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The far right actually hates America: Its dark ideology has foreign roots

If there is one thing Republicans want you to know, it’s how much they bleed red, white and blue for America. None of their gatherings is complete without dozens if not hundreds of American flags, attendees sporting flag-themed costumes (some veering close to obscene mockery), Uncle Sam suits or Lady Liberty getups. Jimmy Cagney’s old schmaltz vehicle "Yankee Doodle Dandy" looks restrained by comparison.

Democrats, on the other hand, have borne the stigma ever since the Joe McCarthy era, if not the New Deal, of hankering after alien creeds — a suffocating European “socialism” (meaning anything to the left of Calvin Coolidge) or maybe outright Marxist-Leninism. Conservatives with intellectual pretensions have blamed progressives for following French deconstructionist philosophers. The cabal around Paul Weyrich, an early leader of the Heritage Foundation who left it because it was insufficiently conservative, held that every supposed evil in modern America was a consequence of the left employing the "cultural Marxist" ideas of the Frankfurt School (one of the right’s many antisemitic conspiracy theories) as a blueprint to conquer the culture.

These two contrasting identifications have embedded themselves in the national subconscious to the point that the media instinctively reflects them. Hence the anthropological expeditions to the “real America” (somewhere away from the coasts, where Bass Pro Shops outnumber Starbucks) to find a diner where genuine Americans congregate. By contrast, the press happily played along with the efforts of Vietnam-avoider George W. Bush's campaign to portray John Kerry, an actual Vietnam combat veteran, as decadently French. One half-expected Kerry to be taking along the works of Michel Foucault as beach reading to Martha’s Vineyard.

To the extent there is any truth to this caricature, it serves as a superficial explanation of the GOP’s xenophobia (remember “freedom fries?”) and near-pathological parochialism. It also dovetails with an aggressive anti-intellectualism: One would no more expect a Republican politician to speak a foreign language than to play the cello. 

What, then, accounts for the GOP’s adulation of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán? As one observer puts it: “The American right’s love affair with Hungary seemingly knows no bounds.” That country’s wannabe dictator is now a regular feature at the annual CPAC convention (think of that event as the Burning Man festival, except for wingnuts), and luminaries of the American right regularly troop to Budapest to confer with Orbán and his cronies. American conservatives’ enthusiasm for foreign-based authoritarianism, and their readiness to cooperate with grandees like Orbán or Vladimir Putin, is now well established, a phenomenon I witnessed in its embryonic stage as early as 2016. 

Nearly every historically conscious person is able to trace at least some aspects of contemporary conservatism to their roots in early America. Present-day Republican hostility to the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act has a straightforward genealogy: back to Nixon’s "Southern strategy," then to the Southern agrarians of the 1930s, to the post-Civil War Lost Cause movement, then the 1861-1865 secession itself and finally back to John C. Calhoun and his own ideological predecessor, John Randolph of Roanoke, who still receives sympathetic treatment from the conservative propaganda mill.

From Randolph’s dyspeptic political rants to the agrarians’ nostalgia-drenched manifestos, all the reflexes of the present-day American reactionary are prefigured: hatred of industry, cities, public education and internal improvements (the old term for infrastructure); distrust of cosmopolitanism, sophistication and the new;  a worship of “tradition” that amounted to stultification; an equation of democratic principles with mob rule. Above all, a fundamental distaste for human equality, especially racial equality, but including political and social distinctions of gender and class.

Joseph de Maistre, though less well-known than Edmund Burke, embodies the essential points of the 21st-century American conservative mind at a deeper level than taxes, spending or size of government.

Curiously, the agrarians, ur-Americans of Southern Protestant extraction, were influenced by the leading figure of the French Counter-Enlightenment, the arch-reactionary ultramontane Catholic Joseph de Maistre. Even in the present day, a Southern apologist for slavery has written a screed for something called the Abbeville Foundation extolling Maistre’s hatred of republics. Evidently, despising the very governmental foundation of the United States has become fashionable for a certain type of reactionary conservative.

Those are hardly the intellectual roots of American conservative philosophy that post-World War II salesmen of conservatism like William F. Buckley Jr., Russell Kirk or George F. Will chose to peddle. They professed to find the source of their ideology with Edmund Burke, the 18th-century Anglo-Irish philosopher and politician.

Among Burke’s epigrams are such unexceptionable Rotary Club maxims as “All government, indeed every human benefit and enjoyment, every virtue, and every prudent act, is founded on compromise and barter,” and “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.” Very uplifting, but hardly in the spirit of present-day conservatives, for whom compromise is betrayal.

Maistre, on the other hand, fits the dogmatic spirit of their creed. He considered the executioner to be the indispensable backstop of civilization, the better to save wayward souls: "Man cannot be wicked without being evil, nor evil without being degraded, nor degraded without being punished, nor punished without being guilty. In short … there is nothing so intrinsically plausible as the theory of original sin.”

Émile Faguet, a French author and critic, called Maistre “a fierce absolutist, a furious theocrat, an intransigent legitimist, apostle of a monstrous trinity composed of pope, king and hangman, always and everywhere the champion of the hardest, narrowest and most inflexible dogmatism, a dark figure out of the Middle Ages, part learned doctor, part inquisitor, part executioner.”A white circle with a black background

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Maistre, though less well-known than Burke, embodies the essential points of the American conservative mind at a deeper level than taxes, spending or size of government. His Catholic zealotry prefigures present-day Catholic ideologues like Patrick Deneen and Leonard Leo, not to mention their political marionettes Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas. Isaiah Berlin, the great historian of Western ideas, considered Maistre the true father of reactionary Western conservatism, and, indeed, a precursor to the past century's fascist movements.  

Although worldly enough to have served as the Kingdom of Savoy’s ambassador to Russia, Maistre detested science and secular learning. And he positively wallowed in violence, in near-pornographic fashion: “The whole earth, continually steeped in blood, is nothing but an immense altar on which every living thing must be sacrificed without end, without restraint, without respite until the consummation of the world, the extinction of evil, the death of death.” 

That orgasmic vision is pretty strong meat for a tradition that claims to defend ordered liberty. But running through American conservatism like a red thread is a creepy fascination with violence, not to mention a habit of apocalyptic thinking and a longed-for showdown with satanic forces. Amid the invasion of Iraq, when self-righteous stupidity was en vogue, neoconservatives Richard Perle and David Frum wrote "An End to Evil: How to Win the War on Terror," a paean to redemptive violence as a cure for violence.

Maistre hits many of the key themes of American conservatism: religious dogmatism, belief over evidence, anti-scientism, the imperative of obedience to hierarchy and a habitual brooding over violence. But those themes do not satisfy certain paradoxical values that also make up the conservative mindset: a rather irreligious appetite for worldly possessions, and the desire for a pseudo-empirical justification for greed.  

Here one might be tempted to believe that conservative economic theory rests on solid domestic foundations: rugged American individualism, the Horatio Alger fable and the (entirely spurious) quote attributed to Abraham Lincoln: “You cannot help the poor by destroying the rich."

America was largely founded on greed, exemplified by land-grabs, gold rushes and real estate flimflams, not to mention the institution of slavery. But before Hayek and Mises, greed lacked a sophisticated theoretical foundation.

To be sure, America was largely founded on greed, exemplified by land-grabs, gold rushes and real estate flimflams, not to mention the institution of slavery — the theft of others’ labor. But it lacked a sophisticated theoretical foundation, and its justification was sorely wanting in the wake of the Great Depression and the New Deal’s widely popular efforts to combat the ill effects of greed through fiscal stimulus and the creation a social safety net. 

Ironically, then, just as 20th-century socialism rested on German thought of the previous century, post-World War II conservative economic thinking in America was largely based on the groundwork of German-speaking intellectuals. 

Friedrich Hayek and Ludwig von Mises are generally considered to be among the principal founders of radical free-market doctrine in the postwar era. Hayek, the more famous of the two, described himself as a pragmatist and empiricist, but, as is common in the transmission of ideas, his followers dogmatized his theories to the point where they became a materialist religion, a mirror image of Marxist-Leninism. Hayek is frequently invoked in the op-ed pages of the Wall Street Journal, the Pravda of the American overclass.

Hayek, like other founders of neoliberal economic theory such as Wilhelm Roepke, claimed that their championing of laissez-faire was a remedy for the horrific wars and state oppression that plagued Europe between 1914 and 1945. But in later life, he appeared to develop a soft spot for authoritarianism. In the 1970s and 1980s, Hayek was feted by Augusto Pinochet, the Chilean military dictator who seized power (with help from the CIA) in 1973. In the course of several visits, Hayek claimed he had “not been able to find a single person, even in much-maligned Chile, who did not agree that personal freedom was much greater under Pinochet than under Allende” (the elected social democrat overthrown in the 1973 coup). Doubtless Hayek did not have many encounters with the relatives of the roughly 3.000 people murdered by the Pinochet regime.

Mises, an economist who in the early 1930s had advised the Austrofascist chancellor of Austria, Engelbert Dollfuss, settled in the U.S. in 1940. His laissez-faire views were so uncompromising that even Milton Friedman, most people’s idea of a hardcore libertarian, considered his thinking overly inflexible. Mises became the namesake of a tax-exempt foundation in Auburn, Alabama, that's so far out on the libertarian fringe it makes the Cato Institute look like the Ford Foundation. Its bullpen of “scholars” have included neo-Confederate apologists, crackpots out to disprove Einstein’s relativity theory and — wait for it! — crusaders for the legalization of drunk driving.

Perhaps the most influential European of all — at least to Americans in permanently arrested adolescence — was the Russian immigrant, Hollywood screenwriter, novelist and cult leader Alisa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum, better known as her Promethean alter ego, Ayn Rand. Her works achieve the difficult feat of synthesizing a coma-inducing dullness with piercingly shrill extended diatribes to create reverse masterpieces worthy of the most risible North Korean propaganda. To an even greater extent than the neoliberal economists, she fashioned an ideology that is simply the worst of the Marxist-Leninism she escaped stood on its head, with a heroic Übermensch substituting for the proletarian masses. It is a pity the film version of "Atlas Shrugged" hasn’t featured on "Mystery Science Theater 3000."


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Such is Rand’s cult following that former Republican congressman and presidential candidate Ron Paul, a senior fellow of the Mises Institute, saw fit to name his spawn Rand, who is now the junior senator from Kentucky. Former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan was an enthusiastic fan of Ayn Rand, supposedly requiring his office interns to read "Atlas Shrugged," a clear example of unfair labor practices. Oddly, Ryan claimed to be an observant Catholic, yet idolized an author who contemptuously called Christianity a “slave religion.” Such is the syncretic nature of contemporary conservatism that blatantly contradictory elements can be fused into the monstrous ideological confection we see all around us.

Functional adults can dismiss Ayn Rand and her petty tyrannizing over acolytes, her psychodramatic love affair with cult deputy Nathaniel Branden, and her continuing ability to inspire teenagers with a Nietzsche complex. But how can we account for the fact that Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Federal Reserve for 20 years, was an early member of her circle, and that her writings have sold 37 million copies? Unreadable doorstops her books may be, but they would seem to reveal something about the psychology of a significant slice of Americans.

Perhaps the most influential European of all — at least to Americans in permanently arrested adolescence — was the Russian immigrant, Hollywood screenwriter, novelist and cult leader Alisa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum, better known as Ayn Rand.

Other sources of modern conservative ideas have a somewhat less direct influence on the current right-wing American zeitgeist. Carl Schmitt, the 20th-century German jurist, political theorist and Nazi official, never set foot on U.S. soil, and remains mostly unknown here. He believed that the fundamental concept in the political realm from which all else flowed was the distinction between friends and enemies, and that to be a sovereign meant being completely unrestrained by law. 

Schmitt employed his judicial and political theories to defend the early Nazi-era Enabling Act (which suspended the Weimar Republic's constitution), to justify Hitler’s assumption of dictatorial rule and to support Joseph Goebbels’ campaign to burn “decadent” books. After the war, Schmitt refused to submit to denazification, and remained completely unrepentant of his prewar beliefs.

Just before the Nazi seizure of power, Schmitt had a Jewish follower and protégé, Leo Strauss, who was able to emigrate from Germany for employment by the Rockefeller Foundation thanks, ironically enough, to a supportive letter from Schmitt. According to surviving correspondence, Strauss and Schmitt had previously carried on a political dialogue in which Strauss agreed with the jurist on most points, sharing a distaste for liberal democracy, a belief in authoritarian rule and a contempt for the masses. It seems he bought into the rising tide of European fascism on all issues except antisemitism.

Strauss arrived in the U.S. in 1938, and taught philosophy, most notably at the University of Chicago, for the rest of his life. He focused mainly on the works of Plato and Aristotle and their application to politics. His method was ambiguous and esoteric — using rhetorical concealment, with a surface meaning for general readers and a hidden truth for the wise — and usually avoided any direct statement of the immediate political relevance of Greek philosophy.

Living in a liberal democracy that had given him refuge from the Holocaust, Strauss soft-pedaled his earlier enthusiasm for fascism, but consistently emphasized the authoritarian implications of Greek philosophy while praising the American constitutional system with faint damns. He also highlighted to his students Plato’s belief in the necessity of “the noble lie,” the veneer of comforting falsehoods with which wise rulers must placate the untutored masses while going about the serious business of exercising power.

A large number of Strauss' students and followers became prominent neoconservatives, including Bill Kristol, Paul Wolfowitz, Francis Fukuyama, Harvey Mansfield, Gary Schmitt, Walter Berns and Abram Shulsky, who all later achieved notoriety either as political operatives or publicists advocating for the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq based on false claims of hidden weapons of mass destruction.

A large number of Leo Strauss' students and followers became prominent neoconservatives, who later achieved notoriety either as political operatives or publicists advocating for the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq.

Once the wheels began to fall off the Iraq crusade, critics, pivoting off the earlier work of political theorist Shadia Drury, began to notice the sheer number of Straussians in high places who had been among the war's most vociferous proponents. Investigative reporter Seymour Hersh related that Straussians filled the Pentagon’s ad hoc Office of Special Plans, and  had bulldozed the government’s intelligence agencies in order to cherry-pick dubious evidence to fit their preconceived notions. They even called themselves the “cabal,” in what seemed a parodic tribute to Strauss’ clique of wise men.

In March 2003, on the eve of war, I staffed a House Budget Committee hearing in which Wolfowitz, at the time the second-ranking official in the Pentagon, predicted that total U.S. casualties from the invasion and occupation of Iraq might amount to fewer than those suffered in the recent U.S. military intervention in the Balkans. (In other words, nearly none at all.) Did a man with access to the most extensive intelligence apparatus in the world actually believe what he told us, or was this a textbook example of Plato’s noble lie?

Considering that Strauss was a relatively obscure academic who had been dead for many years, it was surprising that revelations of his influence on the neocons produced such a well-organized and extensive pushback. The New York Times, which had vigorously supported the Iraq invasion published four op-eds defending  Strauss, polemics that employed ridicule and condescension against the unsophisticated critics who supposedly didn’t “get” the philosopher’s subtle arguments. Ever since, there has been a cottage industry of conservative academics writing books and essays supporting Strauss, which almost invariably receive laudatory notices in right-wing vehicles like National Review or the Claremont Institute.

Strauss apologists never directly engage the points raised by critics. They are mostly mute on Strauss’ early dalliance with fascism, such as in a 1933 letter where he endorses  “the principles of the Right — fascist, authoritarian imperial and not the pathetic and laughable imprescriptible rights of man.” He never repudiated any of those early statements, and Straussians went to some lengths to conceal from critical scholars the more controversial writings in his collected papers.

If Strauss, an unworldly academic lecturer, had no conceivable link with the neoconservative project to unleash redemptive war and exalt untrammeled executive power, why did two of his followers, neocon operatives Abram Shulsky and Gary Schmitt — who had both held government positions in foreign intelligence — write a 1999 essay crediting Strauss with having helped them conceptualize intelligence matters? Apparently the Platonic method of ferreting out hidden meanings was key to the neocons' certainty that Iraqi WMDs existed. Whatever Strauss intended, his followers applied what they held to be his teachings to justify a disastrous war of aggression based on imaginary evidence.

The neocons were always a small fraction of the conservative movement, and their sheer, agonizing incompetence in engineering the Iraq debacle all but finished them as a driving influence by the end of George W. Bush’s presidency. As the conservative movement became cruder and more extreme, it no longer cared to perform analyses of Plato to guide its ideology. And as the culture wars became a right-wing obsession, the locus of coercion and violence was transferred from foreign crusades to domestic soil. But it still found a foreign model to help guide it.

A moment’s reflection suggests the reason behind conservatives' tendency to lavish praise on foreign regimes and their theoreticians: The right does not much care for America, as its leading voices have been telling us for years.

As everyone knows, Donald Trump admires Vladimir Putin, and so a large portion of the Republican Party admires Putin in an imitative and slavish manner. But even before Trump became a candidate, the most regressive elements of conservatism — the paleoconservatives who developed around former Nixon and Reagan staffer (and Hitler apologist) Pat Buchanan, Christian nationalists and reconstructionists inspired by Francis Schaeffer, and the tech-obsessed neoreactionary movement fueled by Silicon Valley money, which has produced JD Vance — discovered how much there was to love about Putin’s Russia.

This New Right also seems to have an easy familiarity with the theorists of totalitarianism. In an interview this June with New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, Vance invoked the legal architect of Nazi rule, Carl Schmitt — in an effort to blame liberals, the very people Schmitt despised, for wanting to carry out his precept of power over justice. As most people in the reality-based community have noticed by now, operatives of the right habitually project every desire they dare not express onto their opponents. One also wonders where Vance gained his expertise on Schmitt; I doubt the Nazi jurist was a subject in the Yale Law School curriculum.

A moment’s reflection suggests the reason behind the right’s tendency to lavish praise on foreign regimes and their theoreticians: The right does not much care for America, as its leading voices have been telling us over and over for years. Donald Trump, the exalted leader of the gang, habitually refers to his native land as a “third-world country” or a "laughing stock,” and has called fallen U.S. service personnel “suckers” and “losers;” According to one of his social media posts, “WE ARE A NATION IN DECLINE, A FAILING NATION!” Vance, his running mate, makes similar disparaging remarks about the country he wants to run.

All of this is logical enough, in that it necessarily flows from their views. The right has told us for some time that it has no use for non-subservient women, minorities, college students (excepting Turning Point USA’s storm troopers), non-Christians, bureaucrats, public school teachers or any other group it wants to target. A Venn diagram of all these groups certainly adds up to more than half the population. The right scorns America as it is, and, contrary to conservatives’ anti-historical nostalgia, as it always has been.

The logical weakness of reactionary movements has actually been their political strength. The seemingly contradictory elements of their platform do not bother their adherents; as we have seen countless times with the GOP, a new party line that flatly negates supposedly timeless Republican principles elicits barely a murmur among the true believers. If the leaders of the party know this fact, they are certainly not going to wise up their foot soldiers.

Perhaps the biggest contradiction of all is that the so-called thought leaders of the GOP — a party that wraps itself in the flag and feels called upon to judge the patriotism of others — are profoundly alienated from the real America as it exists today, the America in which normal people quietly live their lives, work and raise families, and dream their own private dreams. Unable to find solace in such petit-bourgeois domesticity, the socially estranged scholars of Claremont or Hillsdale or some mother’s basement have no problem ransacking the intellectual underworld of Europe during its most blood-soaked eras to find voices that can articulate their grievance, and their rage, more eloquently than they themselves.

As Austrian writer Robert Musil observed, “A man can't be angry at his own time without suffering some damage."

Experts warn: GOP using “great replacement fears” to push new “voter suppression tactics”

As Republicans across the country sound alarms over the potential for illegal, noncitizen voting in the upcoming presidential election — and roll out measures to prevent it — they've painted a picture suggesting the matter is a widespread fraud that threatens the legitimacy of the results. But experts say the opposite is true, and instead, these efforts to curtail what is effectively a non-issue amount to little more than voter suppression tactics. 

Hinging their claims on the influx of migrants in recent years along the United States-Mexico border, GOP officials and activists have increasingly mounted concerns about the potential for noncitizen voting as November approaches. Officials have gone on to review and purge voter rolls, place constitutional amendments on their state ballots and issue executive orders as part of efforts to thwart such voter fraud. 

In Louisiana, a state that explicitly bans noncitizen voting in its constitution, Republican Gov. Jeff Landry recently signed an executive order requiring state agencies that offer voter registration forms to include a disclaimer that only U.S. citizens can vote. 

"Voting is a privilege reserved for American citizens, and it’s crucial that we uphold this standard," he wrote in a Sunday post to X highlighting the order.

But that standard is already being upheld by the law enforcement structures in place federally to deter non-U.S. citizens from participating in this kind of voter fraud, argued Jonathan Diaz, the director of Voting Advocacy and Partnerships for the Campaign Legal Center.

"Would you risk prison time and potentially being deported to cast one ballot for president? That doesn't seem like a great trade off to me," he told Salon. "The penalties are very steep, and people who are going through the immigration system, who are here in this country and are not U.S. citizens, tend to be pretty careful about following the law because they don't want to get deported and they don't want to be charged with a crime. They're not savvy political operatives.

"All of these big, flashy efforts that these state AGs, the speaker of the House, and all of these people are doing is really just political theater," Diaz added. 

U.S. law already prohibits noncitizens from voting in federal elections, with penalties for violators ranging from fines to up to a year of imprisonment and even deportation. Registering to vote similarly requires people to confirm under penalty of perjury that they are U.S. citizens. 

Federal law also requires states to regularly review and update their voter rolls and remove anyone who is ineligible. According to the Associated Press, no state constitutions explicitly authorize noncitizens to vote, and many states also have laws barring them from voting for state offices (though a handful of municipalities nationwide allow noncitizens to vote in some local elections).

In reality, that form of voter fraud is exceedingly rare. State audits and reports from groups spanning the political spectrum have repeatedly found that a minute number of noncitizens register to vote and an even smaller crop manage to cast ballots. 

A Brennan Center analysis of 42 jurisdictions in the 2016 election found only 30 incidents of suspected — not proven — noncitizen voting out of 23.5 million votes tabulated, amounting to just 0.0001% of the vote. 

Analyses from the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, and the ultraconservative Heritage Foundation's database have also found scant evidence of noncitizen voter registration and voting, much less widespread fraud. The former saw that the number of noncitizen votes uncovered through state audits in 2016 ranged from just three out of more than a million votes in Nevada to 41 in North Carolina, which saw nearly five million votes cast. The latter analysis, a review of Heritage Foundation data by immigrant rights group the American Immigration Council, found just 68 documented cases of noncitizens voting in the think tank's database dating as far back as the 1980s. That number represents less than 5 percent of the cases in the Heritage Foundation database, and out of millions of ballots cast over the time frame, such quantities are miniscule. 

"It's infinitesimal the number of actual noncitizens who register or vote, and most of that is inadvertent. It's not like they're nefarious," said Ron Hayduk, a professor of political science at San Francisco State University whose research focuses on noncitizen voting laws.

If noncitizens do end up on voter registration rolls, it's usually due to clerical and administrative errors, and the number is not significant enough to influence the outcome of the election, Diaz explained.

"Even when there are these handful of cases, it's not for the reasons that are being elevated," Hayduk added, "that Democrats are letting immigrants into the country, they're actively registering them to win elections, and doing so in ways that dilute the votes of citizens and are a strategy to defeat the Republicans, illegitimately." 

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During a news conference earlier this year about the Safeguard Voter Eligibility Act, a bill GOP members of Congress are rallying behind that would require proof of citizenship to register to vote, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., insisted noncitizen voting was a concern but did not offer any specific examples to support the claim. 

“We all know, intuitively, that a lot of illegals are voting in federal elections," Johnson said, "but it’s not been something that is easily provable.”

Diaz said, however, that concerned election officials' failure to prosecute and secure convictions in the cases that would theoretically arise from rampant noncitizen voting shows both that the safeguards against it are working and that the issue is far overblown. 

If there were "these huge numbers of non-U.S. citizens on the voter registration roll," he argued, "the same attorney generals and secretaries of state pushing this narrative" every election cycle "would be prosecuting them and securing convictions, and that just doesn't happen." 

Still, election officials in red states have taken a number of measures to lessen the potential for that voter fraud to take place.

Just last week, Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced that more than 6,500 potential noncitizens had been pulled from the state's voter rolls since 2021, including nearly 2,000 with "a voter history" who have been referred for investigation by the attorney general's office. In August, Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose, a Republican, also said he'd referred 138 apparent noncitizens found to have recently voted and 459 more who registered but did not vote. Those numbers amount to small fractions of the 18 million registered voters in Texas and the more than 8 million in Ohio.

Officials in Alabama and Georgia made similar announcements, with Alabama Secretary of State Wes Allen, a Republican, saying recently that 3,251 people previously listed as noncitizens by the federal government were switched to inactive status on the state's voter registration rolls, which includes more than 3 million registered voters, according to the AP.

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger reported he found that 1,634 potential noncitizens attempted to register to vote between 1997 and 2022 though failed when election officials flagged them. In that time, Georgia had registered millions of other eligible voters. 

In the aftermath of previous election cycles, Diaz explained, it was not uncommon for officials who claimed they identified large numbers of suspected noncitizen registered voters to amend their statements to note that the alleged offenders were mostly people who hadn't been citizens at one point but were later naturalized and lawfully registered. 

"They're relying on stale, out-of-date databases and resources and making a big deal out of this to score political points and to seed this narrative that our elections are fundamentally broken and plagued by noncitizen voting, so that if their side loses, they can point to that as the reason why," Diaz argued. "Should their favored candidates win, I think they'll all of a sudden get very quiet about this supposed problem of non citizen voting. It's only a problem when they lose."


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Following the footsteps of North Dakota, Colorado, Alabama, Ohio and Florida, where voters passed amendments between 2018 and 2022 limiting voting to "only" citizens, Republican-led legislatures in eight states — Iowa, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Idaho, Kentucky and Wisconsin — have introduced constitutional amendments on their November ballots aiming to explicitly declare the same.

In Texas, Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton established Wednesday a dedicated email account for reports of suspected violations of election laws, citing "significant growth of the noncitizen population," and Raffensperger last week authorized a requirement that polling places post signs in English and Spanish alerting noncitizens that it is illegal for them to vote.

Republicans in Wisconsin have in recent weeks filed a set of lawsuits challenging the state's citizen verification process for registered voters, while some in North Carolina have sued the state's election board, accusing it of failing to enforce a new law aimed at removing people who seek exclusions from jury duty because they are not citizens from voter rolls.

Along with the move to require proof of citizenship to vote — which many Americans don't have readily available — these efforts to curb voter fraud serve in "justifying the imposition, as it did historically, of restrictive voter registration procedures," Hayduk said. More often than not, these actions instead "disenfranchise eligible citizens who tend to be lower income, people with lower levels of education, often urban voters who tend to register and vote for Democrats."

The "drumbeat" of allegations of noncitizen voting also, he explained, fuels suspicion that can motivate people to go to poll sites and "intimidate" or harass others during the voting process, or place signs in neighborhoods with large immigrant, Latino or Asian American populations stating the illegality of noncitizen voting. 

That behavior can have "a huge chilling effect, particularly on naturalized citizens, who are often the ones targeted by these efforts," Diaz added.

Republican officials pushing these claims also runs the risk of disrupting and straining the election administrations process should it motivate their supporters to submit lists with thousands of potentially ineligible people to their local elections offices and demand they be removed, he added, noting that many states have a formal process that allows voters to challenge others' eligibility and requires administrators to evaluate and verify or adjudicate those challenges. 

Hayduk argued that the Republican mobilization behind the claims also "lays the groundwork" for them to place unsubstantiated blame on noncitizens, "contest elections, draw out the elections, create chaos and maybe motivate people to go do another Jan. 6 attack."

"The great replacement fears, immigration restrictions, the rationale to have voter ID, proof of citizenship, all of this — these are basically voter suppression tactics which have been in process or enacted in many states around the country, and they want to do that on a national level," Hayduk said.

"I think it feeds into this whole notion of who are the rightful holders of this cherished power, the right to vote?" he added. "Who are real Americans? What's the nature of America? It links to these broad debates that are happening in the country."

Revolt of the capybaras: Have these large rodents taken over — or reclaimed what’s theirs?

Has social revolution spread to Argentina? While the country has historically witnessed economic strife, onlookers were graced with a new sort of rebellion in 2021, when hordes of capybara (large rodents also known as “water hogs”) created a stampede and rampaged through gated communities in an affluent suburb located twenty five miles north of Buenos Aires. Known in Argentina as carpinchos, capybaras are gentle and herbivorous, but they are hard to miss. They are the world’s largest living rodents, measuring more than three feet long and weighing more than 170 pounds.

Though previously preyed upon by jaguars, the latter have almost disappeared in Argentina, and now the rodents, which reproduce at a high rate, as many rodents do, have increased in population. Local scientists say that in one year, their numbers shot up by 16%, according to Time Magazine. More and more have been trampling through gardens and golf courses.

Recently, capybaras have expanded their presence in Buenos Aires province due to climate change. Indeed, the capital has become more tropical, and increased temperatures and precipitation have created more suitable habitat for the creatures. Researchers believe more rainfall and flooding may have caused some brackish lagoons to become less salty, a trend which favors capybaras, since the animals are semi-aquatic freshwater mammals. They seemingly prefer water so much, “hydro” is in their Latin binomial twice: Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris.

The rich label the rodents “pests,” but are these “masters of the grasses” invaders or merely “reappropriating” what is theirs? Gated communities and golf courses are located on vulnerable wetlands along the Paraná River, home to capybara habitat. However, this hasn’t stopped rapacious real estate interests from pursuing indiscriminate development which poses a threat to wetlands. Leftist politicians, meanwhile, argue capybaras have become a “symbol of socio-environmental resistance” and even call for “capybara protest caravans.” Young environmentalists, meanwhile, have created a popular hashtag, "VidaDeCarpinchos" (“Life of Carpinchos”) to draw attention to ongoing environmental campaigns.

Leftist politicians argue capybaras have become a “symbol of socio-environmental resistance” and even call for "capybara protest caravans."

Activists are particularly concerned about wetland ecosystems, which are vulnerable to climate change. Ominously, the Paraná delta — the second largest river in South America after the Amazon — caught fire several years ago amid terrible drought. The flames worsened when the water table dropped, which in turn exposed flammable carbon-rich soil. Paradoxically, even though climate change has benefited capybaras in certain respects, in other ways the animals have been placed at greater risk. Indeed, wildfires displace capybara, driving them towards urban areas, and drought may drive the animals to flee towards areas with already scarce water resources.

CapybarasA capybara crosses a street while others eat grass in a gated community in Tigre, Buenos Aires province, on August 27, 2021. (MAGALI CERVANTES/AFP via Getty Images)Though rodents have evolved in South America for millions of years, some may wonder how the animals will cope with new environmental challenges. Such vexing questions would have intrigued naturalist Charles Darwin, who made his way through South America from 1832 to 1835. During his travels, Darwin took in local wildlife, including rodents, and his observations later informed the theory of evolution. Traveling along the Paraná, Darwin observed thickets which “afford a retreat for capybaras and jaguars. The fear of the latter animal quite destroyed all pleasure in scrambling through the woods.”

When he wasn’t eating sleek brown rodents himself — probably the twenty pound agouti, which Darwin regarded as “the very best meat I ever tasted” — or collecting small tuco-tuco rodents as pets, the naturalist made important rodent fossil discoveries in Argentina. For instance, he uncovered specimens which were different, but related to, the living Patagonian mara, a sort of rabbit-like creature. Other specimens belonged to an extinct species of tuco-tuco which grew as large as current-day capybaras. Though it’s unclear whether Darwin’s “cavia” fossils provided a critical “a-ha” moment, some believe the discoveries contributed to evolutionary theory, since they proved direct descent of species living in the same area. 


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Despite their long and enduring evolutionary journey, rodents in Argentina, including capybara, face ecological stress in wetlands, while their smaller cousins are hunted and regarded as critically endangered. Take, for example, the Chalchalero Vizcacha rat, whose range has been reduced to less than five square miles. Then there’s the tuco-tuco, which Darwin described on his travels as “A curious, small animal…tucotucos appear…to be gregarious…This animal is universally known by a very peculiar noise…A person the first time he hears it is much surprised.” While some tuco-tucos have managed to survive for thousands of years while enduring harsh climatic conditions, rodent habitat has now been cleared for agricultural and industrial use.

Retracing Darwin’s route, I’ve come to Buenos Aires in conjunction with a book project examining the naturalist’s legacy in relation to climate change. At the Bernardino Rivadavia Argentine Museum of Natural Sciences, I caught up with paleontologist Agustín Martinelli. Though capybaras were certainly affected by recent fires and are sometimes hunted, the scientist explains the animals are still abundant in certain areas.

Indeed, capybaras are hardly endangered, and the creatures, which form part of the larger caviomorph group, are hardy survivors. Rafting from Africa to South America 40 million years ago across an Atlantic that was then more narrow — a voyage which took just one to two weeks — caviomorphs subsequently underwent an “incredible evolutionary radiation.”

"Capybaras aren’t threatened. For now."

Because South America was then an island and had split from North America, there was little competition from other mammals, which allowed rodents of all sizes to evolve with little pressure. The earliest caviomorphs, which arrived during the Mid-Eocene Climatic Optimum, a period of elevated temperatures, were tiny, but Martinelli remarks there’s evidence of other extinct giant rodents in the fossil record. In neighboring Uruguay 2 million years ago, one rodent grew to one ton in weight.

However, once North America rejoined South America, other animals such as saber-toothed cats crossed the land bridge, which may have brought about the demise of giant rodents. It's also possible that changing climate, which switched from lush to arid-like conditions, may have made giant rodent habitat less hospitable for the creatures. But the current day capybara survived.

Not all giants vanished, however: glancing atop a shelf in Martinelli’s office, I spotted a model of Toxodon, a nine foot long hoofed creature which weighed one ton and looked like an “evolutionary Frankenstein” combining hippo, rhino and rodent-like features. In 1832, Darwin uncovered molar teeth belonging to Toxodon, and the following year he discovered a skull belonging to the creature in Uruguay. Though Toxodon went extinct more than 11,000 years ago, the animal overlapped with humans in South America. Toxodon, Darwin wrote, was “perhaps one of the strangest animals ever discovered…the structure of its teeth…proves indisputably that it was intimately related to the Gnawers [rodents].”

Though Darwin wondered about the relationship between capybaras and Toxodon, we now know the latter wasn’t technically a rodent but rather belonged to a larger extinct group of animals called notoungulates. During the Pleistocene, Toxodon may have been the most common hoofed mammal in South America, and Darwin was “deeply astonished” at the disappearance of such “great monsters.” Though he did not believe changes in temperature provided the death blow, researchers now believe climate could have played a role, or perhaps human hunters contributed to Toxodon’s demise.

Montevideo, where I also plan to speak with scientists, is a short ferry ride from Buenos Aires. When he wasn’t examining extinct rodent-like skulls in Uruguay, Darwin remarked on “ludicrous” looking capybara making “peculiar” grunts. The animals, he remarked, “were very tame,” which he attributed to “the jaguar having been banished for some years.”

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At a storehouse belonging to Uruguay’s National Museum of Natural History, I met with paleontologists Andrés Rinderknecht and Washington Jones. Shortly before my arrival, the museum had put on an exhibit dealing with Darwin’s legacy in Uruguay. The naturalist’s discovery of Toxodon fossils in Uruguay, Rinderknecht remarked, was an important step which helped Darwin come up with evolutionary theory. Jones added that when the museum launched its exhibit, they had been careful to include a replica of Darwin’s Toxodon skull and jaw.

The conversation turns to the plight of capybaras once more. Though it’s illegal to hunt the creatures in Uruguay, some still disobey the law. Despite this, Rinderknecht says it’s remarkable how these “clumsy” yet “incredible” animals have managed to endure. When jaguar predators disappeared, capybaras were left alone to reproduce. Yet when asked about the environmental catastrophe on the Paraná River which has affected the animals, the scientist weighs his words carefully.

“Capybaras aren’t threatened,” he remarks, adding with emphasis, “for now.” 

Though giant rodents, not to mention huge “rodent-like” mammals, have long since disappeared from South America after succumbing to climatic changes, and perhaps even human encroachment, capybaras and other smaller rodents are still with us. Remarkable survivors, they have similarly endured climatic changes throughout their evolutionary history, yet some may wonder whether they have now finally met their match.

How climate change is expanding the reach of EEE, a rare and deadly mosquito-borne illness

A 41-year-old man in New Hampshire died last week after contracting a rare mosquito-borne illness called eastern equine encephalitis virus, also known as EEE or “triple E.” It was New Hampshire’s first human case of the disease in a decade. Four other human EEE infections have been reported this year in Wisconsin, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Vermont

Though this outbreak is small and triple E does not pose a risk to most people living in the United States, public health officials and researchers alike are concerned about the threat the deadly virus poses to the public, both this year and in future summers. There is no known cure for the disease, which can cause severe flu-like symptoms and seizures in humans 4 to 10 days after exposure and kills between 30 and 40 percent of the people it infects. Half of the people who survive a triple E infection are left with permanent neurological damage. Because of EEE’s high mortality rate, state officials have begun spraying insecticide in Massachusetts, where 10 communities have been designated “critical” or “high risk” for triple E. Towns in the state shuttered their parks from dusk to dawn and warned people to stay inside after 6 p.m., when mosquitoes are most active. 

Like West Nile virus, another mosquito-borne illness that poses a risk to people in the U.S. every summer, triple E is constrained by environmental factors that are changing rapidly as the planet warms. That’s because mosquitoes thrive in the hotter, wetter conditions that climate change is producing.

“We have seen a resurgence of activity with eastern equine encephalitis virus over the course of the past 10 or so years,” said Theodore G. Andreadis, a researcher who studied mosquito-borne diseases at the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, a state government research and public outreach outfit, for 35 years. “And we’ve seen an advancement into more northern regions where it had previously not been detected.” Researchers don’t know what causes the virus to surge and abate, but Andreadis said it’s clear that climate change is one of the factors spurring its spread, particularly into new regions.

On an individual level, the best way to stay safe from EEE and other mosquito-borne diseases is to prevent bites.

The first triple E outbreak on record occurred in Massachusetts in the 1830s in horses — the reason one of the three Es stands for “equine.” It wasn’t until a full century later, in 1934, that mosquitoes were incriminated as potential vectors for the disease. The first recorded human cases of the disease also occurred in Massachusetts four years later, in 1938. There were 38 human cases in the state that year; 25 of them were fatal. Since then, human cases have mostly been registered in Gulf Coast states and, increasingly, the Northeast. From 1964 to 2002, in the Northeast, there was less than one case of the disease per year. From 2003 to 2019, the average in the region increased to between four and five cases per year.

The disease is spread by two types of mosquito. The first is a species called Culiseta melanura, or the black-tailed mosquito. This mosquito tends to live in hardwood bogs and feeds on birds like robins, herons, and wrens, spreading the virus among them. But the melanura mosquito doesn’t often bite mammals. A different mosquito species, Coquillettidia perturbans, is primarily responsible for most of the human cases of the disease reported in the U.S. The perturbans mosquito picks up the EEE virus when it feeds on birds and then infects the humans and horses that it bites. Toward the end of the summer, when mosquitoes have reached their peak numbers and start jostling for any available blood meal, human cases start cropping up. 

Andreadis, who published a historical retrospective on the progression of triple E in the northeastern U.S. in 2021, said climate change has emerged as a major driver of the disease. 

“We’ve got milder winters, we’ve got warmer summers, and we’ve got extremes in both precipitation and drought,” he said. “The impact that this has on mosquito populations is probably quite profound.” 

Warmer global average temperatures generally produce more mosquitoes, no matter the species. 

Studies have shown that warmer air temperatures up to a certain threshold, around 90 degrees Fahrenheit, shorten the amount of time it takes for C. melanura eggs to hatch. Higher temperatures in the spring and fall extend the number of days mosquitoes have to breed and feed. And they’ll feed more times in a summer season if it’s warmer — mosquitoes are ectothermic, meaning their metabolism speeds up in higher temperatures. 

Rainfall, too, plays a role in mosquito breeding and activity, since mosquito eggs need water to hatch. A warmer atmosphere holds more moisture, which means that even small rainfall events dump more water today than they would have last century. The more standing water there is in roadside ditches, abandoned car tires, ponds, bogs, and potholes, the more opportunities mosquitoes have to breed. And warmer water decreases the incubation period for C. melanura eggs, leading one study to conclude that warmer-than-average water temperatures “increase the probability for amplification of EEE.” 

Climate change isn’t the only factor encouraging the spread of disease vectors like mosquitoes. The slow reforestation of areas that were clear-cut for industry and agriculture many decades ago is creating new habitat for insects. At the same time, developers are building new homes in wooded or half-wooded zones in ever larger numbers, putting humans in closer proximity to the natural world and the bugs that live in it.

On an individual level, the best way to stay safe from EEE and other mosquito-borne diseases is to prevent bites: Wear long sleeves and pants at dusk and dawn, when mosquitoes are most prone to biting, and regularly apply an effective mosquito spray. But there are also steps that local health departments can take to safeguard public health, like testing pools of water for mosquito larvae and conducting public awareness and insecticide spraying campaigns when triple E is detected. Massachusetts is an example of a state that has been proactive about testing mosquitoes for triple E in recent summers. 

The most effective way to protect people from this disease would be to develop a vaccine against it. A vaccine already exists for horses, but there is little incentive for vaccine manufacturers to develop a preventative for triple E in humans because the illness is so rare.  

“Although EEE is not yet a global health emergency, the recent uptick in cases has highlighted our lack of preparedness for unexpected infectious disease outbreaks,” a group of biologists wrote last year in the open-access scientific journal Frontiers. “It would be wise to follow proactive active control measures and increase vigilance in the face of these threats.”

This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/health/eee-triple-e-climate-change-eastern-equine-encephalitis-mosquito-borne-illness/.

Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future. Learn more at Grist.org

Earth has endured its hottest summer ever recorded — for the second year in a row

For the second summer in a row, global temperatures broke temperature records, according to the European climate service Copernicus, putting this year on track to be the hottest in recorded history. Specifically, summer 2024 was 0.69 degrees Celsius hotter than the 1991 to 2020 average and was, additionally, 0.03 degrees hotter than summer 2023's record-setting temperatures.

More concerningly, Earth is creeping closer to the 1.5 degrees Celsius threshold established by the Paris climate accord in 2015 that experts agree is necessary to avoid greater calamity. Indeed, a recent study found that 1.6 degrees Celsius is the best we can hope for at this point, but even fraction of a degree counts.

As the global average temperatures reach and surpass that level, they will lead to a phenomenon that Dr. Twila Moon, a climatologist and deputy lead scientist at NASA's National Snow and Ice Data Center, told Salon in July can be described as "global weirding."

This will include "more extreme weather events producing conditions that are entirely new for communities, weather whiplash as folks may experience quick swings between hot and cold or drought and flood, and many challenges for crops, wildlife, recreation, and being able to plan for what we previously considered normal weather conditions."

According to the recent Copernicus data, the Earth's average temperature in August 2024 was on average 16.82 degrees Celsius (62.28 Fahrenheit), 1.51 degrees Celsius warmer than an average August in the pre-industrial era. Meanwhile the period from September 2023 to August 2024 was the hottest on record for any year-long period, or 1.64 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

"I am 100% certain that worsening heat waves across Earth are due to global heating caused primarily by burning fossil fuels," Dr. Peter Kalmus, a NASA climate scientist who emphasized his opinions are his own, told Salon in June. "We see intensifying extreme heat in all observational datasets and model hindcasts."

“Irrelevant RINO”: Trump bashes Dick Cheney in Truth Social tirade

Former President Donald Trump trashed former Vice President Dick Cheney in a post to Trump's own social media platform Truth Social on Friday night.

“Dick Cheney is an irrelevant RINO, along with his daughter, who lost by the largest margin in the History of Congressional Races!’ Trump wrote in a long-winded post to Truth Social, going on to praise himself for pardoning Bush-era criminal and Iraq War champion Scooter Libby before labeling himself as the “Peace President.”

The tantrum came after Cheney shared that he would be voting for Vice President and current Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris in the upcoming election.

"In our nation's 248-year history, there has never been an individual who is a greater threat to our republic than Donald Trump,” Cheney said in a statement. “He tried to steal the last election using lies and violence to keep himself in power after the voters had rejected him. He can never be trusted with power again.”

Trump shot back at Cheney, proving the old adage about broken clocks when he called the War on Terror architect  the “King of Endless, Nonsensical Wars.”

Cheney's statement about his intention to vote for the Democratic candidate came hours after his daughter Liz Cheney shared her father would be voting for Harris. The younger Cheney wasn't spared in Trump's Truth tirade.

Trump picked at an old wound, attacking Liz for her outspoken criticism of Trump’s role in the Jan. 6 attacks.

“What Liz Cheney did with the Unselect Committee of Political Losers is unthinkable. She and her Unselects deleted and destroyed all evidence and information – IT’S GONE,” Trump said, repeating debunked claims about the bipartisan Jan. 6 investigation commission. “Cheney and the others should be prosecuted for what they did, but Comrade Kamala is even worse!”

Trump, whose social media posts and public appearances have become increasingly angry and incoherent, has faced increasing opposition from legacy Republican politicians in recent weeks.

Nate Silver faces backlash for pro-Trump model skewing

Nate Silver, the celebrity statistician who gained notoriety for his FiveThirtyEight election models, is facing backlash over alleged skewing in his new model.

Silver left the ABC-owned company and launched his own Substack, the Silver Bulletin, last year. Since then, he’s become increasingly critical of the FiveThirtyEight projection and its behind-the-scenes assumptions and adjustments.

“There’s a fine line between an “objective” statistical model and “just some dude’s opinion,” Silver wrote in mid-July, a month after launching his own competing election model. “But the 538 model falls somewhere on the wrong side of this line, in my view.”

Some social media users have denounced his complaints as not based in math, especially as he makes similar adjustments to his data. Silver has adopted the FiveThirtyEight system of weighting polls differently, ostensibly based on reliability. He's  facing criticism for allegedly favoring junk polls over respected pollsters.

“Patriot Polling is literally run by two right wing high school students that is ranked 240th on FiveThirtyEight,” former pollster Adam Carlson noted on X, asking why that poll was weighted more highly than a YouGov poll, which they called “an internationally respected pollster that is ranked 4th on FiveThirtyEight.” 

Some users believe that Silver’s methods of weighting polls are dubious, especially as his swing state calculated “polling averages” move in the opposite direction as recently released swing state polls. 

Silver's now being scrutinized for a potential conflict of interest after joining the crypto-based gambling company Polymarket as an advisor in July, and pushed his model while promoting election betting opportunities.

“Feels like it should be a bigger deal that Nate Silver is employed by Polymarket, a site that allows you to bet on political outcomes, and also runs a “prediction model” that has the ability to directly affect betting behavior,” journalist Brett Meiselas wrote on X.

Silver’s model  gives Trump a greater chance of winning than most forecasts, which has earned him fans in MAGA World. Those new boosters include former President Trump, who used Silver's model as evidence that he wasn’t losing as badly as polling averages suggested.

 

 

 

Trump cracks joke about attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband in speech to police

Donald Trump joked about the brutal 2022 attack on Nancy Pelosi’s husband in a speech to the Fraternal Order of Police on Friday.

“Nancy Pelosi has a big wall wrapped around her house. Of course, it didn't help too much with the problems she had, did it?” the former president said, referring to a break-in at Pelosi’s home in which a Canadian conspiracy theorist David DePape struck Paul Pelosi with a hammer in an attempted kidnapping of the former speaker of the House.

The crass jab earned some awkward chuckles from police officers in attendance. It came as Trump was criticizing Democratic politicians for having security at their homes. 

“They live in safety, in many cases behind walls, you know that?” Trump said, after accusing Democratic politicians of “forc[ing] anarchy on the American people.”

Nancy Pelosi condemned political violence after Trump was shot by would-be assassin Thomas Crooks in July. She noted in a statement that she knew “firsthand” the harms that come from politically motivated acts of terror.

Prosecutors revealed Trump-inspired anti-government writings on his DePape's blog while building their case against him following the attack. He was sentenced to 30 years in prison in May.

In the speech, Trump also slammed an alleged uptick in crime in his hometown of New York City, despite his announcement that he’d sent his son Barron Trump to New York University on Wednesday.

“The new thing in New York, you go to a pharmacy to buy aspirin, to buy a toothbrush, and it takes you 45 minutes to get a clerk to open up the glass, because people are walking in and just taking as much as they want,” Trump said, adding that city residents couldn’t leave their apartment without “getting mugged.”

George R.R. Martin unhappy with “House of the Dragon” changes to one significant character

George R.R. Martin, the architect of the "Game of Thrones" literary universe, called out the changes from his text, specifically those that took place in the second season of "House of the Dragon,"  on which he is also co-creator and executive producer.

The author has been teasing this anticipated blog post by saying on Aug. 30 he would finally share “everything that’s gone wrong” with “Dragon.” When the time came, the new blog post stated biggest gripes with "House of the Dragon," highlighting specific changes from his original work “Fire & Blood,"  Variety reported. The author has since deleted the blog post published Sept. 4.

Since nothing on the internet completely disappears, however, Variety had already read and reported on the post. In it, Martin explains his main issue stems from the difference between the “Blood & Cheese” plot line in the book and the show, which features the death of 4-year-old Jaehaerys Targaryen (Jude Rock), whose throat was slit in retaliation for the killing of one of Rhaenya's (Emma D'Arcy) sons. "House of the Dragon" frames this as a significant political move since Jaehaerys is the only male hair of Helaena (Phia Saban) and Aegon (Tom Glynn-Carney), who was currently claiming the Iron Throne. However, it turns out that the series also entirely eliminated Aegon's youngest son, Prince Maelor, although they kept Jaehaerys' twin sister (Lulu Barker). Martin said this absence would largely affect the future of the show moving forward into its last two seasons. 

Martin wrote, "When Ryan Condal first told me what he meant to do, ages ago (back in 2022, might be) I argued against it, for all these reasons. I did not argue long, or with much heat, however. The change weakened the sequence, I felt, but only a bit."

Martin noted that Condal knew casting an additional child actor would cost money: "Ryan had what seemed to be practical reasons for it . . . Budget was already an issue on 'House of the Dragon,' it made sense to save money wherever we could. . . . Ryan assured me that we were not losing Prince Maelor, simply postponing him."

Condal noted that Maelor would be introduced in Season 3, at which point Martin withdrew his concerns. 

While that means Maelor can still act as Aegon's heir in the future, the child's absence changed an emotional beat in the book in which Helaena must choose which of her sons will die at the hand of assassins. She reluctant chooses the younger Maelor, hoping he's too young to understand what's happening, but the assassin instead kills Jaehaerys, meaning that Maelor is alive to know his mother chose him to die.

"Losing the ‘Helaena’s Choice’ beat did weaken the scene, but not to any great degree," Martin wrote. "There is another aspect to the removal of the young princeling, however."

At this point, Martin revealed what happens later in the book and there what could happen in Season 3 and 4. Major spoiler alert: for those who don't want their viewing experience sullied, please stop reading now.

Martin wrote, "Maelor by himself means little. He is a small child, does not have a line of dialogue, does nothing of consequence but die… but where and when and how, that does matter. Losing Maelor weakened the end of the Blood and Cheese sequence, but it also cost us the Bitterbridge scene with all its horror and heroism, it undercut the motivation for Helaena’s suicide, and that in turn sent thousands into the streets and alleys, screaming for justice for their ‘murdered’ queen. None of that is essential, I suppose . . . but all of it does serve a purpose, it all helps to tie the story lines together, so one thing follows another in a logical and convincing manner."

With those revelations, it's clear why Martin deleted the post.

The author concluded the post foreshadowing potential issues to come in seasons three and four.

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“And there are larger and more toxic butterflies to come, if 'House of the Dragon' goes ahead with some of the changes being contemplated for seasons 3 and 4…”  he said.

In a statement obtained by Variety, an HBO spokesperson defended the changes made to the second season.

"There are few greater fans of George R.R. Martin and his book ‘Fire & Blood’ than the creative team on ‘House of the Dragon,’ both in production and at HBO," the statement read.

The statement continued, "Commonly, when adapting a book for the screen, with its own format and limitations, the showrunner ultimately is required to make difficult choices about the characters and stories the audience will follow. We believe that Ryan Condal and his team have done an extraordinary job and the millions of fans the series has amassed over the first two seasons will continue to enjoy it.”

In an episode of HBO's “House of the Dragon” podcast, Condal said that when it came to Maelor, "we had to make some compromises in rendering the story."

Swift avoids Brittany Mahomes at first game since Trump support

Taylor Swift seemingly distanced herself from her Trump-backing friend Brittany Mahomes at a Kansas City Chiefs game on Thursday night.

For much of the last season, the superstar and girlfriend of Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce typically watched the action alongside Mahomes. However, TMZ reports that Swift  spent the Chiefs season opener in a separate suite. The move came after the wife of Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes appeared to support Donald Trump's campaign.

Brittany made headlines in August when she liked a message posted on Instagram by former president Donald Trump. She later later blasted “haters” for having “deep rooted [childhood] issues,” amid criticism.

Swift and Kelce, the subject of numerous right-wing conspiracy theories framing the pair as a plant meant to support Democratic politics, have both opted to stay quiet on politics in recent months.

The “Miss Americana” singer  endorsed Joe Biden and Kamala Harris ahead of the 2020 race, but has faced questions and even attacks for her comparative silence ahead of the 2024 election. When Trump posted an AI-generated image falsely depicting Swift’s support for him, she avoided taking legal action despite public backlash.

Swift also faced criticism for her failure to condemn Chiefs kicker Harrison Butker’s misogynistic and anti-LGBTQ+ commencement remarks at Saint Benedict University, especially after Kelce defended his remarks and character.

Still, fans of Swift raised thousands via a "Swifties for Kamala" Zoom meeting, which featured remarks from singer Carole King and Senator Elizabeth Warren.

Trump, for his part, seemed shocked that the pop star would support Democrats. In a November 2023 interview, the former president seemed taken aback by the idea that Swift might not be playing at liberal beliefs for the cameras. 

“She’s legitimately liberal? It’s not an act?" he said. "It surprises me that a country star can be successful being liberal.”

 

 

“People think I don’t look disabled”: Swimmer wants to redefine what a Paralympian looks like

U.S. Paralympic swimmer Christine Raleigh Crossley earned two more medals in Paris this week after facing criticism over an earlier medal moment at the Games. 

Crossley on Tuesday won the 100-meter backstroke S9, setting a new Paralympic record with her time of 1:07.02. The swimmer, who is a first-time Paralympian, earned a silver medal the following day in the 100-meter freestyle S9.

But last week, after securing a second-place finish in the 50-meter freestyle S9 — and setting a world record in the process — Crossley shared that social media users and other Paralympians had questioned her disability. 

“It’s so great that I just broke a world record and won my first Paralympic medal on the same day,” Crossley said, per USA Today. “But I got off a bus and got verbally accosted by another athlete from another country.

“To be told online by all of these bullies that I’m somehow not as disabled as I appear just because I can swim faster than them is pretty devastating,” she said, according to The Washington Post. “Because my family witnesses my disability every day and what it takes away from our family life, what it takes away from me as a human, as a woman, and it’s been pretty awful.

“I went from enjoying a world record to being utterly devastated that the entire world seems to think I was a cheater and that I was somehow faking the hole in my brain and the cyst in my spinal cord."

Though Crossley declined to identify the Paralympians who had criticized her, she indicated that it was a “prominent member of Team USA who has come after me the hardest.

“It’s just absolutely disgusting,” the swimmer said of the scrutiny. “They say that they want to be a role model for the future generations, yet when a new athlete comes in, to treat them that way, you’re saying those words for a sound bite.”

Kate Hartman, a United States Olympic and Paralympic committee spokesperson, said in a statement that the body was investigating the matter. “We take all matters of bullying, harassment and abuse with the utmost seriousness,” Hartman said, as noted by WaPo. “Every athlete deserves to be treated with respect and dignity, and we are committed to fostering an atmosphere that not only encourages excellence in competition but also prioritizes mental and emotional well-being.”

Crossley, 37-year-old mother of three and former Florida State swimmer, offered a candid look into her disability in an as-told-to piece published last week, after the controversial comments, on Today.com. Crossley shared how in 2007, she was involved in a car accident that left her with "some instability in my spine." The next year, as a pedestrian she was struck by a car, which she claims caused a tumor to grow her brain. In 2018, the athlete experienced paralysis on her left side as a result of brain hemorrhaging, per her Team USA profile.

According to Crossley's essay, she initially aimed for the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics, but subsequent injuries to her back and brain precluded her from doing so. "If I’m being honest, I also didn’t want to admit to the depth of my disability. I had muscle spasms and immobility on my left side, and I tried to hide it," she said. "Although I’m in my wheelchair every day, sometimes I walk with forearm crutches if my muscles aren’t as spastic, but it still puts a heavy strain on my body. When I’m competing, I also use a tapper, a guide at each end of the pool who taps me when the wall is approaching because my vision goes blank during hard swims.

"I’ve dealt with bullying because I’m not missing limbs or because people think I don’t 'look disabled,'" she continued. I want to show that Paralympians are more than athletes who are missing limbs. We are not just people in wheelchairs. We are not all blind. There is a spectrum of what makes someone eligible and there are many athletes who are missing out because they just don’t know. I want to help kids, the next generation of Paralympians, to embrace their sport.”

 

Linkin Park’s new singer Emily Armstrong receives backlash from Danny Masterson accuser

Linkin Park's newest band member, singer Emily Armstrong, is experiencing pushback from fans online for a possible connection to Scientology and convicted rapist Danny Masterson.

Fans online have been circulating an Instagram comment that former Scientologist and the Mars Volta musician Cedric Bixler-Zavala sent to Armstrong, alleging that she has ties to the controversial group. Bixler-Zavala alleged that Armstrong and others tried to silence his wife Chrissie Carnell Bixler after she came forward, claiming Masterson sexually assaulting her. Carnell Bixler testified against Masterson in 2022 and separately filed a lawsuit against Masterson, NME reported.

The message said, "I’m surprised none of you wrote a letter on Danny Masterson’s behalf since your corny a** singer showed up to support him in the prelims. Remember Emily? Remember how your fellow Scientologist goon squad surrounded one of the Jane Doe’s when she was trying to leave the elevators? The court sheriffs had to escort her away from your awful cult."

“Remember when we did the purification run down Emily? Were you directed to safepoint me cuz of what my wife knew? Why can’t you shut your mouth during a detox program where people are going through some rough shit but your corny ass is singing like an unsupervised child?

“Is it cuz you’re a born in Scientologist that gets a pass? How do you reconcile the homophobia found in the teachings of LRH’s [L Ron Hubbard, Scientology founder] book 'Dianetics'? Do your fans know about your friend Danny Masterson? Your rapist friend?”

On Instagram Carnell Bixler also posted in her stories a statement, which has been screengrabbed, that alleged Armstrong was a "hardcore Scientologist" who supported Masterson "in and out of court." The accuser also criticized what she alleges are the group's beliefs on abuse, sexual assault and homosexuality and cited "Science of Survival" and "Dianetics."

Bixler-Zavala and Armstrong have known each other previously. The two can be seen in a photograph together that the Church of Scientology included as a handout for their Celebrity Centre 44th Anniversary gala on Aug. 24, 2013. 

These accusations follow the Friday announcement of the band's reunion and new addition in Armstrong, NBC News reported. Linkin Park suffered a loss with the 2017 death of its former frontman Chester Bennington. Bennington died by suicide shortly after the release of the group’s last album, "One More Light." The new Linkin Park also plans to release a new album, “From Zero," on Nov. 15.

Neither Linkin Park nor Armstrong have responded to the allegations.

If you are in crisis, please call the 988 Suicide and Crisis  Lifeline by dialing 988, or contact the Crisis Text Line by texting TALK to 741741.

 

Former Vice President Dick Cheney to vote for Kamala Harris: Liz Cheney

Former Republican Vice President Dick Cheney will vote for Democrats Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, according to  his daughter Liz Cheney.

“Dick Cheney will be voting for Kamala Harris,” the former Wyoming Congresswoman told reporter Mark Leibovich during a panel on Friday. “My dad believes — and he’s said publicly — there’s never been an individual in our country that is as grave a threat to our democracy as Donald Trump.”

The ultra-conservative vice president and architect of the war in Iraq was once a majorly influential voice in Republican politics. He previously voiced his condemnation of ex-President Donald Trump in a 2022 campaign ad for his daughter, calling him “a threat to our Republic” and a “coward.” 

Liz Cheney, who herself announced her plan to vote for Harris on Wednesday, lost her primary race in 2022 after voting to impeach Trump following the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

“Vice President Harris and I have had and have policy disagreements on some issues, but I have been really impressed, watching, for example, the Democratic convention, listening to her speech at that convention,” the younger Cheney said. “I think we all have to walk ourselves back from this abyss that we’ve looked over in our politics and work together to build a better future for this country.”

Other prominent Republicans like the son of Arizona Senator John McCain, a group of hundreds of former Republican White House officials, and several Trump administration alumni, have announced their plans to vote against Trump in the coming election.

“She made up a story”: Trump goes off the rails in press conference after E. Jean Carroll appeal

Donald Trump once again accused author E. Jean Carroll of making up sexual abuse allegations.

"I never touched her. I would've had no interest in meeting her in any way, shape, or form," Trump said in a press conference on Friday.

“She made up a story. Fabricated 100 percent, that I attacked her at Bergdorf Goodman,” Trump said. “Her favorite show is Law & Order. And there's a, almost exact story as her story in Law & Order about being attacked in the dressing room of a department store.”

The tirade came following an appeal hearing on a 2023 verdict that found Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation. Similar comments denying the abuse were found to be defamatory by a second Manhattan jury in January, which ordered Trump to pay more than $83 million in damages.

Trump also denied assault allegations from another woman who said that Trump groped her on an airplane. His remarks came hours after his attorneys argued that her testimony was inadmissible in the first Carroll defamation trial.

“I know you’re gonna say it’s a terrible thing to say, but it couldn’t have happened, it didn’t happen, and she would not have been the chosen one,” Trump said. “It’s a total lie.”

In court earlier that day, Trump attorney John Sauer argued that the allegations should be inadmissible since the incident occurred under "territorial or maritime jurisdiction," according to Business Insider.

As part of the appeal, Trump’s team also contested the admission of the infamous “Access Hollywood” tape, per the Associated Press. That recording finds the former president boasting to television host Billy Bush that he could “grab [women] by the p****y” and get away with it due to his celebrity status.

Trump, who took time off the campaign trail to attend the court proceedings, won a separate legal fight on Friday when New York judge Juan Merchan postponed his sentencing for falsifying business records until after the November election.

Trump hush money sentencing delayed until after the November election

Donald Trump, who faces up to 4 years in prison after being convicted of 34 felonies, will not be sentenced until after the November election, New York Judge Juan Merchan announced Friday.

Trump was initially slated to be sentenced in July after a jury unanimously found him guilty of fraud for covering up a hush payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election. Daniels has said she had an affair with Trump just weeks after his wife, Melania, had given birth, an allegation that Trump denies.

But the decision by the Supreme Court's right-wing majority to grant Trump absolute immunity for "official acts" as president has complicated his New York case, Merchan admitted in his order Friday, granting the former president's request to adjourn the case and delay sentencing as he seeks to overturn his conviction. Trump's defense team argues that prosecutors secured that conviction by introducing evidence from the Republican candidate's time in the White House, which it insists should be off limits in the wake of the high court's immunity ruling.

"The public's confidence in the integrity of our judicial system demands a sentencing hearing that is entirely focused on the verdict of the jury and the weighing of aggravating and mitigating factors free from distraction or distortion," Merchan wrote, noting that a delay in sentencing would also help the court avoid the appearance of trying to impact the 2024 election.

"Unfortunately," he continued, "we are now at a place in time that is fraught with complexities rendering the requirements of a sentencing hearing, should one be necessary, difficult to execute."

“Lincoln and Bowie share a lot of the same behaviors”: Filmmaker on the 16th president’s bisexuality

Shaun Peterson hadn’t thought much about Abraham Lincoln’s love life until around 15 years ago. That changed when he read Gore Vidal’s 2005 Vanity Fair article about “The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln,” C.A. Tripp’s controversial biography that dared to make connections other historians had long set aside concerning his friendships with other men. 

The title of Vidal’s piece places the question front and center: “Was Lincoln Bisexual?” Nearly 20 years later, Peterson’s documentary “Lover of Men: The Untold History of Abraham Lincoln” revisits that question with ample visual evidence. But the first image drawing our attention is the poster’s illustration, featuring Lincoln’s face dashed with David Bowie’s signature red lightning bolt from his album “Aladdin Sane.” 

“It's a striking image, sure,” Peterson told Salon in a recent video interview, adding, “It's very punk rock. But I think Lincoln and Bowie share a lot of the same behaviors in their past.”

The accepted history of Lincoln’s love life is that he was awkward with women, but eventually courted and married Mary Todd Lincoln, and had four sons, three of whom died young. But Tripp and others scrutinized the whispers in the margins that cast Lincoln’s relationships with men in a different light.

Lincoln's first intimate experience may have been when he shared a cot with Billy Greene, with whom he worked in a New Salem, Ill., store after moving there in 1831. He was said to have grieved more passionately for Col. Elmer Ellsworth, the first Union soldier to die in the Civil War, than for his sons. Capt. David Derickson served as Lincoln’s bodyguard and shared a bed with him. 

But no relationship was more central to Lincoln’s life than his bond with Joshua Speed, a handsome store owner in Springfield, Ill., with whom the man who went on to be the 16th president of the United States shared a bed for four years. Vidal, repeating other historians’ assertions, pointed out this was “not necessarily, in those frontier days, the sign of a smoking gun — only messy male housekeeping.”

“Nevertheless,” Vidal added, “four years is a long time to be fairly uncomfortable.”

Peterson designed “Lover of Men” to connect Lincoln’s suppressed history to the larger queer experience in America and human history. Through his lens, Lincoln becomes an anchor to look at society’s view of same-sex relationships back to antiquity and connect it to modern views of sexual fluidity and legislative pushback via anti-LGBTQIA+ bill proposals in Congress and state legislatures. 

In our conversation, we discussed these choices and Lincoln’s enduring significance as a political and historic icon. 

The following transcript has been edited for length and clarity.

Before we dig into the documentary, I read your filmography and noticed that you've done a lot of video work. So that leads to a question about your decision to this very recognizable Bowie album cover image over Abraham Lincoln’s face. Can you talk about the meaning of that? That's the first thing people will notice.

Yeah, sure. I think it's a great comparison, because David Bowie had lots of love affairs with men, married a woman, had children, never, ever defined himself, never even called himself bisexual. He's just a man that fluidly went through life finding things that he enjoyed and ways to connect. And that's the kind of the point of the movie.

The word homosexual, the word heterosexual, were literally invented in the 1870s . . . Before that, things were very fluid.  Even the idea of gender identities are all very new concepts. So the fact that Lincoln had all these different men that went in and out of his life, these loves, but also is married — because marriage culture was very important – makes it a really good analogy. What I find fascinating today, too, is the Gen Z is also hearkening back to the past with a more fluid life where these labels and binaries didn't exist.

Lover of Men: The Untold History of Abraham LincolnLover of Men: The Untold History of Abraham Lincoln (Special Occasion Studios)

Since we’re talking about Gen Z: Right now, there is this concerted effort on the part of the right wing to suppress history on a larger scale than the previously existing level of suppression that is discussed within “Lover of Men.” What is the importance of this coming out right now?

Well, we definitely wanted this to come out right before the election for a reason.

One of our scholars, Dr. Lisa Diamond, speaks about how much empathy the film evokes. Certainly it's a hotbed film, but at the same time, I think it's a love story. And it's a story that asks people to have an open mind and see with empathy that these Gen Z kids aren't just part of some trend. That the trend of loving someone that you love, regardless of what gender they are, what sexuality they are, is human existence.

Another of our scholars, Michael Bronski from Harvard, said it well when he said that people's impulses throughout history have always been the same, but how we define those impulses changes throughout time. Right now, we're in a particularly conservative time, and what we're asking the audience to do is  . . . look at our past in order to find a way forward. Certainly the hundreds of anti-LGBTQ laws that are on the ballot and in state legislatures right now is definitely what we're focused on, too.

Now, if you were just to look at the title — it's provocative. And there's a lot of explanation about how this element of Lincoln's life and his identity was suppressed. But also, getting into the film, you take a look at antiquity. The film continues long after his assassination, and you intentionally make this connection between this history and what's going on today. Was that originally your intention, when you first decided that you were going to film this story?

Look, I've been researching the Lincoln part of it for 15 years. But I learned a ton of making the film and talking with all these scholars about human sexuality and the history of it. So that came in as we were first crafting the original concept. And as I started doing more research . . . that became a big component of it. But I think it was also important to be like, "OK, we're making this case. Hey, everyone, here's all these photos of these queer couples in the 19th century. We've always been fluid. . . . What went wrong? How are things so different today?" So we really had to tell that story of when things started to go off the tracks there, when the binaries were created, when the early cycle of psychiatric community took it on. Then the modern church took it on. That was all part of the process and the research of the film.

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You said you've been researching this for 15 years, so let's go back to 2009. Did you know about this story then or was it one of those situations where you heard about it and decided to find out more?

Well, I read a Vanity Fair article that Gore Vidal wrote about Clarence Tripp's book, "The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln," and that just is sparked my imagination. This has been going all the way back to the 1925 [edition] of Carl Sandburg’s book, where talks about "streaks of lavender, and spots soft as May violets."

"Certainly it's a hotbed film, but at the same time, I think it's a love story."

. . . I just kept trying to find ways to tell the story. And then it occurred to me during the pandemic, that I should make a documentary about this. I should really set the record straight. Because whenever I pitched it to people, they're like, "You know what? This doesn't make sense. No way. There's no way he was queer." And I thought, "OK, well, I'm gonna have to prove this to people, to set precedent for it."

We went to great lengths to go into the Library of Congress, dig out documents, go to Brown University . . . you see in the film, these letters that we pull out. A lot of these have never been seen before. And one of the things we're trying to point out is that, like when you see a letter where Abraham Lincoln is a lawyer, a very dry writer is writing very eloquently, very lovingly to another person. You know a love letter when you see it. You know in your heart, and you feel the love letter as it comes out. And I think that was important for us too.

Something else that this film does really is connect the gaps in the histories we’ve learned that seem so obvious. I don't know if you had some thoughts just in terms of how you approach filmmaking in a way that that fills in these gaps of history that have been edited out.

Well, that’s what I think is so great about making a movie about this topic, right? On the fringes of academia, there's been writings about it. Once in a while, an article will pop up, and people will lose their mind over it. But to see it visually, like with pictures . . . I really drew out that section where you see all these queer couples in the 19th century, photo after photo after photo. Bear in mind, these are men and women that are going into public photo studios. They're not taking selfies alone. They're going into a studio and they're embracing each other. And it just shows you, time and time again how this wasn't a big deal at the time, that this kind of same-sex affection and love and physicality existed. The opportunity to see that on screen, to experience it in a film with music and to feel the emotionality of it was important.

That's what drew me to expanding the story. And then . . . I wanted to tell a love story where we see these affections that happen. You know, you can read these things and they feel dry and academic, but when you see them come to life, and you see these young people —I mean, I really want young people to see the film. And when you see this, this young couple, Lincoln and Speed together, having these queer moments, sleeping together, enjoying each other, intellectually connecting, I think the young people will see themselves in these figures in a way maybe they hadn't before.

Lover of Men: The Untold History of Abraham LincolnLover of Men: The Untold History of Abraham Lincoln (Special Occasion Studios)

Lincoln is claimed by both sides of the partisan divide. What do you think it is about him that makes him so such a celebrity among American presidents? And how do you think that, either through coded language or overtly stating that he was in same-sex relationships, how do you think that might have played into that popularity whether people knew about it or not?

Look, I mean, he’s the person that's credited for saving the nation at all cost. He kept the Union together.

"To think to Lincoln as a human being . . . who had love in his heart? He loved these men, he loved his wife. You can have both throughout your life."

Everyone loves Lincoln, and he was such a meek man. And as you know, history shows he literally made his cabinet [from] his political rivals. This would be unheard of today. You know, the idea of [Donald] Trump bringing Bernie Sanders into his cabinet would be preposterous, but Lincoln did that. That's how open-minded he was, and that's what everybody loves about him.

But whether people at the time knew or didn't know, well, we show evidence that lots of people knew that Lincoln, while in the White House, was sleeping with his bodyguard. A lot of scholars will say, "Oh, it was common to share beds when men were didn't have a lot of money." Well, maybe when Lincoln and Speed first slept together, it was financial. But for four years? That was not a financial decision. He was a legislator and a lawyer. He's making plenty of money. He wanted to sleep together, and people in the community knew, and it wasn't a big deal. All the superior officers of Captain Derickson knew he was wearing Lincoln's night shirts and sleeping with him at night, and it wasn't a big deal.

And that's what we have to really realize, that the behaviors of the time are very different than they are today, and it was accepted.


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In New York, "Oh, Mary" – a play starring “At Home with Amy Sedaris” castmate Cole Escola as Mary Todd Lincoln – is running on Broadway.

Yeah.

I don’t want to ask you specifically about that, but rather the creative habit of approaching Lincoln’s life stories from an array of directions including fictionalizing him as a vampire slayer. Why was it important to you to tell this story as a documentary versus dramatizing it?

A good question. I mean, I certainly considered fictionalizing it. But again, this story is so . . . I mean, no one was trying to convince people that he was a vampire hunter. Everyone knows that was just fun, but to convince people that Lincoln loved other men was going to take a burden of proof. And that's why we went to great lengths to really find the documented evidence.

I was going to have to say, "This seems far-fetched, but bear with me here and let me tell you the story of not just Lincoln, but of Lincoln's time." And I think it was important to do that in a documentary, to really set the tone.

I think when you're a kid in school, and you think about Abraham Lincoln, he's very stoic and he's very serious. But to think to Lincoln as a human being, who had love in his heart? He loved these men, he loved his wife. You can have both throughout your life.

And I think we're seeing with this younger generation that's the way it can be. You can love different people throughout your life . . . And I think we want to get to a point where we accept that and not make it illegal to love. And the fact that we're at a place where love could be illegal again is unbelievable.

So I ask people to say our greatest president, one of the greatest Americans that ever lived, also loved people from both sexes. And as one of the scholars in the film said, if you can accept a queer Lincoln, you can accept all queer people.

"Lover of Men: The Untold History of Abraham Lincoln" is playing in limited release in theaters nationwide.

 

“He created his own legend”: “The Goldman Case” reshoots famed trial with a “very seductive” suspect

In 1970s France, the trial of Pierre Goldman was known as “The Trial of the Century.” Goldman was charged in April 1970 with “four armed attacks, one of which led to the death of two pharmacists.” Sentenced to life imprisonment in December 1974, Goldman insists he is innocent of the murders. In November 1975, the appeals court transfers the case to the Amiens Criminal Court where Goldman is retried for his crimes.

"Goldman had a relationship to truth that was very blurry."

“The Goldman Case” is director/cowriter Cédric Kahn’s gripping, dramatized recounting of the trial and filmed almost entirely in the courtroom. As witnesses testify, Goldman speaks out, his supporters react, and the accused’s lawyers try to mount a defense for their client. The case is as fascinating as Goldman’s character. He was a Polish Jew, born in France, who became a revolutionary and spent time in Venezuela. He was assassinated in 1979 “in conditions that remain unclear.”

Kahn’s film portrays Goldman as a man who wants the facts of the case to prove his innocence. Yet he also refuses to identify someone who can prove his innocence because he does not rat on people, and, he insists, he is innocent of the killings. Goldman also sees himself as a “Jewish warrior,” and a scapegoat for the crimes. The police are racist and antisemitic and intimidate witnesses who provide contradictory testimony. But Goldman’s actions in the courtroom, which include insulting the prosecution’s lawyer, cause his attorneys grief, and at one point, cause him to be restrained. 

In the title role, Arieh Worthalter delivers a committed performance, with Arthur Harari lending fine support as Goldman’s lawyer, Maître Kiejman. (Harari is no stranger to courtroom drama; he won an Oscar for cowriting “Anatomy of a Fall.”) 

“The Goldman Case” is riveting as it presents the courtroom proceedings and the verdict and its aftermath. With the assistance of interpreter Nicholas Elliott, Kahn spoke with Salon about Goldman and his trial.

How did you learn of the Goldman case and what interested you about this particular trial? 

My first encounter was reading Goldman’s autobiography. I was very interested in the character and doing a film about justice. I saw the possibility of making a film that was dialectic, where words and speaking were at the center of the film.

Did you have access to transcripts or footage from the case? How did you create the narrative since you imagined this as a dialectic film? 

In France, the law forbids filming or photographing trials. We tried to get the transcripts, but they weren’t granted to us. We recreated the trial using newspaper articles from the time, but since a lot of things were missing from those newspaper articles, we recreated the “gaps” by making things up. It’s a little paradoxical, but we invented by trying as much as we could to maintain the spirit of truth.  

The Goldman CaseThe Goldman Case (Menemsha /Moonshaker)What can you say about filming “The Goldman Case” almost entirely in the courtroom?  There are little to no “private” moments. 

It is specifically because these private moments would have created subjectivity for the viewer. I wanted the viewer to be in the position of the juror and to be constantly or permanently confronted with the question of truth. 

Goldman is shown to be aggressive in the courtroom. He is righteous, he is outspoken, he is rebellious. He is also loyal and refuses to rat on someone who can prove his innocence. He is an activist and a “Jewish Warrior.”  He feels guilt and may be seen by some as a martyr. What did you think of his character?

He is all of those things, but what one has to remember is that he is someone who is trying to save his life because at the time, he still risked the death penalty. I think he was fragile psychologically or “borderline,” as we say. Goldman had a relationship to truth that was very blurry, like all people who are “borderline.”

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What do you believe he believed? 

I believe Goldman believed in his innocence. But your question is a complicated one. I believe he wanted to be a hero. His models were his parents who lived through exceptional circumstances — the war; they were resistance fighters who emigrated from Poland. Goldman was someone who came “too late.” He would have liked to have lived in exceptional circumstances. He would have liked to have had an exceptional life. 

That may explain why he went to Venezuela. There is a question of Goldman’s past being examined — including his political views. A line in the film by one of his lawyers says that you can’t understand Pierre Goldman without understanding the impact of his family’s past, his personality and his struggles. What did you think of that?

Regarding Venezuela, Goldman himself says that he arrived too late, after Che Guevara had died and after the guerrilla warfare was over. What one has to understand about Goldman is that he was reunited with his mother in the 1960s. He admired her tremendously as a militant and revolutionary. He took her as his model, and it was her that directed him to warfare in South America. Not much happened in Venezuela — or, very anodyne things did. He was a long way from revolutionary war. So, in 1969 he returned to France, and became a stickup artist. What is fascinating about Goldman is the gap between his discourse and reality. Thanks to the power of his discourse, of his words, he created a kind of fanaticism around him. The French Left at the time admired him and were his fans. They had no doubt of his innocence. 

What did you think of Goldman’s behavior in the courtroom? He lashes out against lies and injustice at incredible risk. That is where we see his character.

From my perspective, his defense strategy, is very risky, nearly suicidal. I’m quite in agreement with his defense lawyer, Kiejman. Because Goldman politicizes everything. He brings up antisemitism and racism, but he does not deal much with the facts. Kiejman is very rational. There are many moments in the trial when one gets the impression that Goldman wants to be convicted. Actually, he is putting on a show. It seems like it is more important for him to do his show than to be exonerated. 

The issues raised about antisemitism, racism, police abuse and intimidation persist today. Is your film showing us how things have not changed? Do we not learn from history?

It is absolutely timely. When we started to write the screenplay, we thought we were making a film about the 1970s. But we realized the political context and French society had not changed that much. It was probably the same context we had during Occupation when a part of French population had collaborated, and a part of the French population resisted. I observe certain deep-seated constants in French society. It is a society that does not change that much. 

How does this film fit into your career? Your films, such as “Wild Life” and “A Better Life” are critical of society. Why did this film speak to you in this moment? 

"His assassination is part of his legend."

That is a difficult question. There is always an instinctive aspect in the choices we make about what films to make. This is a film I wanted to make for a long time. But it is a film that stands apart for me because it is the first one that I made with a Jewish subject. I was happy to deal with the subject of Judaism through a character who was subversive. He lived surrounded by Black people who shared the struggle of Jews. He was, in a sense, a marginal Jewish man. 

Did you identify with Goldman?

I looked at Goldman with a lot of curiosity as well as a mix of fascination and antipathy, but I did not identify with him. I identified more with Kiejman. For me, the device of using only the trial in the film was a way of keeping a distance from the character. If I had private scenes with him or scenes with him alone, I wouldn’t be able to keep this distance from him. 

The Goldman CaseThe Goldman Case (Menemsha /Moonshaker)How did you work with Ariel in creating Goldman’s character? 

I did a work session with Ariel before I cast him. He had read the screenplay. He was so convinced and inhabited by the character that right away I trusted him. He worked a lot on his own. He read Goldman’s book several times and he really knew the screenplay by heart, so he arrived extremely well prepared. He needed to be isolated on the shoot a lot, and needed a lot of time alone, so, in fact, we did not communicate very much. We created a real courtroom with a real audience that was very reactive. Ariel had to “fight for his own innocence” in a sense. The only question he asked me before we started shooting is, “Do you think he is innocent or guilty?” I said, “I don’t know, but you have to play him with the conviction that he is innocent.” 

Do you think Goldman was innocent or guilty?  Although, it almost doesn’t matter.

I never answer that question. But I am convinced of something. I do have a position. 

I like that the film forces you to think critically about a man who is a criminal, but you kind of want him to be innocent.

In reality, Goldman was very seductive. That was the power of his allure and his discourse. That is why justice is so hard to deliver. It is a film about justice and truth. What is truth? 

And I guess we’ll never know . . .

No, but that’s what’s interesting. There is a mystery about Goldman before the film, and the film maintains that mystery about him. To this day, there are still many books and articles about Goldman. People are still asking questions about his innocence, and his sincerity. I’m not going to tell you because I respect justice and the legal proceedings. But I am very much fascinated and admiring of Goldman’s intellectual brilliance. That’s very impressive, but if one is a rational person, the lawyer’s discourse is far more reassuring. 


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What are your thoughts about his assassination? 

His assassination is part of his legend. What is interesting about Goldman is that he created his own legend. He created it as he tried to save his life. To this day, we don’t know the truth about his assassination. There are many hypotheses, which are, in my view, on the order of mythology. Many people believe that he was murdered by the police, but I don’t believe that for a second.

“The Goldman Case” opens in New York City on Sept. 6, and in Los Angeles on Sept. 13, with a national expansion to follow.

26-year-old US activist shot dead during West Bank protest after Israeli forces open fire

A 26-year-old American activist, Aysenur Eygi, has been shot and killed in the Israeli-occupied West Bank during an anti-settlement protest near Nablus, CNN reported

The woman, who had U.S. and Turkish citizenship, was protesting against the expansion of illegal settlements in the Palestinian town of Beita, near Nablus, when she was shot by Israeli troops, according to eyewitnesses.

The Israel Defense Forces admitted Friday that its soldiers opened fired on demonstrators, saying they “responded with fire toward a main instigator of violent activity who hurled rocks at the forces and posed a threat to them in the Beita area," the BBC reported. The IDF said that it was “looking into reports that a foreign national was killed as a result of shots fired in the area.”

Eygi was rushed to a hospital in Nablus where she was later pronounced dead, AFP reported. Dr. Fouad Naffa, the head of the hospital where the activist was admitted, confirmed that an American citizen in her mid-20s died from a “gunshot in the head.”

According to CNN, Eygi was protesting as part of the International Solidarity Movement, a group that opposes illegal Israeli settlement building in the West Bank. In 2003, Israeli forces killed Rachel Corrie, another U.S. activist associated with the group, by running her over with a bulldozer as she protested the razing of Palestinian homes.

“Incoherent gibberish”: Experts “can’t find a complete sentence” in Trump’s child care response

Former President Donald Trump on Thursday was asked how he would make child care more affordable if he is elected in November. Trump responded with an incoherent rant about tariffs, tax cuts, and a rollback of federal regulations. 

“Can you commit to making childcare affordable? And if so what specific piece of legislation will you advance?” Reshma Saujani, the CEO of Girls Who Code, asked the Republican presidential nominee.

Trump answered by saying he “would do that,” and then proceeded to highlight the work of his daughter Ivanka and Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who worked on a paid family leave plan during his administration. Despite Saujani’s question about lightening the hardships working parents, especially women, face to stay in the workforce, Trump maintained that his economic proposals would act as a catch-all solution even though numerous economic experts say that Trump’s economic policies will actually weaken the economy, increase inflation, and increase prices of goods and services for the average American. 

“It’s a very important issue. But I think when you talk about the kind of numbers that I’m talking about that, because, look, child care is child care. It’s something you know you have to have it, in this country you have to have it,” Trump answered before he started to talk about economic numbers.

“We’re going to be taking in trillions of dollars, and as much as child care is talked about as being expensive, it’s, relatively speaking, not very expensive compared to the kind of numbers we’ll be taking in. We’re going to make this into an incredible country that can afford to take care of its people,” Trump said, still not answering the question.

Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign called out the former president's rambling answer.

“Billionaire-bought Donald Trump’s ‘plan’ for making child care more affordable is to impose a $3,900 tax hike on middle class families,” Harris campaign spokesperson Joseph Costello said in a statement. “The American people deserve a President who will actually cut costs for them, like Vice President Harris’ plan to bring back a $3,600 Child Tax Credit for working families and an expanded $6,000 tax cut for families with newborn children.”

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"If you have any idea what the hell that answer means, you’re a better detective than I am, because these tariffs that he wants to apply across the board would amount to a $4,000 tax increase on working families," deputy press secretary Andrew Bates said, according to Mediaite.

Others also remained sufficiently unimpressed with the former president’s response.

“My job is to analyze policy,” CNN commentator and Washington Post columnist Catherine Rampell posted on X. “I can't even find a complete sentence in this.”

“Calling Trump's remarks at the NY Economics Club incoherent gibberish is not a biased attack. It is a completely rational observation,” senior business analyst, Stephanie Ruhle posted on X. “He did not speak in coherent or complete sentences. And when he did, proposals like (tarriffs – childcare) do not make sense.”

California extends its food additives ban with new bill targeting foods served in local schools

California is continuing its ban on various food additives, this time with a new bill that targets specific chemicals served in school lunches throughout the state. The California School Food Safety Act (Assembly Bill 2316) will ban artificial dyes, which California lawmakers believe are linked to behavioral issues in children. 

The bill prohibits state school districts and charter schools from serving foods or drinks that contain red dye No. 40, yellow dyes Nos. 5 and 6, blue dyes Nos. 1 and 2, and green dye No. 3 to children in kindergarten through 12th grade. These dyes are commonly found in ice creams, fruit snacks, drinks (like Gatorade and SunnyD), cereals, candy and flavored chips.

Although research into the neurological effects of artificial food dyes is still ongoing, such dyes have been shown to have negative impacts on children’s attention span. California’s Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) research into the link between food dyes and child behavior found that the levels (or doses) of dyes deemed “safe” by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) “do not adequately take neurobehavioral effects into account.” That’s because the animal studies that the FDA conducted to determine an acceptable exposure level “are many decades old and were not capable of detecting the types of neurobehavioral outcomes measured in later studies, or for which there is concern in children consuming synthetic dyes,” per OEHHA.  

The recent School Food Safety Act comes after Governor Gavin Newsom signed the California Food Safety Act, which prohibits the sale of foods containing brominated vegetable oil, potassium bromate, propylparaben, or red dye 3 in the state.

JD Vance knows better

Since the U.S. Department of Education opened in 1980, Republicans have wanted to take it apart. This year’s Republican platform is no different. It would cut financial aid benefits that help the neediest students, hobbling our nation’s economic future. Ohio Sen. JD Vance, in his educational ascent from the Rust Belt working class to vice-presidential candidate, should know this better than anyone. His unwillingness to say so is part of the inauthenticity that voters tell pollsters they find “weird” and out-of-touch.

Millions of Americans like Vance have lifted themselves out of hardship using federal education funds. I know this because I am one of them. As an education policy scholar, I know that Vance and I were lucky to be born in a country that makes such stories possible.

As described in his memoir, Hillbilly Elegy, Vance overcame a hardscrabble childhood and attended Ohio State University on the federally funded GI Bill, which provides grants for thousands of veterans, including not only Vance but his vice-presidential rival, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. Vance then received a partial scholarship from Yale Law School, likely supplemented by federal loans. 

My own story was not so different. It involved a chronically unemployed single parent, a stopover in foster care, and lots of packing up and moving around the South. Like Vance, I made my way through fancy universities thanks to their financial generosity and that of federal taxpayers.

But the policies that enabled journies like ours are fragile. The U.S. Department of Education that Republicans want to eliminate is in fact an economic engine. More than half of its budget goes toward Pell grants and federal loans for students who cannot afford college. Access to these dollars depends only on students’ financial need, not on their test scores or creditworthiness.

By calling universities “the enemy” for teaching racial inclusivity instead of celebrating their power to change lives, Vance undermines his own story.

How might a Trump-Vance administration change that? The Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 presidential blueprint, spearheaded by a friend of Vance, lays out a plan. It would privatize the student loan market and get rid of the interest holidays and rate caps that make borrowing viable for low-income students. It would also end loan forgiveness for public service, a step that could even imperil the GI Bill that helped both vice presidential candidates. Project 2025 cites cost savings, explaining that “[i]t is not the responsibility of the federal government to provide taxpayer dollars to create a pipeline from high school to college” (p. 361).           

But isn’t it? College is costly. Pipelines exist when governments make them possible. 

On the day Vance was nominated at the Republican National Convention, I was in rural Mexico chatting with a bicycle-taxi driver who told me that his young son loves architecture but is unlikely to pursue it as a career. Tuition in public Mexican universities is low, but access for the rural poor depends on strong test scores and the ability to forego full-time work while living far from home.

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If private markets could create pipelines for the poor, the bicycle-taxi driver in Mexico would see a path to college for his child. And perhaps he will yet find one. Global access to college is rising, though access for the poor remains low in three out of five countries. 

Surely JD Vance knows this. By calling universities “the enemy” for teaching racial inclusivity instead of celebrating their power to change lives, he undermines his own story. Trump tapped him as an avatar of working-class voters. But those voters need a champion, one who widens their path to opportunity. Those of us who found that path, including Vance, understand how narrow and bumpy it is. To block it further would hurt not only low-income youth but our nation’s prosperity.

Indeed, the cynicism of Project 2025 grows clearer as the presidential race evolves. Republicans now face off against Kamala Harris, who expanded education access in the justice system, and Walz, who made free school meals universal in Minnesota, an effort Project 2025 wants to “eliminate” as “wasteful” at the federal level (p. 303).

America’s future depends on investing in people, especially young people from families the economy has left behind. If Vance cares about working people, he should denounce ideas that would starve them in body and mind.

NPR identifies Trump campaign staffers involved in Arlington National Cemetery altercation

Two Donald Trump staffers who were involved in a physical altercation with an official at Arlington National Cemetery have now been identified, NPR reported.

According to NPR, the two men are Michel Picard, a member of Trump's advance team, and Justin Caporale, Trump's deputy campaign manager. The two verbally abused an employee who tried to prevent them from filming campaign material in Section 60 of the military cemetery, the resting place for many U.S. soldiers who lost their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Caporale previously served as an aide to Melania Trump, NPR reported, and also worked for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

In a statement last week, the U.S. Army said the employee, a woman, was later shoved aside when she tried to enforce the rule against using the grave sites for partisan political purposes.

The Trump campaign had been informed of the rules beforehand. Federal law also prohibits campaigning at Arlington National Cemetery.

Despite the prohibition, the Trump campaign definitely took photos. Indeed, it posted a campaign ad on TikTok using footage from the restricted area of the cemetery.

As the U.S. Army noted in its statement last week: "Participants in the August 26th ceremony and the subsequent Section 60 visit were made aware of federal laws, Army regulations and DoD policies, which clearly prohibit political activities on cemetery grounds."

Judge sets stage for “mini, mini trial” in Trump’s January 6 case right before the November election

It’s not fair, legal counsel for Donald Trump told a federal judge on Thursday. The former president’s election interference case — which could have gone to trial this spring had it not been for litigation over the Republican candidate’s claim he was completely immune from prosecution — is starting back up again just as early voting is about to begin. While ballots are being cast, prosecutors could air new, potentially damning evidence about the defendant's efforts to remain in power.

So what, U.S. District Judge Tanya S. Chutkan responded. Her only concern, she said, is the crimes that special counsel Jack Smith, armed with a fresh grand jury indictment, has accused the 78-year-old defendant of committing: defrauding the United States and seeking to throw out the votes of millions of Americans after decisively losing to President Joe Biden in 2020.

“This court is not concerned with the electoral schedule,” she told defense lawyer John Lauro, MSNBC legal analyst Katie Phang reported from the courtroom in Washington, DC. “I am definitely not getting drawn into an election dispute.”

As former prosecutor Andrew Weissmann observed, Chutkan here is treating Trump “like any other defendant,” upholding the principle of equality before the law. However, the schedule that she has set guarantees that she will be drawn into the world of politics, even as she insists that the only considerations in her courtroom will be the law and the facts of this case.

Although there will not be a trial until at least 2025 — the defense is guaranteed to appeal any decision that allows the case to move forward in light of the Supreme Court’s newly invented presidential immunity doctrine — Chutkan issued an order following Thursday’s hearing that sets the stage for potentially damning evidence to be publicly shared just as the election heats up. That order sets Sept. 26 as the deadline for prosecutors to file an “opening brief” on Trump’s immunity claims, which Politico reported could be “jammed with new and explosive evidence related to Trump’s effort to subvert the 2020 election” (prosecutors said they would include “substantial exhibits” in their filing). A defense response is due by Oct. 17 and prosecutors’ response to that is due Oct. 29.

The election is Nov. 5.

Such a scenario — damning evidence being presented on the eve of an election — was predicted in the wake of the Supreme Court’s July 2024 immunity decision, which held that presidents enjoy presumed immunity for “official acts.” At the time, legal experts suggested that while the case was certainly hampered by the high court’s decision, Smith and his team could still try to share the evidence they had gathered in a sort of “mini trial,” laying out why they believed it should still move forward.

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In light of Thursday’s hearing, legal experts have a new term for what could happen in the coming weeks: “a mini, mini trial,” as NYU law professor Ryan Goodman put it. In court, prosecutors said that after filing their brief they would be open to discussing it at an actual hearing, even raising the prospect of “witness testimony” being presented. According to Goodman, that witness could well be former Vice President Mike Pence, who Trump pressured to use his ceremonial role on Jan. 6 to reject electoral votes from states that the former president had lost.

That could, of course, not happen; Chutkan could also choose to redact any new evidence that the Department of Justice shares in a filing. But Elie Honig, a former federal prosecutor turned legal analyst for CNN who has expressed sympathy for Trump’s defense team, said the case is not turning out as the former president and his attorneys had hoped.

“This is exactly the scenario that Donald Trump’s lawyers were arguing against and trying to avoid,” Honig said. If they had their way, the case would simply be dismissed or, at worst, picked up again only after the election. But Judge Chutkan, he said, “clearly does not care.”

Donald Trump’s incoherence makes the media’s double standard hard to hide

It seems like only yesterday that the elite media were extremely concerned that President Joe Biden had mistakenly referred to the president of Egypt as the president of Mexico. In the course of an otherwise cogent discussion of foreign affairs, he'd made that mistake in passing but it caused a huge uproar and spawned yet another round of critical reporting about his age and mental capacities. No one in the press blew off the gaffe and the substance of his comments went virtually unreported.

That press conference came in the shadow of the Hur report, in which the special counsel made a gratuitous comment about Biden being an elderly man with a bad memory. From that moment on almost every story about Joe Biden was framed in terms of his advanced age and the question of whether he was up to the job. The drumbeat continued for months until Biden's disastrous debate performance validated the narrative and it continued until the day he withdrew from the race. No one in the media cut Joe Biden any slack for his performance.

Donald Trump has the whole press corps acting as his ghostwriter, sanitizing his babble for the public.

Donald Trump, on the other hand, has been speaking nonsense and spouting gibberish on the campaign trail and the media is covering for him by pretending that his verbal incontinence actually makes sense or by ignoring it altogether. Yes, there's been some mordant chuckling in the media over his bizarre comments about "the late great Hannibal Lecter" and his meandering tales about electric boats and shark attacks. Those stories are all delivered with a twinkling eye-roll as if to say "Oh that wacky Trump, there he goes again" as if it's just a funny little anecdote, apropos of nothing.

And it's true that he's always done this to some extent. His speeches and press conferences are surreal windows into his undisciplined, puerile mind. Despite his regular protestations that he's "like, really smart," he communicates at a 4th grade level (the lowest level of any of the past 15 presidents going back to Hoover) and uses the same handful of words and phrases over and over again to cover for the fact that he never really has any idea what he's talking about.

But Trump's getting worse and the press is failing to properly report it. Over the past couple of weeks, the problem has gotten more acute and there has been very little recognition of it. Because political reporters have normalized his unfit intellectual and emotional characteristics for so long they're just continuing to cover him as if they are perfectly ordinary even though he is rapidly deteriorating,

Trump appeared with Sean Hannity for a pre-taped "town hall" in which he wondered how anyone could be voting for Biden. He has repeatedly made that mistake, declaring that he's running against his former rival instead of his current one. That might have been an understandable gaffe in the early days after Biden withdrew but this has now been going on for a couple of months. I think we know that if Biden had done this we would have had screaming headlines.

But it's the truly demented and/or incoherent blather that's going unremarked upon and there is no excuse for it. I already wrote about his stunning declaration at the Moms for Liberty event in which he said that kids are getting transgender surgeries in school and the parents don't know anything about it. But in the write-ups of the event in all the big papers it wasn't even mentioned. Instead, we got headlines like Trump Questions Acceptance of Transgender People as He Courts His Base at Moms for Liberty Gathering and Can Moms for Liberty save Trump?

The New York Times' Jamelle Bouie smartly called this bizarre coverage (and the double standard) out in a TikTok video:

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On Thursday Trump gave what was billed as an economic policy speech to the New York Economic Club. This was a room ostensibly filled with educated people who have a deep understanding of the way our economic system works. Trump attempted to deliver a rote teleprompter speech that derided Biden's economy and discussed his plans to raise more tariffs, drill baby drill and lower more taxes. It could have been finished in 10 minutes. But Trump inevitably digressed to his usual meandering stump speech which he delivered in ever desperate tones to an audience that was more often silent than not.

But the memorable moment came when he answered a question about what specific legislation he planned to propose to deal with the crisis in child care by spewing an incoherent string of words that sounded like a 4th grader giving a book report of a book he didn't read. He clearly had no idea about child care and so he reverted to the only economic policy he's ever known: tariffs, the cure-all for every economic ill.

Here is how the New York Times wrote that mess of a response up:

After his speech, Donald Trump was asked how he might address rising child care costs. In a jumbled answer, he said he would prioritize legislation on the issue but offered no specifics and insisted that his other economic policies, including tariffs, would “take care” of child care. “As much as child care is talked about as being expensive, it’s, relatively speaking, not very expensive compared to the kind of numbers we’ll be taking in.”

Does that accurately describe Trump's incomprehensible babble? I don't think so but it certainly was nice of the Times to "interpret" his comments to mean that he "insist[ed] that his other economic policies, including tariffs, would take care of child care." It's very generous of them to help him out that way otherwise people might think that Trump had absolutely no idea what he was talking about and clearly has no economic "policy" other than tariffs (which he doesn't understand either) even after having spent four years in the White House. Why, they might even conclude that he doesn't have the mental capacity to be president. I guess that would be rude.


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The New Republic's Greg Sargent wrote about this phenomenon which he calls "sane-washing" (coined, I believe, by Parker Molloy.) He speculates that the reason members of the media are unable or unwilling to characterize Trump as being unfit for the job is because they think calling Trump's ignorance and irrationality what it is would require them to make a value judgment that interferes with their self-regard as unbiased, objective observers. If that's the case, they are simply failing to do their jobs. As he writes:

Serial incoherence, lack of basic curiosity, pathological dishonesty, a tendency toward sadistic verbal abuses of many different kinds—all these things can also plainly be evaluated through the prism of whether they might impair someone from performing the job of president effectively. Journalists can say what they know to be true about Trump’s qualities on all these fronts.

They could, but in all these years, Trump has dominated the political culture they never have. I wouldn't hold my breath.

Meanwhile, here's a recent headline about Vice President Kamala Harris that's indicative of the coverage she's been getting from the Times: Harris’s Early Campaign: Heavy on Buzz, Light on Policy. The piece immediately inspired a whole line of criticism about Harris' grasp of the details of the job of president. Just last night, we got this from Alex Thompson at Axios: Harris abandons 2019 pledge to ban plastic straws.

Trump's "policy" speech (talk about light!) at the New York Economic Club should have been reported as a train wreck. But the media covered for him as they so often do. He has the whole press corps acting as his ghostwriter, sanitizing his babble for the public. But Joe Biden and Kamala Harris aren't so lucky. They have to campaign and govern in a world where they are held to the standard that requires a president to be able to demonstrate his or her fitness for the presidency.