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50 Cent may appear at RNC after memeing Trump shooting with song “Many Men (Wish Death)”

50 Cent is in talks to make an appearance at the Republican National Convention even after memeing the assassination attempt on former president Donald Trump

After the rapper spent the weekend posting jokes about Saturday's shooting incident at a Pennsylvania Trump rally, convention officials are saying that the hip-hop mogul is set "to appear in Milwaukee during the GOP convention, according to a person familiar," CNN journalist Kate Sullivan reported.

On Saturday, 50 Cent posted his song “Many Men (Wish Death)” with the now widely circulated photo of Trump being protected by the Secret Service during the shooting. He captioned the tweet, “I know the vibes. We all in trouble now!”

Following this post, which has now been deleted, the rapper also tweeted a photoshopped version of his cover art from his album "Get Rich or Die Tryin." The album cover featured Trump's head on the rapper's body. 50 Cent said in the caption, "Trump gets shot and now I'm trending."

Recently, 50 Cent has cozied up to Republican politicians. In June, he was flamed by the internet for taking a picture with the controversial Rep. Lauren Boebert, who was kicked out of a musical last September for “causing a disturbance” for allegedly getting intimate during the show. 

"All you seem to care about is Lauren what did she do in a dark theater that hasn’t been done, my God. Hey I don’t have chlamydia by the way. LOL,” the rapper said of the situation.

How Ron DeSantis let thousands of Florida kids go hungry this summer

In December, Mallory McManus, a spokeswoman for the Department of Children and Families in Florida — which administers the federal school lunch program in the state — told reporters that the state planned on refusing over $250 million dollars in new federal food assistance money. 

That money, which was available through the US Department of Agriculture’s new SUN Bucks program, would have given $120 of additional summer grocery money to the parents of the 2.1 million school-aged children who receive free or reduced-price lunches throughout the school year in Florida. As food insecurity experts have established, child hunger spikes during the summer because millions lose access to the school breakfast, lunches and afterschool meals they receive during the regular school year. 

“We anticipate that our state’s full approach to serving children will continue to be successful this year without any additional federal programs that inherently always come with some federal strings attached,” McManus said. 

It’s unclear what exactly the state’s opposition was; according to the Orlando Sentinel, running the new program would have cost Florida $12 million in administration costs, a fraction of the $250 million dollars received in return. However, a fear of “federal strings” is an attitude that’s now seemingly baked into Florida politics thanks largely to Governor Ron DeSantis, who, during his tenure, has voiced opposition to what he perceives to be governmental overreach in arenas ranging from so-called “arbitrary [C02] emissions targets” to the “woke corporate monitoring” of Floridians’ personal finances. 

Yet despite McManus’ assurances that Florida had enough resources to provide for its hungry children, advocates from the state say that’s not actually the case and that that data shows hundreds of thousands of children likely are experiencing food insecurity. 

Now, DeSantis has just a month to decide whether he’ll make the same mistake again. 

As Salon Food’s Joy Saha reported in February, Florida wasn’t the only state that chose not to participate in the SUN Bucks, also called Summer EBT, program. The benefits come in the form of pre-loaded cards that families can use specifically to purchase groceries. Eligible families receive $40 per child for three months. Thirty-five states, all five U.S. territories and four tribes opted into Summer EBT, per the Associated Press, while 15 states — all Republican-governed — chose not to opt in for this summer.

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Most, like Florida, cited cost and existing programs that already feed children during the summer as reasons they wouldn’t be participating, though there were some outliers; for instance, in Iowa, Gov. Kim Reynolds said in a news release that an EBT card “does nothing to promote nutrition at a time when childhood obesity has become an epidemic,” a stance Democratic Sen. Izaah Knox of Des Moines characterized as “cruel and short-sighted.” 

On May 21, Allison Johnson, the program director of ParentsTogether Action, launched a petition calling for the governors of the states that turned down the program to reconsider ahead of the August 15 deadline for officials to notify the U.S. Department of Agriculture whether they will partake in the summer of 2025.

“We were hearing just a lot of frustration, and, frankly, anger from families who are finding right now money is not going as far at the grocery store, and it’s already sort of hard enough making sure that there’s enough food on the table to feed their families,” Johnson told the Florida Phoenix

She continued: “So then there is this sort of additional added insult to injury that this $120 per child would have been available, and it is available for most children across the country, but that certain governors had just said ‘no thank’ you to the money.”

Sky Beard, the Florida director for the non-profit organization No Kid Hungry, told the Orlando Sentinel that “every summer is a hungry time for kids.” 

“The perception put forward by the state is that there is no need for other programs in the state,” Beard said. “I wish it were true!” 

According to Feeding America, more than 2.3 million people are facing hunger in Florida and of that more than 613,000 are children; additionally, reporting from the Food Research & Action Center shows that fewer than 10% of the 672,324 elementary school children in Florida who get free or reduced-price lunches during the school year actually receive a summer lunch. 

While Florida administers other federal programs like Summer Break Spot — which allows organizations “to serve nutritious meals to children in Florida while school is out” from locations like community centers and churches — these aren’t as convenient as pre-loaded grocery cards, especially for working parents. 

In addition to the petition from ParentsTogether Action, which has over 3,500 signatures, 185 groups from across Florida have sent a letter to DeSantis and other state leaders urging them to apply for next year’s SUN Bucks program. 

“This is a statewide concern that affects colleagues, friends and families in our communities that are really challenged,” Beard told the Orlando Sentinel. “It would be highly unfortunate that Florida didn’t take advantage of that in 2025.” 

 

New study reveals that mussels, oysters and other sealife contains an excess amount of fiberglass

Love eating ice-cold oysters-on-the-half-shell in the summertime? Enjoy a large bowl of mussels cooked in garlic, wine, butter and parsley? Then you may be a bit discouraged to learn that, as per Megan Schaltegger at Delish, both oysters and mussels "contain 'disturbingly high levels of fiberglass.'" Perhaps it's a good time to curtail your consumption a bit, at least in the interim.

Schaltegger writes that The Journal of Hazardous Materials published the research; lead author Corina Ciocan tells Newsweek that "our findings show a disturbing level of glass-reinforced plastic contamination in marine life." The shellfish samples, which were collected on the south coast of England, reportedly contained "11,220 glass particles per kilogram, while the mussels had 2,740 particles per kilogram," as per Schaltegger.

As noted by Pandora Dewan at Newsweek, "fiberglass is a reinforced plastic material embedded with extremely fine fibers of glass." It should also be stated that not online shellfish showed high fiberglass particles; Ciocan said that "We identified fiberglass embedded in other organic material floating in the water, like seagrass and seaweed fragments, small snails etc." 

Ciocan says that the reason behind this is because the shellfish are "ingesting the particles through filter feeding by mistakes," noting that this is a "stark reminder of the hidden dangers in our environment." Fay Couceiro, another study author, told Newsweek that "we're just starting to understand the extend of fiberglass contamination," while Ciocan noted that "I hope that more researchers will start looking for fiberglass contamination in the coastal environment so that the industry and regulators can take it very seriously and start investing in recycling strategies and natural materials to replace glass-reinforced plastic." 

With five more human bird flu cases reported, number of infected this year more than doubles

On Sunday, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment announced a total of five human cases of avian influenza in workers responding to the outbreak at a commercial egg layer operation. Four cases have been confirmed, and the fifth is “presumptive positive and pending confirmation at CDC.” Previously, there were four confirmed cases in humans following exposure to dairy cows, as well as one case from poultry from 2022. 

According to the announcement the workers had “mild symptoms” and none were hospitalized. Specifically, they had pink eye and “common respiratory infection symptoms.” Public health officials suspect the workers got infected by working directly with infected poultry. On Friday, the CDC said the risk to the general public remains low. “There are no signs of unexpected increases in flu activity otherwise in Colorado or in other states affected by H5 bird flu outbreaks in cows and poultry,” the agency said.

This latest development is one part of a multi-month story. In late March, a worker on a commercial dairy farm in Texas developed a case of pink eye. He eventually tested positive for the highly pathogenic avian influenza Type A H5N1, also known as bird flu. Scientists were shocked to find out that cattle, not birds, were the host — and that large amounts of H5N1 were found in the infected cattle. As Salon has previously reported, experts have raised concerns that more human cases than those that have been reported have gone undetected since then. 

Notably, the Colorado workers are believed to have been infected by poultry, not cattle. This news follows a report that suggested the bird flu is mutating to better infect humans.

Katy Perry insists “Woman’s World” song is “satire” despite backlash calling it “cringe”

Katy Perry fires back at critics who have panned her latest single "Woman's World."

The singer, who hasn't released a single since 2021, has been met with scathing criticism for working with alleged sexual abuser and music producer Dr. Luke and for what's seen as anti-feminist content. People have accused the "Woman's World" music video of using the male gaze because Perry and a cast of women are dressed as sexed-up construction workers before an anvil kills her. She then reawakens as a new version of herself.

Perry took to Instagram to address the backlash with a behind-the-scenes look at her music video and a caption that stated, "YOU CAN DO ANYTHING! EVEN SATIRE!"

https://www.instagram.com/p/C9X5J6hJlNp/

The singer said in the video, “We’re kind of just having fun being a bit sarcastic with it. It’s very slapstick and very on the nose."

She continued, “And with this set, it’s like, ‘Oooh, we’re not about the male gaze but we really are about the male gaze,’ and we’re really overplaying it and on the nose because I’m about to get smashed, which is like a reset, a reset for me, and a reset for my idea of feminine divine, and it’s a whole different world we go to after this."

Critics have called the single "pandering nonsense" by The Guardian, Pitchfork said it was a "monumental catastrophe" and The Cut said it was "so forgettable" and "so cringe."

“There was gaslighting”: “The Bachelorette” Jenn Tran on her toxic ex and today’s dating landscape

Jenn Tran is done with toxic relationships and instead wants to find a “ferocious love.” She makes this declaration in the Season 21 premiere of "The Bachelorette," in which she gets her second chance at reality TV love after being eliminated on Joey Graziadei’s season of "The Bachelor."

"I think going in this time around, I really wanted to find someone who was open to being vulnerable,” Tran (no relation) tells me on a Zoom call following the season premiere. “And I didn’t want to have this push-and-pull relationship anymore."

"I spent probably half of my life hiding [the Vietnamese] part of me because I wanted to fit in."

Tran is the first Asian American lead for the Bachelor franchise, which is using her season as a reset of sorts. Not only has production introduced new protocols to ensure the safety of its POC leads, but it's also the first season shot at Hummingbird Nest Ranch in Simi Valley, Calif., instead of the usual Bachelor Mansion. It's certainly the first season where a contestant makes a grand entrance on a stretcher while wrapped only in bandages and a hospital gowtn that exposes his butt cheeks on TV. 

Needless to say, the premiere was quite a wild introduction for the bubbly and outgoing 26-year-old Vietnamese American physician’s assistant student from Miami. But she is up for the challenge. Tran wants to take control of her love story, rather than let her love story be dictated by others. She’ll flirt, kiss, date and send home exactly who she wants and when she wants. 

"The Bachelorette" Jenn Tran and Jonathon (Disney/John Fleenor)Her go-getter attitude is fully evident when she welcomes the 25 men competing for her love, going toe-to-toe with each of them when it comes to charm, cheekiness and flirting. In a refreshing departure from stereotypes of demure Asian women, we get to see Tran be unabashedly feral and horny about her attractions and act on them. In fact, when she selects "Southern charmer" Sam M. for the First Impression rose, they engage in a glorious make-out session that's arguably the best in the franchise’s history. 

The excitement doesn't stop there. It turns out the rest of Tran's journey with the men will take place in Melbourne, Australia. "Traveling with a partner is one of the best ways to learn about somebody," Tran notes. A preview of the season promises even more drama, from a toxic ex making a surprise bid to win her back to Tran making an unprecedented decision that sounds a lot like she will be the one popping the question. Time will tell how this all plays out.

Tran sat down with me to discuss meeting the suitors, swearing off toxic men, and what she’ll be looking for during the rest of the season when it comes to finding love in our modern dating culture.

The following interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.

That was a packed first episode. How did finally meeting the men shift what you were looking for or who you were open to? And what is it about Southern charm that does it for you? 

I don’t know if I had expectations going into this group of men, but I have had a bad previous dating history. I really wanted someone who was willing to put in the effort and initiate and all that stuff. In terms of Southern charm, it’s giving husband. With Southern charm, there’s this sense of “I’m going to take care of you.”

You mentioned that you finally feel worthy of all the attention the men have given to you. What changed for you to get you to this point?

"I had an ex who was really, really insecure and would put me down in times of success."

It was really hard to see myself being the Bachelorette and having all these guys come to date me. I think it’s the issue of having never really seen myself as the main character, never having seen myself in that role before because we haven’t had great Asian representation. We’ve never been a main character. We’ve always been a side character and someone not really sought after. So just being there and having those men be so thoughtful and intentional with their time with me made me realize I do belong here, belong in this role and deserve to have my own moment like anybody else. 

Are there any strategies to be vulnerable and split your attention between multiple men at the same time? 

I try to stay in the moment for each day. For me, being vulnerable is not an easy thing to do, because I hadn’t grown up doing that. So I really pushed myself to [be open] with each of these men, because I wanted to really lay it all out there for all of them and give each relationship the best opportunity for success. Every big moment counts. Because if for some reason I was open to one and wasn’t open to the other and the latter didn’t work out, I would have regrets about it. I didn’t have any regrets from the whole season because I really stayed vulnerable with each of these men.

 "The Bachelorette" Jenn Tran and Hakeem (Disney/John Fleenor)What was it like emotionally and mentally to turn men down knowing firsthand what it’s like on the other side?

Yeah, it was definitely hard. It wasn’t easy. I know how quickly feelings can build and how much you can really want someone and want a partner at the end of this. For me, I also was thinking I would never want to lead anybody on. When I knew, I knew and I would send them home. I take pride in being able to do that and letting them go because otherwise keeping them stringing along would be more hurtful to them. 

What aspect of yourself (the brain, the heart, the gut, etc) do you listen to when deciding who stays and who goes? 

A mix of all of the above. And I think that that’s a good thing because in my previous relationships, I would only go with my heart. But now, definitely a mix because you want to think logistically, is this going to work outside? And you also want to think, is there a gut feeling here that you are about to enter something bad or do you love this person or not? 

I loved seeing and hearing you speak with your mom. What were discussions like with her since this time you’re dating more than one man, compared to the first time? And how comfortable is she being more involved onscreen this time?

She hadn’t been onscreen last season so she was really nervous to be onscreen for this. She’s more of a reserved person. She didn’t want to be on TV. She didn’t sign up for this, so it definitely was a conflicting factor. But at the end of the day, she loves me and is willing to do anything for me. She went on for me because she wanted to support me and be there for me. I never doubted how much she loved me.

In terms of talking about dating 25 men with her, it’s not something she’s used to either. But also at the end of the day, she wants me to find someone who takes care of me even if that’s through dating 25 men. She knows the bad relationships I’ve been in, so she was just happy for me to get an opportunity to be happy. 

How important is it to you to find a partner that honors your Vietnamese heritage (like the food and language) and your mother’s immigrant background? And what does that look like, practically?

It’s so, so important for me. I spent probably half of my life hiding that part of me because I wanted to fit in. And I’ve come to a point in my adult life where that is such a huge part of me and a part that I want to continue embracing even more and more. So with dating now, I want to make sure that my partner is open to my Vietnamese culture, to being in a bilingual family and is willing to put in efforts to grow closer with my family, even though it can be tough. It’s not easy to mix different cultures. But it’s so important to me because my mom is everything and my family is everything. You’ll see a lot of those types of important conversations onscreen this season because this is important to me when I’m looking for a lifetime partner.

"The Bachelorette" Jenn Tran and Thomas N. (Disney/John Fleenor)If you could eat only one Vietnamese dish for the rest of your life, what would it be and why?

It would be banh hoi. It’s my absolute favorite and it’s an underrated one. 

We’ve heard about improvements that the Bachelor franchise made to make the dating process safer for POC, such as therapists. What was the nature of your discussion with the producers? 

"Our current generation’s dating landscape is pretty toxic to the mindset."

I felt so comfortable with all of my producers and having these conversations about race, culture and what it means to be Vietnamese. It was really nice to have them be so curious and want to learn more and showcase the best parts of me. And we did have an inclusivity and diversity coordinator as well that I could reach out to if needed at some point. But I felt really, really supported by everybody throughout the show. 

How do you tell the difference between having genuine compatibility with someone, versus someone saying all the right things to make you like them? 

Actions speak louder than words. Somebody can say all the right things. But after a while, it’s like if you can’t back it up, if you’re not putting in more effort, if you don’t actually really know me at all, then that’s kind of how you tell the difference, you know? 

In the preview, we get a hint that someone from your past joined in on the journey. How did this twist affect your ability to process your emotions for dating on the show? 

The moment when someone from my past arrives is definitely pivotal to my journey. It was a moment that changed the trajectory of the rest of the journey for sure. It was a hard thing for me to process, but it’s nice because you can kind of see me process and figure it all out onscreen. I’m excited to watch that part back for sure. 

You said you know what dating a toxic person feels like. How would you describe that?  

Toxicity can mean several things. Specifically speaking to me and my previous toxic relationship, I had an ex who was really, really insecure and would put me down in times of success because he didn’t know how to deal with someone being more successful than him or having more wins than him. He really silenced me in times where I wanted to talk about race and culture and he would make fun of it. I should have spoken up more. At that time, I didn’t have confidence and didn’t fully believe in myself yet. So I entered a bad relationship in which he didn’t encourage all the best parts of me. And there was gaslighting and emotional manipulation in the relationship as well. 

What is your opinion on some men feeling insecure about a woman financially earning more than them? 

I definitely think that there are some men out there who do get insecure about that because we’ve grown up in this culture where men have always been providing for women. But we’re at this place in our world today where women can work and are earning more than men sometimes. So I think some men are uncomfortable with that. They don’t know how to deal with it and they think it attacks their masculinity in some way. It’s a hard thing for men to sometimes accept. 

"The Bachelorette" Jenn Tran and suitors (Disney/John Fleenor)What are your feelings on our current generation’s bleak dating landscape compared to dating on a reality dating show? 

Our current generation’s dating landscape is pretty toxic to the mindset. People think that they can just swipe and find the next best thing. It allows for a lot of commitment issues for people because we’re constantly overstimulated by social media. Like, Instagram is a dating app. You can DM anybody at any time. There’s just so much information and so much access to all these kinds of different people all at once that it’s hard dating in this landscape. That’s why I’m like, yeah, it is an untraditional way to date being the Bachelorette. But in my opinion, it’s better than swiping right, swiping left all day long, and then not actually going on a date – or going on 10 different dates and realizing it doesn’t work out, etc. 


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If you could be on any other show – reality or otherwise – after “The Bachelorette,” what would it be?

Oh gosh, I don’t know. I haven’t really thought about this. What is it? "Grey’s Anatomy," I guess. A reality version of "Grey’s Anatomy." Like a doctor dating show.

What advice would you give to the next “Bachelorette”?

I would tell the next Bachelorette to be the most themselves that they can be and to continue to stay open. The reason why I felt like I was able to explore all these different connections was because I continued to stay present and open in each relationship. I was really surprised throughout the journey by how much I was learning about these men. Maybe initially I didn’t feel anything, but then the attraction would grow. So I would say to stay open so that you can be surprised. 

"The Bachelorette" airs Mondays at 8 p.m. ET on ABC and next day on Hulu.

“Functionally Useless”: AOC blasts senior Democrat resigned to Trump presidency

Worries over President Joe Biden's capacity to run a vigorous election campaign is casting a pall of dread over Democrats, with one senior lawmaker claiming that their colleagues have now "resigned ourselves to a second Trump presidency." However, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., was quick to rebuke the unnamed Democrat for their defeatist attitude.

"If you’re a ‘senior Democrat’ that feels this way, you should absolutely retire and make space for true leadership that refuses to resign themselves to fascism,” she wrote on X. “This kind of leadership is functionally useless to the American people. Retire.”

The comments by the unnamed lawmaker were reported by Axios in an article describing the current state of an awkward, halting campaign by some Democrats to remove Biden from the ticket before the Democratic National Convention next month, an effort seemingly put on hold by the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump. Biden had just come out of a series of tense calls with groups of House Democrats and was struggling to stanch the flow of statements calling on him to step down when the shooting occurred.

"We're all just focused on expressing condolences … and keeping our teams safe," one House Democrat who had been critical of Biden told Axios. Another House Democrat suggested that the post-shooting situation is too "chaotic" for internal leadership battles.

Ocasio-Cortez has continued to support Biden, urging the party to rally around him and focus on defeating Trump in November.

Legal experts: Cannon’s dismissal may backfire and land Trump before “more competent judge”

Judge Aileen Cannon's dismissal of Donald Trump's classified documents case may backfire on the former president, according to a slew of legal experts, potentially landing the presumptive Republican nominee in another court where he'd be less likely to win on the merits.

In her decision Monday, Cannon opined that the appointment of special counsel Jack Smith by the Department of Justice violated the Constitution. But she had long frustrated prosecutors and legal observers before this week for repeatedly delaying the trial and appearing partial towards Trump's team, culminating now in a ruling that one expert called "jurisprudential garbage." The decision, which clashes with Watergate-era precedent over the appointment of independent prosecutors, asserts that Smith should have been appointed by the president himself and confirmed by the Senate.

"Judge Cannon dismissed decades of institutional precedent, years of recent rulings on Mueller and Smith, and pretty much the entire premise of the special counsel regulations. Her ultimate complaint? Jack Smith is TOO independent," wrote Bradley P. Moss, a national security lawyer.

Cannon, responding to  the Supreme Court's earlier decision to grant Trump immunity over "official acts," had earlier this month approved the former president's request to once again delay the trial so that the high court's ruling could be evaluated. In a concurrence with that ruling, Justice Clarence Thomas had written that special counsel Smith's appointment violated the law; Cannon proceeded to cite Thomas three times in her own ruling.

Thomas voted with the Supreme Court's 6-3 right-wing majority in favor of Trump, but he was the only judge to raise the repeatedly-rejected argument that the Constitution's appointments clause prohibits special counsels. According to some legal experts, the reliance on Thomas' opinion and the apparent flimsiness of Cannon's ruling gives Smith an opening to appeal the decision and seek a different judge to oversee the case.

Smith can appeal to the 11th Circuit and seek a reassignment on remand, but even if the Supreme Court gets involved, former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti noted that "Judge Cannon’s ruling, which would invalidate the appointment of any special counsel, is unlikely to get five votes in the Supreme Court."

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Another expert suggested that Smith turn the case over to federal prosecutors in Florida.

"If I'm Jack Smith and the DOJ, I might consider handing the Mar-a-Lago case to the United States Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, re-indict, and hope it gets assigned to a more competent judge than Cannon," constitutional law professor Anthony Michael Kreis, who believes that a reversal and re-assignment is unlikely, wrote on social media.

The documents case, based in part on the testimony from a former Trump lawyer who recalled discussions with his client over how to hide the files from government investigators, was initially considered to be the most straightforward of the four legal cases being pursued against the former president. Now, even a best-scenario replacement judge may not be enough to start the trial before November.

"Unless the 11th Circuit & ultimately SCOTUS disagree, Trump goes free for walking out of the White House with top secret documents," wrote former federal prosecutor Joyce Vance. "At best, this is seriously delayed. Disgusted."

How the last queen of Hawaiʻi is influencing the debate over deep-sea mining

In 1895, Queen Liliʻuokalani spent nearly eight months imprisoned in an upstairs bedroom in Iolani Palace in Honolulu. She had been put there by American businessmen backed by the United States military, which had overthrown the Hawaiian Kingdom, an internationally recognized sovereign nation. 

She spent her days in confinement translating the creation story of the Hawaiian people into English, line by line. 

She would never be allowed to rule over her people again. The U.S. annexed Hawaiʻi over the protests of the Native people, and the islands became a territory and then a state. But now the work of the imprisoned queen is resurfacing in the international debate over whether to mine the seabed for minerals that could accelerate the energy transition away from fossil fuels.

Solomon Kahoʻohalahala, a Native Hawaiian activist from the island of Lānaʻi, has been poring over the queen’s translation, known as the Kumulipo, and bringing it to the attention of state and international lawmakers to make the case that the ocean is sacred to Hawaiians and that deep-sea mining would irreparably harm it.

On Friday, he’s flying to Kingston, Jamaica, to the headquarters of the International Seabed Authority, a United Nations agency that oversees international waters. He’s hoping to convince the agency to establish a committee where Indigenous people like himself can weigh the costs of mining proposals to their cultural heritage.  

“The ocean doesn’t know any boundaries. The fish and the animals don’t know boundaries,” Kahoʻohalahala said. “We are the people that have subsisted and we have lived here, so we need to protect it all.”

Locally, his message is resonating: On Monday, Hawai’i Governor Josh Green signed into law a ban on seabed mining in the state’s surrounding waters, making Hawai’i the fourth state to do so following Oregon, Washington, and California. The ban prevents any permits from being issued for extracting minerals within state waters. The new law comes on the heels of a letter a dozen members of Congress sent to President Joe Biden last month asking him to support a moratorium on deep-sea mineral extraction.

"No one had ever considered that the Indigenous people of Oceania have a connection and relationship to what they’re calling the high seas."

The mining of minerals like cobalt, which can be used to make electric vehicle batteries, has the potential to jump-start a multibillion-dollar industry that could accelerate the green transition away from reliance on oil and gas. But opponents are concerned about the potential for irreparable harm to sea creatures that have spent millions of years untouched. 

To Kahoʻohalahala, the ban in his home archipelago is meaningful, as are efforts to put pressure on the Biden administration. But the U.S. doesn’t have a seat at the International Seabed Authority because it hasn’t ratified the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Seas. And that’s where the most important negotiations are happening that could determine whether permits are granted to allow corporations to mine the high seas. 

The agency hasn’t yet approved its agenda for this month’s gathering, but the stakes are high. 

Member states are expected to vote on a new secretary-general, which features two candidates with far different views on the future of mining. The New York Times reported last week that the election is already embroiled in scandal amid allegations of bribery for votes and similar corruption. 

There’s also increasing interest in deep-sea mining from places like American Samoa. It’s possible that the agency could receive proposals this summer from companies and governments who want approval for their mining plans.

That’s why Kahoʻohalahala feels it’s urgent to ensure Indigenous peoples have a voice in any decision-making. He wants the International Seabed Authority Council to establish a Committee on Intangible Underwater Cultural Heritage which can advise the Council on how mining proposals might affect Indigenous peoples’ cultural connection to the ocean. 

He thinks about how Indigenous peoples weren’t involved in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Seas and how that led to the conclusion that the high seas belong to all humankind.

“The colonial perspective and that of deep sea mining is that the deep sea is an area of vast void-ness and there is nothing there. They have determined that this really belongs to no one,” he said. “No one had ever considered that the Indigenous people of Oceania have a connection and relationship to what they’re calling the high seas.” 

Kahoʻohalahala grew up in a family of farmers and fishers on the Hawaiian island of Lānaʻi, and spent years working in local and state advocacy for Indigenous rights and conservation before starting to participate in international conservation and biodiversity meetings in the last decade.

Two and a half years ago, he heard about the International Seabed Mining Authority. He attended an agency meeting in Kingston as an observer sponsored by Greenpeace. There, he realized that the agency was considering permitting mining on the ocean floor in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, about 500 miles south of Hawaiʻi. 

Since then, he has become Hawaiʻi’s leading activist against seabed mining. 

“My commitment is to make sure that we’re doing what is responsible for us to do as kupuna looking forward for the next several generations, 100 years from now,” he said, using the Hawaiian word for elders. “I hope that our great mo’opuna (grandchildren) will say our tutus (grandparents) were involved in caring for this space, and that is why we can still be here 100 years from now.”

Kahoʻohalahala thinks of Queen Liliʻuokalani often. He thought about her on Monday as he stood in the Hawaiʻi governor’s office, a stone’s throw from the palace where she was imprisoned. 

“[I am] thankful that our queen, in her darkest hours, at Iolani Palace took the time to translate this into English, to help us to be advocates of our own cultural connection, which ties us all to all ecosystems,” Kahoʻohalahala said.

This story has been updated to clarify that Greenpeace funded Kahoʻohalahala’s participation in the International Seabed Authority.

This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/accountability/indigenous-peoples-want-say-future0-deep-sea-mining/.

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

“Just the first step”: Trump praises Judge Cannon ruling that throws out classified documents case

Donald Trump is welcoming the dismissal of his classified documents case as “just the first step,” insisting all efforts to hold him legally accountable be dropped in the name of unity.

“As me move forward in Uniting our Nation after the horrific events on Saturday, this dismissal of the Lawless Indictment in Florida should be just the first step, followed quickly by the dismissal of ALL the Witch Hunts — The January 6th Hoax in Washington, D.C., the Manhattan D.A.’s Zombie Case, the New York A.G. Scam, Fake Claims about a woman I never met (a decades old photo in a line with her then husband does not count), and the Georgia “Perfect” Phone Call charges,” the former president wrote on his website, Truth Social.

Trump went on to call the cases against him “political attacks,” baselessly insisting they were all products of Democrats manipulating the legal system.

“The Democrat Justice Department coordinated ALL of these Political Attacks, which are an Election Interference conspiracy against Joe Biden’s Political Opponent, ME," he wrote. "Let us come together to END all Weaponization of our Justice System, and Make America Great Again!”

Judge Aileen Cannon, a Trump appointee, dismissed the classified documents case against Trump on Monday, ruling that the appointment and funding of special counsel Jack Smith was unconstitutional.

Trump was indicted last year for retaining national security documents in his Mar-a-lago residence after his presidential term ended.

Republicans, ignoring facts about the shooter, try to blame Trump attack on Democrats’ rhetoric

The attempted assassination of Donald Trump on Saturday has given Republicans an opportunity to pin the blame on Democrats, who have long campaigned on the warning that the former president is a threat to democracy. Although the shooter, Thomas Matthew Crooks, was a registered Republican and "definitely conservative," in the words of one former classmate, GOP officials rushed to blame President Joe Biden and the Democrats for a creating political environment that encourages violence.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., was quick to the point on Sunday, arguing that “when the message goes out constantly that the election of Donald Trump would be a threat to democracy and that the republic would end, it heats up the environment.”

Other Republicans, disregarding facts about the shooter, explicitly blamed Democrats for the attack. Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, accused Biden's campaign of using rhetoric that "led directly to Trump's attempted assassination." His colleague, Tim Scott, R-S.C., wrote that the assassination attempt was "aided and abetted by the radical Left and corporate media incessantly calling Trump a threat to democracy, fascists, or worse."

Crooks' own motive remains unknown, but Biden's calls for unity and appeal for Americans to wait until law enforcement can finish their investigation before drawing conclusions appears to have had little effect. Trump supporters, who seek to press their advantage as the party rallies around the former president, have in some cases dialed up their incendiary rhetoric.

“Joe Biden sent the orders,” claimed Rep. Mike Collins, R-Ga., citing Biden's figurative use of the word "bullseye" in recent remarks. “The Republican District Attorney in Butler County, PA, should immediately file charges against Joseph R. Biden for inciting an assassination,” he wrote in another post. Users on the pro-Trump forum Patriots.Win went a step further, calling for "borderline martial law to set the country right."

A Reuters analysis of more than 200 incidents between 2021 and 2023 found that ring-wingers are responsible for most politically-motivated acts of violence. Kurt Braddock, an assistant professor of public communication at American University who researches political violence, told the wire service that Biden's critique of Trump is a "false equivalence" to the violent rhetoric and threats deployed by right-wing Trump supporters against election workers, judges and other officials. And unlike measured statements by Biden and other Democratic officials that wished Trump well over the weekend, Trump and his supporters reacted with mocking glee to the attempted kidnapping of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, in which her husband, Paul, sustained serious head injuries.

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This time, Trump is reportedly using the moment to promote a message of unity, with the former president telling the Washington Examiner that he is planning to rewrite his speech at the Republican National Convention to reflect on his near-death experience.

"I think it would be very bad if I got up and started going wild about how horrible everybody else, and how corrupt and crooked, even if it's true," he said. "Had this not happened, we had a speech that was pretty well set that was extremely tough. Now, we have a speech that is more unifying."

The threat of election violence still remains, however. A senior member of the Proud Boys, the all-male far-right group that helped lead the pro-Trump attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, said that the group would show up in force at the Republican National Convention this week in Milwaukee.

After the shooting of Trump, “you’ll see us at more events,” the Proud Boys member told Reuters. “It’s going to be more active. It’s that simple.”

Marjorie Taylor Greene blames “evil” Democrats for shooting by registered Republican

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., is being criticized for her divisive messages following the attempted assassination of Donald Trump on Saturday.

In a series of posts on X, Greene attacked Democrats and said the country is in "a battle between good and evil." She also wrote that the Democratic Party tried to "murder President Trump,” despite the fact that the bullets fired at the former president were shot by a registered Republican.

“The Democrats are the party of pedophiles, murdering the innocent unborn, violence, and bloody, meaningless, endless wars,” she added. 

Greene’s message came after House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., urged Americans to tone things down following Saturday’s shooting, even as he focused on Democrats' warnings about the threat Trump poses to democracy.

“We’ve got to turn the rhetoric down," Johnson said. "We’ve got to turn the temperature down in this country.”

President Joe Biden has also called for the calming of political division in the country, telling Americans to “lower the temperature in our politics” in a message from the Oval Office on Sunday.  

Despite this, Greene fanned the flames.

“They want to lock up their political opponents, and terrorize innocent Americans who would tell the truth about it. The Democrat party is flat out evil, and yesterday they tried to murder President Trump,” she wrote.

Critics on X urged Greene to “cool down” her language, calling it “reprehensible” and “encouraging violence.”

“Your rhetoric is REPREHENSIBLE. Sit down,” one X user replied.

“You are directly responsible for the polarization of American politics. Your rhetoric of hate and division is encouraging violence. You create an us v them environment and claim anyone who disagrees with you is the enemy. You are the problem, You should be removed from office,” another user replied.

“Lost a lot of moral high ground”: Bill Maher says Trump shooter did “so much damage to the left”

Comedian Bill Maher had a lot to say about the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump on Saturday at a rally in Pennsylvania, specifically a message for the left in a politically fraught election cycle. 

Maher denounced the shooter's attempted actions during his intro for a show on Saturday. 

“I so unequivocally denounce it. I don’t care what you think about that. Not funny. I’m sure there will be jokes that people will make because they hate him so much—about, they wish it went the other way. Not for me," he said.

The "Real Time With Bill Maher" host continued: “Whoever was the shooter has done so much damage to the left."

“Lost a lot of moral high ground in the ‘You’re the violent people.’ You know, ‘Liberals don’t shoot people, liberals don’t solve it that way,’” Maher said.

Additionally, Maher explained to his audience that “none of this violence happens in a vacuum. But I'm glad he's OK. Trump, I got to say this, he's the luckiest motherf**ker that ever walked the face of the earth." 

Maher stated that Trump has been lucky in the past, winning the 2016 election, narrowly losing 2020 and now "I don't want to say the elections over but . . ."

He concluded, "MAGA nation has finally found its full martyr."

Judge Aileen Cannon repeatedly cites Clarence Thomas to dismiss Trump indictment

Judge Aileen Cannon dismissed the classified documents case against former President Donald Trump on Monday, ruling that the appointment of special counsel Jack Smith by the Department of Justice violated the appointments clause of the U.S. Constitution. According to Cannon's ruling, Smith should have been appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate like other high-level officers.

"The Special Counsel's position effectively usurps that important legislative authority, transferring it to a Head of Department, and in the process threatening the structural liberty inherent in the separation of powers," she opined in a 93-page document justifying the dismissal of Smith's indictment. Trump had been charged with illegally hiding sensitive government documents in his Mar-a-Lago residence after leaving office.

The ruling, which clashes with precedent set by previous court decisions over the appointment of independent prosecutors since the Watergate scandal, at least for now removes a major legal threat to Trump and confirms the worst fears of critics who questioned the Trump-appointee's partiality and competence.

The Supreme Court's decision to grant Trump immunity over "official acts" may have portended the decision by Cannon, who approved Trump's request to delay the trial so that the ruling could be evaluated. She then cited Judge Clarence Thomas three times in her own ruling to dismiss the indictment.

"In Trump's immunity ruling, Justice Thomas all but invited Judge Cannon to find Jack Smith was unconstitutionally appointed as special counsel," MSNBC's Adam Klasfeld commented. "Cannon noticed."

The special counsel's team can appeal the ruling to the 11th Circuit and ask for a new judge, but the process will further delay a case that was already unlikely to go to trial before November.

 

“He definitely was conservative”: Classmates paint picture of Republican “outcast” who shot Trump

Donald Trump was shot in the ear Saturday by a 20-year-old registered Republican described by most former classmates as a loner who was bullied in high school, with at least two describing him as a conservative.

The FBI has identified the deceased shooter as Thomas Matthew Crooks of Bethel Park, a suburb of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Crooks, who graduated high school in 2022, used his father’s legally purchased “AR-style 556” semiautomatic rifle, per the bureau, to open fire on the former president as he spoke at a campaign rally, wounding the presumptive Republican nominee, killing another man, and injuring two other attendees who had come to hear him speak. Crooks was shot dead by a member of the Secret Service.

Crooks’ former classmates at Bethel Park High School described him as quiet, nerdy kid who, according to some, was abused by his peers.

“I mean, he was just an outcast,” Jason Koehler told NBC News, saying Crooks was “bullied so much in high school” for the way he dressed: usually in hunting gear.

Others disputed that Crooks was bullied but shared the assessment of him as an outsider.

“I will say he was definitely nerdy, for sure, but he never gave off that he was creepy or like a school shooter,” Mark Sigafoos told CBS News.

“He just seemed like a normal boy who was not particularly popular but never got picked on or anything,” Jameson Myers told the outlet, who noted that Crooks tried out for his high school rifle team in freshman year but was rejected “because of how bad of a shot he was — it was considered, like, dangerous.”

Crooks would go on to join an area shooting range, the Clairton Sportsmen’s Club, the BBC reported. On Saturday, he was found wearing a t-shirt for the YouTube channel “Demolition Ranch,” which features videos on guns and explosives. Law enforcement authorities told CBS that an explosive device was later found in Crooks’ vehicle.

While some Trump allies have sought to blame Democratic rhetoric for the shooting, no classmate has described him as ever speaking negatively about the former president.. Myers, who said he had known the shooter since elementary school, said Crooks “never acted, like, by any means, a political revolutionary.”

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Campaign finance records show that in January 2021, as a 17-year-old, Crooks gave $15 to the Progressive Turnout Project, a pro-Democrat political action committee, Axios reported. However, records show that he later registered as a Republican and voted in the 2022 midterm elections. This November would have been the first presidential contest for which he would have been old enough to participate.

Crooks was certainly not a liberal, according to at least two former classmates.

“I would almost put money on the fact that I probably had seen him wear a Trump shirt or something along the lines of that beforehand, which is why this is so shocking to me,” Paige Updegraff told Pittsburgh public radio station WESA.

Max R. Smith, another classmate who took a history course with the shooter, told The Philadelphia Inquirer that Crooks would talk about politics but never said anything that would suggest he hated Trump.

“He definitely was conservative,” Smith said. “It makes me wonder why he would carry out an assassination attempt on the conservative candidate.”

Smith noted that, in class, the teacher would often ask students to take a side on a political issue being debated. Crooks always sided with the right.

“The majority of the class were on the liberal side, but Tom, no matter what, always stood his ground on the conservative side,” he said. “That’s still the picture I have of him. Just standing alone on one side while the rest of the class was on the other.”

Police spotted gunman but retreated moments before he took a shot at Trump

The 20-year-old who carried out an assassination attempt on Donald Trump had earlier pointed his gun at a local police officer before firing at the former president on Saturday, CNN reported.

The Butler Township police department had received calls about a suspicious person on the perimeter of the rally, but none indicated that the person had a gun, sources told CNN. 

After locating the suspicious person on the roof, one local officer hoisted another onto the ledge of the roof. The gunman saw the officer, pointed a semi-automatic rifle at him and the officer retreated to “take cover.”

Moments later, the gunman fired several rounds from the rooftop and Trump was rushed off stage with a bloody ear. Secret Service agents killed the gunman at the scene.

“This is being investigated and obviously at the end of the day, we’re going to learn something from it,” Butler County Sheriff Michael T. Slupe told CNN. 

He added that agencies were not aware of any potential threats before the rally but local law enforcement did meet with the U.S. Secret Service, bomb squads and state police a week before the July 13 event to discuss “roles and responsibilities.”

The gunman who fired the shots has been identified as 20-year-old Thoman Matthew Crooks, a resident of Bethel Park, Pennsylvania, and a registered Republican voter. 

Trump, who is set to attend the Republican National Convention on Monday, posted to TruthSocial following the attack: “In this moment, it is more important than ever that we stand United, and show our True Character as Americans, remaining Strong and Determined, and not allowing Evil to Win.”

Inside Ziklag: The secret group of rich Christians trying to sway elections and change the country

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

A network of ultrawealthy Christian donors is spending nearly $12 million to mobilize Republican-leaning voters and purge more than a million people from the rolls in key swing states, aiming to tilt the 2024 election in favor of former President Donald Trump.

These previously unreported plans are the work of a group named Ziklag, a little-known charity whose donors have included some of the wealthiest conservative Christian families in the nation, including the billionaire Uihlein family, who made a fortune in office supplies, the Greens, who run Hobby Lobby, and the Wallers, who own the Jockey apparel corporation. Recipients of Ziklag’s largesse include Alliance Defending Freedom, which is the Christian legal group that led the overturning of Roe v. Wade, plus the national pro-Trump group Turning Point USA and a constellation of right-of-center advocacy groups.

ProPublica and Documented obtained thousands of Ziklag’s members-only email newsletters, internal videos, strategy documents and fundraising pitches, none of which has been previously made public. They reveal the group’s 2024 plans and its long-term goal to underpin every major sphere of influence in American society with Christianity. In the Bible, the city of Ziklag was where David and his soldiers found refuge during their war with King Saul.

“We are in a spiritual battle and locked in a terrible conflict with the powers of darkness,” says a strategy document that lays out Ziklag’s 30-year vision to “redirect the trajectory of American culture toward Christ by bringing back Biblical structure, order and truth to our Nation.”

Ziklag’s 2024 agenda reads like the work of a political organization. It plans to pour money into mobilizing voters in Arizona who are “sympathetic to Republicans” in order to secure “10,640 additional unique votes” — almost the exact margin of President Joe Biden’s win there in 2020. The group also intends to use controversial AI software to enable mass challenges to the eligibility of hundreds of thousands of voters in competitive states.

In a recording of a 2023 internal strategy discussion, a Ziklag official stressed that the objective was the same in other swing states. “The goal is to win,” the official said. “If 75,000 people wins the White House, then how do we get 150,000 people so we make sure we win?”

According to the Ziklag files, the group has divided its 2024 activities into three different operations targeting voters in battleground states: Checkmate, focused on funding so-called election integrity groups; Steeplechase, concentrated on using churches and pastors to get out the vote; and Watchtower, aimed at galvanizing voters around the issues of “parental rights” and opposition to transgender rights and policies supporting health care for trans people.

In a member briefing video, one of Ziklag’s spiritual advisers outlined a plan to “deliver swing states” by using an anti-transgender message to motivate conservative voters who are exhausted with Trump.

But Ziklag is not a political organization: It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt charity, the same legal designation as the United Way or Boys and Girls Club. Such organizations do not have to publicly disclose their funders, and donations are tax deductible. In exchange, they are “absolutely prohibited from directly or indirectly participating in, or intervening in, any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for elective public office,” according to the IRS.

ProPublica and Documented presented the findings of their investigation to six nonpartisan lawyers and legal experts. All expressed concern that Ziklag was testing or violating the law.

The reporting by ProPublica and Documented “casts serious doubt on this organization’s status as a 501(c)(3) organization,” said Roger Colinvaux, a professor at Catholic University’s Columbus School of Law.

“I think it’s across the line without a question,” said Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer, a University of Notre Dame law professor.

Ziklag officials did not respond to a detailed list of questions. Martin Nussbaum, an attorney who said he was the group’s general counsel, said in a written response that “some of the statements in your email are correct. Others are not,” but he then did not respond to a request to specify what was erroneous. The group is seeking to “align” the culture “with Biblical values and the American constitution, and that they will serve the common good,” he wrote. Using the official tax name for Ziklag, he wrote that “USATransForm does not endorse candidates for public office.” He declined to comment on the group’s members.

There are no bright lines or magic words that the IRS might look for when it investigates a charitable organization for engaging in political intervention, said Mayer. Instead, the agency examines the facts and circumstances of a group’s activities and makes a conclusion about whether the group violated the law.

The biggest risk for charities that intervene in political campaigns, Mayer said, is loss of their tax-exempt status. Donors’ ability to deduct their donations can be a major sell, not to mention it can create “a halo effect” for the group, Mayer added.

“They may be able to get more money this way,” he said, adding, “It boils down to tax evasion at the end of the day.”

“Dominion Over the Seven Mountains”

Ziklag has largely escaped scrutiny until now. The group describes itself as a “private, confidential, invitation-only community of high-net-worth Christian families.”

According to internal documents, it boasts more than 125 members that include business executives, pastors, media leaders and other prominent conservative Christians. Potential new members, one document says, should have a “concern for culture” demonstrated by past donations to faith-based or political causes, as well as a net worth of $25 million or more. None of the donors responded to requests for comment.

Tax records show rapid growth in the group’s finances in recent years. Its annual revenue climbed from $1.3 million in 2018 to $6 million in 2019 and nearly $12 million in 2022, which is the latest filing available.

The group’s spending is not on the scale of major conservative funders such as Miriam Adelson or Barre Seid, the electronics magnate who gave $1.6 billion to a group led by conservative legal activist Leonard Leo. But its funding and strategy represent one of the clearest links yet between the Christian right and the “election integrity” movement fueled by Trump’s baseless claims about voting fraud. Even several million dollars funding mass challenges to voters in swing counties can make an impact, legal and election experts say.

Ziklag was the brainchild of a Silicon Valley entrepreneur named Ken Eldred. It emerged from a previous organization founded by Eldred called United In Purpose, which aimed to get more Christians active in the civic arena, according to Bill Dallas, the group’s former director. United In Purpose generated attention in June 2016 when it organized a major meeting between then-candidate Trump and hundreds of evangelical leaders.

After Trump was elected in 2016, Eldred had an idea, according to Dallas. “He says, ‘I want all the wealthy Christian people to come together,’” Dallas recalled in an interview. Eldred told Dallas that he wanted to create a donor network like the one created by Charles and David Koch but for Christians. He proposed naming it David’s Mighty Men, Dallas said. Female members balked. Dallas found the passage in Chronicles that references David’s soldiers and read that they met in the city of Ziklag, and so they chose the name Ziklag.

The group’s stature grew after Trump took office. Vice President Mike Pence appeared at a Ziklag event, as did former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson, Sen. Ted Cruz, then-Rep. Mark Meadows and other members of Congress. In its private newsletter, Ziklag claims that a coalition of groups it assembled played “a hugely significant role in the selection, hearings and confirmation process” of Amy Coney Barrett for a Supreme Court seat in late 2020.

Confidential donor networks regularly invest hundreds of millions of dollars into political and charitable groups, from the liberal Democracy Alliance to the Koch-affiliated Stand Together organization on the right. But unlike Ziklag, neither of those organizations is legally set up as a true charity.

Ziklag appears to be the first coordinated effort to get wealthy donors to fund an overtly Christian nationalist agenda, according to historians, legal experts and other people familiar with the group. “It shows that this idea isn’t being dismissed as fringe in the way that it might have been in the past,” said Mary Ziegler, a legal historian and University of California, Davis law professor.

The Christian nationalism movement has a variety of aims and tenets, according to the Public Religion Research Institute: that the U.S. government “should declare America a Christian nation”; that American laws “should be based on Christian values”; that the U.S. will cease to exist as a nation if it “moves away from our Christian foundations”; that being Christian is essential to being American; and that God has “called Christians to exercise dominion over all areas of American society.”

One theology promoted by Christian nationalist leaders is the Seven Mountain Mandate. Each mountain represents a major industry or a sphere of public life: arts and media, business, church, education, family, government, and science and technology. Ziklag’s goal, the documents say, is to “take dominion over the Seven Mountains,” funding Christian projects or installing devout Christians in leadership positions to reshape each mountain in a godly way.

To address their concerns about education, Ziklag’s leaders and allies have focused on the public-school system. In a 2021 Ziklag meeting, Ziklag’s education mountain chair, Peter Bohlinger, said that Ziklag’s goal “is to take down the education system as we know it today.” The producers of the film “Sound of Freedom,” featuring Jim Caviezel as an anti-sex-trafficking activist, screened an early cut of the film at a Ziklag conference and asked for funds, according to Dallas.

The Seven Mountains theology signals a break from Christian fundamentalists such as Jerry Falwell Sr. and Pat Robertson. In the 1980s and ’90s, Falwell’s Moral Majority focused on working within the democratic process to mobilize evangelical voters and elect politicians with a Christian worldview.

The Seven Mountains theology embraces a different, less democratic approach to gaining power. “If the Moral Majority is about galvanizing the voters, the Seven Mountains is a revolutionary model: You need to conquer these mountains and let change flow down from the top,” said Matthew Taylor, a senior scholar at the Institute for Islamic, Christian and Jewish Studies and an expert on Christian nationalism. “It’s an outlined program for Christian supremacy.”

“The Amorphous, Tumultuous Wild West”

The Christian right has had compelling spokespeople and fierce commitment to its causes, whether they were ending abortion rights, allowing prayer in schools or displaying the Ten Commandments outside of public buildings. What the movement has often lacked, its leaders argue, is sufficient funding.

“If you look at the right, especially the Christian right, there were always complaints about money,” said legal historian Ziegler. “There’s a perceived gap of ‘We aren’t getting the support from big-name, big-dollar donors that we deserve and want and need.’”

That’s where Ziklag comes in.

Speaking late last year to an invitation-only gathering of Ziklaggers, as members are known, Charlie Kirk, who leads the pro-Trump Turning Point USA organization, named left-leaning philanthropists who were, in his view, funding the destruction of the nation: MacKenzie Scott, ex-wife of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos; billionaire investor and liberal philanthropist George Soros; and the two founders of Google, Larry Page and Sergey Brin.

“Why are secular people giving more generously than Christians?” Kirk asked, according to a recording of his remarks. “It would be a tragedy,” he added, “if people who hate life, hate our country, hate beauty and hate God wanted it more than us.”

“Ziklag is the place,” Kirk told the donors. “Ziklag is the counter.”

Similarly, Pence, in a 2021 appearance at a private Ziklag event, praised the group for its role in “changing lives, and it’s advanced the cause, it’s advanced the kingdom.”

A driving force behind Ziklag’s efforts is Lance Wallnau, a prominent Christian evangelist and influencer based in Texas who is described by Ziklag as a “Seven Mountains visionary & advisor.” The fiery preacher is one of the most influential figures on the Christian right, experts say, a bridge between Christian nationalism and Trump. He was one of the earliest evangelical leaders to endorse Trump in 2015 and later published a book titled “God’s Chaos Candidate: Donald J. Trump and the American Unraveling.” More than 1 million people follow him on Facebook. He doesn’t try to hide his views: “Yes, I am a Christian nationalist,” he said during one of his livestreams in 2021. (Wallnau did not respond to requests for comment.)

Wallnau has remained a Trump ally. He called Trump’s time in office a “spiritual warfare presidency” and popularized the idea that Trump was a “modern-day Cyrus,” referring to the Persian king who defeated the Babylonians and allowed the Jewish people to return to Jerusalem. Wallnau has visited with Trump at the White House and Trump Tower; last November, he livestreamed from a black-tie gala at Mar-a-Lago where Trump spoke.

Wallnau did not come up with the notion that Christians should try to take control of key areas of American society. But he improved on the idea by introducing the concept of the seven mountains and urged Christians to set about conquering them. The concept caught on, said Taylor, because it empowered Christians with a sense of purpose in every sphere of life.

As a preacher in the independent charismatic tradition, a fast-growing offshoot of Pentecostalism that is unaffiliated with any major denomination, Wallnau and his acolytes believe that God speaks to and through modern-day apostles and prophets — a version of Christianity that Taylor, in his forthcoming book “The Violent Take It By Force,” describes as “the amorphous, tumultuous Wild West of the modern church.” Wallnau and his ideas lingered at the fringes of American Christianity for years, until the boost from the Trump presidency.

The Ziklag files detail not only what Christians should do to conquer all seven mountains, but also what their goals will be once they’ve taken the summit. For the government mountain, one key document says that “the biblical role of government is to promote good and punish evil” and that “the word of God and prayer play a significant role in policy decisions.”

For the arts and entertainment mountain, goals include that 80% of the movies produced be rated G or PG “with a moral story,” and that many people who work in the industry “operate under a biblical/moral worldview.” The education section says that homeschooling should be a “fundamental right” and the government “must not favor one form of education over another.”

Other internal Ziklag documents voice strong opposition to same-sex marriage and transgender rights. One reads: “transgender acceptance = Final sign before imminent collapse.”

Heading into the 2024 election year, Ziklag executive director Drew Hiss warned members in an internal video that “looming above and beyond those seven mountains is this evil force that’s been manifesting itself.” He described it as “a controlling, evil, diabolical presence, really, with tyranny in mind.” That presence was concentrated in the government mountain, he said. If Ziklaggers wanted to save their country from “the powers of darkness,” they needed to focus their energies on that government mountain or else none of their work in any other area would succeed.

“Operation Checkmate”

In the fall of 2023, Wallnau sat in a gray armchair in his TV studio. A large TV screen behind him flashed a single word: “ZIKLAG.”

“You almost hate to put it out this clearly,” he said as he detailed Ziklag’s electoral strategy, “because if somebody else gets ahold of this, they’ll freak out.”

He was joined on set by Hiss, who had just become the group’s new day-to-day leader. The two men were there to record a special message to Ziklag members that laid out the group’s ambitious plans for the upcoming election year.

The forces arrayed against Christians were many, according to the confidential video. They were locked in a “spiritual battle,” Hiss said, against Democrats who were a “radical left Marxist force.” Biden, Wallnau said, was a senile old man and “an empty suit with an agenda that’s written and managed by somebody else.”

In the files, Ziklag says it plans to give out nearly $12 million to a constellation of groups working on the ground to shift the 2024 electorate in favor of Trump and other Republicans.

A prominent conservative getting money from Ziklag is Cleta Mitchell, a lawyer and Trump ally who joined the January 2021 phone call when then-President Trump asked Georgia’s secretary of state to “find” enough votes to flip Georgia in Trump’s favor.

Mitchell now leads a network of “election integrity” coalitions in swing states that have spent the last three years advocating for changes to voting rules and how elections are run. According to one internal newsletter, Ziklag was an early funder of Mitchell’s post-2020 “election integrity” activism, which voting-rights experts have criticized for stoking unfounded fears about voter fraud and seeking to unfairly remove people from voting rolls. In 2022, Ziklag donated $600,000 to the Conservative Partnership Institute, which in turn funds Mitchell’s election-integrity work. Internal Ziklag documents show that it provided funding to enable Mitchell to set up election integrity infrastructure in Florida, North Carolina and Wisconsin.

Now Mitchell is promoting a tool called EagleAI, which has claimed to use artificial intelligence to automate and speed up the process of challenging ineligible voters. EagleAI is already being used to mount mass challenges to the eligibility of hundreds of thousands of voters in competitive states, and, with Ziklag’s help, the group plans to ramp up those efforts.

According to an internal video, Ziklag plans to invest $800,000 in “EagleAI’s clean the rolls project,” which would be one of the largest known donations to the group.

Ziklag lists two key objectives for Operation Checkmate: “Secure 10,640 additional unique votes in Arizona (mirroring the 2020 margin of 10,447 votes), and remove up to one million ineligible registrations and around 280,000 ineligible voters in Arizona, Nevada, Georgia, and Wisconsin.”

In a recording of an internal Zoom call, Ziklag’s Mark Bourgeois stressed the electoral value of targeting Arizona. “I care about Maricopa County,” Bourgeois said at one point, referring to Arizona’s largest county, which Biden won four years ago. “That’s how we win.”

For Operation Watchtower, Wallnau explained in a members-only video that transgender policy was a “wedge issue” that could be decisive in turning out voters tired of hearing about Trump.

The left had won the battle over the “homosexual issue,” Wallnau said. “But on transgenderism, there’s a problem and they know it.” He continued: “They’re gonna wanna talk about Trump, Trump, Trump. … Meanwhile, if we talk about ‘It’s not about Trump. It’s about parents and their children, and the state is a threat,’” that could be the “target on the forehead of Goliath.”

The Ziklag files describe tactics the group plans to use around parental rights — policies that make it easier for parents to control what’s taught in public schools — to turn out conservative voters. In a fundraising video, the group says it plans to underwrite a “messaging and data lab” focused on parental rights that will supply “winning messaging to all our partner groups to create unified focus among all on the right.” The goal, the video says, is to make parental rights “the difference-maker in the 2024 election.”

According to Wallnau, Ziklag also plans to fund ballot initiatives in seven key states — Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Montana, Nevada and Ohio — that take aim at the transgender community by seeking to ban “genital mutilation.” The seven states targeted are either presidential battlegrounds or have competitive U.S. Senate races. None of the initiatives is on a state ballot yet.

“People that are lethargic about the election or, worse yet, they’re gonna be all Trump-traumatized with the news cycle — this issue will get people to come out and vote,” Wallnau said. “That ballot initiative can deliver swing states.”

The last prong of Ziklag’s 2024 strategy is Operation Steeplechase, which urges conservative pastors to mobilize their congregants to vote in this year’s election. This project will work in coordination with several prominent conservative groups that support former president Trump’s reelection, such as Turning Point USA’s faith-based group, the Faith and Freedom Coalition run by conservative operative Ralph Reed and the America First Policy Institute, one of several groups closely allied with Trump.

Ziklag says in a 2023 internal video that it and its allies will “coordinate extensive pastor and church outreach through pastor summits, church-focused messaging and events and the creation of pastor resources.” As preacher and activist John Amanchukwu said at a Ziklag event, “We need a church that’s willing to do anything and everything to get to the point where we reclaim that which was stolen from us.”

Six tax experts reviewed the election-related strategy discussions and tactics reported in this story. All of them said the activities tested or ran afoul of the law governing 501(c)(3) charities. The IRS and the Texas attorney general, which would oversee the Southlake, Texas, charity, did not respond to questions.

While not all of its political efforts appeared to be clear-cut violations, the experts said, others may be: The stated plan to mobilize voters “sympathetic to Republicans,” Ziklag officials openly discussing the goal to win the election, and Wallnau’s call to fund ballot initiatives that would “deliver swing states” while at the same time voicing explicit criticism of Biden all raised red flags, the experts said.

“I am troubled about a tax-exempt charitable organization that’s set up and its main operation seems to be to get people to win office,” said Phil Hackney, a professor of law at the University of Pittsburgh and an expert on tax-exempt organizations.

“They’re planning an election effort,” said Marcus Owens, a tax lawyer at Loeb and Loeb and a former director of the IRS’ exempt organizations division. “That’s not a 501(c)(3) activity.”

An instinct to incite: The challenge to tamp down political rhetoric in the wake of Trump’s shooting

According to Brady United, the nation’s oldest gun violence prevention group, 327 people are shot with guns every day in the United States. Over one million have been shot in the last decade. There are more civilian-owned firearms than there are people in this country. Gun violence is so ubiquitous that we only raise our heads once in a great while when the body count is shockingly high or the victims are particularly vulnerable, like elementary school children. But this weekend we all looked up sharply when a lone sniper shot at Donald Trump, grazing his ear, killing a spectator and wounding two others. 

These shootings are all horrific but this one was particularly shocking because America's history of political assassinations is very long. We are living in one of our acute periods of political violence, whether from religious terrorism or unbalanced people who are radicalized on the internet. There have been attempted assassinations, assaults and violent threats against members of Congress, the judiciary, the media and election officials in recent years and now the current Republican nominee for president, who also happens to be a former president. We are awash in political violence and the proliferation of guns has made it particularly deadly. 

We are awash in political violence and the proliferation of guns has made it particularly deadly. 

It is not surprising, therefore, that many people's immediate assumption was that the attempt on Donald Trump's life on Saturday was motivated by politics or ideology. While the vast majority of political violence of the past few years has been at the hands of jihadist radicals or right-wing extremists, there have been a few attackers out of the left, such as the man who shot Republican Congressman Steve Scalise, R – La., during a congressional baseball game practice. So it's understandable that people would suspect the shooting could be motivated by hostility to Donald Trump. 

Some of the rally-goers immediately turned on the reporters covering the event, reportedly claiming the press was responsible for the gunman's actions and had blood on their hands. Republican officials, like Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance, rumored to be Trump's top contender for running mate, immediately accused President Joe Biden and the Democrats of inciting the shooter by campaigning against Trump as a threat to democracy.

Some, like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., went even further:

The consensus on the right formed very quickly that this wasn't just an assassination attempt, it was the natural consequence of Democratic criticism of their political rival, Donald Trump. This set off a flurry of more solemn remonstrations from other Republicans demanding that the Democrats "change the tone" of their campaign rhetoric. President Biden obliged and very quickly condemned the attack in a Saturday address. In his formal Oval Office address Sunday, the president said, "I want to speak to you about the need for us to lower the temperature in our politics." All the former presidents followed suit with similar statements as well, as did virtually every other elected Democrat. 

Everyone said the "right thing" and they used all the comfortable conventional phrases. As David Frum observed in The Atlantic:

But conventional phrases don’t go unheard. They carry meanings, meanings no less powerful for being rote and reflexive. In rightly denouncing violence, we are extending an implicit pardon to the most violent person in contemporary U.S. politics. In asserting unity, we are absolving a man who seeks power through the humiliation and subordination of disdained others.

[…]

Nobody seems to have language to say: We abhor, reject, repudiate, and punish all political violence, even as we maintain that Trump remains himself a promoter of such violence, a subverter of American institutions, and the very opposite of everything decent and patriotic in American life.

Witness Speaker Mike Johnson unctuously declaring that Trump is "the most attacked persecuted president in history, maybe since Abraham Lincoln" and condemning the Democrats for saying the stakes in this election are anything unusual. When confronted with Donald Trump's own rhetoric he just kept on going:

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Donald Trump is a demagogue and there is no one in political life who is more rhetorically violent than he is. With all the talk of lowering the temperature, nobody's mentioned the fact that the most incendiary rhetoric about the event came from Donald Trump himself when he raised his fist and pumped it angrily yelling "fight" repeatedly to his crowd as he was led off the stage. I understand that he was probably in shock but that moment became instantly iconic and it was anything but calm and statesmanlike. 

With all the talk of lowering the temperature, nobody's mentioned the fact that the most incendiary rhetoric about the event came from Donald Trump himself when he raised his fist and pumped it angrily yelling "fight" repeatedly to his crowd as he was led off the stage.

What did Trump mean by that? Was it just another opportunity to look tough, like his glowering expression in his mug shot? Was he hamming it up for the cameras? Or was he once again exhorting his followers to "fight" like they did on January 6? With all the lugubrious handwringing over Biden and the Democrats saying Trump is a threat to democracy, nobody seems to care that his instinct in that horrible moment was to incite more violence. 

The internet has been deluged with merchandise commemorating the moment already. Every person at the GOP convention this week will no doubt be wearing a t-shirt with the famous photo from the Associated Press' Evan Vucci on it. Members of his faithful following are even getting tattoos of the image:

Saturday's event was the first such act of gun violence in many years that didn't follow the usual ritual of initial horror and wall-to-wall coverage before we quickly move on to the next one. This incident has inspired a totally different narrative. Few are talking about the fact that this was a 20-year-old kid who got a hold of a semi-automatic weapon, apparently owned by his father. Nobody is saying this is a problem of mental health, not easy access to guns. It's a rush to talk about politics and yet we have no evidence, as of yet, that this was a partisan political act at all. 

Yes, shooting at a presidential candidate or a president is inherently "political" by definition. But this shooter was a registered Republican who liked guns so he hardly fits the profile of a left-wing extremist inspired by Joe Biden's stirring denunciations of Donald Trump. And not all assassination attempts are political anyway. Remember, Ronald Reagan was shot by someone who was trying to impress a movie star.  

It's certainly possible that we'll find out that he was so upset by someone calling Donald Trump a fascist that he took action. It's also possible that we'll find out that he was just another unhappy, unstable young man who decided that his life as he knew it wasn't worth living and decided to go out in a blaze of glory. It literally happens in this country all the time and the great irony is that Donald Trump and his party have absolutely no answers for that plaguing problem at all. If that's what this turns out to be I guess we'll all just have to give him our thoughts and prayers and then move on. 

Attack on Trump exploited: “An opportunity to shame dissenters from the MAGA movement into silence”

“May you live in interesting times” is a curse, as these last three weeks in American politics remind us. President Joe Biden was routed by Donald Trump in their first presidential debate. Biden’s candidacy is now in serious doubt as leading Democrats have been calling for him to reconsider if he is the best candidate to win the 2024 election — and if his advanced age means that he is even capable of remaining in office and finishing his term. The historic debate was followed several days later by a Supreme Court decision that granted Trump (and his Republican-fascist successors) the power of a king by making them essentially above the law. In a cruel irony, the Supreme Court made Trump a de facto king the same week as the July 4th Independence Day holiday. A holiday meant to be a celebration of American freedom and the American democratic project instead felt like a funeral.

The American people would be allowed no rest or time to recover.

"I believe that it’s the fear of a tragic outcome — the end of the centuries-old American democratic experiment — that is behind much of the panic by Democrats and the piling on of a rabid media."

On Saturday, Donald Trump survived an assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Trump was hit in the ear by a bullet. The Secret Service rushed to protect him. In what will be an iconic image that may very well win Donald Trump the presidency, he would then stand up, his face covered in blood, and raise his fist in the air while saying “fight, fight, fight!” Trump’s followers at the rally were simultaneously stunned, shocked, scared, enthralled and excited as they responded with cheers and chants of “USA! USA! USA!” to the ex-president’s act of defiance in the face of death. For those of us watching these events live on television, it was utterly surreal.

The would-be assassin was swiftly killed by the Secret Service. Three people attending the rally were critically wounded. One of them would die from their injuries.

Whoever is controlling this simulation or writing the timeline for this version of Earth, needs to reset it. We “the Americans” are at our breaking point. “Trauma” is an overused word in 21st-century America. But “trauma” most certainly describes what the American people, both individually and collectively, have experienced these last few weeks.

In an attempt to better navigate these maddening events, I recently spoke with a range of experts about the country’s democracy crisis, where we are in the story that is the Age of Trump, and what may happen next with the 2024 election and America’s political life.

Steven Beschloss is a journalist and author of several books, including "The Gunman and His Mother." His website is America, America.

The anxious-filled turbulence of the last weeks, beginning with the media frenzy to drive Joe Biden out of the race and including the assassination attempt this weekend on Donald Trump, vividly illustrates the need for thoughtful, responsible leadership. I would like to imagine there are two presidential candidates who intrinsically and emphatically understand the need to renounce violence, but we know there is only one. That guarantees more anger and more violent incitement as the election ramps up. This period in our collective life remains a deeply polarized battle between those who love and are committed to democracy and those who would throw it all away and usher in fascism. I believe that it’s the fear of a tragic outcome—the end of the centuries-old American democratic experiment—that is behind much of the panic by Democrats and the piling on of a rabid media.

We have every reason to expect that Trump and the MAGA Republicans will exploit the assassination attempt to emphasize Trump’s near-martyrdom and divine necessity while falsely blaming Democrats for the hot rhetoric and rising climate of violence. As much as Joe Biden needs to aggressively argue the case against letting a convicted felon, rapist and wannabe dictator back into office, we also will benefit from leadership that reminds the country of the need for stability, unity and wisdom. I dearly hope an overwhelming majority gets the message.

Dr. Jennifer Mercieca is a historian of American political rhetoric. She is a professor in the Department of Communication and Journalism at Texas A&M University and author of several books including "Demagogue for President: The Rhetorical Genius of Donald Trump." 

We are in a very dark place politically. Trump will use the attack against him at his Pennsylvania rally to claim martyr status and will seek retribution against anyone who is viewed as disloyal. If he is put back in office, he will have unlimited power over us all. The biggest story in the United States (and around the world) is the threat of Donald Trump. His agenda for his second presidency is fascist and the Supreme Court ruling enables him to complete his authoritarian takeover without accountability or restraint. This is arguably the most dangerous time for democracy in America since its founding. We've never had one of the two major parties captured by an autocrat, nor have we had a compliant judiciary to support autocratic rule.

"This is arguably the most dangerous time for democracy in America since its founding."

That the media are talking about anything other than the fascist threat facing America is baffling and frustrating. It seems that they're not taking it seriously and they believe that once Trump is in power, he'll allow the media to continue to publish independently of his propaganda machine. They're sorely mistaken. If Trump becomes president again you can count on him controlling the media. If Trump wins again you cannot count on the rule of law, the protection of private property, or religious freedom. And the threat isn't just to America. If Trump becomes president again, he will withdraw the U.S. from NATO and form an alliance with autocratic leaders around the world—Putin, Orban, Netanyahu, MBS, and others. Together they will control the world's nuclear weapons, oil, and fresh food and water. They will have complete autocratic rule in their own countries where they will reward their friends and punish their enemies and they will rule over the globe like mafia leaders. I'm encouraged by the election results in the UK and France and other places around the world, but the fascist threat is still very real and very serious.

Darrin Bell is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist, creator of the syndicated comic strip “Candorville," and author of the graphic novel “The Talk." He is also a contributing cartoonist for the New Yorker.

I don’t think most Americans have realized how much the ground has shifted beneath their feet. There have been so very many horrendous rulings coming out of the MAGA Supreme Court over the past few years, that it’s hard to keep track of the ones (Chevron and the immunity ruling, in particular) that seem to have been calculated to pave the way for Project 2025’s dystopian blueprint for a new America. We’re no longer the nation we were one month ago.

The Republican Party’s transformation from “the party of law and order” into a crime syndicate was complete when they embraced a convicted felon who’s also an adjudicated rapist (it would take a run-on sentence to list everything else courts have nailed him for). He’s a treasonous would-be dictator and an entire right-wing movement is busy building the infrastructure of his autocratic second term. The debate was President Biden’s chance to call all that out and rally the nation against it, but he failed. And he’s spent the subsequent two weeks telling America he’s the best hope Democrats and the country have left. Maybe he’s only wrong because there’s no hope at all. It’s possible the right-wing anti-democracy movement has already succeeded.

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It feels as if we’re nearing the final page of the “democracy” chapter of a future American history book, and we’re about to turn the page to something else. Or maybe we turned it long ago, when we as a nation allowed the Supreme Court to decide the presidency in 2000, and it’s taken this long for us to realize it. Whatever happens next, we need to wake up and realize that the country we thought we had is long gone. If Trump wins, there’s no telling how far it can unravel. If he loses and Democrats keep the Senate, Democrats need to recognize they’ve been losing a cold civil war for decades, and start fighting. They need to kill the filibuster and expand the Court on day one, or whatever else they try to do to counter this existential threat won’t matter.

Last night, a MAGA (formerly known as “conservative”) cartoonist tried to shame me for spending nearly the last decade pointing out Trump’s authoritarian proclivities, and for depicting Trump and his movement as an existential threat to American democracy. It didn’t matter to him that the shooter was a registered Republican, he sensed an opportunity to shame dissenters from the MAGA movement into silence. I expect to see a lot more of that between now and the election. And I expect it’ll work, because Republicans and Democrats are held to different standards.

When a MAGA foot soldier bludgeoned Paul Pelosi nearly to death with a hammer (only because his real target, the Speaker of the House, wasn’t home at the time), Republicans incessantly mocked Pelosi. Donald Trump himself mocked Pelosi. When a MAGA mob invaded the Capitol building and domestic terrorists hunted lawmakers with zip ties and bear spray, Donald Trump did nothing to stop them for hours, and has spent the last few years promising to pardon them if re-elected. That’s the reprehensible fascist Republicans are now going to demand we stop depicting as a reprehensible fascist.

David Pepper is a lawyer, writer, political activist, and former elected official. His new book is "Saving Democracy: A User's Manual for Every American."

The American people do not support the extremism of the far right at any level. After Dobbs, that has been reflected in Democratic overperformance again and again, from Kansas to Alabama to Ohio.  I navigate the ups and downs of things I can’t control by focusing on the things I CAN control and where I can make the biggest difference: fighting for democracy at all levels and ensuring people understand the many freedoms they would lose if Trump and his allies at all levels win in 2024.

The news media and other observers are completely missing the big picture by focusing on one candidate’s poor debate performance. 

For example, in the same debate, the former president and current GOP candidate said that Putin told him it was his “dream” to take over Ukraine. There was no follow-up question at the time, and as far as I can tell, nothing since. The details of that conversation truly matter. For this year’s campaign, we deserve to know what someone who was Commander in Chief at the time (I presume that's when the meeting happened) and wants to be Commander in Chief again, said in response to such a dramatic statement. His response may have impacted Putin’s decision-making. 

So, we see weeks of frenzy over Biden’s debate performance and age, and nothing about Trump’s Putin reveal, just as one example.

That’s a problem, and not just for Biden. But for democracy.

Of course, the press will and should keep asking questions of Biden. But the press must ask equally tough and persistent questions of Trump as well—in the moment (like that debate), and after, beginning now.

Applying two standards because Trump’s anti-democracy instincts are already understood is itself a step away from democracy. 

I don’t sense that people have gotten it wrong or that Trump was considered “doomed” because of his multiple criminal trials, for example. I’ve always sensed that this would be a tight election, which of course has people on edge because the stakes are so enormous. 

I do think there’s a blind spot of covering legal matters as if they have a greater impact on votes than they do. Our rule of law is so broken, courts are not going to save democracy—it’s on the voters. For that and other reasons, I’d move half the nation’s press corps out of D.C. and away from court coverage and out to states, where so much of the damage to democracy is taking place. 

What do I think happens next?

I guarantee that the ever-growing, multi-partisan, pro-democracy army keeps working through thick and thin. That grassroots energy has fueled two years of overperformance, and it’s the key to protecting democracy this year. 

An attempt on Donald Trump’s life should be a wake-up call for the Democratic Party

After surviving an assassination attempt at his Pennsylvania rally, Donald Trump is in a stronger position than ever to win a second term in November. With his active supporters even more motivated in the wake of the shooting Saturday, preventing a Trump victory is now unlikely. Still, we must try.

Top Trump strategists are very eager for their candidate to run against Joe Biden. They’re now worried that the Democratic Party might end up with a different standard bearer.

The Atlantic recently published Tim Alberta’s in-depth examination of the Trump campaign’s strategic approach. “Everything they have been doing, the targeting that they have been doing of voters, the advertisements that they’re cutting, the fund-raising ploys that they’re making, the viral Internet videos that they have been churning out, they’re all designed around Joe Biden,” Alberta told PBS' "NewsHour."

“So if suddenly he were replaced at the top of the ticket,” he added, “I think in many ways it’s back to square one for the Trump campaign. They recognize this. And I think they’re deeply unnerved by the possibility of a switcheroo at the top of the Democratic ticket.”

Last weekend, the Washington Post put it this way: “As Democrats debate the future of Biden’s reelection bid, Republicans would prefer he stay in a race they believe they are already winning.”

On Sunday, “Face the Nation reported “top Democratic sources believe that Democrats who had thoughts about challenging President Biden are now standing down ‘because of this fragile political moment.’” Yet a guest on the same CBS program, Democratic Rep. Jason Crow, warned of a “high risk” that his party will lose the election “unless there is a major change.” He said that messaging from Biden’s campaign “is not effectively breaking through.” Additionally, an unnamed “senior House Democrat” reportedly told Axios over the weekend that "We've all resigned ourselves to a second Trump presidency."

While Biden boosters like to talk about national polling that sometimes puts Biden within a couple of points of Trump, such surveys mean little. Due to the Electoral College, the swing states will determine the winner. Biden is behind — and falling further behind in most of them. Arizona, Georgia and Nevada have moved from “toss up” states to “lean Republican” following Biden’s disastrous CNN debate, according to the Cook Political Report. With an approval rating that now hovers around an abysmal 37 percent, Biden is increasingly playing defense in states he won easily four years ago.

“Democrats’ concerns about Biden’s ability to win are expanding beyond this cycle’s predetermined battlegrounds into states that long ago turned blue in presidential elections,” Politico reported last week, in an article raising doubts about Biden’s prospects in New Hampshire, Maine, New Mexico and Minnesota. The headline: “Dems Are Freaking Out About Biden Even in Once Safely Blue States.”

Around the country, Democratic candidates are running well ahead of Biden. Last week, the Economist/YouGov poll found that “96 percent of registered Democrats say they will vote for a Democratic House candidate in the fall, compared with 85 percent who plan to vote for Biden.”

Biden’s presence at the top of the ticket promises not only deliver the White House to Trump but also the House and Senate to Republicans.

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In the light of such realities less than four months before Election Day, it’s alarming to hear many elected Democrats — including some progressives in Congress — publicly claim that Biden is just fine as the party’s nominee.

The happy-talk denialism from those congressional progressives shows a disconnect from the progressive grassroots. Many activists who devoted months of their lives on behalf of Biden in 2020 to vote Trump out are disaffected from Biden in 2024. Many are furious over Biden’s nonstop support of Israel during its continuous slaughter of civilians in Gaza. That includes Arab-American and Muslim activists and groups who mobilized for Biden four years ago against his Islamophobic opponent. Many climate activists who fought for Biden in 2020 against the “drill, baby, drill” Trump are disgusted with his reversals on climate policy.

So, the depressing poll numbers may understate the problem for Biden as the Democratic nominee, because they don’t count the gap in campaign volunteer energy — especially in contrast with the highly energized MAGA base. Early this year, an anonymous letter from 17 Biden 2024 campaign staffers urged Biden to reverse himself on Gaza and seek an immediate ceasefire: “Biden for President staff have seen volunteers quit in droves, and people who have voted blue for decades feel uncertain about doing so for the first time ever.”

In 2017, the Trump presidency was properly mocked for its brazen assertions of “alternative facts.” It’s now disconcerting that Biden and his advocates so often lapse into puffery as to his true political situation.

That situation was laid out with chilling candor in a detailed New York Times piece by longtime Democratic strategist Doug Sosnik, who was a senior adviser to President Bill Clinton and has advised dozens of governors and senators. The article makes for grim reading: “President Biden has spent much of 2024 with a more challenging path to winning a second presidential term in November than Donald Trump. But for reasons that have become glaringly obvious, that path has all but vanished.”

Biden “not only faces losing battleground states he won in 2020,” Sosnik wrote, “he is also at risk of losing traditional Democratic states like Minnesota and New Hampshire, which Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama carried. If current trends continue, Mr. Trump could rack up one of the most decisive presidential victories since 2008.”

Yet so many Democrats in Congress are refusing to call for Biden to step aside. And a lot of them are even cheering him on, encouraging his intransigence, as though nothing is amiss. 

There is still time, however, to course correct. Until the Democratic Party officially nominates its presidential candidate, the push for Biden to withdraw from the ticket should continue.

An apprehensive flight into Milwaukee for the RNC

As I write this column, I am on the way to Milwaukee to cover the Republican National Convention. My plane is packed with GOP delegates from New Jersey and New York, journalists, and civilians who have love or business somewhere in the Midwest.

There’s a palpable sense of apprehension on board. It’s the day after former president Donald Trump was wounded in an assassination attempt in what can only be described as a spectacular failure of the multi-billion dollar national security apparatus. As passengers who boarded at Newark Liberty International, we’ve all just submitted to being poked and prodded by the TSA after taking our shoes and belts off in a kind of homage to a decades-old regime virtually unchanged since after 9/11.

Political violence is in our DNA and anyone who says otherwise hasn’t been paying attention.

Since the last in-person national Republican convention in 2016, there’s been a global mass death event, global mass protests after the police murder of George Floyd and a violent insurrection timed to happen as President Joe Biden’s 2020 electoral college win was to be certified. 

On the plane, reporters and Republican activists feel each other out in their across-the-aisle introductions. "What outlet do you work for?" comes the inquiry, and then the cautious response.

Even in a wounded state, former President Trump struck a pugilistic profile mouthing what appeared to be the word “fight!” That footage of his blood streaming down his face from his ear is like a Rorschach video. For tens of millions of Americans he was a near martyr for others he’s a TV reality star.

The gunfire that exploded in Butler, Pennsylvania left dead the alleged gunman and an innocent bystander, Corey Comperatore, a former fire chief, who shielded his family from the incoming sniper fire from the shooter’s AR-15. Once again, a nation that spends close to a trillion dollars of borrowed money on weapons and security is made to seem vulnerable to the actions of a lone actor.

While media commentators assert the broad daylight high-profile shooting of a former President shocks the conscience, it’s just another day in a nation where the smell of gunpowder always hangs in the air. There’s a gun violence epidemic in America with the Brady Center estimating that on an average day 327 Americans are shot and 117 die from their wounds.

Political violence is in our DNA and anyone who says otherwise hasn’t been paying attention. As I was packing up my reference materials for the convention, I came across a letter I wrote in August of 1964 to Senator Clifford Case, who was the last New Jersey Republican to be elected to the U.S. Senate. I wrote to suggest that the FBI should be in charge of the investigation into Kennedy’s murder. In my third-grade voice, I expressed concern that the 1964 presidential campaign was well underway and there were still so many unanswered questions about the circumstances surrounding John Kennedy’s murder. I had been in charge of my younger brothers and sisters when my parents went to mass at St. Catherine’s in Glen Rock in the days after JFK was killed. I watched in real time horror on TV as Lee Harvey Oswald was shot in the gut during his transfer in Dallas. It was just a warmup for Malcolm X, MLK Jr., and RFK. It’s what we do.

In the decades since the national security state’s need to control information has come at a price of public confidence. Back in 2023, a Gallup poll found that 65 percent of Americans believed there was a conspiracy behind the JFK murder. Files from that era are still classified. Scroll forward to the lead-up to the Jan. 6 insurrection and the MAGA movement’s efforts in the aftermath of Trump’s 2020 defeat to subvert the electoral college. According to the Inspector General for the Department of Homeland Security, which has responsibility for overseeing the U.S. Secret Service, “many U.S. Secret Service text messages from Jan. 5 and 6, 2021 were erased as part of a device-replacements program.” We never got a full accounting of what the U.S. Secret Service knew and when they knew it about the first-of-its-kind attack on the U.S. Capitol. It’s always "need to know." 

There’s precious little time for self-examination of any kind.

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After a twenty-year-plus military binge driven by our further war on terror, Brown University’s Watson Institute estimates the world lost 2.5 million lives indirectly due to the economic collapse, “the destruction of public and health infrastructure," and environmental contamination. Watson estimates the U.S. spent $8 trillion dollars in the 20 years since 9/11, setting off the worst refugee crisis since WW II, and collapsed a few nation-states in the process. Did we have any reason to feel safer?

It’s a very open question as to whether or not we can gather as Americans in large crowds at a national political convention in a convivial way that harkens back to those halcyon days captured by Norman Rockwell. The decimation of local newspapers and community-based owned and operated TV and radio stations has left us as a nation that’s had authenticated news and information replaced by aggregated cheap to produce social media.

This content is distributed by the corporate news media that’s entirely fixated on driving online traffic and uses analytics that customize our “news” feeds to match our existing prejudices and biases. Is it any wonder we don’t have a consensus on who won the 2020 election?

This degraded information ecology has both profound public health and civil defense implications. No doubt, this fracturing of our national narrative along the faultiness of red and blue states helped drive our catastrophic COVID death toll of close to 1.2 million Americans. Consider the challenge of finding the necessary public consensus required to confront the real challenges presented by the climate crisis.

By becoming reliant on a news media that relies on affirming our biases we’ve lost the intellectual capacity to challenge ourselves by asking how we know what we know. This becomes particularly problematic when as citizens in a democracy we have to try and hold the national security apparatus accountable, yet we don’t have a clue about what’s actually going on.

Farmworkers are at greatest exposure risk for bird flu, but given few protections

Dairy farmworkers often spend 10 to 12 hours a day milking dairy cattle in crowded, wet environments. They are in constant, intimate contact with unpasteurized cow milk, a known carrier of H5N1, the viral strain of bird flu that jumped from poultry to cows back in March.

But despite being the most exposed population to the virus, farmworkers are also offered few protections. To prevent the spread of bird flu among the general public, experts say we need to first protect the health of  farmworkers.

“I don't want us to ignore what is happening right now, which is that farmworkers are getting infected with this virus,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist at Brown University.

Since the first herd was infected on March 25 in Texas, over 148 dairy cattle herds have contracted the virus across a dozen states (though experts believe there could be more) and so far, there have been four confirmed human cases in Americans, all of whom worked on dairy farms. Another case dates back to 2022 after a worker was exposed to poultry.

So far the symptoms experienced by the workers have been mild, but five cases shouldn’t be used to determine the severity of the virus, Nuzzo explained. Of the just over 900 people who have ever been infected with Avian Flu since 1997, nearly half of them have died, according to the World Health Organization.

 “I don't think we can say anything intelligent about the virus based on that limited number of cases,” Nuzzo said. 

"We shouldn't be in a position of waiting for farmworkers to become severely ill, or to die."

To spread between humans at the rate needed to start a pandemic, bird flu would have to adapt to the right combinations of mutations. Nuzzo said it’s difficult to estimate how likely that combination is, but the priority right now should be to treat farmworkers who are already infected and at-risk. 

“We shouldn't be in a position of waiting for farmworkers to become severely ill, or to die. We should be thinking about what we can do today to prevent that from happening,” Nuzzo said.

There has been overwhelming focus on the risk bird flu poses to consumers and the general public, such as how it may impact egg and dairy prices, which is valid but “slightly misguided,” said Elizabeth Strater, the director of strategic campaigns at United Farmworkers (UFW), the nation’s largest farm workers’ union. Strater agrees that the focus right now should be on treatment and prevention for farmworkers, which will benefit the public in the long run.


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“We know who is at risk, because we know who is getting sick. And that's the workers who have that very intimate contact with raw milk with infecting others and things like that,” Strater said. Many farmworkers also lack a social safety net — health insurance, job security, American citizenship, etc. — putting them at even greater risk.

Of the 150,000 dairy workers across the U.S. nearly one in five are immigrants and many are undocumented. They face a high level of job precarity and are unlikely to do anything that will put their job — and possibly their immigration status — at risk, explains Alexis Guild, the vice president of strategy at the nonprofit labor advocacy group Farmworker Justice.

"These are folks that are going to avoid testing … these are folks that are economically desperate."

“Workers are less likely to assert themselves, ask for protective equipment or go to a doctor when they're sick, because they worry about losing wages, they worry about being fired, and they worry about potential immigration consequences,” she said.

But experts say things like personal protective equipment (PPE), medical care, paid sick leave and job security are essential to farmworker health and stopping the spread of H5N1. Farmworkers have historically been excluded from basic labor laws like paid sick leave, so taking time off to get tested or seek treatment could put one’s job at risk. 

Limited access to paid sick leave helped contribute to the spread of COVID-19 among farmworkers, many of whom reported being afraid of losing their job or being deported after taking time off from work to access health care services, according to a study by the National Center for Farmworker Health. 

Thus far, human testing of bird flu has relied on a relatively voluntary approach. If somebody experiences symptoms, they are expected to go to the emergency room and get tested. But migrant workers aren’t likely to seek medical treatment for anything but a life-threatening condition, Strater explains.

“These are folks that are going to avoid testing, these are folks that are going to avoid state and federal agencies, and these are folks that are economically desperate so that they're not in a position to report symptoms or take the day off when they are sick,” she said.

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To encourage testing, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently announced that farmworkers would be compensated $75 if they got tested for avian flu. Strater said it’s something, but if they test positive and have to miss a week's worth of wages, $75 “won’t cover it.”

To test in a way that is safe and comfortable for farmworkers, their employment needs to be protected, Strater said. In the short term, UFW pushing for PPE, paid sick leave and greater financial compensation for testing while ensuring that farmworkers understand the risk H5N1 poses to their health.

Down the road, both Strater and Nuzzo hope farmworkers will be among the first to receive the vaccine for Avian flu once it is developed, which is similar to a strategy recently proposed in Finland.

“Think about it like a protective ring around the source of the infection and separating that from the general public,” Strater said.

FBI leading investigation into “fundamental security failure” at Trump rally

Following the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump during a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on Saturday evening, GOP Rep. Mike Turner of Ohio appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday, stating the importance of a full investigation into an apparent lapse of security at the event, which nearly cost Trump his life.

“How is it that someone could get on a roof with a superior position, with a weapon, and attempt to assassinate former President Donald Trump?” he asked, in a quote obtained from AP News. “It’s just unthinkable, unfathomable. We need to know, is this a protocol failure? Is this a resources issue? Or is this just a failure of those who were on site that day?”

According to updates from CNN and other outlets, the FBI is now leading an investigation into the shooting, and there are calls from Congress to look into what is being viewed as a security failure at the rally which, in addition to Trump's injuries, left several others critically injured and one man dead — not including the death of the 20-year-old shooter himself. 

Per the outlet's reporting, "House Speaker Mike Johnson vowed a 'full investigation' of the shooting, featuring testimony from USSS, DHS and the FBI, and two Republicans on the Senate Homeland Security Committee have also called for an investigation."

“This cannot happen, and I demand accountability,” says Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego.

“The investigation will really give us an opportunity to take a look at where any failures occurred and what can be done better in the future,” Pennsylvania State Police Lt. Col. George Bivens said in a quote to NBC News

U.S. leaders show support following Donald Trump’s rally shooting

The apparent attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump sent shock waves through the geo-political biosphere, as U.S. leaders chimed in to condemn the attack. 

Shortly after the shooting on Saturday evening, President Joe Biden addressed the nation and said that “everybody must condemn” the events that took place, the Associated Press reported

Showing support for Trump's recovery after his injuries at the Butler, Pennsylvania rally, Biden spoke with a teleprompter and said “The idea that there’s violence in America like this is just unheard of.” In a White House Press Release, the president was able to confirm that Trump is “safe and doing well.” He added that the nation must unite in its condemnation of what happened. 

A White House official told NBC News that a call between Biden and Trump after the rally shooting was “good, short and respectful.”

Vice President Kamala Harris also shunned the “senseless shooting” that took place, saying that there is simply no place for it. “We must all condemn this abhorrent act and do our part to ensure that it does not lead to more violence,” she wrote in a White House Press Release.

Sympathies and well-wishes echoed amongst Democrats and Republicans alike, Reuters reported.

Democratic U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer expressed that he was “horrified by what happened at the Trump rally,” adding that “Political violence has no place in our country.”

Republican U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson offered prayers for Trump and gratitude to the law enforcement at the scene. “This horrific act of political violence at a peaceful campaign rally has no place in this country and should be unanimously and forcefully condemned,” he said.

Republican U.S. Senator J.D. Vance — one of Trump’s possible running mates — blamed President Biden, to an extent. "Today is not just some isolated incident,” he said. “The central premise of the Biden campaign is that President Donald Trump is an authoritarian fascist who must be stopped at all costs. That rhetoric led directly to President Trump's attempted assassination."

On Sunday, a traditionally mum Melania Trump issued a statement of her own regarding her husband's harrowing campaign event, saying, "America, the fabric of our gentle nation is tattered, but our courage and common sense must ascend and bring us back together as one."