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“We could have done more”: Mueller prosecutor to publish insider account before Election Day

Sen. Lindsey Graham, the chairman of the Republican-led Senate Judiciary Committee, will grant a request by Democrats on the panel to invite former special counsel Robert Mueller to testify about his investigation into the Trump campaign.

Sunday’s news follows a Washington Post op-ed Mueller published Saturday, the day after President Donald Trump rocked the legal world when he commuted longtime friend and adviser Roger Stone’s 40-month prison sentence for obstructing a congressional investigation into the president.

“Stone was prosecuted and convicted because he committed federal crimes,” Mueller wrote, defending his work after a year of silence. “He remains a convicted felon — and rightly so.”

Shortly afterwards, a top Mueller prosecutor announced that he was writing a memoir about the investigation and its failures to “do more.” The book, titled “Where Law Ends,” will be published one month before the election.

Graham made his announcement on Twitter.

“Apparently Mr. Mueller is willing – and also capable – of defending the Mueller investigation through an oped in the Washington Post,” Graham wrote.

“Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee have previously requested Mr. Mueller appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify about his investigation,” he added. “That request will be granted.”

Though Mueller testified before the House Judiciary and Intelligence Committees in back-to-back hearings last July, Graham and Senate Republicans rejected Democratic demands to call the former FBI director, saying it was time to move on from the Russia investigation.

“I made sure that Mueller was able to do his job without interference,” Graham told CNN in April 2019. “The Mueller report is over for me. Done.”

But last month Graham signaled a shift when he told his Democratic counterpart on the committee, Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, that it is “not an unreasonable request” to call someone from Mueller’s team, including the former special counsel himself.

“I’m not adverse to having somebody from the Mueller team come and tell the committee what they did and how they did it,” Graham said. “As a matter of fact, I think that’s a really good idea.”

“As to Mr. Mueller: If you want to call him, I will,” Graham later added. “I would just ask you to think twice about that.”

Former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed Mueller in May 2017 to take over the Russia investigation after Trump fired FBI Director James Comey.

Over the next two years, Mueller’s team secured eight guilty pleas or convictions, including four Trump campaign advisers. The investigation served its final indictment to Stone, in January 2019.

Mueller also indicted more than two dozen Russian entities and individuals, including senior intelligence officers, and documented at least ten instances of possible obstruction of justice by the president.

While Graham’s about-face drew speculation from some that “the rats are leaving the sinking ship,” the chair of the House Intelligence Committee Chairman, Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., cautioned otherwise.

“I suspect all Lindsey Graham wants to do is continue his counter-factual,” Schiff told CNN. “That is that Donald Trump was somehow the victim, when Donald Trump was the one inviting Russians to help him get elected in the first place.”

Graham, who currently finds himself in an unexpectedly tight re-election race, acceded to Republican demands in May to call former Obama officials before the committee to testify about the origins of the Russia probe. He has yet to do so.

Stone’s commutation, while not entirely unexpected, was a stunning watershed moment. It appears to have rattled even the famously tight-lipped Mueller team, which refused to comment on the case except on rare occasions.

Former Mueller top prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, who led the investigations and prosecutions of former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort and top aide Rick Gates, announced that he would publish a book about the Mueller probe following Stone’s commutation. 

Weissman told the Associated Press that the book, titled “Where Law Ends,” will examine the “hard truth” about the investigation: “mistakes” were made and “more” could have been done.

“I am deeply proud of the work we did and of the unprecedented number of people we indicted and convicted — and in record speed. But the hard truth is that we made mistakes,” Weissman said. “We could have done more. ‘Where Law Ends’ documents the choices we made, good and bad, for all to see and judge and learn from

“This is the story of our investigation into how our democracy was attacked by Russia and how those who condoned and ignored that assault undermined our ability to uncover the truth,” he continued. “My obligation as a prosecutor was to follow the facts where they led, using all available tools and undeterred by the onslaught of the president’s unique powers to undermine our work.”

Mueller submitted his final report last March, which concludes among other things that his investigation did not establish proof of a criminal conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russian government officials. The report also detailed ten instances in which the president committed prima facie obstruction of justice, but declined to reach a conclusion either way.

“At the same time, if we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the President clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state,” the report reads in its concluding paragraph. “Based on the facts and the applicable legal standards, we are unable to reach that judgment. Accordingly, while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”

Weissman plans to release the memoir Sept. 29.

Beluga whales are the ocean’s extroverts, research finds

A new study reveals that beluga whales have complex societies that include vast circles of hundreds of friends.

Published in Scientific Reports, the study utilized field research and molecular genetic techniques to better understand beluga whales’ complex social structures. The scientists looked at beluga whale groups from 10 locations all across the world, including the Arctic, Alaska, Canada, Norway and Russia. 

Led by researchers at Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, they concluded that beluga whales form complex, multi-scale societies, ranging from mother-calf dyads to large communities; moreover, one component of those social structures is the ability to form friendships with strangers from outside of their familial circle. These include specific cultures, tendencies toward cooperation and sophisticated social networks and support structures.

Notably, the scientists also found that beluga whales can forge long-term relationships with other beluga whales even if they are not biologically related to them.

“Close [beluga] relatives did not always associate in a group, but the fact that they could be in another group close by was supported by field observations where individually recognized whales were observed moving between groups, and even group types, over a few days, and in some cases a few hours,” the authors wrote. “By contrast, unrelated whales can spend long periods of time and cover considerable distances together, and sometimes split up only to come back together.”

In an interview with Science Daily, Greg O’Corry-Crowe, Ph.D., the lead author of the study, said that “this research will improve our understanding of why some species are social, how individuals learn from group members and how animal cultures emerge. It also has implications for traditional explanations based on matrilineal care for a very rare life-history trait in nature, menopause, which has only been documented in a handful of mammals, including beluga whales and humans.”

He later added, “Unlike killer and pilot whales, and like some human societies, beluga whales don’t solely or even primarily interact and associate with close kin. Across a wide variety of habitats and among both migratory and resident populations, they form communities of individuals of all ages and both sexes that regularly number in the hundreds and possibly the thousands.”

As the study explains, this is part of a much larger phenomenon involving the complexity of beluga whale societies.

“We propose that beluga whales, across a wide variety of habitats and among both migratory and resident populations, form communities of individuals of all ages and both sexes that regularly number in the hundreds and possibly the thousands,” the authors wrote. “Beluga whales may form a wide variety of social groupings within these communities, dependent on immediate social and ecological contexts, that may include seasonal sexual segregation. At larger spatiotemporal scales there is strong philopatry or fidelity by both sexes to these mixed-age and—sex communities.”

Belugas are known for being exceptionally friendly whales. Last year, researchers documented a rare case of “interspecies adoption” when a group of belugas “adopted” a narwhal. 

This is not the first time that research has emerged showing that whales have complex societies and perhaps even cultures. In October, Felicia Vachon, a PhD candidate in the Dalhousie University’s Department of Biology, wrote in The Conversation that “beyond primates, the animal group for which we have the most evidence of culture are the cetaceans (whales and dolphins).” 

She notes that sperm whales, specifically, have a lot of human-like traits. As she writes: “Like us, sperm whales have families, they have strong affiliations with a few individuals and they are extremely social. Such a social environment is the perfect substrate for culture.”

Ex-chief of staff Mick Mulvaney slams Trump’s “inexcusable” failure after his kid can’t get tested

Former White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney criticized the Trump administration’s failure to ramp up testing months into the coronavirus pandemic after his own daughter could not get tested.

Mulvaney was one of the Trump administration’s leading coronavirus skeptics early in the pandemic, arguing that media coverage warning of the risks posed by the virus was the “hoax of the day” to “bring down the president.”

“The reason you’re seeing so much attention to [the coronavirus] today is that they think this is going to be what brings down the president,” he told reporters in February. “That’s what this is all about.”

But Mulvaney is very worried about the coronavirus these days, criticizing the government response after his own child could not get tested.

“I know it isn’t popular to talk about in some Republican circles, but we still have a testing problem in this country,” he wrote in an op-ed at CNBC. “My son was tested recently; we had to wait five to seven days for results. My daughter wanted to get tested before visiting her grandparents, but was told she didn’t qualify. That is simply inexcusable at this point in the pandemic.”

Mulvaney’s reversal on the coronavirus drew criticism.

“Glad Mulvaney no longer believes this is a hoax, even though it apparently took his two children being impacted to change his mind,” CNN reporter Abby Phillip tweeted.

“This opinion piece by Mick Mulvaney is a fine illustration of the old truth that it’s only a crisis once it’s happening to you,” The New York Times’ Binyamin Applebaum added.

Mulvaney, who was also Trump’s former budget chief, wrote in the op-ed that “it may be too soon” for Congress to approve another stimulus package. If Congress does move forward with another relief bill, he argued that it should not provide direct aid to Americans. Instead, he proposed a payroll tax cut, which would overwhelmingly flow to the richest Americans, and tying capital gains to inflation, which would even more overwhelmingly benefit the top 1% of earners.

Tying capital gains to inflation would among to a “$2 trillion tax cut over ten years,” The Intercept’s Lee Fang noted, “86% of which would go to the top 1% of ultra rich Americans.”

“This Mick Mulvaney op-ed is a joke. He makes the case against fiscal stimulus, but says if we HAVE to have one then we should cut payroll taxes and index capital gains to inflation,” The Hill’s Saagar Enjeti said. “Mulvaney says the real danger of stimulus is that [Republicans] would overpromise [and] underdeliver by doing so and could suffer in future elections. Thus his solution is that Republicans should underpromise and underdeliver so they can lose the election in November. Galaxy brain stuff here.”

Democrats swiftly rejected Mulvaney’s proposal.

“A payroll tax holiday will benefit the wealthy the most and would harm Social Security,” Rep. John Larson, D-Ct., the chairman of the House subcommittee that oversees Social Security, said. “This is a non-starter.”

The affluent are in denial about their class privilege, research says

Income is correlated with right-wing politics, meaning wealthier people tend to be slightly more conservative. While there is no singular reason for this, both history and observational anecdotes suggest that those with wealth and privilege tend to distort the reason they were so successful, chalking up their success to right-wing ideological canards like “hard work” — rather than admit they were helped by other social factors. (President Trump is a great case study, as he exaggerates the degree to which his father helped him build his empire: during the first 2016 presidential debate, Trump bragged that his father gave him “a very small loan in 1975,” which he built “into a company that’s worth many, many billions of dollars.” That “small loan” was actually $60.7 million.)

Now, a new social psychology study has uncovered the extent to which this tendency appears to be pathological among the moneyed elite. Titled “I ain’t no fortunate one: On the motivated denial of class privilege,” the new study, which was published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, found that those who were posed questions about their class privilege responded by “increasing their claims of personal hardships and hard work, to cover [their] privilege in a veneer of meritocracy.” 

“Flying in the face of meritocratic prescriptions, evidence of privilege threatens recipients’ self-regard by calling into question whether they deserve their successes.” Dr. L. Taylor Phillips, a professor of management and organizations at New York University Business School, and co-author Dr. Brian S. Lowery, a professor of organizational behavior at Stanford University, wrote in their study. “Evidence of class privilege demonstrates that many life outcomes are determined by factors not attributable to individuals’ efforts alone, but are caused in part by systemic inequities that privilege some over others.”

The authors emphasized that, in the United States, people are conditioned to believe that we live in a meritocracy and to attribute success or failure primarily to one’s talent and hard work. When members of the upper-middle or upper class are confronted with evidence that class privilege plays a major role in determining socioeconomic status, their self-regard is challenged. To maintain their sense of self-worth, they will exaggerate their own hardships or focus on the amount of work they do — even though class privilege does not preclude the reality of non-class related hardships and many people work very hard without achieving socioeconomic mobility.

The authors arrived at these conclusions after conducting a series of experiments. They asked hundreds of adult American citizens with upper-middle or upper class incomes from an elite West Coast university to read statements on general inequity or class privilege and how those are connected to opportunities in education. Others were asked to read about the more general advantages that accrue from people with high incomes. In an expansion on the original study, participants were exposed to information about personal hardships and class privilege. All of the studies found that, when participants who came from class privilege were confronted with that fact, they tended to focus on their personal hardships and work ethic in order to protect their self-regard from facing the reality that much of what they owned was given to them through luck and systems of oppression rather than individual merit.

“The main takeaway is really that people who are benefiting from inequity — that’s how we define privilege — people who are benefiting from inequity do a lot of psychological work to cover up that benefit,” Dr. Phillips told Salon. “They do things like claim that their lives has been harder overall as compared to when the privileges not been exposed and no one’s really aware of it, but once we make it exposed, they start saying life has been harder.”

She said that the individuals studied will specifically claim that they work harder at their jobs and will point to struggles from their lives to make the claim, “‘Oh, you say I have this privilege and that’s unfair, but actually look at these other things in my life, they kind of counteract or they kind of balance it out. It’s all a wash.'”

Dr. Phillips also connected this mindset to a tendency toward classist and racist beliefs.

“It certainly supports the likelihood — or kind of creates a likelihood — that people start claiming racist, classist, and other inherently different sort of beliefs,” Dr. Phillips explained, summarizing the mentality as arguing that “‘I’m here in this position, someone else’s in this different position. Rather than because the system is unfair or because I’ve benefited from something unfair, which would then threaten my self regard, instead it’s easier for me to claim that there’s actually some sort of difference between us that makes this all fair. . . . It’s actually because this group is worse in some way, or this individual person is worse in some way.'”

In the study, Phillips and Lowery emphasize the importance of the meritocracy myth in creating these delusions.

“The ideology of meritocracy is woven deeply into the cultural fabric of American society,” the authors write. “The very ‘American dream’ that attracts and attaches so many to America suggests that if one works hard enough, they can succeed, no matter their class or background. As a result, systemic inequity is a tricky subject for American psyches: while most Americans subscribe to meritocratic ideologies that abhor such inequity, many also benefit from inequities. To resolve this tension, we find that the class privileged specifically claim hardship and effort because these are symbols of merit: they help cover privilege in a cloak of meritocracy.”

CBS, once broadcast’s whitest network, sets an ambitious goal for inclusive hiring

The flurry of Black Lives Matter statements from Hollywood studios, networks and media conglomerates has attracted criticism from people within and outside the industry pointing to the dismal track record many of these companies have with regard to honestly valuing inclusion. Audiences can see the lack of diversity in front of the camera for themselves, but it doesn’t take much digging to discover an overall lack of people of color in decision-making positions behind the camera, whether on set or in executive offices.

Among the major networks CBS has long been perceived as a top offender in this regard. But on Monday morning the network publicly stated its commitment to changing that image.

According to the network’s press release, CBS intends to allocate a minimum of 25% of its future script development budgets to projects created or co-created by Black people, Indigenous people and people of color, commencing with the 2021-2022 development season.

CBS also set a target for its writers’ rooms to be staffed with a minimum of 40% BIPOC representation beginning with the 2021-2022 broadcast television season, and pledges to increase that number to 50% by 2022-2023.

In addition to setting such pledges for future seasons, the network also is committing to adding more BIPOC writers on select CBS series for the upcoming 2020-2021 broadcast season. As of which ones, the release didn’t specify. Nor does the release make any promises that any of those near-future additions would be handed the showrunner’s mantle, granting him or her the power to shape a series – and, for that matter, better career prospects down the road.

This is worth mentioning given the fact that at the moment, that very position is open on “Magnum P.I.” and “MacGyver.” All of these are relatively popular series on CBS whose showrunner and executive producer Peter Lenkov was fired last week following an investigation into claims that he created a toxic work environment for staff and the actors on his series.

Also worth noting is the fact that this commitment to inclusion is coming only a few months into George Cheeks’ tenure as the new President and Chief Executive Officer for the CBS Entertainment Group.

Cheeks is a first Black man to hold this top executive position in CBS’ history.

“While steady progress has been made in recent years both in front of and behind the camera, change needs to happen faster, especially with creators and leadership roles on the shows,” Cheeks stated in the network’s press release. “As a network with ambitions to be a unifier and an agent of change at this important time, these new initiatives will help accelerate efforts to broaden our storytelling and make CBS programming even more diverse and inclusive.”

This is a first step on a long road for CBS, which was specifically called out by Color of Change executive director Rashad Robinson in its 2017 report Race in the Writers’ Room: How Hollywood Whitewashes the Stories That Shape America. The study, written by UCLA dean of social sciences and professor of sociology and African American studies Darnell Hunt, examined 234 broadcast, cable and streaming scripted series from the 2016-17 season.

“CBS, once the champion of Norman Lear’s record-breaking lineup of successful shows, including ‘All in the Family’, ‘The Jeffersons’ and ‘Maude,’ as well as the home of shows like ‘M*A*S*H,’ is now digging in its heels to defend writers’ rooms that systematically exclude non-white people, and target white audiences with regressive ‘white shows’ in which people of color do not exist in a meaningful way,” Robinson wrote.

Moreover, in explaining why practicing inclusion in the writers’ room is necessary to make a positive impact on culture, Robinson pointed to CBS’s programming mainstay.

Crime procedurals greatly miseducate the public about both Black people and Black family and community life,” he stated. ” . . . We know this shapes both what people think about Black people in real life and the public policies and political rhetoric they do or do not support.”

In addition to examining CBS’ shows, the study also analyzes programming from AMC, Amazon, Hulu, Showtime and other networks. Among its findings were that, at the time of the report’s release, Black writers comprised a mere 4.8 percent of the 3,817 of the writing staffs on these networks’ shows. Two-thirds of the dramas and comedies examined had no black writers in their rooms. Among the writers room headed by a white showrunner, more than 69 percent hired no black writers at all.

Also at that time, the study found that more than 90% of showrunners were white — and the needle hasn’t moved very far from that number since then.

Making this pledge is an important move on CBS’ part. Committing to that pledge and enacting measurable change is another story. However, during to the near quarter of a century that former CBS Corporation chairman and CEO Les Moonves spent shaping the network and its corporate culture, no such ambitious public goal setting in the arena of diversity and inclusion occurred.

And it showed. In 2016 the network contended with a damning report in the L.A. Times noting that year that among all the major networks, CBS managed to present the whitest fall schedule in prime-time television. Writer Greg Braxton pointed out that very few of the network’s fall series featured a minority actor in a starring role, and at the time featured only three minority leads among all of the major broadcast networks, and was the only one that did not have a series built around a family of color.

Since then CBS conscientiously constructed series around leads of color such as Shemar Moore on “S.W.A.T.,” Cedric the Entertainer on “The Neighborhood,” Simone Missick on “All Rise,” Mike Colter on “Evil,Folake Olowofoyeku on “Bob Hearts Abishola” and Jay Hernandez on its reboot of “Magnum P.I.” At the same time, it also continued a pattern of placing actors of color in supporting positions to white leads, thereby relegating them to positions that paid less than their white counterparts and netted fewer if any rewards on the back-end.

The most public example of manifested in the 2017 departures of Daniel Dae Kim and Grace Park from “Hawaii Five-0” after being with the show for seven seasons because CBS refused to pay them the same salary as their white male co-stars Alex O’Loughlin and Scott Caan.

Of course, this preceded #MeToo and the necessary but long-delayed ouster of Moonves 2018, part of an overall housecleaning that also ended the tenures of “NCIS: New Orleans” showrunner Brad Kern and former CBS News executive Jeff Fager, each of whom had multiple allegations of sexual harassment and discrimination lodged against them.

Even after their resignations and dismissals it became obvious that the culture Moonves created left behind plenty of unexploded land mines. Moonves was known for hiring longtime allies, not an unusual practice among executives, but also rewarding their loyalty by protecting them, as was alleged to be the case with Kern and Fager, among others.

For example, questions about the overall whiteness at the network led directly to its casting choices, all of which were overseen by former head of casting Peter Golden.

Moonves hired Golden in 1996. He was fired after multiple allegations of harassment and not long after former executive Whitney Davis’ first-person account published in Variety, in which she stated that Golden discouraged the casting of minority actors in CBS television shows. But Golden’s reputation for making disparaging remarks about diverse casting has been a pain point for years among people who work or have worked at the network. The same is true of Lenkov. Indeed, Davis’ column is a collection of tales of the racism and sexism she encountered in multiple departments at CBS and from multiple executives and co-workers, not all of whom were mentioned by name.

In other words, the scrub of Moonves’ old guard to make way for the new is ongoing. But it appears to be accelerating following the merger of Viacom and CBS Corporation, completed at the end of last year. And Cheeks’ recruitment from NBC Entertainment, where he spent a year as co-chairman between 2018 and 2019, may cautiously be seen as a sign that real change is in the works both in terms of what TV viewers see onscreen and in the writers’ rooms, where stories and character images are created.

This is as important to meaningfully shifting our progressing conversation about race and inclusion as the political and social policies being discussed and acted upon elsewhere.

Major media corporations have been making statements about their commitment to inclusion for many, many years now with varying amounts of action. And while this move on CBS’s part is in the earliest minute of early days, perhaps it’s a sign that the most-watched broadcast network is ready to stop lagging behind in areas of racial and social equity and take the lead instead. It’s worth keeping an eye on.

Trump falsely claims that he golfs less than Obama during 276th golf course outing as president

President Donald Trump falsely claimed that he golfs less frequently than former President Barack Obama did while in office as he headed for his 276th golf outing in less than four years this weekend.

Trump complained about media coverage of his frequent trips to the golf course by declaring that Obama “played more and much longer rounds.” In truth, Trump has now visited a golf course 276 times as president, according to CNN. Obama played 102 rounds of golf at this point in his presidency, CBS News White House correspondent Mark Knoller reported. Obama played 113 rounds of golf through his entire first term, per Golf Digest.

“I know many in business and politics that work out endlessly, in some cases to a point of exhaustion. It is their number one passion in life, but nobody complains. My ‘exercise’ is playing, almost never during the week, a quick round of golf. Obama played more and much longer rounds,” Trump falsely claimed Sunday on Twitter. “When I play, Fake News CNN, and others, park themselves anywhere they can to get a picture, then scream ‘President Trump is playing golf.’ Actually, I play VERY fast, get a lot of work done on the golf course, and also get a ‘tiny’ bit of exercise. Not bad!”

“Trump has played more than twice as many rounds of golf than former President Barack Obama had at the same point in his presidency,” wrote CNN White House correspondent Sarah Westwood, noting that the criticism from the media was not over the fact that he plays golf but because Trump was a “frequent critic of Obama for playing golf in office.”

“Can you believe that, with all of the problems and difficulties facing the US, President Obama spent the day playing golf,” Trump tweeted in 2014.

“Because I’m going to be working for you, I’m not going to have time to go play golf,” Trump declared during his presidential campaign.

Trump’s trips have cost taxpayers untold sums of money, because the administration and Trump Organization have gone to great lengths to keep the numbers under wraps. Available data shows his company charges taxpayers more for Secret Service stays than it does for regular guests.

Critics also questioned Trump’s claim about exercise after a video of him riding around a golf cart with a caddy hanging off the back went viral on social media.

“The only workout Trump gets is an occasional round of golf,” Axios reported in 2017. “Even then, he mostly travels by cart. On the campaign trail, he viewed his rallies as his form of exercise.”

The book “Trump Revealed” by Washington Post reporters Mike Kranisch and Marc Fisher also claimed that Trump does not believe in exercise, because he thinks it drains a body’s finite resource of energy.

“Trump believed the human body was like a battery, with a finite amount of energy, which exercise only depleted. So he didn’t work out,” the book said. “When he learned that John O’Donnell, one of his top casino executives, was training for an Ironman triathlon, he admonished him, ‘You are going to die young because of this.'”

Former White House physician Ronny Jackson said that Trump was less than “enthusiastic” about the doctor’s recommendation that he exercise more after a physical in 2018. A year later, Trump’s 2019 physical showed that he was medically obese.

Trump’s claim that he gets work done on the golf course was also widely questioned. Last month, Trump sent the White House into a frenzy when he tweeted a video of one of his supporters yelling “white power.” 

Two White House officials told NBC News that the tweet set off a “five-alarm fire” among aides. Officials could not reach Trump to ask him to delete it for more than three hours, because “the president was at his golf club in Virginia and had put his phone down.” Aides also tried to reach White House social media chief Dan Scavino, himself a former Trump golf caddy, but were likely unsuccessful.

Trump’s latest golf outings come as the U.S. continues to set new record highs for coronavirus infections on a nearly daily basis.

“Another horrifying fact of the Trump administration’s response to the pandemic,” former Labor Secretary Robert Reich tweeted. “In the past two months, Trump has played golf more times than he has met with Dr. Fauci.

Giuliani: Trump’s tax audits have been “completed and accepted” — except maybe not

Former Lifelock spokesperson Rudy Giuliani tells Salon that the audits of President Trump’s tax returns have been “completed and accepted,” except for “possibly not most recent.”

Giuliani was confirming claims he made Sunday morning to Fox News host Maria Bartiromo. This new story, however, seems to undermine the president’s excuse that he can’t release his returns because they are under audit, a line he has been repeating since the 2016 campaign.

Last Thursday, following the Supreme Court’s 7-2 ruling that the Manhattan district attorney can subpoena the president’s tax returns, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany repeated the excuse to reporters, saying, “The media’s been asking this question for four years, and for four years, the president has said the same thing, his taxes are under audit, and when they’re no longer under audit, he will release them.”

In a separate case about Congress requesting the president’s financial documents, which the court effectively delayed until after the election, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had pushed the audit issue with one of Trump’s attorneys, who avoided responding directly. 

“Every president voluntarily turned over his tax returns, so it gets to be a pitched battle, because President Trump is the first one to refuse to do that,” she said this spring. “Initially, he said because of an audit was ongoing. Now, it seems to be broader than that.”

In 2019 an IRS whistleblower turned evidence over to Congress reportedly showing “inappropriate conduct” on Trump’s returns.

But Giuliani said that prosecutors have “no reason to believe that there’s anything wrong with his tax returns,” because “all of them have been audited, all of them have either been passed on or settled.” The former mayor of New York City allowed for an exception: “maybe not the last one.”

Giuliani added this in a text message, which we publish verbatim:

Since there are. Always extensions can’t be sure. Really not sure if there is one or two not completed but almost all are and they are done.

Those last “one or two” would be the returns has Trump filed as president. “The last one” would be fiscal year 2018, the year Giuliani says he took on Trump as his client, pro bono.

When Salon asked Giuliani if he meant that Trump’s returns had been audited each year up through 2018, Giuliani replied that he “didn’t specify.”

The former face of Fraud Guarantee LLC explained that these specific claims of fact about Trump’s returns had derived from his “general knowledge of how taxes are handled.”

He did not respond when asked whether this meant that he himself had also been audited every year, and that this was a common experience for people.

“All you have to do is know how they work and most are gone now or an action would be brought because of statute of limitations,” Giuliani said in a text message.

Whatever his protestations, Giuliani appears to have made conclusive claims about knowledge of facts regarding his client that pertain directly to an ongoing criminal investigation.

The Manhattan DA’s office had sought eight years of Trump’s business and tax records in connection with its investigation into hush-money payments made on Trump’s behalf just ahead of the 2016 election.

Trump and the Trump Organization both reimbursed Michael Cohen, Giuliani’s predecessor as the president’s former personal lawyer and fixer, for payments made to pornographic film actress Stormy Daniels. Cohen was also involved in payments to former Playboy model Karen McDougal. Both women claim to have had affairs with Trump.

While Giuliani appeared to be attempting to defend his client, however, he seems instead to have directly contradicted Trump, including official White House statements given as recently as last week.

Those claims of fact would seem on their face to violate attorney-client privilege, a favorite exit ramp for Giuliani, which he has used numerous times throughout the Ukraine impeachment saga in media interviews about his relationships with Trump, Lev Parnas, Igor Fruman and husband-and-wife attorney team Joseph diGenova and Victoria Toensing. At the time, Trump also alluded to the privilege.

In 2017 Giuliani told Fox News personality Sean Hannity that Trump had repaid Cohen for the Daniels payoff.

“They funneled through a law firm, and the president repaid it,” he said.

“Oh. I didn’t know that,” Hannity replied. “He did?”

“Yep,” Giuliani said.

Cruz called out for not wearing mask on American Airlines flight: “Horrifying disregard” for others

Although Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has recently encouraged mask wearing in response to the coronavirus pandemic, some far-right Republicans are still reluctant to wear face masks in public. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, according to AmericaBlog reporter John Aravosis, wasn’t wearing a mask at all during an American Airlines flight from Houston to Dallas on Sunday, July 12 — which is a violation of the airline’s rules.

Aravosis tweeted, “I just confirmed that Ted Cruz went the entire one-hour-eight-minute flight from Houston to Dallas and never put on his mask. So he wasn’t just drinking coffee for a minute.”

Cruz’ defenders have argued that the senator was photographed on the flight when he was drinking coffee. But Twitter user @hossehenad explained, “For those trying to argue that he was drinking, it’s not hard to have a mask on and undo one side to take a sip then put it back on. Most people take their time drinking coffee.”

Texas is among the Sun Belt states that is suffering a troubling surge in COVID-19 infections, and Cruz is being lambasted on social media for not wearing a mask during the flight. Marc Perrone, president of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, tweeted, “Horrifying disregard of the lives of others by both Texas US Senator Ted Cruz and @AmericanAir.”

Here are some more angry reactions:

Betsy DeVos criticized for plan to reopen schools: “I wouldn’t trust you to care for a house plant”

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos was met with heavy criticism after she doubled down on her call to reopen schools even as coronavirus infections continue to skyrocket across the country.

CNN host Dana Bash repeatedly pressed DeVos on Sunday on the school reopening guidelines issued by the Centers of Disease Control, which have warned that a full school reopening would be the “highest risk.”

“The CDC guidelines are just that — meant to be flexible and meant to be applied as appropriate for the situation,” DeVos said.

“Yes or no: Can you assure students, teachers and parents that they will not get coronavirus because they’re going back to school?” Bash pressed.

“The key is that kids have to get back to school,” DeVos replied as she dodged the question. “And we know there are going to be hot spots, and those need to be dealt with on a case-by-case basis. But the rule should be that kids go back to school this fall. They have been missing months of learning.”

Bash noted that a Missouri summer camp was recently forced to close after 82 reported infections, and Texas has reported 1,300 infections among children and employees at child care facilities.

“Here’s what the CDC guidelines say: ‘If children meet in groups, it can put everyone at risk. Children can pass this virus onto others who have an increased risk of severe illness from COVID-19.'” Bash said. “That’s your own federal government’s guidelines.”

“There’s going to be the exception to the rule, but the rule should be that kids go back to school this fall. And where there are little flare-ups or hot spots that can be dealt with on a school-by-school or a case-by-case basis,” DeVos repeated.

“So I want to be clear from you: As the secretary of education, should schools in the United States follow the CDC recommendations or not?” Bash asked.

DeVos again insisted that the guidance only included “recommendations” and claimed that the federal government was “very much on the same page.”

“Kids need to get back to school. They need to get back in the classroom,” DeVos said. “Families need for kids to get back in the classroom, and it can be done safely.”

DeVos claimed in another interview with Fox News that “there’s nothing in the data that suggests that kids being in school is in any way dangerous.”

“We know that children contract and have the virus at far lower incidence than any other part of the population,” she said.

Some countries, such as Israel, have already been forced to shut down schools after early reopenings led to hundreds of new infections among children.

DeVos also defended President Donald Trump’s threat to cut off funding for school systems which do not fully reopen in the fall.

“Isn’t cutting off funding exactly the wrong answer? Don’t you want to spend more money to make schools safer — whether it’s with plastic shields or health checks, various other systems?” host Chris Wallace asked. “Doesn’t it make more sense to increase funding for schools where it’s unsafe rather than cut off funding?”

“If schools aren’t going to reopen and not fulfill that promise, they shouldn’t get the funds,” DeVos replied. “Then give it to the families to decide to go to a school that is going to meet that promise.”

“Well, you can’t do that,” the Fox News host said. “You can’t do that unilaterally. You have to do that through Congress.”

“Well, we’re looking at all the options, because it’s a promise to the American people and their families,” DeVos said. “And we want to make sure that promise is followed through on.”

Health experts have pushed back on DeVos’ arguments.

“While the balance of the data shows that kids are less susceptible to infection and less likely to transmit it, less susceptible doesn’t mean they’re not susceptible,” Scott Gottlieb, Trump’s former FDA chief, told CBS News on Sunday. “No other country, with the exception maybe of Sweden, reopened their schools or kept their schools open against the backdrop of so much spread that we’re attempting to do in this country.”

Sweden “literally gained nothing” from staying open during the pandemic, including “no economic gains,” The New York Times reported last week, while recording on of the highest death rates in the world.

Scott Brabrand, the superintendent of Fairfax County schools, whose Virginia district was cited Sunday by DeVos, rejected her argument.

“You can’t put every kid back in a school,” he told CNN. “COVID hits all of us, and the guidelines for six-feet social distancing simply mean that you can’t put every kid back in a school with the existing square footage footprint. It’s just that simple.”

“You would need another five Pentagons of space to be able to safely accommodate all of the students in Fairfax County Public Schools,” he added.

The American Academy of Pediatrics issued a joint statement with the largest teachers unions in the country last week warning that “evidence — not politics” should guide decisions to reopen schools.

“Schools in areas with high levels of COVID-19 community spread should not be compelled to reopen against the judgment of local experts. A one-size-fits-all approach is not appropriate for return to school decisions,” the statement said. “Withholding funding from schools that do not open in person fulltime would be a misguided approach, putting already financially strapped schools in an impossible position that would threaten the health of students and teachers.”

Democrats slammed DeVos after the interviews.

“You have no plan,” Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass., wrote in a tweet directed to DeVos. “Teachers, kids and parents are fearing for their lives. You point to a private sector that has put profits over people and claimed the lives of thousands of essential workers. I wouldn’t trust you to care for a house plant let alone my child.”

“What we heard from the secretary was malfeasance and dereliction of duty,” Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told CNN following DeVos’ interview. “This is appalling.”

Pelosi argued that the Trump administration was “messing with the health of our children.”

“Going back to school presents the biggest risk for the spread of the coronavirus,” she said. “They ignore science and they ignore governance in order to make this happen.”

White House sends “oppo dump” in attempt to discredit Fauci after he disputes Trump on coronavirus

The White House sent reporters documents seeking to discredit top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci after he disputed claims made by President Donald Trump about the new coronavirus.

An anonymous White House official released a statement claiming that “several White House officials are concerned about the number of times Dr. Fauci has been wrong on things” and included a “lengthy list” of comments he made early in the outbreak which turned out to be incorrect, The Washington Post first reported.

The document was sent to reporters at seemingly every mainstream news outlet.

“Confirming Washington Post reporting– WH openly discrediting Fauci,” CNN’s Kristen Holmes tweeted.

“As @washingtonpost first reported, a White House [official] also provided a long list of past Fauci comments that did not age well, in what bears striking resemblance to an oppo dump,” NBC News’s Josh Lederman added.

The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman also noted that it was “laid out in the style of a campaign’s opposition research document.”

Trump has repeatedly said in recent interviews that he “disagrees” with Fauci on his assessment that the coronavirus is getting worse — not better — in the U.S. His concerns are visible in the data: the country reported a record-high 67,211 new confirmed cases Friday.

Fauci no longer briefs Trump and is “never in the Oval [Office] anymore,” a senior official told The Post. The two have not spoken since the first week of June, though the report noted that Trump cannot directly fire Fauci, who has strong bipartisan support after more than 50 years at the National Institutes of Health.

Trump has also been bothered by Fauci’s approval rating. A recent New York Times poll found that 67% of voters trust Fauci for information on the coronavirus compared to 26% who trust Trump.

The White House has responded by trying to silence him. CBS News host Margaret Brennan reported Sunday that the White House has refused to approve an interview with Fauci for three months.

“Lately the White House stopped approving most requests for Dr. Fauci to appear on TV, believing it would help reduce the public contradictions,” CNN’s Kaitlan Collins reported, adding that they let him do print and podcast interviews in which he disputed claims made by the president.

“As a country, when you compare us to other countries, I don’t think you can say we’re doing great,” he said in an interview on a FiveThirtyEight podcast last week. “I mean, we’re just not.”

Fauci disputed Trump’s claim that “99%” of coronavirus cases were “totally harmless,” telling the Financial Times that was “obviously not the case.”

He even appeared on a Facebook Live event with Sen. Doug Jones, D-Ala., where he disputed Trump’s claim that the country’s relatively low death rate showed progress in the coronavirus response, calling it a “false narrative.”

“Don’t get yourself into false complacency,” he warned.

The list sent by the anonymous White House official notes that Fauci argued early in the outbreak that there was no significant asymptomatic transmission and downplayed the risk of community transmission, though this was when other disease experts were saying the same things based on the data.

Adm. Brett Giroir, the administrations testing czar, echoed the White House’s complaints on NBC News Sunday.

“Dr. Fauci is not 100 percent right, and he also doesn’t necessarily — and he admits that — have the whole national interest in mind,” he said. “He looks at it from a very narrow public health point of view.”

“Fauci’s supporters acknowledge those early mistakes, attributing them to the challenges posed by a new, largely unknown pathogen,” The Post reported. “They agree he downplayed the possibility of the virus spreading from person to person in January and early February, even as it quietly seeded itself in communities on the East and West coasts. And, like several other public health officials, he initially said the public shouldn’t wear masks, but now strongly recommends it, especially when individuals can’t maintain distances of at least six feet from other people.”

The attempt to discredit Fauci to advance the president’s false statements on the virus alarmed public health experts.

“The White House attacks on Dr. Fauci are unfair and dangerous,” Dr. Vivek Murthy said, who served as the surgeon general under former President Barack Obama. “He’s been right on #COVID19 far more than the politicians who blame him. During pandemics, science is your guide-even if it’s politically inconvenient. Covid is surging. We need to hear more from scientists, not less.”

“If they want to fire or undermine Fauci they should do it in broad daylight and explain why,” Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, who serves on a subcommittee that oversees health spending, argued. “And if the media must cover this they should not give anonymity to powerful officials to help them do their dirty work.”

Trump’s commutation of Roger Stone’s sentence is blatant corruption: He’ll get away with it

I don’t think there was anyone in the country who was truly surprised that President Trump commuted his good pal Roger Stone’s sentence. I think we might have expected a full pardon, but since there was reportedly so much resistance within the administration, Trump may have decided that commutation before the election, and then pardon afterward looked like a reasonable compromise.

Certainly, Trump was never going to let Stone go to prison. Stone made sure of that. Last week he told journalist Howard Fineman:

I had 29 or 30 conversations with Trump during the campaign period. He knows I was under enormous pressure to turn on him. It would have eased my situation considerably. But I didn’t. They wanted me to play Judas. I refused.

I’m pretty sure Trump got that message loud and clear. After all, his mentor was Roy Cohn, the infamous lawyer and fixer whose clients included Sen. Joseph McCarthy and the mobsters Carmine Galante and “Fat Tony” Salerno, among other unsavory characters. Cohn also mentored Roger Stone.

Trump speaks fluent gangster patois:

He told the “Fox & Friends” hosts back in 2018 what he thought of people who cooperate with the authorities:

It’s called “flipping” and it almost ought to be illegal. I know all about flipping. For 30, 40 years, I have been watching flippers. Everything is wonderful and then they get 10 years in jail and they flip on whoever the next highest one is or as high as you can go.

Roger Stone made sure in the days just before he was set to go to prison that the president understood exactly what he needed to do. Trump knows Stone very well, and understood what he was capable of. Stone might easily have decided to flip if Trump didn’t come through. They’ve known each other so long that whatever Stone has on Trump doesn’t necessarily have anything to do with the Russia investigation. Stone knows where a lot of bodies are buried. He helped bury many of them.

He needn’t have worried. His boy Trump came though, although against the wishes of his White House counsel, chief of staff Mark Meadows and even his top henchman, Attorney General Bill Barr. You can imagine how upset Barr must have been after he went to such great lengths to have Stone’s sentence reduced that he caused an insurrection at the Department of Justice and permanently destroyed his reputation. He obviously thought he’d helped Trump’s buddy out sufficiently, but that wasn’t enough.

You’ll recall that Barr claimed that the president didn’t order him to do it and that it was just a coincidence Trump had tweeted this mere hours before Barr’s decision:

When reporters asked Trump over the weekend why he didn’t take Barr’s advice not to commute Stone’s sentence, Trump replied, “Well, he didn’t say that. No, the attorney general, about a week or two ago, had made a statement, but that was long before anybody knew what I was going to do.”

Actually, that was before Stone made it clear last week that he would not stand for doing even a day of jail time. His reminder that his “situation” would be much improved if he turned on Trump left no room for interpretation.

Stone’s no Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chairman, who spent several months in jail before being allowed to serve home confinement due to the pandemic. Manafort stood up to the prosecutors and Trump let him sit behind bars. But then Manafort only knew Trump briefly, and can’t possibly have the same volume of dirt on him that Stone has. (Furthermore, Manafort had his own reasons for clamming up, namely some angry Russian mobsters to whom he owed a lot of money.)

The Stone commutation announcement was unusual, to say the least. In fact, it sounded a lot like Trump dashed it off in a series of tweets and the White House decided that would serve as an official proclamation:

Aside from the dishonest rehash of the Mueller investigation, which was the usual Trumpian combination of whining and blaming, the president attacked a juror in Stone’s trial in his official announcement, which was probably one of the lowest acts he’s ever perpetrated — and that’s really saying something. The degree to which the self-appointed “law and order president” disrespects the legal system is unprecedented. Even notorious gangsters are more civil.

If you are wondering why Trump may have commuted the sentence instead of just pardoning his old buddy, journalist Marcy Wheeler pointed out that a commutation allows Stone to maintain his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, which means he doesn’t have to testify against Trump in any possible further proceedings regarding all those phone calls between them — conversations that Stone specifically mentioned in that interview with Howard Fineman.

Lawfare’s Benjamin Wittes and Quinta Jurecic observed that Trump has just committed another act of obstruction of justice. They argue that Trump’s written answers to Robert Mueller about his knowledge of the WikiLeaks plot were lies, which also specifically pertain to the felonies Roger Stone was convicted of committing. It’s clear from the record that Trump was signaling to Stone throughout to keep his mouth shut.

Newly unredacted pages of the Mueller report back that up. According to Lawfare:

[S]hortly after he submitted those answers [to the special counsel], the unredacted report states, Trump began tweeting publicly in support of Stone — calling him “brave” and congratulating his “guts” for refusing to testify.

Trump’s tweets were always suspicious, to say the least. And his answers to Mueller seemed less than entirely credible even when the redacted report was first released. But the newly revealed text makes clear Mueller’s suspicions that Trump lied in his written answers — and then pushed Stone not to testify in order to prevent Mueller from discovering that lie.

As Mueller put it dryly: “[T]he President’s conduct could also be viewed as reflecting his awareness that Stone could provide evidence that would run counter to the President’s denials and would link the President to Stone’s efforts to reach out to WikiLeaks.” The special counsel also writes that Trump’s tweets to Stone — along with his tweets criticizing [Michael] Cohen, who was by then cooperating with investigators — “support the inference that the President intended to communicate a message that witnesses could be rewarded for refusing to provide testimony adverse to the President and disparaged if they chose to cooperate.”

Roger Stone got his reward last Friday night.

This should have been an impeachable offense. But for reasons I will never understand, nobody wanted to bother with all the evidence of obstruction of justice in Mueller’s report. I suspect there will be little appetite for pursuing it after Trump is out of office, which is a travesty.

The president of the United States just exercised his constitutional powers to commit a crime in plain sight. And once again he will get away with it. 

Trump’s purge of the Voice of America continues: Visas for foreign journalists won’t be extended

Dozens of foreign journalists are expected to be sent back to their home countries from the U.S. following a decision on Thursday by the newly appointed head of the federal government’s global news agency to not renew their visas.

As Common Dreams reported, the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) was taken over last month by Michael Pack, a close ally of Steve Bannon, former advisor to President Donald Trump.

The new visa rule was announced three weeks after Pack purged several top career officials from Voice of America (VOA) and other news agencies overseen by USAGM in what one former employee called a “Wednesday night massacre.”

Colleagues of the foreign journalists who will be affected by the decision expressed concern that many could face retribution for their work if they are repatriated to countries hostile to the United States or to press freedom. 

“Many are likely to face repercussions, some very severe,” Matt Armstrong, a former member of Broadcasting Board of Governors—which oversaw USAGM until Pack took over—told NPR Thursday. 

PEN America said the decision amounts to a “betrayal” of reporters who have worked for years for the agency, which promotes American-friendly coverage of world events and is seen by progressives as a vehicle for U.S. propaganda.

“This reported decision puts the lives of intrepid, free-thinking foreign journalists at risk,” said Suzanne Nossel, CEO of the organization. “Many of these journalists have worked with VOA precisely because it offers them the opportunity to report stories that they cannot tell in their home countries without risk of severe punishment. If these journalists are forced to return home, some of them will be greeted with jail cells or worse. It is appalling that the VOA’s new boss could be so reckless about the safety of journalists.”

Laura Rosenberger of the Alliance for Secure Democracy tweeted that “xenophobia” is the only rationale for threatening journalists’ ability to remain in the United States.

The decision is in line with the Trump administration’s position on limiting work visas, supposedly in the interest of preserving jobs for Americans. Foreign journalists are particularly needed as employees of USAGM’s news agencies because of their foreign language skills. One VOA journalist told NPR that more than 100 employees in the agency’s foreign language service could be forced to leave.

Another employee told The Guardian that the decision to not renew the visas follows a significant change in tone in Pack’s regular communications with the agency and the press. Press releases from USAGM now contain anonymous praise for the new director. 

“It is a bit Dear Leader-like, isn’t it?” the employee told The Guardian. “For him to say that he’s trying to improve morale and at the same time he’s sending Voice of America journalists back home to places like Thailand, or Cambodia, or China. How in the world is that going to improve employee morale when you’re sending people home, perhaps to their deaths? And that’s not hyperbole.”

Norm Eisen, co-founder of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), compared the move to ICE’s recent decision to order international students back to their home countries if the American colleges they are attending move to an online-only model in the fall.

“Trump and gang are looking at the possibility of losing and are vandalizing the joint on the way out,” Eisen tweeted. “For some of these journalists, a death sentence.”

Dr. John Gartner: “Donald Trump is the most successful bio-terrorist in human history”

The June 6 edition of the German newsweekly Der Spiegel described Donald Trump as a “fire devil” and a president who “sets fire to his country.”

The English edition of Der Spiegel continues with this damningly accurate description of America in the Age of Trump:

Should we be worried about the United States? Is a fundamental shift taking place in a country that is synonymous with deeply rooted democracy? The current chaos on the streets of America isn’t just the product of the country’s economic and societal tensions. The president himself has repeatedly exacerbated those conflicts with his rhetoric. Trump, it seems, needs the chaos. He feeds off it.

Every day he is in office, the political pyromaniac Donald Trump continues to burn the rule of law and democracy.

He has shown himself to be the most corrupt president in the history of the United States. The most recent example of Trump’s unlimited perfidy: last Friday, in a naked quid pro quo, Donald Trump commuted the sentence of his longtime confidant and adviser Roger Stone as a way of insulating himself from any future charges related to the Russia scandal or other criminal matters.

Aided by Trump and his agents’ willful malevolence, negligence and cruelty, the coronavirus pandemic continues to spread across the United States. The country continues its slide towards a second Great Depression.

More than 135,000 Americans have now been killed by the coronavirus. Public health experts predict that hundreds of thousands or more may die unless the Trump administration and Republican governors in states such as Florida and Texas radically alter their public health policies by mandating that masks be worn in public. In some places, lockdowns may need to be reinstated.

Instead, the Trump administration and its allies have decided that more people — including public school students, their teachers and their families — should fall ill and die as a means of creating a new “normal” where the disease is no longer viewed as an emergency. The evident goal is to sacrifice human beings for “capitalism” and “the economy” in order to salvage Donald Trump’s re-election chances. This is the “economics of barbarism” in practice.

In total, the United States in the Age of Trump and the coronavirus pandemic is a global pariah.

Writing at Medium, Indi Samarajiva summarizes this pathetic and pitiful situation:

America is not united anymore and it’s barely a state. They have crashed right through failed state into a plague state, unwelcome across the world…. In the absence of a humane government, America is now ruled by COVID-19. Welcome to the Plague States of America.

Ultimately, Donald Trump’s fascism, his apparent mental pathologies, and his sabotaged response to the coronavirus are not discrete and separate things. Rather, they are all connected.  

Dr. John Gartner, whom I have interviewed on several previous occasions, is a psychologist, psychoanalyst and former professor at the Johns Hopkins University Medical School. Gartner is also the founder of Duty to Warn, an organization working to raise awareness about the danger to the United States and the world posed by Donald Trump. Gartner is a contributor to the 2017 bestseller “The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 27 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President” and is featured in the upcoming documentary “Unfit: The Psychology of Donald Trump.”

In our latest conversation, Gartner warns that Donald Trump is actively using the coronavirus pandemic as a type of biological weapon against the American people. Gartner also explains how Donald Trump, like other malignant narcissists who attain great power, is willing to hurt and even kill his own followers as a way of satisfying his personal sadism and need for narcissistic energy.

Gartner also explains that Donald Trump’s supporters are members of a political death cult in which not wearing a mask and refusing other rational measures to stop the coronavirus pandemic are acts of loyalty and love to their personal savior and Great Leader.

You can also listen to my conversation with Dr. John Gartner on my podcast “The Truth Report” or through the player embedded below.

This conversation has been edited for clarity and length.

Trump is surrounded by a maelstrom of events. John Bolton’s new book has shown Trump to be dangerously incompetent and a threat to the safety of the American people and the world. Trump’s niece’s new book shows him to be mentally unwell, evil and cruel to his own family members. The Supreme Court just ruled that Trump’s taxes and other financial records must be handed over to prosecutors. Public opinion polls and other metrics show him losing to Joe Biden in a landslide. The George Floyd protests continue across the country. How are you making sense of Trump’s mood and mind in this moment?

Because of his extreme malignant narcissism, Donald Trump can and should be compared to leaders such as Adolf Hitler. At this point, the country is really at the endgame with Trump — we are getting closer and closer to the bunker moment. Donald Trump is not just incompetent. He’s not just delusional. He is not just narcissistic and doesn’t care about others. Donald Trump’s behavior with the coronavirus pandemic is intentional. He is malevolent. He is a first-degree mass murderer. This is a plan.

I am a great believer in the principle of Occam’s razor. The simplest explanation is usually the right one. Trump disbanded the pandemic task force. First, Trump said that the virus was not going to come to America. Then he chose not to do more testing. Trump chose to not use the Defense Production Act to make more needed medical supplies and equipment.

Trump has admitted to trying to slow down the testing for the coronavirus. Trump has undermined the governors’ efforts to protect the public from the virus. Trump even went so far as to encourage astroturf protests to intimidate Democratic governors into reopening for “the economy.” Trump has said that he is against people wearing masks — which is the simplest, cheapest and most efficient way to keep us from spreading the virus.

Trump is trying to open the floodgates. He’s hosting mass gatherings of people at his rallies and other events. He’s doing everything he can to enable the virus.

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, is going to be the most successful bio-terrorist in human history. Let me repeat myself so there is no confusion. Donald Trump is the most successful bio-terrorist in human history. This is not an accident.

Let me ask the most basic forensic questions: Why? And how?

Trump’s behavior is a function of the psychology of a malignant narcissist. If you look at the history of malignant narcissists, whether its Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot or Saddam Hussein, there is something they all have in common. They all kill massive numbers of their own people.  

Consider the example of Adolf Hitler. At a certain point everybody knew, including his generals, that Germany had lost the war. But Hitler fought on and hundreds of thousands of more Germans died. Hitler knew the war was lost and that he would end up committing suicide to avoid capture, trial and execution.

Hitler issued an order that’s called the Nero Decree. Albert Speer, Hitler’s minister of armaments and war production, was supposed to destroy every German factory, every German farm, every German bridge, every German power plant, rail line, dams, utilities, docks, mines, everything that could allow the German people to survive. Speer pointed out to Hitler, “The German people won’t survive if you basically bomb our own people down to the Stone Age.”

Hitler supposedly responded with, “We don’t need to worry about their survival, because all the good Germans are already dead.” In other words, you make me great, or I will murder you. That is the guiding proposition for a malignant narcissist. Do not forget that one of the components of malignant narcissism is sadism. Omnipotent destruction makes malignant narcissists feel powerful. This is especially true if they feel somehow disempowered or otherwise weak.

Trump leads a political death cult. Not wearing a mask during the coronavirus pandemic has become an important symbol of personal loyalty.

Suicidal self-destructive behavior as a sign of loyalty to the Great Leader is a tradition among malignant narcissists. Leaders such as Trump are so unwell that if the people around them and their followers are not stoking their egos then a Trump-type person will turn their rage outward.

To the extent that they are not feeling great enough about themselves, they need someone to punish. One of the ways that a Trump or Hitler-type leader does that is to try to make people show loyalty by doing things where they knowingly harm themselves.

The idea that one would lead your own followers to their deaths is not unusual in the broader context of history. This is how malignant narcissists work. But as Americans, we literally cannot wrap our minds around such a thing. Of course, the American news media is also unable to accept such a reality, that there are leaders who would actively hurt their own followers and others.

The implication of your argument is that Trump’s followers who refuse to wear masks are a type of biological weapon. As human bio-weapons Donald Trump’s followers can then use the virus to kill their personal enemies, and anyone else they or Trump have targeted.

In that way, Trump’s use of the coronavirus is almost like a vampire who turns people into monsters who then kill and attack other people. Trump is actually making his followers into bio-weapons. There is a narrative that Donald Trump is crazy, delusional, selfish, and cognitively disabled. Of course, that is true. But Donald Trump is not so stupid that he does not know the consequences of not wearing masks at a large gathering of people. Trump knows what the effect of that will be. Trump has been briefed repeatedly about how not wearing masks will lead to mass death. He knows that. Trump has consciousness of guilt. He understands the cause-and-effect relationship between his behavior and all the people who are dying in this country from the coronavirus pandemic.

Donald Trump and the Republicans are willing to sacrifice the lives of Americans to the coronavirus in order to save “capitalism” — and of course Trump’s reelection chances. This is grotesquely evil behavior. The next step in this ghoulish plan is to force America’s schools to reopen in the fall knowing full well that this will kill children, teachers and parents. This is all part of a strategy where the goal is to make the American people numb to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people from the pandemic. Help me understand Trump’s mind. How can he rationalize potentially sacrificing children to this death cult? Doesn’t he have some internal ethical governor that says this is too far?

It’s very hard for relatively normal and mentally healthy people to truly understand how Donald Trump’s mind works, to empathize with his thought processes, because it is hard to empathize with someone who truly does not care if he’s killing massive numbers of children. Such an outcome does not upset Donald Trump. He is more upset by some idle comment made on Fox News. The deaths of children and other people do not have any emotional meaning to him.

It is also very hard for most people to understand how there’s a sinister way in which harming, degrading, destroying and, yes, even killing large numbers of people actually excites and arouses Donald Trump. It all makes him feel powerful. That excitement and arousal and empowerment is an antidote to the emptiness that he feels inside and to the humiliation and mockery that he is experiencing from his critics and the public.

When the Secret Service forced Donald Trump into the White House bunker several weeks ago during the George Floyd protests, how did his mind respond?

It makes Trump worse. This is one of the things where I worry a little bit about the glee that his critics and opposition take in upsetting him. What happens when you stir the hornet’s nest? Trump is going to hurt a lot of people, and hurt them very badly.

It is not an accident that when Trump was forced into the White House bunker he ordered the protesters outside to be gassed and attacked. That was Trump’s reaction to being made to feel weak by going into the bunker for his protection. Trump’s reaction to feeling weak during the George Floyd protests was to invoke the power of the military and martial law in an attempt to declare war on the American people. This is a clear cause-and-effect dynamic. The more humiliated and out of control Donald Trump feels, the more violently and powerfully he feels he needs to strike back.

Donald Trump has been on an emotional roller coaster. He was rebuked and embarrassed in Tulsa. Then he went to a rally at one of his churches in Arizona where he was praised as the second coming of God. Trump then had a truly vainglorious Independence Day rally and other events. But Trump is still losing badly to Joe Biden in early polling. He is addicted to narcissistic fuel and energy. How does his mind process these ups and downs?

Yes, Donald Trump is addicted to his supply of narcissistic energy and fuel. These rallies are his high. He is addicted to them and the feelings of praise and adulation he gets from his followers. But the flip side to that for Trump is that if he is not made to feel great by his followers and rallies, then he will simply find another way to get pleasure. Trump does that by killing, harming and degrading others. In other words, Trump’s mind works in the following way: “I get my narcissistic supplies by your praising me. I can get them by hurting you as well. That’ll make me feel good too.” Trump chooses to hurt the American people.

What is your analysis of Trump’s rally at Mount Rushmore?

He did everything to feel aggrandized and powerful. In his mind, he could see his face on Mount Rushmore. Trump needs the crowds. He needs them close together, he needs them praising him. Trump had military jets flying overhead and all his supporters singing his praises. But what was Trump’s message for Independence Day? All the people who do not praise me are bad. They’re evil. They’re left-wing troublemakers. All those people who don’t praise me want to destroy this country and that is not going to happen under my watch because we are going to get them first. Donald Trump takes a perverse pleasure in destruction — and that destruction is the destruction of the American people, the country, our way of life, our actual lives themselves. Donald Trump is reveling in our destruction and our deaths.

During his two Independence Day weekend speeches, Donald Trump declared that anyone who does not support him is an enemy of America who should be destroyed. Trump is not kidding. He is not making a “harmless joke.” He is deadly serious. Why are so many Americans still in denial about this reality? At this late date, is it even possible to awaken them to the truth?

It is a defense mechanism. Trump always telegraphs every terrible thing he is ever going to do, and then he does it, and then most people are always shocked. And then the next time Trump says he is going to do something terrible the same people think that it is somehow going to not happen.

Such reactions are a defense mechanism because most people cannot imagine that Donald Trump, the president of the United States, is as evil and destructive and out of control as he truly is. Trump is going to take his behavior all the way to the end. His dangers are not just with the coronavirus but with how there will not be a peaceful transition of power if he loses the 2020 election.

Here is an observation: Trump is going to find a way to steal the 2020 election. And even if defeated at the polls, he still has two months between Election Day and supposedly stepping down in January. These months up to Election Day and then to January will be some of the most dangerous in the country’s history. Trump is capable of anything.

I agree. The American people and the world really need to understand that we are heading towards the endgame with Donald Trump. This moment is extremely dangerous because Trump is wounded, rejected and feeling devalued. Trump is going to be a loser and probably go to jail if he is not re-elected. Trump is going to take everyone down with him. But Trump also has enablers in place throughout the government to protect him. This is all very dangerous.

As with drug addicts, is Donald Trump capable of hitting “rock bottom” and then having a moment of clarity where he recants and then changes his behavior?

Again, look at the last days of Hitler. He was losing his mind towards the end, but he was still giving orders and people were still following them. We do not know what crazy orders Donald Trump is going to give and we do not know who will follow them. But whatever Trump does it will be destructive, and he will have followers willing to do what he commands. In the end Donald Trump will have the full force of the executive branch trying to rig and invalidate the 2020 election in his favor.

A singular figure in Texas’ coronavirus collapse: Greg Abbott leads his state in alarming direction

One evening last week, after making one of his most consequential decisions yet in Texas’ response to the coronavirus, Gov. Greg Abbott settled in for his pandemic routine: a rapid-fire round of local TV interviews from his campaign’s satellite studio in Austin.

In the hours since he’d issued a statewide mask mandate, Abbott had taken a familiar shellacking from both sides of the aisle: the Democrats who had wanted the mask requirement weeks earlier, and some Republicans who had not wanted it at all.

An anchor with KIII in Corpus Christi offered a measure of sympathy.

“Governor, I must tell you I wouldn’t trade jobs with you for anything,” he said, drawing chuckles from Abbott.

“You articulate it well,” Abbott later said. “I get it from both sides.”

Four months of unprecedented emergency have forced the cautious, measured governor into a leadership test like no other. While he has steered the state through major crises before — Hurricane Harvey, multiple mass shootings — no other has required the sustained, high-stakes decision-making that this one has, leaving Abbott with countless, constant choices that have immediate impact on millions of Texans. Abbott is leaning hard on his executive power and a small circle of advisers as the biennial Legislature remains on the sidelines.

If the virus has presented a leadership test, Abbott’s metrics are getting worse. COVID-19 has already killed at least 3,013 Texans and is spreading rapidly, infecting new people and filling hospitals with the sick. Hospitals are beginning to get overwhelmed. Despite an early reopening, the state’s economy continues to struggle, with an unemployment rate in double digits and budgets facing major shortfalls. Even by the metrics Abbott has said he is focused on — the percentage of COVID-19 patients who require hospitalization, and the share of tests coming back positive — Texas is headed in an alarming direction. While Texas at first fared better than many other states, it is now a national hotspot.

For most of the pandemic, Abbott has been met with persistent criticism from Democrats and a small but vocal faction of his GOP, but lately his Republican skeptics have begun to grow in number.

Critics point to ever-changing, sometimes serially confusing top-down guidance. Facing down a public health emergency, the governor has more than once reversed himself, making virus mitigation decisions that some say came too late and others say should not have been made at all.

Abbott’s defenders praise him for remaining characteristically calm during a dark hour for the state. Democrats plead with him to act on the advice of public health experts, many of whom urge further shutdown of the economy, and to allow local leaders to issue stricter guidelines than the statewide regulations. A growing group in his own party questions both his choices and his authority to make them.

Politically, Abbott — who does not face re-election until 2022 — has little to fear on his own. But he sits atop a Texas GOP that has plenty to worry about in November, with polls showing Joe Biden in striking distance of President Donald Trump and Democrats making a massive push farther down the ballot.

Abbott entered the pandemic with plenty of political capital as the state’s most popular Republican leader. While Abbott maintained a generally high approval rating during the first few months of the pandemic, his rating fell seven percentage points from April to June in University of Texas polling.

The second-term governor, who often seems reluctant to take political risks, is forging his legacy through a crisis that he is singularly positioned to address. With the Legislature out of session, and after he limited the power of the state’s mayors and county judges, Abbott has almost complete authority to make critical decisions about the state’s response. That means he owns the decisions that lead to lost jobs and lost lives.

The summer will prove a critical chapter: Can he change the state’s course, or will it careen further toward disaster?

“There’s so much at stake here — we’ve got to get it right. We don’t have a whole lot of time,” said state Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, a nurse and leader in the state’s minority party. “And I don’t believe the governor has shown the leadership we need. I realize it’s a tough job, but the buck stops with him. The Legislature is not in session. He’s the one that’s running the ship.”

“We took a leap of faith”

In a public health crisis, government at all levels has a role to play: federal health agencies issuing guidance; states wrangling data; mayors and city councils communicating with their constituencies.

But Abbott came to the public health crisis with an already-tense relationship with local leaders. The GOP-dominated state government he heads clashes routinely with Democratic leaders in the state’s biggest cities and counties, over issues ranging from property taxes to paid sick leave requirements. As the coronavirus began to spread in China and then to Europe, the governor was bickering with Austin’s leaders about people experiencing homelessness.

Still, in March, as cases of the new coronavirus began to pop up in Texas cities, Abbott was uncharacteristically deferential to local officials.

Amid calls for a statewide stay-at-home order, a spokesman for the governor said in mid-March that cities and counties “have done a very good job of doing what is right for their municipalities.”Abbott ordered the state’s bars and restaurants to close, but resisted calls for a more comprehensive directive that Texans stay at home, insisting “local officials have the authority to implement more strict standards. … I would applaud them for doing so.”

By the end of the month, though, with case counts surpassing 3,000 and states across the country battering down, Abbott finally took statewide action: He ordered Texans to remain in place except for essential activities like grocery shopping.

Was this the stay-at-home order Democrats and health experts had been agitating for? He didn’t call it that.

Asked to clarify, the governor dithered, using language that experts said confused the public and undermined the seriousness of the situation.

“Well candidly, when people talk in terms of shelter in place, what shelter in place really means as a term of art, would mean that wherever you may be at a particular time, you need to take shelter immediately right there. Whether you are at your home or some other location or in a roadside ditch, wherever you may be, you’re supposed to take shelter because of something like a tornado would be coming. … This is not a stay-at-home strategy. A stay-at-home strategy would mean that you have to stay at home, you cannot leave home under any circumstances,” he told reporters.

Whatever it was called, experts agree it helped deter the spread of the virus. During the month of April, cases were on a steady but manageable rise, with Texas typically adding fewer than 1,000 new cases each day. Other mitigation measures, like barring elective medical procedures, kept hospitals freed up for a crush of patients that didn’t materialize at the time. Abbott mostly steered clear of the culture wars that emerged, leaving Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to defend a ban on nearly all abortions.

But many in Abbott’s own party were growing restless. Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick was making national headlines for telling Fox News “there are more important things than living.” The president had said he wanted the economy “opened up and raring to go” by Easter.

No sooner had Abbott shut the state down than he began to talk about reopening. He named a “strike force” of business leaders to advise him on his reopening plan, along with a group of medical advisers including Dr. John Zerwas, the executive vice chancellor for health affairs at the University of Texas System, state health Commissioner John Hellerstedt and Mark McClellan, a former commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Abbott announced businesses would reopen in phases starting May 1, with the second phase coming as early as May 18 if all went well.

“We need to see two weeks of data to confirm no flare-up of COVID-19,” he said.

He also laid out tough enforcement measures — fines of up to $1,000, jail sentences of up to 180 days.

Experts praised Abbott’s plan for its promise to open businesses slowly, in measured phases. But they noted that unlike in some states, there were few specific health metrics that controlled further reopenings. Experts warned that the pandemic could spiral out of control.

Just hours after he had promised a measured approach, the governor hinted to a Houston TV station that he might allow more businesses to reopen even before the May 18 date some experts had cautioned was too early.

On the evening of April 30, with restaurants and malls set to reopen the next day, Texas reported its highest death toll yet: 50 people. But Abbott remained cautiously optimistic, pointing to two key metrics — hospitalization rate, the share of COVID-19 patients who required hospital care; and positivity rate, the percentage of coronavirus tests that showed presence of the virus — which remained in a manageable range. The governor had made clear from the start that cases would rise when the state reopened; his goal was not to prevent all spread, but to open slowly enough that hospitals could care for all the people who fell ill.

As Democrats and public health experts warned he was moving too fast, many in Abbott’s own party urged him to move yet more quickly. Restaurants were open in limited capacity, but not bars or hair salons. What was the difference, critics demanded, between a waiter serving a meal and a bartender pouring a cocktail? Two hardline conservative lawmakers got haircuts at an illegally open salon in Houston, daring the governor to insist on the penalties he’d warned about. In Dallas, a salon owner named Shelley Luther earned praise from Fox News, hundreds of thousands in donations from like-minded shutdown skeptics and a weeklong jail term after she repeatedly defied court orders to close her business until state law permitted her to open.

The governor backpedaled rapidly. He revised his coronavirus executive orders so that violators could not be forced to serve jail time. His team contacted Luther — not to order her to close, but to seek her advice on how salons could open safely and soon. Abbott said salons could reopen May 8, more than a week before his target date for phase two. The slow reopening he promised had begun to speed up already — and the penalties that were supposed to ensure compliance were beginning to disappear.

Heeding Luther’s example, and watching their own bottom lines plummet amid the shutdown, bar owners started to wonder about their own strategy.

“This one lady did it, and she got a lot of attention and now all the salons are open,” bar owner Emil Bragdon told the Tribune in May. “Is that something we have to do? Because if we have to do that, we’ll do it.”

The economic advisors on Abbott’s strike force began to press for bars to open, too. After “a substantial amount of conversation” with medical advisors, Abbott’s team agreed that the bars could open so long as they followed social distancing protocols, Zerwas recalled.

It would prove to be a major misstep — one Abbott said he regrets.

Young people crowded into bars, and the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission was slow to enforce regulations or yank licenses. Cases began to rise among young people. Weeks later, with cases surging, Abbott shut the bars back down.

“Clearly what happened is the bars, when they opened, did not comply. In hindsight, it would’ve been quite a challenge for them to comply,” Zerwas said. “We took a leap of faith on that.”

“It’s not a scavenger hunt”

Meanwhile, Abbott’s tentative truce with local leaders was eroding, and the usual antagonism reemerged.

As Texas remains a hotspot for the virus, local leaders are pleading with him to either order more shutdowns or allow them to do it for their own communities.

Even some fellow Republicans, like Lubbock Mayor Dan Pope, have criticized Abbott for tying their hands with his statewide order. In an interview, Pope acknowledged it has been a little tough to keep up with the state’s evolving rules. But, Pope said, “we’re in unprecedented times.”

“I know how difficult COVID-19 has been locally and I can only imagine how difficult it is at the state level,” Pope said, describing his city’s relationship with the state as “very strong” at this point.

Clay Jenkins, the Democratic county judge in Dallas, said when he was navigating fears of an Ebola outbreak in 2014, he was in touch with former Gov. Rick Perry — cellphone to cellphone — at least once every day. This emergency has been different from any other he’s weathered, Jenkins said, because the virus became politicized.

In this public health emergency, local officials have been left to guess at Abbott’s intentions. Jenkins said he hasn’t spoken to Abbott in more than a month.

Nowhere has the friction between state and local leaders been more visible than on the issue of masks.

After the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began recommending masks in April, Abbott encouraged Texans to wear masks, but often appeared in public without wearing one himself. And when Abbott allowed businesses to reopen May 1, he stripped local leaders like mayors and county judges of the ability to mandate stronger restrictions, including the wearing of masks. His statewide standards were not a floor but a ceiling.

Local leaders in big cities like Houston and Dallas began to chafe under the state’s firm hand, agitating to impose the mask requirements that public health experts call essential. Abbott made it clear mask mandates would not be acceptable — and the Texas attorney general threatened lawsuits against cities and counties that passed them.

“We strongly recommend that everyone wear a mask,” Abbott said in May. “However, it’s not a mandate. And we’ll make clear that no jurisdiction can impose any type of penalty or fine for anyone not wearing a mask.”

That push and pull continued for weeks as case counts began to surge following the Memorial Day Weekend. The virus began to spread more rapidly in Texas than ever before, a trend Abbott attributed in part to young people gathering at the bars he had opened. For weeks, the governor remained optimistic, pointing to hospitals’ “abundant” capacity to serve the sick even as their ranks began to grow exponentially.

In June, with the virus rocketing through San Antonio, Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff tried a workaround: Instead of ordering residents to wear masks, he required businesses to require them.

To the surprise of local officials, Abbott praised Wolff. He “finally figured that out,” Abbott said.

The riddle of the mask mandate earned Abbott immediate criticism: Either the governor had been intentionally misleading or confusing to the point of negligence, allowing local leaders to stumble in the dark for weeks.

“I thought, my God, it’s not a scavenger hunt,” Vivian Ho, a health economist at Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine, said of the mask order. “Have you listened to the physicians who said that masks help? If you did, then you would’ve announced this yourself much earlier. You don’t hide important facts about protecting people’s health.”

That same week, Abbott acknowledged that the virus was spreading at an “unacceptable rate.” Days later he paused the state’s reopening process, closed bars again, and told Texans “there’s never a reason for you to have to leave your home.”

Still, he left open the restaurants many Texans were leaving their homes for. And that weekend he appeared before a gathering of hundreds at a Dallas church. Another featured guest: Mike Pence, the vice president.

The next week, Abbott reversed himself again: Under mounting political pressure, and watching the exponential rise of case counts, Abbott issued a mask order for most of the state. Accompanying it was the fine — after a warning — that he had previously prohibited local officials from issuing.

To public health experts, and to many of the governor’s critics on the left, it was the right decision, but it had come far too late.

Jenkins, who was the first in the state to issue a stay-at-home mandate for his county, said he expects that pattern to repeat itself.

“The crush of new cases and the continual unfortunate bad news that we’re getting every day will force the governor to listen to the doctors’ recommendations,” Jenkins said. “The key thing is how fast will that happen? Because every day that we wait is more damage to our economy, more people getting sick, and the longer it’s gonna take to pull out of the tail spin.”

While some Republican state lawmakers have become more vocal against Abbott’s response, the governor still has defenders in the Legislature.

“We have a Governor who uses facts, not fear, to drive decision-making, and that’s never been a more critical leadership attribute than during this challenging season,” state Sen. Kelly Hancock, R-North Richland Hills, told The Texas Tribune.

But some conservatives question Abbott’s authority to issue sweeping disaster orders. At least six county GOPs have censured him for his handling of the pandemic, including those in Montgomery and Denton Counties, two of the party’s biggest strongholds. Many of those resolutions have called for delegates to the state GOP convention to consider a broader censure of the governor — a striking but largely symbolic move.

Republican lawmakers have begun to agitate for more say in the state’s response, with some pushing for a special session of the Legislature to consider coronavirus responses.

“It should not be the sole responsibility of one person to manage all of the issues related to a disaster that has no end in sight,” state Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, wrote last week.

Patrick Svitek contributed reporting.

Disclosure: The University of Texas System and Rice University 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. 
                  

State violence, a crisis of legitimacy, and the path to true public safety

This article originally appeared on The Niskanen Center.

Let’s be clear about what’s been happening in the country these last few weeks. Policing is an arm of the state. Police departments and police officers operate under the color of law and as agents of the state, with authority granted by their nation’s citizens. That gives their actions special meaning. George Floyd was—literally—killed by his government. Over and over again in America, Black people have been killed, beaten, and otherwise abused by their government through its agents: the police. In the modern era, Rodney King was beaten by his government. Michael Brown was shot and killed by his government. Walter Scott was shot in the back and killed by his government; his government then falsified the shooting scene and lied about what had happened.

This has always been an outrage. But the last several weeks in America have been transformative for how the nation thinks about and responds to police violence. A short time ago—before a Minneapolis police officer killed George Floyd—it would have been unimaginable that hundreds of thousands of both Black and White protesters would take over cities for weeks, advocating for Black lives and protesting police brutality. It would have been unimaginable that those protests would be supported across the political spectrum, that the city council of a major American city would commit to the outright elimination of its police department, and that “defunding” policing would become a live option in the national political discourse—with commitments from the mayors of New York City and Los Angeles. It would have been unimaginable that over a thousand professional athletes would call for an end to the doctrine of “qualified immunity” that protects police violence, that NASCAR would ban the Confederate flag, and that PepsiCo would retire Aunt Jemima.

As somebody who has spent the last three decades working with the police to reduce violent crime, I believe that all of this is for good. I’ve been part of developing a violence prevention strategy that has a central role for police in partnership with the community and service providers. It can cut homicides—mostly of young Black men—in half or more. It was the source of the so-called “Boston Miracle” over 20 years ago that reduced young people’s murders by almost two-thirds. It’s the same body of work that has made Oakland, California, a shining star in violence prevention, with homicide and gun violence down by half over the last eight years.  I’ve worked with police to shut down street drug markets in ways that keep dealers out of jail, and to prevent domestic violence victims from being killed without making them bear the risk of prosecuting their abusers or the burden of going underground to hide. I have worked arm in arm with police officers who are courageous, creative, and committed to their communities. In short, I know how much good the right kind of policing can do. But I also know how much damage the wrong kind of policing does—and I support sweeping changes to mend that damage. 

In the protests of these last weeks, the government has beaten citizens, driven vehicles into protesters, and fired pepper rounds at journalists. Yes, in those same protests, police officers have been shot, police stations burned, and businesses looted. But police violence is fundamentally different from private violence. It is in no way to diminish the wrongness of crimes committed by the public to say: we know that people will do these things—kill, rape, and rob. It is because we know that people will do these things that in democracies there is the social contract: a state monopoly on violence and coercion, which speaks through the law and makes that law operative through institutions, including the police. If a protestor punches you in the face, he has committed a crime. The social contract says that it is wrong, and the state has the power to stop it. If a police officer punches you in the face, you have been assaulted by your government. It is simply a statement of the human condition to say: people will forever and always kill each other, no matter how hard we try to prevent it. If we say: our government will forever and always kill us, and beat us, and do us violence under the color of law, no matter how hard we try to prevent it, that is fundamentally different. That is an admission and an acceptance of the failure of the state of our democracy, and the American experiment.

Yet, for all of American history, the government has done exactly that to Black Americans. Slavery was violence. Reinstituting slavery after Reconstruction through the criminal justice system and convict leasing was violence. Lynching was violence. Setting dogs and fire hoses on the civil rights movement was violence. As was the FBI trying to drive Martin Luther King Jr. to suicide was violence, and the city of Philadelphia bombing and burning a city block. Zero-tolerance policing, rampant stop-and-frisk, the disparity in crack and powder cocaine sentencing, and mass incarceration were and are the racialized use of the state’s coercive power.

Where the government has not done violence to Black people, it has failed to protect them. The homicide rate for Black men ages 18-34 is almost 18 times that of White men the same age.  Homicides of Black men and women go unsolved. White men in military garb carrying rifles gather safely at statehouses; Black men going running are hunted down, shot, and killed. Black people fear their government. They have “the talk” with their kids and worry when they go to school and drive their cars. They are unsafe walking, shopping, swimming, sleeping at Yale. They know what asking a White woman to leash her dog can mean. Black police officers, often required to carry their weapons off-duty, fear being killed by their fellow officers.

This is what so misses the point when people who don’t get it say, “But most Black homicide victims are not killed by police.”  Most White people are not killed in terrorist attacks; 9/11 and everything like it represents a tiny fraction of the White body count over the last decades. But the United States government completely reoriented national security after 9/11; we’re still at war. Most White kids are not killed in mass shootings, but the country is pouring resources into school safety. Terror and mass shootings cut to the core of what it means to live one’s life, feel safe and secure, and trust that one’s family and loved ones will be safe and secure. And when the mass of White people feels threatened by terror and mass shootings, their country leaps to their defense. Being Black in America has meant knowing that one’s family and loved ones are never safe and secure because your country can hurt you and them at any moment. It has meant being subject to state violence and to the state’s protection of private violence, in a nation forged out of, structured by, and soaked in racism. Black Americans have always known that. White Americans are apparently starting to get it. What is going on now in the nation is a rejection of that arc of history.

The protest movement represents core American values and deserves broad bipartisan support. It is no threat to our efforts to prevent crime and violence; indeed, it represents an opportunity to make those efforts much more successful. That is because it can support the emergence of a fundamentally better way to produce public safety. The evidence from the scholarly literature suggests that the more legitimate the law and the police are in the eyes of America’s communities, the less we will actually have to use them. And while “law and order” has traditionally been a platform for the political right, this goal—using the state’s coercive power no more than absolutely necessary—is one that conservatives should find easy to embrace. In a very real way, more legitimacy in the realm of policing means less government. 

This Is a Crisis of Legitimacy

Legitimacy is a core element in democracy: the belief of the people in the institutions of government and their power to set rules and gain compliance. When people think of the law and of policing, they think of the power of the courts, jail and prison, of the gun and the badge. In fact, that power is trivial compared to voluntary compliance with the law. Most of the time, people do not need to be threatened by the state in order not to kill, rape, and rob. Most people know that when the law says not to do terrible things, the law is right; when they are tempted, they believe that the law has the standing to say, Don’t. Scholars like Tom Tyler point out that even criminals obey the law most of the time: They buy groceries, stop at red lights, and seldom kill the people they’re mad at.  Policing research shows very clearly that as legitimacy goes up, violence goes down, voluntary compliance with the law goes up, people call 911 when they need help, and the like. When legitimacy goes down—as after incidents of police violence—research shows that Black communities withdraw from the police and violence goes up.  

Contrary to what many think “high crime” Black communities are deeply law-abiding. Research shows that residents in the most troubled areas of those communities have a very high regard for the law, want their neighbors to obey the law, want to be safe, and even want to have good relationships with the police. But they don’t trust the police, don’t think the police respect them, don’t think the police share their values, think the police are biased, and don’t trust the police to govern themselves.  

Scholars have long characterized this as “legal cynicism“: belief in the law, but not in its institutions, especially the police.  More recently, scholars like Monica Bell have gone beyond this to a profoundly more dire—and in my experience, more accurate—notion of “legal estrangement.”  Bell reminds us that more than 50 years ago, the Kerner Commission found that “police have come to symbolize White power, White racism, and White repression.”  Those beliefs are driven by hundreds of years of history and collective memory and experience, present treatment and mistreatment by police, and the vicarious experience of the endless series of police killings. “Much literature has shown that, regardless of how trust is measured or conceived, African Americans, particularly those who are poor or who live in high-poverty or predominantly African American communities, tend to have less trust not only in the police, but also in other governmental institutions, in their neighbors, and even in their intimate partner relationships in comparison to other racial and ethnic groups in the United States,” Bell writes. “Most discussions of African American distrust of the police only skirt the edges of a deeper well of estrangement between poor communities of color and the law—and, in turn, society.” 

This is not about every officer or all officers. Policing is full of—and in my personal experience dominated by—good and frequently amazing people who do often extraordinary work under unimaginable circumstances. I have had former public defenders come into my organization, hating the police. Yet as they get to know the officers we work with, they’ve taken me aside to say, “This is really weirding me out; I like them.”  That’s not the point. The point is not the tired argument about good officers and bad officers, or “bad apples” or the lack thereof. It is that the institution of policing has been ungovernable. Officers do terrible things, and nothing happens. Departments make terrible choices—Let’s “protect” communities by swamping them with officers and stopping everybody who moves—and there’s no way to stop them. Disrespect is rampant—in many cities, the single most frequent complaint is officers cursing the public—and nothing happens or changes. The Supreme Court of the United States creates case law that makes it nearly impossible to hold officers accountable for killings and shootings. Cities, pressured by the political clout of police unions, give away the powers that would let chiefs fire officers they know are toxic and make departments reinstate the officers they have managed to get rid of. Police union heads sully the names of Black men killed by their members and get reelected. No institution is perfect; doctors kill patients all the time. But when a doctor kills through gross malpractice, the head of his hospital doesn’t throw a press conference to talk about how the dead man had a criminal record and really deserved it.

It is all so familiar that it can take an act of will to see clearly. In Illinois, Gov. Rod Blagojevich tried to sell Barack Obama’s Senate seat and was impeached within a year and in prison not long after. By contrast, in Chicago, police officer Jon Burge spent years torturing over 100 Black men and women. He was caught, honored by the police union, sentenced to federal prison, and quickly released to house arrest. He was then released from house arrest. Jackie Wilson, one of the men Burge brutalized into a confession, served 36 years in prison before a judge released him.

If one works closely with police, as I do, it is a given that many chiefs do not really run their departments. Reform chiefs figure they’ve got maybe three years before they’re driven out. They consciously strategize to leave things so that their successors can hope to build on the work they’ve begun. My community of practice has a proven track record of dramatically reducing violence, a goal you would think the police are interested in. We still spend much of our time trying to figure out how to get departments to just keep doing their work, knowing that often chiefs and mayors can’t or won’t—and that, except in rare instances, nobody really cares about what the Black community wants.

Imagine that the Securities and Exchange Commission’s regulators did their jobs by stopping bankers on the street, pointing them out on the sidewalk, calling them names, and going through their pockets. Imagine if they announced compliance visits by kicking in office doors, and from time to time, got at insider trading by beating investors until they gave up their friends or just gave themselves up. Imagine that EMTs called to accident scenes pulled drivers from their cars and beat them to a pulp. Imagine that they were legally protected in doing all that. Imagine that their own leadership and prominent politicians urged them to do it more. And imagine that forever, people had been trying hard to fix it— from both the outside and the inside—and it just didn’t change.

People have been trying. Police commissions: The national Wickersham Commission, appointed by President Hoover in 1929, focused on “the third degree” (confessions obtained through beatings). In the wake of Frank Serpico’s revelations, the famous Knapp Commission formed in New York City in the 1970s, which found systematic corruption in the police department. In the early 1990s, I staffed both the St. Clair Commission in Boston, which savaged the Boston Police Department’s internal controls and leadership, and the Mollen Commission in New York City, which savaged the NYPD’s internal controls and leadership. There have been Department of Justice investigations and consent decrees, voluntary reviews, and agreements through the DOJ’s Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. There have been civilian complaint review boards and police commissioners and inspectors general and auditors. After Michael Brown was killed in Ferguson, there was the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing. And training. Dear God, has there been training.

Nothing has fixed it. George Floyd is dead. I’m implicated in that personally; I directed the DOJ’s National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice, a marquee Obama administration project that worked in six cities, including Minneapolis. It made a difference, but it did not transform the institution that is the Minneapolis Police Department. A lot of reforms have made a difference, but they have not transformed the institution that is American policing.

People have had it. This is what the protests are about. The institution that is American policing keeps killing Black people, keeps doing terrible things, people keep trying to fix it, and it won’t be fixed. Camden, New Jersey, has been getting a lot of attention lately. Camden is a case of a terminal loss of legitimacy. Policing there was a mess: outrageously corrupt, completely ineffective in a city saturated with open-air drug markets and violence, with a useless accountability system and an intransigent union. A coalition of state and local officials and civic figures said, Enough, dissolved the department, and rebuilt from scratch.

But even though it was a radical move, for a lot of advocates, Camden is most definitely not what they have in mind; they’re not interested in rebuilding police departments at all. As activist Mariame Kaba wrote in the New York Times, “Yes, we mean literally abolish the police.” Any legitimate policing has to create safety, not danger. It has to protect Black lives, not perpetuate and worsen racial harms. It has to conduct itself legally and constitutionally, be committed to and effective in governing its own misbehavior, and be accountable. That’s not what people are seeing. People are saying, Enough. This is what has just happened in Minneapolis, where the City Council voted to eliminate the Minneapolis Police Department. “[N]o amount of reforms will prevent lethal violence and abuse by some members of the Police Department against members of our community, especially Black people and people of color,” the council said.

Pause for a moment and notice how easily—if you are like most of us—you just took in what the council said, and kept on reading. No amount of reforms will prevent lethal violence. An arm of your government will kill you, and we—also your government—can not stop it. Kill you. “We acknowledge that the current system is not reformable—that we would like to end the current policing system as we know it,” council member Alondra Cano said. This is what has moved “defunding the police” from the advocacy slogan and aspiration that it was less than a month ago to the center of American discourse–and to the new reality of figuring out just what that might mean.

Defunding the Police

Under the very best of circumstances, there will always be an irreducible role for state power in public safety. That’s not just facing facts; it’s a good thing. It’s the core social contract. The availability of that power to communities means that they aren’t on their own and don’t have to rely only on their own capacities to be safe. It means that they can get help and protection when they need it, that the potentially dangerous and violent know that and restrain themselves, and that the use of private violence need not risk a descent into faction, retaliation, and vendetta.

Not so protecting communities is disastrous. Yale ethnographer Elijah Anderson explains the “code of the streets” that, in the face of bad policing, drives so much community violence: If you disrespect me I have to hurt you, if you hurt my friend I have to retaliate, we don’t go to the police for help. “Lack of police accountability has, in fact, been incorporated into the status system: the person who is believed capable of ‘taking care of himself’ is accorded a certain deference, which translates into a sense of physical and psychological control,” he writes. “Thus, the street code emerges where the influence of the police ends and personal responsibility for one’s safety is felt to begin.” People not protected by the state will do what they need to do to protect themselves: recent research by Michael Sierra-Arévalo found that negative perceptions of police in marginalized communities were linked to higher rates of illegal firearm ownership. Battered women call the police, call the police, call the police, and get no help. A few of them will finally and desperately kill their abuser—and go to prison. In many Black neighborhoods, there is effective impunity for homicide; the clearance rate for Chicago homicides involving Black victims is under 22 percent, less than half that for Whites.  Journalist David Bernstein looked at nonfatal shootings in Boston and found that a staggering 96 percent went unsolved.  Jill Leovy, in her brilliant book Ghettoside, makes the simple but scorching point that authorities have abandoned Black America to violence. “When violent people are permitted to operate with impunity, they get their way,” Leovy tells us. “No amount of ‘community’ feeling or activism can eclipse this dynamic… That’s what the criminal justice system is for.” 

But it’s completely realistic to recognize the “irreducible” role of state power, and advocate and strive for “reduced as far as possible.”  The state’s coercive capacity should be welcome in the eyes of the public, do as little harm as possible, and give communities the protections they want in the ways that they want. It should be informed by the awful racist history of America, and configured so as not to perpetuate those harms. The more it lives up to those standards, the more legitimate that function will be, and the less it will need to be used. Black America is over-policed and under-protected. Young Black men are routinely stopped for merely walking down the street, while in the same neighborhoods, killers go free. In my organization’s violence prevention work, we tell police: communities need policing. They just don’t need the policing they’ve been getting.     

What that means in the current moment is not at all clear, and won’t be in the immediate future. After the council vote in Minneapolis, a group of prominent activists condemned the council for moving so quickly without community consultation and voiced support for police chief Medaria Arradando.  “We can say that we need community policing and say that we are going to work with the Minneapolis Police Department,” one said.  The city can’t actually eliminate the department without a charter change requiring voter approval, and has announced a year-long process to rethink public safety in the city.  New York and Los Angeles have made commitments to moving money out of their police departments, without much in the way of details. “Defunding” is much more a rallying cry, an aspiration, and a direction than it is an actual road map. Nobody is suggesting that there’s a light switch to be thrown today, so there are no police tomorrow. Answers will likely look different based on the needs of different communities. And as with its close cousin, “abolition,” many advocates say that there has to be a process over time to get as close to an end to policing as is possible.

That’s a goal no one should take issue with. Policing is the application of the state’s coercive power to produce public safety. We should want as little application of that power as we can possibly have. Public safety should be produced as much as possible by healthy communities; equity; deliberate progress away from racism and other biases; a strong and inclusive economy; education; opportunity; support for children and families. Bad policing damages the fabric of communities, hurts families, takes parents away from their children, fails to produce the safety in which communities and economies can flourish, and alienates people from what should be their democracy. Nobody wants that. 

Violence is a critical issue in thinking about any realistic path to reinventing public safety. In the national conversation about mass incarceration, there has long been a happy fiction that prisons are full of nonviolent drug offenders, and that simply stopping the drug war will solve the prison problem. In fact, half of the prisoners are there for violent crimes. We cannot solve the prison system without taking violence seriously. Similarly, we cannot deal realistically with policing without being serious about violence. This is crucial. Homicide and gun violence are visited with massive disproportion on America’s Black communities. They have been abandoned to it forever; it is unconscionable and cannot continue.

But most policing is not about violence and serious crime, or even about crime at all. Police work is overwhelmingly about people who are in distress, in conflict, angry, confused, lost, and in need of help. This has always been true. In a 1980 study in New York, when the city was one of the most dangerous in the country, patrol officers in one precinct got almost 60,000 calls for service, fewer than a third of which were for any sort of crime at all. Only about half of those calls that appeared to involve crime could have been about felonies, with officers making fewer than a thousand felony arrests.  

But in recent decades, political decisions have removed social support from where they are needed, and put police in their place. Police did not close mental institutions and refuse to replace them with anything else, or defund school counselors and after-school programs, or shut down community centers and summer job programs. They are not making the decisions that make opioid treatment so scarce in a national epidemic. But they get the call when the dual-diagnosis homeless man decompensates, they are stationed in the high school to enforce the idiotic zero-tolerance laws the state legislature passed, they respond when neighbors call on the group of noisy kids at one o’clock in the morning, and they inject the Naloxone when the addict overdoses for the third time in a week. “Police aren’t first responders,” a friend of mine says. “They’re just the last ones standing.” Police hate this—they didn’t sign up for it and aren’t good at it. What’s more, they know that they lack the resources for it. Moving money to where it’s needed makes all kinds of sense. And a small number of alternative first-responder programs already do replace police with community support and service teams to handle non-criminal emergencies such as overdoses and crises among the homeless. Eugene, Oregon’s Crisis Assistance Helping Out On The Streets (CAHOOTS) organization handles almost twenty percent of the city’s calls at the cost of only a few percent of the police department’s budget.  

Violence remains. The perennial favorite alternative to policing and prisons is taking money away from the back end that is the criminal justice system to make investments in addressing “root causes:” in family support, education, programs for young people, health care, economic development. We absolutely should do that, as a fundamental matter of equity and justice, but the hard truth is that as a solution to policing, it’s not nearly the panacea people want. At best, those changes are slow: Make things better for kids entering school today, and the impact on, say, violence won’t be felt for a decade or more, when those kids enter their high-risk years. Preventive programming around—for example— gangs has been tried for generations; evaluations show nearly complete failure.  Economic well-being is no insulator against serious misbehavior: rich people beat their wives, rape their dates, and abuse their kids (and sell and do more drugs than poor people: drugs cost money). And there’s evidence that economic uplift does not reduce crime in communities where there remains a threshold level of belief in the illegitimacy of the police.  Scholars David Kirk and Andrew Papachristos found that homicide got worse in certain Chicago neighborhoods even as fundamental economic conditions improved. “We assert that when the law is perceived to be unavailable—for example, when calling the police is not a viable option to remedy one’s problems—individuals may instead resolve their grievances by their own means, which may include violence,” they wrote. 

Happily, more targeted violence-prevention investments clearly work. Sociologist Patrick Sharkey has shown that community-based anti-violence nonprofits reduce, over time, both violence and property crime. Community violence is overwhelmingly driven by very small numbers of people at astronomical risk of both victimization and offending. Street outreach “credible messenger” interventions focused on those people often show impact (though they have sometimes proved to make things worse, which might be fixable through careful implementation). Programs that identify and then surround this small number of people with intensive, customized support, like the “Advance Peace” initiative that originated in Richmond, California, can make a big difference. In New York City, the Mayor’s Office to Prevent Gun Violence supports a web of community-based organizations that conduct community safety planning, promote nonviolence, intervene in the street cycles of retaliation, and “beef” that drive violence, and provide trauma-informed care. It’s almost certainly a big part of the reason that New York is now the safest big city in the country, and continues to get safer even as police stops, arrests, and the number of people the city sends to jail and prison have plummeted.

Some of the most effective approaches to violence prevention depend on a fundamentally different role in policing. The focused-deterrence interventions I’ve been part of developing bring together law enforcement, community actors, and service providers to stop violence among that small number of people at highest risk in ways that can be dramatically effective, which greatly reduces the need for actual enforcement, and that build legitimacy. The LAPD’s Community Safety Partnership places very small numbers of officers in what used to be dangerous public housing to work with the community to prevent violence without making arrests. Violence has plummeted and—is a key marker of legitimacy—the rare remaining homicide is cleared almost immediately through community support. The PIVOT initiative, piloted in Cincinnati, uses the investigative skills of police to unpack community violence problems, then moves that assessment to other city agencies to facilitate non-police interventions.  All of these approaches stand in opposition to the kinds of profligate, undifferentiated policing that vilifies Black communities, saturates them with enforcement, facilitates bias and disproportion, fills the prison pipeline, and creates the endless police contacts that can go so terribly wrong.          

In all of this—wherever policing goes, wherever it ends up, and however it gets there—measurable accountability is key. Police use of force, particularly lethal violence, should be tracked nationally and locally, and move steadily down. Police misbehavior should be defined, tracked, and moved steadily down. Complaints against police should be reported out and acted upon. Abusive officers should lose their jobs. Legitimacy should be systematically tracked: If McDonald’s can manage itself by assessing customer attitudes, so can the police.

We are where we are because policing has been ungovernable. One of the most encouraging signs of the last few weeks has been a tectonic shift in the impunity and protections that have kept it that way. The officers who killed George Floyd were fired within days. The speed was possible because of changes in departmental policy, put in place after the 2015 police shooting of Jamar Clark, that mandated respect for life and a duty to intervene. All four of the officers involved in Floyd’s killing have been criminally charged, as has the officer who shot Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta. In New York state, the legislature has criminalized chokeholds, formally empowered the state attorney general to investigate police killings of unarmed civilians, and ended measures that had prevented the release of police disciplinary records. New Jersey’s attorney general has ordered departments to publish annual lists of officers fired, demoted, or disciplined for misconduct. California’s attorney general is proposing steps to decertify officers guilty of misconduct so they can’t work anywhere in the state. Attention is turning to the measures that, for example, routinely allow unaccountable arbitrators to make departments take back officers they’ve fired for misconduct.

Most of these sorts of reforms can only happen through the political process, and it’s clear the ground is shifting. In New York, Republican legislators, traditionally in lockstep with police unions, voted with Democrats to move the reform legislation. Police unions have been bulwarks against reform, but the president of the Minnesota AFL-CIO, Bill McCarthy, just called on Minneapolis union chief Bob Kroll to resign. “Unions exist to protect workers who have been wronged, not to keep violent people in police ranks,” McCarthy said. Three California police unions have issued a plan for police reform to “root [racist officers] out of the law enforcement profession.” Major police organizations have taken unprecedented stands against police violence. And for police who have organized and been able to stand against accountability, the defunding movement holds what should be an unmistakable lesson. The Minneapolis City Council’s move to eliminate the department says: You thought you had a monopoly. You’re wrong. You won’t change?  We can get rid of you, and we will. Other cities’ instant moves to take money out of police budgets are a lesser version of the same thing, and a warning shot. Wherever their hearts and minds may be, officers with an eye on their own best interests should be paying attention.

The national cry is absolutely right: You cannot treat us like this. We will not stand for it. There is a recent parallel. Over the last decade or so, from an initial position of deep polarization, a bipartisan consensus has emerged that another core feature of modern criminal justice—mass incarceration—is fundamentally wrong. Doing criminal justice in a way that incarcerates vast numbers of people, with massive racial disproportion, and causes incalculable damage to individuals, families, and communities has come to be seen as morally wrong, deeply harmful, and contrary to what America should stand for as a nation. Understanding that has not led directly to know what to do to fix it. Still, it has reset the frame around prison and incarceration and moved the country in fundamentally different directions. Conservatives in red states have been at the heart of many of these changes. The same thing is now happening—and should be happening—around policing.

The powers and structures of the nation have always been used to do harm to Black people. The police have always been at the leading edge of doing that harm. It cannot continue. There is an enormous amount of work to do. What is clear is that the nation is in a different place than it was just a moment ago. That is a very, very good thing.

“Women are in to serve”: Joni Ernst rejects McSally’s claim on pregnancy in the military

Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa repudiated last Wednesday an argument that her Republican colleague Sen. Martha McSally of Arizona published in a law journal in 2007, in which she said that military servicewomen should be counseled against the “foolishness of entering into a lifetime commitment (motherhood)” to avoid deployment.

In the article — first reported earlier that week by Salon and titled “Women in Combat: Is the Current Policy Obsolete?” — McSally, the first woman combat pilot in U.S. history, also called for the Pentagon to address the “problem” at the national level by repealing the policy that, in her view, allowed women to use pregnancy as an excuse to “skirt” their commitment.

Ernst, herself a veteran of the Iowa National Guard who served in Kuwait during the Iraq War and retired as a lieutenant colonel after 22 years, made the remarks at the Barefoot Bar in Lake Okiboji, Iowa, and they were captured in a video obtained by Salon.

Asked whether she believed that women in the military get pregnant to avoid deployment, Ernst replied, “I don’t think so. No, I don’t think so.”

“Most of the time, too, when you’re put on notice it would be really hard for them to get their cycle and everything,” she added.

“As a matter of fact, my experience has kind of been the opposite,” Ernst continued. “I had a young woman — her husband was in my unit, too — and they had a baby that was under a year old. I gave her the opportunity to stay home and excuse her from going on deployment, and she said ‘No, this is why I’ve trained.’ She and her husband both deployed and left their child here with her parents. So I don’t think they do. There could be circumstances out there, but by and large women are in to serve.”

That directly contradicts what McSally says was her own experience as a squadron commander, where “single, pregnant, junior enlisted personnel were considered the most problematic because the pregnancies were less likely to be planned and more likely to create other problems, such as financial and child-care problems, that impacted the unit.”

McSally, who published the paper in the Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy, later expounded on it in an in-person lecture at Duke University School of Law. The school hosts a video of the lecture on its website.

She spoke more freely in the lecture, saying that the Pentagon’s policy of giving temporary leave to pregnant women was “ludicrous” and that the mere prospect of a pregnancy was “enough to cause a problem” that all servicewomen get “lumped into.”

“You know, go work at Walmart if you want to do that,” McSally said. “Nothing against Walmart.”

McSally ran for an open Senate seat in Arizona in 2018, but was narrowly defeated by Democrat Kyrsten Sinema. McSally was then immediately appointed by Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey to fill Arizona’s other Senate seat, left vacant after the death of Sen. John McCain. In the process becoming the first person in U.S. history to attain a Senate seat after losing the election.

During a 2019 hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee, McSally revealed in emotional testimony that she had been “preyed upon and raped by a senior officer.” A New York Times report published soon after that hearing specified that McSally had been assaulted soon after entering the Air Force Academy in 1988.

In the article, McSally argues that the primary “issue” with her proposal is that senior officials would have trouble saying with certainty exactly what a woman’s “intent” was behind her pregnancy.

The issue is intent, which is difficult to enforce except through strong leadership, a call to dedication and integrity, and proper counseling for military women.

The article does not address pregnancies as a result of rape.

Today McSally finds herself trailing Democratic challenger Mark Kelly — a former astronaut and the husband of former Rep. Gabby Giffords — by double digits in most polls. She could end up losing two U.S. Senate races in the same state within two years, a rare accomplishment. A poll from June showed her trailing Kelly among women voters by 15 points.

Ernst, a survivor of sexual assault who voted to confirm Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, is also far from safe in the Iowa Senate race. A statewide poll released July 6 shows the one-term incumbent trailing Democrat Theresa Greenfield by two points, while a poll from mid-June had Greenfield up by three points.

You can read McSally’s article here, and watch her expository lecture here.

The video of Ernst’s remarks, acquired and posted by the liberal PAC American Bridge, can be found here.

Coronavirus side effects: Deep budget cuts for state and local government services

Nationwide, state and local government leaders are warning of major budget cuts as a result of the pandemic. One state — New York — even referred to the magnitude of its cuts as having “no precedent in modern times.”

Declining revenue combined with unexpected expenditures and requirements to balance budgets means state and local governments need to cut spending and possibly raise taxes or dip into reserve funds to cover the hundreds of billions of dollars lost by state and local government over the next two to three years because of the pandemic.

Without more federal aid or access to other sources of money (like reserve funds or borrowing), government officials have made it clear: Budget cuts will be happening in the coming years.

And while specifics are not yet available in all cases, those cuts have already included reducing the number of state and local jobs — from firefighters to garbage collectors to librarians — and slashing spending for education, social services and roads and bridges.

In some states, agencies have been directed to cut their budget as much as 15% or 20% — a tough challenge as most states prepared budgets for a new fiscal year that began July 1.

As a scholar of public administration who researches how governments spend money, here are the ways state and local governments have reduced spending to close the budget gap.

Cutting jobs

State and local governments laid off or furloughed 1.5 million workers in April and May.

They are also reducing spending on employees. According to surveys, government workers are feeling personal financial strain as many state and local governments have cut merit raises and regular salary increases, frozen hiring, reduced salaries and cut seasonal employees.

Washington state, for example, cut both merit raises and instituted furloughs.

A survey from the National League of Cities shows 32% of cities will have to furlough or lay off employees and 41% have hiring freezes in place or planned as a result of the pandemic.

Employment reductions have met some resistance. In Nevada, for example, a state worker union filed a complaint against the governor to the state’s labor relations board for violating a collective bargaining statute by not negotiating on furloughs and salary freezes.

Most of the employee cuts have been made in education. Teachers, classroom aids, administrators, staff, maintenance crews, bus drivers and other school employees have seen salary cuts and layoffs.

The job loss has hurt public employees beyond education, too: librarians, garbage collectors, counselors, social workers, police officers, firefighters, doctors, nurses, health aides, park rangers, maintenance crews, administrative assistants and others have been affected.

Residents also face the consequences of these cuts: They can’t get ahold of staff in the city’s water and sewer departments to talk about their bill; they can’t use the internet at the library to look for jobs; their children can’t get needed services in school.

Most of these cuts have been labeled temporary, but with the extensions to stay-at-home orders and a mostly closed economy, it will be some time before these employees are back to work.

Suspending road, bridges, building and water system projects

As another way to reduce costs quickly, a National League of Cities survey shows 65% of the municipalities surveyed are stopping temporarily, or completely, capital expenditure and infrastructure projects like roads, bridges, buildings, water systems or parking garages.

In New York City, there is a US$2.3 billion proposed cut to the capital budget, a fund that supports large, multiyear investments from sidewalk and road maintenance, school buildings, senior centers, fire trucks, sewers, playgrounds, to park upkeep. There are potentially serious consequences for residents. For example, New York housing advocates are concerned that these cuts will hurt plans for 21,000 affordable homes.

Suspending these big money projects will save the government money in the short term. But it will potentially harm the struggling economy, since both public and private sectors benefit from better roads, bridges, schools and water systems and the jobs these projects create.

Delaying maintenance also has consequences for the deteriorating infrastructure in the U.S. The costs of unaddressed repairs could increase future costs. It can cost more to replace a crumbling building than it does to fix one in better repair.

Cities and towns hit

In many states, the new budgets severely cut their aid to local governments, which will lead to large local cuts in education — both K-12 and higher education — as well as social programs, transportation, health care and other areas.

New York state’s budget proposes that part of its fiscal year 2021 budget shortfall will be balanced by $8.2 billion in reductions in aid to localities. This is the state where the cuts were referred to in the budget as “not seen in modern times.” This money is normally spent on many important services that residents need everyday — mass transit, adult and elderly care, mental health support, substance abuse programs, school programs like special education, children’s health insurance and more. Lacking any of these support services can be devastating to a person, especially in this difficult time.

Fewer workers, less money

As teachers and administrators figure out how to teach both online and in person, they and their schools will need more money — not less — to meet students’ needs.

Libraries, which provide services to many communities, from free computer use to after-school programs for children, will have to cut back. They may have fewer workers, be open for fewer hours and not offer as many programs to the public.

Parks may not be maintained, broken playground equipment may stay that way, and workers may not repave paths and mow lawns. Completely separate from activists’ calls to shift police funding to other priorities, police departments’ budgets may be slashed just for lack of cash to pay the officers. Similar cuts to firefighters and ambulance workers may mean poorly equipped responders take longer to arrive on a scene and have less training to deal with the emergency.

To keep with developing public safety standards, more maintenance staff and materials will be needed to clean and sanitize schools, courtrooms, auditoriums, correctional facilities, metro stations, buses and other public spaces. Strained budgets and employees will make it harder to complete these new essential tasks throughout the day.

To avoid deeper cuts, state and local government officials are trying a host of strategies including borrowing money, using rainy day funds, increasing revenue by raising tax rates or creating new taxes or fees, ending tax exemptions and using federal aid as legally allowed.

Colorado was able to hold its budget to only a 3% reduction, relying largely on one-time emergency reserve funds. Delaware managed to maintain its budget and avoided layoffs largely through using money set aside in a reserve account.

Nobody knows how long the pandemic, or its economic effects, will last.

In the worst-case scenario, budget officials are prepared to make steeper cuts in the coming months if more assistance does not come from the federal government or the economy does not recover quickly enough to restore the flow of money that governments need to operate.

Carla Flink, Assistant Professor of Public Administration and Policy, American University

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

Manufacturer approved for coronavirus hardship loan — but just landed a $83M government contract

The Dallas-based Retractable Technologies, Inc. is among the companies that has made use of the federal government’s Paycheck Protection Program, obtaining the type of loan designed for businesses that are suffering financial hardship because of the coronavirus pandemic. But according to NBC News reporters Stephanie Ruhle and Jonathan Allen, the $1.4 million loan that Retractable received on April 17 was approved despite the fact that the company (which manufactures syringes) has enjoyed a financial windfall in 2020.

Ruhle (known for co-hosting “Velshi & Ruhle” with Ari Velshi on MSNBC) and Allen explain, “In late March, the Department of Health and Human Services began drafting an $83.8 million order for RTI to produce the lion’s share of roughly 330 million needles and syringes for a future COVID-19 mass vaccination campaign. That coincided with private business brisk enough for the company to report a 41.8% increase in first-quarter sales compared with the same period in 2019, according to one of its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.”

On May 1, the NBC News reporters add, the “nearly $84 million government contract for Retractable came through.”

According to Ruhle and Allen, “During those months of good news, RTI’s stock price surged, moving from $1.53 per share on January 2 to $7.38 per share by the close of business on June 19. One of the biggest beneficiaries of the 382% spike was Renaissance Technologies, a hedge fund that held more than 1.2 million shares of RTI as of March 30.”

Retractable, Ruhle and Allen point out, managed to “get both a government hardship loan and a big federal contract virtually at the same time.”

“RTI’s taxpayer-backed windfall has raised eyebrows among industry insiders and lawmakers who questioned how the company could be both a struggling small business and a bustling manufacturer able to produce needles and syringes by the hundreds of millions,” the NBC News journalists explain.

One of the people who would like some answers is Democratic Rep. Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey. The congressman told NBC News, “We simply can’t afford to be unprepared when a vaccine is ready. The (Trump) Administration gave a multimillion-dollar contract to a business who can’t produce the necessary supplies — and who, simultaneously, received a PPP loan. It’s left a lot of us scratching our heads.”

Former Trump Organization executive: The president is “emotionally stunted”

Former Trump Organization executive Barbara Res appeared on MSNBC’s “The Beat” with Ari Melber to explain that there is probably a lot of truth in the new book by Mary Trump.

“I’m glad that she’s come out with it,” said Res. “Nobody that knew him like she did, and like I did, back in the time, has really spoken much about this. Written about it, but by people that didn’t work with him or know him but read about it and summarized what was. She has very, very powerful information. And I’m glad that she’s willing to share it. I think it will be helpful.”

“When you were around Donald Trump, did you pick up anything that was consistent with her view of the impact of his father?” asked Melber.

Res said “yes and no.”

“I worked for Fred. He drove me crazy, absolutely, without a doubt,” she recalled. “He was very, very, very tough. I think he was tough on Donald. He was not abusive with Donald where he might have been abusive of her father, Freddy. So, I did see that.”

Melber explained that Mary Trump is giving a portrayal of the president that describes him of being able to co-opt his father but it made him traumatized and emotionally stunted.

“I do consider him traumatized and emotionally stunted,” Res continued. “I think his father was a tremendous influence on him and his father was definitely the kind of person that cheated and lied a lot. But I also think that Roy Cohen had an influence. And he didn’t start as an altar boy. He did have a predisposition to a certain kind of person that he is and he just grew into it. Even way beyond where he was when I knew him.”

Progressive commentator Sally Kohn noted that if he was a good president, no one would care about Trump being emotionally stunted with daddy issues. But as a leader that has failed on COVID-19, embraced white supremacists, and overall hurt the country, she doesn’t care what his past or his issues are.

“I care about his leadership right now,” she said. “The bigger problem is the Donald Trump we are seeing today.”

She went on to say that one thing that is being ignored in the conversation about Mary Trump’s book is that she is an actual psychologist who has written books on these specific issues she’s addressing. While many psychologists and mental health experts have released statements or written about Trump’s mental and emotional problems, Mary Trump has the experience along with the time to truly examine Trump’s behavior.

See the full discussion below:

Seafood’s antibiotic crisis: Fish farming is creating an animal welfare disaster

new report has issued an urgent warning on the spread of drug resistance (anti-microbial resistance, AMR) from animal to human pathogens. It identifies aquaculture as a major source worldwide. Aquaculture (fish farming) is an under-appreciated source of AMR, and as global citizens we can no longer neglect its ecological and human impacts.

The challenge for the scientific and political community is to find a sustainable solution to the spread of AMR without compromising the economic security of fishing societies.

As with so many other health and environmental disasters, coastal communities in low- and middle-income countries in Africa and South Asia are facing the worst of this crisis. Rates of AMR in humans are skyrocketing in places that do not have the infrastructure or resources needed to monitor the spread of resistance in hospitals, a measure thought to be key in controlling AMR outbreaks.

We have been building to this moment for a long time. For decades, fishing communities have made heavy use of antibiotics to boost animal growth and to prevent disease outbreaks. Intensification of aquaculture has meant ever-increasing numbers of fish are kept in pens and ponds, in some cases devastating aquatic ecosystems. Take for example Saprolegnia parasitica, a fungal-like organism from the oomycete family. This species is naturally saprotrophic — it eats dead things, contributing to the carbon cycle. But when salmon are farmed intensively, packed together in crowded pools, S. parasitica becomes a deadly parasite, necrotizing the flesh of stressed animals and causing the disease Saprolegniasis.

From an animal welfare point of view, infections like these seem avoidable — the disease stems directly from animal over-crowding, so a simple solution would be to keep fewer fish together or give them more space. But this would reduce yields at a time when farmed fish are vital to feed our growing global human population. And it neglects the central role of aquaculture in supporting the economies of coastal communities, particularly in low- and middle-income countries.

Fish farming can be an economic boon, but it comes with risks. Vulnerability to climate change and local spread of AMR in human pathogens are directly correlated. There is even evidence that increasing water temperatures due to climate change increases the severity of some fish diseases, which will almost certainly lead to ever-greater reliance on antibiotics as the oceans continue to heat.

Of course, the global economic importance of aquaculture means that lots of well-funded research is going on, developing new drugs and vaccines to control pathogens and prevent infection. Farmed salmon have been vaccinated against furunculosis in Norway since the 1980s, where the use of antibiotics on fish farms is now minimal. Other northern European countries are looking at new offshore systems for fish farming that use recirculation aquaculture in indoor tanks to prevent runoff of pharmaceuticals into the wider ocean.

But such high-tech innovations are expensive, and out of the reach of many communities. Moving aquaculture away from the sea might also go against hundreds of years of local and family tradition, disrupting coastal communities.

More achievable changes come by integrating fish farming with other types of cultivation. Combining aquaculture with algae harvesting allows companies like Swedish Algae Factory to use nature to clean waste from fish tanks and absorb carbon dioxide. Algae are then harvested to produce new biomaterials and valuable cosmetic ingredients. A similar approach of growing fish and edible seaweed together in the same body of water has provided long term economic sustainability for farmers in Japan. Likewise in Bangladesh, cultivating fish and prawn directly in rice fields increases the productivity of all three crops. 

Another solution to AMR, treating animals with traditional medicinal plants, is commonly used by farmers in parts of Vietnam and Indonesia. Probiotics (beneficial microbes) are another option. Shifting farming strategies away from antibiotic use requires time, investment, and short-term loss of productivity, but the results can be transformative, decreasing dependence on drugs and increasing income by diversifying the products that can be sold.

Solutions to the AMR-in-aquaculture crisis are within reach — but implementation must acknowledge the human aspect of aquaculture, and allow fishing communities to maintain productivity without becoming dependent on financial aid. Ongoing support from the United Nations is vital: this must include economic assistance, as well as ground-level support for infrastructure, education, and community leadership. Organizations like the International Fund for Agricultural Development are dedicated to helping build up resilience in rural food-producing communities. They offer financial help and education, and they encourage local leadership for sustainable management of fishing stocks and communities. Another key element will be to improve health monitoring programs, so that AMR in human infections can be tracked more effectively.

Most importantly, decision making must remain with the local communities. Historical research has shown that fishing communities around the world have been able to manage their fish stocks and fishing practices sustainably by following locally agreed-upon rules. Communication between the fishing community and local healthcare experts should also be emphasized, with careful and coordinated monitoring for disease in fish and humans.

This concerted effort will require global agreement on the importance of sustainability in aquaculture, to protect our environment and our health. Even those of us in the richest countries must hope for better leadership in the near future.

“The rats are leaving the sinking ship”: Lindsey Graham agrees to let Robert Mueller testify

Senate Judiciary Committee Charman Lindsey Graham (R-Sc) stunned political observers on Sunday by siding with Democrats to allow former special counsel Robert Mueller to testify before his committee about his investigation into the Donald Trump administration.

Following a Mueller op-ed published Saturday in The Washington Post expressing displeasure with Donald Trump commuting Roger Stone’s sentence, Graham tweeted, “Apparently Mr. Mueller is willing – and also capable – of defending the Mueller investigation through an oped in the Washington Post,” before adding, “Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee have previously requested Mr. Mueller appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify about his investigation. That request will be granted.”

With many Twitter commentators saying Graham’s s decision would make Trump exceedingly unhappy by giving Mueller a forum to talk about his investigation, some felt Graham — who is struggling in the polls — was trying to put distance between himself and the unpopular president.

As one person noted, it looks like ‘The rats are leaving the sinking ship.”

More Twitter observations below:

 

How the 99% can force the 1% to defeat COVID-19

The government’s response to the pandemic has further enriched the wealthy, while everyday people, especially Black and Brown workers, face sickness, death, and destitution. Government handouts to the rich are unsurprising, since they repeat the century-old pattern of “rescue packages”, but another pattern is more perplexing: why have business leaders not stepped up to demand a robust public health response, which would ultimately be in their own self-interest? The titans of industry have mostly stood by in the face of Trump’s criminal negligence, which has devastated much of the 99% but also endangers the wealthy.  

Judging by past history, there’s little reason to believe that even the most progressive corporations will “do the right thing.” But collective action by ordinary people can compel them to. Mass disruption of business by workers, consumers, and renters can shift the costs of the crisis onto business owners. If we force them to bear the costs, they’ll demand the needed changes in government policy, using sway that the average person simply lacks. 

Surviving the killing floors

Take for instance the meat industry, which exemplifies both the worst of “coronavirus capitalism” and the enormous vulnerability of corporations right now. 

The industry was already notorious for its dangerous conditions and racist exploitation of nonwhite and undocumented workers. Now the major meatpackers have ramped up production and denied aid to their infected workers and the local communities that have become virus hotspots. By late June, 30,000 meat workers were known to have contracted the virus in 260 plants, leading to 102 deaths. And because of government-sanctioned secrecy by meatpacking executives, these figures were surely a vast underestimate.

The Trump administration’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration has refused to intervene in the industry. The June 22 issue of Bloomberg Businessweek noted that “OSHA hasn’t issued a single job site requirement for how meatpackers should protect workers.” Guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, meanwhile, are “purely voluntary.” The result is that “U.S. meat plants are deadly as ever, with no incentive to change.”

The examples of European packing plants and certain plants in the United States, which have had much lower infection rates, demonstrates that the current trend is avoidable. The meat companies could drastically reduce infections if they invested the capital to slow the speed of processing, spread out workers, insulate work stations, test workers daily, perform contact tracing, and guarantee paid sick leave.

 The major firms have been unwilling to take these steps. Instead, they are reaping record profits by running the plants at full capacity, replacing sick workers from the ample supply of unemployed substitutes, and inflicting poverty, illness, and death on the surrounding communities.  

 Yet the meat industry is also highly vulnerable to disruption by workers, consumers, and local communities. Because of the nature of the production process, which relies on immediate refrigeration of disassembled animal parts to prevent spoilage, a work stoppage or absenteeism in just one part of a plant can throw a wrench in the gears. This is how meat workers during and after the Great Depression made meatpacking into a highly-paid union job with relatively safe working conditions and good healthcare plans.  

Organized work stoppages and strikes could both protect workers and revitalize the unions in the industry, putting them in position to address the abysmal conditions – low wages and long hours, high rates of injury and sickness, and systematic racism – that predate Covid-19. Meatpacking workers have a long-forgotten history of militant interracial unionism, led especially by Black workers. Their efforts greatly reduced injury rates, among other gains. 

An updated version of this approach would empower the most exploited workers in the industry, who are 80 percent nonwhite, 52 percent foreign-born, and 42 percent women. While there is often intense racial animosity among the workforce – stoked by the companies – it can be overcome

People outside the plants can play a vital supporting role. They can support workers’ demands for protective gear and better conditions. They can press local governments for health regulations that put pressure on the industry. And they can mount organized boycotts that threaten profits, since virtually all packed meat is now sold as “name brands” like Tyson and Hormel. Even Bloomberg Businessweek concedes that consumers “could force change with mass boycotts.” 

Successful pressure on a single major producer can change the whole industry. Victory in a single plant can inspire similar actions elsewhere, while also teaching employers that quick concessions can prevent the devastating losses that a work stoppage can cost in meat spoilage and lost customers. As soon as one major producer is forced to implement changes, it will insist that their competitors be forced to adopt the same changes. This concern for competitiveness is precisely why the first federal regulation of the meat industry, the 1891 Meat Inspection Act, was passed. 

We see hints of the same dynamic as Covid cases surge during the country’s “reopening.” Politico reports that in Florida the tourism industry has itself asked state officials “to crack down on dozens of eateries and bars that have failed to embrace capacity restrictions and social distancing guidelines – a remarkable invitation to pursue its own members.” Tourism has been devastated by the pandemic, so the industry is especially vulnerable to pressure by workers and consumers. Targeted boycotts of reckless businesses could help amplify the pressures already being felt across the board.

By forcing these companies to enact safety measures, worker and consumer disruption can help quash the curve for the country as a whole. As part of this process, OSHA might even be transformed into an effective regulator.

 A clue from the past for transforming OSHA

Long before the pandemic, OSHA had been neutralized by Congressional underfunding (its budget is 0.5 percent of the amount spent on police), corporate lawsuits, and the designation of pro-business appointees. Even before Trump became president, the agency was so resource-starved that it would’ve taken 139 years to inspect all U.S. workplaces. Since 2017, Trump has reduced inspections still further. OSHA now has its fewest inspectors since 1975, while the workforce they are tasked with protecting has doubled in size.

Shaming OSHA or electing Joe Biden won’t solve the problem. Historically, direct disruption by workers and consumers has often been essential to bringing about government regulation of business. As we argue in our new book, Levers of Power: How the 1% Rules and What the 99% Can Do About It, this disruption can even push employers to welcome regulation as a necessary evil.  

Like today’s OSHA, the National Labor Relations Board was initially feckless. On paper, the 1935 Wagner Act guaranteed private-sector workers’ right to unionize and created the NLRB to oversee union elections. But most employers simply ignored the law and the agency. 

By the early 1940s, however, they had changed course and accepted the NLRB’s authority. What changed their minds was an upsurge in strikes and work stoppages – almost 9,000 in the years 1935-37 alone. The auto industry was a vital site of conflict. The famous Flint sit-down strike of 1936-37 forced General Motors to recognize the United Auto Workers union. 

Over the next several years worker militancy continued to impose direct, sustained costs on employers. Accepting the NLRB thus became a way to restore stability. Later that year, the Wall Street Journal reported that auto executives “unanimously express satisfaction with the National Labor Relations Board decision to hold elections” in workplaces. 

Thus a new regulatory agency was created and empowered, overcoming the diehard business opposition to unionization. Business never fully accepted the NLRB, and in the 1940s would begin a long-term assault on the agency’s powers. But the episode shows how mass disruption targeting employers can pave the path to regulation. 

The worker actions of the 1930s provide a model for current-day movements, including for fighting the pandemic. If collective disruption can force businesses to bear more of the virus’s costs, employers will force politicians to finally take the measures needed to defeat it.

Kevin Young teaches history at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Michael Schwartz is professor emeritus of sociology at Stony Brook University. They are co-authors, with Tarun Banerjee, of Levers of Power: How the 1% Rules and What the 99% Can Do About It (Verso, 2020).
 

Geologists find evidence of two new supervolcano eruptions at Yellowstone

Some 8.7 million years ago, much of what is now Idaho was torched by clouds of hot volcanic ash, destroying all vegetation and animals in sight. The supervolcano, Yellowstone, was erupting. This was Yellowstone’s largest eruption on record.

Super-eruptions can decimate entire regions, and their cocktail of ash and gases can alter the climate. But, even though they eject huge amounts of material, there are very few documented super-eruptions in the geologic record. So we don’t fully understand why they are so big or how often they occur. Now, details of the Yellowstone supervolcanic eruption are documented in a new study published in the journal Geology.

Yellowstone’s ancient eruptions scattered volcanic debris across the northwestern US. There are so many deposits — covering an area tens of thousands of square kilometers — that it can be difficult to tell each eruption apart. To get around this, volcanologists collected detailed identifying information, including chemical and chronological data, on each geological deposit. 

When they looked at the data, they found that much of the volcanic debris, which was thought previously to come from repeated smaller eruptions, had the same chemical makeup and age. In fact, these deposits were produced by two previously unrecognized super-eruptions. Both eruptions were searingly hot, and would have baked the landscape in a thick coating of molten volcanic glass. The youngest of the two, known as the Grey’s Landing super-eruption, is dated to roughly 8.7 million years ago, and, according to the volume of debris released, is 30% larger than all other eruptions recorded from Yellowstone. 

Recognition of these events brings Yellowstone’s total number of eruptions during the late Miocene to six. That makes for one eruption about every 520,000 years. Since then, however, the pace of eruptions has slowed to once every 1.5 million years. 

The evidence seems to suggest that Yellowstone is slowing down. And if this trend continues, the next super-eruption won’t happen for another 900,000 years. Predicting eruptions is however a risky business, and the United States Geological Survey still maintain a permanent monitoring network on Yellowstone — just in case. 

Lazarus Lynch find success by following his authentic truth: “A show is not the end game for me”

It’s been one year now since Lazarus Lynch released his debut cookbook, “Son of a Southern Chef: Cook with Soul.” The journey of sharing his soul food bible with the world left an indelible mark on Lynch, and the colorful and vibrant book was unlike any Southern cookbook that came before it. In the process, the chef gained a newfound sense of empowerment and ownership of his own narrative, which includes openly identifying as a Black queer person.

Three hundred and sixty-five days later, the landscape looks not only different for Lynch but also for America as a whole. The nation reels from a pandemic and a recession, both of which have impacted Black Americans at a disproportionate rate. In the wakes of the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, America also finds itself confronted with a national reckoning on race.

Lynch is quick to remind us that these struggles are not new for Black Americans. “They are issues that we, as a community, have been given Band-Aid solutions for and have never received true reforms or systemic change,” he tells Salon. 

RELATED: Lazarus Lynch on the politics and healing power of food: It’s “the conduit for all beautiful things”

As a Black chef in America, Lynch views his role as inherently political. The production and sale of food, as well as who has access to it and the land it is grown on all politicize our plates. The history of food in America is intertwined with the history of enslaved people. We vote with our dollars, and so we vote with our plates.

“Who we are is in the aromas of our kitchens. It comes out in our Sazón, in our Lawry’s seasoned salt, in our Jiffy cornbread. It comes out in our biscuits, in our fried chicken and in our okra,” Lynch says. “We must know not just about where that food comes from — not just about the Edna Lewises, the Leah Chases of the world — but we must also understand that growing our own food gives us ownership in a way that simply just telling the story through cooking doesn’t.”

Politics aside, food also has the ability to nourish and heal our bodies, which may be needed now more than ever. 

“Food has the power to heal — and not just heal bodies — but heal hearts, heal spaces and bring up important conversations around healing,” Lynch adds.

When Lynch last appeared on “Salon Talks,” he showed us how to make a sweet take on grilled cheese that’s ooey, gooey and delicious. You can watch more of Lynch cooking up some of his beloved recipes here after you read part one of our two-part interview here.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity and length. 

As we’ve seen the protests against police brutality unfold, we’ve also seen reckonings over race across industries. Systematic racism in the food industry has been examined, including at prominent media publications. What do you think about the current state of the industry? How can it evolve and rise to the moment that we’re living through right now?

Well, I think that’s a very important question. I think that we’re living in a very important time. These are all very necessary, long overdue changes, in my opinion. These changes are the beginnings of what I hope to be a permanent reconstruction of the industry. Now, that’s going to take a lot of time. That’s going to take a lot of labor. That’s going to take a lot of willingness of powers to come to the table and really see these issues, and acknowledge these issues, before we can change them.

I think what’s happening now is this: We’re in the beginning stages. This is the acknowledgement stage, and we know people are still in denial. People still don’t see the disparity. People still don’t think anything’s wrong. So we’re still at the acknowledgement phase of this, which has to happen before we can get to the next level. 

RELATED: Inspired by his dad, Lazarus Lynch’s peach cobbler is the dessert you’ll want to bake all summer

I am looking at this as an organizer in this movement. I’ve seen the fashion industry. There’s been a Black in Fashion Council which has been launched from this movement, and their role is to continue to hold the fashion industry accountable so that there’s representation. And we need that in food. We need a Black in Food Council, and I’m willing to be a part of that. Because that is the important work.

I’ve had so many conversations with production companies, with networks who I won’t name, who are interested in telling Black stories. But they’re not interested in really telling the entire story, because they don’t want to offend anyone. They don’t want their audience retention to go down. They don’t want to lose budgets.

And so there’s still this capitalistic motivation driving a lot of these decisions. There’s a reason why certain people are replayed and replayed on certain channels, while others are not. That’s a money thing. And so the whole thing has to change. As a person who’s been on camera, and hosted shows and who’s written a book: Look, a show is not the end game for me. It is absolutely not the end game for me. And it’s important that you, please, express that. A show is not the end game for me, because a show is, as all art is, a tool for social justice. And when you are irresponsible about how you use that tool, you end up perpetuating systems of oppression.

RELATED: We promise you’ve never had shrimp and grits like these before

So what we need to do is not just fill the screens with more Black people. That’s important. Black representation matters. Not just filling the screens with Black trans people, because that’s important and because that matters. But it’s also about who’s making those decisions. It’s also about who’s signing those checks. It’s also about who’s editing those stories. We need an entire change here.

And so, for me, it’s about the beginning the stages, right now. The acknowledgement, stepping down of certain people, I appreciate. But how do we make sure that this is not created again, in a new form? How do we make sure that this is not just another problem that we put a Band-Aid solution over and really undue this whole system? That’s how I’m thinking about this.

Have you redefined what success means for yourself? If a show is not the end game for you, should others who are up and coming in the industry think the same way? How can we think outside of the box of the current formula for success?

Well, I don’t know that my definition has changed that dramatically. I’ve always sort of approached my life and the work that I do from a space of authenticity and from the space of what feels right for me. And that includes having a spiritual foundation and a practice in prayer and meditation, where I’m able to center myself before I make those kinds of decisions and those moves.

I think it’s dangerous for me to tell people not to want a TV show or not to want a book deal. Those are things that people who want them should aspire to and absolutely make every best effort to make that reality for themselves. It would be unfair and completely incomplete for me to give advice like that, but I do believe that there is work to do. And I think that we have to, as people, as individuals, begin to do our own work. And that has nothing to do with an industry. That has nothing to do with food. That has nothing to do with the powers that be.

That has everything to do with us examining our own biases, examining our own prejudices, examining the ways in which we don’t speak up. Because not doing that work is what has created the issues we have today. So my challenge to everybody is: If you’re hosting a show, ask for representation in those crews. If you’re writing a book, include other people. Your team you put together are people of color, who are equally as talented, who can do the job. And so, to me, it’s not exclusively about just the color of people’s skin who you are hiring. But it’s about working in your own community, in your own life, to undo systemic racism. And that is the work that I want everyone to do.

So I haven’t truly changed the position on success. I don’t think a TV show means that I’m successful. I don’t think having a book means I’m successful. I think those are things that I wanted, and those are things that I worked hard to earn and those are things that I did because those are the things I wanted to do.

If I never do a show again, and if I just moved or relocated to another country to teach children — if that was what I wanted to do, then I would find happiness in that. So for me, as a creator, as a thinker, as a artist, I have always envisioned my life sort of in a very creative, bold way. And that’s how I express the things that I do. It’s never motivated by, “I must do this so that I’m successful.” Success is following my authentic truth, whatever that means for me.

And I think that shows in cooking, too. If you cook food that is authentic to yourself, it really shines through in the recipe, on the finished plate, in the book that you’re writing. 

Absolutely. But the thing about what you’re saying is that in literature spaces, in publishing spaces, we have to have a more expansive understanding of the stories that are to be told. That the stories that are to be told may look like a Mexican immigrant who lives in your city, and who has this fusion of culture, and who is fascinated by many different cuisines and who loves telling stories about their homeland. That is a valid story. And for someone who’s from Ethiopia, who cooked Ethiopian food from a food cart and who’s parents owned a local business. That is a valid story.

There’s a quote that says, “You don’t have to understand in order for it to be valid.” This speaks to validation. In the food space, in the writing space, there are Black chefs, there are Ethiopian chefs, there are Puerto Rican chefs. There are chefs of color who want to tell their story in the pages of literature but who are told, either directly or indirectly, that their stories aren’t valid, that their story won’t sell, that their story doesn’t belong on a book shelf.

And so what we do is we just create the same kinds of things, the same kind of stories, the same kind of images, because we think that that’s what’s going to work. And so here’s the opportunity — now is the opportunity. I’m calling on the industry  I’m calling on publishers, I’m calling on editors  to expand their idea of storytelling. To expand the possibility of what readers want, of what consumers want. Because the truth is that all of these cuisines are valid. All of these stories matter, and so I want to see all of them told.

In the larger conversation of cultural appropriation in food, there are conversations about authenticity, experience and who can cook what foods. What do you think about these topics?

Alexander Smalls, the opera singer in Harlem, wrote the cookbook Between Harlem and Heaven, which received a James Beard Award. He talked about this in a recent essay he wrote  about who can cook what. Often times, Black people are put in the category of soul food. I’m going to just use very blunt words here and language, so please don’t take offense to this. In the imagination of whiteness  and I say that with respect to this country that we live in and this kind of society that we live in — but in those kinds of institutions, in the imagination of whiteness, Blacks live in a very specific category. It’s the same thing in music, because I’m also in the music industry.

So in the music industry, Black people don’t necessarily live under the genre of opera. We live in the genres of soul, R&B, hip hop and funk. These associations about where our stories belong actually limit the creativity of the people who can do many different things, myself included.

So if I wanted to cook Italian food, because that’s what I love, and I had done the necessary training to cook that food authentically from a space of truth, and a space of honesty and a space of love and respect, I deserve the opportunity. And because we live in a society where everybody can choose for themselves. But I think that if we have this very narrow-minded approach about who can tell a story, I think that’s a very dangerous thing.

However, there’s a caveat to that. Not everyone can tell every story, but everyone should have the opportunity to tell any story. And that’s a very sort of complicated idea for some people. But that just means that because I have the ability to tell this story does not necessarily mean that I should tell this story. And on the flip side, I might be able to tell a story or have the resources to tell the story that is not my own, and I’m going to tell it because it needs to be told. So I respect that, and I understand that.

It always has to come back to the person’s intention and why they are sharing it, because that says everything to me. So it’s a nuanced conversation. I think that the beauty of food is that it can be exchanged, and we see that in agriculture. We cannot say that physically this belongs to Africa, and it should never leave the continent of Africa. It must only stay in Africa. Food is broader than that. Food transcends those boundaries.

Speaking of your music, I love “I’m Gay.” How do you see your music career growing?

Thank you very much for liking the song. I appreciate that. I made a decision at the end of last year that 2020 was going to be a different year for me. I couldn’t expect how different it would be. But I knew it was going to be a different year, and I knew that I wanted to take a step back from how active I was in the food side and focus on my music. I wrote “I’m Gay” last year on the eve of my cookbook coming out and just kind of sat on it. I thought maybe I’d release it at the same time as the book, but I just no time. And so this year I decided I’m going to focus on music.

Music has always been a part of me. It’s part of my history. It’s part of my family. It’s part of my DNA. To be able to really now tell stories through sound, and through music and also through music videos, is a different expression of my artistry that people are getting to witness now.

It’s just the right time. You know it just felt like this is the right thing for me to do. It is the right way for me to spend this year. So I’m very blessed because of that. And I’m very blessed that “I’m Gay” has come out at such a pivotal moment in our history, in our time. And it’s really an affirmation to celebrate Black queer people and an affirmation of social justice. When I released the song. I said, “This is my protest. This is my pride anthem. This is my Black pride anthem.”

I’m really grateful that people are listening to it and that it’s emerging conversations around homophobia, race  all kinds of discrimination that this song interrogates and confronts. It’s really bringing up these conversations. And as I said earlier, that art is a form of social justice. It is a teaching tool. I’m grateful for the ability to be able to use that tool  the ability that I have as a musician — to really bring up conversations. And there’s more coming.

What can we look forward to next from you?

You can look forward to more music this year. You can look forward to witnessing the expansion of my artistry and storytelling. I’m still identifying for myself what that means. I know that music is a big part of that for this year, but I know that it’s broader than that. And so I think we’re all in for a surprise. This might be a wild ride. This is going to be a journey for all of us. But certainly in the coming months, you can expect some more music.

I cook because of my Mexican grandmother and growing up with her in the kitchen. It connects me to those memories, and it instructs me about my family and my identity. It’s foundational in that sense. Why do you cook?

I cook to nourish my soul. I cook to nourish my mind. I cook to honor my ancestors. I cook to honor the past. I cook to be inspired about the future. I cook through memory. I cook through sensory. I cook through passion and feeling. And I cook from a space that reminds me that the shoulders that I stand on today have overcome. Therefore, I will overcome. And that is why I cook.