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Union workers at Georgia College to stage “die-in” to protest nation-leading COVID rate

A small liberal arts college in rural Georgia has seen a COVID surge in the last two weeks that has made it one of the nation’s leading hotspots.

In response, campus workers at Georgia College in Milledgeville, part of the University System of Georgia, are holding an on-campus “die-in” Friday to protest what employees see as the school’s “willful negligence” in failing to control the coronavirus through the first weeks of classes.

The COVID tracking page on the school’s website has posted 495 cases since June, 450 of those among students who have returned to campus since the week of Aug. 17. The New York Times college case tracker ranked the school 14th nationwide in total cases Thursday. That number represents about 7% of Georgia College’s total 7,000 enrollment, easily the highest rate of the top 25 schools on that list.

By comparison, the Times’ tracker ranks infections at the University of Texas in ninth place overall — but that represents just 483 reported cases out of 50,000 enrolled students. Aside from Texas Christian University, which has about 10,000 students, and University of Alabama at Birmingham — a ranking that some of its 17,000 students and administration both protest — none of the schools ahead of Georgia College on the Times’ list have fewer than 20,000 students, and no school has reported more than 1,000 cases. Large state schools with enrollments of 50,000 or more, such as the University of Michigan, University of Florida and Penn State, have fewer cases than Georgia College.

(Disclosure: The reporter attended Georgia College for graduate school and later taught.)

The workers’ action is part of the United Campus Workers of Georgia’s (UCWGA) statewide campaign to hold the University System of Georgia Board of Regents responsible for outbreaks due to what a UCWGA press statement calls a “forced campus reopening.”

“Union members demand choice in online teaching and learning, increased testing capacity, quarantine housing for positive students, hazard pay for all essential workers, and no layoffs in the event of campus closure,” the statement says.

A non-tenured faculty and union member, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that the school is “acting as if they can’t do anything, but there are a number of reasons to believe they could be doing more,” pointing to in-person regulations.

The die-in is in solidarity with Georgia College’s sister school, the state flagship University of Georgia, which held one earlier this year.

The action, scheduled for two hours from 8 to 10 a.m. will feature faculty and staff lying on the grass — socially distanced — with signs with messages such as, “We don’t want to die” and “We don’t want our students to die.”

Georgia College President Steve Dorman posted a welcome video last week urging students to practice social distancing. Administrators plan to work with private off-campus apartment complexes to dissuade students from holding large gatherings, which the school holds responsible for most of the surge.

A tenured faculty member told Salon that the circumstances were “some dark shit.”

“I think what I fear the most is that they’ll get away with it — with treating faculty, staff and students, not to mention the local community, as utterly expendable. This is some dark shit,” the professor said. “You can feel the long arm of the Republican money machine all over it.”

Faculty were reportedly told that they could teach remotely only if they could prove one of a dozen or so health conditions on a list — such as high blood pressure, or being over 65 — but that did not extend one degree further, for example, to faculty members who may live with someone who is elderly or ill or has underlying conditions.

“Many faculty and students here are very, very disturbed by the willful negligence on the part of the USG and our own administration,” another faculty member told Salon, again on the condition of anonymity.

 

In a statement provided to Salon, the university supported the right to free speech and concern for well-being on campus. 

“Georgia College fully supports the freedoms of speech and expression for our faculty, staff and students,” the school said, adding that “The health and well-being of our students and campus community will always be our top priority.”

“The university and it’s faculty members are doing all they can to ensure that students have an outstanding academic experience. For students in quarantine, faculty members will work to make sure learning continuity continues until they are able to return to campus safely,” the statement said.

However, faculty argue that the school has not established independent quarantine facilities, and the school did not answer Salon’s specific question about the matter.

Faculty working groups developed a multi-part reopening plan over the summer, including rules and policies, one of those being that classes must be in-person but office hours and student meetings could be virtual. Though faculty were included in these policy groups, multiple professors told Salon that many concerns were dismissed out of hand, and they did not expect that in-person teaching would continue if case numbers surged as they have.

“Most people in these groups, I think, thought that if case numbers went up, they would go to the all-remote plan, to ensure everyone’s safety,” the tenured professor said. “So here we are, two weeks in. Some people have 50 percent of their class populations in quarantine or isolation.”

Campus workers say that the university administration seems to be displacing blame onto students, threatening them with suspension if they attend parties and sending students who fall ill home, with no reserved quarantine locations in place.

The school, which pointed out that it has spent “the past several months” preparing for in-person classes with social distancing and “other mitigation measures,” pointed to the students in its statement.

“We continue to remind our students that COVID-19 can spread rapidly at off-campus social gatherings, where social distancing and other mitigation measures are not maintained. With only 21 employee cases at Georgia College since June, our data is showing that the spread of COVID-19 is largely happening in off campus locations among our student population,” the statement said.

“I think most faculty find this appalling,” a professor said. “Those in the wrong are the people running the show, who brought the students back into what was, in early August, already a precarious environment.”

That environment extends to Milledgeville — which has itself registered as a coronavirus hotspotmonth after month — a relatively poor city of about 19,000 residents, with the college campus dominating its manicured antebellum downtown.

The Milledgeville Union-Recorder reported earlier this month that Navicent Health Baldwin Hospital’s intensive care unit has been full since the pandemic hit the city in mid-March.

Todd Dixon, the hospital’s CEO, told the paper that they have experienced about a 3% overall increase in admissions from previous years.

“We also have seen a 26 percent increase in our average daily census,” said Dixon.

On the other side of Milledgeville — which was the capital of Georgia from 1804 to 1868, and was left untouched by Union Army Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman’s scorched-earth march through Georgia during the Civil War — sits another campus: The empty, cratered brick dorms of Central State Hospital, which was originally called Georgia Lunatic Asylum and was once the largest mental hospital in the world, with 12,000 inmates.

Central State has seen at least 10 coronavirus deaths, according to local news reports, including staff.

Shawn Brooks, vice president for student affairs at Georgia College, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution last week that no students have reported serious symptoms, a claim faculty say is flatly false.

One non-tenured professor told Salon that students had in fact been admitted to the hospital for “quite serious symptoms — not one, but multiple,” but would not provide further details out of fear that it might reveal identifying information to the administration.

The school, which has mandated masks on campus, struck a partnership with the state to provide testing at a local health outpost, private providers and two local pharmacies, but results can take up to a week, according to faculty and reports in the Journal-Constitution. There is reportedly no mechanism in place to compel students or employees to report results to the school, so public statistics are derived entirely from self-reported cases.

Brooks told the Atlanta paper that the spike traced to students who were overexcited after returning to campus in August.

“They get off campus and relax their methods of masking and social distancing,” he said.

However, faculty members told Salon that the school had reneged on its promise that fraternity and sorority rushes, held before classes start, would not occur in person. Furthermore, students weren’t required to be tested before arriving.

The school did install distanced desks and tables in classrooms as well as plexiglass barriers, and loaded up on hand sanitizer — though it is still not available in all classrooms.

“Rooms are only cleaned once a day, and many of us still don’t have hand sanitizer in the classroom,” a professor said. “There was none in buildings for first two weeks.”

“It’s not easy to take collective action here. As you can imagine, many are afraid to speak up for fear of retaliation,” the tenured faculty member said. “But the lack of ethics and of general humanity is stunning. And apparently it’s largely about housing revenue.”

Rolling Stone reported Aug. 11 that it had seen documents that a property-management company called Corvias had pressured the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia not to impose limits on dorm capacity this fall.

In response to the letter, Rolling Stone reported, the Board of Regents considered directing at least one school, Georgia State University, to lift its 75% occupancy cap on all dorms controlled by Corvias.

Trump wanted to “maim” and “tear gas” migrants at US-Mexico border, former DHS official claims

Former Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Chief of Staff Miles Taylor claimed in a podcast earlier this week that President Donald Trump told administration officials he wanted to “maim” and “shoot” migrants at the southern border.

Taylor, who served as chief of staff to former DHS Kirstjen Nielsen before departing the agency with her in April 2019, made the remarks Monday on an episode of “The New Abnormal” podcast from The Daily Beast.

Taylor said he could not get through a meeting without Trump “doing 20 tangents, becoming irascible, turning red in the face, demanding a diet Coke, spewing spit.”

“Literally out of goddamn nowhere, he’d be like, ‘You know who’s just my favorite guy? The MyPillow guy. Do any of you have those pillows?'” Taylor said, referencing his first in-person interaction with the president, at a meeting about the construction of a wall on the southern border with Mexico.

“Donald Trump hates it when people take notes,” Taylor recalled, reasoning it had something to do with the content of those meetings.

“He says, ‘We got to do this, this, this and this,’ all of which are probably impossible, illegal unethical,” Taylor said, echoing allegations from a number of former senior staffers such as former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and former National Security Adviser John Bolton. 

As he was writing down Trump’s ideas while the president spoke, Taylor said, “He looks over me and he goes, ‘You fu*king taking notes?'”

“I’ve actually seen him do that so many times in meetings,” Taylor said. “‘Why the hell are you taking notes?'”

When discussing border security, Taylor said, Trump would concoct “sickening” schemes “to pierce the flesh” of migrants at the southern border, “maim” and gas them.

“He wanted to maim them, and tear gas them and shoot them,” Taylor said. “And I’m not even being hyperbolic.”

On one occasion, he said, Trump asked for steel bollards “so sharp that I want them to pierce human flesh if they climb it.”

“Why don’t we just shoot them?” Taylor said the president asked, referencing migrants approaching the border in “caravans” in 2018.

“This was a man with no humanity whatsoever,” Taylor said.

Around the time Taylor joined Google in a policy role in Sept. 2019, The New York Times and The Washington Post published stories citing administration officials with details similar to his descriptions to The Daily Beast.

The Washington Post reported that Trump wanted U.S. border forces armed with bayonets to block people from crossing from Mexico and even suggested fortifying a border wall with a water-filled trench, or a moat, which could be stocked with snakes or alligators.

The New York Times had first reported Trump’s proposal for a moat filled with dangerous reptiles, which the president allegedly wanted the wall “electrified” with “spikes on top that could piece human flesh.” Trump also reportedly suggested that soldiers shoot migrants in the legs to slow them down.

A lifelong Republican, Taylor has made a series of high-profile media appearances recently on the heels of an anti-Trump opinion piece, which gained traction after its Aug. 17 publication in the Washington Post. Taylor has said that Trump claimed “magical authorities” beyond the law and has announced the formation of a group comprising Trump administration officials — including at least two current senior officials — dedicated to defeating Trump in November.

“We’ll have a broad group of Republicans focused on denying Trump a second term, and most importantly, planning for a post-Trump GOP and America,” he told NBC News on Tuesday.

Taylor, as DHS chief of staff, played a not insignificant role in implementing the child separation policy at the Mexican border. In one email sent to Nielsen ahead of the rollout, Taylor coined it “the Protecting Children Narrative.”

Taylor’s hiring at Google was controversial at the time, and led to several employees’ departure from the company. One of those employees, Laurence Berland, published an opinion piece in BuzzFeed News on the heels of Taylor’s Aug. 17 op-ed.

“Like he did in his role at DHS, Taylor is again crafting a ​narrative​, one in which he is another of Trump’s victims, but he and others who played a part in the atrocities of the Trump administration cannot be absolved of their past simply by supporting Biden’s bid for the presidency,” Berland wrote. “If they truly are asking for our forgiveness, they will first need to admit that what they did was wrong, and say those words that Trump himself surely never will: ‘I’m sorry.'”

Twitter forces Ann Coulter to delete tweet fêting alleged Kenosha shooter as ideal president

Ann Coulter was at the front of the pack of right-wing provocateurs who fêted a 17-year-old arrested Wednesday on first-degree murder charges for fatally shooting protesters in Kenosha, Wis., tweeting she wanted the teen “as my president.”

A Twitter spokesperson confirmed to Salon that the platform forced Coulter to delete her tweet for violating its rules about glorifying violence.

“The tweet glorified violence, specifically condoning an act of violence that may be replicable by a civilian,” the spokesperson said in an email.

Former San Francisco Giants player Aubrey Huff also lauded the alleged suspect, and Fox News host Tucker Carlson took to his defense in a fiercely criticized segment on his show Wednesday.

Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times Magazine reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones tweeted that Carlson had “justified murder” as calls for the network to fire him accelerated.

Multiple Fox News stars later echoed Carlson’s line of argument, however, including commentator Katie Pavlich.

RELATED: Calls grow for Tucker Carlson to be fired from Fox News over accusations of “inciting violence”

“On the argument of vigilante justice, when you have no police around to defend businesses and people who are being attacked — and their livelihoods burned to the ground — then there is a void that is filled,” Pavlich said Thursday on Fox News.

Network veteran Chris Wallace later challenged Pavlich, calling vigilante justice a “crime.”

“Just as it is fair to say that rioting and looting is a completely inappropriate response to George Floyd or Jacob Blake, vigilante justice is a completely inappropriate response to the rioting in the street,” Wallace said. “There is no justification for what happened in Kenosha, and vigilante justice is a crime and should be punished as a crime.”

Defenders extended to Congress with Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., calling the shootings “100% justified self defense” on Twitter.

“Do not try to take a weapon away from a man or bear the consequences,” Gosar wrote. “The criminals here: Kenosha local government that allows the riots, burning and looting night after night. Armed citizens defending themselves will fill the vacuum.”

The shootings came amid civil unrest following the shooting of Jacob Blake, a 29-year-old father who was captured in a viral video being shot in the back at point blank range by Kenosha police. A family attorney said Blake’s children were present on the scene. He is now paralyzed. 

Kenosha Chief of Police Daniel Miskinis appeared to extend the blame to violators of the city’s 8 p.m. local time curfew.

“Everybody involved was out after the curfew,” Miskinis said in a news conference Wednesday. “I’m not gonna make a great deal of it, but the point is: The curfew’s in place to protect. Had persons not been out involved in violation of that, perhaps the situation that unfolded would not have happened.”

The suspect, identified by police as Kyle Rittenhouse, was revealed to be avid supporter of law enforcement and President Donald Trump by BuzzFeed News. Following the shooting, Rittenhouse fled across the state line to his Illinois home town and later turned himself in at a local police station. He is due for a Friday court hearing regarding extradition to Wisconsin, where he is wanted on a warrant charging first-degree intentional homicide.

Right-wing responses to the shooting shocked many people on social media such as Hannah-Jones and Shannon Watts, the Founder of Moms Demand Action, for their apparent attempts to justify violence. Huff, the former Giant, called Rittenhouse “a national treasure” in a since-deleted tweet.

“This goes beyond being provocateurs,” Shannon Watts, the Founder of Moms Demand Action, tweeted. “Ann Coulter, Tucker Carlson and Fox News are encouraging Americans to murder one another.”

Carlson characterized Rittenhouse’s alleged vigilanteism as an effort to “maintain order.”

“How shocked are we that 17-year-olds with rifles decided they had to maintain order when no one else would?” he asked.

Carlson also argued that state and local authorities had “abandoned” the city and “refused to enforce the law,” claiming that they “stood back and watched Kenosha burn,” despite reams of video evidence showing police on the scene.

“So are we really surprised that looting and arson accelerated to murder?” Carlson wondered.

Donald Trump Jr. also swung to Carlson’s defense, claiming that his words had been “willfully twisted” while misquoting those words. (Carlson said “authorities”; he did not say “leaders.”)

Vice President Mike Pence tapped into the unrest Wednesday to attack Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden as a hallmark of his Republican National Convention keynote address, warning audiences that “you won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America.”

Trump swiped $44 billion from FEMA as he undermined unemployment negotiations before Hurricane Laura

Lawmakers are concerned that President Donald Trump’s decision to swipe $44 billion from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) will leave its disaster fund depleted amid a record-setting hurricane season.

Trump issued a memorandum allowing states to use $44 billion from FEMA’s Disaster Relief Fund to pay $300 per week in enhanced federal unemployment benefits earlier this month. The move came after Trump and Senate Republicans refused to budge on their demands to slash boosted unemployment benefits, repeating a widely-debunked claim that the extra pandemic aid was a disincentive for workers to return to their jobs. House Democrats, meanwhile, approved a full extension of the $600-per-week benefit back in May.

After Hurricane Laura made landfall this week in Louisiana amid a hurricane season which has already seen a record-setting number of named storms, lawmakers worry Trump’s move could leave FEMA unprepared to respond to recovery efforts. If the entire $44 billion is used, it could deplete the disaster relief agency’s budget to as low as $25 billion, according to the Louisiana news outlet NOLA.com.

Craig Fugate, the former FEMA administrator under former President Barack Obama, told the outlet that he expected Congress would approve extra funding as it has done in the past.

“This Congress prints money faster than China can lend it to us,” he said.

But Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., who chairs the Homeland Security Committee, which oversees FEMA, expressed doubts that Trump would approve additional funds after he balked at providing crucial pandemic relief to hard-hit cities and states in the latest round of negotiations. He argued that the public should not rely on unallocated funds after Senate Republicans refused to compromise on the pandemic relief package.

“We’re in the midst of this pandemic, and we have hurricanes and wildfires and the Senate is in recess,” he told the outlet.

Five members of the Homeland Security Committee wrote a letter to FEMA Administrator Peter Gaynor expressing that “concerns remain whether the amount will be enough given the current COVID-19 response expenditures, other current open disaster reimbursements and any future storms or disasters.”

The letter noted that “the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recently amended its forecast to predict 19 to 25 named storms this year.”

Hurricane Laura made landfall Thursday as a category 4 storm, leaving widespread destruction in its path. Rep. Donald Payne Jr., D-N.J., who chairs a subcommittee on emergency preparedness and response, said he was “extremely concerned about the health and safety of Americans when Hurricane Laura comes ashore.”

“The fact that President Trump would take up to $44 billion from FEMA’s Disaster Relief Fund right before a possibly record-setting hurricane season shows his inability to protect our country during a crisis,” he said in a statement. “If he had convinced his Senate allies to pass our Heroes Act, we would have extended unemployment benefits and still had plenty of money for FEMA and states to use to help Americans recover from a natural disaster, like Hurricane Laura.”

But Republicans pushed back on the concerns. Rep. Garret Graves, R-La., told NOLA.com that “there is no way that we will leave our citizens hanging out there,” predicting that Congress will “just print more” money for relief if necessary. 

But Paul Rainwater, a disaster response expert who worked on Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal’s team during hurricanes like Katrina and Rita, warned that relief funds could be delayed even if Congress does provide extra funding.

“I wish the president would have found another fund to use or worked something out with Congress,” he told the outlet. “You have to have money in the pot so people can draw it down.”

The active hurricane season is far from the only threat with which FEMA will have to contend. Iowa was recently hit with a rare and devastating storm, and many parts of California and the western U.S. face historic wildfires.

“There is a reason the Constitution gave Congress the sole power to authorize government expenditures,” Payne said. “It was to prevent reckless presidents from taking money from one program to fund another one.”

Republican policies lead to shorter lives, new study finds

The United States trails many other developed countries when it comes to life expectancy, but how long one lives can have a lot to do with where that person lives in the U.S. and how conservative its policies are. And Michael Hobbes, in an article for HuffPost, discusses the connection between GOP policies and shorter life expectancy and a new study showing how destructive those policies can be.

“In 2014,” Hobbes notes, “American life expectancy fell backward for the first time in 21 years. U.S. lifespans slid lower for another three years straight before barely ticking upward in 2018.”

This month, the Milbank Quarterly published a study that breaks down the connection between where Americans live and how long they live.

“Conservative policies, the researchers found, are the driving force behind America’s declining lifespans,” Hobbes observes.

According to Jennifer Karas Montez, a sociologist at Syracuse University and the study’s lead author, “Across a huge range of issues, the more liberal version of state policies predicts longer life expectancy, and the conservative version predicts shorter life expectancy.”

Hobbes explains that the study published in Milbank Quarterly “illuminates the choice before Americans in the 2020 election. While the Republican Party has declined to release a national policy platform for the next four years, the GOP currently holds 29 state legislatures and 26 governorships and has spent decades enacting its preferred policies in conservative states. Over the last decade, a growing body of research has found that these policies are negatively affecting the health of constituents.”

A hurricane hunter describes what it feels like to fly inside Hurricane Laura’s eye

Last night, as Hurricane Laura crept closer to making landfall, Captain Garrett Black, aerial reconnaissance weather officer for the 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron, hopped in a WC-130J aircraft and prepared to fly into the storm. As a hurricane hunter, Black’s goal was to descend into the eye of the hurricane and obtain accurate readings on top wind speeds. “We documented winds anywhere from 120 to 130 knots at the surface,” Black told Salon in an interview on Thursday afternoon. Black’s data collection ends up being a crucial component for weather forecasters, whose predictions end up saving lives. “Once the data is there, the forecasters on the floor have the ability to use our data, along with other data that they have streaming and to kind of put in a good picture of what’s going on,” Black said.

Hurricane Laura made landfall early Thursday morning shortly after 1 a.m. in Cameron, Louisiana. The National Hurricane Center warned the previous day that an “unsurvivable storm surge with large and destructive waves will cause catastrophic damage.” As of Thursday evening, four deaths have been linked to the storm in Louisiana. Over 1.5 million people in the coastal regions of Louisiana and Texas were under some form of evacuation orders. Here, Black describes what it was like flying into the hurricane. As always, this interview has been condensed and edited for print.

How did you become a hurricane hunter?

I joined the Air Force almost seven years ago, doing army support weather, and then about five years ago I joined the Hurricane Hunters. My degree is in meteorology, so I became our weather officer with the Air Force. I’ve been flying with Hurricane Hunters for about five years now and it’s been pretty active the last five years, so it’s been a very interesting start to my career.

So you flew through Hurricane Laura last night. What was that like?

It’s obviously a very strong and powerful category 4, high-end category 4 hurricane. And it was a very interesting mission since it was a landfall mission — meaning that while we were in the storm it made landfall in Louisiana — so those are always a very unique type of storm for us to fly. And it’s always quite humbling when you know that there’s [a] real impact going on at the surface. The storm was not completely over water at that point, but it was a very turbulent and bumpy ride, quite a bit of lightning, especially in the northern sections of the storm. We ended up getting pretty strong winds and it was a long night for the entire crew.

Can you share more about that turbulence? Is it like normal airplane turbulence that you would experience on a commercial flight?

We always try to figure out what kind of turbulence we’re going to end up going through, and it changes a lot to even in the same storm. So, our first pass through the storm was actually relatively smooth, believe it or not. But on our outbound leg we ended up getting quite a bit of turbulence . . . . we get bumped around a little bit, but we take safety to the utmost importance. We’re very trained to deal with those kinds of things, and our pilots up front are experts at handling the aircraft in those kinds of environments.

Did you fly into Hurricane Laura’s eye? What was that like?

We made what we call six hurricane penetrations last night to the storm. We got into the storm environment around nine or 10 o’clock central time, and we were flying in the eye wall and into the center of Hurricane Laura until about three in the morning before it completely made landfall. At that time, we moved back to our home base to get some rest. It was a long few hours there and we were able to get into the center about six different times.

Since it was such a strong storm, it has what we call the “stay effect.” The eye wall surrounding the center was tall. Thunderstorms going up beyond 40,000 and 50,000 feet. Obviously the center of the eye was very clear above us, so when we made it through the worst of the weather in the eye wall and we got in the center, we could actually see the stars and some of the illumination from the moon inside. And it was real clear and calm in the eye. It’s a very eerie feeling and very humbling feeling too, to know you’re in the center of a very powerful hurricane. It’s just a very unique experience that most people honestly don’t don’t get to experience, so it’s very interesting.

When you’re flying into the hurricane, what’s the most information you’re looking for? What’s the purpose of the mission?

Our main goal is to get into the actual storm at about 7,000 feet, so fairly low to the surface. Obviously we have satellites now and that gives forecasters at the National Hurricane Center a good overview of what’s going on. But we’re actually able to get in the storm and really sample the intricate details of what’s going on close to the surface.

So our main goal is to go in and find the exact center of the storm. The stronger hurricane, typically it’s a little easier to find with the eye. But we’re looking for the strongest winds that we can find as well. Our main things are finding the exact center and then how strong the winds are, and while we do that our loadmaster is releasing dropsondes, an instrument that falls from the aircraft to the surface of the water that’s collecting wind speed, wind direction, temperature, dew point and sea level pressure. We send all of that information directly to the National Hurricane Center so they can see what’s going on in real-time to get the forecasts as accurate as possible.

I’ve read in other interviews with Hurricane Hunters that hurricanes have been described as having their own personalities. And I’m curious if you could describe what Hurricane Laura’s personality is like?

Every storm does have its own personality, and ours was very unique with it making landfall, so we definitely had some impacts from the land. It had a little bit of a different feel to it, which probably explains why we got bumped around a fair amount after our first pass. But it was just very electric, and very dynamic, compared to a lot that we fly [into]. The eye wall max winds stretched out pretty far — and a lot of times you don’t see that for stronger storms. It’ll just be, you know, high intensity right there in the eye wall. But the wind field was very large. It was very electric, turbulent and windy.

How did it compare to other hurricanes that you’ve flown through?

It was rapidly intensifying pretty much all the way up till landfall. So, when I entered the Gulf, it was a tropical storm and quickly became a hurricane and then quickly became a major hurricane, so I think it is just interesting at how fast it intensified. Fortunately the National Hurricane Center did a great job of predicting where it was going to make landfall to give everyone a great lead time on it. The winds were very impressive and, in turn, it had a large swath of storm surge especially on the eastern side of the storm.

Why the NBA strike is so unprecedented

American athletes have advocated for political and social change for decades, in ways that often brought them into conflict with coaches, owners or the general public. But labor historians and sports journalists alike say that the NBA strike, initiated by the Milwaukee Bucks that arguably qualifies as a wildcat strike, is without precedent in the history of American labor or American sports. 

On Wednesday, the National Basketball Association team boycotted a playoff game against the Orlando Magic, scheduled for that day, as a form of protest on behalf of Jacob Blake, an African American man who was shot multiple times in the back by police officers in Kenosha, Wisconsin as he leaned into his car. Three of Blake’s children were in the backseat of his vehicle when the officers shot at him.

The Bucks players’ decision  was not made in a vacuum. According to ESPN, many NBA players had expressed reservations about playing before the Blake shooting because of other cases of allegedly racially-motivated police violence, most notably the deaths of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota and Breona Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky. Yet when the Bucks decided to sit out their game against the Magic, they set off a chain reaction: The Houston Rockets and Oklahoma City Thunder also decided to sit out their games, and then the NBA postponed both those games and an upcoming game between the Los Angeles Lakers and Portland Trail Blazers. The NBA players agreed later on Thursday to resume the playoffs on Saturday.

Then, in solidarity, a number of NFL teams decided to either not practice on Thursday or postpone their practices in order to discuss social change. These included the Arizona Cardinals, Washington Football Team, Green Bay Packers, Indianapolis Colts, New York Jets, Tennessee Titans, Denver Broncos, Jacksonville Jaguars and Chicago Bears. Many teams that cancelled their practices also used that time to talk about how to fight for meaningful social change — at which point the Bucks-Magic boycott evolved into a full-blown strike.

Meanwhile, Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) teams decided not have any games on Thursday and three Major League Baseball games were postponed, including one with the Milwaukee Brewers who have expressed solidarity with the Bucks.

Sports journalists, political scientists, labor leaders and economists all agreed that the strikes were unprecedented and historic. 

“In America sports has always been either at the center or the beginning of protest and civil movement,” Robert “Scoop” Jackson, a sports journalist and ESPN contributor who wrote the book “The Game is Not a Game: The Power, Protest and Politics of American Sports,” told Salon by email. “It may look different from one generation to the next, but at the core it’s the same. Just as the circumstances and incidents that cause athletes and sports leagues to takes stances haven’t changed, neither have the role sports has played in demanding change.”

David Niven, a political science professor at the University of Cincinnati who teaches about the intersection of sports and politics, emphasized that the Milwaukee Bucks have set an important precedent.

“Political athletes have taken a knee, raised a fist, draped themselves in words and symbols, but those things happen in brief moments before the game,” Niven wrote to Salon. “The Milwaukee Bucks didn’t trade away a moment of quiet reflection to advance a cause, they traded away the game itself. The Bucks’ decision is a great example of how important the first spark is in a resistance movement. Without the Bucks, the NBA rolls on. Without the NBA’s example, no baseball team would have sat out.”

Dave Zirin, a sportswriter who writes about politics and sports (such as in his book “A People’s History of Sports in the United States“), shared Niven’s assessment.

“While there were incidents in the 1960s when teams — led by Black athletes — refused to play games in protest of racist treatment, what we are seeing right now is without historical precedent, in terms of its breadth, its reach, and its power,” Zirin wrote to Salon. “We are in uncharted territory.”

Indeed, there have been a number of iconic moments in sports when athletes stood for political change, from track and field runners Tommie Smith and John Carlos giving a Black Power salute at the 1968 Olympics to boxer Muhammad Ali forfeiting his boxing titles by refusing to be inducted to fight the Vietnam War. Yet what is interesting about this current moment, Zirin mentioned, is that it is not one or two athletes, but multiple, entire teams standing up in solidarity. 

Besides being a big moment in sports history, the actions of NBA teams and other professional athletes are also a stand-out moment in the history of American labor.

“There is enormous precedent with workers in a position to disrupt profits withholding their labor and thus forcing the hand of the owners,” Maria Svart, National Director of the Democratic Socialists of America, wrote to Salon. “From Tommie Smith and John Carlos to Colin Kaepernick, athletes have made symbolic protest, but collective action like a strike has a direct material impact on profits. Workers in such a high profile position as this can do so, but also influence popular culture and prompt much broader swaths of workers to see the power we hold if we exercise it.”

She added, “We do the work to make the economy run, and we can shut it down. These players striking for black lives are part of a long tradition of people who work for a boss saying enough is enough. The question is whether we realize that not only can we shut it down for one night or season — we could run society ourselves, without the owning class insisting on doing it for us.”

Dr. Richard D. Wolff, professor emeritus of economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, told Salon that the players’ actions can be understood as an expression of frustration with the inadequacy of existing institutions to address important social grievances.

“I think it’s important for the following reason,” Wolff told Salon. “It is a recognition outside of the official labor movement that the labor movement isn’t doing what needs to be done and these workers — whether they would put it that way or not — are recognizing that they don’t have a mode of expression through the labor movement and they don’t have a mode of expression through the political parties.”

He added, “There will be no business as usual, even though this is a sports business, unless people sit down and work out with some sort of compromise, some sort of arrangement that addresses our concerns. The Democratic Party isn’t doing that. The Republican Party isn’t doing that.”

Scoop Jackson told Salon that “it’s still — to a degree — workers versus structures of power using their sweat equity as leverage to be heard/felt/taken seriously.” The real question is whether they can make a difference — and Jackson, like Svart, pointed out that “that all depends on how far they are willing to take it, how determined and committed they are, how fed up they are and how willing ownership is willing to work with them and not in the future hold their actions against them when CBAs and contracts are on the table.”

Jackson added, “Keep in mind that the athletes, specifically the NBA players during this moment, are reaching out to government officials directly and trying to find out both locally and nationally how they can implement change. They are rushing into this and being led strictly by emotions. They’re thinking this through as much as possible and trying to strategize as much as they can. They are trying to dive deeper than the surface.”

Zirin told Salon that, because the scope of the players’ protest is without precedent, it will be difficult to accurately predict the long-term effects.

“There is no historical precedent so it is impossible to say if the athletes are going to make a tangible difference in terms of policy,” Zirin explained. “But they have already accomplished two important things: 1) they have raised awareness and recentered the discussion around Jacob Blake, where it should be. Not on ‘anarchists’ or whatever right wing talking points are being spewed about the demonstrations. 2) They are providing hope for people during a time when hope is in short supply.”

Niven explained to Salon that, as with Kaepernick, many professional athletes take considerable professional risks when they advocate for social change.

“Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf [a former player for the Denver Nuggets, Sacramento Kings and Vancouver Grizzlies] conducted a one-man anthem protest in the NBA in 1996,” Niven recalled. “He was suspended by the league, and that was largely the end of it. Today, entire teams can literally refuse to play moments before a game and the league does not even consider suspending anyone.”

Niven characterized this as a “players’ revolution,” meaning that players realize that they can make a difference “if they stand united” in solidarity. Niven said that those who stand alone, particularly in franchises like the NFL, haven’t fared well. “Most players in the NFL play without a guaranteed contract, they can be terminated without pay in an instant,” Niven said. “I did a study of what happened to NFL players who participated in anthem protests, and on average they lost millions on their next contracts.”

He added, “On the other hand, there are leagues like the WNBA were the players are not economically safe but remain remarkably politically active. So it is not all about the bottom line.”

The current strikes are also distinguished by the fact that they are wildcat strikes — that is, strikes that unionized workers undertake without the official authorization of their labor leadership.

“No strike is successful without a broad majority among the workers to do it, whether wildcat or not,” Svart told Salon. “It’s clear here that the players felt that what they had negotiated so far was insufficient so they collectively pushed farther. Wildcats can have a huge impact, such as in 1964 [when players for the first NBA All-Star Game threatened a strike in order to get their union recognized], because it’s a demonstration of tremendous unity and resolve.”

What happens next could change everything. Jackson said of the wildcat strike, “trust me on this: If another unarmed black man/woman is killed or shot by someone sworn to ‘protect and serve’ and NOTHING immediately happens in its aftermath before the finals or leading into the season opening, this will no longer be ‘wildcat.’ It will be ‘Part 2’ and permanent.”

Likewise, Wolff told Salon that this current wildcat strike “is a prod to those two establishments — the labor movement on the one hand and the political parties on the other, they had better read the tea leaves here and understand that if they don’t once again become a means or an agency for the working class to express its concerns and grievances, then they will be left behind as new and different political forms emerge — new parties, new movements, new labor unions.”

He added, “Who knows what kinds of emergence is going to come?”

How the religious right’s purity culture enables predatory behavior

The last year has found former Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr. tumbling into one scandal after another, before finally officially plummeting from grace this week.  It began last year when, as Politico reported, former Trump attorney Michael Cohen helped “clean up racy ‘personal’ photographs” of Falwell’s wife, Becki, including one of her in a French maid costume, which he had allegedly sent to a number of employees at his evangelical university. 

Then there were the photos of Falwell that surfaced on Aug. 7, showing  him with his pants partially unzipped and his arm around a woman whom he later claimed was his wife’s assistant. Two weeks later, he released an exclusive statement with the Washington Examiner claiming that his wife had engaged in a “fatal attraction type” affair with Giancarlo Granda, a former pool attendant-turned-Miami businessman. 

The next day, Granda released a statement of his own at Reuters claiming that Falwell both knew of and observed his sexual relationship with Becki. “Becki and I developed an intimate relationship, and Jerry enjoyed watching from the corner of the room,” Granda said. 

The level of hypocrisy is overwhelming; students at Falwell’s university are all required to adhere to a strict code of conduct called “The Liberty Way,” which forbids premarital sex, same-sex relationships, alcohol, and “obscene language,” while also requiring that students “dress modestly at all times.” 

But there’s an additional, especially sinister, accusation regarding Falwell’s behavior that has since emerged. On Tuesday, Granda posted a statement on Twitter wherein he described Falwell as a “predator,” saying he’d sent Granda an image of a female Liberty University student exposing herself at their farm. In an interview with the Washington Post, Falwell recalled the image, saying, “She had on, I don’t know how to say this, granny panties,” saying it wasn’t sexual, but that he sent photo to multiple people because he thought it was funny. 

Compared to some of the more salacious elements of the Falwell scandal, like French maid costumes and debates over where the verses on cuckoldry are found in the Bible, it’s been easy for this smaller yet more insidious detail to get overshadowed. 

However, it’s perhaps one of the clearest illustrations of how the purity culture that is bolstered by and ingrained in contemporary evangelical circles enables predatory sexual behavior, often without consequences. 

I grew up attending Southern Baptist churches during the mid-2000s, when purity had become a pop culture buzzword after the Jonas Brothers donned rings to symbolize their commitment to abstinence before marriage. Miley Cyrus, Jordin Sparks, Selena Gomez, and Demi Lovato all followed suit, adding a little glimmer to their sugar-coated public personas. 

These celebrities were occasionally ribbed for their public proclamations of purity. There was a “South Park” episode that poked fun at the concept, and Russell Brand had a quick bit about the Jonas Brothers’ purity pledge at the 2008 VMA Awards. But the stars were prepared to respond. 

“Not everybody, guy or girl, wants to be a slut!” Sparks infamously clapped back. 

Eventually, most of the stars quietly took off their rings as they began the process of aging out of their totally wholesome images (Sparks, however, publicly recommitted to abstinence before marriage after breaking up with pop star boyfriend Jason Derulo). But in my evangelical church, purity wasn’t something you could simply shed. 

One of my most vivid memories of youth group was from a discussion about the effects of premarital sex. My youth pastor glued together two pieces of flimsy tissue paper — one red to symbolize sexual sin, one white to symbolize purity — rubbed them together vigorously and pulled them apart. The pieces were shredded and irreparably damaged. 

That wasn’t the only metaphor. There were many more — an alabaster bottle that was shattered after being roughly handled, roses with the petals torn off, a stick of gum that becomes undesirable after a single use, a bicycle that had been stolen and damaged rendering it “less fun” for the rightful owner to ride  — but the message was always the same: as a woman, before sex, you were pristine, but afterwards you were essentially worthless. 

Inherent to all these metaphors was the implication that women were the inanimate objects that were acted upon; we were the roses and the bicycles and the sheets of white tissue paper. But it was also our responsibility to ensure that our purity was maintained, to dress modestly so we wouldn’t cause our brothers in Christ to stray and to keep our legs closed. 

Underlying these teachings is belief that a woman’s sexuality is not her own. It belongs first to her father — in evangelical circles, fathers will often gift their daughters purity rings and organize purity balls — and then to her husband. I heard young men encouraged to guard young women’s virginity on the sole basis that it “belonged to her future husband.” If a woman was not a virgin before marriage, she owed it to her future husband to not only let him know, but to ask for his forgiveness. 

“No one wants damaged goods,” a youth leader once explained to me.  

This fear of being rendered completely undesirable also contributes to a fear of coming forward after sexual assault. I don’t have hard data on the number of women who have been abused by fellow church members, though as I reported in 2018, there was a call to put together a register of “Southern Baptist clergy and staff who have been credibly accused of, personally confessed to, or legally been convicted of sexual harassment or abuse.”

But I have listened to and cried with Christian women who didn’t even know how to proceed after they were assaulted. They were swallowed by feelings of grief and guilt, but also consumed by that lingering fear that they had been left in a state that was eternally unlovable. After all, we were taught that we were the sticks of chewing gum; it didn’t matter who chewed it, we were worthless after that first bite.

When such damaging patriarchal objectification is so deeply ingrained in the teachings of the evangelical church, it makes sense that Jerry Falwell Jr. wouldn’t see an issue with spreading a compromising image of one of the students at the university where he teaches. It makes sense that he would vocally support a president who has been accused of rape, sexual harassment and brags about his ability to grab women by the pussy. 

It makes sense that, until Granda released his statements about his intimate relationship with the Falwells, he positioned his wife as the sinner caught up in an affair that was tearing the family apart, while he attempted to reconcile the situation. 

It also makes sense that there are likely more images and stories from women who have been hurt by Falwell — other women that he has objectified and subsequently vilified —  that are yet to come to light. Unfortunately, it’s also true that there’s an entire subset of Christian men who would feel entitled to do the same.

Keanu Reeves & Alex Winter: Bill & Ted “aren’t playing Van Halen riffs” anymore

Making good on the promise of one of their signature catchphrases, “Catch ya’ later!” Bill (Alex Winter) and Ted (Keanu Reeves) are back. Sure, it’s been nearly 30 years since “Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey,” the 1991 sequel to “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure” (1988), but “Bill & Ted Face the Music” reunites the two “Great Ones.” And while much has changed over the years — phone booths are a thing of the past, and the internet is now a thing of the present — the Wyld Stallyns are still a band. And perhaps still ridiculously insipid. In fact, one in-film critic writes, “More Manure from the Stallyns” in response to one of their musical efforts.

This latest escapade for the duo has them determined to write the song that will be “the nexus point to bring humanity into rhythm and harmony.” And they do travel through the Circuits of Time in their trusty (or rusty?) old phone booth to accomplish this task. The dudes meet future versions of themselves, some of whom are, well, dicks. Meanwhile, their adult daughters (Samara Weaving and Brigette Lundy-Paine) are going back in time — in a new-fangled egg-shaped transporter — to find the greatest musicians in history to play Bill and Ted’s yet-to-be written masterpiece. 

Suffice it to say, chaos and comedy ensue; the characters all end up in Hell in one sequence that reunites them with Death (William Sadler). 

The actors chatted in a recent press conference held via Zoom about their thoughts on their iconic characters and Bill and Ted’s latest adventure.

Why is Bill and Ted’s advice, “Be Excellent to Each Other” is still relevant right now?

Keanu Reeves: I think it’s relevant all the time. Now it has more impact because of the situation we find ourselves in and the idea of “Be Excellent to Each Other” is a very good idea.

Alex Winter: Keanu summed it up pretty well. The “Bill and Ted” movies have an inherent sweetness and a theme of inclusivity of people being kind to each other and coming together. This was the story the screenwriters set out to write many years before COVID, and so it may bring folks some joy.

How easy was it to get back into the speech and mannerisms?

Winter: We had time; it went through a lot of iterations with the script, and we worked on it together. During that time, I had a chance to wrap my head around who this guy was at this age, and Keanu and I spent a lot of time talking about those things. I wasn’t like I had to suddenly turn it on like a switch. I had time to prepare. There is a familiarity to working with Keanu, and the physicality of that and the instinctive way we riff on the dialogue and that stuff kicked in on its own. It was helped by the fact that we had time to rehearse, prep, and discuss it.

Reeves: It’s been many years since we’ve seen them last, and during those years they’ve lived life, and got more mature, and had daughters, and the relationships with wives, and their friendship and being together with this pressure of and this destiny they were given and this responsibility of uniting the world through music that they haven’t been able to do. How do those pressures and what does that maturity look like? To play these guys who are familiar, but they are not caricatures of themselves from the past. We feel the weight of these guys and their joy and their spirit.

Did you have any after-effects of playing Bill and Ted?

Winter: Post-“Bill & Ted” disorder? The whole experience had a kind of warmth to it. They are joyful, optimistic people even if they are experiencing hardships and challenges and who have fears and doubts—all the human traits we do have. . . . . So many of us reunited. Keanu and I already see a fair amount of each other. There were difficult days, but you come away from the experience with great appreciation.

Bill and Ted were iconic at the time. Did you do anything to modernize them?

Reeves: The writers did that in the way they structured the film and the plot of the film. It was all about facing the music and being in the moment. That work was done for us. You see that in one of the opening sequences with Bill and Ted at the wedding ceremony. They aren’t playing Van Halen riffs. They have expanded their musical [laughs] excellence. They have moved on and developed from that. The theme of the daughters using music as a mashup construction is a modern idea that brought it to present day. 

How has fatherhood changed Bill and Ted?

Winter: That’s another aspect of the modernity. They have very distinct lives with their wives, and they are parents and they love their kids and they love their wives, yet they are having challenges in their life. In typical Bill and Ted fashion, they are simple guys always facing these gigantic challenges — in this case, they have not succeeded in writing the song that will save the world and reality as we know it — that’s what’s impacting us.  How do we relate to wives and daughters? We are in marriage counseling. Their daughters love us, but they know we are having a hard time. We leaned into the grounded stuff that is launched to a completely insane narrative.

It was fun to play Bill and Ted as dads. It changes how you approach the role. These films aren’t bro-y. They are more childlike. But once you’re a parent, it’s really not that. Bill and Ted love being parents and husbands. That created more things to play. The writers were intent in finding new ways into Bill and Ted and they gave us a lot of meat on the bone. We get to play so many different versions of ourselves. We look at different facets of these characters. This is really just Bill and Ted in painful and traumatic periods of different iterations in their lives. There were new things the guys came up with that gave us room to play.

What version of the characters was the most fun to play?

Reeves: I can’t choose that. I don’t think there’s a “most” here. We had extraordinary makeup for the prison yard Bill and Tell, but I think it was more emotionally that the characters got dark, and it was nice to play the darkness against lightness. They are exuberantly darker. [Laughs]

What memories do you have about George Carlin?

Reeves: He brought class. He was such a down-to-earth guy, and he worked hard on Rufus. He brought a weight to it. Of course, its George Carlin coming from the future. It was extraordinary to have a chance to work with such an incredible person and artist.

Winter: I have an overall fuzzy – and I mean warm and fuzzy, not indistinct – memory and gratitude about having been able to work with George so closely. Keanu and I were young, and we had both been around famous people when we did the first movie, but George was a different kind of famous than the type of people we were used to meeting as an actor. It was the beginning of the “rock star” comedy identity — [Richard] Pryor, Carlin, obviously Lenny Bruce — so they were godlike. So much more than a personality. I was very starstruck by him. He was open and accommodating. You didn’t feel a wall. I have an overall feeling of gratitude that we got that experience and that he was in the movie. He elevated “Bill & Ted 1” just by his presence.

Can you talk about the cross-generational appeal of “Bill & Ted?” 

Reeves: I don’t think that has hit yet. That’s more of a concept than a reality. We’ve experienced something akin to that in the sense of people who meet us, and they tell us how they have shown the film to their kids and then we’ve met those kids. 

Winter: We tried to make a film to be enjoyable whether you have seen the first two or not.

How has your journey been to be alongside Bill and Ted? What have they given you over the years?

Reeves: So many warm moments with fans. It is such an honor to work with Alex and the way that we can share our sense of humor and laugh at work I don’t get that anywhere else. It’s pretty extraordinary. I’m very grateful for it. Thanks, Alex.

Winter: It’s obviously mutual. It’s a strange and very lovely thing to have in your life. Its sweet from the outside experience. You’re in your day and in your head and some five-year-old comes up and tells you how much you mean to them. Then there’s the internal performance part of it of having these experiences. But getting into that groove — it’s a lot like being in a band, especially since comedy comes from timing. We literally play together and having that opportunity of playing again with Keanu it was really fun and instinctive. It’s rare.

What observations do you have about being back on the set in costume the first day of shooting? 

Reeves: Our first day was in the phone booth, and I think that’s where it landed for us. “Here we go.” It was cool we got to do the first scene in the booth; that was like a touchstone.

Winter: We had no say in that or much of anything else, which is a good thing. But looking back, it was a smart move. It was helpful to start that way. It was a few days into production, after we shot the marriage counseling scene, there was a moment he and I were in a real groove. Suddenly, something was there I didn’t expect that I hadn’t quite remembered; and it was back and that was nice.

What do you think about having to wait another 30 years for the next “Bill & Ted”?

Winter: That’s not good. Thirty years from now, it might be tough, but anything’s possible. 

What advice would Bill and Ted give to everyone who needs positivity in 2020?

Reeves: Alex, do the line and I’ll do the other line.

Winter: Be excellent to each other!

Reeves: And party on, dudes!

“Bill & Ted Face the Music” is available in theaters and to purchase online Friday, Aug. 28.

Calls grow for Tucker Carlson to be fired from Fox News over accusations of “inciting violence”

Tucker Carlson faces a growing number of calls for his removal from Fox News over allegations of “inciting violence and abetting terrorism” after he questioned why Americans were “shocked” that “17-year-olds with rifles decided they had to maintain order when no one else would.”

“The first ten minutes of tonight’s Tucker Carlson Tonight are the closest thing I think I’ve ever seen to pure, unfiltered fascism in American public life. Going out to the largest cable news audience ever,” Matthew Gertz, a senior fellow for Media Matters for America, wrote on Twitter. “Fox News hosts are able to do this because the Murdochs want them to.”

Carlson made the controversial comments on his broadcast after two individuals were shot to death amid continued civil unrest in Kenosha, Wis. Kyle Rittenhouse, a 17-year-old white man, was arrested on a warrant charging first-degree intentional homicide.

“So are we really surprised that looting and arson accelerated to murder? How shocked are we that 17-year-olds with rifles decided they had to maintain order when no one else would?” Carlson asked on his Fox News show. “Everyone could see what was happening in Kenosha. It was getting crazier by the hour.”

The civil unrest stems from the shooting of Jacob Blake, a 29-year-old father who was seen on video being shot in the back at point blank range by police. A lawyer for the family said the now-paralyzed Blake’s children were present at the time of the shooting.

Carlson faced similar backlash two years ago after he called white supremacy a “hoax” on the heels of a mass shooting targeting Latino immigrants in El Paso, in which the alleged shooter left a manifesto announcing that “this attack is a response to the Hispanic invasion of Texas.” 

The Fox News host made a number of false claims to support his argument about Rittenhouse, which were interpreted by many as an attempt to justify the alleged murders. Among them, Carlson falsely claimed that authorities had “abandoned” Kenosha to “watch it burn.” Carlson cast blame on Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, even though he had deployed National Guard forces one day prior. Moreover, bystander video showed law enforcement on the scene.

“He just justified murder,” Nikole Hannah-Jones, who won a Pulitzer Prize for her work on the 1619 Project, tweeted after the segment aired.

Other prominent figures called out Carlson and Fox News for “encouraging” murder and “inciting violence.”

“This goes beyond being provocateurs,” Shannon Watts, the Founder of Moms Demand Action, tweeted. “Ann Coulter, Tucker Carlson and Fox News are encouraging Americans to murder one another.” (Coulter, the right-wing provocateur, for her part called for Rittenhouse to be president.)

“Vigilante violence was always one of my greatest worries about the present moment,” Blake Hounshell, the digital editorial director for Politico wrote. “And here we have a prominent TV host – a man who had the president’s ear – excusing it, rationalizing it.”

Conservative Washington Post columnist Max Boot added that Carlson was “inciting violence and abetting terrorism.”

Fred Guttenberg, a gun control activist whose daughter was killed at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., called for advertisers to drop Carlson’s show.

He tweeted, “I will answer [Tucker Carlson]. My daughter was killed by an 18 year [sic] with an AR 15. Just walked into her school. Tucker, you are a fu*king lunatic who will get people killed. I hope advertisers dropp [sic] you immediately today. You should be removed for the safety of our kids.”

Five advertisers, including Disney and T-Mobile, pulled their advertising from Carlson’s Fox News program in June amid backlash over his “race-baiting” screed in the wake of nationwide protests against police brutality following the death of George Floyd.

That rant, during which the host told his mostly white viewers that the social justice movement was “definitely not about black lives” and to “remember that when they come for you,” lasted nearly half an hour, or about 75% of the show’s on-air time.

Before playing video of the Kenosha shooting, Carlson falsely claimed that “big media organizations have done their best to downplay and ignore the violence in Kenosha and around the country.” (Here is a link to the Washington Post’s coverage.)

The Fox News host then played a graphic video appearing to show the alleged shooter firing a semi-automatic long gun in front of a boarded-up auto shop several times, including after individuals had fled.

Carlson singled out, Richie McGinnis, an on-the-scene reporter for The Daily Caller — a conservative outlet founded by the Fox News host — who tried to use his own shirt to staunch the bleeding on one of the victims.

“Sorry for the painful video but it’s real,” Carlson said. “That man later died.”

“At one point, the 17-year-old who has now been charged tried to run from the mob. He tripped and fell in the middle of the street,” the Fox News host continued. “A man ran up and smashed him in the head with a skateboard. The 17-year-old then fired his gun.”

Carlson played video of the scene he described. After the altercation, the shooter can be seen alone in the street with a body on the ground. 

“So, what does that amount to? We’re unsure. A court will decide whether what you just saw qualifies as self-defense. As of tonight, we really don’t have more details,” Carlson, who frequently arrogates the first-person plural pronoun, knitting his perspective with that of his viewers, said. 

“We do know why it all happened, though,” he continued. “Kenosha has devolved into anarchy, because the authorities in charge of the city abandoned it. People in charge from the governor of Wisconsin on down refused to enforce the law. They stood back, and they watched Kenosha burn.”

“So are we really surprised that looting and arson accelerated to murder?” Carlson asked. “How shocked are we that 17-year-olds with rifles decided they had to maintain order when no one else would?”

Carlson included some of these same claims in a tweet promoting the controversial segment.

The alleged shooter’s social media history revealed support for “Blue Lives Matter,” a pro–police movement, and President Donald Trump, according to BuzzFeed News. He also had a front row seat at a Trump rally in Iowa this January.

At that rally, Trump said, “During this campaign season, the good people of Iowa have had a front-row seat to the lunacy and the madness of the totally sick left.” He also added, “They want to kill our cows. That means you’re next.”

Multiple spokespeople for Fox News declined multiple requests to answer Salon’s specific questions about Carlson on the record, including whether the network planned to take disciplinary action in response to the public backlash.

A Fox News spokesperson pointed Salon to a partial transcript of Carlson’s remarks, as well as the aforementioned tweet promoting his monologue after it aired. The written copy of the tweet, which paraphrases Carlson’s words, omitted his remarks about how “17-year-olds with rifles decided they had to maintain order when no one else would.” When asked why Salon was pointed to a paraphrased tweet which specifically omitted that information, the same Fox News spokesperson did not respond. 

Jared Kushner knocks striking NBA players over wealth: They’re lucky to “take a night off from work”

White House senior adviser Jared Kushner, the son-in-law of billionaire President Donald Trump, said NBA players who refused to play in protest of police brutality were “fortunate” to be wealthy enough to “take a night off from work.”

The Milwaukee Bucks led a player strike on Wednesday following the shooting of Jacob Blake, the 29-year-old Black father who was shot in the back at point blank range by police in front of his young children, according to bystander video and family statements.

The NBA postponed all three playoff games scheduled for Wednesday. (Athletes from other sports sat out scheduled events, as well.) There were reports that some NBA teams had voted to continue the strike through the remainder of playoffs, but ESPN reported on Thursday that players had decided to resume games as early as Friday.

Kushner, a billionaire who took over his family’s real estate empire when his father was sent to prison after pleading guilty to 18 counts of illegal campaign contributions, tax evasion and witness tampering, took a swipe at the players’ wealth on Thursday.

“Look, I think that the NBA players are very fortunate that they have the financial position where they’re able to take a night off from work without having to have the consequences to themselves financially,” he told CNBC. “So they have that luxury, which is great.”

Kushner, who praised Trump’s record on criminal justice, said he was unimpressed by the players’ activism.

“I think with the NBA, there’s a lot of activism, and I think that they’ve put a lot of slogans out,” he said. “But I think what we need to do is turn that from slogans and signals to actual action that’s going to solve the problem.”

Kushner said in a separate interview with Politico that “this country’s seen enough of the protests and some of the negative things that can happen when the protests go too far.”

“We’re offering solutions with policy,” he said. “The other side’s doing a lot of complaining. What I’d love to see from the players in the NBA — again, they have the luxury of taking the night off from work. Most Americans don’t have the financial luxury to do that.”

Kushner added that he would be happy to meet with NBA superstar LeBron James, who recently partnered with other Black athletes to start an organization to help register Black Americans to vote.

“If LeBron James reached out to the White House — or we could reach out to him — we’re happy to talk with him and say, ‘Look, let’s both agree on what we want to accomplish, and let’s come up with a common pathway to get there,'” Kushner said.

Former NBA player Rex Chapman slammed Kushner for what he called his “silver spoon” after the remarks about players’ wealth.

“These are grown men who have worked insanely hard to earn their jobs. Without rich parents,” he tweeted. “Unlike Jared.”

Other administration officials went further in criticizing the player protest.

“If they want to protest, I don’t think we care,” Mark Short, Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, told CNN. “I don’t know that you are going to see the administration weigh in one way or the other. In my mind, it’s absurd and silly.”

CNN anchor John Berman pointed out that Short’s comment shows how “dishonest” Vice President Mike Pence was at the Republican National Convention when he claimed the administration supports “peaceful protest.”

Former NBA player Chris Webber hit back at critics of the protest while covering the postponed games on Wednesday.

“If not now, when? If not during a pandemic and countless lives being lost — if not now, when? That’s all I just want to hear,” Webber said. “Don’t listen to these people telling you, ‘Don’t do anything, because it’s not going to end right away.’ You are starting something for the next generation — and the next generation to take over.”

Watch George Conway realize Trump is a malignant narcissist in an exclusive clip for “#Unfit”

During the opening night of the Democratic National Convention, former first lady Michelle Obama characterized Donald Trump’s administration as being marred by “chaos, division, and a total and utter lack of empathy,” which, she said, are just some of the major reasons he is unfit to serve. 

The upcoming documentary “#Unfit:The Psychology of Donald Trump” delves deeper into the president’s unhinged behavior that underlies that and similar statements. According to the website for #Unfit, director Dan Partland — who was a producer on A&E’s “Intervention” and the Emmy-nominated decade retrospective “The Sixties” — and his producers did not make this documentary to advocate on policy issues; it is strictly about Trump’s fitness to serve as president.

“We interview mental health professionals, who discuss the disorders, why they feel the danger is now exacerbated, and why they believe that for them to NOT warn the public at this juncture would be an abdication of professional responsibility,” the site reads.

Partland and his producers interviewed a number of doctors and mental health professionals who conclude that Trump is a malignant narcissist, a personality disorder characterized by narcissism, sociopathy, paranoia and sadism. 

This was a conclusion that was also reached by attorney George T. Conway III, who is the husband of former counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway, an outspoken Trump critic and a founding member of  the Lincoln Project, a conservative Super PAC formed in December 2019 and dedicated to “defeating President Trump and Trumpism at the ballot box.” 

On Sunday, Kellyanne Conway announced that she would be leaving the Trump administration to focus on her family, “less drama, more mama.” This comes after months of increasingly public conflict with George over their differing views on the president, and after their 15-year-old daughter Claudia Conway recently joined the conversation by posting TikTok videos and public Tweets disagreeing with her mother’s abhorrent politics. 

As Conway says in the film — and in the exclusive clip you can watch below —  he didn’t go into the Trump administration for a lot of reasons, “but the fundamental reason is that it was a mess.” 

“I guess I must have been Googling ‘Trump’ and ‘mental health’ because I clearly thought there was something seriously wrong with him,” Conway says. 

“#Unfit” will get a limited theatrical and virtual cinema release on Aug. 28 before heading to on-demand platforms Sept. 1.

Mike Pence and Tucker Carlson encourage violence, while faking concern for “law and order”

Under Donald Trump’s leadership, Republicans have figured out their election strategy for 2020: Actively incite and encourage violence, and then turn around and feign outrage while promising voters “law and order.”

It’s a strategy Trump employed in Washington, D.C., when he ordered federal police to tear gas peaceful protesters in Lafayette Square, clearly hoping to use the chaotic images that ensued to bolster a lie about protester violence. He did it in Portland, Oregon, sending in federal police for the sole purpose of causing violent clashes he could blame on protesters. He tried to pull the same stunt at his “comeback” rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, but failed because local police didn’t take the bait and avoided attacking peaceful protesters. 

But while Trump’s provocations have backfired as often as not, his strategy of instigating violence and then blaming it on “the left” has started to spread among the Republican ranks and Fox News. Wednesday night, at both the Republican National Convention and on the party’s favorite propaganda network, the tactic of inciting violence under the guise of “law and order” was on full display. 

Tucker Carlson, whose Fox News show is increasingly indistinguishable from white nationalist forums online, wasn’t even subtle about it. His opening segment on Wednesday night tried to turn Kyle Rittenhouse — a 17-year-old charged with murder after allegedly shooting three Black Lives Matters protesters, killing two of them, in Kenosha, Wisconsin, on Tuesday night — into a hero. 

“How shocked are we that 17-year-olds with rifles decided they had to maintain order when no one else would?” Carlson said, after claiming, in a shameless lie, “Kenosha has devolved into anarchy because the authorities in charge of the city abandoned it.”

None of this is true. Kenosha has had unrest in the streets since police shot a man named Jacob Blake in the back seven times in front of his children. As with most protests across the country that have turned violent, this isn’t because local cops abandoning their posts, but because police are actively making it worse.

As USA Today reported earlier this week, protesters in Kenosha were largely peaceful on Sunday night until cops used the “emergency curfew” declared by the county as an excuse to start tear-gassing the crowd. It was only then that the fires and other unrest followed, all kicked off by police aggression. 

Rittenhouse, a Trump supporter with an adolescent fascination with police, had gone from his hometown in nearby Illinois to Kenosha to join militia groups who claimed they were there to “help” maintain order. Any fool can see that was not their real purpose. This was a bunch of right-wingers who have spent years soaking in violent fantasies and see the protests as an excuse to lash out against people they demonize as “social justice warriors.” These militias are all too often openly supported by police, who may be less interested in keeping order than in cracking down on protests. 

Unsurprisingly, then, the presence of the militia led to more disorder and violence, not less. And it’s truly rich for Carlson to claim some enthusiasm for “order” when he’s actively glorifying a young man who is accused of murder — whereas no BLM protesters in Kenosha have killed anyone, or been accused of doing so.

Vice President Mike Pence might have been more subtle with his rhetoric, but he was no less guilty than Carlson of encouraging right-wing violence in his keynote speech at the Republican National Convention Wednesday night

After claiming to believe that the “violence must stop,” Pence went on to lament the death of Dave Patrick Underwood, a federal police officer “who was shot and killed during the riots in Oakland.”

This claim was wildly misleading. Pence clearly meant his audience to believe that BLM protesters (or antifa, or other “radicals”) had killed Underwood. In fact, those accused are Air Force Staff Sgt. Steven Carrillo and an accomplice named Robert Justus, who appear to be affiliated with the far-right “boogaloo” movement.

Boogaloo adherents want to turn the current racial tensions brought on by Trump’s overt racism and police violence into an occasion for a new civil war, and have been openly plotting to exploit BLM protests as cover for violent acts that they hope will to kick off such a conflict.

In Facebook messages just before the killing, Carrillo explicitly said, “We have mobs of angry people to use to our advantage.”

While feigning outrage over Underwood’s killing, Pence was giving the alleged murderer exactly what he wanted: A bait-and-switch in which BLM protesters are blamed for violence caused by the right. It may have been more sophisticated than what Carlson was doing, but Pence was still encouraging right-wing militiamen to act on their violent fantasies, by signaling that they’ll be rewarded by the Trump administration helping them elevate their false narratives. 

Don’t buy Pence’s crocodile tears over a dead officer. If he was actually opposed to police being killed, he wouldn’t be encouraging the boogaloo movement like this. 

Trump’s belief that he needs violence in the streets in order to be re-elected has now become the common wisdom of the Republican Party and Fox News. And since Trump thinks he needs violence, the order of the day is to incite it, by any means necessary. All this Republican hand-wringing over “law and order” is disingenuous in the extreme. Trump wants violence, and by God, his allies are going to give it to him. They don’t much care who gets hurt or killed along the way. 

RNC Day 3: GOP rewrites history and praises coronavirus response as Trump wades into maskless crowd

An otherwise lackluster third night of the Republican National Convention kept fact-checkers busy with a torrent of false claims aimed at rewriting the history of not only Trump’s presidency but also the entire nation.

The evening, which featured mostly pre-taped speeches that largely ignored the hurricane bearing down on the Gulf Coast, was headlined by Vice President Mike Pence, the head of the White House coronavirus task force. His speech cast President Donald Trump’s response to the pandemic as a success even as the number of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. reached 180,000 — the most recorded by any country in the world

Pence described Trump’s widely-criticized response to the coronavirus pandemic as “the greatest national mobilization since World War II.”

“President Trump marshalled the full resources of our federal government from the outset. He directed us to forge a seamless partnership with governors across America in both political parties,” Pence claimed.

However, Trump left the response largely up to individual governors, who were forced to bid against each other for vital medical supplies and forge their own path on social distancing restrictions. In mid-July, the nation reported its first weekly increase in COVID-19 deaths since April, largely in Republican-led states.

Pence praised the administration for delivering billions of pieces of personal protective equipment, even though such supplies remain short. Ignoring the fact that tens of millions have faced unemployment benefit cuts in recent weeks after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., adjourned the upper chamber for the rest of the month without a deal on a new coronavirus relief package, the vice president claimed that the administration had “enacted an economic rescue package that saved 50 million American jobs.”

Trump, who has spent much of the pandemic attempting to downplay its impact and spreading conspiracy theories about it, then joined Pence at Fort McHenry in Baltimore to shake hands and take selfies with audience members, who did not wear masks and were not tested for the virus.

Instead of addressing the national reckoning on police brutality, Pence railed against protesters of Jacob Blake’s death, who staged a peaceful demonstration on Wednesday, as he pushed Trump’s “law and order message.”

“You won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America,” Pence warned as he falsely claimed that the Democratic nominee would move to defund the police.

At one point, Pence erroneously linked protests in Oakland to the killing of a federal law enforcement officer, neglecting to mention that the officer was allegedly killed by a far-right extremist who prosecutors say wanted to use the protests as cover.

Other speakers also attempted to rewrite history — quite literally.

Lara Trump, the president’s daughter-in-law, appeared to quote a Facebook meme when she declared that Abraham Lincoln “once famously said, ‘America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.'”

But Lincoln never said that, as fact-checkers at Politifact and Snopes pointed out when the meme went viral in conservative circles last year.

Another speaker, the 25-year-old North Carolina congressional candidate Madison Cawthorn, delivered an emotional speech which ended with him rising from his wheelchair with the aid of a walker. Cawthorn, who would become the youngest member of Congress if he wins the seat vacated by White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, compared himself to the Founding Fathers because of his age.

“James Madison was just 25 years old when he signed the Declaration of Independence,” Cawthorn claimed. 

But while Madison signed the Constitution, he never signed the Declaration of Independence.

Other false claims at the convention were more geared toward painting Trump as a very different president than the one he has proven himself to be. 

White House adviser Kellyanne Conway, who recently announced she would be stepping down, described Trump as a “champion” of women.

“For decades, he has elevated women to senior positions in business and in government,” she added. “He confides in and consults us, respects our opinions and insists that we are on equal footing with the men. President Trump helped me shatter a barrier in the world of politics by empowering me to manage his campaign to its successful conclusion.”

Trump has appointed far less women to senior-level jobs than former Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton and has repeatedly been criticized for sexist attacks against women who challenge him. Conway’s comments came a night after another woman convention speaker appeared who believes women should defer their voting rights to their husbands.

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany delivered an emotional speech about her experience as an “American with a pre-existing condition,” describing her decision to have a preventative double mastectomy. She said she was “blown away” when Trump called to check on her after her reconstructive surgery.

“Here was the leader of the free world caring about me,” McEnany said, ignoring the fact that Trump has spent years pushing to destroy the Obamacare law, which would eliminate protections for people with pre-existing conditions like her own.

Jack Brewer, a member of Black Voices for Trump who was charged with insider trading earlier this month, repeated a common conservative myth about Trump’s Charlottesville response.

“Are you going to allow the media to lie to you by falsely claiming that he said there were ‘very fine white supremacists’ in Charlottesville? He didn’t say that. It’s a lie,” he falsely claimed.

Though this myth has been perpetuated across large swaths of the Republican Party, Trump absolutely described white supremacists as “very fine people.” His remarks were caught on camera.

“They didn’t put themselves down as neo-Nazis, and you had some very bad people in that group. But you also had people that were very fine people on both sides,” Trump said during his infamous press conference after the murder of Heather Heyer.

The torrent of falsehoods overwhelmed fact-checkers for the third night in a row.

“It’s not just big things, on broad revisionism on the pandemic. It’s inaccuracy, carelessness,” CNN fact-checker Daniel Dale said Wednesday. “There is just so much dishonesty and inaccuracy at this convention. It’s hard for me to know where to start.”

Mike Pence’s contemptible convention speech: A fable of failure, culture war and corruption

Vice President Mike Pence’s appearance as the keynote speaker at the Republican National Convention on Wednesday was an ill-timed booking that mostly served to highlight his role in the Trump administration’s failed response to COVID-19, its continued culture wars and its blatant corruption. 

Exactly six months to the day since Trump claimed, in reference to the spreading novel coronavirus, “When you have 15 people, and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero — that’s a pretty good job we’ve done,” the U.S. officially registered 180,000 deaths from COVID-19. And exactly four years to the day since former San Francisco 49er quarterback Colin Kaepernick first knelt during the national anthem in protest of police violence, several NBA, Major League Baseball and Major League Soccer teams led an unprecedented wildcat strike in protest of continued police killings of unarmed Black people. Joe Biden was quick to make a strong statement of support for the atheletes.

But speaking Wednesday from Fort McHenry outside Baltimore, reputed location for the writing of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” Trump’s dutiful vice president opened his address not by noting the solemn state we find ourselves in as a nation, but by continuing to rail against cancel culture, socialism, “left wing mobs” and Americans who failed to adequately “back the blue.” Pence praised law enforcement, including a misleading reference to Dave Patrick Underwood, an officer with the Department of Homeland Security’s federal protective service who was shot and killed in May by a far-right extremist.

“He was shot and killed during the riots in Oakland, California,” Pence shamelessly claimed.

Even as Pence was ranting about protesters — those in Kenosha, Wisconsin remained peaceful without police interference. Of course, Pence didn’t even bother to mention the police shooting of Jacob Blake that ignited this latest round of civil unrest, or the outside agitator, another apparent right-wing milita member, who shot and killed two protesters the night before. 

Using a National Park Service location for his blatantly political speech, Pence followed his boss’ RNC strategy of forcing public employees to appear in potential violation of the Hatch Act, which forbids federal employees other than the president or vice president from engaging in political activity at their workplace. Like the faithful soldier, Pence used his speech to rewrite recent history as an epic success.

“We are protecting the vulnerable and we are saving lives,” Pence said, claiming that the federal government has now “coordinated the delivery of billions of pieces of personal protective equipment.” But the forced sell fell as flat as the veep’s delivery. 

 

“Last week, Joe Biden said ‘no miracle is coming,'” Pence said Wednesday night. “What Joe doesn’t seem to understand is that America is a nation of miracles and we’re on track to have the world’s first safe, effective coronavirus vaccine by the end of this year.” Most experts believe a vaccine won’t be ready until 2021 at the earliest.

Pence, who was plucked off the campaign trail in February to head the White House coronavirus task force, quietly quit overseeing day-to-day operations in Washington to return to the campaign trail after being sidelined by Trump earlier this summer. While still in charge, Pence implored people not to listen to warnings about COVID-19 just before it exploded all over the South. He trotted around Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to brag about how well the Sunshine State was doing, right before it degraded into a COVID deathscape. And he infamously visited the Mayo Clinic and wore no mask inside the hospital, where staff were caring for patients infected with the coronavirus. 

Pointing to a new Politico report about Pence’s role leading the White House coronavirus task force, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Wednesday that Pence had “pulled his punch” in confronting the virus and became “a figure in the background.” 

“There’s nothing for him to be proud of in terms of his role in fighting this virus,” Pelosi said. “In fact there’s evidence to support the fact that he was very slow on the draw, pulled his punch when he should have been leading with it. And he’s part of the indictment on the coronavirus. They were slow in anticipation and … reacting to what was happening out there in terms of the spread of the virus.” 

Hours before Pence’s RNC speech, multiple news outlets confirmed that the CDC had abruptly changed its guidelines to limit coronavirus testing, a top priority of Trump’s since the outset of this outbreak. Dr. Anthony Fauci, who serves on the White House coronavirus task force, told CNN that the changes had been rushed through while he was in surgery last week under anesthesia. Of course, Pence’s track record during an HIV/AIDS outbreak while he was governor of Indiana ought to have been enough to make anyone interested in public health alarmed.

Recall that Pence has covered for Trump’s corruption at nearly every turn during the last four years. 

He was present in the Oval Office just before Trump asked former FBI director James Comey to drop the investigation of former national security adviser Michael Flynn. Asked what he knew as the head of Trump’s transition team, Pence claimed that he had just learned of Flynn’s ties to Turkey in March 2017. When Flynn was initially fired, however, his cited offense was having lied to Pence during the transition. Pence also admitted to helping Trump pressure Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate Joe Biden in exchange for the release of U.S. military aid. 

Pence has even helped drive taxpayer dollars to Trump’s private business ventures. 

During a foreign trip to meet with Irish leaders, Pence stayed at a hotel owned by Trump almost 180 miles away. at his boss’s urging. Trump International Golf Links in Doonbeg, on the west coast of Ireland, was nearly a four-hour drive from Pence’s scheduled meetings in Dublin. According to an analysis by the government watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), Pence’s stay cost taxpayers nearly $600,000 in limousine service alone.

If Pence was supposed to be the post-Trump savior of the Republican Party, then Wednesday’s performance reveals that prospect as a complete farce. This nightmare won’t end in November. The contemptuous dismissal of the Hatch Act on display this week at the RNC is just one more test run for Team Trump’s evident plan to dismiss or overturn the results of the election. The professional athletes who walked out last night in pursuit of justice have the right idea and we all should follow suit. This week’s RNC performance makes clear that the entirety of the Republican Party is rotten. Americans can’t wait until the election has already been undermined. They need to be in the streets now.

The case of Steven Donziger and Chevron: How those who fight corporate tyranny are crushed

The persecution of the attorney Steven Donziger is a grim illustration of what happens when we confront the real centers of power, masked and unacknowledged by the divisive cant from the Trump White House or the sentimental drivel of the Democratic Party. Those, like Donziger, who name and fight the corporate control of our society on behalf of the vulnerable see the judiciary, the press and the institutions of government unite to crucify them.

“It’s been a long battle, 27 years,” Donziger said when I reached him by phone in his apartment in Manhattan.

Donziger, who has been fighting polluting American oil companies for nearly three decades on behalf of indigenous communities and peasant farmers in Ecuador, has been under house arrest in Manhattan for a year. He will go to trial in federal court in New York on Sept. 9 on contempt of court charges, which could see him jailed for six months. Ever since he won a multibillion-dollar judgment in 2011 against the oil giant Chevron, the multinational has come after him personally through litigation that threatens to destroy him economically, professionally and personally.

“Our L-T [long-term] strategy is to demonize Donziger,” Chevron wrote in an internal memo in 2009, as reviewed by Courthouse News.

“It started when Texaco went into Ecuador in the Amazon in the 1960s and cut a sweetheart deal with the military government then ruling Ecuador,” Donziger told me. “Over the next 25 years, Texaco was the exclusive operator of a very large area of the Amazon that had several oil fields within this area, 1,500 square miles. They drilled hundreds of wells. They created thousands of open-air, unlined toxic waste pits where they dumped the heavy metals and toxins that came up from the ground when they drilled. They ran pipes from the pits into rivers and streams that local people relied on for their drinking water, their fishing and their sustenance. They poisoned this pristine ecosystem, in which lived five indigenous peoples, as well as a lot of other non-indigenous rural communities. There was a mass industrial poisoning.”

“By the time I went down there in the early 1990s, many people had died, cancer rates were skyrocketing according to several independent health evaluations, people were really hurting. There was zero regard for the lives of the local people by Texaco. I was a very young lawyer back in 1993 when I first went to Ecuador. It was like looking at an apocalyptic scene. There was oil on the roads. People were living in abject poverty. They had no shoes. They would get oil on their feet when they walked along the roads. The oil pollution had permeated every aspect of daily life. It was in the food supply. It was in the water supply. It was in the air. The average person there would get exposed multiple times a day to very harmful, cancer-causing toxins, with foreseeable results.”

“I, with other lawyers, filed a lawsuit in New York against Texaco. The reason we filed in New York was because Texaco’s headquarters were in New York in 1993. The decisions to pollute in Ecuador, to play God to the people of Ecuador, were made in New York. We sued in New York. Texaco tried to get the case back to Ecuador where they had never been held accountable, where they knew the indigenous peoples had no money or resources to find lawyers.”

“They thought it would just go away,” said Donziger. “Over a 10-year period, we battled to get a jury trial in the United States. Ultimately, they won that part of the battle. It went down to Ecuador.”

“We started working with a team of Ecuadorian lawyers in the early 2000s. We went forward with the lawsuit. We produced voluminous scientific and testimonial evidence, showing that they caused probably the world’s worst oil pollution. It was called the ‘Amazon Chernobyl’ by locals and experts. They dumped 16 billion gallons of toxic waste. They did it deliberately to save money. This was unlike the BP spill in the Gulf of Mexico, which was a terrible accident, even though it was a product of horrendous negligence by BP. This was done by design to pollute, knowing that people would die, and that indigenous groups would be decimated, and that this beautiful part of the Amazon would be destroyed.”

The refusal to abide by even minimal environmental regulations saved Texaco an estimated $3 on every barrel of oil produced over 26 years (1964 to 1992), according to Amazon Watch, or an estimated extra $5 billion in revenue. The hundreds of waste pits the company eventually abandoned in Ecuador, on average, contain 200 times the contamination allowed by typical global standards.

“They tried to grind us down using classic corporate defense tactics,” Donziger said of the legal war. “They filed thousands of motions. We stood strong. We had a great legal team of Ecuadorian lawyers.”

In the end, they won a stunning victory, a rare moment of accountability for first-world conglomerates who rape the environment of developing nations by exploiting weak, corrupt governments.

“The verdict came down, about $18 billion in favor of the affected communities, which is what it would take at a minimum to clean up the actual damage and compensate the people for some of their injuries. That eventually got reduced on appeal in Ecuador to $9.5 billion, but it was affirmed by three appellate courts, including the highest court of Ecuador. It was affirmed by the Canadian Supreme Court, where the Ecuadorians went to enforce their judgment in a unanimous opinion in 2015.”

Chevron, which had acquired Texaco in 2000, sold its assets in Ecuador and left the country as the evidence mounted against it. The corporation threatened the plaintiffs with a “lifetime of litigation” if they attempted to collect, and, according to internal Chevron memos, launched a legal and media campaign that has cost an estimated $2 billion to prevent payment of the settlement and to demonize and destroy Donziger.

Donziger came to his epic battle against Chevron through journalism. “I was a journalist on my college newspaper,” he said of his time as a history major at American University. “My first job out of college was as a journalist with [United Press International]. I worked for UPI in Washington. They were strong in Latin America. I traveled to Managua in 1983 or 1984, I don’t remember exactly, and found work in the UPI bureau. I was 23 years old. I worked in the UPI bureau in Managua during the Sandinista era.”

He left UPI after a year in Managua but stayed on in Nicaragua to work as a freelance journalist for newspapers such as the Fort Lauderdale News, the Toronto Star and the Atlanta Constitution. He spent about three years as a reporter before going to Harvard Law School. When he graduated from Harvard Law School in 1991, he worked as a public defender in Washington, D.C. He documented Iraqi civilian casualties in Iraq following the first Gulf War, in work that became a report adopted by the United Nations. 

A classmate at law school was from Ecuador. His classmate’s father organized a trip in April 1993 for lawyers and medical professionals to look at the contamination caused by the oil extraction in the Amazon. That trip, which Donziger joined, spawned the suit against Texaco. He would make more than 250 trips to Ecuador over the next two decades.

“Journalism significantly shaped my views and skill set,” he said. “It was vital to allowing my work to be successful. From the beginning this was a unique litigation, for many reasons, but one of the reasons was we, as a team, decided to work across multiple platforms. If we only saw this case as a lawsuit we would never win.”

“Chevron controlled the legal system in Ecuador with their influence. We needed to operate across different platforms, including engaging with the media and carrying out significant public education. Most Ecuadorians, other than those who lived in the region, knew nothing about the pollution that had been happening in their country. We carried out zealous advocacy in the public arena. We realized that the indigenous people would never get a fair trial in Ecuador if they did not illuminate what had happened to them and get public support.”

Both the judge who oversaw Chevron’s lawsuit against Donziger for “racketeering” and Chevron itself “claim that this type of activity is wrong,” he said. “The irony is that what we were doing is what the big oil companies have always done. They always operate in the public relations domain, lobbying Congress to pass legislation to extinguish various legal claims, meeting political leaders behind the scenes. They operate across every platform they can find to exercise their power. We were smart enough to meet them toe-to-toe wherever they were operating and neutralize their ability to undermine the fairness of the trial. That’s how they operate. They try to control court systems.”

“My journalism [experience] sensitized me to injustice. It allowed me to understand the media. I knew how to write press releases, which matters when you do a public case like this. I knew how to work across different platforms to mobilize positive energy around the case. Human rights work involves, first and foremost, justice for victims. But equally important is accountability for the perpetrators. The fact that I am detained shows how far we’ve come and how much risk Chevron feels. It’s not a sign we lost. It’s the opposite.”

Chevron, which had left Ecuador, went back to the New York court, where Donziger had originally filed the lawsuit before Chevron got a change of venue to Ecuador, and sued him, using a civil courts portion of the federal law famous for breaking the New York Mafia in the 1970s, the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.

In effect, “They sued me as a civil racketeer, under a civil RICO statute for $60 billion,” he said. “That was the largest amount of money an American individual ever had been sued for. This began a 10-year campaign to demonize me by Chevron and by its judicial allies.”

Chevron, which has more than $260 billion in assets, has hired an estimated 2,000 lawyers from 60 law firms to carry out its campaign, according to court documents. The oil giant dropped its demand for financial damages weeks before the RICO trial, which would have necessitated a jury trial. Judge Lewis A. Kaplan, a former lawyer for the tobacco industry who had undisclosed investments in funds with Chevron holdings, according to his public financial disclosure statement, decided the RICO case alone. He found credible a witness named Alberto Guerra, relocated to the U.S. by Chevron at a cost of some $2 million, who claimed the verdict in Ecuador was the product of a bribe. Kaplan used Guerra’s testimony as primary evidence for the racketeering charge, although Guerra, a former judge, later admitted to an international tribunal that he had falsified his testimony.

 “[Kaplan] wouldn’t allow me to bring in any environmental evidence that the Ecuadorian courts had used to find Chevron liable,” Donziger said. “He wouldn’t let me testify on my own behalf on direct. He allowed Chevron to use secret witnesses whose identities he wouldn’t reveal to me. He tried to treat it like a national-security kind of case to try to demonize me. Because Chevron’s whole strategy is to demonize [me] as a way to distract attention from its environmental crimes in Ecuador. And Judge Kaplan, who knows all the tricks in the books because he used to work for [tobacco company] Brown & Williamson, when he was [an attorney with the law firm of] Paul, Weiss. He knows the tobacco industry playbook that they used for years and years and continue to use. And he worked with the Chevron lawyers at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher to implement them against me without a jury. And there was nothing I could do about it.”

(Paul, Weiss is a large law firm that currently advises Chevron on its $13 billion purchase of another energy company.)

John Keker, one of Donziger’s lawyers on that case, said he was up against 160 lawyers for Chevron and during the trial he felt “like a goat tethered to a stake.” He called the court proceedings under Kaplan “a Dickensian farce” and a “show trial.” In the end, Kaplan ruled that the judgment in the Ecuadorian court against Chevron was the result of fraud.

He also ordered Donziger to turn over decades of all client communication to Chevron, in effect eradicating attorney-client privilege, a backbone of the Anglo-American legal system with roots dating to ancient Rome. Donziger appealed what was, according to legal experts following the case, an unprecedented and illegal order. While Donziger’s appeal was pending, Kaplan charged him with criminal contempt for this principled stance, as well as his refusal to turn over his passport, his personal electronics and to refrain from seeking the collection of the original award against Chevron.

When his criminal contempt charges against the environmental lawyer were ignored by the U.S. attorney’s office for over five years, Judge Kaplan, using an exceedingly rare judicial maneuver, appointed the private law firm of Seward & Kissel to act in the name of the government to prosecute Donziger. Neither the judge nor the law firm disclosed that Chevron has been a client of Seward & Kissel.

Kaplan also violated the established random case assignment protocol to personally assign Judge Loretta Preska, a member of the right-wing Federalist Society, to hear the case. Chevron is a major donor to the Federalist Society. Preska, in a show of bias, already has said the charges against Donziger appear to be “very strong,” according to Courthouse News. In May, she disallowed him from having his charges heard by a jury.

“The last thing any of them wants is for a group of ordinary citizens to see what has happened to Steven Donziger,” Rick Friedman, one of Donziger’s attorneys, said of Chevron.

Preska’s fealty to corporate power was previously on public display in 2013 when she imposed a 10-year sentence, the maximum allowed under a plea deal, on Jeremy Hammond, the activist who hacked into Stratfor, a private security firm. Hammond made public a barrage of damning internal emails and exposed the email address and password of an account used for business by Preska’s husband, Thomas Kavaler, a partner at the law firm Cahill Gordon & Reindel. Preska, despite the conflict of interest, refused to recuse herself. The 10-year sentence was one of the longest in U.S. history for hacking.

Kaplan had Preska demand Donziger post an $800,000 bond on a misdemeanor charge. Preska placed him under house arrest and confiscated his passport, which he has used to meet with attorneys around the world attempting to enforce the judgment against Chevron. Kaplan managed to have Donziger disbarred. He allowed Chevron to freeze Donziger’s bank accounts, slapped Donziger with millions in fines without allowing him a jury, forced him to wear an ankle monitor 24 hours a day and effectively shut down his ability to earn a living. Kaplan allowed Chevron to impose a lien on Donziger’s apartment in Manhattan, where he lives with his wife and teenage son.

Donziger is scheduled to go to trial without a jury on Sept. 9 in New York City for contempt. Preska will preside over the trial. There has not been a criminal trial in Manhattan federal court since March because of the pandemic. Donziger’s trial would be the first, although hundreds of other defendants facing far more serious felony charges are waiting in jails, infested with COVID-19, for a trial date. Donziger’s four pro bono lawyers said they do not want to risk their lives by traveling to New York during the pandemic for what is a misdemeanor offense.

“The judgment against Chevron Corporation in Ecuador was the product of fraud, bribery and corruption,” Sean Comey, senior advisor for external affairs at Chevron Corporation said when I asked the corporation to comment on the case. “Steven Donziger is a proven liar and an adjudicated racketeer. He committed criminal acts in the U.S. and abroad in pursuit of his extortion scheme in the Ecuadorian courts. Donziger’s continuing lawlessness is now a matter for prosecutors and the U.S. courts to decide. Chevron is not involved in Donziger’s criminal prosecution.”

The flagrant corruption and misuse of the legal system to abjectly serve corporate interests in the Donziger case illustrates the deep decay within our judiciary and democratic institutions, one that was abetted by Democratic administrations that stacked the courts with corporate lawyers — Kaplan was appointed by Bill Clinton — and by Donald Trump, who has elevated ideologues selected by the Federalist Society to the federal bench. Ruling after ruling in Donziger’s case has ignored or grossly distorted the law on behalf of Chevron to ensure that Donziger will be prosecuted, sent to prison and remain in debt for life, all while the $9.5 billion settlement is never paid to aid the people harmed in Ecuador.

The International Association of Democratic Lawyers and the international committee of the National Lawyers Guild issued a letter signed by more than 70 organizations calling the persecution of Donziger an “attack on the rule of law.” The letter said his house arrest was “unprecedented” and charged that he was being targeted for what it called “one of the most important corporate accountability and human rights cases of our time.” The letter accused Kaplan of “violating basic notions of fairness in the judicial process that lie at the core of the rule of law.”

“We cannot allow the rule of law to be upended by corporate interests and a highly biased federal judge seeking to destroy the willpower of one lawyer who has already withstood decades of brutal litigation and scathing personal and professional attacks,” the letter read.

Chevron has also used its clout and advertising dollars to keep the story from being reported in numerous media outlets.

“Based on where this story is trending, we have launched a full offensive to kill it or redirect it,” an Aug. 10, 2010, internal memo from Chevron reads concerning a potential report on the case being done by the Fox News bureau in Miami.

“In addition to working through the Miami bureau, we have reached out to more senior news folks at Fox News, both in NY (through Dana) and in WDC (through Greg Mueller). So, we are trying to attack this story on multiple fronts. To this end, Kent is set to talk to John Stack and Sean Smith who both reside at Fox News in NY at 1:30 today. Finally, if need be, I think we may need to pull the JSW card with Roger Ailes. We have checked John’s availability to place a call to Roger, but his first availability is tomorrow afternoon.”

“JSW” and “John” refer to John S. Watson, who was CEO and chairman of the Chevron Corporation from 2010 to 2018.

The story was killed.

Another internal memo lays out the steps, also ultimately successful, to prevent a similar story from appearing in GQ magazine. The memo suggests that Chevron work “with the Columbia Journalism Review (that ran the rebuke of 60 minutes) and the Media Research Center to expose any degree of bias by GQ and raise alerts about the reporting techniques prior to the story’s publication.”

The memo recommends letting the magazine know that it will face legal action if the story runs and calls on Chevron investigators to “conduct further due diligence on reporter.” Chevron has also hired reporters to produce fake pieces of journalism that peddle the corporation’s propaganda on fake news sites it runs.

The New York Times Magazine earlier this year considered a story about Donziger and then dropped it. The newspaper runs its own ad agency called T Brand Studio. Chevron is a major client, meaning that The New York Times, through T Brand Studio, produces ads for Chevron.

Jake Silverstein, editor of the magazine, when asked to comment said by email: “It was one of several stories William [Langewiesche] considered writing for us in the past year, one that ultimately we decided not to assign. Many factors go into our decisions about what to assign, and none of them ever include who is or is not a client of T Brand Studio or any other part of the paper’s advertising business.”

Dean Baquet, the newspaper’s executive editor, said, when I reached him by email, that the idea that the magazine piece on Donziger was killed because Chevron is a major advertiser is “a ridiculous claim.” He added, “I didn’t even know Chevron worked with T Brand [Studio].”

But that Chevron has invested tremendous resources to kill stories about this case is indisputable given the detailed campaigns to block coverage outlined in its own internal memos.

“I’ve experienced this multiple times with media over the past 10 to 15 years,” Donziger said. “An entity will start writing the story, spend a lot of time on it, then the reporter disappears. The story doesn’t run.”

While The NationThe Intercept and Courthouse News Service have reported on Donziger’s current legal battle, no major mainstream publication has touched it.

“Corporate influence over our federal judiciary has increased dramatically in recent years,” Donziger said. “This firm [Chevron] has captured an element of power from the government and deployed it against a human rights activist.”

Front Line Defenders issued a report in 2019 that found that 300 human rights activists had been murdered in 31 countries, more than two-thirds in Latin America. Of those killed, 40 percent fought for land rights, indigenous peoples and environmental justice.

“What’s shocking to a lot of people is that this is now happening in the United States,” Donziger said. “I don’t mean murder, but death by a thousand cuts. Chevron does not want me to be a lawyer anymore, at a minimum. They don’t want me advocating even as a non-lawyer. They want to silence me. They want to kill every story they can. They’d rather have no story about this case than even a positive story about their side. They don’t want people to know about it. They want to erase it from people’s thought process.

“I cannot get a fair trial with a judge appointed by Judge Kaplan rather than though the random assignment process,” he lamented. “I cannot get a fair trial with a prosecutor whose law firm [has worked] for Chevron. These are egregious conflicts of interest. It’s misconduct on a grand scale. I’ve been locked up four times as long as the longest sentence ever imposed on a lawyer for criminal contempt in New York. Anyone who cares about the rule of law should be appalled.”

“The sky has changed”: Astronomers say SpaceX satellites are interfering with their observations

When the Federal Communications Commission approved Amazon’s plans for the Kuiper constellation, a plan to put 3,236 low-Earth orbit (LEO) satellites in orbit, the astronomy world raised a collective eyebrow. Low-Earth satellites move quickly across the night sky like small stars — which can interfere with the kinds of long exposures that astronomical observatories need to do in order to image distant astronomical objects. And the more satellites there are orbiting Earth, the more likely that one or more will interfere with an observation.

Anecdotally, astronomers have shared their fears over the last couple years, sometimes speaking out publicly, and a few reports have tried to quantify the impact. Now, an in-depth new report from a working group of astronomers released by the American Astronomical Society shows how these satellites could drastically change the scope of astronomy work conducted on Earth.

Specifically, astronomers state that existing satellites, including the 538 satellites from SpaceX as well as future ones, will “fundamentally change the way astronomers can plan and execute observations.” In other words, the field of astronomy is facing an existential threat. 

“With tens of thousands of LEO [satellites], no combination of mitigations can avoid the impacts of the satellite trails on the science programs of the coming generation of optical astronomy facilities,” the report states. 

The authors warn that, even in this last year, “the sky has changed,” as a “growing numbers of satellite trails contaminating astronomical images.” The risk of contaminated data, they write, can be hard to predict and mitigate: “A bright satellite crossing near a long spectrograph slit . . . could ruin the entire exposure, as it is not known a priori which observations are contaminated, forcing a repeat exposure or possible loss of science opportunity.” 

And this is just the beginning. SpaceX is planning to send a total of 25,000 communications satellites for its planned Starlink constellation; it is currently approved to launch 12,000. As of February 2020, there were about 5,500 satellites total in space, 2,300 of which are still functioning. The number of satellites is predicted to grow into the tens of thousands over the next several years, thanks to companies like Amazon, SpaceX and OneWeb. Their satellite constellations are part of plans to provide broadband internet access to everyone on Earth.

But at what price for science? As the report explains, the success of astronomical investigations depends on the ability to observe any part of the sky with the same quality of view. Specifically, investigations such as observing stellar populations in the Milky Way and neighboring galaxies, and looking for potentially hazardous near-Earth objects, could be undermined with more LEO satellites, especially given how time-sensitive these observations can be.

“For example, if a near-Earth object is not recovered, its orbital parameters are lost,” the authors of the report state. “If the transit of a promising super-Earth exoplanet candidate is missed, the orbital timing may not be recovered.”

Authors of the report called out OneWeb as a particularly problematic constellation due to its high altitude at 1200 kilometers above Earth.

“Constellations at high altitudes, such as the OneWeb constellation at 1200 km, present particularly serious challenges; they will be visible all night during summer and significant fractions of the night during winter, fall, and spring, and will have negative impacts on nearly all observational programs,” the report said, referring to “twilight observations,” which are often important when it comes to searching for Earth-threatening asteroids and comets.

The report includes ten recommendations to mitigate the influence of satellites on astronomical investigations, including launching “fewer” or no LEO satellites. “However impractical or unlikely, this is the only option identified that can achieve zero astronomical impact,” a press release about the report stated. Other ways include deploying satellites to orbital altitudes, darkening the satellites, and finding a way to minimize satellite trails.

The authors of the report also note that these commercial satellites could spoil starry nights for amateur astronomers.

The report comes at a time when Earth’s capitalists are gearing up to commercialize space, and rapid technology developments are advancing our knowledge of the universe.

“Recent technology developments for astronomical research — especially cameras with wide fields of view on large optical-infrared telescopes — are happening at the same time as the rapid deployment of many thousands of LEOsats by companies rolling out new space-based communication technologies,” Connie Walker, a collaborator on the report and an astronomer at NOIRLab in Tucson, Arizona, said.

Despite the tension, the hope is that this report will inspire both scientists and commercial satellite operators to work together.

“Even though we’re still at an early stage of understanding and addressing the threats posed to astronomy by large satellite constellations, we have made good progress and have plenty of reasons to hope for a positive outcome,” AAS President Paula Szkody said in a statement.

Texas GOP’s new slogan echoes a conspiracy group. Its chair says there’s no connection

Shortly after Allen West took over as the Texas GOP chair last month, he gave the party a new slogan — “We are the storm” — and plastered it everywhere: fundraising emails, social media accounts, even on T-shirts and hats for sale.

West, a former Florida congressman, indicated he drew inspiration for the slogan from an unattributed quote that he likes: “The devil whispers to the warrior slyly can it withstand the coming storm. The warrior responds, ‘I am the storm.'” Others, however, saw something more nefarious: a dog whistle to the QAnon conspiracy movement — the one that President Donald Trump notably declined to denounce Wednesday, saying he did not know much about it while also speaking favorably of its followers.

So what’s going on at the state party?

On Thursday, The New York Times published a story that prominently featured the Texas GOP slogan, calling it an “unusually visible example of the Republican Party’s dalliance with QAnon.” The party pushed back on the story — pointing to the anonymous quote as the “provenance” of the slogan — and said it was never contacted for comment. Democrats, meanwhile, called on state GOP leaders to disavow the slogan, which West indicated he would not do.

The QAnon movement adheres to an unfounded theory that a mysterious government official named “Q” is exposing a plot against Trump by “deep-state” actors involving satanism and child sex trafficking. Some believers have been accused of plotting or carrying out violent crimes, including killing a New York mob boss. In April, an Illinois woman was arrested after she traveled to New York with illegal knives and wrote on Facebook that Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden need to be “taken out.”

Last year, the FBI identified the movement as a domestic terrorism threat. It is getting more attention than ever after Marjorie Taylor Greene, a GOP congressional candidate who openly supports the movement, won her primary runoff last week in Georgia — and after Trump’s comments Wednesday.

The concept of “the storm” is a significant part of QAnon vernacular, said Mark Fenster, a law professor at the University of Florida who studies conspiracy theories.

“The storm has been one of the metaphors that Q and his followers have used to describe the coming upheaval in which Donald Trump reveals himself to have been working heroically behind the scenes to expose and punish those who have been engaged in this horrible satanic child sex cult,” Fenster said. “Storms are longstanding metaphors going back to biblical [times] of how it is you cleanse what has otherwise been a sinful humanity.”

While it may not be entirely clear how the Texas GOP slogan plays into that metaphor, Fenster noted that QAnon followers are constantly trying to “seek out the breadcrumbs” in statements by public figures to discern solidarity with them.

“They view it as just part of the game,” Fenster said. “The classic QAnon move … is to take isolated anomalous sentences of Trump’s Twitter feed or press conferences and say, ‘See, this demonstrates that this is gonna come true.'”

Before the uproar over the New York Times story, West was asked about the slogan’s nexus to QAnon during an interview earlier this month with KXAN-TV in Austin and denied a connection. West pointed to the quote beginning with “the devil whispers” and said, “I don’t know about anybody else and I’m not into internet conspiracy theories.”

While the quote’s origin is unknown, West has used it previously, including in speeches while campaigning for state party chair. In one speech uploaded to YouTube on July 11, West calls it “one of my favorite quotes,” recites it in full and says the “Republican Party of Texas — and each and every one of you — we’re gonna be the storm that the progressive socialist left has never seen.”

On Friday, the Texas GOP blasted the New York Times story, saying the newspaper never “reached out for a comment or clarification.”

“The we are the storm poem is one of Chairman West’s favorite quotes to use in speeches,” the statement said. “He and the entire Texas GOP will not be bullied by partisan leftists in the media into ceding powerful phrases with biblical roots — taken from Psalm 29 — to Internet conspiracy groups. The New York Times should be ashamed of themselves, and we look forward to their correction, apology, and retraction.”

On Friday evening, a New York Times spokesperson, Ari Isaacman Bevacqua, said the newspaper “reached out to the Republican Party of Texas and did not hear back” before publishing the story. The party’s spokesperson, Luke Twombly, said he received no such correspondence. The story did not include any mention of an effort to reach the party.

Psalm 29 does not include the “devil whispers” quote. However, it is titled “The Voice of God in a Great Storm” and depicts God as a force for good overwhelming nature.

The Texas Democratic Party did not buy the GOP’s explanation for the slogan.

“The Republican Party is being led by an internet cult that believes in dangerous, extreme far-right conspiracy theories,” party spokesperson Abhi Rahman said in a statement. “West can try to deny it’s connection, but it’s there in plain sight for everybody to see.”

The party particularly pressured U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, who is up for reelection in November, to denounce QAnon.

“Sen. Cornyn doesn’t agree with their views,” Cornyn campaign spokesperson Travis Considine said in an email.

Whatever the state party’s explanation, the slogan has created unease among some Texas Republicans. Among them is Chris Ford, former chair of the Dallas Young Republicans.

“I truly believe it’s not the intention of Chairman West to spread this QAnon message, but if someone like me, after a little research, can find there’s a bunch of QAnon accounts on Twitter saying, ‘We are the storm,’ and a T-shirt you can buy with ‘We are the storm’ and the letter Q, I think the Texas GOP should’ve done the research and said, ‘Do we even want to even appear that we’re pandering to this conspiracy theory part of the GOP?'” Ford said.

Ford added that he would like to see a “firm denouncement” from the state party, but he acknowledged it is “hard when you have President Trump not denouncing the movement.”

West has been Texas GOP chairman for about a month, after a resounding defeat of incumbent James Dickey at the party’s convention in mid-July. West has so far made good on his campaign promises to orient the party to more aggressively confront Democrats, challenging his Democratic counterpart to a debate shortly after taking over and holding a rally Thursday with the McCloskeys, the St. Louis couple who brandished guns at Black Lives Matter protesters outside their home in June.

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

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

Arizona GOP worried Trump and McSally will cost them the state: “Arizonans are fed up”

Arizona has been on the verge of turning into a blue state for years. Now even some Republicans believe that President Trump’s sagging popularity amid the coronavirus pandemic and the worst economic crisis in a lifetime could flip the state to the Democrats.

Arizona has long been to Democrats what “Lucy’s football was to Charlie Brown,” wrote FiveThirtyEight’s Nathaniel Rakich. The party has spent millions trying to win the state and media outlets have argued that “this year” would be the year Democrats finally flip Arizona since at least 2004. It hasn’t happened. Democratic nominee Joe Biden would become just the second Democrat to carry the state since 1948 if he can pull off a win, and Arizona would have two Democratic senators for the first time since 1953 if Sen. Martha McSally, a Republican appointed to her seat by Gov. Doug Ducey, loses her race to retired astronaut Mark Kelly.

Unlike in past years, rising turnout, a changing electorate and Republicans’ widely-criticized response to the pandemic have the GOP worried that Democrats won’t just build on their 2018 success, when Sen. Kyrsten Sinema became the first Democrat to win an Arizona Senate race since the 1980s, but could even flip both chambers in the state legislature.

That’s “certainly within the realm of possibility,” Paul Bentz, a longtime Republican strategist at the firm HighGround, told Salon. Bentz was campaign manager for former Gov. Jan Brewer in 2010.

“There are two [State] Senate seats that are vulnerable,” Bentz said, and it’s the “same thing on the House side.” He said he could imagine “a world in which both chambers ended up equally split … which would be unbelievable, but there’s a pathway towards that. That might happen.”

Democrats are “very confident” of their chances to flip the state legislature, Felecia Rotellini, the chairwoman of the Arizona Democratic Party, told Salon.

“Both chambers are on the precipice of turning blue for the first time in 50 years,” she said. “We need three seats in the Senate and two in the House to gain control. We are fighting for each and every seat and the path to achieving these majorities is clear.”

The fate of the state legislature is likely tied to the fortunes of Trump and McSally in the federal races. Recent polls of Arizona have been fairly split between Biden and Trump but have consistently shown McSally trailing Kelly, often by significant margins.

“I definitely think they are both in for an incredibly difficult race,” Bentz said. Republicans lost their longtime voter participation advantage in 2018 and Democrats have “caught up with Republicans in the state,” he said.

The pandemic has worsened the situation for the party.

“Before the pandemic, Arizona had one of the best and fastest-growing economies,” Bentz said. “I definitely think the pathway for success for the president was better than it is now, especially with everything slowing down and unemployment. I think between the two … the president has a better chance of winning Arizona right now than McSally does. His base is more supportive of him.”

Rotellini said that “Arizonans are fed up” with Republicans’ “failure to control the spread of the virus.” Along with Trump’s widely-criticized federal response, Republican Gov. Doug Ducey has seen his approval rating plummet into the 30s after infections spiked following the state’s early reopening.

“Arizonans know that until we get the pandemic under control, the economy can’t fully recover,” Rotellini said. “Arizonans are tired of the wishful thinking with no plan of how to truly curtail the spread of this virus. They want leaders who are ready to roll up their sleeves and do the work.”

Arizona has been trending toward Democrats for years. Former President Barack Obama lost the state by 11 points in 2012 before Hillary Clinton narrowed the margin to three points in 2016. Two years ago, Sinema became the first Democrat to win statewide in a decade as turnout surged to the highest level in 36 years. Turnout is expected to rise even more after more than 580,000 Democrats voted in the state’s presidential primary, up more than 110,000 from 2016, according to data provided by the state’s Democratic Party. Democrats saw registrations grow by 9% between 2016 and 2018 and that number climbed to 16% ahead of the primary. Turnout this year was also bolstered by a surge in voting by mail. While many Arizona voters have voted by mail in the past, Democratic turnout surged from 29% in the 2018 primary to 40% in this year’s primary.

Rotellini told Salon that “2018 proved that Arizona is a battleground state and that Democrats can win when we organize, invest, and build an operation to elect leaders who will put people first.”

“We elected the first Democratic U.S. senator from Arizona in 30 years, secured three additional statewide victories, flipped a U.S. Congress seat blue — giving us a 5-4 Democratic congressional delegation majority — and increased Democratic representation in the state legislature,” she said. “Now, in 2020, we’ve doubled-down on this strategy. We began organizing earlier than ever before, are building the largest Democratic organizing effort in our party’s history and we have phenomenal leaders like astronaut Mark Kelly.”

Rotellini said the party’s investment in digital organizing has paid off amid the pandemic and organizers have seen that voters’ “enthusiasm is real.”

“People of all walks of life are reaching out to get involved,” she said. “The election in 2016 was close, Trump only won by 3.5%, and has spent most of his administration trying to take away health care coverage from hundreds of thousands of Arizonans while he’s failed to confront COVID-19. It’s clear he’s not up for the job. Arizonans recognize that, and they are motivated to elect new leadership.”

Numerous progressive groups have worked to register hundreds of thousands of new voters. One Arizona, a group launched after the passage of SB1070, the controversial immigration law that was later struck down by the Supreme Court, organized to register previously “disenfranchised” Latino voters. The group reported registering more than 190,000 people to vote in 2018. The group had already registered 35,000 new voters before moving their operations online after the pandemic struck.

“It has been a grind to say the least but we have kept pushing since March and our coalition member organizations have stayed optimistic and creative,” Montserrat Arredondo, the group’s executive director, told Salon. “I think we will get close to that same number this year.”

Immigration has not been the top issue for voters that it has been in the past because of the pandemic but “folks are not one-issue” voters, Arredondo said. “The pandemic has definitely elevated the issues in many ways. It reminds us of the connectivity discrepancies between neighborhoods as kids go back to school, the lack of monetary support for taxpaying immigrants, the cost of utilities as folks are at home more.”

Arredondo said that she is “optimistic” that there will be a “huge turnout of young people and people of color” as a result of the protests against systemic racism and concerns about public health.

“I think that is going to bring a huge shift in what our government makeup looks like now,” she said.

Both parties expect turnout to surpass the 2018 total.

“Frankly, the sky’s the limit. 2018 wasn’t a miracle,” Rotellini said. “It was the result of years of hard work which hasn’t stopped. We are building an even bigger and better Get Out the Vote program. We have more enthusiasm for our candidates up and down the ballot than I’ve ever seen. I truly believe there are no limits to what we can achieve. We have a strong voter protection program that is focused on making sure that Arizonans are able to vote safely this election and that every vote cast is counted.”

Bentz said his firm expects turnout to reach 3 million for the first time in Arizona history, which “will create much tighter races.”

Which voters will swing the election is an issue of some debate. Arredondo predicted that changing demographics would result in a more progressive electorate.

“In Arizona, our younger and browner community is coming of age and will be a huge part of these election results … I definitely think the changes in elections right now are due to changing demographics and folks hearing and seeing more candidates that look like them, came from neighborhoods like theirs and grew up in ways similar to them,” she said. “And more and more it’s not just representation folks are looking for but candidates [and] politicians that are genuine and are speaking honestly about the issues affecting us today, like the pandemic.”

Bentz predicted that the race would be decided by swing voters, perhaps even those who split their votes between Democrats and Republicans.

Of the more than 2.4 million people who voted in 2018], Bentz said, “195,000 of them were crossover voters” who voted for both Sinema and Ducey, he said. “So we’re talking somewhere between 8% and 10% of the electorate is the key swing audience that moves. And what’s really interesting that we’ve seen so far is there’s actually some of those folks that are Trump-Kelly voters.”

Bentz says that trend means the state is unlikely to back any left-wing Democrats anytime soon, “especially when you look at how candidates have won Arizona. Sinema called herself an independent and talked about issues that were important to the state, talked about veterans’ issues, talked about public safety. She did not cast herself as one of those types of progressive-leaning Democrats. And you saw David Garcia, the candidate for governor against Ducey, go that more progressive route and get pretty soundly defeated.”

Bentz noted that there has been a “significant uptick” in Trump advertising trying to cast Biden as a “weak candidate and emphasizing illegal immigration issues.”

“The Biden campaign has to be mindful of that,” he said. “I know the Republicans are … trying to align him and now [Kamala] Harris with those portions of the party. And that will create some challenges for them in Arizona. … He needs to visit the state and needs to spend some time here. I know that’s very big challenge in this environment, but the president is going to keep coming to Arizona. If Biden doesn’t come here, I think that creates a vulnerability.”

Despite the trends in recent elections and new polls, Bentz warned that Democrats should not “underestimate the president” or they risk yet another Grand Canyon State disappointment.

The Trump campaign is spending heavily, he said, “which tells me that they think Arizona is in play and they’re trying to destabilize Biden by doing that. We’ll see if it works, but I suspect both races will get much tighter before the end of this thing.” Trump’s poll numbers are “pretty well set at who’s going to support him, Bentz said. “I don’t see that growing right now. Everything they seem to be doing strategically is to try to erode any Biden enthusiasm.”

Hurricane Laura highlights GOP has “absolutely no plan to deal with the climate crisis”

Climate action advocates in the U.S. amplified the urgency needed for political leaders from both major parties—including Republicans in the middle of their 4-day national convention this week—to address the planetary climate crisis as Hurricane Laura, upgraded to a potentially catastrophic Category 4 earlier in the day, barreled toward the Gulf Coast.

“It is terrifying to watch the speed with which Hurricane Laura is intensifying,” author and climate activist Bill McKibben tweeted. “The hot waters of the Gulf are an endless source of destructive power.”

McKibben’s tweet came as the National Hurricane Center warned that Laura, expected to make landfall along the Texas-Louisiana line Wednesday night, is “an extremely dangerous Category 4 hurricane” that could unleash an “unsurvivable storm surge.”

Among the Louisiana communities in the storm’s path is Lake Charles, with federal forecasters warning that the city could experience winds of up to 110 mph.

Lake Charles is “a majority Black city with metro area population of 225,000″ and per capita income of $22,855,” tweeted meteorologist and journalist Eric Holthaus, who referred to the city as being at “the crossroads of the climate emergency and environmental racism of the oil industry.”

Progressive group Power4NewMexico drew attention to the National Hurricane Center’s blunt warning about the power of the storm. “The more we wait on a bold climate action, people will die from the climate crisis,” the group wrote.

While the Democratic Party platform has been criticized for not being bold enough to address runaway planetary warming, Republicans, who are holding their convention this week, have been harshly panned for having “absolutely no plan to deal with the climate crisis.” 

And, as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) noted Wednesday, the un-action plan has to been seen in the context of the multiple climate-fueled disasters currently ravaging the nation:

Hurricane Laura producing an unsurvivable storm surge in Texas and Louisiana. A catastrophic 800-mile derecho in Iowa and Illinois. Raging wildfires in California. No. The Green New Deal is not radical. Having a president in office who calls climate change a hoax—that’s radical.

— Bernie Sanders (@BernieSanders) August 26, 2020

For those in the storm’s path Wednesday—and future storms to come— the need for bold climate action is clear:

As Mike Pence ranted about Wisconsin protesters — Kenosha was peaceful without police interference

Vice President Mike Pence took a moment of out his Republican VP speech to demand law and order and bash the protesters that have taken to the streets after another unarmed Black man, Jacob Blake, was shot by police.

To make matters worse, the protests last night ended with two dead after an armed 17-year-old supporter of President Donald Trump took the call for “law and order” to heart and killed two people.

But as Pence was shaming the protesters and demanding “order,” the protests were winding down after a peaceful night without incident. Unlike previously, the police didn’t rush the protesters at the curfew. Instead, that stayed back, and everything came to a close without any more death. The crowd is currently peacefully marching.

Suburban women are rejecting Trump’s ‘”blatantly racist” appeal for their votes: report

President Donald Trump has had a lot to say about “suburban housewives” in July and August, arguing that all hell will break loose in suburbia if his Democratic opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, defeats him in the 2020 presidential election. But journalist Inyoung Choi, in an article published in Business Insider on August 25, reports that disdain for Trump is widespread among suburban women — including some who voted for him in 2016.

Choi notes that in a Marist poll released in late June, 66% of suburban women disapproved of Trump’s performance as president — and that in July, more polls showed Biden with an advantage among suburban voters. Quinnipiac, for example, found Biden to have a 22% advantage over Trump among suburbanites, while an NPR/PBS poll showed that advantage to be 25%.

Business Insider spoke to some suburban women who are supporting Biden over Trump, including Ohio resident Julia Womack — who lives in the Cincinnati suburbs and has been active in a group called Red, Wine & Blue. Choi describes it as “a social and political group to mobilize women in the suburbs, many of whom do not have a political background.”

Womack is critical of Trump for promoting racism, and Red, Wine & Blue’s founder, Katie Paris, told Business Insider that when Trump speaks of “suburban housewives,” he is “describing someone who no longer exists.”

Similarly, Dolores Hayden, a professor at Yale University, told the publication that Trump “really doesn’t have a good feeling for demographics” when he talks about “suburban housewives” — a 1940s-inspired image of suburban women that recalls a time when “the man was the homeowner, the woman was the consumer, and they were raising their kids in a white suburban setting. But that’s an idea of the 1940s, and that’s really not the way suburbs look today.”

First, suburbs are more racially diverse than they were during the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s. Second, soccer moms aren’t necessarily stay-at-home moms. Tracy Johnson, an African-American Democrat who lives in suburbia in Ohio, told Business Insider, “I’m a ‘suburban housewife’ who doesn’t fit (Trump’s) demographic who he’s reaching out to. It’s blatantly racist what he’s trying to do.”

Another interviewee in Choi’s article is Erin Rosiello, who lives in the Cincinnati suburbs and is running as a Democrat for a seat in the Ohio House of Representatives. Rosiello voted for Trump in 2016 but regrets it now and is supporting Biden — and one of the reasons is Trump’s war on the Affordable Care Act of 2010, a.k.a. Obamacare. Rosiello has undergone chemotherapy for lung cancer and said that the “little piece that’s left” of the ACA has “kept me alive.”

Rosiello told Business Insider, “I still fear every day that he’s going to pull the plug on ACA, which will take away preexisting coverage — which would cost me my life.”

Discussing her vote for Trump in 2016, Rosiello explained, “I made a horrible mistake — so much so that I’m willing to run for office in this very tumultuous time.”

Pharma execs dumped millions in stock for huge profits after getting pandemic contracts

Pharmaceutical executives continued to dump millions of dollars in stock in August despite criticism that they were profiting from big taxpayer-funded contracts awarded amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Stock prices have soared for pharmaceutical companies like Moderna, which is developing a leading vaccine candidate, in no small part thanks to contracts awarded by the Trump administration. The top five executives at Moderna sold more than $89 million in stock in the first five months of the year, with about three times as many stock transactions as in all of 2019, according to Stat News.

The trades come despite warnings from Jay Clayton, the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, who cautioned pharmaceutical companies to avoid selling stock amid the pandemic.

“We’ve said for a long time: In this volatile time, please practice good corporate hygiene,” he told CNBC earlier this year. “Why would you want to even raise the question that you were doing something that was inappropriate?”

Months later, executives at Moderna and other pharmaceutical companies that received government contracts have continued to sell off large amounts of stock at a big profit, according to SEC records reviewed by Salon.

“It certainly doesn’t inspire much confidence to see drug company executives feverishly dumping their stock options and cashing out fortunes for themselves after stock prices were inflated by the billions of dollars the Trump administration shoveled into drug company coffers,” Eli Zupnick, a spokesman for the progressive watchdog group Accountable Pharma, told Salon.

Moderna, which has been touted by President Donald Trump, received nearly $1 billion in research aid before landing a $1.5 billion deal with the government to deliver 100 million doses of its experimental vaccine — even though it has never previously brought a vaccine to market.

By June, executives at Moderna had sold about $161 million worth of stock as the company’s shares soared by more than 200%, The Wall Street Journal reported last month.

The practice continued into August, as just three of the company’s executives dumped more than 150,000 shares between Aug. 5 and Aug. 17 for a net profit of $9.8 million, according to SEC records.

Novavax has also benefited from Trump’s Operation Warp Speed, receiving the program’s largest award yet at $1.6 billion last month. It received another $60 million in funding in June from the Defense Department, though the company has never successfully developed a vaccine.

The company’s stock was trading at 36 cents per share in May 2019 and did a 1-for-20 reverse stock split to stay on the NASDAQ exchange but still finished the year down 39%, according the Journal.

But Novavax’s fortunes shifted when it used its power connections to pursue a government contract. The New York Times reported that the company “drew on influential ties it has cultivated in the federal government,” including two former Novavax executives who serve on the Biomedical Advances Research and Development Authority (BARDA), one of the federal agencies involved in Operation Warp Speed. One of the former execs “would later complain that the company crossed ethical lines when it approached him about receiving funding this spring,” according to the report.

John Trizzino, the company’s chief business and financial officer, told the Times that Novavax had done nothing wrong, but did not deny using their connections to land the biggest vaccine contract yet.

“This doesn’t happen by itself,” he said. “This happens through years and years of working within the industry, building solid relationships, having worked with many of these partners.”

With the company’s stock soaring after the contract, its executives sold off more than 164,000 shares at a net profit of $16.8 million on a single day in August, according to SEC records. Trizzino made about $4.2 million in profit that day.

Another company with ties to the Trump administration has also reaped the benefits of its connections.

Before the pandemic began, Emergent BioSolutions landed a $2.8 billion deal that paid it more than double the previous price per dose for its smallpox vaccine. This happened shortly after Robert Kadlec, who formerly worked for the company as a consultant, was confirmed as assistant secretary for preparedness and response at the Department of Health and Human Services, The Washington Post reported. Emergent BioSolutions received hundreds of millions in other contracts under Trump, the Post reported last month, before the administration awarded one of its largest pandemic-related contracts — $628 million to manufacture an eventual vaccine — to the “little-known biodefense” firm in July.

Six of the company’s executives sold more than $3.3 million in shares last month, according to SEC records, a month after an HHS report warned that the Trump administration’s decision to award it a series of large contracts had created “vulnerabilities in the supply chain” and raised concerns about inflated costs due to the decreased competition.

“Emergent is a premier manufacturing partner to innovative vaccine companies and the U.S. government because we’re one of the very few that has the highly specialized capabilities and large-scale production capacity required to address the COVID-19 pandemic,” Nina DeLorenzo, the company’s senior vice president for global communications and public affairs, said in a statement to Salon. “We have deliberately invested in and prepared for this kind of health emergency and are quickly deploying those capabilities to help us deliver large quantities of COVID-19 vaccine candidates as soon as possible.

“Our executive team and board of directors are held to the highest ethical standards and follow strict compliance with all laws and regulations governing financial transactions,” the statement continued. “We have a pre-clearance process for directors and senior leaders, equity ownership requirements, and follow all best practices, including strict oversight and disclosure.”

Moderna and Novavax did not respond to questions from Salon.

Accountable Pharma called for the SEC to investigate the stock sell-offs.

“This is another sad reminder that the Trump administration has allowed its drug industry allies to hand all the risk to taxpayers while their executives and shareholders make millions whether or not they deliver on a safe and effective vaccine,” Zupnick said. “These sales should be investigated by the SEC and this should be another reminder to Congress that Trump’s secretive vaccine program needs a serious dose of accountability and transparency.”

“We’ll do anything to see ‘Tenet”: Meet the fans taking flights for Christopher Nolan’s latest

California resident Tyler Tompkins booked a plane ride to see “Tenet” weeks before movie tickets to Christopher Nolan‘s latest sci-fi epic even went on sale.

The round-trip flight from Los Angeles to Austin, a three-hour Spirit Airlines journey in time for the Sept. 1 screening, set him back $220. And that’s without accounting for the cinema stub itself, popcorn or soda. His plan? Land in the Lone Star state (where movie theaters have reopened), book it to the AMC Barton Creek Square, and see the movie — twice — before returning straight home.

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“I’m seeing the movie like three hours after I land. That’s the whole purpose of this trip,” says a breathlessly excited Tompkins, who’s traveling with three others. “My friends think I’m crazy, going all the way across the country to watch it, but we want to show support for this film and we’ll do anything to see it.”

Though 65% of cinemas across the globe are now open, according to Gower Street Analytics, some international fans keen to see rare 70MM IMAX screenings of the film, and Americans in states with shuttered movie theaters, like Tompkins, are willing to cross state and country lines to be among the first to see “Tenet” on the big screen.

The 24-year-old cinephile moved from Austin to Los Angeles earlier this year with a group of friends, all hoping to break into the film industry as writers, directors and producers. Then, the global pandemic happened, and any glimmer of entry-level work dried up. Tompkins, an evangelical Nolan fan who’s been anticipating “Tenet” for months, gets by working as a server at Yard House in Marina Del Rey. As the situation grew dire for California’s cinemas, he began quietly putting money aside in case an inter-state journey was an option.

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“When we were certain the film was coming out in the U.S. and I saw the theater I used to go to all the time in Austin was showing the movie on Sept. 1, I immediately bought a plane ticket,” says Tompkins.

The trip will be his first flight since the coronavirus crisis hit, and his first cinema outing, too. Tompkins, who graduated college in 2018, describes the summer anticipating “Tenet” as an “emotional rollercoaster.” “We’re just happy it’s finally happening. Nolan and Warner Bros. are taking a huge chance on this $200 million movie. We want to make sure we support it in any way possible.”

Tompkins is aware some may balk at the lengths — and perceived risks — he’s taking to see “Tenet,” but there’s little trepidation on his part. Friends who’ve flown since March have assured that face coverings are diligently worn on flights, and AMC’s socially distanced seating plans put him at ease.

“I’m not too worried,” he shrugs. “If I get sick, that’s my problem, but I want to make sure I don’t get anyone else sick, so I’ll be following the precautions.”

Another Los Angeles-based fan set to take flight for “Tenet,” who spoke to Variety on the condition of anonymity, likens the experience to “Star Wars” fans camping out for tickets, or Apple users queueing for new iPhones. “It’s stupid, yes,” says the 30-year-old university administrator who’s flying to Salt Lake City over a long weekend, “but it’s something I’m interested in.”

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The film junkie, who plans to catch the film at an IMAX with Utah’s Megaplex Theatres, was able to pay for his flight with air miles, forking out a nominal $13 in taxes and fees. Thanks to free lodging with friends, he reckons he can get by on $50 over the weekend ahead of his Aug. 31 screening, for which he’s taken Monday off.

Such trips come as the U.S. exhibition sector creaks back to life, with movie theaters in Florida, Texas and Georgia now screening films such as “Unhinged,” which played 1,823 venues in North America last weekend. However, major markets like New York, California and New Jersey remain shuttered, and many are critical of all non-essential travel, let alone for an out-of-state movie.

“Travel can be a way of spreading vectors and it does give me pause,” he says. “But in general? I think people have been very selfish. People are drinking, gambling, touching cards and chips in casinos, yet there’s less shame for that than a handful of movie nerds who are doing this.”

There’s a wider principle at stake, too. “This [release] will be a referendum on whether or not theatrical for large blockbusters can happen, and I don’t want these films to go the way of ‘Mulan,'” he says. “If a film is shot for IMAX, I’m interested in seeing it on a large-format screen.”

Indeed, the lure of IMAX cinemas, especially those equipped to show crisp 70MM prints — the wide high-resolution film gauge once used to project classic films — has prompted some global fans to cross country lines. However, Europe’s resurgence of COVID-19 and knee-jerk government regulations are foiling plans across the continent.

Lukáš Meinhart, a cinema manager based in Prague, Czech Republic, says the pleasure of seeing a Nolan film in “the biggest analogue format out there” is “absolute perfection.” This year, the feat is especially challenging as London’s BFI IMAX — where Tom Cruise caught an early screening of “Tenet” on Tuesday — is the only IMAX in Europe showing “Tenet” in 70MM.

Keen to take his wife Bettina, who is based in Vienna, Austria, Meinhart booked London flights out of neighboring Slovakia for mid-September — a trip that will amount to around €300 ($350). However, the U.K. last week removed Austria from its “travel corridor” list — a roster of countries permitting safe travel without a 14-day quarantine period — meaning the couple would need to self-isolate for two weeks upon arriving in London, which they’re not prepared to do.

“Either they open the borders [again] for Austria by mid-September, or not,” the 29-year-old says warily. “I can either cancel the flights and spend time somewhere else with my wife, or take my brother.” Further complicating matters is whether a cautious BFI IMAX will even screen the film into September.

“I was pretty sad about it,” says Meinhart. “I just wanted to share it with my wife — to show her what cinema means to me.” Bettina Meinhart says she simply “can’t understand the travel regulations against Austria,” and suggest politics may be involved.

And yet, the couple regrets nothing. “We shouldn’t stop making plans to realize our dreams, to visit another country and experience something else,” Lukáš Meinhart says. “We should be aware of the regulations, but it shouldn’t limit us.”

In Paris, France, Franck Laniel similarly found himself in the coronavirus crosshairs. A devout supporter of the BFI IMAX, he booked his Sept. 5 cinema tickets as well as passes for the Eurostar train between London and Paris on Aug. 12. “But by Aug. 13, I started seeing that the British government was putting in quarantine measures [for France]. It was just unbelievable,” says the 43-year-old. “I was devastated.”

France was plucked off the travel corridor list on Aug. 15, meaning Laniel, who’s traveled to London for every BFI IMAX screening of Nolan’s films since 2012, can’t enter the U.K. without his one-day trip, costing the director of photography and his partner around €179 ($211), becoming a two-week stay in a hotel room.

“I’ll now have to book either another ride to London…which I obviously won’t need if the movie is no longer available at [the BFI IMAX],” complains Laniel.

But echoing a familiar refrain, the hassle is worth it for Nolan. “He’s taking lengths to shoot in IMAX so, as far as I’m concerned, if he’s going to do that much work, I’ll try and make the effort to see it in IMAX,” says Laniel.

“If the movie industry doesn’t realize there’s a difference between a movie made for TV, and a film made for theaters, the business is really going to feel the pain in the coming years.”