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Bill Barr leverages Justice Dept. to “cancel” E. Jean Carroll’s rape accusation against Trump

At the Republican National Convention, the topic du jour was “cancel culture” and Republicans’ supposed defense of free speech against censorious progressives. This was always transparent nonsense, an effort to recast liberals or leftists who exercise their freedom of speech to criticize right-wing intolerance as some kind of attack on open discourse. Donald Trump’s own attacks on the rights of his political opponents to express themselves — ranging from tear-gassing peaceful protesters to voter suppression efforts — far surpass the damage to free speech of even the most excessive Twitter leftists hunting down political heretics. 

Now the Trump administration is at it again, this time using the might of the Department of Justice to silence one of the two dozen women who have accused Trump of sexual abuse

Last year, veteran journalist E. Jean Carroll publicly accused Trump of rape, coming forward with a story about Trump assaulting her in the dressing room of a Manhattan department store in 1995 or 1996. The story didn’t get nearly the media coverage it deserved at the time, even though Carroll is a highly credible person and two witnesses recall her telling them about the alleged rape at the time.

Unfortunately, the reason for the media’s relative lack of interest wasn’t that journalists didn’t believe Carroll. It’s because Trump’s history of sexual assault is “old news.” The president was famously recorded bragging about how he enjoys sexual assault, and it didn’t seem to move the needle at all when it comes to his popularity with his base. Besides, the statute of limitations had long since expired in New York on rape, making it impossible to press criminal charges against Trump. So much of the press basically yawned. 

But Carroll hasn’t given up. Instead, the former advice columnist for Elle sued Trump for defamation in November, for saying she was “totally lying” and that she is “not my type.” (Carroll actually looked, at the time, quite a bit like Trump’s first two wives: Thin, pretty, blonde.) In typical Trump fashion, he told an easily disproved lie, claiming he had “never met this person in my life,” even though there was a photograph of the two of them talking at a party included with the original story Carroll published in New York magazine. 

Earlier this year, Carroll upped the ante by unearthing the dress she wore the day of the alleged rape and demanding Trump provide a DNA sample so she can prove it was him. This sort of thing, of course, has a precedent. In the late 1990s, a DNA test on a semen-stained dress ended up being important proof that Bill Clinton had an affair with Monica Lewinsky. At the time, Republicans had no problem using DNA evidence in a case against a president, even though no one saw that affair, as problematic as it was, as anything resembling rape.

But now, even though the accusations against Trump are far more serious, Attorney General Bill Barr is taking dramatic action to protect Trump from having to turn over evidence. On Tuesday, the Justice Department took over Trump’s defense from his personal lawyers, arguing that, by saying a woman is ugly and and a liar, Trump was “acting within the scope of his office as President of the United States.” Seriously.

“This law is designed to protect government employees like mail carriers who are involved in accidents with their postal trucks,” Barbara McQuade, a law professor at the University of Michigan, told Salon, adding that this shouldn’t cover Trump’s comments, which “seem to be purely within his personal capacity.”

McQuade also warned that this move could allow the court to simply “dismiss the lawsuit because the government has sovereign immunity over claims of defamation.”

Barr has always viewed his role as a taxpayer-funded defense attorney and political attack dog for Trump, rather than as the nation’s top law enforcement official. He’s spent his time as attorney general ginning up lies about Trump’s opponents, downplaying Trump’s corrupt and criminal behavior, and publicly defending Trump’s schemes to cheat in the election.

This is just more of the same. Taking the case over this way moves it out of New York state court, which rejected Trump’s delaying tactics on turning over evidence, and puts it in the hands of a federal court. It also means that Trump, who is always trying to shift his personal expenses onto someone else, could force the taxpayers to cover not just his legal expenses but any damages that might be awarded Carroll in the lawsuit. 

That said, it’s a little surprising that Barr is bothering with this. Even if Carroll’s lawyers managed to snag that DNA evidence, it’s unlikely it would make much difference, politically speaking. No one doubts that Trump is a sexual predator. Again, he’s on tape bragging about it. Anyone who is likely to vote for Trump simply doesn’t care that he sexually assaults women. Some of them probably think that makes him “manly” and admirable. 

This is probably less about saving Trump’s re-election prospects than about Barr and the conservative movement lashing out against the #MeToo movement, and against the women who have stepped forward to tell their stories of sexual harassment and abuse at the hands of powerful men in the past few years. Bringing the weight of the DOJ against Carroll sends a strong signal to would-be accusers that it’s better to stay silent rather than risk the wrath of those in power, who will do anything and pull any lever to protect the dirty secrets of predatory men. 

Republican hostility towards #MeToo has calcified after an initially confused response in the early days. Conservatives enjoying watching a few prominent Democrats, such as Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein and Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota, fall from grace. Soon, however, the right quickly realized that #MeToo posed a very real threat to male dominance, which is a bedrock principle of the conservative movement. 

While a Republican rejection of the #MeToo movement was inevitable, it all came to a head during the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, after Christine Blasey Ford stepped forward to accuse him of attempted rape when both of them were teenagers. The outrage against Ford continues to burn bright in conservative circles, even though her testimony failed to keep Kavanaugh off the bench, and even though he was the one who told obvious lies under oath, not her. 

No, the right wing’s exaggerated anger at Ford is clearly about her having the nerve to speak out in the first place. It’s about restoring a social order where women were expected to tolerate abuse at the hands of men, especially powerful men, in silence. 

Barr’s move is similar. Using maximum force to try to stop Carroll isn’t just about this one case, but about sending a signal to any woman with a story to tell: There is nothing to be gained from speaking out or fighting back. It’s about making sure would-be accusers fear that the system will crush them for even trying to get justice. Forget “cancel culture.” This is just an old-fashioned effort at intimidating women into silence.

Trump’s contempt for the military reveals his fatuous, bloated ego — and could finish him off

You’d have to have been in a coma since last Thursday not to have heard about Jeffrey Goldberg’s big article for The Atlantic in which a number of anonymous former Trump administration figures reveal that the president has expressed total disdain for military service. The political world has talked of little else for the past five days, and all this chatter took place over a holiday weekend, when a lot of people who usually pay little attention to the news undoubtedly heard about it.

Just to recap briefly, Trump has allegedly referred to soldiers as “losers” and “suckers” for joining the military in the first place, and for having the poor judgment to die in battle when they could have been making money instead. Indeed, he’s reported to have remarked to former White House chief of staff and retired Marine Gen. John Kelly, “I don’t get it. What was in it for them?” He said this at Arlington National Cemetery at the gravesite of Kelly’s son, a Marine who died in Afghanistan.

Trump also reportedly had a temper tantrum during his 2018 visit to France over something that President Emmanuel Macron said (probably his denunciation of “nationalism”) and refused to attend a ceremony honoring the U.S. Marines who died in the World War I battle of Belleau Wood. Then the president reportedly proceeded to strip the home of the U.S. ambassador to Paris of every piece of artwork that took his fancy to display in the White House. And he really, really didn’t want to acknowledge the late Sen. John McCain’s funeral.

These anecdotes and more have been confirmed by The Associated Press, the Washington Post and the New York Times among others, including Fox News. Trump has denied them in a flurry of desperate-sounding tweets, even as he continued to denigrate McCain, making it clearer than ever that the claims were true. Nobody can claim that these sorts of insults “just don’t sound like something he’d say,” even as numerous of his current and former henchmen and sycophants stepped forward to say just that.

We’ve all seen the video of his nasty insult toward John McCain in 2015:

And we have recently been reminded that he said the same thing 16 years earlier when he was interviewed by Dan Rather, so that insult wasn’t just issued in a fit of pique over something McCain said in 2015. He has clearly believed for a long time that a naval pilot who gets himself shot down is no hero.

On Monday, Trump held another of his campaign “briefings” at the White House in which he inexplicably added yet another insult to the litany:

I’m not saying the military’s in love with me — the soldiers are, the top people in the Pentagon probably aren’t because they want to do nothing but fight wars so that all of those wonderful companies that make the bombs and make the planes and make everything else stay happy.

According to a recent poll of the military, even before this latest flap, while it’s true that officers dislike him even more than enlisted personnel, the latter aren’t “in love” with him either:

More than 59 percent of officers said they have a poor view of the president, with more than half saying they strongly disapprove. Among enlisted respondents, 47 percent said they have an unfavorable view, and nearly 39 percent a favorable view.

Among all the active-duty service members in the poll, 41 percent said they would vote for Joe Biden and only 37 percent said they planned to vote for Trump, a striking decline in the president’s popularity among a generally pro-Republican demographic. About “40 percent of troops surveyed identified as Republican or Libertarian,” Military Times reported, while 44 percent said they were independent or another third party — and only 16 percent identified as Democrats.

This explains the White House’s massive pushback on this issue. Trump thinks of the military and veterans as part of his base. At this point, he knows he cannot afford to lose even one of his loyal voters if he hopes to win in November.

Regardless of the politics, it’s worth considering what Trump’s insults toward the military actually mean. First of all, it’s nonsensical for the man who continuously boasts of having raised military spending by the trillions to pretend to condemn what Dwight Eisenhower famously called the “military-industrial complex.” Trump goes around the world bragging about all the arms contracts with despots and dictators that he has personally brought home to American contractors. Not to mention his dramatic expansion of airstrikes and drone strikes, while eliminating all accountability for civilian casualties. After nearly four years of unkept promises he’s just now scrambling, in the last weeks of his re-election campaign, to withdraw some troops from Iraq and Afghanistan.

During the 2016 campaign, Trump lied and said he had been against the Iraq war from the beginning, and too many people have naively assumed that he’s some kind of isolationist. His comments about the Pentagon and defense contractors the other day had him sounding like he was trying to appeal to anti-war Democrats rather than rank-and-file soldiers in the military. But according to CNN, Trump said those things because he was in a snit that the top brass hadn’t stepped forward to defend him. He apparently insulted Defense Secretary Mark Esper, who actually was a top lobbyist for military contractor Raytheon, causing White House chief of staff Mark Meadows to feel compelled to tell the press that Trump wasn’t attacking Esper personally.

Amid all the spin, here’s one thing Trump said on Monday that many people missed: “I will be a better warrior than anybody, but when we fight a war, we’re going to win them.” 

According to Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker’s book “A Very Stable Genius,” Trump at one point lashed out at his top Pentagon chiefs, calling Afghanistan a “loser war” and saying, “You’re all losers. You don’t know how to win anymore.”

Trump made that “philosophy” clear over and over again during the 2016 campaign when he said he planned to “bomb the shit” out of ISIS and insisted that “torture works.” As president he has threatened war crimes and nuclear war and has pardoned war criminals.

Trump believes the U.S. military as soft and cowardly and doesn’t have what it takes to win. He thinks Navy pilots who are captured, Marines who lose their lives on the battlefield, military regulations that forbid war crimes and generals who refuse to accept mass civilian casualties are all “losers” because it’s weak to adhere to the laws of war instead of “winning” by any means necessary.

Trump once said he could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue without losing any voters. But it’s possible that one group within his former base that isn’t quite as gung-ho about his definition of “winning” are members of the military. After all, they’re the ones who will have to pay for his bellicose ignorance, not him. And then he’ll call them losers and suckers for being foolish enough to follow his orders. 

Safety advocates assail lack of federal action on weak vehicle seats

Andrew Warner was driving his family home from a Christmas party near Houston when they were rear-ended by a drunk driver. Warner’s seat buckled, slamming backward into his infant daughter, Taylor. She suffered massive brain trauma and died less than a day later.

In the decade since his child’s death, Warner has learned that what happened to Taylor was no freak accident. While relatively rare, seatback failures have been injuring and killing people for decades. According to one estimate, roughly 50 children have been killed each year since 2001 in rear-end crashes, and experts say that some of those fatalities were likely from front seats collapsing backwards.  

For decades, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has required automakers to build seats strong enough to meet a safety standard.  But experts regard the standard, established more than 50 years ago, as laughably weak—several who spoke with FairWarning said that a lawn chair could pass it. In actual rear-end collisions, the seat pushing forward against the weight of a person in the front seat can cause the seat to collapse, sometimes throwing the driver or passenger head-first into the back or out the rear window, and also endangering anyone in the backseat.

Although NHTSA has long recommended that young children be seated in the back for safety reasons, critics say the agency should also be telling parents to put a child behind the unoccupied passenger seat, or behind the lightest person in the front, to reduce the risk of injury. NHTSA has been aware for years that collapsing seats can smash into passengers in the rear.  

Car shoppers have virtually no way to compare seat strength of different vehicles. Automakers boast on their websites about numerous seat features, from their fabric treatment to their ability to be folded and stowed away. But none that FairWarning reviewed mentioned seatback strength.

“Each individual manufacturer has their own internal seatback standard,” said Jeff Wigington, a Texas-based attorney who has handled numerous seatback lawsuits, including a high-profile case against Audi. “The problem is that unless you have a lawsuit against them for a seatback that collapsed, you’re not going to be privy to that information … You could have a situation where the manufacturer’s standard is 10 percent better than the federal regulation, or 50 percent better, or twice as good—you just don’t know.”

FairWarning reached out to several major automakers for information about the strength of their vehicle seats. A spokesman for Chrysler said in an email that the company’s seats meet or exceed federal safety standards but declined to get more specific. Mercedes-Benz and Volvo— widely considered two of the best models for vehicle safety—refused interview requests. Ford, a defendant in several recent seatback lawsuits reviewed by FairWarning, did not respond to a request for comment. Industry officials have said in the past that strengthening seats without making them so rigid they become less safe is more challenging than critics say.

NHTSA declined an interview request and refused to answer a list of written questions. Instead, the agency emailed a brief statement to FairWarning, saying that later this year it intends to seek public comment on major updates to the New Car Assessment Program—the agency’s five-star safety rating system that many consumers rely on when shopping for vehicles. But there’s no indication that seat strength will be factored into the safety ratings.

Victims of seatback failures like Warner and traffic safety advocates have long called for a stronger standard. In July, Senators Edward Markey (D-Massachusetts) and Richard Blumenthal (D-Connecticut) introduced a bill that would force NHTSA to adopt a stronger standard for seats. But even if the legislation is enacted, it could take years before NHTSA amends the standard and requires vehicle makers to meet it.

Still, auto safety experts said they are pleased by congressional interest in the issue. For years, the agency has ignored petitions urging improvements to the standard. Alan Cantor, who runs the engineering consulting firm ARCCA, Inc., petitioned the agency in 1989 and again in 2015 for changes to the standard. Cantor and others note that, just as a seat belt protects passengers from a frontal collision, the seat is essentially the seatbelt for a rear collision. In the more recent petition, Cantor and several co-signers called on NHTSA to make seatbacks provide “the same kind of protection to the user that a seat belt provides in a frontal impact.” According to Cantor, the agency acknowledged their petition but didn’t do anything else. 

 “When we talk to NHTSA it’s like talking to the wall,” Cantor said. Yet when he gave a presentation to agency staff about seatback issues a few years ago, Cantor recalled,  several members of the audience asked him what cars they should buy for their families.

 “It astounded me,” he said.

Experts like Cantor said they have been involved in hundreds of seat failure lawsuits where people were injured. An analysis from 2016 calculated that 898 children under the age of 12 died in rear impact crashes from 1990 to 2014. But there’s no way to know how many of these children died due to seat failures, said Michael Brooks, chief counsel for the Center for Auto Safety, a Washington D.C.-based advocacy group.

 “There’s not even a true mechanism to capture these kinds of events,” Brooks said, adding that police crash reports usually fail to note instances of seat failures.

“There’s a monumental failure in our reporting,” said Todd Tracy, a Texas-based attorney, who has been collecting lawsuits and police reports to build his own count of seatback injuries and deaths. But this method still has flaws, he said, because “the standardized police reports do not say if the front seat collapsed.” 

Raymond Paul Johnson, a Los Angeles-based attorney who has handled numerous seat-back accident lawsuits, said that European automakers such BMW and Volvo tend to put more of a premium on safe designs. He recommended vehicles with belt-integrated seats, which are built directly into the frame of the seat. 

 “Most dealerships don’t know anything about seat strength,” Johnson said. “If you ask them about the seat, they’ll tell you how cushy it is or how the vinyl won’t make you sweat… The consumer is basically on their own.”

Short of stripping down a seat to its individual components, the only way to really gauge a seat’s strength is to test it—an option only available to engineers.

“You’re going to think this is nuts—if I’m looking at a car for myself or a family member, I will buy a seat and I’ll run a test on it,” said Alan Cantor.

Engineers and attorneys said there has been a decline in seatback-related injuries since the 1990s as automakers increased the strength of seats. But lawsuits over the past few years show these accidents are still occurring. 

In March 2016, a family in a Ford Explorer was rear-ended while waiting in traffic. According to court records, the front passenger seat collapsed and the headrest struck a child sitting in the rear, causing a severe head injury. Ford denied that a seat failure took place, and the parties agreed to settle the case earlier this year, according to court documents.

In September 2017, a couple in a 2016 Ford Fusion in Arkansas were rear-ended while waiting at a red light. The front passenger seat failed and struck a 23-month-old child in the backseat, who later died. The passenger, a pregnant woman, also lost her fetus, which had been due in about 10 weeks. The suit claimed that the seat failed, as well as the seat-track locking mechanism, which allowed the seat to slide backward as it collapsed. Ford was dismissed from the case; it’s unclear if it paid a settlement. The case is still pending against other defendants, according to court records. 

In August 2017, a driver in Riverside, California was rendered a quadriplegic after her car was struck from behind in a chain reaction collision. The seat failed from the impact, throwing her into the rear compartment of her car, according to a lawsuit. The suit said that the defendant, Ford, has known about the weakness of its seats since the early 1970s. Ford denied the claims and the case is still pending. 

Lawsuits only capture the most severe incidents. Andrew Warner said he knows this firsthand: seven years after a seatback accident killed his daughter, he was rear-ended again and uninjured. His seat collapsed again, but this time there was no one in the backseat.  

How the evangelical movement became Trump’s “bitch” — and yes, I know what that word signifies

Four years in, people are still struggling to understand the overwhelming support for Donald Trump that has come from what should have been its least likely source: American evangelicals. They belong to a socially conservative movement that embraces traditional Christian morality and family values. Their leaders have loudly insisted, especially during the Clinton years, that the moral character of our president deeply matters. They take as their highest infallible authority a Bible whose central themes include God’s love for the poor and the vulnerable, and a demand to love one’s neighbor — even one’s enemies — to the point of great personal sacrifice.

He, by contrast, is a man whose lifestyle displays little regard for Christian morality or family values. His dishonesty and infidelity have been almost daily news items since before he took office. His reputation for sexual predation, bullying, narcissism and a host of other sins and vices antithetical to Christianity has only continued to grow since he took office. His most notable advice for interacting with half the human population is “grab ’em by the pussy”. Who could have predicted such an alliance? 

In 2003, philosopher Daniel Dennett wrote an op-ed in The New York Times lamenting the discrimination faced by atheists in the United States, particularly in politics. Dennett’s lament could be echoed by members of a variety of religious minorities. But within evangelical circles Dennett’s lament seemed bizarrely disconnected from the truth. For the dominant narrative among evangelicals is just the opposite: Christians are persecuted; religious freedoms are being curtailed; discrimination against Christians and their faith is rampant; their values are under siege by hostile forces in American culture aiming to promote an anti-Christian agenda. (Dennett himself had said in print elsewhere that “safety demands that religions be put in cages … when absolutely necessary,” and he wrote as if theologically conservative Baptists, among others, were prime candidates for caging. This was just fuel for the fire.) 

As an evangelical myself, for a long time I mostly embraced the narrative of embattlement. In 2016, however, shortly before the presidential election, I found myself crashing into it. I was president of the Society of Christian Philosophers, a professional organization formed in the late 1970s for the purpose of promoting fellowship among those who self-identify as both philosophers and Christians. There was an incident that fall in which a presenter at one of our conferences made some inflammatory remarks about members of the LGBTQ community. The remarks went beyond the sorts of moral objections that familiarly arise out of traditional Christian sexual morality, and seemed to arise out of sheer bigotry. They made their way onto social media and drew predictable (and justified) condemnation. As president, I felt compelled to respond. 

I wrote a public post on Facebook in which I expressed “regret for the hurt that was caused” by the remarks, and emphasized the SCP’s commitment to diversity and inclusion. I can’t say exactly what I expected to come of this, but what I certainly did not expect was the flood of outright hate mail that I received rapidly in the wake of it from fellow Christians, some signed with phrases like “In the truth of Christ.” Several minor news outlets wrote about the incident. Conservative columnist Rod Dreher wrote an article condemning me. Evangelical leader Al Mohler condemned my remarks on his weekly podcast. 

How could such a frankly anodyne expression of regret and concern for others provoke such anger, especially within a Christian community? The answer, I learned in conversation with colleagues who had signed a petition demanding an apology from me, was that I had triggered the evangelical sense of embattlement. (That’s my gloss, not their words.) The fact that it was not perfectly OK to make the sorts of inflammatory statements about the LGBTQ community that this person had made left a lot of traditionally-minded Christian philosophers feeling persecuted. They felt unsafe in what they took to be a kind of refuge from an academic culture hostile to them and their views.

Never mind Jesus’ own declaration that we are blessed when persecuted for his name’s sake; the threat to unfettered freedom of expression that had been raised by my expression of concern for the LGBTQ people in our midst was, for many Christian philosophers, intolerable. This despite the fact that, demographically speaking, straight white males are overwhelmingly in the majority in the Society of Christian Philosophers, and traditional Christian beliefs are featured in and defended at just about every conference that it sponsors. 

This sense of embattlement goes a long way toward explaining why evangelicals might want to cozy up to powerful political figures. But it still leaves us wondering: Why Trump? There is another, more important piece to the puzzle. 

In her recent book, “Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation,” Calvin University historian Kristin Kobes Du Mez argues compellingly for the conclusion that evangelical infatuation with Trump stems in large part from the “cult of masculinity” that American evangelicalism has both cultivated and succumbed to over the past century. What evangelicals wanted, and found, in Trump was not just a (potentially) powerful ally, but a man of a certain sort — a political strongman whose brash and swaggering demeanor made it clear not only that, but how he would wield power on their behalf.

He was a man who would “tell it like it is” — code for something like “confront people and issues aggressively, without concern for the usual norms of tact, diplomacy, respect, and concern for the feelings of others.” He would “turn over the tables” — code for something like “deliberately upset or circumvent the usual rules and protocols for getting things done in Washington in order to push his own agenda and the agenda of supporters.” In displaying this demeanor while at the same time embracing a socially conservative and superficially Christian-friendly political platform, he sent a clear message. He would deal with evangelicalism’s “oppressors” and cultural enemies in the manner of a political John Wayne, James Bond or Jack Bauer. He would be a hypermasculine tough guy, a modern day Goliath, who would fight on their side in the culture wars. 

Here, too, my experience with the Society of Christian Philosophers controversy is instructive. Predictably, in the wake of my unimpressively mild expression of support for LGBTQ persons in our society, many called me a “liberal.” (I’m quite sure that the day before I posted that message, most of my academic friends would have described me as quite conservative). Some Christian philosophers puzzlingly called me a Nazi. But the slur that was most striking, and now seems most interesting, was this: some called me a “cuck.”

A cuck, I discovered by consulting the Urban Dictionary online, is a “weak, effeminate, inadequate man.” (It is apparently derived from “cuckold” which, of course, means something else entirely.) What was wanted by my critics, although I didn’t fully understand this at the time, was someone who would lead the Society of Christian Philosophers in a certain, decidedly masculine way — an intellectual John Wayne who would put the academic persecutors of the Christian faith in their place. A leader who instead sought to look out for the feelings of vulnerable minorities and to ensure that the Society of Christian Philosophers would be seen as a welcoming and hospitable space for all of its members, and not just the straight white male conservative majority, was not just manifesting the wrong set of values; he was effete, insufficiently masculine, an inadequate man. 

In a 2012 address entitled The Frank and Manly Mr. Ryle,” the influential evangelical pastor and writer John Piper commented that “God has given Christianity a masculine feel.” Piper drew this conclusion on the basis of the fact that the Bible tends to characterize God in terms usually reserved for males (masculine pronouns, stereotypically male gender roles and so on), and the leadership of the early Church was predominantly male. But, if we may mince words for a moment, none of this really implies that Christianity, at its origins or even for much of its history, has been given a masculine feel in any of the contemporary senses of that term.

As Notre Dame sociologist Gail Bederman has pointed out, the term “masculinity” and its cognates only came into common use in the late 19th century as changes in the economic conditions of middle-class males, together with anxieties and challenges posed by the burgeoning women’s movement, were beginning to erode and call into question previous ideals of “manliness.” The American version of the “Muscular Christianity” movement played an important role in cultivating ideals of Christian masculinity; and, as Du Mez explains, the history and development of this movement is deeply intertwined with the history and growth of evangelicalism. The 20th-century conception of masculinity which evangelicals embrace is both patriarchal and racialized (hence Du Mez’s focus on white evangelicalism). There is a strong case to be made for the conclusion that it is not God who has given Christianity a “masculine feel” in this sense, but instead evangelicals themselves, and their 19th-century predecessors, have given American Christianity that feel. 

“Jesus and John Wayne” is a tour-de-force indictment of the white evangelical cult of masculinity. But the indictment comes not so much at the level of analysis as at the level of mere description. Although Du Mez has done a brilliant job of weaving a narrative that brings into high relief the relevant tendencies and trends within American evangelicalism, analytical commentary was not her book’s main task. Nevertheless, as has often been the case with evangelicalism’s president-hero Donald Trump, description is all it takes to indict. The picture that emerges is one according to which, time and again (and increasingly over the years), the culture and visible leadership within American evangelicalism has persistently valorized a John Wayne-style conception of masculinity, sought to empower and emulate leaders who exemplify this conception, and embraced a political agenda that supports it. 

Under the banners of “biblical manhood and womanhood” and the promotion of “family values,” evangelical leaders like James Dobson, Mark Driscoll, John Piper and many others have decried or sought to prevent the “sissification” of American Christianity. They have advocated a conception of gender and gender roles that idealizes masculinity and links it with power, aggression, domination and strength in all spheres — not just in the home, but in business and military culture, in politics and in foreign policy. In doing so, they have sought shelter in the arms of powerful, paradigmatically masculine politicians even when (and to some extent because) the politicians have been known to behave in ways radically contrary to the Christian values they hope to promote. Indeed, time and again, even as they have denounced their cultural and political enemies for threatening Christian family values, male evangelical leaders themselves have behaved in ways that flagrantly disregard those same values. (The current scandal involving Jerry Falwell Jr. is only the most recent in this trend.) In their pursuit of power and the promotion of a patriarchal and heterocentric value system, they have worked to defend, protect and restore power to evangelical leaders guilty of a bewildering variety of misogynistic, predatory and abusive behaviors. 

Many people, some evangelicals among them, have tried to explain evangelical support for Trump as a purely instrumental alliance: Although they can’t really support, much less admire, the man, they have (grudgingly?) allied with him for the sake of greater goods. They have compromised some of their values in doing so but, so the narrative goes, they have done so in fidelity to the most important Christian values. But Du Mez puts the lie to this narrative. Her book comes to a close by highlighting what, by the middle of the book, has already become entirely evident:

Evangelicals hadn’t betrayed their values [in electing Donald Trump]. Donald Trump was the culmination of their half-century-long pursuit of a militant Christian masculinity. … He was the latest and greatest high priest of the evangelical cult of masculinity. … Within their own churches and organizations, evangelicals had elevated and revered men who exhibited the same traits of rugged and even ruthless leadership that President Trump now paraded on the national stage. Too often, they had also turned a blind eye to abuses of power in the interest of propping up patriarchal authority.

I grew up in evangelicalism and to some extent still comfortably inhabit that world; but, in contrast to many of the friends with whom I grew up — friends, for example, like the one whose main critique of one of the more recent “Star Wars” films was that he “didn’t like all the female leadership” — I have largely abandoned the conceptions of gender and gender roles that are so often, and mistakenly, held up as the biblical conceptions. I teach feminist philosophy, and my wife is a pastor. Far from having any concerns about the “sissification” of Christianity (a sexist term that I use here only to represent the language of people whose views I oppose), I think that the Church would benefit from losing whatever distinctly “masculine” feel it has been given over the course of its history and especially in the last century. Ironically, I have arrived at such “non-evangelical” values by reflecting carefully on what follows from the commitments that my evangelical teachers taught me to hold most dear: love for others, love for Jesus, reverence for God’s Word. 

But I can still speak the language of the value system into which much of evangelicalism has fallen, and I still know the mindset. The mindset is one that would see a book (by a woman, no less!) making the points that Du Mez makes as an attack most likely motivated by an “anti-Christian” agenda — feminism, perhaps, or support for LGBTQ rights. It is a mindset that would have a hard time responding to mere argument with the concession that something has gone badly awry with the evangelical masculinity movement, not because reason and argument are not valued but rather because of the entrenched idea that arguments can seductively lead one astray. It is a mindset that is a deeply wary of arguments reaching conclusions different from those reached by the “respected authorities.” 

What then can be done? What critique could possibly be offered that might actually speak to people still at least partly in the grip of American evangelicalism’s cult of biblical manhood and womanhood? What is needed, it seems to me, is not so much reasoned argument as a new lens through which to view the authorities in that movement — again, folks like Dobson, Driscoll and Piper. To hold up the lens, in turn, it will help to speak the language. 

So I give you “the bitch.”

As most of us know from film rather than actual prison experience, to make someone your bitch is to co-opt them as an ally and active supporter by way of a certain kind of oppression, usually sexual domination. The man who is made another man’s bitch is held in thrall by the bitch-maker, reduced by fear or felt weakness to a position of submission to and respect or maybe even affection for the bitch-maker. Not just any victim of prison rape is the rapist’s bitch. Rather, the bitch is the one who responds to the rape by sacrificing his values, integrity and autonomy in an effort to draw near and submit to the rapist. And not every bitch is a rape-victim. Doug Stamper in “House of Cards” was President Underwood’s bitch — not because Underwood raped him (he didn’t) but because, for reasons not entirely evident in the series, Stamper found himself deeply in thrall to Underwood’s power and ruthless, domineering leadership. 

Within the evangelical cult of masculinity (and its counterparts in other ideological circles, both religious and secular), the bitch — as the very name implies, with all of its demeaningly misogynistic implications — is not masculine, but rather feminine. Whatever power the bitch himself might hold, he is ultimately the “beta” rather than the “alpha.” He is not to be admired for his own sake; his position is not to be aspired to. What one wants, ultimately, is to be the alpha. 

Importantly, there is no particular value system that goes along with being an alpha; nor, indeed, is there even any particular demeanor or personality disposition that goes along with it. The heroes of masculinity — people and characters like John Wayne, James Bond, Jack Bauer and Jack Reacher, but also just about every chivalric knight in Arthurian legend and every male hero from “Lord of the Rings” — have a diverse range of personalities, demeanors and value systems. But what they most saliently have in common, at least in the popular imagination, is a commitment to their principles and values that cannot be shaken by threat, pain or oppression, as well as a commitment to pursue their mission come-what-may, but only within the boundaries set by their principles and values. This, too, is their most salient point of contrast with the bitch, the man who responds to threat or abuse by compromising himself in submission to a bitch-maker. 

In 2016, evangelical leaders became Trump’s bitch. They have remained so to this day. 

There is, of course, nothing objectionable in itself about finding a hero, looking up to a role model, or even seeking a powerful ally in effort to further one’s own legitimate aims or to liberate oneself from oppression. But a man, under the conception of manhood that evangelicals and their secular counterparts have embraced, will do these things only within bounds set by their most deeply held values and principles. To compromise those values and principles in submission to or defense of a strongman, whether out of fear or calculated, transactional pragmatics, is to become the strongman’s bitch. 

As Du Mez points out, there are some values evangelical leaders did not compromise in submitting to Trump; but the values that were not compromised were simply those wrapped up in their own cult of masculinity and power-worship. Their moral values — the very values they appealed to in condemning Bill Clinton’s affair with Monica Lewisnsky, and Hillary Rodham Clinton’s alleged corruption and deceitfulness, the very values they appeal to in condemning the sexual lives and practices of others (even as they themselves do the same and worse) — they did compromise in submission to Trump. In doing so, they became Trump’s bitch. 

So evangelical leaders, along with others who have abased themselves before Trump in fear of their cultural enemies, stand condemned by the very value systems they proclaim. By the lights of their own conception of masculinity, they are unmanly. By the lights of the value system that valorizes “biblical manhood,” they are not to be followed. They, rather than those who suffer persecution for taking a stand for LGBTQ rights or for the rights of women, they, rather than men who stay at home to care for children so as to support the careers of their wives or who pursue careers or hobbies culturally coded as feminine, they, rather than those who have more stereotypically feminine personality traits and dispositions (ironically, traits like love, peace, patience, gentleness and kindness, which the Bible labels “fruits of the Spirit”), represent the true “sissification” of Christianity. 

Evangelicals should not be surprised that this has happened within their ranks. They have fallen prey to what they should recognize from their own scriptures as a common temptation for God’s people. In the time of the Judges, God ruled over Israel; but Israel, according to the familiar story, was ashamed to be unlike the other nations in lacking a king. Eventually, God gave them what they wanted, delivering to them as king the finest specimen of traditional manhood in all the land, namely, Saul. But the divine commentary on Saul reported to Samuel is telling: “Do not consider his appearance or his height,” God says to Samuel as he is about to anoint Saul king, “for I have rejected him. The LORD does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.” 

So too, we might say in light of the history traced by Du Mez’s book, contemporary evangelicalism has fallen into the trap of looking at appearances rather than the heart. Forsaking the steadfast commitment to Jesus and the principles that treat love for neighbor, concern for the oppressed and the obliteration of artificial hierarchies among human beings, evangelicalism has turned submissively to the desire for a strongman to preserve them in a place of privilege and power and to provide them with public recognition as partners in the deal-making that shapes the policies of our nation. This is a posture that many secular value systems will condemn; it is a posture that is certainly condemned by what I take to be an authentically Christian value system. but the point of the present essay is that it is also a posture that is condemned by the value system of “masculine” evangelical Christianity. 

Trump says it would be “an insult to our country” if Kamala Harris became the first female president

President Donald Trump lashed out at Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) during a rally held in violation of North Carolina’s COVID-19 regulations.

“Nobody likes her,” Trump claimed.

According to the Real Clear Politics polling average, Harris has a 45.9% favorability rating average with only 41.3% unfavorable, giving her a 4.6% net favorablity rating. Trump only has a 452% favorablility rating average, with 55.3% unfavorable, giving him a negative 13.3% net favorability rating.

“She could never be the first woman president. That would be an insult to our country,” Trump argued.

Trump then repeatedly mispronounced her name, which sounds like “comma-la.”

With schools starting online, vaccinations head for recess

Dr. Chris Kjolhede is focused on the children of central New York.

As co-director of school-based health centers at Bassett Healthcare Network, the pediatrician oversees about 21 school-based health clinics across the region — a poor, rural area known for manufacturing and crippled by the opioid epidemic.

From ankles sprained during recess to birth control questions, the clinics serve as the primary care provider for many children both in and out of the classroom. High on the to-do list is making sure kids are up to date on required vaccinations, said Kjolhede.

But, in March, COVID upended the arrangement when it forced schools to close.

“It was like, holy smokes,” he said, “what’s going to happen now?”

Schools play a pivotal role in U.S. vaccination efforts. Laws require children to have certain immunizations to enroll and attend classes.

But this academic year, to prevent COVID-19 from spreading, many school districts have opted to start classes online. The decision takes away much of the back-to-school leverage pushing parents to stay current on their children’s shots, said Dr. Nathaniel Beers, member of the Council on School Health for the American Academy of Pediatrics. If schooling is not happening in person, said Beers, who also led multiple roles in the District of Columbia Public Schools system, “it is harder to enforce.”

Public health officials have relied on schools as a means to control vaccine-preventable diseases for over a century. Vaccination laws that require immunizations to enter school first emerged in the 1850s in Massachusetts as a means to control smallpox, as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has noted.

Every state requires children to receive certain vaccinations against illnesses like polio, mumps and measles before entering the classroom or a child care center, unless the child has a medical exemption. Some states allow people to opt children out of vaccinations for religious or philosophical reasons, although these exemptions have been associated with outbreaks of otherwise well-controlled diseases like measles.

“If they get behind or they don’t get specific vaccines they need, kindergarten is a real catch point to get them up to speed and make sure they’re up to date,” said Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers.

At the local level, the responsibility of tracking whether students are compliant generally falls on the school nurse. If one is not present, a clerical worker or administrator does the job, said Linda Mendonca, president-elect of the National Association of School Nurses. Usually, school systems face a deadline for checking every child’s record and reporting compliance to government health officials, she said.

How districts choose to hold noncompliant children accountable varies, Beers said. Some schools work with parents to set up appointments with a provider. Some isolate children in a classroom, he said, and some are so strict that “you can’t even walk through the door unless you are appropriately immunized.”

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in steep declines in vaccinations. In May, a report from the CDC showed a sharp drop in the number of orders submitted to the Vaccines For Children program, a federal initiative that purchases vaccines for half the children in the U.S. A second release revealed similar trends — vaccination coverage in Michigan declined among all milestone ages, with the exception of immunizations given at birth, which are generally done in a hospital.

Making Backup Plans

In Pennsylvania, for instance, the state health department in July suspended vaccine requirements for two months after the start of the school year. In addition to causing delays in doctors’ offices, the state said, the pandemic may also prevent school and public health nurses from holding in-school “catch-up” vaccination clinics.

“The department cannot stress enough that as soon as children can be vaccinated, they should be,” said Nate Wardle, press secretary for the state’s health department, in a written statement. However, the lockdown order prompted by COVID meant “that there was a several month period in some parts of the state where well-child visits were not occurring.”

Members of the American Academy of Pediatrics, the National Association of School Nurses and the Association of Immunization Managers said the grace periods are a prudent step to account for the pandemic’s effect on pediatric care. The majority of children already have some protection from diseases from previous vaccines, they said.

Additionally, Beers acknowledged that closing schools — among other actions like restricting travel and shuttering large gathering spaces — make children less likely to contract or spread illnesses that typically incubate in classrooms. For example, according to CDC data, measles has essentially disappeared — 12 cases had been reported as of Aug. 19 this year, compared with 1,282 throughout 2019.

However, schooling will eventually resume in person, which will also bring back the risks of illnesses moving through classrooms, Beers said. And school systems may be less forgiving of children who enter the classroom without the needed vaccinations.

“What would be an immense shame is if schools reopen in person and children are back together and we start getting outbreaks of other diseases that are preventable based on immunizations,” he said.

School-based health centers in New York are actively contacting parents about vaccinations. In Cooperstown, Kjolhede reached out to every superintendent soon after the lockdown in March to ask if the clinic could remain open. All but one said no.

The staff then set up telehealth appointments and phoned students who needed in-person care to arrange visits — including those who needed a vaccine before the start of this school year, he said. Luckily, the health center that remained open had a door that allowed patients to enter the clinic without walking through the school.

Several hours away, Dr. Lisa Handwerker is grappling with how to tackle the problem that hundreds of students across her six school-based health clinics in New York City have missed a required vaccine.

The city’s health department gave her a list of students in her care who needed additional immunizations, she said. Over 400 children were missing the second dose to prevent meningococcal meningitis, generally given to teens and young adults ages 16 to 23. Because the department used data from the last academic year to compile the list, Handwerker has no information about new students. Some families left the city because of the lack of income and resources caused by the pandemic.

“We had difficulty with at least half of the kids on our vaccine list,” Handwerker said. “Then when we reached families, they were reluctant to leave their houses.”

A Shot at Normalcy

That wasn’t the case for Tracey Wolf, a mother of two who visited the doctor recently to get her son Jordan vaccinated for measles, mumps, rubella and HPV before starting the seventh grade. He will be attending middle school in Dunedin, Florida, in person, said Wolf, 38.

It seemed nonsensical to keep Jordan, 13, from his classmates when he already plays baseball and hangs out with his friends, she said. His grades also slipped last spring when the COVID threat transformed his classroom into a computer.

She also took her 6-month-old Ethan for his immunizations. When asked whether she was afraid of going into her doctor’s office, she replied, “Not more than going to the grocery store.”

Regardless of whether a child starts school at home or in the classroom, immunization experts stressed the importance of vaccinating a child on time. The schedules factor in a child’s stage of development to maximize the vaccine’s effectiveness. That said, it is preferable that children get their vaccines from their regular doctor to prevent lost immunization records and additional shots, said Beers.

Yet on Aug. 19, the Department of Health and Human Services released a statement allowing pharmacists to provide childhood immunizations for children ages 3 to 18.

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

“They’re extremely sophisticated”: DHS confirms white supremacists remain the biggest threat to U.S.

A new draft report from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security warns that white supremacists are the “most persistent and lethal” threat in the United States, according to a new CNN report by Geneva Sands.

It stands in sharp contrast to the notion of terroristic threats typically portrayed by conservatives, which focuses on the threat from Muslim attackers from other countries and, more recently “Antifa” and leftist groups. The DHS report warns that although foreign terrorist groups will continue to call for attacks on the U.S., those groups “probably will remain constrained in their ability to direct such plots over the next year.” But it predicts that the U.S. will face an “elevated threat environment at least through” early 2021 because of white supremacists.

Sands notes that DHS has had three different drafts of that report. According to Sands, the language in the drafts varies. But all three versions cite white supremacists as the greatest terrorist threat in the U.S.

Journalist Abigail Tracy, in Vanity Fair, reports that some former DHS officials believe that Trump is seriously downplaying the threat that white supremacists and far-right militia groups pose — or is even encouraging them. One former DHS official who is especially critical of Trump is John Cohen, former deputy undersecretary for intelligence and analysis at the agency.

Trump has praised Kyle Rittenhouse, the 17-year-old militia member who is accused of shooting three people — two of them fatally — at an anti-racism protest in Kenosha, Wisconsin. And according to Cohen, praising Rittenhouse is the last thing Trump should be doing.

“He is literally throwing gasoline on a fully raging fire,” Cohen told Vanity Fair. “You’re going to see potentially armed extremists from the other side of the political spectrum travel to those same cities to protect the protesters. Then you run the very real risk of a full-blown firefight breaking out between these different armed camps. Rittenhouse is a classic illustration of the concern.”

Miles Taylor, another former DHS official, also believes that Trump’s administration has downplayed the threat posed by white supremacist groups. Taylor told Vanity Fair, “There was a mindset in this administration from Day One that the threat wasn’t real — a deliberate burying of the head in the sand. I didn’t ever see that change within the White House, even as attacks started to happen.”

The Trump White House, Tracy notes, has been uncomfortable with the term “domestic terrorism” — and Taylor blames Trump.

“I’d say most of this lays at the president’s feet because ultimately, people are following the tone that he sets and the vision that he lays out,” Taylor told Vanity Fair. “In this case, it’s very clear to someone who would serve the president that he would hold views sympathetic to conspiracy-theory-wielding, semi-violent groups because they tend to like him…. People knew that talking about these issues too much was going to get them in trouble. And so, it had a chilling effect on the subject, whether or not the president directly ordered them to stand down.”

Elizabeth Neumann, a conservative Republican who served as assistant secretary for threat prevention and security policy at DHS and is now supporting Democratic nominee Joe Biden in this year’s presidential race, has stressed that the greatest threat of violence in the U.S. isn’t coming from Antifa — as Trump claims — but from far-right groups like the Boogaloo movement and QAnon. Neumann told Vanity Fair that Trump is “more than willing to talk about domestic terrorism in the context of Antifa. He clearly has a hard time admitting when he’s made a mistake.”

Neumann told Vanity Fair: “What we’re seeing now is more coordination among the white supremacist groups. They’re extremely sophisticated…. an enemy that is sophisticated enough to know how to operate without getting themselves caught. We might be aware of them, but we can’t do anything about their activities. The bigger concern is when some of these folks get together and they decide: this is it, this is the time to start that civil war, that race war — and they plan something big.”

Citizenship delays imperil voting for hundreds of thousands of immigrants in the 2020 election

Citizenship unlocks voting rights for immigrants in America. The long wait for naturalized citizenship imperils those rights for a growing number of immigrants.

A backlog is defined as the “number of pending applications that exceed acceptable or target pending levels.” The nationwide backlog for naturalization is now exacerbated by COVID-19 agency closures and social distancing requirements that limit the size of the oath ceremony.

With the November 2020 elections coming, holding back immigrants from becoming citizens will be consequential — especially given the growing size of the Asian American and Latino electorate in swing states.

Rising backlog

From 2017 to 2019, the Colorado State Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, a bipartisan government agency of which I am a member, examined the causes and consequences of naturalization backlogs and their effects on voting rights, civil rights and the administration of justice.

We found that the federal agency responsible for naturalization, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, was keeping 738,148 people’s naturalization applications waiting — for anywhere between 10 months and nearly three years — at the time of the report.

Federal laws target a processing time of six months, and it was 5.6 months in 2016 when President Trump took office. It has grown to to 10-18 months in the last four years.

We concluded that the substantial delay to naturalization created by the backlog hurts voting rights because you can’t vote until you’ve become a U.S. citizen.

Though the situation briefly improved after September 2019, the backlog has been rebuilding, and it could get worse.

Worse during COVID-19

Since September 2019, the backlog has grown again from 647,576 to 700,885.

The most recent government data indicates that 700,885 naturalization applications were still pending in March 2020, and that the average processing time for the naturalization application in 2020 is approximately 12 months. The longest delays are for applicants working with the Chicago office, who have to wait 13 to 48.5 months.

These numbers don’t reflect what happened when COVID-19 hit and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services offices closed from March 18 to June 4, 2020.

That’s when a new kind of backlog developed: As a result of the postponement of naturalization ceremonies, approximately 126,000 eligible immigrants have been left waiting to become citizens.

When it reopened, the agency began in-person oath ceremonies in small groups to meet social distancing precautions that allow for only 10% of the original capacity. Although some offices have shortened the oath ceremonies to increase their frequency, it is not enough to catch up.

Things are likely to get worse. The agency anticipates it may exhaust its funding and is planning to administratively furlough up to 70% of its workforce if it does not receive emergency funding from Congress. That will slow the process down even further.

Electoral impacts

Immigrants who become naturalized citizens can influence elections.

Before COVID-19 shut down most of the country, the Pew Research Center projected that in November 2020, 10% of the U.S. electorate would be naturalized citizens. Many of these new citizens are concentrated in states that are likely to play a big role in November’s election.

For instance, the National Partnership for New Americans, a nonprofit organization that coordinates voter registration and naturalization nationwide, reports that the margin of victory was 112,911 ballots in Florida during the 2016 presidential election. The number of naturalized voters in Florida who became citizens between 2014 and 2018 is almost triple that margin, at 415,468, suggesting that new voters could make a difference in this delegate rich state.

The number of newly naturalized voters in swing states such as Michigan, Pennsylvania and Nevada also exceeded Donald Trump’s margin of victory in 2016.

Naturalized voters will likely also play a role in Senate races in Arizona, Virginia and North Carolina.

Although naturalized citizens do not always vote as a bloc for one political party, their support for specific issues has become increasingly cohesive since 2008: in favor of immigration reform, health care and workers’ rights during COVID-19.

As the backlog grows, more people who could become citizens in time for the 2020 election will have to wait to vote for a president until 2024 — or later. Boundless, a network of immigration experts who provide immigrants help with the naturalization process, uses government data to estimate that 2,100 immigrants will run out of time to vote each day that U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services offices remain closed.

The total number held back by the end of September is 378,000 people who would otherwise have been able to vote, Boundless estimates.

In many places, immigrants must complete the citizenship oath by early October in order to register in time for the election, worsening these estimates.

Fixing the backlog, getting to vote

There are a number of ways that the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service could overcome barriers to naturalization and voting rights in the time remaining before the election. Some of these ways were included in a statement about the naturalization backlog made by the bipartisan U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in July and have been endorsed by representatives of both parties in Congress:

Additional steps could include more stakeholder outreach and strengthening the connection between naturalizing and voting, as I discuss in my book “Pursuing Citizenship in the Enforcement Era.”

By taking these combined steps, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services would allow newly naturalized Americans to engage in the foundational right ensured by citizenship: voting.

Ming Hsu Chen, Professor of Law and Political Science, University of Colorado Boulder

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

America’s so-called war on terror has displaced as many as 59 million people

The ongoing U.S. “war on terror” has forcibly displaced as many as 59 million people from just eight countries in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia since 2001, according to a new report published Tuesday by Brown University’s Costs of War Project.

Titled “Creating Refugees: Displacement Caused by the United States’ Post-9/11 Wars” (pdf), the new report conservatively estimates that at least 37 million people have “fled their homes in the eight most violent wars the U.S. military has launched or participated in since 2001.”

The latest figure represents a dramatic increase from the Costs of War Project’s 2019 report, which estimated that 21 million people had been displaced internally or forced to flee their home countries due to violence inflicted or unleashed by U.S.-led wars over the past two decades. That report also put the death toll of the so-called war on terror at 801,000 and the price tag at $6.4 trillion.

The new report argues that “wartime displacement (alongside war deaths and injuries) must be central to any analysis of the post-9/11 wars and their short- and long-term consequences.”

“Displacement also must be central to any possible consideration of the future use of military force by the United States or others,” the report states. “Ultimately, displacing 37 million — and perhaps as many as 59 million — raises the question of who bears responsibility for repairing the damage inflicted on those displaced.”

In addition to the tens of millions displaced by U.S. military actions in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, the Philippines, Libya, and Syria, the report notes that millions more have been displaced by “smaller combat operations, including in: Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mali, Niger, Saudi Arabia, and Tunisia.”

“To put these figures in perspective, displacing 37 million people is equivalent to removing nearly all the residents of the state of California or all the people in Texas and Virginia combined,” the report says. “The figure is almost as large as the population of Canada. In historical terms, 37 million displaced is more than those displaced by any other war or disaster since at least the start of the 20th century with the sole exception of World War II.”

David Vine, professor of anthropology at American University and the lead author of the new report, told the New York Times that the findings show “U.S. involvement in these countries has been horrifically catastrophic, horrifically damaging in ways that I don’t think that most people in the United States, in many ways myself included, have grappled with or reckoned with in even the slightest terms.”

Matt Duss, foreign policy adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), demanded such a reckoning in a tweet responding to the Costs of War Project’s latest findings.

“The scale of the disaster the United States has inflicted on the world — through three war on terror presidencies — is staggering,” wrote Duss. “We need a reckoning. We can’t simply move on.”

Sacha Baron Cohen back for “Borat 2” and is already done filming the sequel — report

A sequel to Sacha Baron Cohen‘s blockbuster 2006 comedy “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan” has been shot and screened “for a select few industry types,” Collider’s Jeff Sneider reports based on confirmations from multiple sources. The sources say “Borat 2” finds Cohen’s Kazakh journalist “thinking he’s a big movie star after the success of the original 2006 film made him famous, so he’s trying to hide from the public by pretending to be someone else, and starts meeting and interviewing people incognito.”

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Cohen has been popping up in the news over the last several months for public pranks, leading many fans to speculate as to whether or not he was cooking up a second season of his Showtime series “Who Is America?” or a new project. At the end of June, Cohen made headlines for crashing a far-right rally in Olympia, Washington and convincing the crowd to sing a racist song with him. The event was a “March for Our Rights 3” rally organized by the Washington Three Percenters, a far-right militia group known for its gun advocacy. Cohen appeared dressed in overalls and a fake beard, and his song included lyrics about injecting kids with the “Wuhan flu.”

Another Cohen prank made its way into the news in early July when former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani revealed to The Post that Cohen ambushed a July 7 interview at the Mark Hotel in New York City. Giuliani believed he was going to be interviewed about the White House’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, but in the middle of the conversation with a female journalist a man stormed in “wearing a crazy” outfit that included “a pink bikini, with lace, underneath a translucent mesh top.” Giuliani called the prank “absurd.”

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Near the end of August, a viral Tik Tok video of Cohen dressed in character as Borat speeding down the highway starting making the rounds on social media. The video increased buzz that Cohen would be resurrecting Borat for a sequel, but it was unclear whether or not this would be related to the earlier pranks conducted over the summer. Based on Collider’s plot synopsis for “Borat 2,” it appears Cohen was filming the sequel this whole time. A source described the project to Collider as “Cohen playing Borat playing Cohen.”

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“Borat” was a box office winner in 2006, grossing over $260 million worldwide. Cohen won the Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Comedy or Musical, and the film went on to land an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 79th Academy Awards. IndieWire has reached out to Cohen’s representatives for further comment.

“Ellen DeGeneres Show” Season 18 returns Sept. 21: “Yes, we’re gonna talk about it”

“The Ellen DeGeneres Show,” after ousting three top producers amid internal allegations of racial insensitivity and sexual misconduct, has scheduled its Season 18 premiere for Monday, Sept. 21.

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“I can’t wait to get back to work and back to our studio. And, yes, we’re gonna talk about it,” said Ellen DeGeneres in a statement, seemingly referring to the accusations.

Tiffany Haddish will join DeGeneres in studio on the “Ellen” stage on the Warner Bros. lot, though it will film without an in-studio audience amid the ongoing coronavirus crisis. The show’s first week back is slated to include guest appearances by Kerry Washington, Alec Baldwin, and Chrissy Teigen. The guest roster through the month includes Chris Rock, Amy Schumer, Adam Sandler and Orlando Bloom. Stephen “tWitch” Boss, who was recently promoted to co-executive producer, is set to guest-host upcoming episodes of “Ellen” in the fall.

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Executive producers Ed Glavin and Kevin Leman, as well as co-executive producer Jonathan Norman, departed the syndicated daytime talk show last month following the allegations, as reported in BuzzFeed in July, which also include harassment by top execs on the show. As Variety reported in April, staff noted mistreatment, poor communication and pay reductions in the spring after the pandemic shut down production.

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DeGeneres apologetically addressed more than 200 staff virtually in mid-August, verging on tears as she told the staff she was “not perfect” and acknowledged that the show’s leaders were not as sensitive as they should have been. During the same meeting, the remaining exec producers said that the studio’s internal investigation found no evidence of “systemic” racism on set, but admitted that more needed to be accomplished in the way of diversity and inclusion.

“Mulan” backlash grows over filming in Xinjiang, site of reported human rights abuses

Disney‘s live-action “Mulan” adaptation has been at the center of backlash for a year after lead actress Liu Yifei showed support on social media for Hong Kong’s police, who have been accused of violence towards pro-democracy protesters, but a new controversy is erupting now that the film has been made available on Disney+. According to reports from THR and Bloomberg, Disney filmed “Mulan” in China‘s Xinjiang province and included a “special thanks” in the film’s credit sequence to the “publicity department of CPC Xinjiang Uighur Autonomy Region Committee.” Xinjiang is a province where human rights abuses have been reported, including the detainment of over one million Uighur Muslims.

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The “Mulan” credits also offer a thank you to the public security bureau in the city of Turpan, which is where the detainment centers are reportedly in operation. China refers to the facilities as “voluntary education centers,” designed “to improve the region’s security and economic development.” But as THR reports about Xinjiang: “Uighur residents have reported being subjected to grueling political indoctrination regimens, forced labor, and forced sterilization — part of an alleged government program to suppress birth rates in the Muslim population.”

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“It just keeps getting worse!” Hong Kong pro-democracy advocate Joshua Wong shared on Twitter upon discovering the connection between “Mulan” and the Xinjiang province, “Now, when you watch ‘Mulan,’ not only are you turning a blind eye to police brutality and racial injustice (due to what the lead actors stand for), you’re also potentially complicit in the mass incarceration of Muslim Uyghurs.”

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IndieWire has reached out to Disney for further comment.

“Star Trek: Discovery” Season 3 trailer: Rousing speeches restore faith in the Federation

The first trailer for Season 3 of “Star Trek: Discovery” has arrived and it’s ready to show audiences who the crew of the USS Discovery truly are.

If you haven’t followed the last two seasons of the CBS All Access series, the trailer drops in a bit of information. The events of Season 2 saw the USS Discovery travel to the 32nd century, more than 900 years in the future. Upon arriving on a mysterious planet science specialist Michael Burham (Sonequa Martin-Green) discovers there’s life on it.

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But all is not as joyful as it seems. The inhabitants of the planet have been left without hope after a mysterious incident known as “The Burn.” It’ll be up to Burnham and the Discovery crew to help right the galaxy and restore faith in the Federation itself.

“Star Trek: Discovery” has become a solid investment for CBS All Access, so much so that the complete first season is making the leap to the CBS network to fill in their fall programming. Fans can catch up on the show starting September 24 in preparation for the arrival of Season 3 on Oct. 15.

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On top of that, it’s become a welcome and refreshing face in the world of inclusive casting in science fiction. The franchise announced their first non-binary and transgender actors, who will make their debut in Season 3. Blu del Barrio will play Adira, a non-binary resident of the 32nd Century who quickly finds the USS Discovery to be their new home. Described as “highly intelligent with a confidence and self-assurance well beyond their years,” Adira becomes friends with Dr. Hugh Culber (Wilson Cruz) and Paul Stamets (Anthony Rapp), who were the first gay couple to be part of a “Trek” show’s major cast.

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And Ian Alexander, who uses both he/him and they/them pronouns, plays Gray, the first major Trill character in “Star Trek” since “Deep Space Nine.” CBS All Access’s description says: “Gray is empathetic, warm and eager to fulfill his lifelong dream of being a Trill host, but he will have to adapt when his life takes an unexpected turn.” Alexander is also the first out transgender Asian-American actor on television.

See more in the trailer below:

“Star Trek: Discovery” Season 3 premieres on CBS All Access Oct.15.

Thom Tillis staffer tells cancer survivor that people only deserve health care if they can afford it

North Carolina Republican Sen. Thom Tillis — viewed as one of the most vulnerable GOP senators in 2020 — has found himself in an uncomfortable situation after a staffer’s excessively honest comments to a constituent were caught on tape.

As first reported by WRAL, Bev Veals of Carolina Beach, a three-time cancer survivor, called her senator out of fear that her health insurance was at risk. She has previously faced medical bankruptcy and difficulty accessing care, WRAL said, and her husband was furloughed because of the pandemic. She wanted assurance that she’d have coverage if she lost her health insurance.

But Tillis’s office wasn’t helpful. While speaking to a dismissive staffer, Veals began to record their conversation, which was provided to WRAL and can be viewed above.

“You’re saying that, if you can’t afford it, you don’t get to have it?” she asked. “That includes health care?”

“Yeah, just like if I want to go to the store and buy a new dress shirt. If I can’t afford that dress shirt, I don’t get to get it,” the staffer explained.

“But health care is something that people need!” Veals said, clearly alarmed. “Especially if they have cancer.”

“Well, you got to find a way to get it,” the staffer said.

“So what do I do in the meantime, sir?” she asked, not hiding the irritation in her voice.

The response was snide: “Sounds like something you’re going to have to figure it out.”

Tillis’s office has apologized after Veals came forward about the exchange: “The way Mrs. Veals was talked to by a staff assistant in our Washington office was completely inappropriate and violates the code of conduct Senator Tillis has for his staff, which is why immediate disciplinary action has been taken.”

But the truth is that, insensitive and rude as the staffer’s comments to Veals were, they were simply a much more honest reflection of the Republican Party’s policies on health care than officials typically admit. But the truth isn’t hard to see. The Trump administration is currently arguing that the Supreme Court should overturn all of Obamacare, throwing millions of people off their insurance and invalidating protections for pre-existing conditions, along with other provisions that protect patients.

The unofficial Republican Party policy, though, is to lie about this fact. Trump is constantly telling voters that he protected pre-existing conditions — even though he has done nothing to ensure they’re covered — and that he’ll continue to keep these protections in place, even though he’s trying to destroy them.

The Tillis staffer, apparently, didn’t get the message. He has imbibed the attitude at the heart of the GOP’s policy preferences. His mistake was being honest with a member of the public about the policy.

Veals, for one, doesn’t seem deceived by the office’s apology. And that’s because she still hasn’t gotten the original answer to the question she called about.

“We need our legislators to listen to us and help us solve this problem because it’s not just my problem – not being able to afford health care,” she told WRAL. “It’s the problem of hundreds and thousands of North Carolinians.”

North Carolina is one of 12 states in the U.S. that has not adopted Medicaid expansion, a policy that would help cover people like Veals if they lost their insurance. Tillis opposes Medicaid expansion.

In a statement to WRAL, Tillis dishonestly defended his position:

“When he was Speaker of the House [in North Carolina],” the statement continues, “Senator Tillis inherited a Medicaid program that was mismanaged and plagued with overspending and inefficiency. Expanding Medicaid at the time would have been a promise that the state wouldn’t have been able to keep, requiring cuts to the program that would have harmed patients that states like New York and California have already been forced to make. Instead, Senator Tillis worked to strengthen the state’s Medicaid program to deliver quality health care to patients, and the reason the North Carolina is in a position to discuss expansion is because of Senator Tillis’ leadership.”

These claims are in spectacularly bad faith. Medicaid expansion has been wildly successful across the United States — it can even save states money. And claiming to be concerned about “cuts to the program” that harm patients is absurd when patients like Veals can be left with no coverage at all. It’s even more pernicious, though, because the recent stressed on state budgets in the wake of the pandemic come from the Senate Republicans’ refusal to provide recovery funds to state and local governments, as Democrats have sought to do.

It’s these comments — far more than a staffer’s rudeness — that should be the real scandal.

Senate Dems probe political donations surrounding nomination of Louis DeJoy’s wife to be ambassador

Democrats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee are investigating the events surrounding the nomination of Aldona Wos, the wife of Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, to be the next U.S. ambassador to Canada following a report on high-dollar donations made by Salon.

Salon first reported the conspicuous alignment of hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations from DeJoy with President Donald Trump’s February announcement of Wos as his pick to fill the cush Ottawa gig.

DeJoy, a top Trump donor and the former head fundraiser for the Republican National Convention, made a series of major donations to the Trump campaign and Senate Republicans leading up to his wife’s nomination, federal election records show.

In the weeks surrounding the nomination, DeJoy gave Trump Victory $360,600. He also gave a $35,000 maximum donation to the Senate GOP’s election committee the day after Trump announced his intention to nominate Wos. 

The Senate oversees the confirmation of all U.S. ambassadors. Sen. Todd Young, R-Ind., the current chair of the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), sits on the powerful Foreign Relations Committee, which holds confirmation hearings for ambassadors. Last month the committee voted to send Wos’ nomination to a full Senate vote.

Previous DeJoy donations also fall within the timeline of his wife’s nomination. 

DeJoy and Wos each donated $35,000 to Trump Victory on Jan. 22, 2019, according to FEC records. Following Trump’s Feb. 22 announcement that the Canadian ambassadorship would be opening up, DeJoy poured in hundreds of thousands of dollars, records show.

He gave a total of $320,000 to Trump Victory in the three months between April 3 and June 17, 2019. During that time frame, DeJoy also made his largest single donation to the fund to date: $120,000. A few days later, Trump was said to be considering Wos for the position.

Trump did not nominate anyone at the time and the position was temporarily filled. When the post opened again in January, DeJoy donated another $150,000 to Trump Victory in two separate chunks on Jan. 15 — at the time his largest single-day contribution.

Then, the White House announced that Trump would nominate Wos as the next U.S. ambassador to Canada on Feb. 11. The next day, DeJoy made his maximum donation of $35,000 to the NRSC, FEC flings show.

Finally, on Feb. 19, 2020, the week after the White House announcement and the NSRC donation, DeJoy made his biggest single donation to Trump Victory to date: $210,600. Six days later, Trump officially nominated Wos. 

The news of fresh scrutiny from Senate Democrats comes as the Democratic-controlled House Oversight Committee announced an investigation into DeJoy following a bombshell report in the Washington Post. DeJoy allegedly repeatedly urged the staff of his supply chain company to donate to Republican candidates and later reimbursed them, according to former employees. The arrangement, colloquially known as a “straw donor” scheme, is one of the few campaign finance crimes that can carry jail time.

“Reimbursing another person for political contributions is a serious campaign finance violation,” Brendan Fischer, the director of the Federal Reform Program at the Campaign Legal Center, told Salon. “Straw donations violate campaign finance law’s transparency requirements, usually constitute excessive or prohibited contributions and are made with some level of intent. A donor doesn’t accidentally ask another person to make a political contribution and then reimburse them — they do so intentionally, typically because the original donor has already maxed-out to the candidate. Plenty of people have gone to jail for straw donor schemes.”

Right-wing agitator and media personality Dinesh D’Souza was fined $30,000 and sentenced to eight months in a community confinement center after he pleaded guilty to running a straw donor scheme through his secretary. Trump pardoned D’Souza in 2018.

Lyft laid off contract janitors while spending $17.5 million on an astroturf ballot measure

On Labor Day, a group of laid-off janitors who once maintained Lyft’s San Francisco headquarters gathered outside the building to demand an expansion in unemployment benefits and more clarity around the status of their jobs since they were fired in June. At the end of the month, workers like Rezk Ghanim say they will no longer have unemployment benefits.

“It’s really scary because we don’t know if we’re going to have a job or not, we don’t know what the deal is,” Ghanim told Salon in an interview. “I have one more month left on my unemployment benefits and what’s gonna happen after that? People are worried, and people are scared.”

In California, unemployment benefits last 26 weeks, though unemployed workers in California can qualify for an extension of unemployment benefits as part of the state’s pandemic relief response. Pandemic Unemployment Assistance offers relief to those who aren’t usually eligible for unemployment insurance up to 46 weeks.

Ghanim, who worked at Lyft via a subcontractor called Service by Medallion, first started working at the gig economy conglomerate in March 2019 as a main dishwasher. Then he got promoted to a nighttime foreman, which led to another promotion as morning foreman leading various custodial duties. Then in March, as the coronavirus began to spread around the Bay Area, Lyft sent its employees to work from home. However, service workers who kept the estimated 361,300 square feet-headquarters clean and maintained didn’t have that luxury.

As reported by KQED, 63 janitors who worked for Service By Medallion were informed via text messages that they would only get two days of work per month in the coming months in April. By June, at least 90 workers received an official letter of termination, Ghanim told Salon.

When asked about the subcontractors of Service by Medallion returning to work, or about the termination and their benefits, a Lyft spokesperson directed Salon to contact Service by Medallion. A spokesperson for Service By Medallion confirmed to Salon that Lyft terminated the contract, and that their last day of service was on June 5.

“Lyft got paranoid…. they didn’t want us to get sick or anybody to get sick, so they said we can’t afford you to work, so just go home,” Ghanim told Salon. “We asked our supervisors, ‘What do we do next now that we’re jobless?’ They said all you can do is go to the EDD [Employment Development Department].”

Ghanim said it’s been especially challenging in San Francisco, where he pays $1,700 for a one-bedroom apartment. Ghanim is receiving $450 a week on unemployment, which isn’t enough to fully cover his rent. And jobs are hard to come by.

“Finding a job has been really difficult,” he said. “I’ve been trying to find a CAD job, a construction job, a gas station job, any type of job, and like I said things are getting worse.”

Lyft’s Janitors are organized with the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 87 chapterOlga Miranda, who is the president of the union SEIU Local 87 in San Francisco, was especially outraged at Lyft’s decision to terminate its janitorial services while spending millions on the Proposition 22 campaign in California — an astroturfed ballot proposition effort which, if successful, will allow Lyft to keep their drivers classified as independent contractors rather than full-time employees. So far, Lyft has contributed $17.5 million to the “Yes on 22” coalition, according to campaign filings

Miranda alleged that after Lyft terminated its contract with Service by Medallion, it hired a non-union janitorial contractor. Salon is waiting for Lyft’s to respond to a comment request regarding this change in custodial subcontractors.

“This is just to shed light on what Lyft is capable of doing in trying to lead how to weaken workers that are represented by a collective bargaining agreement,” Miranda said.

The Local 87 chapter is part of the Justice for Janitors movement, which has been fighting for the rights of janitors for nearly 30 years. On Monday, janitors in San Francisco were joined by hotel workers, rideshare drivers, and other frontline and furloughed workers as part of a bigger protest against some of the city’s biggest companies that have left their service workers behind during the pandemic.

“We’re putting these billion-dollar corporations in our COVID-19 Hall of Shame, because Marriott, Lyft, and the SF Giants have put workers’ lives at risk through unsafe working conditions and abandoned them while they struggle to survive,” Rudy Gonzalez, Executive Director of the San Francisco Labor Council, said in a statement. “This year, we’re going to reclaim Labor Day for working families as we fight back against San Francisco’s worst corporate offenders.”

Sex and the Baby Industrial Complex: Why gender reveal parties persist despite multiple tragedies

On Sunday, California’s Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) announced the origin point of the El Dorado Fire, which has been raging through San Bernardino County since Sept. 5. It began at a gender reveal party held at El Dorado Ranch Park where a pyrotechnic device was used to create colored smoke. The fire has since overtaken 10,574 acres and is 16% contained as of Tuesday morning.

This actually isn’t the first time that a gender reveal party — during which an expectant parent or couple announce the sex of their baby, usually by displaying blue items for a boy and pink for a girl — has resulted in real-world tragedies, such as other large-scale fires, a deadly explosion and even a plane crash. But this stunt feels particularly egregious given both current local and global conditions. 

Cal Fire officials say that the party took place during what they classify as “critical fire weather conditions,” meaning that there was a combination of low relative humidity, strong surface wind, unstable air and drought, which could produce “extreme fire behavior” if one was ignited. Combine that with a triple-digit heat wave over much of California and a global pandemic in which public gatherings, like parties, are “generally prohibited” by the state health officer — and the response, specifically on Twitter, to the news of the fire’s origin has been overwhelming. 

It’s largely a mix of disbelief, exasperation and memes (oh, so many memes), all of which highlight two cultural narratives that have come to run parallel to gender reveal parties: the “reveal” portion of these parties are becoming increasingly elaborate, while contempt for such events continues to grow. 

The early days of the gender reveal party

Many people credit Jenna Karvunidis as the “inventor” of, or at least the woman who popularized, the gender reveal party. In 2008, she held a party where she cut into a cake, knowing that the inside would reveal the sex of her child. 

“We had a knife and we cut into it all together and we all saw the pink icing at the same time, and found out that we were having a girl,” Karvunidis told NPR in 2019. She went on to write about the party on her blog, High Gloss And Sauce, and it was then written up by a local Chicago magazine. 

Keep in mind, this was before the invention of Instagram or Pinterest — both of which were released in 2010 — but the eventual advent of those platforms helped solidify the gender reveal party concept as something distinct from a typical baby shower. 

The baby shower as we know it started during the postwar Baby Boom in the late 1940s and ’50s (though celebrations and rituals surrounding fertility and birth are as old as time), where expectant mothers were “showered” with useful gifts: baby clothing, diapers, toys. In contrast, the main focus of the gender reveal party is simply letting guests know the sex of the fetus, which may inform what gifts the expectant couple receives at a later date. 

Search for #genderreveal on Instagram and you’ll be met with over 1.5 million results. Similarly, a search for “gender reveal ideas” on Pinterest returns thousands of collections like “500+ Best Baby— Gender Reveal Party” and “200+ Best Gender reveal parties images in 2020.” 

The commodification of gender reveal parties

As gender reveal parties began to grow in popularity during the early 2010s, so, too, did the creation of products specifically meant to help expectant parents announce the news. This was inevitable because, you know, capitalism. We’re talking piñatas filled with pink or blue candy, confetti-filled balloons, “pop the belly” dartboards and a whole new business opportunity for bakers built on pink and blue food coloring. 

This marketing development, in concert with the inception of “social media challenges,” pushed some expectant parents towards more extreme visual aids. Cannons that shoot colored powder, Mardi Gras-style parades, light shows, hair dye, motorcycle burn-outs featuring pink or blue smoke. 

At this point, it was clear that gender reveal parties had turned a corner from celebration to spectacle. The reveals were meant to be filmed, posted and rack up likes, shares and subscriptions. As Carly Gieseler, an assistant professor of gender and communications at York College, wrote in a paper for the “Journal for Gender Studies,” the performative nature of gender reveal parties feeds into the increase in products advertised to create the “perfect party,” which is then shared on social media — it’s a pink-and-blue-scaled ouroboros slithering around the Baby Industrial Complex.

“The communicative spaces dedicated to this trend not only offer ideas but market products to achieve the ideal image of the celebration so that this image can subsequently be plastered across social media sites like Pinterest, Facebook, Instagram,” Gieseler wrote. 

The backlash begins 

As the “reveals” at these parties became more extreme and more ubiquitous, the entire concept was met with a certain amount of backlash — much of which was centered on the inherently binary nature of the  event and the purposeful misuse of the word “gender.” It’s 2020; I think we all are at least familiar  with the differences between biological sex and gender presentation. 

As a result, the celebrations feel pretty antiquated, despite the fact that until the late ’80s, ultrasound technology that could actually be used to predict fetal sex wasn’t commonplace enough for most expectant parents to use it as a means to construct an elaborate party theme. Themes like “Tiaras or Trucks?” or “Pearls or Putters?” Thought we were in an era where an expectant child could have both? Think again! 

“It doesn’t strike me as a coincidence that this semi-elaborate ritual sprung fully formed from the bowels of Pinterest around the same time that our culture at large began to grapple with our understanding of gender,” Salon’s Erin Keane wrote in 2017. “I mean, it’s an extraordinary period: Previously held absolutes are challenged and expanded every day. Periods of rapid and intense social change can prompt backlashes, even through relatively benign if somewhat eye-roll-inducing  phenomena like this. I suspect that the lack of a ‘nonbinary’ option in the gender-reveal cultiverse provides some unarticulated comfort.”

This makes sense, too, considering who is throwing these parties. Demographic research done by Florence Pasche Guignard — which was reported in her 2015 article “A Gendered Bun in the Oven. The Gender-reveal Party as a New Ritualization during Pregnancy” — shows that “most gender-reveal parties are done by expecting parents that are middle-class, heterosexual white Americans who are married or partnered.” 

Members of these specific demographic groups are also traditionally members of the communities that uphold cultural norms; hosting these celebrations is just another way to maintain the status quo, albeit potentially behind a literal pink or blue smoke screen. 

Even Karvunidis, who had popularized of the parties, has since publicly expressed regret over starting the trend because of the potential pain that it had caused members of the LGBTQ and intersex communitites. In 2019, she spoke with NPR about her own daughter — for whom the pink icing-filled cake had been made more than a decade earlier. 

“Plot twist! The baby from the original gender reveal party is a girl who wears suits,” Karvunidis says. “She says ‘she’ and ‘her’ and all of that, but you know she really goes outside gender norms.”

Beyond the binary: Performative masculinity and intensive parenting

The restrictive, binary nature of these celebrations aside, gender reveal parties also illustrate two societal norms that merit interrogation: performative masculinity and the pressures of “intensive parenting.” 

American baby showers have traditionally been women-only functions — an afternoon of diaper exchanges, delicate food and ooh-ing and aah-ing over almost-impossibly small outfits. Gender reveal parties are different. There are guns! Cannons! In a society where the majority of child-rearing duties are assigned to women, it shouldn’t escape notice that it seems some men can only be coerced into enthusiastically participating in these functions if they’re built around a theme that is typically coded as “masculine,” like hot rods or catfish noodling

This is a phenomenon that Karvundis noticed, as well, writing on her blog’s Facebook page on Sept. 7, “Stop it. Stop having these stupid parties. For the love of God, stop burning things down to tell everyone about your kid’s penis. No one cares but you.

“Toxic masculinity is men thinking they need to explode something because simply enjoying a baby party is for sissies,” she continued. 

But underlying these parties is something that is less “in your face,” though perhaps more insidious, than an expectant father’s display of machismo that is literally on fire. Pinterest-perfect gender reveal parties — with elaborate cakes, decorations and just-so gift bags — are a training ground for what Cornell University researcher Patrick Ishizuka classified as “intensive parenting” in 2018. 

It’s a parenting style that has become common in upper-middle-class households for at least a generation, but has achieved a much broader appeal in the social media age. The Atlantic characterizes its hallmarks as such: “Supervised, enriching playtime. Frequent conversations about thoughts and feelings. Patient, well-reasoned explanations of household rules. And extracurriculars. Lots and lots of extracurriculars.” 

As Ishizuka’s research found, many American parents describe this parenting style as an ideal, something to aspire to, but for some parents it’s simply out of grasp. As Joe Pinsker wrote for “The Atlantic” in 2019, “intensive parenting” was first identified as a middle-class phenomenon, most notably by the sociologists Sharon Hays and Annette Lareau in the 1990s and 2000s, respectively. 

“Lareau in particular called the approach ‘concerted cultivation’ and contrasted it with a vision of parenting she labeled ‘the accomplishment of natural growth,’ which entails much less parental involvement and which she found to be more common among working-class and poorer parents,” Pinkser wrote. “A big lingering question since then has been why these class differences exist: Did poorer families have different notions of what makes for good parenting, or did they simply lack the resources to practice the parenting styles they believed would be better?” 

Ishizuka asserts that the answer lies in access to resources. 

“Poverty not only limits parents’ ability to pay for music lessons, for example, but is also a major source of stress that can influence parents’ energy, attention, and patience when interacting with children,” Ishizuka told Pinsker. 

But social media has made it so much easier to compare real-life struggles with picture perfect “online parents.” You know the kind, with daily schedules posted on black and white letter boards, a selection of specially curated wooden toys (no screen time!) and an Instagram story filled with snaps of creative, colorful school lunches. 

When this is the cultural ideal, it makes sense that — right or wrong — there would be pressure to assert that your own personal parenting abilities and skills align with it as early as possible, the threat of sparking a raging wildfire be damned. 

Cultural catharsis amid tragedy

None of this negates the real-world tragedies that gender reveal parties have caused since their inception. In 2019 an Iowa woman was killed by shrapnel after a homemade device meant to emit colored smoke exploded. Two years earlier, a Customs and Border Protection agent started a 47,000-acre wildfire in Arizona with his color-coded explosives, causing more than $8 million in damage. 

But videos of gender reveal parties gone wrong, where the only thing injured is someone’s pride, have their own viral appeal. Carina Chocano wrote about this genre for the New York Times in 2019. 

“The appeal of the gender-reveal disaster video is rooted in contempt: It’s a schadenfreude delivery system, comeuppance porn for a new kind of social overreach,” she wrote. “Each video originates as a homespun production, documenting a moment of great significance to a handful of people.” 

Chocano continues: “Great care and elaborate planning, obsessive pomp and circumstance, have been devoted to announcing the very first thing most parents know for certain about the child they expect and all the cultural baggage that child will be burdened with. And when it all goes wrong, it exposes a surprisingly intimate moment of cognitive dissonance and uncertainty — the very kind of anxiety and lack of control that gender-reveal stunts are designed to dispel.” 

The memes and social media posts that have emerged in the wake of the San Bernardino fire speak to that dichotomy between how societally inconsequential the news these parents were attempting to share is when compared to the havoc they’ve caused. “Gender reveal in 2020 be like” — fill in the blank. The explosion of the Death Star, a scene from “Midsommar,” Spongebob screaming into the abyss. 

Chris Franjola, a comedian and writer for “Chelsea Lately” perhaps best summed it on Twitter like this, “You just burned down half of California to have your child tell you they’re gender fluid in 18 years. #GenderReveal.” 

 

A new analysis of the Nebra sky disk could rewrite Bronze Age history

The mysterious Nebra sky disk, a famous bronze artifact that depicts the cosmos, may not be as old as scholars once thought — and, therefore, may not actually prove that human beings were well-informed about the universe during the Bronze Age, as previously believed. The age of the artifact, which has been considered one of the most important archaeological finds since its discovery in 1999, is called into question in a new academic paper that could rewrite what we know about prehistoric knowledge in the Bronze Age and Iron Age.

The paper, which was published in the German journal Archäologische Informationen, calls into question the veracity of the claims made by the disk’s discoverers, which in turn revises the age of the disk. The disk is purported to have been discovered by two looters in 1999 in the German state of Saxony-Anhalt. Thus, the Nebra sky disk moved around the black market for several years before being seized by state police. After its recovery, the state launched an investigation to determine the disk’s origin; at the time, it was believed that other Bronze Age artifacts, including swords, armor and axes, were found in the dig area as the Nebra sky disk.

Yet analysis of the metals used in these other artifacts suggests that their ore came from different deposits years apart, meaning that it is not clear that all of the objects supposedly found at the same site as the Nebra sky disk are from the same collection or period.

As for the disk itself, the authors — Rüdiger Krause, professor for prehistory and early European history at Goethe University Frankfurt, and Rupert Gebhard, director of the Munich Archäologischen Staatssammlung — believe that it was created during the Iron Age of the first millennium BCE, rather than during the Bronze Age around 1600 BCE as previously thought. There is ample evidence in the different ratios of metal isotopes, particularly lead, that points to that conclusion. 

The Nebra sky disk is roughly one foot long in diameter and weighs just under five pounds. The disk has a blue-green patina and shows a gold-colored crescent moon, a number of stars and a large round object that could depict either the sun or a full moon. At some point after being originally created, two arcs constructed of gold from a different origin were added to the sides. It is believed these were intended to represent the angle between the solstices. A third gold arc was later added to the bottom.

There have long been doubts about the disk’s historical significance, and even its authenticity, because of the way in which it came to the academic world’s attention. As Krause and Gebhard explain, “the Nebra Sky Disk came into the hands of archaeologists only after a lapse of [about] four years after its discovery. The history of its discovery was reconstructed according to information supplied by the first buyer and the finders of the object as well as to observations of traces of damage on the disc.” 

The scholars also argue that “the site that was considered the discovery site until today and which was investigated in subsequent excavations is with high probability not the discovery site of the looters” and that “there is no convincing evidence that the Bronze Age swords, axes and bracelets form an ensemble of common origins.”

Krause and Gebhard point to similarities between the depictions of celestial bodies on the disk and Celtic myths and beliefs as they existed in the first millennium BC, which was the Iron Age in Europe. 

“The fact that motifs of the night with stars and the moon crescent are extremely frequent in the Late Iron Age seems particularly remarkable, and at the same time this is proven by historical sources as well,” the authors write. “In essence they describe – in addition to the continuing sun symbolism – above all the symbols of the night, which played a special role in the ancestral history of the Celts and therefore are present in the Celtic lunisolar calendar, too.”

If Krause and Gebhard are correct, this would mean that previous assumptions made as a result of the disk’s earlier supposed age — particularly about human understanding of basic astronomy — will have to be rethought.

House panel launches probe into Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, who “could face criminal exposure”

The House Oversight Committee has launched an investigation into Postmaster General Louis DeJoy following allegations of a pattern of campaign finance crimes.

House Oversight Committee Chair Carolyn Maloney on Tuesday called on the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) Board of Governors to “immediately suspend” DeJoy, telling Salon that he also faces possible “criminal exposure” for lying to Congress.

“If these allegations are true, Mr. DeJoy could face criminal exposure – not only for his actions in North Carolina, but also for lying to our committee under oath,” Maloney said in a statement to Salon. 

“We will be investigating this issue, but I believe the Board of Governors must take emergency action to immediately suspend Mr. DeJoy, who they never should have selected in the first place,” she added.

DeJoy, a top donor to President Donald Trump and the Republican Party, was scrutinized for his high-dollar contributions when he was appointed by the USPS Board of Governors this May. A number of DeJoy’s former employees came forward over the weekend to accuse him of unlawfully pressuring and reimbursing employees for political donations to Republican candidates in a Washington Post report. 

Such an arrangement, colloquially known as a “straw donor” scheme, is one of the few jailable campaign finance violations, the Campaign Legal Center’s Brendan Fischer told Salon.

Straw donor schemes, in which one donor gets other individuals to donate and then repays them, are serious for a number of reasons, according to Fischer. They violate transparency and maximum limit laws, allowing wealthier donors to secretly tip the scales in their favor.

“Plenty of people have gone to jail for straw donor schemes,” Fischer said.

The Post interviewed former employees who alleged that they were pressured by DeJoy or his associates to donate to Republican causes. Individuals who worked in the company’s accounting and payroll divisions also claimed that employees who made contributions were awarded bonuses to offset the cost.

David Young, a former Human Resources director at DeJoy’s supply chain company New Breed, told The Post that “Louis was a national fundraiser for the Republican Party. He asked employees for money. We gave him the money, and then he reciprocated by giving us big bonuses.”

In recent weeks, pressure has mounted on DeJoy, the target of fierce criticism from USPS employees, Democrats and the American public after reports surfaced that the agency had warned 46 states that mail ballots might not be delivered on time for Election Day, potentially disenfranchising millions of voters.

Additionally, numerous other reports have detailed how policy changes enacted under DeJoy have cut overtime and slowed down mail delivery across the country. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said in a letter to DeJoy last month that the postmaster general had “confirmed that contrary to prior denials and statements minimizing these changes, the Postal Service recently instituted operational changes” shortly after he assumed office.

Those changes, they said, “now threaten the timely delivery of mail — including medicines for seniors, paychecks for workers, and absentee ballots for voters — that is essential to millions of Americans.”

Further, internal USPS documents obtained by Salon contradict DeJoy’s sworn Senate testimony that he had not cut overtime. The USPS memo, which was provided by a manager to rank-and-file employees, appears to confirm reports that the agency was beginning to execute policies aimed at dramatically curtailing the opportunity for worker overtime under DeJoy. The memo says flatly on its first page, “Overtime will be eliminated.”

Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., asked DeJoy under oath whether he had taken steps to “eliminate” or “curtail” overtime. DeJoy responded in the negative. 

“We never eliminated overtime,” DeJoy said.

When Peters asked whether it had been curtailed, Dejoy replied: “It’s not been curtailed by me or the leadership team.”

“The new PMG is looking at COST,” the memo begins, referencing DeJoy’s position.

“Here are some of his expectations and they will be implemented in short order,” the memo adds.

The second item says, “Overtime will be eliminated. Again we paying too much in OT and it is not cost effective and will soon be taken off the table. More to come on this.”

The Post report also appears to have galvanized Democrats in the Senate, where DeJoy’s wife is currently up for confirmation as Ambassador to Canada.

“These troubling allegations raise serious concerns about Wos’ nomination,” Juan Pachón, spokesperson for Democrats on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee told Salon. “At this point, we are looking into them.”

Trump nominated Wos in February amid a series of conspicuously timed high-dollar contributions to the president’s campaign and Senate Republicans. The committee approved her and her confirmation is pending on the Senate calendar.

“Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President”: A loving relationship to music that “cuts through politics”

“Jimmy Carter: Rock and Roll President” is director Mary Wharton’s delightful documentary that pays tribute to the 39th (and most peaceful) American president. The film opens in Plains, Georgia, 2018, with Carter smiling and listening to Bob Dylan‘s “Mr. Tambourine Man.” The film shows how Dylan, along with Carter’s friends Greg Allman, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, Jimmy Buffett, and Charlie Daniels were instrumental in helping him get elected. It was not just that concerts that doubled as fundraisers could help buy political advertising, Carter appealed to younger voters who were tired of Nixon and Ford. Hell, even Hunter S. Thompson was impressed enough to follow and endorse Carter.

This may not be a groundbreaking concept, but Wharton’s film explores how music reflects society, and how Carter’s efforts as a civil rights leader made him an appealing candidate who used soft power — music — to win hearts and minds. 

Wharton’s film is chock-full of anecdotes by Carter and his famous musical friends. In addition to Dylan, Allman, Buffett and Nelson, interviewees include Nile Rodgers, Rosanne Cash, Garth Brooks and Tricia Yearwood, and, inexplicably, Bono. But equally enjoyable are the concert scenes that range from Aretha Franklin performing “America the Beautiful” at Carter’s inauguration to Loretta Lynn singing “Coal Miner’s Daughter” for Deng Xiaoping, to Carter himself performing “Salt Peanuts” with Dizzy Gillespie.  

“Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President” isn’t just about music, but does touch on the Iran hostage situation, but also Carter’s Peace Treaty with Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin. The film also includes his post-Presidential life and his work with the Carter Center and for Habitat for Humanity.

Wharton along with producer Chris Farrell, spoke with Salon about this wonderful documentary and showing a different side of President Carter.

What sparked your interest in this particular aspect of Carter and his presidency? 

Chris Farrell: When I was researching an Allman Brothers project, I was told to talk with folks at the Carter Center. I did, and I was told stories about how they helped Carter get in the White House. Then they told me stories about Carter and Bob Dylan. And Carter and Willie Nelson. It completely shifted my focus of what I wanted to do and the story I wanted to pursue. We were not looking to tell the traditional story of Jimmy Carter. We wanted to show his love of music and how he used it. We thought by doing it this way, the messages we wanted to get across would resonate.

Mary Wharton: My background is in making documentaries about music. If Chris said, “I wanted to make a documentary about Jimmy Carter,” I’d say “That’s cool. Why tell me about that?” I don’t think of myself as a presidential documentarian. But when he came to me about the idea of Jimmy Carter and his relationship with music, I thought that was an interesting opportunity to utilize this aspect of Carter’s life that is not well known, and show a different side of him. This idea that he’s a lot hipper than most people ever gave him credit for was so appealing to both of us. You think of his cardigan sweaters and having this persona of being grandfatherly and, quite frankly, pretty square. And here he is the whole time hanging out with pot-smoking Willie Nelson and Bob Dylan and the Allman Brothers. It’s a head-spinner! We hope that making people look twice with that fun aspect of his life would make them reconsider a lot of what they think about Jimmy Carter.

What can you say about securing the interview with Carter? Barbara Kopple told me recently that he was not an easy interview to get! 

Farrell: We haven’t spoken to Kopple to compare notes. Our negotiation with the Carter Center wasn’t easy, but it wasn’t difficult. We were trying to tell a fun story and convey that music can bring people together. As we spent time with them, they realized we were not out to dupe the President or provide an analysis; that we were trying to tell a different angle, and we were up front of the messages we were trying to convey. 

Wharton: It was clear that Carter wanted to talk about this aspect of his life. When you see his smile in the interview, he was enjoying this conversation. When he talked about music, his face would light up. For a guy who has done thousands of interviews, we don’t think anyone has asked him about this music taste and love of music.

Farrell: Even though they believed us, and signed the contract, he could be pretty stern and intimidating, but to Mary’s point, within 3-5 minutes, he realized the line of questioning wasn’t about the current political environment or the 1980 election. He realized what we were there for, and it was a joy.

Did you talk about specific performers with Carter, or have talk Carter and fill in the anecdotes?

Wharton: We had not done the research on a lot of the performance footage we used in the film when we did the first interview with Carter. Once it became clear we were moving forward we jumped at the first date they offered for an interview. We fished around to tell us his stories and then we went back to do the second interview, we had done the research and knew more specific things we wanted to ask him about. We got two one-hour interviews. They said, “You can use it however you want, but you literally have an hour.” We were focused on judiciously spending time with him. We were given a special opportunity to have that much time with Carter, and we took it very seriously.

Do you think his associations with these musicians were appropriate? There is some discussion that it was a political risk to associate with pot smokers; they are radical. But at the same time, he leveraged his campaign on their backs. And you show in the film Jerry Brown followed suit, albeit less successfully. 

Wharton: There were a number of articles and press and archival news pieces that I saw where people were suspicious at that time — whether it was a good or bad thing for a presidential candidate to associate with pop stars and what effect this might have on our politics in America. At the time, America wasn’t quite as celebrity-obsessed as we are now. There weren’t people who were famous just for being famous, influencers, or what have you. Other politicians have asked musicians to perform at their rallies. Bernie Sanders was doing that before he dropped out of the race. But there is an organic relationship Jimmy Carter has with these musicians that doesn’t feel forced.

Farrell: Nixon tried to associate himself with Elvis but people didn’t see it as authentic. It’s marketing. This was genuine. Carter invited Dylan and Greg Allman to the Governor’s mansion. He didn’t ask them there to campaign for him for president. These were relationships he genuinely had and built, and it was fortuitous that he could use them. It was less celebrity-focused; it was his genuine love of music and how it connects with the people.

On that same note, what observations do you have about music and politics and how they go hand in hand? There is a line in the film about music reflecting society. 

Wharton: I think that any good politician is going to understand that music is played at football games and pep rallies and political events to excite people and get them riled up. But I think that there’s a fine line between using music as a soundtrack and actually having a real endorsement from a musician. You see where musicians object when certain politicians use their music because they object to the politics.

Farrell: Carter cuts through all that. He cuts through politics. He liked gospel, country, classical, rock, R&B and jazz. It wasn’t that it was 1976 and this is the mood of the country. He tapped into things of the times. It was about the music. 

Wharton: I think he showed that he had a really deep understanding of the meaning behind the music that he was signaling to people. When he quotes Dylan at 1976 Nation Convention, it was a 7-year-old song; it wasn’t a song of the moment. There was a huge divide between the establishment and adult world of politicians, and the youth culture who knew Dylan and the Allman Brothers. That he quotes Dylan lyrics shows he is not grasping at cool and hip but he’s showing he understands the meaning behind Dylan and how it resonates to him in that moment. This is coming out of Watergate and he’s talking that he’s never had more hope in America when many people felt disillusioned. He used Dylan’s lyrics that he sees American is busy being born, not busy dying.

Farrell: Even the jazz on the White House lawn — he brought those musicians there and honored them. It was about the messaging. The powerful thing is the President acknowledges that in an art form, and he used that to convey the racism — that Black and white musicians couldn’t play together historically. 

What about securing the musicians, which is a long list of greats? How did you get them to appear and did you review what they would discuss? 

Wharton: To be honest, a lot of it was because of Jimmy Carter. Carter has a relationship with a number of these artists, so it was, “You’re doing something. Where do you need me to show up?” 

You incorporate interviews, archival footage and performance clips for the film. Can you describe how you assembled the documentary and finding footage of Carter at an Allman Brother’s show, or performing “Salt Peanuts”?

Wharton: It was really quite Herculean task, the research and archival materials. Everything he did was documented for years by multiple outlets. It was a lot to sift through. We have a little road map because we knew about certain interviews we’d done, like Jimmy Buffett playing at a camp rally in Portland. We’d look into that, and while we didn’t know the exact date, we could figure it was sometime around the Oregon primary. And then go to the ABC news archive. We dug around in databases and found stuff that had never been labeled properly or never been transferred. His “Salt Peanuts” performance aired on TV, but those tapes were sitting unseen for 40 years. We wound up with hundreds of hours of footage and thousands of photos. 

I appreciate that you touch on Carter’s civil rights and human rights efforts. What did you learn about his work in making the doc? 

Wharton: One thing that surprised me was how strong and true his moral compass is. I guess I always thought he was a good man, but I didn’t realize to what length he was willing to go to remain true to his moral compass. Some of the stories that we learned making this film were in regard to the Iranian hostage crisis. I didn’t know that he knew to get U.S. public on side was send in bombers and bomb Iran. That’s what his political advisers said he needed to do to win the election, and he refused because the hostages would die if he had done that. At risk to his own political fortune, he did the right thing. He did the same standing by Allman who was arrested on cocaine charges. It was said to be political suicide to associate with someone on trial for drug charges. He saw his friend was going through a difficult time and needed help, and he was there for him.

That was surprising, because you don’t meet people like that very often. 

Farrell: The strength. This perception that came out of Iran hostage crisis, that people think he’s a nice sweet guy, but he’s a strong-willed person. He has the strength of conviction and putting that into action is pretty incredible.

“Jimmy Carter: Rock & Roll President” is available in theaters and virtual cinemas on Wednesday, Sept. 9 and on home entertainment release on Oct. 9.

Michele Bachmann: “Transgender Black Marxists” are “seeking the overthrow of the United States”

Former congresswoman Michele Bachmann warned that Black Lives Matter and anti-fascist demonstrators were working to soften up the U.S. for a communist revolution under Joe Biden.

The Minnesota Republican appeared on televangelist Kenneth Copeland’s “The Victory Channel,” where she claimed Biden and street protesters intended to destroy the economy and impose a global communist government, reported Right Wing Watch.

“Antifa is, if you go to their website, their materials, they are directly traceable to the Communist Party because their goal is the overthrow of the United States government and to bring communism into America,” Bachmann said. “Just like Black Lives Matter, this is not a new movement, either. On their website, these are transgender Marxists, transgender Black Marxists who are seeking the overthrow of the United States and the dissolution of the traditional family.”

Bachmann anticipated criticism of her theory.

“You say, ‘Aren’t you a little overheated? Isn’t this melodramatic?'” Bachmann said. “This is exactly what a communist revolution looks like. They think they’re going to do it by electing Joe Biden and then once Joe Biden is elected, they think that these Davos, Switzerland, meetings that go on, they think that what they’re going to do is have the United States’ economy collapse, move to a digital currency globally, and then we move into a global-type government. I mean, it’s bizarre, but this is their goal.”

The former lawmaker said none of this should come as a surprise to Christians who have been awaiting the apocalypse.

“For people who know their Bible, this is exactly what the prophets told us,” Bachmann said. “So, we stand on the word of God, the Bible, and we say, ‘Satan, flee, we’re going to stand on the truth of God,’ and so that’s why now more than ever, between now and the election, what we need to do is pray and cry out to Almighty God and ask for his protection over America and to speak in this election.”

People who wear face masks become less sick if they do contract coronavirus, researchers find

Face masks are a well-proven preventative measure for slowing the spread of the novel coronavirus. But it turns out that mask-wearing has a second, surprising benefit, too, in that they may actually confer heightened immunity upon those who wear them. 

That’s the conclusion of a fascinating new study from University of California, San Francisco researchers. The study’s findings: mask-wearing, aside from limiting virus spread, seems to make those who do contract coronavirus feel less sick.

The article, which was co-authored by Dr. Monica Gandhi and Dr. George W. Rutherford, reviews the history of masking during the coronavirus pandemic and goes into how wearing a mask both limits the spread of the infection and protects the person wearing the facial covering. The researchers also note that the importance of wearing a mask is particularly acute in this pandemic, writing, “SARS-CoV-2 has the protean ability to cause myriad clinical manifestations, ranging from a complete lack of symptoms to pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and death.”

Salon spoke with Gandhi about her research.

“What we’re trying to discuss and put forth is the possibility that we can drive up immunity to COVID-19 safely,” Gandhi told Salon. “The strange part about this virus is that many, many people don’t even know they have it. They’re totally healthy well and asymptomatic. That population can be disturbing because they can spread the virus, which is why we recommend masking. We’re interested in driving up the proportion of people who get less sick. Why not make people less sick?”

Gandhi says wearing a mask appears to increase the probability that you will be asymptomatic. “Previous work by our group seems to indicate that you can drive up the proportion of people who are asymptomatic by universal, population-wide masking,” she told Salon. “By everyone putting on a mask, you reduce the amount of aerosols that you get in, and then you are less likely to get sick.” In other words, she says, “we are arguing that … population-wide masking will sort of trigger immunity in the population, and bridge us to a vaccine.”

Gandhi’s research builds on a paper she co-authored in July that was published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, which presented “the hypothesis that universal masking reduces the ‘inoculum’ or dose of the virus for the mask-wearer, leading to more mild and asymptomatic infection manifestations.”

“In the previous one we were arguing that masking will reduce the severity of infection in the population, and then we’re taking it one step further with the evidence that we’ve gotten over the last month, that by reducing the severity of infection in the population… we’re going to drive up population level of immunity,” Gandhi explained. “The common word is ‘herd immunity’ while we wait for a vaccine.”

Gandhi also expressed concerns about President Donald Trump, who has long downplayed the importance of wearing a mask, recently tried to pressure a reporter into taking off a mask and his ridiculed his election opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, for frequently wearing a mask.

“As a scientist, the example that President Trump is setting is terrible for COVID-19 control in this country,” Gandhi told Salon. “What we’re trying to argue is not only does [masking] reduce transmission, but it reduces severe illness and it could even get us to immunity.”

Describing masking as “one of the most important pillars of pandemic control,” Gandhi observed that “I just cannot believe that any leader of a country would mock it, because I think that sets a really poor example for his followers.” She explained that “in every country where this wasn’t questioned, where this wasn’t mocked, and this was modeled by leaders, they have managed very quickly get on top of their pandemics and open society.”

Dr. Eric Feigl-Ding, Senior Fellow at the Federation of American Scientists, previously told Salon by email that “masks are important for catching droplets and microdroplet aerosols expelled while talking and breathing (not just sneezing or coughing), [as] recognized by WHO [World Health Organization] and 239 scientists.” Feigl-Ding also stressed that “testing saves lives too, in addition to masks.”

Short on cash, Trump campaign appears to be hiding large-dollar payments to top staff

The Trump campaign faces a cash crunch, having spent about $800 million of the roughly $1.1 billion it raised since January 2019. At the same time, it appears to be hiding payments to top officials charged with cracking down on profligacy.

Salon reported last week that the Trump campaign has not disclosed any payments to senior adviser Jason Miller or new campaign manager Bill Stepien, who took over Brad Parscale’s role in July, according to mandatory Federal Election Commission filings.

The report cited court documents showing that the campaign appears to be paying Miller, a top campaign strategist, as much as $35,000 a month. That is effectually a $420,000 salary, or more than the presidency pays. 

The campaign reports salary payments to chief of staff Stephanie Alexander and senior adviser Katrina Pierson, each of whom earn $20,000 a month. However, it does not appear to issue similar reports for COO Jeff DeWit or senior advisers Kim Guilfoyle, Bob Paduchik, Bill Shine, and Lara Trump, federal records show.

By comparison, Democratic rival Joe Biden’s presidential campaign reports regular bi-monthly payroll disbursements to campaign manager Greg Schultz, totaling about $7,700 a month.

It is unclear how much Stepien makes; the Trump campaign did not reply to Salon’s requests for comment. But a New York Times report revealed over the weekend that Stepien had taken a pay cut when he accepted the position, after which President Donald Trump expressed glee. (The campaign pays one of Parscale’s firms, Parscale Strategies, more than $47,700 a month, per filings.)

“Since Bill Stepien replaced Mr. Parscale in July, the campaign has imposed a series of belt-tightening measures that have reshaped initiatives, including hiring practices, travel and the advertising budget,” The Times reported.

However, the details of those new hiring practices remain unclear. The campaign brought Miller aboard in June, following six weeks of lucrative lobbying work for two clients who paid him between $15,000 and $24,000 apiece over that time, Salon previously reported.

Before that, court filings obtained by Salon showed that Miller was making nearly $60,000 a month, about $20,000 of which came from Steve Bannon’s nonprofit Citizens of the American Republic. Investigators are now eyeing the entity in a federal money laundering case against Bannon and three co-conspirators.

“We held on to cash to make sure that we’ll have the firepower that we need” for the fall, Miller told The Times.

Though the Trump campaign does not disclose payments to Miller or Stepien, it does disclose payments to Jamestown Associates, a media company founded in New Jersey which specializes in campaign publicity. Miller was once a top executive and partner there.

Stepien also has ties to Jamestown Associates, through former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. The Republican ousted Stepien as his campaign chief in the wake of the “Bridgegate” scandal but went on to praise his elevation to the top slot in Trump’s operation this year.

FEC filings show that the campaign has made several payments to Jamestown this year, in the range of approximately $7,500 and $45,500 through June. In July, those payments increased significantly — including a $78,394 payment on July 13 and a $133,800 payment on July 28.

Miller joined the campaign in June, and Stepien was promoted by the campaign on July 15. The campaign reports that the disbursements were for “video production services.”

When asked if the missing payroll receipts for two top-level officials, including the campaign manager, seemed unusual, Brendan Fischer, the director of the Federal Reform Program at the Campaign Legal Center, told Salon, “It doesn’t surprise me at all. The Trump campaign has disguised millions of dollars in payments to personnel and vendors by routing the money through LLCs created or managed by senior Trump campaign officials.”

The CLC recently filed an FEC complaint alleging that the Trump campaign had unlawfully hidden at least $170 million in payments through shell companies, thereby keeping its spending a secret form the public, law enforcement and its own donors. Some of those hidden payments have allegedly gone towards salaries — such as to Kimberly Guilfoyle and Lara Trump — and were made through an entity controlled by Parscale.

The campaign has also paid out a reported $2.3 million to the president’s private businesses.

“This is illegal,” Fischer told Salon at the time.

This spring, a report suggested that Parscale paid Guilfoyle and Lara Trump $180,000 a year, roughly equal to a top White House salary. Miller’s recent court filings suggest that his campaign salary might be more than double that amount. (Salon has not independently verified that report, which cited “top Republicans with knowledge of the payments.”)

A great many of Trump’s donors contribute in small dollar amounts.

Death Star blows itself up: Trump ran his campaign finances like his businesses — into the ground

The “Death Star”: At the beginning of this year, that’s what Donald Trump’s then-campaign manager, Brad Parscale, dubbed the billion-dollar fundraising operation at the heart of the Trump campaign.

The choice was a telling one, largely as a reminder that many Republicans in the Trump era are not only aware that they’re the bad guys, but are proud to align themselves with some of the notorious villains of pop culture history. But more than one commentator was also quick to point out that the Death Star isn’t just a symbol of evil, but of hubris, because it’s destroyed by the plucky heroes who may be outgunned but have the wit and courage to defeat the foolhardy tyrants of the Empire. 

“Dude, the Death Star gets blown up in the end of just about every Star Wars movie,” MSNBC host Joe Scarborough tweeted back in May, in response to Parscale bragging that he was about to “start pressing FIRE for the first time” on Trump’s “juggernaut campaign.”

Life rarely plays out like a children’s sci-fi movie, but I am happy to say that the people who made Death Star jokes turned out to be right. The Trump campaign’s Death Star had its own version of the ray-shielded particle exhaust vent that allowed the Rebel Alliance to fly directly into its reactor core to blow up the entire apparatus: The greed and incompetence that defines Trump and everyone around him. 

On Monday night, the New York Times published an article so satisfying that it felt almost pornographic, about how the Trump campaign has burned through most of that Death Star cash, with little to show for it — except, of course, when it comes to the bank accounts of the Trump family and their ancillary leeches. 

It appears much of the problem was the way that Trump himself, along with Parscale, the Trump’s family and other associates, treated the campaign as a personal piggybank. Trump paid his family’s enormous legal bills with campaign cash. Money was routinely spent to fluff Trump’s ego, as with the reported $11 million spent on Super Bowl ads. Nearly a third of the cash was routed through “a single limited liability company linked to Trump campaign officials.” The partners of Trump’s two sons are literally on the payroll. Trump’s own incompetence is also a factor, leading to massive losses as he impulsively switched the Republican convention from Charlotte to Jacksonville to and then, effectively, to Washington. And the campaign spent far more money on fundraising than is typical, suggesting that Parscale was more interested in bragging about his Death Star than making it run efficiently. 

Say what you will about Darth Vader, but at least he didn’t destroy the Empire by greedily sucking all its resources dry so nothing was left to fight the rebels. 

What makes this entire situation even funnier is that it was entirely predictable: Give Donald Trump a billion dollars and he blows it all. That’s how the man has operated his entire career. Trump’s history of running various businesses into bankruptcy — including Atlantic City casinos — isn’t exactly some big secret. Of course he runs his campaign the same way. Giving the man money is like lighting it on fire, and always has been. 

Affluent people are often keen to disproving the American faith that wealth reflects intelligence. Trump has managed to survive for decades as a financial vampire, getting by on his ability to talk rich people into wasting their money on him. First, it was the banks who kept loaning him money, long after he proved he couldn’t be trusted with it. Now it’s big Republican donors who keep giving Trump money, even though the thanks they get for it, as billionaire Sheldon Adelson recently discovered, is Trump yelling at them for not giving more. 

The rational thing for rich Republican donors to do right now would be to cut their losses and stop giving Trump cash. It’s possible that this is, in fact, happening. Republicans have still not released their August fundraising numbers, although the Democratic nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, released his record-setting numbers with great fanfare. The silence from the Republican camp strongly suggests their haul might not be so impressive. 

Still, it’s worth remembering that, in the past, banks have kept writing checks to Trump — even giving him an “allowance” of $450,000 a month in 1990 — in the vain hope that by keeping his real estate empire afloat they might can recover some of the money he had already lost. This is literally called the “sunk cost fallacy,” and it’s famously hard for people — including people at supposedly savvy financial institutions — to stop throwing good money after bad. There’s always the hope that all that previous investment will pay off if just a little more scratch is put into the project. 

And make no mistake, wealthy Republican donors see their spending on the party as an investment. Helping get Trump elected in 2016 has paid off enormously, leading to a major tax overhaul that is redirecting huge amounts of money from the pockets of working people toward the already wealthy. Keeping those tax cuts is a major priority for people of the Sheldon Adelson class. So even though Trump as squandered all the other money they’ve given him, there’s still an incentive to try to push this grifter over the finish line with one last cash infusion. 

To make things worse, the New York Times story — which was co-authored by perpetual Trump beat-sweetener Maggie Haberman — is stuffed with assurances that the campaign’s days of reckless spending are over.

“Since Bill Stepien replaced Mr. Parscale in July, the campaign has imposed a series of belt-tightening measures,” the article reassures skittish would-be donors.

The article also quotes senior Trump strategist Jason Miller claiming that the campaign’s relatively light ad spending at present reflects a decision to “sav[e] it for when it really matters” and promising that the Trump team will “have the firepower that we need” for fall advertising. 

This, of course, is the same Jason Miller who was getting paid $20,000 a month by a nonprofit currently entangled in the fraud investigation that led to the arrest and indictment of former 2016 Trump campaign chief Steve Bannon. So it would be foolish to take Miller’s word on anything, especially the topic of whether the campaign is acting less like a giant grift and being more responsible with donor money. 

Ultimately, Trump has never really planned on trying to win this election through the traditional means of campaigning and persuading Americans to vote for him. Instead, his focus appears to be on leveraging taxpayer money and the immense power of his office in a series of schemes to steal the election. If he “wins,” it will almost certainly be due to the success of those schemes, not because of the money given to him by members of the ultra-wealthy elite who are happy to sell out our democracy for tax cuts. 

Still, we all need a laugh in these dark times, so don’t feel the slightest bit guilty for making fun of all these rich, immoral monsters who kept writing checks to Trump, even though it was obvious he would either waste their money or steal it. Trump still needs to get a good deal closer to Biden in the polls than he is right now to get the election within stealing range. If he fails to snag a second illegitimate term in office, his own greed and incompetence will have played a role in his downfall. That will be poetic justice, and we can all take pleasure in that.