role as head of the Coronavirus Task Force, Pence has been widely seen as a buttoned-up puppet of the president’s — a “normal avatar of Trump,” as The Nation‘s Jeet Heer described his performance in Wednesday’s debate. But Pence didn’t need Trump to show him how to pursue an agenda through deception. In this case, the goal is power, and it appears Pence will apply all of the tricks in his playbook in order to hold on to it.

Copyright © Truthout. Reprinted with permission.

Michelle Pfeiffer brings sly elegance to the peculiar but charming “French Exit”

At the center of “French Exit,” the closing night film at this year’s New York Film Festival, is the formidable Frances Price (Michelle Pfeiffer), a once-wealthy widow now facing insolvency. Frances, who has a reputation of sorts, sizes up and takes control of every situation she encounters. It is her defense mechanism to silence all comers, from a real estate agent who demands a high fee to the waiter whose attention can only be obtained by setting a floral display on fire. These are character-defining moments that illustrate Frances’ moxie. But she is mercurial. How else to explain Frances’ penchant for sharpening a knife in the dark because she likes the sound it makes?

Pfeiffer delivers a sly, elegant performance as Frances, which provides the chief pleasure of Azazel Jacobs‘ film, a melancholy farce adapted by Patrick DeWitt from his novel of the same name. Watching Frances lighting a cigarette, as she does throughout the film, reveals so much of her mood, her thoughts, and her feelings. With each calculated flick of the lighter, the louche Frances illuminates her weariness, and steels herself for what comes next. 

Frances always looks glamorous, but she is self-aware enough to acknowledge that her glamour days are long gone. Jacobs lets his camera fixate on Pfeiffer’s impressive cheekbones as Frances looks forlornly out a window. Despite her regal postures, she is a sad, haunted woman, putting on a brave face, masking her pain.

And then there is her voice. Pfeiffer purrs many of her lines in “French Exit,” and her husky whisper is delicious. She can melt or chill the air depending on what she is saying or whom she is talking to. She exhibits a haughtiness when addressing most people, but a conversation she has with a homeless man on a park bench in Paris is downright seductive.

Frances is in Paris because she has moved there with her adult son, Malcolm (Lucas Hedges) and her black cat, Small Frank (voiced by Tracy Letts). She has liquidated her remaining assets and sailed to Europe to stay at her friend Joan’s (Susan Coyne) modest apartment. She had hoped her life would run out before her money, as was the plan, but the reverse has happened. France for Frances is not quite retirement — that would suggest she actually worked a day in her life — nor is it a second or even third act. It is, she acknowledges, more like a coda. Frances is contemplating suicide, a fact she scribbles on a postcard to Joan but never mails. However, a waiter who finds it does, and Joan arrives in Paris only to discover her apartment is full of people.

And it is in this packed apartment that the film finds much of its humor. Frances has unexpectedly befriended Mme. Reynard (Valerie Mahaffey), a lonely widow during her brief time in the city. Mme. Reynard is quirky and neurotic, but she helps Frances secure a private investigator, Julius (Isaach De Bankolé, the coolest man in movies), to find Madeleine (Danielle Macdonald), a fortune teller who slept with Malcolm on the ocean liner, to communicate with the now-missing Small Frank. Small Frank, Frances insists, contains the spirit of her late husband, and Frances as well as Malcolm have some unfinished business with him. As Madeleine conducts a séance, “French Exit” gets a bit goofy, but Pfeiffer sells Frances’s belief, which is what makes it drolly amusing.

Things get wackier when Susan (Imogen Poots), Malcolm’s fiancé arrives from New York, with Tom (Daniel di Tomasso) her once and current beau in tow. Tom engages Malcolm in an arm-wrestling contest which is silly, but not inappropriate. 

“French Exit” does not so much build narrative tension as ask viewers to go with the flow, which is what Frances does in Paris. Her letting go — of money, of grudges, of herself — liberates her, and provides the film with its poignancy and charm. At times, the film can feel stagey or artificial, with clipped dialogue and pregnant pauses, but when a character mentions something about luck, or love, what at first seems frivolous becomes oddly thoughtful, even meaningful upon reflection.

That said, does Frances – who it is revealed behaved improperly in the face of her husband’s death – deserve anyone’s sympathy? Pfeiffer’s performance is convincing as Frances’ icy demeanor softens over the course of the film.

In support, Hedges is appropriately passive with both his mother and Susan, but he does manage to exhibit a little childish glee when Malcolm encourages Frances to see what surprising thing Mme. Reynard keeps in her freezer. And as Mme. Reynard, Mahaffey provides most of the comic relief. 

“French Exit” is a peculiar film, pitched at the same frequency as the offbeat characters. Jacobs asks viewers to lean into the rhythms.

Fox News’ Chris Wallace fires back at Lara Trump for lies about wearing masks at debate

Fox News host Chris Wallace questioned Trump campaign surrogate Lara Trump on Sunday about the first family’s decision not to wear masks at the first presidential debate between President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden.

Wallace began his interview with the president’s daughter-in-law by asking whether a White House Rose Garden gathering for Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett was a “super-spreader event.”

“People were packed in, almost no masks and Dr. Fauci has said that event was a super spreader,” Wallace explained. “Why did it take the president getting COVID for the White House to take the CDC safety guidelines more seriously, although even yesterday they were still violating some?”

Trump argued that “most if not all” of the attendees at the Rose Garden event had been previously tested.

 

“And you never hear, Chris, on the other side of the coin the fact that we have had in this country since really the height of the COVID days these demonstrations across America,” Trump opined. “But you never hear any concern after these things about those being super-spreader events. I have yet to hear one doctor say anything about them.”

“It doesn’t seem like coronavirus would have a political agenda but oftentimes is feels like it does,” she added. “The White House has always followed guidelines.”

“I take your point about the protests,” Wallace pressed. “But that doesn’t make what happened at the White House — which Tony Fauci says was a super spreader — at least eight people at that event later came down with the virus, including the president and the first lady.”

The Fox News host went on to ask the campaign surrogate why the Trump family declined to wear masks at the first presidential debate.

“You all took them off,” Wallace recalled. “Did you think, Lara, that the rules that applied to everybody else in that hall didn’t apply to you?”

“Well, of course we didn’t think that!” Trump insisted. “I want to be very clear. Never one time did anyone from Cleveland Clinic come up and ask any member of our family to put a mask on. So that is totally false.”

“Everybody in that hall had tested negative,” Wallace said. “And the fact is, the rules were everybody except for the president, the vice president and I were supposed to wear masks and it was the pool report — I’m not just making this up — the pool report says a member of the Cleveland Clinic — in fact, there’s video that exists — coming up to someone in the presidential party and saying would you like masks, and they were waved away.”

Watch the video below from Fox News.

The candidates don’t get it: from pandemics to climate change, the real problem is capitalism itself

Last week President Donald Trump and his Democratic rival, former Vice President Joe Biden, engaged in a fierce debate that was noted by millions for the unpleasantness of Trump’s repeated interruptions. During those interruptions, Trump frequently denounced Biden as either radically left-wing or a hostage of the radical left. Eight days later, Vice President Mike Pence made similar insinuations that Biden’s running mate (and his potential replacement), Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris of California, is some kind of socialist.

If only it were so. The truth is that the ailment afflicting America is capitalism, and the difference between the two parties is that the Democrats will only describe some of the symptoms but refuse to provide an honest diagnosis, while the Republicans outright defend the disease.

Most of the major problems with America, and the world, can be traced back to the singular cause of capitalism, an economic system in which a society’s means of production are primarily controlled by private individuals hoping to make a profit. It is a system that has devastated our planet to the point where it may soon be largely uninhabitable, created massive income inequality and left us woefully unprepared for crises like the novel coronavirus pandemic.

We can start with the last item on that list, the coronavirus pandemic. Because capitalist systems require perpetual consumption and growth to maintain prosperity, any little hiccup in the ability of most industries to stay profitable causes the whole economy to crash. This is why, despite the economy doing relatively well prior to the mandatory shutdowns in March, whole sectors began to collapse while unemployment skyrocketed once the pandemic forced people to shelter in place.

If America had a universal basic income in place — that is, a monthly amount of money guaranteed to every citizen to keep each one above the poverty line — ordinary people would have had at least been able to stave off desperate poverty during these trying times. The same is true of the eviction epidemic: Although Trump has announced a mostly symbolic eviction moratorium, he has refused to implement the real thing, and as a result millions of Americans face the likelihood of being thrown out of their homes… assuming that has not already happened to them.

Yet on a deeper level, the problem with capitalism is that it is built on the need for private enterprises to make money, no matter what. During a pandemic in which everyone will ultimately require some kind of medical care — for some to treat the disease, for others to be vaccinated once a vaccine becomes available — the need for corporate profit clashes with the needs of the general public.

“There is a unique incapacity of the capitalist system — by which I mean, a system of private enterprises owned and operated by shareholders, families, individuals producing for a profit and the ordering about of the majority of people involved in every enterprise or the employees — that system is uniquely incapable of securing public health,” Dr. Richard D. Wolff, the professor emeritus of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, told Salon earlier this month. “And since public health is a basic demand, a need of human communities, this represents a profound disqualification of capitalism. And to spell it out just briefly: it is not profitable for a private, profit-driven competitive capitalist to produce masks by the millions, or gloves, or ventilators, or hospital beds, or all the rest of them.”

Wolff noted that the government is entirely capable of stepping in and filling a void left by the private sector when a given industry deems this to be in its best interest. This is what happens, for example, with the military-industrial complex.

“A government failure cannot be excused on grounds of the government not doing such things or conceiving of such things, because that’s not true,” Wolff told Salon. “The government does exactly what it failed to do in the maintenance of public health. It does that for the military. It is just as unprofitable for a private capitalist to produce a missile and then store it in some warehouse and monitor it and clean it and replace it and repair it, waiting for God knows however long a time until the next war makes this missile something the government buys.”

The problem is that the American health care industry — including doctors, drug and device makers, hospitals and medical insurance companies — do not want to establish any precedent that could lead to socialized medicine. Therefore, even though we have the resources to help everyone during this pandemic, we do not avail ourselves of them.

A similar dynamic is at play when it comes to the issue that most immediately threatens the survival of our species — climate change. 2020 saw some of the worst wildfires in recorded history on the American west coast because humanity has artificially warmed the planet through emission of greenhouse gases. A report by the World Wildlife Foundation identified global warming as the primary culprit for the cataclysmic decline in animal population sizes, with a 68 percent drop being recorded among “mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish” since 1970. If global warming is not brought under control, and soon, we can expect a world in which “a large part of the planet will become unlivable (either too hot or too dry),” Penn State climate scientist Dr. Michael Mann told Salon in 2018.

“More and more of the available land surface will be used for agriculture and farming to feed a growing global population. That means more concentrated human settlement—and probably a lot more conflict,” Mann added. His colleague, Dr. Kevin Trenberth of the US National Center for Atmospheric Research, also predicted at the time that “food and water become major issues with costs and shortages.” 

If it’s so clear what’s happening, why doesn’t humanity take the steps necessary to fight climate change?

In the words of Ted Morgan, a professor emeritus of political science at Lehigh University: “The vast majority of greenhouse gas emissions are produced by the world’s developed capitalist economies, with China and the US leading the way.” He added that “each of the capitalist powers is loathe to weaken its competitive position vis à vis the other capitalist economies. In a capitalist world, each economic unit must act to protect what it deems its own interests. The only counterweight comes from the public sector.” Yet government authorities are reluctant to aggressively curtail capitalist industries that emit greenhouse gases — from the fossil fuel industry and big agriculture to those that cut down rainforests — because they are “constrained by the fear that pushing public interests too far will cause capital flight, thereby undermining its viability. And, of course, corporations and the wealthy dominate the shaping of public policy — nowhere more than in the US.”

That term, “capital flight,” is absolutely critical here. Under capitalist systems, companies that do not like potential government regulations often have the right to threaten to close up shop or move their businesses elsewhere, in the process taking away people’s jobs and hurting local economies. This is known as a “capital strike” and it has been used since the Industrial Revolution to do everything from get tax breaks from the state and break up labor movements to killing legislation that business magnates oppose, particularly when they help workers’ rights.

Capital strikes are ethically dubious even when permitted for those purposes, but allowing them is literally suicidal when an issue like climate change is at stake. Because capitalism encourages businesses to coerce governments into allowing them to destroy the planet, most of humanity is forced to watch helplessly as the Earth literally burns up. And it is not as if there are any eventual winners in systems where capital strikes are allowed: In the end, the 20 firms that contribute to one-third of the planet’s carbon emissions will eventually suffer just like the rest of us, since they inhabit the same planet.

Finally there is the issue of systemic poverty. In 2020 we have seen the problem of capitalism in the fact that our supposed economic recovery has been “K-shaped,” meaning that the wealthy have disproportionately gotten better while everyone else suffers more than they did before. Yet this severe income inequality long preceded the pandemic: For more than forty years, in fact, businesses have manipulated the government into making sure that the super-rich gain far more than their fair share of our wealth. Indeed, if income had kept pace with overall economic growth in the United States since 1970, the bottom 90 percent of our country would be earning an average of $12,000 more each year.

With income inequality comes not only poverty, but economic injustice. According to the Brookings Institute, as of 2018 American households held over $113 trillion in assets. If that was distributed evenly among the 329 million US citizens, each person would have more than $343,000. Yet as of 2016 the top 20 percent of households held 77 percent of the wealth, while the top one percent owned 29 percent of the wealth. This is the direct result of capitalism for two reasons: First, it allows the wealthy to make sure that the government does not restrain their greed through policies that require a fairer distribution of resources; and second, it continuously empowers the rich compared to everyone else by making sure that they have far more means of influencing policymakers than their significantly disempowered non-wealthy counterparts.

This brings us back to those presidential debates, in which precisely none of these observations were made. On the one side you had the Democratic candidates for president and vice president, Biden and Harris, who sounded like latter-day examples of America’s most left-wing president, Franklin D. Roosevelt. To be clear: It is unambiguously good that Biden wants to put America back in the Paris Climate Accord (which would help fight climate change, but not do nearly enough to eliminate it entirely); that he wants to create a Pandemic Testing Board on the scale of Roosevelt’s famous War Production Board, with the goal of using science to fight the pandemic (Trump, by contrast, has deliberately ignored science since the pandemic reached our country at the start of the year); that he wants to invest in trillions of dollars in stimulus spending that would create millions of jobs; and that he supports other progressive measures like improving regulations on banks and other powerful industries, providing free public college to lower-income and middle-class individuals, forgiving federal student-loan debt at a minimum of $10,000 per person and requiring businesses to provide paid emergency sick leave.

These are all very good things — and they are certainly a far sight better than Trump and Pence shilling for the status quo. Yet Biden and Harris also went to great pains to emphasize that they are not socialists, that they support capitalism, and that their proposals would only nibble at the edges of the problem rather than obliterate it entirely. Indeed, Biden even bragged in his debate with Trump that he had barely conceded at all to the Democratic Party’s anti-capitalist wing — led by Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who almost became the party’s presidential nominee this year — and he is absolutely right. When Salon spoke with Sanders insiders who had tried to get Biden to move to the left, they all agreed that they won only modest concessions.

This approach is not going to cut it in the future.

“It really has to be an ‘all hands on deck’ that allows our economies to be completely transformed in order to literally allow human survival,” Professor Julia K. Steinberger, a professor of ecological economics at the University of Leeds, told Salon in June. “That’s what’s at stake in terms of the gravity of the situation and the rapidity with which the climate crisis is unfolding.”

Steinberger says Biden doesn’t “fully understand” the magnitude of the crisis. She sounded very much like Bernie Sanders himself, who last year rejected the claim by another Democrat that you could support meaningful change while remaining a capitalist by arguing “I think business as usual and doing it the old-fashioned way is not good enough. What we need is, in fact—I don’t want to get people too nervous—we need a political revolution. I am, I believe, the only candidate who’s going to say to the ruling class of this country, the corporate elite: Enough, enough with your greed and with your corruption. We need real change in this country.”

I think it is best to close this with a personal story. Last year I interviewed Ben Shapiro, one of the most popular conservative commentators in America today, and confronted him about his belief that if there are starving children in America, one possible solution is to take them away from their parents. His reasoning was that, because capitalism provides everyone with an opportunity to support themselves and their families, the parents must be at fault if their children can’t afford to eat. When I argued that he was ignoring the problem of systemic poverty under capitalism and lacking compassion for capitalism’s victims, he responded:

No, I don’t see how that lacks compassion in any way. If you are unable to feed your child, and you cannot find a social fabric to help you take care of that child, your child should not be with you. You’re living in the freest, most prosperous country in the history of the world. It is not all that expensive to pay for a child’s lunch.

When I pointed out that millions of Americans work full-time and are still unable to support their families. Shapiro cut me off.

I do not accept your premise that we live in a society where people literally cannot afford to feed their children, [where] their children will starve without a free school lunch.”

Shapiro’s inability to even comprehend economic realities hints at the root of the problem. While Biden and Harris may not outright detest the poor as Shapiro does, they still share his unwillingness to accept the premise that there could be anything wrong with capitalism as a system.

Unfortunately, to quote President John Adams, “Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”

The state of facts and evidence proves that capitalism is condemning millions upon millions to hopeless poverty, rendering us incapable of effectively coping with manageable problems like a pandemic and literally destroying the planet. Unless that reality becomes part of our mainstream political discourse, humanity is doomed.

Donald Trump’s health: A new front in the right’s long war against reality

Last Sunday morning, the medical team supervising President Trump’s care at Walter Reed Medical Center returned to the microphones to address misinformation they had divulged the previous day. The president’s physician, Dr. Sean Conley, admitted he had obfuscated the fact that Trump had been administered oxygen and explained his misleading statements by saying he was “trying to reflect the upbeat attitude” of Trump and “didn’t want to give any information that might steer the course of illness in another direction…”

This bizarre episode capped off a truly strange weekend in which the condition of the president of the United States of America, the most powerful man in the world, was puzzled over as one conflicting account after another battled for precedence. It was reminiscent of the propaganda-laden crises of authoritarian states and failed nations, times in which leaders were either perfectly healthy or functionally dead and crises either under control or raging unabated.

The disturbing truth is that this seemingly inexplicable moment is the result of a decades-long war over the very nature of reality within America. I had struggled to understand this before writing “American Rule: How a Nation Conquered the World but Failed Its People” and finding that modern American history has been dominated by this conflict and the Republican Party’s insistence on constructing an alternate reality to aid in its consolidation of power.

It is no accident that the Republican Party has evolved into Trumpism. After decades of manipulation, including the vilification of academics and experts and an all-out onslaught on science, it was sadly inevitable for the GOP to reach the point where even the medical condition of the president is subject to relentless propaganda and subjective pseudo-science.

In the post-Vietnam era, this project was best summarized by William E. Simon, a businessman who served as Richard Nixon’s secretary of the Treasury, who wrote in his influential 1978 book “A Time for Truth” that liberals had so dominated cultural conversation with their array of academics and experts that it was necessary for conservatives to create their own “powerful counterintelligentsia.” This followed on the heels of the civil rights, free speech and antiwar movements that found purchase on college campuses and among academic circles in the 1960s and ’70s. What followed was a backlash against the academy itself and a desperate attempt to forge an alternate establishment that would protect Republican power and capitalist interests.

This would lead to the creation of an army of right-wing think tanks like the Heritage Foundation and the Cato Institute, bodies that offered opinions troubling scientific and academic consensus while preparing pundits to challenge experts in the public arena. Corporate and private donations were mobilized to tempt experts into espousing anti-establishment views. Even while major corporations internally distributed their own studies of scientifically-proven threats like climate change and carcinogenic products like cigarettes, large-scale discrediting operations were undertaken to inject doubt in the public mind.

To assist this effort, the American right founded a powerful media operation that began with print and moved to the airwaves with talk radio, cable news and eventually websites and social media networks dedicated to proliferating misinformation. With the death of the FCC’s “fairness doctrine” in 1987 — a rule that had guaranteed equal time to opposing viewpoints in the media — the right was free to construct a self-sustaining, impenetrable alternate reality its supporters and adherents could reside within, beyond the reach of experts, science or even a passing conflicting opinion.

There is a line to be drawn from Simon’s urge to push “non-egalitarian” voices in order to protect Republican and moneyed interests to our peculiar moment. The reliance on politically favorable opinions and personally advantageous pseudo-science has given room to misinformation, disinformation and the proliferation of conspiracy theories that “feel real” to people while existing solely as weaponized narratives. 

It is this war on science and expertise that gave rise to attacks on scientists urging the wearing of masks, and to the “miracle cures” of hydroxychloroquine, UV light and household cleansers, not to mention the empty promise by a president — who had been caught on tape admitting he knew better — that a generational pandemic might simply solve itself, saying, “One day, it’s like a miracle, it will simply disappear.”

But with more than 214,000 deaths so far during the coronavirus pandemic and the disastrous consequences of climate change as evident as the flaming maelstroms on the West Coast — not to mention an ailing president who is either all better, improving or gravely ill, or maybe all three at once — it is time to recognize the manipulation that has occurred and the necessity to move beyond a war on objective reality. As perhaps even President Trump’s partisan doctors could be made to admit, propaganda simply does not exist at the microscopic level.

Taking the next knee: Is this athletic revolt for real and is it a danger to Donald Trump?

Last year, when LeBron James described some of President Trump’s public statements as “laughable and scary,” Fox News commentator Laura Ingraham ordered the basketball superstar to “shut up and dribble.”

LeBron responded thoughtfully by saying that her comment “resonated with me, but I think it resonated with a lot of people to be able to feel like they can be more.”

Those “people” have come to include most of the National Basketball Association and hundreds of other athletes in professional baseball, hockey, football, women’s basketball, and the top tiers of college sports. As for that “more” they have become? They are now active participants in the most significant and inclusive wave of the often crushed or coopted yet ever breathing “athletic revolution” that first took shape in the 1960s.

Thanks to the pandemically isolated “bubbles” in which some teams are now living and playing, and driven by Donald Trump’s continuing racially based attacks on various sports, some athletes are now communing with each other ever more regularly and making collective decisions as never before — decisions often supported by their teams and even leagues. In the process, many of their protests against systemic racism and specific acts of police brutality have gone from messages at their usual social media outlets to acts like forcing games to be postponed via wildcat strikes.

As baseball and basketball, battered by the Covid-19 pandemic, cautiously continue their delayed and shortened seasons and the National Football League and some college football conferences finally launch their own belated starts, more and more questions arise: Will such physically dangerous playing conditions be sustainable? (Is there even such a thing as a socially distanced tackle?) Will fans accept rule changes meant to take the coronavirus into account and still keep watching (while their own lives threaten to go down the tubes)? Will former San Francisco 49er Super Bowl quarterback Colin Kaepernick, who sparked the current sports revolt by kneeling to the national anthem four years ago and was subsequently abusedby the president and functionally banished from football, ever get to play again? And above all, what effect will the various protests of such athletes have, if any, on the election?

The women led the way

However it plays out, the most recent victory of National Basketball League players striking during their playoffs over yet another grim death of a black man at the hands of the police was spectacular. The team owners agreed that, in the Covid-19 moment with polling places potentially in short supply on November 3rd, pro basketball arenas would be made available as just such sites. Consider this path breaking: it’s the first time a player-owner bargaining agreement has included such a gift to democracy from two of the (previously) most self-centered groups in America.

Before we cry “Bravo!” however, let’s cry “Brava!” After all, it was the most marginalized of the professional leagues, the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA), that provided the impetus for the current movement and remains its moral center. Keep in mind that, for years now, women pro basketball players have been protesting against gun violence and police brutality, both individually and as teams, while their male equivalents, who earn so much more money and possess so much more security, tended to posture and pontificate while putting themselves at much less risk.

Last month, the women upped their game. The WNBA’s Atlanta Dream players donned T-shirts endorsing Dr. Raphael Warnock, the Democratic opponent of Georgia Republican Senator Kelly Loeffler, who has disparaged Black Lives Matter and, as the New York Times reported, “publicly and frequently derided the league for dedicating its season to the Black Lives Matter movement.” Loeffler just happens to be the Dream’s co-owner. Other teams in the league followed suit and soon most teams were wearing such “Vote Warnock” T-shirts, while also proclaiming that Black Lives Matter. (BLM, by the way, was a group founded by women.)

Soon after, something stunning happened in the male version of pro basketball with the NBA in the first round of its playoff games in a “bubble” at Florida’s Disney World. After a white police officer shot an unarmed black man, Jacob Blake, in the back seven times in Kenosha, Wisconsin, the Milwaukee Bucks refused to take part in their next playoff game. And that protest then produced a cascade of brief strikes by other NBA and WNBA teams and, most surprisingly, by predominantly white Major League Baseball teams.

While the statements of the protesters tended to describe the strikes as a response to recent incidents of police brutality, the underlying cause may have lain elsewhere. Those angry strikes may really have been side effects of the Covid-19 “bubbles” in which they were playing. In them, the usual focus on the game of the moment and the party to follow was replaced by conversations about Donald Trump, racism, and the responsibilities of rich Black sports celebrities to express themselves and act in the interests of their communities.

The New Yorker‘s Isaac Chotiner conducted a revealing interview with Andre Iguodala, a Miami Heat forward and the first vice-president of the NBA players’ union, who said:

“African-Americans are trying to search for ourselves and ask where we stand in the world and where we stand in America. And we don’t know. We shoulder a lot of the burdens of our community, but I think a lot of that responsibility should fall on the majority, and those who are the lawmakers and who are supposed to insure that every man and woman is treated as an equal. But we still haven’t seen that. So we are still searching for our place.”

Take the money or march?

One of the most poignant expressions of that search came from the coach of the Los Angeles Clippers, Doc Rivers, whose father had been a police officer. “It’s amazing,” he commented, “why we keep loving this country, and this country does not love us back. It’s really so sad… I’m so often reminded of my color… We got to do better. But we got to demand better.”

What exactly does “demand better” mean and what could it achieve? In the sports world, at least, with the possible exception of those still-must-be-seen-to-be-believed arena voting sites, the sporadic protests of various players over the years for equality and social justice have usually resulted, at best, in yet more discussion about the issues they were raising rather than actual solutions, however provisional. Although over the decades, the integration of baseball, the introduction of free agency, and the emergence of the Black quarterback could all certainly be viewed as progress in the sports world itself.

Today, however, it remains a question whether players will continue pushing for social reform or, as so often in the past, settle for better salaries and pensions. As Iguodala put it:

“Historically, money determines a lot of our actions. Do we stand up for something or take the money? We will always get caught in those crosshairs. But I think players are smartening up, and I think that will come into play with a lot of guys.”

Similar optimism has been expressed recently by a number of sporting icons including Hall of Fame basketball player Kareem Abdul Jabbar who began his career with the Milwaukee Bucks. He found hope in “the instantaneous support of other sports teams and athletes,” especially ones from Major League Soccer (only 26% black), Major League Baseball (8%), and overwhelmingly white pro tennis.

Times, Jabbar believes, may indeed be changing. After all, he remembers that “when I boycotted the 1968 Olympics because of the gross racial inequities, I was met with a vicious backlash criticizing my lack of gratitude for being invited into the air-conditioned Big House where I could comfortably watch my community swelter and suffer.”

Another long-time sports activist, retired sociology professor Harry Edwardswho was instrumental in inspiring the memorable Black power salute given from the medal stand at the 1968 Mexico Olympics by American track stars Tommie Smith and John Carlos, is similarly hopeful. An adviser to Kaepernick, Edwards sees an opening for genuine change in this moment because, he says, it’s no longer just about the acts of individual sports figures. This wave of protest, he adds, “is distinctively different from the single athletes who were involved. These are entire teams that are reacting to this situation and leveraging their power to demand change. It’s not just a Colin Kaepernick or Eric Reid or Michael Bennett or Maya Moore. This one is about an entire organization and I could see this coming from the time the University of Missouri football team protested.”

That was back in 2015 when that football team joined a campus-wide demand for the resignation of the university’s president for mishandling racial incidents at the school. (He did finally resign.) Such a full-scale involvement of a college sports team in a protest movement was unheard of at the time. It would take another five years and so many more racial nightmares before that spirit of unity with a larger protesting culture in this Black Lives Matter era, not to mention the willingness of athletes to risk their own brief careers, would bloom throughout sports.

“Spoiled rotten millionaires”

The current reaction of the Trump administration and its allies to such protests has underlined the threat that they clearly feel from wildcat strikes, bent knees, and other actions disrupting their notions of “normality” in an unnerved and unnerving world. The president, in particular, has been counting on the return of pro sports and college football to help project an image of him being in control in this ongoing pandemic.

Weighing in from the White House, President Trump’s son-in-law and senior advisor Jared Kushner typically dismissed the recent set of basketball wildcat strikes by saying, “Look, I think that the NBA players are very fortunate that they have the financial position where they’re able to take a night off from work without having to have the consequences to themselves financially.”

That snide attempt to separate the athletes from their fan base, itself stricken by a weakening economy, the still-spreading coronavirus, and a mounting sense of political anxiety, soon blossomed into something more like a political campaign theme. At the right-wing website Newsmax, for instance, conservative radio host Chris Salcedo attacked “the spoiled rotten millionaires.” He then added: “Pro sports is no longer about unifying us but about shoving left-wing politics down our throat and up our nearest orifice. They push social justice, which is the absence of justice.”

For all the right-wing outrage over the basketball protests, football is now the true American national pastime and carries the most weight with Trump and gang. Several months ago, I speculated that, “if the National Football League plays regular season games this fall, President Trump stands a good chance of winning reelection for returning America to business as usual — or, at least, to his twisted version of the same.”

Despite the fact that most NFL owners have been Trump donors, the league, which did away with pre-season games, has been bending leftward to avoid a NBA-style set of strikes that could cripple the season just as it’s starting. Last month, League Commissioner Roger Goodell professed regret for not paying more attention to Colin Kaepernick’s message when he took those knees. Topping that, earlier this month, Goodell announced that “End Racism” and “It Takes All of Us” signs will be stenciled in the end zones of all stadiums this season and the so-called Black national anthem, “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” will be sung before each opening game. Political slogans will even be allowed on helmets.

In certain ways, when it comes to the Trump voter in particular, the return of college football — a major multibillion-dollar business that pays most of its “employees” nothing whatsoever — with its own cult-like regional passions is of particular importance. While college football fans tend to lean right and insist on their entertainment, no matter who has to die for it, college players have used the health risks of Covid-19 to ramp up their demands for more control over their lives and a share of the revenue that their schools collect from the sale of jerseys with their names on them.

After two of the five major conferences, the West Coast’s Pac-12 and the Midwestern-based Big 10, worrying about the toll that the pandemic might take, called off their fall seasons, the Trump campaign declared: “The Radical Left is trying to CANCEL college football.” The electoral implications were obvious: five key swing states — Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Ohio and Minnesota — have Big Ten teams and calling off the season in this fashion does, of course, send a message to future voters about the state of Trumpian America.

In reality, the urge to protest playing football in the midst of a pandemic was spreading (and not just among the usual suspects). Buzz Bissinger, the author of Friday Night Lights, a famed book on high school football in Texas, for instance, called on players in the remaining leagues to boycott their games:

“[M]any of the states advocating to play are the same states that find wearing protective masks optional, college football a sacred American right. Football is not like other sports. It is blood, snot, sweat and spit, bodily meals the virus craves. How can these schools even be contemplating the risk when several medical advisers to the N.C.A.A. said it was ill advised? Some coaches have suggested that football players alone should return to campus, which provides additional evidence that they are viewed more like employees than traditional students and should be compensated.”

Such evidence has, of course, been in plain sight for years, but maybe it takes a plague to see it clearly. College administrators may be no better than Trumpsters in their willingness to sacrifice lives for money and power. They certainly do fit comfortably with the sort of sentiments Donald Trump, Jr., expressed on Chris Salcedo’s show: “I can’t tell if some of this stuff is politically motivated because not going back to normalcy allows you to instill some fear that can be used as political leverage. Let them play, man.”

In other words, the position of the Trump administration as it makes a Covid-19-ignoring scoring drive for November 3rd is distinctly shut up and dribble. However, the question, in this moment from hell, is: Will the players and fans agree?

Who will take the next knee?

Robert Lipsyte, a TomDispatch regular, was a sports and city columnist for the New York Times. He is the author, among other works, of SportsWorld: An American Dreamland.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s new dystopian novel (the second in the Splinterlands series) Frostlands, Beverly Gologorsky’s novel Every Body Has a Story, and Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation Unmade by War, as well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power and John Dower’s The Violent American Century: War and Terror Since World War II.

Copyright 2020 Robert Lipsyte

Netflix’s “Deaf U” wants viewers to see “there is no one right way to be deaf”

On Netflix’s “Deaf U,” Daequan contacts Raelyn in her dorm room and lays on the charm until he convinces her to go on a date with him. He accomplishes this flirtation from afar as they sign to each other through opposite-facing windows. It’s just another day at Gallaudet University, the only institution of higher education where all programs are designed to accommodate deaf and hard of hearing students.

“Deaf U” is the new series by activist Nyle DiMarco, a reality show king who won “America’s Next Top Model” in 2015 and then “Dancing With the Stars” a year later. He’s landed parts on scripted shows, has spoken out about negative deaf portrayals, and runs a foundation that aims to help the lives of deaf people. DiMarco recently extended his reality kingdom to behind the cameras as an executive producer on Netflix’s eight-part series “Deaf U,” which follows a tight-knit group of students at Gallaudet as they navigate dating, personal traumas, partying, bullying, schoolwork, and family dynamics. 

“Deaf U” is everything one would expect of a reality series set on a college campus with plenty of humor, drama, and heartbreaking moments. And while the usual jealousies and dating betrayals spark conflict, what’s eye-opening for mainstream audiences is that some of the in-fighting stems from disagreements over Deaf culture and who feels like they belong to the community. And yes, that’s Deaf with a capital “D.”

Identification with the Deaf community doesn’t hinge on how much hearing one has or not, rather adhering to practices and norms that are distinct from the mainstream hearing community. Those who identify with the Deaf community embrace their difference in human experience instead of viewing deafness as a disability or disease. Many have deaf family members and aim to perpetuate Deaf culture, whether it’s by celebrating the arts, following prescribed social behaviors or using signed language as their primary language. 

It’s a complex and nuanced subject that creates friction for a few of the featured students in the series. Daequan, who has hearing in one ear, didn’t even know how to sign before attending Gallaudet. Rodney, who has a cochlear implant, says he’s treated differently, while Dalton threw out his hearing aid long ago and prefers to only date Deaf women. 

Meanwhile, influencer Cheyenna constantly feels ostracized by the diehard Deaf community at Gallaudet and refers to many of them as “Elites,” a label that she now regrets. One of those students is Tessa, who doesn’t believe Cheyenna’s behavior aligns with the Deaf community’s, while fellow “Elite” Alexa thinks the criticisms are too harsh.

DiMarco – who is from a fourth-generation family of people born deaf and also attended Gallaudet University – spoke to Salon about the differing views on deafness and the Deaf community, making “Deaf U,” and possibilities for a second season.

The following interview was interpreted by Grey Van Pelt, and has been edited for length and clarity.

In an interview earlier this year, Daequan revealed that initially he was reluctant to join the show. Why was it important to pursue him and include his story?

He really represents a large majority of the Deaf community, with 95% of deaf kids being born to hearing parents. Often, they grew up lacking the culture, the sign language, often don’t go to a Deaf school, so they’re often deprived of that experience. I thought it was so critical for him to be able to tell his story, because he represents 95% of our deaf audience who are really going to relate to him. 

When we first got to talking, he said, “I can’t do this. I’m not deaf enough.” And I was like, “What do you mean, you’re not deaf enough? You literally are the Deaf community and in fact you are the person who would represent more of the community than the ‘capital D Deaf’ people like me and Tessa and Alexa.” So I also really wanted to showcase his experience in order to help our audience relate to him, for them to find their own journey. 

It also reminds me of Rodney. He was asking what is considered “not deaf enough” as far as how people are treated within the community. I wasn’t aware of this distinction.

In the Deaf community, I think it’s a conversation that we’re still going through through every day, which is why we still have a group of Deaf Elites, right. But one has to wonder if we really are Elites when we only make up the minority, the 5% of the Deaf experience. 

I think there’s so many layers that that the Deaf community is still really navigating in conversation and finding our own sort of place within the community. My bottom line answer is always there is no one right way to be deaf. We’re starting to see that shift.

Some of the students whom Cheyenna characterized as “Elite” didn’t like how she “catered to the hearing community,” through her behavior, which I didn’t understand. One of the criticisms is that she over-expresses her face, and mouths words. Could you explain to me why that’s a criticism?

It’s interesting because often people who are considered over-expressive would follow English-signing order, which would be called Signed Exact English or SEE. It’s not actually a language, it’s just a different modality of English. Oftentimes, people who use that, we can’t really understand because you simply can’t mix two languages, American Sign Language and English. They don’t make sense to blend together – the same way Spanish and French might [not].

So what you see in that group is essentially asking, “Why is she catering to the hearing community? Why is that specifically her audience?” With ASL being a language that is shrinking in use, we wonder, perhaps, why she would have picked that road. It’s interesting because a lot of the Elites who really identify strongly as culturally Deaf tend to choose just one aspect of their identity – that is the deafness, and they really fall into it. So it made sense to them.

Cameron, Cheyenna’s own friend, says he’s an Elite, that they’re dying out and don’t want to lose their culture or language, that they’re a minority and need to fight back. This created a friction between them that surprised me.

I think a lot of people throw the word “Elite” out there and really weaponize it against this small group of people, for example, who really only make up that minority. The majority of the Deaf experience is not what you see in the smaller group. 

To really dissect that – 95% of the Deaf community really faces hearing parents who don’t teach them sign language or don’t enroll them in a Deaf school or don’t provide them access to Deaf culture. And that becomes internalized, and arriving at Gallaudet and seeing someone who had that sort of experience that they would have wished they had: they have the confidence in their identity, they have the language, they have the educational background, they’re ready to just focus on their degree and learning. I think it gets thrown on them in a way to equalize and maybe pull them down, which of course, does damage in the community. But if we were to shift that narrative, or shift that argument, if you will, and look at Hearing Society, why that’s actually causing that separation and causing a lot of the issues that are at the root cause, I think we would have a more clear dialogue coming to that conversation — but it is a conversation.

Many of these students revealed painful parts of their history. How did it come about with Cheyenna discussing her past abuse? 

We actually never realized Cheyenna’s history until Cheyenna became really comfortable with our producing team. She actually came to the team and said, “I have this story that I think is important that I tell.” And, you know, the producing team obviously was very sensitive to her comfort level and making it as comfortable as possible for her, and an environment that would be conducive for that. But we’re very thankful that Cheyenna was willing to be vulnerable. It’s not easy, but for Cheyenna, it was very necessary. And uncomfortability is really where we find our journey.

By the end of the season, we find out that Cheyenna has left Gallaudet to attend a mainstream university. What was the conversation like to figure out how to follow up on her story?

We don’t know what Season 2 will look like or if we’re going to have it. We’re definitely manifesting it now. When the time is right. You know, I’m sure that there will be some deep discussion on how we’re going to follow through with Cheyenna’s story, but right now, it remains a mystery. 

One of my favorite parts of the series was learning about Deaf people having “sign names” – instead of spelling out a name, creating a shortcut sign to indicate that person. We learn that Trump’s sign name looks like a hand mimicking a toupee [in the video below]. Is there a Biden sign name?

I don’t think I’ve seen one yet. I’d have to do a little bit of research and find out. Typically, there’s a lot of conversation on social media about what the sign will be, but I haven’t really seen any yet.

What was more surprising to me in this conversation is that the people who take the time to spell out Trump’s name are doing it respectfully because they’re his supporters. The president has made ableist comments about deaf people before, so I didn’t realize that some people in the Deaf community still would be supportive of him.

There’s still a lot of deaf people out there that are very much Trump supporters, unfortunately. I can’t imagine why. He’s been historically very against disability and [participated in] disability erasure. But “The Social Dilemma” on Netflix, for example mentions people in their own bubbles. They live within their own little “Truman Show.” So I can’t argue with that I guess.

I recently learned through the “Twenty Thousand Hertz” podcast about “deaf gain,” in which a Deaf person has an advantage over a hearing person – such as being able to converse at a loud party or concert, Daequan signing to Raelyn through windows, or as Rodney says, “sh*t-talking” about non-deaf people who are present. Why was it important to include these moments?

It was really key to find a lot of funny parts to being Deaf that would be entertaining and also bring a level of awareness as well. We wanted to show that there are a lot of benefits. One article recently that I was reading talks about gene editing, for example, and a lot of what’s happening with that, and how they wanted to edit out the deaf gene. But the article actually argued that the deaf gene prevents other very specific diseases oftentimes, fights Alzheimer’s and things like that. That is deaf gain, right? That might not be the most humorous example, but it’s something to show that we’re perfectly healthy beings who are just enjoying our lives.

There’s a scene where Cheyenna is at a restaurant and a waiter puts a bottle in front of her, between her and her friend, and she says that’s not deaf friendly because it blocks their line of sight (and therefore communication). Are there ways that people like me can be more deaf friendly?

Yeah, the water bottle is a really great example. You know, when you see deaf people, it’s always great to bring them an option to communicate. The phone has a really awesome app called Cardzilla now. And it’s available on both app stores. You can literally type something out, it comes in large print that you can pass the phone back and forth. Or you can use speech-to-text like on the phone where you talk into it, it types for you. Bring options and be creative.

Are there any projects that you would recommend other people to watch to learn about Deaf culture?

That’s one of the negatives; there’s not really enough Deaf experience being put out there yet. You know, perhaps “Deaf Out Loud” – a great [special] out there that’s a little bit helpful, but of course it never is enough.

Although I know about Shoshanna Stern and Josh Feldman from the series “This Close,” there aren’t that many deaf actors who are household names – just you and Marlee Matlin. What have you heard in casting as reasons why they don’t want to consider deaf actors?

I think people often don’t want to cast actors specifically because they don’t know how to write them in because they don’t really get Deaf culture, the Deaf experience, but also they don’t really understand the accommodations that may be necessary in working with a deaf actor, and they might feel that it’s better for them to opt out. They’re used to working with hearing actors, and so they just assume that they can do the job, right? And that really leads to deaf people [being] shut out of the entertainment industry. With my platform expanding and growing, hopefully, we’re going to see more producers out there looking to really reframe and shift the lens and start hiring people to get the experience.

Are you producing other projects that will also help bring the Deaf community to the forefront?

I’m actually producing a feature film specifically about Gallaudet University as well, about one of our crowning achievements, which was the 1988 Deaf President Now protests, which gave rise to the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act. You should be seeing more about that next year, and then I have another show coming out with with Netflix next year called “Audible” that was filmed in the deaf high school that I went to as well 

“Deaf U” is currently streaming on Netflix.

Pandemic erects barriers for prized bloc of voters in nursing homes, senior facilities

The convergence of the coronavirus pandemic and election season has complicated this year’s voting for residents of nursing homes, assisted living facilities and other long-term care centers.

Many seniors who need help to get or fill out their ballots may be stymied by shifting rules about family visits. Voting procedures — whether in person or by mail — are under increased scrutiny, adding to the confusion. Facilities that used to host voting precincts likely won’t do so this year because of concerns about the spread of COVID-19.

“We’re basically not allowed to go out into the public right now, we’re more vulnerable, and our immune systems are compromised anyway,” said Janice Phillips, a 14-year resident of Village Square Healthcare Center, a skilled nursing facility in San Marcos, California. “We’re basically locked in.”

Phillips, 75, who has rheumatoid arthritis, has voted by absentee ballot for years without problems. This year she is encouraging her fellow residents to vote by mail as well. She works with the facility’s activities staff, going resident by resident, to make sure folks are registered. As president of the resident council, Phillips has also raised the issue at community meetings.

Older Americans are a consistent voting bloc courted by both parties.

According to AARP, 71% of Americans 65 and older voted in the 2016 presidential election, compared with 46% of people 18-29. “For many older adults, it’s a point of pride for them that they’ve voted in every election since they were 18,” said Leza Coleman, the executive director of California’s Long-Term Care Ombudsman Association.

But hardly anyone has been allowed inside skilled nursing facilities since the start of the pandemic, except for staff members and the occasional state health official, or family members in certain circumstances. In California and beyond, facilities are beginning to open up in counties with low transmission rates, since federal rules changed in September to allow for more lenient visiting policies.

At the same time, outbreaks continue to plague some senior facilities, despite improved testing of staff and other safety measures. On Wednesday, Santa Cruz County health officials reported a major outbreak at the Watsonville Post-Acute Center, which has infected 46 residents, killing nine of them, and infecting 15 staff members.

California officials are pressing nursing homes and senior centers to give residents who want to vote the opportunity. The Department of Public Health on Oct. 5 sent a letter to all those facilities, explaining they have an obligation to inform and assist residents with voting, including what actions are permissible for staffers to undertake in helping voters. It also includes advice about maintaining a safe environment through the election by limiting nonessential visitors, properly using protective gear such as gloves and handling ballots as little as possible.

In years past, civic groups such as the League of Women Voters would stop by to give presentations on what’s on the ballot. Candidates for local office would hit nursing homes to make pitches. “In the context of a pandemic, we just can’t do it this year,” said Michelle Bishop, voter access and engagement manager with the National Disability Rights Network.

Before the pandemic, nursing homes and assisted living facilities also often served as polling places. Residents could easily access voting booths, often set up in a lobby or community room. That was especially important because nursing homes are likely to be accessible to people with mobility problems, Bishop said.

Otherwise, facilities would often organize bus trips and outings to polling places.

In California, the last day to register to vote online or by mail is Oct. 19, though voters can register in person up to and including Election Day. All registered voters will receive a ballot in the mail, and those postmarked by Nov. 3 will still be counted in California for 17 days after the election. Advocates say it’s important for newer residents at skilled nursing facilities to make sure they’ve registered at their new address or have plans to get their ballot delivered to them from their former homes.

Other states are also sending ballots to all registered voters by mail this year on various time frames. All states permit seniors or people who have trouble reaching polling stations to request an absentee ballot.

Once they have a ballot in hand, some older adults need help from family or staff at their facilities to complete it correctly and send it back to election officials. The federal directive to relax visiting rules could ease some of that pressure, but the situation varies by facility. For people whose relatives cannot help them, it may fall to staff members to set up calls and video chats between residents and their families, or provide the assistance to residents themselves.

Some states don’t allow nursing home staffers to help with ballots to avoid influencing votes. Even if they can assist, employees may be stretched too thin to help. In a year when nursing home staff members are spending an extra hour each day putting on protective gear, there isn’t always extra time to make sure every resident is registered and voting, said Dr. Karl Steinberg, chief medical officer for Mariner Health Central, a nursing home management company in California.

“There’s a perennial workforce shortage in nursing homes and it’s been exacerbated by this” pandemic, Steinberg said. “This year with all the chaos, there may be less staff time available to help people with voting.”

Tracy Greene Mintz, whose business, Senior Care Training, trains senior care workers, is responsible for staffing at 100 nursing homes in California. She said she started ringing alarm bells about voting rights in August.

“Elected officials do not care about nursing homes, period,” Greene Mintz said. “They assume residents don’t vote and don’t make contributions.”

She asked the California Department of Public Health, which surveys skilled nursing facilities every six weeks about COVID-19 infection control, to add a question on how facilities were planning for elections. The department declined.

So she set up webinars with facility administrators and the Los Angeles County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk to go over information on how to submit and track absentee ballots.

She has also urged state officials to provide a statewide plan that facilities could use as a blueprint. She wrote one herself that was emailed out by a trade group, the California Association of Health Facilities.

Still, California is in better shape than some other states, said Raúl Macías, a lawyer with the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice, a law and public policy institute. Elsewhere, residents may have to apply for an absentee ballot, and sometimes must provide a reason they can’t vote in person.

California also has the Voter Bill of Rights, which allows individuals to designate someone to help them fill out and drop off their ballot. In some states, such as North Carolina, assistance can come only from designated bipartisan voting assistance teams, which may be harder to recruit during a pandemic, Macías said.

No matter the state, state and county elections officials and facility administrators should draft voting plans, said Bishop, of the Disabilities Rights Network. It will help staff know the proper way to assist residents without influencing their votes, and residents know their voting rights.

“There is a bit of a gray area on whose responsibility this is,” Bishop said. “It’s one of the years when we start asking ‘Whose responsibility is it?’ Who cares? We have to get it done.”

If they can’t get access to ballots or need help, California residents can contact the state’s long-term care ombudsman program, which can investigate complaints, help them resolve the issue and take the problem to the Department of Public Health if it can’t be fixed.

COVID-19 has killed more Americans than five wars combined

Sometime this week, even as we see Donald Trump being treated for COVID-19, it is likely we will hit 212,000 American deaths from coronavirus in seven months. 

That is a mark passing U.S. deaths from conflicts in Vietnam, Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan and World War I – reflected symbolically over the weekend with 20,000 empty chairs on the Washington Mall. 

Globally, of course, we’re over a million deaths. 

It’s a sober and ignoble achievement—a total that public awareness and attention should have kept lower, one whose growth rate should be diminishing and one that seems to encapsulate our divisive mentality about safety for others.

Despite whatever efforts Trump, state governors, government health officials or others want to claim, the maps of disease growth show the United States faring worse than most other industrialized nations on most measures of per population disease control and deaths. This comes even as treatment options have improved and medical treatment has adjusted to recognizing opportunities for earlier intervention.

The total contagion counts show the insistence of Americans to resist even the simplest forms of protection, even while demanding that someone else provide it – for free.

And the president’s own nuttiness about insisting on a spin around the block as if to show off his good health before returning to the hospital just illustrates he is not even taking his own case very seriously. He just exposed everyone in the car. His personal campaign to look strong despite illness frankly is a mystifying version of leadership, for pushing for earlier-than-expected release back to the White House.

Even as pro-Trump crowds were gathering outside Walter Reed Hospital to cheer an ailing president, those waving flags and banners were standing together mostly mask-less, without proscribed physical distancing in some kind of tribal rejection of public health rules. The White House was reported to be doing little toward tracing those who may have been infected in contact with Trump or his close circle. And the president was taking pains to show himself publicly as a strong survivor of the coronavirus challenge, making the White House itself a live contagion point, as if that makes the disease less potent for those without his access to daily testing.

The reality we still face is that whether Trump emerges days from now in peachy health to successfully pursue election victory as one who has survived the coronavirus or opponent Joe Biden wins for being a far more sober, careful candidate respectful of the demands of the disease, coronavirus is still going to be here. It will be a long slog to get through it – something that Trump does not want to own. Even if we get a vaccine, Americans are saying by droves that they don’t see taking it.

Change of heart?

We can hope that a healed Trump, chastened by his own treatment much like Britain’s Boris Johnson, will revisit what has become at best a casual set of policies toward public health to embrace an actual plan with as much fervor as he does Law & Order.

But there is no evidence for a sudden turnaround.

It is much more likely that Trump, who sees the world as a reflection of himself, will think that all Americans can have the kind of free-to-him medical care that he is getting from a committed team of military staffers with helicopter trips to the hospital, and the use of experimental drugs that have not passed FDA muster. He is likely, indeed, to suggest that the disease is no big deal, and that if he can suffer only mild circumstances there is no need for wider public adherence to anything from mask-wearing to protective arrangements in the workplace.

Indeed, it seems that even if we want to show ourselves to be warriors against disease, the government is providing little to no effective tools.

In Wisconsin and in red states where the virus is arriving later, the hospitals and medical staff are still talking about the lack of protective gear and overrun emergency facilities.

At the Centers for Disease Control, they are busily rewriting any public health advice for you and me to best comport with the political message from the White House to keep the economy as open as possible.

In Florida and Georgia, Republican governors are throwing bars and restaurants wide open despite oodles of video showing unhealthful gatherings that seem to be feeding disease and lobbying the federal government to re-allow cruise ship voyages when those always have proved home for respiratory contagion. Other Republican governors and legislators have busied themselves with court challenges to emergency orders for masks and lockdowns rather than trying to fight illness.

And there is Trump’s own insistence on mask-less rallies in closed areas in close formation that are good for campaign cameras but not public health. And, if we’re to believe the emergent timelines about last week, Trump knowingly exposed donors, at least, to the virus just because there was a lot of campaign money on the table.

How does it get better?

When the government leans on the CDC for more positive advice about schools and other public gatherings, when Atty. Gen. William P. Barr attacks emergency lockdowns and compares a takeaway of individual rights in the name of public health with slavery, when Trump himself disdains the wearing of protective masks, we’re asking for trouble.

When Trump refuses to consider financial help to “blue” states for political reasons after urban centers were hit hardest by coronavirus, how exactly is this helping to fight for a healthier country? How is a Supreme Court challenge of Obamacare with no Republican alternative ready to go helpful in the middle of a pandemic? How is hyping the benefits of a vaccine release before Election Day a mark of effective medicine? Is the White House aware that under 20% of poll respondents say they will take a vaccine at all?

That stubborn reality thing keeps getting in the way.

Washington Post piece noted that even some Republican leaders are now questioning a strategy in which Team Trump downplayed the danger of the virus. “There was a panic before this started, but now we’re sort of the stupid party,” said Edward J. Rollins, co-chairman of the pro-Trump super PAC Great America. “Candidates are being forced to defend themselves every day on whether they agree with this or that, in terms of what the president did on the virus.”

Whether Trump or Biden in the coming months, the problem will be getting Americans to take contagion seriously – or we will be living with constantly rising public health emergencies for years, with its widespread effects on the economy, on education, and on our security as Americans.

It was a cultural acceptance of dangers from smoking, not government policy, that changed how cigarettes are viewed in this country. Or excessive drinking. Or even obesity, though we’re still working on that one.

But leadership? We need to see some to believe in it:  Make Leadership Great Again.

The clothes make the candidate: The sartorial politics of this year’s key Senate races

When Richard Nixon praised his wife‘s “respectable Republican cloth coat” in his 1952 Checkers speech, her clothes were not the point.

Rather, Nixon drew a direct line from a coat to the values he proclaimed – frugality, integrity, public service – to counter accusations of financial impropriety.

Nixon understood that clothes are the story we tell about ourselves. Psychologist Dan McAdams’ work on narrative identity highlights the importance of the stories we tell about ourselves to our ability to make sense of our place in the world.

For many – particularly public figures – clothing is a more intentional, outward manifestation of their story, or narrative identity: It reveals who they want to be, the version of themselves they want the world to see.

For politicians, clothing is a way to project authenticity, or consistency with an ideal type. Perceptions of authenticity give voters confidence in candidates’ integrity, persuading them that candidates will fulfill campaign promises once elected.

It is worthwhile considering the message candidates send through their dress. Against what ideal will voters measure them? The fashion choices displayed in three of this year’s high-profile U.S. Senate races provide some illustrative contrasts.

Choices different for incumbents, challengers

As an organizational theorist who researches authenticity and social evaluation, I find that we judge others – imperfectly – based on how closely we feel their image matches their message.

Most political challengers find it easy to project authenticity through dress. They can tailor their wardrobe to highlight themes from their campaigns and personal histories. This guides voters’ understanding of who the candidate is and what they stand for.

The wrinkle: Sending a message with clothing is inherently trickier for incumbents because their office constrains the image they can project. A gubernatorial candidate can wear jeans and boots to the state fair, but once installed in the Capitol, they will more often be seen in a suit. A quick Google Image search for a current candidate and the incumbent they are challenging reveals a near-universal truth: Once elected, the candidate’s most visible public image is that of the office they hold.

This suggests that while a candidate can be authentic to their unique campaign message, the incumbent is more likely to be authentic to their office, instead.

Clothing as a campaign message

In Arizona, Democratic Senate candidate Mark Kelly – astronaut, husband of former Representative Gabby Giffords – goes tieless in sports jackets or a bomber jacket.

His casual look telegraphs that he is not a Washington insider. By referencing his military and NASA background, he projects the expertise needed to take an informed stance on national security and the authority to take a strong position on climate change, a major area of research at NASA.

Kelly is challenging incumbent Republican Sen. Martha McSally, a former Air Force pilot and Afghanistan veteran. She favors streamlined suits and sheaths, often in bold reds, her hair much sleeker than in earlier campaigns. Because McSally’s dress shows no hint of her background, she may be sending the message that her military experience does not define her.

In Maine, Democratic Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives Sara Gideon is often seen at work in double-stranded pearls with a dress or a modern, tailored jacket. Her campaign materials show her with her young family in casual jackets – once in a Patagonia version, a gaffe in the home state of L.L. Bean. She later removed the Patagonia logo from the photo. Gideon’s relatable, chic-mom vibe suggests to voters that health care and education may be topics of actual conversation at her kitchen table rather than abstract policy issues.

Gideon faces incumbent Sen. Susan Collins, a Republican, who hails from Caribou, Maine, a city of 7,600, where her family founded a lumber business in 1844. Collins wears suits in deep, saturated colors, occasionally with a pop of pink, and expensive coats of the sort not often seen in rural areas. Her style is that of a Washington insider, belying nothing of her background or Down East values.

Finally, contrast Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican, with Democratic challenger Amy McGrath, battling for this Kentucky Senate seat. McConnell, on Capitol Hill since 1984, prefers dark, well-cut suits and classic, jewel-toned ties, often with a varsity stripe.

McConnell’s expensive clothes make it clear how far he has come from his childhood in Alabama and Georgia, when his family “almost went broke” dealing with the effects of his bout with polio.

McGrath is a former Marine fighter pilot and Afghanistan veteran. She favors open-collared shirts and flight jackets and is often seen with her three young children. Campaign images often feature her in military gear, giving voters the impression that she has credibility to speak on foreign policy and veterans’ issues.

The straitjacket of incumbency

Each challenger is able to present an image consistent with both their campaign platforms and their personal histories. Their clothing presents a fully elaborated identity statement – without saying a word.

In contrast, the incumbents’ almost uniform-like clothing gives voters little insight into either their personas or policy positions. Their tailored silhouettes indicate their membership in the political class, making individuation difficult.

Note that each incumbent’s campaign website also focuses much more on their incumbency than discrete policy issues.

Incumbency creates an authenticity bind: Incumbents cannot project both their offices and themselves simultaneously.

This is perhaps most constraining in the U.S. Senate, where the rules of decorum are particularly strong. Most senators, with the notable exception of Kyrsten Sinema, stick to dark, serious suits and ties. Members of the House are allowed more idiosyncrasies – think Jim Jordan’s rejection of jackets or Matt Gaetz’s colorful wing tips.

But senators tend toward what sociologists call homophily, or flocking with similar others. The consequence: They dress more alike over time.

Incumbents’ sartorial constraints may appeal to voters who prefer a candidate with a demonstrable track record, but it gives precious little insight into the incumbent’s personal history or governing priorities. The ideal type to which these incumbents are authentic, therefore, is that of senator.

Clothes may not determine this year’s winners, but the authenticity concerns that made Pat Nixon’s coat a powerful image still play a critical role in politicians’ lives. To a large extent, the clothing makes the candidate – if not the incumbent.

Jo-Ellen Pozner, Assistant Professor, Management and Entrepreneurship, Santa Clara University

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

“A threat to a fair election”: Experts warn of danger posed by armed pro-Trump poll watchers

Following President Donald Trump’s refusal last month to denounce white supremacists along with his longstanding pattern of undermining democratic norms—and in the wake of the FBI’s interception of a plot by right-wing domestic terrorists to kidnap Michigan’s Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and overthrow the state government—fears are mounting about the danger posed by far-right paramilitary groups heeding Trump’s call to “go into the polls and watch very carefully.”

Two weeks after Donald Trump Jr. took to social media in an attempt to recruit an “army for Trump’s election security,” and with early voting already underway, Republicans this week have begun dispatching thousands of volunteers to in-person voting locations and mail-in ballot drop boxes, part of a desperate “effort to find evidence to back up Trump’s unsubstantiated complaints about widespread voter fraud,” Reutersreported Thursday.  

According to more than 20 officials involved in the effort, “the mission… is to capture photos and videos Republicans can use to support so-far unfounded claims that mail voting is riddled with chicanery, and to help their case if legal disputes erupt over the results of… the contest between Republican incumbent Trump and his Democratic opponent Joe Biden.”

But critics of the Trump campaign’s operation—which revolves around baseless presumptions of fraudulent electoral activity committed by supporters of Democratic candidates—argued that the president’s “call for his supporters to serve as self-appointed” poll-watchers “sounded more like an incitement to voter intimidation and violence than an endorsement of the role election observers play in protecting democratic norms.”

Given the White House’s alarming normalization of violence against political foes, voting rights experts, civic officials, and citizens are increasingly concerned about the negative consequences that could ensue if tensions escalate and the president’s most militant supporters—white nationalist gangs, so-called “patriots” donning Confederate and Nazi regalia, and other heavily armed pro-Trump factions—follow his authoritarian cues.

Steven Gardiner, a scholar at the progressive think tank Political Research Associates, told The Guardian on Friday that “the militias will absolutely seize on” Trump’s comments. 

“The possibility of armed factions with military-style rifles showing up at polling places is very troubling,” Gardiner added. 

When Devin Burghart—director of the anti-hate organization the Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights—heard Trump endorse voter intimidation at last month’s debate, his “first thought was, ‘Here we go.'”

“This is the stuff of our worst nightmares,” Burghart said

As Common Dreams reported on Thursday amid the revelation that 13 suspects had been arrested on kidnapping and terrorism charges after law enforcement officials foiled a right-wing plot to attack the Michigan State Capitol and hold Gov. Whitmer hostage, many observers have made connections between Trump’s demagogic rhetoric and his followers’ violent actions. 

“I wonder where they got their motivation from,” Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) noted sarcastically on social media, referring to an incendiary message Trump shared in April—during the height of anti-lockdown protests in the state—to “Liberate Michigan!”

“This is a pattern: Trump paints a target. An attack or plot follows,” tweetedWashington Post national security correspondent Greg Miller. 

Gardiner told The Guardian that “the relationship between the militias and the current administration is call and response.”

“It’s not always clear who’s leading the chant,” he added. “Sometimes it’s coming from the militias, sometimes it’s coming from the president.”

 

Another worrisome development is that gun sales nearly doubled between summer 2019 and 2020, meaning that the U.S. is further arming itself with “deadly weaponry [that] is increasingly finding its way onto the streets, borne by self-styled private militias, and culminating in violent clashes that have caused bloodshed in several U.S. cities,” as The Guardian explained.

The New York Times estimated last month that the number of active militia members hovers around 20,000 people in 300 groups, with military veterans constituting one-fourth of those. But a new investigation by The Atlantic magazine into the Oath Keepers, one of the most prominent far-right paramilitary groups, revealed a list of nearly 25,000 current or former members, two-thirds of whom had military or law enforcement backgrounds, suggesting that the number of Americans with ties to extremist factions is larger. 

As Common Dreams reported last month, armed white supremacists pose the greatest domestic terrorism threat in the U.S., according to the FBI, despite efforts by the Trump administration to downplay the risks associated with right-wing militias. 

According to Gardiner’s research, many of the violent incidents committed by far-right vigilantes against anti-racism and anti-police violence protesters this summer were carried out by uncoordinated groups of individuals, with no known involvement of established militias.

“There have been almost 240 incidents [this summer] where small and entirely leaderless bands of extremists coalesced online and then proceeded to take their armed fantasies on to the streets of America,” The Guardian reported

Burghart’s team “has been tracking the escalation of militia activity,” particularly in key swing states including Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, where “groups have been detected discussing what they call ‘voter integrity’ efforts” on Election Day. 

“We’re paying close attention,” Burghart said. As a result of Trump’s “call to arms” at the first presidential debate, he anticipates that “we’ll see a lot more activity from here.”

Rachel Carroll Rivas, co-director of the Montana Human Rights Network, told The Guardian that online monitoring conducted by her organization has been “picking up intensifying conversation among militia groups about the legitimacy of the November 3 ballot and of the integrity of mail-in voting.”

Rivas explained that “militia groups such as the Montana branch of the United States Freedom Protectors were positioning themselves to be vigilante outriders of law enforcement on Election Day,” and that “the possibility of interventions by armed members of the group had to be taken seriously.”

“They present themselves as protectors of property and law and order, and are now starting to talk about the election,” Rivas said. “They may show up at polling places claiming to want to protect voting rights, but their impact will clearly be intimidatory.”

Instilling fear and harassing voters is Trump’s goal, according to voting rights advocates. Nina Jankowicz, a political scholar at the Wilson Center, wrote in The Atlantic that “confrontations between unorganized, self-appointed poll watchers and individual voters are a recipe for trouble—and a threat to a fair election.” 

Jankowicz stated that “if voters encounter any group discouraging or preventing others from casting a ballot, they should immediately inform a poll worker and call a nonpartisan election-protection hotline (866-OUR-VOTE is one example).”

“Election officials across the country should know they have the right to eject poll watchers for disruptions and intimidation, and can call the police if unrest develops outside the station,” Jankowicz said. “And police themselves should be reminded that their job is to protect people’s ability to vote, no matter their personal political preferences.”

Rivas stressed that the threat of voter intimidation “really is top down.” Far-right paramilitary groups “are repeating word for word what they hear from President Trump,” she said. 

Trump-supporting retirees considered COVID a hoax — then Trump himself was infected

Despite the fact that the coronavirus pandemic has killed more than 1 million people worldwide and over 212,800 in the United States — according to researchers at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore — many Republican supporters of President Donald Trump continue to insist that the threat is being exaggerated by the mainstream media. Journalists Francisco Alvarado and Kelly Weill, in an article published in the Daily Beast on October 9, take a look at a Florida retirement community in which the pandemic was widely regarded as a Democratic hoax — that is, until Trump himself was hospitalized after testing positive for the COVID-19 coronavirus. And now, some of the retirees are worried about a visit from Vice President Mike Pence.

This Saturday, October 10, Pence is scheduled to visit The Villages, a retirement community in Sumpter County, Florida. Pence, who debated former Vice President Joe Biden’s running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, on October 7, has not tested positive for COVID-19. But Alvarado and Weill stress that in light of Trump’s illness, some of the retirees are afraid to be around Pence.

Chris Stanley, president of The Villages Democratic Club, told the Beast, “The virus was a hoax here until Trump got it. The other night, they did a prayer vigil — and for the first time, they posted in a big font, ‘You must wear a mask.’ I looked on the webcam and didn’t see many wearing masks, but they now seem to be accepting this is not a Democrat hoax at all.”

Alvarado and Weill note that at The Villages, an “overwhelming majority of the 132,000 residents are white, conservative voters.”

Judy Pristaw, another member of The Villages Democratic Club, told the Beast, “A couple restaurants told me that the day he tested positive, restaurants weren’t as crowded that night, but I think people who like Trump are just as excited about him as we are about electing Joe Biden.”

Florida, which has 29 electoral votes, is among the key swing states where Trump and Biden will be campaigning aggressively between now and Election Day: Tuesday, November 3. Many recent polls have shown the presidential race to be tight in Florida, with Biden ahead by single digits. Polls released in October have shown Biden leading by 4% (CNBC/Change Research and Reuters/Ipsos) or 6% (University of North Florida). However, a Quinnipiac pollreleased on October 7 found Biden ahead by 11% — and on the other hand, a Fox 35 Orlando/Insider Advantage poll released the following day found Trump ahead by 3%.

Trump is hardly the only Republican in Trumpworld who has recently tested positive for the COVID-19 coronavirus. Others have included First Lady Melania Trump, White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany, long-time Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway, former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Republican National Committee Chair Ronna Romney McDaniel and Trump’s campaign manager, Bill Stepien, among many others. And the fact that so many Trump allies have been infected with COVID-19 isn’t lost on retirees at The Villages.

Robin Viger, a Villages Democratic Club volunteer, told the Beast that she wishes Pence wouldn’t visit the retirement community.

“I’m opposed,” Viger declared. “I don’t want him here. I don’t want the virus.”

Why telemedicine may actually be making healthcare more human

It’s not as if office visits were ever that great. Nobody in their right mind has any love for long waiting times, paper gowns, or chilly exam rooms where you can’t even get cellphone reception. Yet when the COVID-19 outbreak abruptly interrupted my own medical plans this year, I dreaded the thought of moving the process over to telemedicine. I anticipated adding to my already considerable Zoom fatigue, feeling rushed and depersonalized. What I found instead was a whole new way approach healthcare — one that might actually bring more humanity into the process, for patients and doctors alike.

I realized it the recent afternoon that my immunologist of nine years saw my living room. I had met him when I had metastatic melanoma and was facing a near certain imminent demise. In most of our numerous interactions since, he has been wearing a white coat and I have been wearing a robe. We have been within the walls of a hospital, where I’ve already been checked in, weighed and assessed by a gauntlet of strangers before we even speak. This time, however, we were on my turf. I was in my chair. My teen daughter was in the background, texting her friends. The geography of our interaction had been altered, and I found myself more attentive and receptive to the information being communicated.

Maybe I shouldn’t have been so surprised. We know that stress can affect cognition and memory; it stands to reason that an environment that’s more comfortable would be more efficient for taking in the often overwhelming, difficult information our doctors give us. That the news was positive was a plus. But that’s not the only reason it was also a far easier conversation than the one I’d had six months earlier with another doctor, in a tiny, spooky room in an office on an inconvenient side of town.

As Dr. Judd Hollander of the Sidney Kimmel Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University explains, conventional medical wisdom suggests that “If you are going to tell someone bad news like they have cancer, they want to hear it in person.” But, he says, “That might be true for some patients. There might be other patients who don’t want to travel 80 miles and drive home alone or with their spouse after hearing that news, [when] they might have it delivered in the comfort of their family room with their whole immediate family around them.”

“My analogy,” he says, “is that once or twice in your life you’re in a very trivial car accident, and my experience is I am shaking for hours afterwards. I’m fortunate that no one has told me I have cancer. But I can imagine, if I’m shaking after a minor car accident, am I going to want to be driving home after being told that? I don’t think so.”

As just one concrete example, he adds, “We’ve had some focus groups around women with post-mastectomy care. Everybody thinks that nobody’s going to want to show their breast on video. But when you realize the alternative is sitting in a cold, sterile room in a gown, and there are people who walk in and out of the room besides the doctor, isn’t being examined on video better for some people than being examined in person? It is. It is a very, very personal decision, and I like to look at telemedicine as one more tool clinicians can use.”

Ingrid Fetel Lee, author of “Joyful: The Surprising Power of Ordinary Things to Create Extraordinary Happiness” echoes that sentiment. She notes that doctor appointments often “tend to be stressful…. Western healthcare is often separated from the rest of your life. Telemedicine opens up the opportunity to engage with context.” But she notes that telemedicine can be a “double-edged sword” for many. “You’re dealing with incredible variabilities, like maybe not having as much privacy. Maybe your space isn’t comfortable. Environment may be a contributor to anxiety, and it may be hard to detach.”

As anyone who has been working remotely the past several months can attest, home is not always a sanctuary, being able to conduct a productive adult conversation from the chaos of it is not always an option. I’m fortunate that my home is safe, and that I have stable Internet access. But roughly ten percent of the US population either doesn’t have or doesn’t use internet access. And it’s no surprise that older, low income, non-white and rural Americans make up the bulk of that number. Telemedicine is a privilege reserved for those who can access it.

Yet telemedicine might also prove to be an equalizer in opening up who gets access to expert care. When Dr. Hollander co-authored an article on telemedicine and COVID-19 for the New England Journal of Medicine back in April, it naturally focused on safe practices for virus screening. But it also touched on some promising other applications, including “rapid access to subspecialists who aren’t immediately available in person.”

“We can take the expertise that exists at Jefferson and deliver it to hospitals in our region or across the nation,” Hollander says, noting several other hospitals across the nation have similar systems. “We have a neurosurgical program that’s been around for close to a decade that delivers stroke care to 38 hospitals in the region. A neurosurgeon might be home on a tablet, seeing the patient in a hospital 75 miles away, looking at their CAT scan and deciding whether they are candidates for the clot busting drug. The beauty of that is you get to transport the expertise to an area it otherwise doesn’t exist. And just as important, you get to leave the patient in the community with their family at that community hospital, rather than ship them 75 miles away for the rest of their stroke care. You can deliver better care, closer to home.”

The barriers to quality in-person care don’t just exist for people who live far from major medical centers. They span a broad range of patient populations. I never in a million years would have imagined my 87 year-old mother-in-law an enthusiastic Zoom adopter, but for the better part of the year it has been her lifeline to her church community. In the past few weeks, it has also become essential to her survival. As a sudden and still baffling set of symptoms have presented themselves, she has often been debilitatingly weak and frustratingly confused.

It’s obvious how logistically and emotionally difficult it would be right now for her to go in person to the string of doctors she’s been consulting with. For patients with disabilities, dementia, chronic pain or other inherent obstacles to travel, telemedicine can provide reassuring expertise without the burdens of transportation.

Similarly, if you’re like my older daughter who’s away at college, telemedicine can be an effective means for patients away from their home base to keep their regular appointments with their specialists. What used to be a simple day trip back home is now off the table for students like her all across the country. In the midst of an absolute crap tsunami of a year, I can’t be the only person grateful that my loved ones can see their doctors — even when I can’t take them to their doctors.

I used to fret that telemedicine was going to wring the last bits of human interaction — and empathy — out of a system that is already fraught and perplexing. But my thinking was too binary. For many of us, it won’t be one or the other, either/or. It’ll be a mix of circumstantial assessments, and, one hopes, personal choice. In the past few weeks, I have gone in person to three different medical facilities for various tests, because you can’t do a blood draw over the phone. When I have an upcoming surgery, it won’t be conducted via laptop. But I’ll be more than happy for the follow-up to be.

As Hollander puts it, it, “I think what we’ve learned is telemedicine is just a care delivery mechanism. The medicine is the same. The manner in which it’s delivered is slightly different… Maybe not every patient every time, but there is certainly a time and a place for many patients. If you build it in the care continuum, you might actually have more touchpoints and deliver better care over a period of time.”

My own doctor, meanwhile, says that while he believes there are pros and cons to telemedicine, “It does change the patient perspective to a person perspective.” A person in a living room, in regular clothes, and a little less scared and vulnerable.

CRISPR researchers, awarded the Nobel Prize, say the technology could defeat coronavirus

Earlier this week, the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to a pair of scientists who discovered a genetic technology that can alter DNA — and, perhaps, help researchers treat COVID-19 and other future diseases.

The scientists who discovered this technology, known as the CRISPR/Cas9 genetic scissors (or CRISPR for short — clusters of regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats), are Dr. Emmanuelle Charpentier from the Max Planck Unit for the Science of Pathogens in Berlin, and Dr. Jennifer A. Doudna from the University of California, Berkeley. In an interview with TechCrunch last month, Doudna explained that their technology could prove essential in fighting both the novel coronavirus and other dangerous microorganisms.

“It’s really interesting to think about the ability to program CRISPR to be detecting not only the current coronavirus, but also other viruses,” Doudna told Tech Crunch in September. “I don’t think any of us think that, you know, viral pandemics are going away — I think this current pandemic is a call to arms, and we have to make sure that scientifically, we’re ready for the next attack by a new virus.”

CRISPR has become a household acronym, famous because of its potential to easily edit any organism’s genome.  CRISPR technology can and has been used to modify crops into genetically modified organisms (GMOs), correct genetic disorders and prevent or treat diseases.

CRISPR works by using a version of the protein Cas9 (one that has been complexed with a synthetic guide RNA) as a pair of molecular scissors, capable of “cutting” strands of DNA at pre-specified locations and adding new genes, removing existing ones or both. 

The award of the Nobel Prize to CRISPR researchers symbolizes its tremendous promise to medicine. Indeed, scientists are already trying to use this technology to treat people with COVID-19. Scientists at Stanford University and the Molecular Foundry were working on using CRISPR technology to fight influenza when, in January, they decided to pivot toward trying to fight the novel coronavirus. Those scientists developed a technique known as PAC-MAN, or Prophylactic Antiviral CRISPR in human cells. Their next step is to try to synthesize PAC-MAN with other gene altering technologies and use that on animals. If that works, they will then try to test this technology on people, in the hope of more effectively treating those whose novel coronavirus infections developed into the COVID-19 disease.

CRISPR technology was developed after scientists learned how bacteria and archaea (single-celled organisms that do not have a nucleus) use CRISPR-derived RNA and a variety of Cas proteins to demolish the DNA of viruses and other foreign invaders. In 2017, a team of scientists led by researchers at the University of Tokyo managed to show CRISPR in action for the first time. Yet knowledge of CRISPR was taken one step further when Charpentier was studying a deadly bacteria called Streptococcus pyogenes and discovered tracrRNA, a previously unknown molecule that the bacteria used to slice up DNA.

After publishing her discovery in 2011, Charpentier began working with Doudna to both recreate this genetic manipulation tool and simplify its molecular structure so that it can be more easily used by human beings. Finally they figured out how to use the genetic scissors to alter not just virus DNA, but DNA molecules from any predetermined site.

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health and one of the first people to decode the human genome, expressed great satisfaction at Charpentier’s and Doudna’s recognition.

“This technology has utterly transformed the way we do research in basic science,” Collins told The New York Times. “I am thrilled to see Crispr-Cas getting the recognition we have all been waiting for, and seeing two women being recognized as Nobel Laureates.”

The Monuments Project: Building the commemorative landscape 21st-century America needs

Imagine a map that commemorates the powerfully complex history of the United States. Vast and strikingly beautiful, the map would reveal the intricate detail created by a cartography of many different voices and stories. 

In Montgomery, Alabama, there are the 800 steel columns of the National Memorial for Peace and Justice — each one a remembrance of thousands of victims of racial terror, each one tall and still in their witness. In another region is the Great Wall of Los Angeles, its murals’ vivid colors conveying the stories of Mexican farmworkers, Chinese laborers, and Dust Bowl refugees with equal vigor, the stories running on and on down the wall of a flood control channel that leads towards the Pacific. 

The map would mark a memorial in the High Sierra that tells the story of the more than 11,000 Japanese-Americans who were interned in the camp at Manzanar during World War II, and the many who died there. To the east, a statue of the soldier Harriet Tubman, who led so many enslaved people to freedom, surveys the streets of Harlem with a steady gaze. Up high, toward the top of the map, Plains Indian Spirit Warriors ride across Montana’s Little Big Horn in a powerful pictograph sculpture. 

These commemorative reference points exist already, but the reality of this imagined map today includes only faint marks for the majority of our fiercest trailblazers — some of them people who lived otherwise regular lives, some of them lifelong leaders of astounding movements to realize the promise of liberty and justice for all — and all of whom, taken together, make the history of the United States so extraordinary. At the same time, too many in our country have been taught for too long with a warped atlas that charts a few members of our society as superior, and distorts or erases others as subhuman. 

The National Historic Register, for example, lists vanishingly few properties explicitly associated with African-American history, Latinx history or Asian-American history. The indigenous people who first walked this land are profoundly underrepresented within it. Acts of violence and war are disproportionately exalted across the country, while the bulk of our history and its brilliant actors are nowhere to be found in the public places where we are constantly taught who we are and what we value.

That must change. 

Statues are not just statues, and monuments are not just stone plinths and bodies cast in bronze. They instruct. They lift up the stories of those who are seen; dominate the stories of those who are unseen; and too often propagate menacingly incomplete accounts of our country’s past. As the poet Adrienne Su writes of childhood picnics at Stone Mountain, the largest Confederate monument in the United States, “Nothing at Stone Mountain Park / echoed my ancestry, but it’s normal for immigrants / not to see themselves in landmarks.” Monuments might be seen only in the ephemeral moments of school field trips, but they remain marked in our collective memory with the pin and pencil points of a history-tracing compass.

As a poet, as a scholar and professor, and now as president of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, I have long explored answers to this question: “What can we do to create a commemorative landscape that speaks to the complexity of our history, educates us to better understand our collective past, and reflects the rich multiplicity of the American story?”

The Mellon Foundation has chosen to answer that question with a new five-year, quarter-billion-dollar commitment to bring a broader range of voices, stories and memories into our ongoing cartography of our country’s history. We call this initiative the Monuments Project. Its grants will fund new commemorative spaces, new work that recontextualizes existing monuments and memorials, and — in some cases — the relocation of existing monuments or memorials. Because this is an initiative that will require perseverance, considerable resources, rigorous historical grounding and laser focus, the $250 million Monuments Project will constitute a significant portion of Mellon’s grantmaking budget for the next several years. 

Our urgent national dialogue around monuments, memorials and their influence on national narratives demands a grantmaking commitment of this dramatic scale. The Monuments Project will make both the full reach of our history and our many different forebears visible and known, and encompass broad public collaboration with artists, scholars, community activists and cultural institutions. It will expand the very meaning of monuments themselves to include the word, the act and the unexpectedly preserved spaces that move us to awed silence — from video footage of filmmaker Bree Newsome removing the Confederate flag from the South Carolina statehouse to poet and Vietnam War veteran Yusef Komunyakaa reading aloud his powerful elegy, “Facing It,” about his visit to Maya Lin’s Vietnam Veterans Memorial. 

Robert Hayden, in his poem “Frederick Douglass,” wrote of commemorating the great abolitionist “not with statues’ rhetoric, not with legends and poems and wreaths of bronze alone,” but instead “with the lives grown out of his life.” Through the Monuments Project, the map we imagine will have its contours fully defined, its topography fully detailed, and its brave and innovative people fully represented. There will be soaring peaks of new artistic interpretations, broad valleys of new research and education and the long rivers of social justice movements and their many tributaries. Together, we will see, and we will honor, the America grown out of this abundance — the lives grown out of so many remarkable lives.

California will keep burning. But housing policy is making it worse

Monday morning, Sept. 28, California woke up sweaty, devastated, even shocked to find the state burning again. But if we’re honest, and to our great shame, no one was surprised. We’d seen this horror movie in this town. Three years ago, wildfire killed 25 people in Sonoma County. Now the Glass Fire was there, again, burning toward Santa Rosa. At 12:30 a.m., a string of seniors stood in line, many in pajamas, waiting to board an evacuation bus from their retirement home. A tiny woman with a roller bag stooped over her walker. A man in a red shirt leaned on his red cane. A woman in a purple robe and magenta slippers sat in her wheelchair, a white teddy bear in her lap. They disembarked at the Santa Rosa Veterans Memorial Auditorium. But then at 2:48 a.m., before the slumped crowd, a young man climbed on a folding chair and announced: The fire was moving too fast toward them. Time to move again.

Farther east, the Butte County sheriff issued an evacuation warning for the entire town of Paradise. The Camp Fire killed 85 people in Paradise less than two years ago. Many survivors, including the former mayor, spent the night trying and failing to sleep in one of Paradise’s 434 newly rebuilt homes.

It is all too close, too soon: the propane tanks exploding, the safety-vest orange sky. By daylight, that sky rained chunks of ash, like dead moths. Many Californians would have felt less triggered by locusts.

California, as we all now know, is going to burn.

The ecosystem here depends on fire to stay healthy. OK, fine.

We suppressed that fire for a hundred-plus years, and now we’re living with a deathly backlog of kindling. Not fine, but that’s going to take decades to fix.

The climate crisis has warmed and dried that tinder, leading to five of the six largest fires in California history just this year. Not fine at all, but the time frame of remedying this … uhh … let’s just put that to the side.

Which leaves us with the one thing we could be doing to keep wildfire from destroying homes and lives: get a whole lot smarter about where and how we build.

Housing is the megafire-sized climate issue that lawmakers in California keep failing to adequately address — even though when asked directly how important housing is to California climate policy, Kate Gordon, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s senior climate policy adviser, told me, “Oh, it’s HUGE.” Yet it remains intractable.

Adam Millard-Ball, a professor who studies urban planning and environmental economics at the University of California, Santa Cruz, told me, “It’s absolutely the weak link in the state’s climate policy.” Affluent urban areas and suburban areas have been incredibly successful at “pulling up the drawbridge,” as Millard-Ball put it, blocking new housing and pushing Californians to live in evermore remote communities, often in what’s known as the wildland urban interface. (WUI, the shorthand for this area where humans meet nature, is pronounced woooeeee.) It kicks off a pernicious cycle. Once there, people drive more, increasing emissions. And thanks to emissions globally, those areas are burning more than ever before. In August, Millard-Ball himself recently had to evacuate his home because of the CZU August Lighting Fire Complex.

“So with that as a backdrop. …” he said. “California’s housing dysfunction has been thrown into really tragic, stark relief for the last couple of months.”

California leads the country on most climate issues; its showpiece is green transportation. Just last week, amid this latest round of fires, Newsom promised to phase out new gas-only cars by 2035. “But when it comes to addressing the root causes why people have to drive in the first place. …” Millard-Ball trailed off. Not much happens. Or not much good.

On Wednesday night, Newsom vetoed a bill that would have nudged Californians to stop putting new housing in high fire-risk zones. The piece of legislation had overcome a yearlong delay, appeased initial detractors — including the development lobby — and passed the legislature by wide margins before flaming out at the eleventh hour on the governor’s desk.

It was, as original sponsor Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson, a Democrat from Santa Barbara, acknowledged when the California Senate Housing Committee began debating it in April 2019, “not exactly the sexiest stuff in the world.” But it had two important goals: One, to identify existing structures highly vulnerable to burning in wildfire and make plans to retrofit them. (This was not politically complicated, as the measure did not even include funding.) Two, to ease pressure to develop in the parts of California with the highest wildfire risk. To date, no legislation related to wildfires — or any other climate-related hazard — impacts California’s arcane housing allocation system. (That system tells each region how much housing it’s required to build over a stretch of five or eight years.) But once wildfire risk is codified as a valid reason not to build, what’s next? Extreme heat? Nick Cammarota, with the California Building Industry Association, articulated that viewpoint when he called the bill “a housing killer.”

“We don’t want to have gentrification. We don’t want to have seismic risk. We don’t want to have sea level rise or wetlands, or ag land preservation or floods, or toxics. Or you name it,” he continued. “The entire state is covered with imperfect places to build.”

Yet dealing with WUI development, according to fire pros like former California State Fire Marshal Kate Dargan, is “the most urgent” fire question in the state.

Newsom did sign legislation to improve emergency response and preparedness efforts. But his veto of what was a pretty modest bill felt inauspicious to climate policy wonks who pay attention to such things. “At this moment, it is extremely disappointing to hear that @GavinNewsom decided not to sign #sb182,” Michael Wara, director of the Climate and Energy Policy Program at Stanford University, tweeted at 10:31 p.m. on Wednesday. “The housing crisis enormously complicates decisions not to build anywhere. But solutions to California’s housing production needs are not now nor will they in future be in the WUI.” A half-hour later he tweeted again, appalled by Newsom’s refusal to back away from “sprawl that must ultimately be defended from wildfire at enormous cost in treasure, and hopefully not in blood.”

What will it take to create change? “If we can’t do it now, with the impetuses of the housing crisis and the wildfire. …” Millard-Ball said. Then he trailed off. “It would be incredibly sad to sit back and do nothing.”

 

This is the basic WUI problem: Houses are essentially big piles of fuel. Houses in the WUI also mean people in the WUI, and people ignite over 95% of California wildfires. Houses further increase risk to lives and structures by making it difficult for land managers to do prescribed burns. Once wildfires grow large, houses increase risks for firefighters. Houses in the WUI cost a fortune to defend.

Max Moritz, a wildfire specialist at University of California Cooperative Extension at the Bren School in Santa Barbara, began focusing intently on the WUI problem six years ago. He’d been creating fire probability maps under different climate change scenarios, and his data on fuel included plants that could burn, but not buildings. He found that nearly a quarter of the increased risk that appeared to be due to climate change was in fact due to development. So in 2016, Moritz worked with a team of scientists to co-write a paper laying out why we need to include land use in the wildfire models. (“I can send it to you if you want it. It’s great bedtime reading.”) Then Moritz pivoted to synthesizing the research on fire in the WUI. His goal was to lay out the facts for policymakers. “Then maybe this stuff could get codified,” he said. “Because yeah, why isn’t it? Why isn’t it regulated?”

After the 2009 Black Saturday fires in Australia that killed 173 people and destroyed 2,133 homes, the federal government launched a commission that found (among many other things) “planning and building controls are crucial factors affecting safety.” The Australians then instituted swift, sweeping changes. Among them: including bushfire risk in planning new development and making ember risk part of building codes. Yet, over the past seven years, wildfires in California have killed 193 people and destroyed nearly 50,000 structures, and the state has done comparatively little to fix the problem. “We have these tragic, huge events. We have Black Saturday after Black Saturday and almost no movement on these things,” Moritz said.

He’d hoped the research he and others had done on where and how we build in the face of climate change would spur bolder action. “Man, you’ve got the chance here to establish your legacy, as a progressive leader, tackling a tough problem,” he said, as if talking to Newsom shortly before the governor vetoed the bill. “But hey, land use urban planning … that’s political. That’s tough, right? Yeah. We need some guts.”

 

To protect a single home from wildfire in the WUI, this is your basic checklist. Defensible space. (No combustibles close to your home — for sure in the first 5 feet. Newsom did sign a separate law on Tuesday mandating this for high fire severity zones.) Class A fireproof roof. Dual-paned windows. Remove flammables from under deck. Metal gutter covers. A mesh covering all vents.

But protecting a single home in the WUI is (with only some exaggeration) like being the only one in your family who wears a mask. Safety is inherently a community project, and fire experts, as a rule, freak out about their neighbors’ houses and yards. One has nightmares about wood shingle siding “that ignites and flies off like an airfoil spreading fires.” Another about mulch that lets embers smolder until a wind whips them into “open flames that creep right up to people’s house walls.” A third told me about ponderosa pines killed by bark beetles but not yet cut down. “Have you ever had a real Christmas tree and burned it in February?” he asked. “They go off like napalm.”

For Wara, of Stanford’s Climate and Energy Policy Program, the zombies are the 20-foot-tall juniper bushes that line his neighbor’s house. “It’s a herd immunity thing, right?” he said. Once your neighbor’s house catches fire and starts throwing embers, yours is probably next. “I don’t think people get that.”

In the early 1970s, the National Commission on Fire Prevention and Control tackled the problem of indoor fire. This culminated in the “America Burning” report, which in turn led to the creation of the U.S. Fire Administration and an over 50% drop in indoor fires since 1980. But there’s no such equivalent effort for wildfires. To help fix this, for the past two years, Alexander Maranghides, a fire protection engineer with the National Institute of Standards and Technology, or NIST, has been co-leading a detailed reconstruction of the Camp Fire that destroyed Paradise. (NIST plans to release its first of three 400-page reports this fall.) “The outside fire problem is technically somewhere between one and two orders of magnitude more complex than the interior fire problem,” Maranghides said. Those fires involve topography, weather, fuel conditions, fire-fighting response, on and on. Just defining the fire dynamics of embers alone is a huge task. The intention of this science is not to keep people from living in the WUI at all, which almost nobody thinks is feasible. The intention is to make the public and policymakers WUI literate and provide science and tools that could lead to the creation of cost-effective solutions, so we don’t keep repeating the same tragic, expensive mistakes.

Wara pointed out that people are rebuilding in Coffey Park, a neighborhood in Santa Rosa that was nearly destroyed in 2017. “And they’re doing all these things that are so avoidable. Like wood fences connecting the homes. It’s like a vertical, combustible ember catcher! You just don’t need to do that.”

* * *

Here’s the political problem: 11 million people, over a quarter of all Califorians, live in the WUI. We are not going to kick them out.

At the same time, the state is in a housing crisis, and Newsom staked his career on fixing it. In his inaugural address, in January 2019, he announced “a Marshall Plan” for housing and promised to build 3.5 million new affordable units by 2025. You could hear the tension between that promise and watching his state burn down in his veto Wednesday night. “Wildfire resilience must become a more consistent part of land use and development decisions,” he wrote. “However, it must be done while meeting our housing needs.”

Right now, the state’s climate priorities are skewed. California has “focused on solar and wind and electric vehicles — the sort of technology solution side of climate,” she said. “We haven’t focused as much on land use,” Gordon, the Newsom adviser, admitted. This is an oversight, and the administration knows it, even refuses at times to act that way. “As a state, we’re the one who pays for the disaster mitigation, right?” Gordon said. “It’s just not sustainable. I mean, our entire budget will become about disaster response if we don’t get ahead of this thing.”

Without action at the state level, it’s hard to see how California achieves good climate housing policy. Local governments have a lot of power. Too much power, Millard-Ball, the UC Santa Cruz professor, argues. “Cities can effectively ignore the climate crisis when they’re making certain decisions,” he said. “Like most cities in California have developed climate action plans, which are great in terms of things promoting waste reduction and street trees and energy efficiency. But they have said almost nothing about creating more walkable, transit-oriented places to live.”

The situation is becoming dire. Insurers, losing a fortune in the WUI, are rapidly dropping homeowner policies. The hemorrhage of “non-renewals” grew so acute that California’s insurance commissioner essentially instituted a circuit-breaker halt and declared a one-year moratorium. But that may not be enough help for residents to afford to stay. As Mariposa County Supervisor Kevin Cann told me, “You go on the FAIR Plan” — the California insurance policy of last resort — “and you realize, Holy smokes! I used to pay $1,200 a year and now I’m going to pay $5,000. That’s a second mortgage.”

The hard truth is: this is as it should be. WUI housing, with its true costs factored in, is not the bargain real estate agents refer to when they say, “Drive until you qualify.” Last year, the National Bureau of Economic Research, or NBER, published a paper detailing how taxpayers are subsidizing people living in high fire risk zones. How? Firefighting is expensive — California may spend a billion dollars this year. A large percentage of that will go to defending private homes. This firefighting “benefit” is not negligible: NBER calculated it can exceed 20% of a property’s value. The very fact that firefighting is publicly funded decreases the incentive for WUI residents to fireproof their properties. Distorting the housing market further and creating moral hazard: Because much of firefighting budgets comes out of federal disaster funds, publicly funded fire response decreases the incentive for a city or state — hello, California — to create and enforce wildland building codes.

This pattern, according to NBER, will grow more pronounced with climate change.

The state would also save money if it took a preventative medicine approach and shifted more funds into fire prevention. Every dollar invested in risk mitigation typically saves six in disaster costs. Dargan, the former state fire marshal, who was a firefighter for 30 years and has a son working as a first responder right now, believes the state makes a mistake by not viewing fire prevention and suppression as the same thing. “Mitigation and response just happen at different times on the continuum of solutions,” she said. “We have the world’s best response system in California.” And that system works beautifully — until a megafire erupts. Then that system fails. At that point, no matter how well they’re trained or how hard they work, “firefighters are unable to focus on firefighting. All they can do is get people out ahead of time and even then we’re beginning to fail at greater numbers.” We need a better plan. For taxpayers. For WUI residents, like those seniors evacuated from their homes after midnight in Santa Rosa on Monday and then evacuated from the evacuation center around 3 am. For people, including her son, on the front line.

“People have a right to be upset”: White House failure to contact trace stirs contempt

Politicians, public health officials, and commentators are lambasting the White House’s failure to provide adequate contact tracing and guidance for thousands of people whose well-being was jeopardized last week after President Donald Trumptraveled to multiple events around the country, at least one of which he participated in even after knowing that he had been exposed to the coronavirus. 

While the contradictory information shared by the Trump administration and medical team about the chronology and status of Trump’s illness has puzzled observers, critics said it is clear that the president chose to expose potentially thousands of people to Covid-19 last week—particularly by interacting with hundreds of guests at a fundraiser he hosted at his Bedminster, New Jersey golf course on Thursday evening—instead of quarantining immediately after the Thursday morning diagnosis of his adviser, Hope Hicks, as Common Dreams reported. 

“The scope of the damage here is unfathomable,” writer Rebecca Traister tweeted on Saturday.

Not only did Trump and other infected members of his inner circle put possibly thousands of individuals at risk of contracting Covid-19, but according to reportingfrom the Washington Post, “there was little evidence on Saturday that the White House or the campaign had reached out to these potentially exposed people, or even circulated guidance to the rattled staffers within the White House complex.”

“The crisis within a crisis is emblematic of an administration that has often mocked or ignored the coronavirus guidance of its own medical experts,” noted the Post. “In this case, the failure to move swiftly potentially jeopardized the health of their own supporters and those close to them, who might fall ill and unwittingly spread the infection to others.”

Traister pointed out that in addition to Trump’s supporters who voluntarily attended Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s nomination ceremony hosted by the president in the Rose Garden on September 26, his campaign rally in Minnesota on September 30, or his fundraiser in New Jersey on October 1 just hours before the president announced that he had tested positive for the coronavirus, the families of countless workers who had no choice but to go to these infectious events will be subjected to the medical and financial consequences of the Trump administration’s negligence. 

While White House spokesperson Judd Deere claimed Saturday that “contact tracing is underway,” public officials in the states “where Trump held events in recent days… haven’t heard from the White house and are racing largely on there own to find people potentially exposed to the virus,” the Post noted. 

According to the New Jersey Department of Health, the only information that the White House had provided to state officials as of Sunday was a list with the names of 206 people who attended the Bedminster fundraiser, but HuffPost reported that it “does not include staff working at the club.”

ABC News stated Monday that New Jersey health officials have begun reaching out to guests who attended Trump’s high-dollar fundraiser. 

However, “because it took days for the White House and the Republican National Committee to provide New Jersey with” contact information, HuffPost explained, “anyone who was infected at the fundraiser went untreated and may have continued to spread the virus.”

In an interview with CBS News on Monday morning, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D), who reportedly found out about Trump’s diagnosis through news outlets, blasted the president’s decision to come to New Jersey last Thursday night despite knowing that he had been in close contact with Hicks, who had tested positive for the coronavirus that morning. 

For a group of people “knowingly having been exposed to someone who is Covid-positive” to come here from out of state “is really, really frustrating,” Murphy said. “Nobody should have come to New Jersey. That trip should have been canceled… it was the wrong decision at every level.”

“This borders on reckless in terms of exposing people, not just in New Jersey, but it looks like for folks around the country, who are now scattered by the way,” Murphy told CNN Monday morning. 

Regarding contact tracing, Murphy stated that “we need more, I think, out of the federal side of this… it’s an all-in moment… we need everybody to punch at their weight here.”

It’s not only the Bedminster fundraiser where the Trump administration’s flouting of public health guidelines and lack of contact tracing is apparent. 

According to reporting from TIME, “local and state health officials in many of the locations that Trump recently visited indicated the Trump administration has taken few evident steps on contact tracing” as of Saturday. “Officials in four states—Minnesota, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Virginia—stated or suggested they had not been contacted by the Trump campaign.”  

Michael Shear, a New York Times journalist who is among the White House reporters who tested positive for the coronavirus after flying on Air Force One, told CNN on Monday morning that he “has not been contacted by the White House”—ten or eleven days since he thinks he was infected.

The Times reported Sunday that even though “the CDC has a team of experts on standby to help the White House,” it has not been asked to trace the contacts of people who attended the September 26 party in the Rose Garden on behalf of Trump’s Supreme Court nominee. 

Instead, according to what White House spokesperson Alyssa Farah told NBC Newscorrespondent Geoff Bennett, “there is an ‘in-house epidemiologist’ who is doing it.”

“Anyone willing to trust a lone guy at the White House… to conduct contact tracing?” asked University of Alabama legal scholar Joyce Vance on social media. 

“Trump and his staff, at least, have a chance to prevent their mess from spreading further,” wrote German Lopez on Monday in Vox. “But so far, it doesn’t seem as though they’re taking that opportunity seriously, as days go by without a serious contact tracing operation.”

While the White House has exacerbated the coronavirus pandemic by undermining epidemiological guidelines regarding social distancing, mask-wearing, testing, tracing, and isolating for months, Trump’s direct role in spreading Covid-19 to unsuspecting Americans in the past week represents a new level of failure. 

“The specter of the president hosting several potential super-spreader events in states and cities across the country has rocked his presidency and imperiled his already struggling re-election campaign,” wrote reporters in Bloomberg.

“People have a right to be upset and angry,” said Gov. Murphy. “Particularly folks who have been doing all the right things every step of the way.”

 

This nostalgic apple crumb cake is the ultimate no-fuss dessert to bake at home

If there’s one dessert that reminds Salon’s resident pastry chef Meghan McGarry of home, it’s crumb cake.

“Crumb cake has a certain nostalgia to it, because there was always a crumb cake in my house growing up,” McGarry, the owner of the beloved Buttercream Blondie brand, tells Salon. “Whenever a guest would stop by, we would cut off a slice of crumb cake to ensure a warm welcome.”

When McGarry developed her recipe for apple crumb cake, her goal was to recreate that same nostalgia factor. It’s the third recipe featured in her series of go-to seasonal bakes for Salon Food. It follows an apple loaf cake, which was a warm welcome to fall, and apple crisp bars, which magnified the star fruit of the season.

This week’s apple crumb cake is another cozy bake, and all of the falls spices you’ve become acquainted with are back again to work their magic. Cinnamon, ground cloves, light brown sugar and freshly-grated nutmeg work together to create a depth of warmth and flavor.

This is arguably the easiest recipe yet to make, and it’s guaranteed to deliver a satisfying crumb every single time. You’ll want to bake it immediately, but also file it away to make again throughout the holiday season.

“It’s the recipe I make every year when I’m prepping for Turkey Day,” McGarry says of her beautiful dessert. “And it’s what we snack on Thanksgiving morning while we’re making dinner.”

RELATED: These cozy apple crisp bars redefine a classic fall dessert

Even though the holidays aren’t here yet, this no-fuss nature of this recipe is exactly what you need in your life right this very second. 

“A crumb cake it’s a no fuss bake,” McGarry tells Salon. “Now, more than ever, I think all of us are reaching to these simple bakes.”

McGarry’s favorite part of a crumb cake growing up was the actual crumb, and she has fond memories of eating it off of the top off the cake. A key objective when developing this recipe was to yield a cake that her inner child would want to eat as much as the crumb. Her technique yields a moist cake, and she levels things up with a few special ingredients. 

RELATED: This spiked apple spice loaf cake is better than any pumpkin dessert you’ll bake this fall

“I’m still definitely a crumb girl. There’s got to be an excellent crumb,” McGarry says. “But I wanted to make a cake that had as much flavor as the crumb topping does.”

Adults who enjoy a cocktail will want to add the optional splash of bourbon to the cake batter, as well. 

“My biggest tip is to make the crumb topping first, because you want to give all those dry ingredients some time to absorb the butter before you top the cake batter,” McGarry tells Salon. 

RELATED: These spiked apple crisp cheesecake bars are a hit even if it’s not fall

But if you don’t have an apple in hand or don’t crave something fruity, don’t fret. Like many of McGarry’s dessert makeovers, this recipe is easily adaptable. You can leave the fruit out entirely, or you can sub a pear for the apple, too.

This crumb cake makes for a good brunch bake or Sunday bake. It’s not too sweet, because McGarry allows the fruit to shine. If you’re serving it after dinner, you may want to add a scoop of ice cream or a dollop of fresh whipped cream for a little à la mode journey.

***

Recipe: Apple Cinnamon Crumb Cake 

Ingredients:

Crumb Topping

  • 1 cup AP flour
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1/3 cup dark brown sugar
  • 1 and 1/4 tsp. teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • pinch freshly grated nutmeg
  • 1/4 tsp. salt
  • 3.5 ounces (7 Tablespoons) unsalted butter-melted

Instructions:

Crumb Topping

  1. Mix all dry ingredients together in bowl.
  2. Pour in melted butter and mix together with a fork making sure everyone gets coated. Set aside.

Click here to access the remainder of Meghan McGarry’s apple crisp bars. And don’t forget to follow @ButtercreamBlondie on Instagram for more ways to bake through it.