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Trump ramps up the threats of violence — and as usual, the media looks away

Donald Trump is continuing his campaign of public threats to injure, imprison or kill his perceived personal enemies, and other foes of the MAGA movement, if and when he takes power a year from now. The most recent example came in a series of posts on Truth Social last Thursday morning. Although certain aspects of these posts made headlines with respect to Trump's preposterous claims of immunity, the full context is important.

In his trademark all-caps prose, Trump proposed that any U.S president "MUST HAVE FULL IMMUNITY, WITHOUT WHICH IT WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE FOR HIM/HER TO PROPERLY FUNCTION." It's unusually generous, by Trump's standards, even to consider other actual or hypothetical presidents. Then he continued:

ANY MISTAKE, EVEN IF WELL INTENDED, WOULD BE MET WITH ALMOST CERTAIN INDICTMENT BY THE OPPOSING PARTY AT TERM END. EVEN EVENTS THAT “CROSS THE LINE” MUST FALL UNDER TOTAL IMMUNITY, OR IT WILL BE YEARS OF TRAUMA TRYING TO DETERMINE GOOD FROM BAD. THERE MUST BE CERTAINTY. EXAMPLE: YOU CAN’T STOP POLICE FROM DOING THE JOB OF STRONG & EFFECTIVE CRIME PREVENTION BECAUSE YOU WANT TO GUARD AGAINST THE OCCASIONAL “ROGUE COP” OR “BAD APPLE.” SOMETIMES YOU JUST HAVE TO LIVE WITH “GREAT BUT SLIGHTLY IMPERFECT.” ALL PRESIDENTS MUST HAVE COMPLETE & TOTAL PRESIDENTIAL IMMUNITY, OR THE AUTHORITY & DECISIVENESS OF A PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES WILL BE STRIPPED & GONE FOREVER. HOPEFULLY THIS WILL BE AN EASY DECISION. GOD BLESS THE SUPREME COURT! [Emphasis added.]

For Trump to claim that police must be allowed free rein to commit acts of violence with impunity was not a random "example." Its implications should be obvious. This from the same man whose attorney recently argued in federal court that Trump, as president, could have ordered political rivals executed and accepted bribes without being held accountable before the law. (Under this ludicrous theory, impeachment is the only recourse against a criminal or corrupt president.) 

This also from the same man who publicly threatened the life of Gen. Mark Milley, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, for alleged disloyalty because Milley refused to support a coup attempt against American democracy and the Constitution. And from the same man who has repeatedly threatened to have President Biden, Attorney General Merrick Garland, special counsel Jack Smith, the judges and prosecutors in his various trials and virtually anyone else (including journalists) who attempts to hold him responsible for his crimes prosecuted for “treason.” As Trump is well aware, the traditional punishment for treason is execution.

Trump no longer bothers to conceal his desire to rule as dictator of a virtual police state, and to claim the right and power to imprison, torture and execute any and all who oppose him.

NYU historian Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a leading expert on fascism, discussed Trump’s murderous intent in a Thursday social media post:

Trump is telling Americans very clearly that he will be jailing and killing Americans. Anyone who votes for him is complicit with these future crimes because of this transparency & these threats. Americans cannot say they did not know ahead of time.

Journalist Luke Zaleski echoed that warning:

Trump is telling you he’s gonna send his hessians to abuse you without due process. He’s a dictator emerging to take revenge on US citizens. Trump wants revenge. He’s a sick puppy, folks — and he’ll sic his dogs on anyone who fights to save America from him.

This “right” of the leader and ruling party to kill or abuse members of the public with impunity, and to reshape the law to their purposes, is a defining feature of dictatorships and autocracies.

Trump’s most recent threats against the American people (and, by implication, against democracy and civil society) attracted some mainstream news coverage for a day or so before disappearing down the memory hole. (Zeeshan Aleem’s essay at MSNBC was a notable exception).

Even so, there was little discussion of Trump’s specific threat or his self-comparison to a violent "rogue cop," licensed to beat, torture, abduct or murder citizens with "total immunity" from prosecution. At this point, some of the most stalwart and reliable voices in the mainstream media have fallen into the trap of normalizing Trump’s deviant behavior. One prominent commentator, for example, wrote about Trump’s most recent threats while entirely ignoring his "bad apple" analogy. That commentator also never offered any clear statement or interpretation of what Trump's promises of violent revenge will mean for the American people in practice. Instead, this journalist relied on quoting someone else, in rather too oblique a fashion, to get nearer the point. 

That kind of political ventriloquism is utterly inadequate to the task of defeating Trumpism and the larger neofascist movement. Those people with a public platform who claim to defend democracy have a responsibility to be direct, bold and consistent in their truth-telling.

Why do we still face this problem? Why has the mainstream news media as an institution so consistently failed to focus on the MAGA movement’s promises, threats and acts of political violence and thuggery?

There are many reasons. Even after almost nine years of Trump's central role in our political life, many in the mainstream media still believe that "normal" politics and the supposed institutions of democracy will be enough stop Trump and today’s Republican fascists. What follows from that is the naive hope or belief that continuing to cover Trump as a normal candidate, according to obsolete horserace standards of “fairness” and “balance,” will somehow cause our democracy crisis to go away. Coverage of the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary, as Trump's rivals have fallen away, represented a brief return to familiar and comfortable terrain for the mainstream news media. But there is nothing familiar or comfortable about the Trumpocene era, and that security blanket will shortly be ripped away.

After almost nine years of Donald Trump on the political stage, many in the mainstream media still believe that "normal" politics and the supposed institutions of democracy will be enough to stop him.

Of course there's also the ad revenue, along with the clicks, shares and "traffic" — the material incentives, in other words — that may flow from normalizing Trump and his behavior. This is motivated, not unreasonably, by a fear that telling the American people what they need to hear about this worsening crisis, instead of what they want to hear, will result in backlash and buzzkill, meaning lower revenues. The attention economy, like other aspects of consumer capitalism, is demand-driven. As I have repeatedly warned in this space and elsewhere, hope-peddling, happy-pill selling and catering to the emotional immaturity of the American public can be a lucrative business. 

Let's not overlook that the “news media” consists of real people and human organizations: Trump's threats against his supposed enemies, which surely include journalists, are frightening and upsetting. Ignoring or downplaying the seriousness of those threats is an understandable reaction to stress that makes it easier to go to work every day. Responding appropriately to this crisis is, without question, damaging to one’s emotional, spiritual and physical health.


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Realpolitik and self-interest may also be at play. Some reporters, editors and producers in mainstream media are positioning themselves with the expectation that Trump will win the election. They want access to his regime; the first Trump presidency was a media feeding frenzy. 

Furthermore, many leading voices in the media, especially the professional centrists and institutionalists, have been conditioned by privilege to believe they are immune from any possible danger or threat, even from a dictatorial regime. Because of their skin color, their gender and sexual orientation, their class backgrounds and their lives rich with social and cultural capital, they cannot imagine they ever could become targets of state-sponsored violence. They may well learn otherwise.

As historian Heather Cox Richardson told me recently:

A lot of privileged white men simply do not believe that there's a different way to look at the world than theirs. And they also don't believe that anything could happen to them. … [M]any of them, in my experience, seem to believe that everybody ideally lives in a world in which they make all their own decisions, and they have no demands on them. … Now, I don't know a woman who approaches the world that way. Because there are always family demands and friends’ demands and children and work demands. There's a web of demands on you. You start from a position in which you can't imagine that you can do whatever you want under any circumstances. And then if you take a step beyond that and you actually add into it, people who wish you ill …  the world feels much more like a web than a world in which you can do anything you want. I can imagine a world in which I am not either allowed to do what I want, but also in which my very life is at stake. I sometimes think that that's much easier for somebody like me to imagine, who's worked as a waitress … than for somebody who came from a middle class suburb and went to a good school and has a good solid job.

In a series of essays at The American Prospect, historian Rick Perlstein shared a conversation he had with journalist Jeff Sharlet about the New York Times and its failings. Sharlet told him that on many previous occasions he had resisted others' use of the word "fascist," until he finally concluded that, in the Trump era, "This is the real deal. There’s a real fascist movement. And I don’t think we have on the table all the storytelling tools we need to counter it."

The result was Sharlet's book "The Undertow," based on holding "hundreds of conversations, witnessing dozens of political and church services, and logging thousands of miles on the road." But in a public discussion with Sharlet, an unnamed New York Times journalist — who evidently had not read Sharlet's book — rejected the word "fascism": 

He was especially smug in the first utterance he offered to the audience: “Yeah, I don’t know if I would use that word” — his eyebrows arched disapprovingly — “it’s not a word we use in The New York Times.”

Then he practically giggled.

Sharlet then directed a question to him — “with love and affection for The New York Times and the dilemma that you’re in: What is the argument against calling that ‘fascism’?” …

“For the same reason we don’t call Trump ‘racist.’ It’s more powerful to say what something is than to offer a label on it that is going to be debated, you know, and distract from the reporting that goes into it."

Sharlet: “Who is debating Trump’s racism right now?”

Mr. Times: “You can say something is ‘racist.’ You can say something is a racist thing. But putting a label on someone is distorting from the reporting that we do. And the reporting is much harder. And much more powerful than the writing” — what he implied was the only thing Sharlet did, perhaps in an armchair in a book-lined study, smoking a pipe, mongering labels. “And people are welcome to label things however they want, but there’s frankly nobody else doing the reporting that we do. … That’s what ten million people are subscribing to The New York Times for … And not to like sound too high and mighty, but the market has spoken, and they like what we’re doing.”

Privilege is the ability to avoid discomfort, and to bend subjective reality to fit your whims and desires. Black and brown people, Muslims, Jews, women, the LGBTQ community and members of other marginalized and targeted groups lack such a luxury. The mainstream media’s willful blindness to the threat of Trump and his movement, and what it will mean if he takes power in 2025, is creating the conditions for an American dictatorship and its reign of terror.

Horror movie for progressives: Biden vs. Trump 2.0 is really happening

The New Hampshire primary has confirmed that the United States is on the way to a disastrous fall election. Unless a health crisis forces withdrawal from the presidential race, either Donald Trump or Joe Biden is headed for a second term. The electoral outlook is now dystopian.

President Biden’s role as party boss worked out well for him in New Hampshire. No doubt mindful that he finished fifth in the state’s 2020 primary with a dismal 8 percent of the vote, Biden directed the Democratic National Committee to decertify New Hampshire’s historic first-in-the-nation primary, and kept his name off the 2024 ballot. Yet pro-Biden forces ran a write-in campaign that got him nearly two-thirds of the vote on Tuesday.

The story might have been quite different if a credible progressive candidate for president had stepped forward to give Biden a run for his money. But the closest competitor, Rep. Dean Phillips, D-Minn. — whose overall record is to the right of Biden — finished with 20 percent of the New Hampshire primary vote. Progressive candidate Marianne Williamson, who has never held elective office or led a social-justice movement, received just 5 percent.

Faced with such meager opposition, Biden romped to victory in New Hampshire. Now, with many polls showing him trailing Trump, including in the crucial swing states, the Democratic Party is on track to nominate a notably weak candidate at a time when epitomizing the status quo is apt to be a losing proposition. Polling shows that fully three-quarters of the public believe the country is moving in the wrong direction.

The factors that got us to this abysmal situation are numerous, but any meaningful list should include the conformity of so many elected officials and activist groups who present themselves as progressive. For many, the temptation to make excuses for Biden and praise him unduly has proven too powerful to resist. In many cases, their real concerns about Biden have been expressed only in private — even after it became clear that Biden’s presidency was stuck in such grim grooves as “all of the above” energy policies accompanied by climate doubletalk, anemic responses to systemic racism, a belligerent foreign policy with scant regard for human rights, and rampant militarism.

As the Biden presidency deteriorated, the left could and should have felt an imperative to generate sustained pressure in the hope of countering these ominous trends. Yet by the end of 2021, the leadership of the Congressional Progressive Caucus had begun what became a pattern of unwisely deferring to the man in the Oval Office.

A turning point came in late 2021 when CPC leaders jettisoned their crucial pledge that the pending infrastructure bill would get through Congress only in tandem with the Build Back Better package — which, as my RootsAction colleague Sam Rosenthal wrote, “contained far more progressive priorities than did the infrastructure bill.” That power struggle “failed catastrophically for progressives, as mounting pressure from the White House and moderate Democrats drove the CPC to relent and vote independently on the infrastructure bill. Build Back Better ultimately failed to secure enough support from Senate Democrats to pass.”

The tragic Build Back Better episode foreshadowed further cave-ins, including premature endorsements of Biden for renomination. CPC Chair Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., endorsed the president 14 months ago, less than halfway through his term, declaring: “He was not my first or second choice for president, but I am a convert. I never thought I would say this, but I believe he should run for another term and finish this agenda we laid out.”

Many others followed suit, thus reducing the chances that a progressive Democrat would launch a credible primary challenge to Biden. Even Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York — who was among the Squad members to vote against the move that sank Build Back Better (“This is bullshit,” she said at the time) — endorsed Biden for renomination last July.

The pressures on Democrats in Congress to do that kind of thing are enormous. Countervailing pressure from progressive grassroots activists and organizations is vital — and all too often lacking. As a result, elected officials who ostensibly represent the progressive base to the establishment are more likely to end up serving as representatives of the establishment to the progressive base.

Biden’s all-things-to-all-Democrats act has worn thin to utter transparency, and he has the polling numbers to prove it. The president is currently 17 points underwater in the approval-disapproval ratio among voters overall. Among key mainstays of his 2020 election victory over Trump — people of color and, especially, younger voters — support for Biden has plunged, reaching new depths since October due to his active complicity in Israel’s ongoing mass murder of Palestinian civilians.


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On the same day as his victory in New Hampshire, Biden again encountered protesters who disrupted his speech with cries for an end to the U.S.-backed carnage in Gaza. As soon as his speech began at a campaign event in the swing state of Virginia, he was interrupted with the shout “How many kids have been killed?”

At the rally, there was no letup to the outcries about Gaza, which included “Israel kills two mothers every hour” and “Stop funding genocide.” The Hill reported that “chants from the crowd” interrupted Biden’s speech “nearly a dozen times.”

Thoughtful dialogue among progressives on Biden and this election is essential. Should we focus on local and state races? Prioritize support for the most progressive members of Congress as they face big-money attacks?

Biden has stressed his ties to organized labor. But several major unions have formally called for a ceasefire in Gaza, including the United Auto Workers, the American Postal Workers Union, and the Service Employees International Union, which represents almost 2 million workers. Organizers among members of the nation’s largest union, the National Education Association, are now pushing for the NEA to also take a formal position urging a ceasefire.

Such direct challenges to Biden’s support for continuation of the bloodshed in Gaza offer yet more indications of how badly he is out of touch with voters he will need to win in November.

Thoughtful dialogue among progressives on what to do about Biden is now essential. Valuable ideas to consider include focusing on local and state races as well as giving priority to support for the most progressive members of Congress as they undergo big-money assaults from the pro-Israel lobby AIPAC and its reactionary allies.

In any event, candor will be necessary about Biden’s betrayals of key 2020 campaign promises and his complicity with the ongoing mass murder of civilians in Gaza. And candor will also be crucial about the very real threat of fascism from Donald Trump's forces, who are intent on seizing full control of the U.S. government — with foreseeably catastrophic impacts on civil liberties, reproductive rights, racial justice, climate, the environment, voting rights, what remains of democracy and much more. Make no mistake about it: Trump and his top collaborators would like to bring fascism to America.

Trump rants that anyone who contributes to Nikki Haley will be barred from MAGA camp

On Tuesday, Nikki Haley fired back at Donald Trump after he spent a good portion of his New Hampshire primary victory speech griping about her campaign persistence. With Trump winning 54 percent of the vote and Haley coming in short with 43 percent, she reminded him that the race is not over, saying, "New Hampshire is first in the nation. It is not the last in the nation.”

The following day, in the written equivalent of pulling up the ladder from the treehouse, Trump is taking this back and forth one step further by threatening to banish anyone who lends support to Haley from the MAGA camp. Which is a sure sign that she's getting closer to him than he seems to have anticipated.

"Nikki 'Birdbrain' Haley is very bad for the Republican Party and, indeed, our Country," he writes in a post to Truth Social. "Her False Statements, Derogatory Comments, and Humiliating Public Loss, is demeaning to True American Patriots. Her anger should be aimed at her Third Rate Political Consultants and, more importantly, Crooked Joe Biden and those that are destroying our Country – NOT THE PEOPLE WHO WILL SAVE IT. I knew Nikki well, she was average at best, is not the one to take on World Leaders, and she never did. That was up to me, and that is why they respected the United States. When I ran for Office and won, I noticed that the losing Candidate’s 'Donors' would immediately come to me, and want to 'help out.' This is standard in Politics, but no longer with me. Anybody that makes a 'Contribution' to Birdbrain, from this moment forth, will be permanently barred from the MAGA camp. We don’t want them, and will not accept them, because we Put America First, and ALWAYS WILL!"

 

 

PETA suggests new Groundhog Day tradition — replacing Punxsutawney Phil with a coin

Ahead of Groundhog Day, the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) have drafted a group letter to The Punxsutawney Groundhog Club’s president, Tom Dunkel, suggesting a change to their standard tradition.

Since 1887, locals and those who travel to Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania for the occasion have gathered in suspense to see if the groundhog Punxsutawney Phil will emerge from his temporary home on Gobbler's Knob to see his shadow — signaling six more weeks of winter — or, if not, an early spring is on its way. But PETA wants to retire Phil, proposing that a flip of a giant gold coin be used to make the time honored prediction instead.

"For more than a century, The Punxsutawney Groundhog Club has exploited a groundhog on February 2—when they’d naturally be in hibernation—and pretended that they’re giving a weather forecast," PETA writes in a post to their website. "Observe Groundhog Day in a way that doesn’t involve abusing animals. Tell Punxsutawney to send Phil to a reputable sanctuary."

When not predicting the weather, the groundhog used for the event is kept in a manmade zoo that is climate controlled and light regulated. According to the Groundhog Club's website, this zoo is connected with Barclay Square, the town park, and the Punxsutawney Memorial Library.

PETA has tried for years to convince the town to do away with the use of a live animal for their event. In 2020, they encouraged replacing Phil with an animatronic groundhog, and in 2022, they suggested officials predict the weather with persimmon seeds.

Leader of Arizona’s Republican party resigns after allegedly bribing Kari Lake to pause politics

The chairman of the Arizona GOP, Jeff DeWit, resigned on Wednesday after leaked audio from an exchange with Kari Lake in 2023 points to a bribery attempt in exchange for her putting a pause on her efforts in the Senate race.

In the audio — posted online by Garret Lewis, a conservative talk show host in Arizona, and reported on by NBC News — DeWit can be heard saying, "There are very powerful people that want to keep you out. They're willing to put their money where their mouth is in a very big way," going on to refer to this as "an incredible opportunity." Per the outlet, DeWit did not reveal the identity of these people, but commented on their offer saying it "had everything to do with her being a drag on the ticket. There are people who want to make sure we win the election and that’s it. No one believes she can get across the finish line, particularly with independents.”

In a statement posted to X (formerly Twitter), DeWit writes, "This morning, I was determined to fight for my position. However, a few hours ago I received an ultimatum from Lake's team: resign or face the release of a new, more damaging recording. I am truly unsure of its contents, but considering our numerous past open conversations as friends, I have decided not to take the risk. I am resigning as Lake requested."

Lake's advisers say that no such threats were made and that the tape speaks for itself. 

Van Halen rocker Sammy Hagar discovers he’s not actually a Hagar on “Finding Your Roots”

Van Halen rocker Sammy Hagar is the latest celebrity to uncover the hidden secrets attached to his family lineage. And what he found was that his name, his very identity, has been a lie that spans generations.

On Tuesday's "Finding Your Roots," the musician first discusses the complicated nature of his childhood with host Henry Louis Gates, Jr., growing up in an abusive household because his father was an alcoholic.

Through the show's extensive research, Gates reveals that Hagar's maternal great-grandfather Giacomo Alessi was a fruit dealer in New York. Yet it turns out that fruit dealing is more dangerous than anyone may have expected. In 1899, Joseph Alessi was involved in a shoot-out with a man over $13. The man died from the shooting, and Alessi was imprisoned for 12 years.

"They're mobsters!" Hagar said of the reveal. Gates agreed, saying the Alessi family were "mobsters of a sort."

While that mobster revelation was a shock for Hagar, the biggest reveal was yet to come. It turns out that the musician's lineage contained one very important deception.

"Sammy, genetically you are not a Hagar," Gates told him.

"Get out of here," Hagar said in disbelief. "This is as nutty as anything I've ever imagined."

On Hagar's paternal side, DNA tests showed that he had no genetic links to the Hagar family. The chart literally listed the percentage as "Zero." However, Gates revealed that Hagar's DNA matched 27 other men . . . with the surname Belcher.

"You are Sammy Belcher," Gates stated.

"What a trip!" Hagar said.

The show's best guess was the only way this was possible was if a female member of his family had a child with someone named Belcher instead of a Hagar. The researchers traced the probable event back to his great-great-grandmother, who has hadn't technically divorced her husband but had separated from him, raising her kids on her own.

"It's so sad because thank God for DNA otherwise — I don't know how much it really matters or what it means at my age but if I was a young man . . . You might think 'Yeah I want to meet some of these people,'" Hagar said.

Additionally, the show traced the Belcher family back to the American Revolutionary War.

"Are you glad to know this?" Gates asked.

"I'm so happy to know this. This gives me so much mind-chewing — man, my mind's gonna work on this like a mouse on a wheel of cheese." Hagar said.

Ultimately, Hagar said Gates will have to come back to check on him in six months for his real, processed emotions on all this new information on his family. But he added, "I love it. I am excited. It's exhilarating. I won't be able to sleep for a month because I am going to be rolling this stuff around in my head or reading through this book. I just can't wait to show this to my sisters. They are going to freak out," he said.

“Finding Your Roots” airs Tuesdays at 8 p.m. ET on PBS.

Greg Abbott defies Supreme Court, sets up Texas border standoff

The Texas National Guard and state troopers are still rolling out concertina wire and preventing Border Patrol agents from accessing most of Shelby Park, a 47-acre Eagle Pass park that sits on the bank of the Rio Grande where thousands of migrants have crossed.

Those continued efforts come despite the U.S. Supreme Court earlier this week vacating a lower court’s decision that prevented Border Patrol agents from cutting the state’s concertina wire to apprehend people who already crossed the river.

The Supreme Court’s 5-4 order didn’t give any reason and didn’t explicitly say Border Patrol agents were allowed to access the park or that the state had to remove the concertina wire. So the state has doubled down and some Republican lawmakers have said Texas should defy the Supreme Court’s ruling.

On Wednesday, Gov. Greg Abbott, defended his actions, saying Texas has the right to continue doing what it's doing. He added, without providing evidence, that President Biden has been refusing to enforce current immigration laws.

"President Biden has violated his oath to faithfully execute immigration laws enacted by Congress," Abbott said in a statement. "Instead of prosecuting immigrants for the federal crime of illegal entry, President Biden has sent his lawyers into federal courts to sue Texas for taking action to secure the border."

According to NBC News, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the federal agency that oversees the Border Patrol, sent a letter to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office Tuesday demanding that immigration officers be allowed access to the park.

“To our knowledge, Texas has only permitted access to Shelby Park by allowing public entry for a memorial, the media, and the use of the golf course adjacent to Shelby Park, all while continuing to restrict U.S. Border Patrol’s access to the park. Please clarify the scope of access Texas permits to the public,” says the letter from DHS general counsel Jonathan Meyer , according to NBC News.

The Texas Military Department’s top officer also signaled quiet defiance in remarks made to agency staff during a Tuesday morning meeting, according to a source familiar with his comments. Military Times and The Texas Tribune verified the identity of the source, who requested anonymity due to potential reprisal from state officials because they are not authorized to speak publicly.

Air Force Maj. Gen. Thomas Suelzer was appointed by Abbott to oversee the Texas National Guard and Texas State Guard as the agency’s adjutant general. He told staff that he believes the ruling only permits Border Patrol to cut through obstacles to retrieve stranded migrants, the source said. Suelzer added that his troops will repair any obstacles destroyed by federal agents, and that his troops won’t allow the feds to set up migrant processing centers in areas they’ve blocked.

“The Texas Military Department continues to hold the line in Shelby Park to deter and prevent unlawful entry into the State of Texas,” the agency said in an unsigned statement Tuesday. “We remain resolute in our actions to secure our border, preserve the rule of law, and protect the sovereignty of our State.”

On social media, U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Austin, said Texas should ignore the ruling on behalf of the agents represented by the Border Patrol’s rank-and-file union.

“This opinion is unconscionable and Texas should ignore it on behalf of the @BPUnion agents who will be put in a worse position by the opinion and the Biden administration’s policies,” Roy wrote.

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Jeremy Carl, a former deputy assistant secretary of the interior under the Trump administration and current senior fellow at the Claremont Institute, a right-wing think tank, expressed a similar sentiment on social media.

“If Greg Abbott wants to have a future on a national ticket he will defy this lawless Supreme Court and protect the Texas border from invasion,” he wrote.

On social media Wednesday, Abbott posted a picture of four guards rolling out concertina wire with a statement: “Texas’ razor wire is an effective deterrent against the illegal border crossings encouraged by Biden’s open border policies. We continue to deploy this razor wire to repel illegal immigration.”

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued the Biden administration in October, claiming that the Border Patrol illegally destroyed state property when its agents cut through concertina wire on the banks of the Rio Grande to “assist” migrants to “illegally cross” the border. The Biden administration has said agents cut the wire in order to arrest migrants that were already on American soil as that is what federal law requires.

District Judge Alia Moses, a George W. Bush appointee, eventually ruled in favor of the Biden administration, saying Border Patrol agents didn’t violate any laws by cutting the wire to take into custody people crossing the river illegally.

Texas appealed and the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the lower court’s ruling until a panel of judges could hear arguments. The Biden administration took the case to the Supreme Court asking the federal judges to vacate the appeal court’s ruling.

The standoff between Texas and the federal government escalated when earlier this month state troopers and National Guard members took over Shelby Park in Eagle Pass against city officials’ wishes.


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On Jan. 12, National Guard members at the park blocked a Border Patrol agent from accessing the river after three migrants drowned while crossing the Rio Grande and two other migrants were still struggling in the water, according to a court filing by the U.S. Department of Justice.

According to the filing, Mexican immigration officials alerted Border Patrol agents at 9 p.m. that night that two migrants were in distress on the American side near the boat ramp at Shelby Park. An hour earlier, a mother with two children drowned in the same area, according to the Justice Department. When a supervising Border Patrol agent told National Guard troops at the park gate about the migrants in distress, one of them responded that they had orders to deny Border Patrol entry.

The Border Patrol agent asked to speak with a National Guard supervisor, who told the agent that “Border Patrol was not permitted to enter the area even in emergency situations,” according to the court filing.

Since then, National Guard has given Border Patrol access to the boat ramp at the park, but the agents have to give their names, and the time they entered the park is recorded, according to a statement by Robert Danley, lead field coordinator for U.S. Customs and Border Protection for the Del Rio area, that was filed with the Supreme Court.

The state has denied the Justice Department’s version of events, saying that the supervising agent who alerted National Guard members at the gate about the drownings didn’t indicate it was an emergency and that “Mexican officials had the situation under control,” according to a court filing by Paxton’s office with the Supreme Court.

Legal expert explains why Trump’s gag order appeal likely to fail: “A losing argument from day one”

A federal appeals court in Washington on Tuesday dismissed Donald Trump's plea to reconsider his appeal against a gag order in the criminal case related to his efforts to overturn the 2020 election results. This marks the latest setback for the former president who is restricted from publicly criticizing certain individuals involved in the legal matter. The only option he has left available if he wants to continue fighting the gag order is to appeal to the Supreme Court.

“Challenging a gag order is very difficult,” Jamie White, an attorney who handles criminal defense and civil rights cases, told Salon.

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, who is overseeing the criminal case in Washington, imposed a gag order last year restricting Trump from attacking witnesses, specific prosecutors or court staff members. She emphasized that her decision to issue the order was based on evidence revealing that Trump’s public attacks consistently led to threats and harassment. She was using the gag order as a means to safeguard the public's interest in a fair trial. The ex-president has directly targeted Chutkan, special counsel Jack Smith and other prosecutors in his office, as well as potential witnesses in the case. On social media, he referred to Smith as a "thug" and "deranged." Similarly, he has gone after former vice-president, Mike Pence, claiming he had “made up stories” about him and had gone over to the “dark side” by cooperating with prosecutors.

Trump has challenged the order in court since it was issued, arguing that the order violated his First Amendment rights. A federal appeals court in Washington last year narrowed the order, allowing Trump to continue disparaging the Justice Department and the Biden administration. It even allowed him to allege that he believed his criminal prosecution was politically motivated. 

“People are certainly entitled to free speech, however, if that speech interferes with the judicial process, or creates threats to individuals within that process, then a person’s freedom of speech is subject to limitations," White explained. 


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Courts have “broad discretion,” and in this instance, Trump’s behavior in particular, speaking about the judge’s staff, and some of those comments were argued to be dangerous, “certainly rises to the level of going beyond free speech,” White said.

On Tuesday, a three-judge panel at the DC Circuit largely dismissed his challenge, upholding Chutkan's restrictions. The court specified that Trump could still criticize Smith and individuals involved in post-2020 election matters, provided he refrained from targeting their trial testimony.

Trump then appealed to the entire D.C. Circuit, urging them to step in and reconsider the issue with the goal of further refining or entirely eliminating the order.

In the unsigned order issued on Tuesday, the 11 full-time judges on the court provided no written opinion. The order simply stated that none of the judges had sought a vote on the matter, according to The New York Times.

“The fact that neither the panel nor the full court wanted to review the request means that there were not enough judges in the Circuit that thought Trump's argument had any merit,” Laurie Levenson, a law professor at Loyola Marymount University, told Salon. “It means that the judges really didn't think the initial decision was wrong.”

Trump would have to somehow convince the Supreme Court that the lower court “abused” its discretion and that his First Amendment rights were being denied because the gag order was either “unjustified or too broad,” Levenson explained. He would have to show how the lower courts' rulings conflicted with rulings of the Supreme Court or other circuits. “I think the Supreme Court will take into account the underlying issues, but I don't think that they will give extra weight to his status as an ex-President,” she added. 

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To the extent Trump argues that he needs to speak more because he is a political candidate, the court may consider that fact, but it does not necessarily mean he will get a review, Levenson said.

The rejection of the former president’s appeal is not a “surprise” though, David Schultz, professor of political science at Hamline University, told Salon. Rarely do courts take appeals while a lower court is still hearing a case. Instead, they defer to the judge and let a defendant raise the question on appeal.

A three-judge panel of the same appeals court is expected to soon decide on Trump's attempt to dismiss the federal election interference case based on a claim of presidential immunity. His team argues that he should be shielded from prosecution since his actions were within the “outer perimeter” of his official responsibilities as president to “ensure election integrity” when he questioned the results of the election. 

“I don't think the Supreme Court would be eager to jump into this issue,” Levenson said. “It has plenty of high-profile cases before it at this time, including those involving Trump.”

The Supreme Court is already under intense pressure to resolve the issue of whether Trump can be disqualified from holding public office under the 14th Amendment’s insurrection ban.  They have to decide if Trump can be removed from Colorado's ballot.

The arguments that Trump intends to make to the Supreme Court to appeal the gag order have to be “novel,” White said. The ex-president would not be able to re-litigate the same arguments, and his attorneys would have to present arguments that suggest the circuit court got this “completely wrong.”

Trump’s lawyers would have to argue that decisions made, “at all levels up to that point,” have been “illegal or unconstitutional.” They’re going to have a very difficult time presenting anything credible, and it’s "very likely" the court will not hear the issue on the gag order.

"I think the issue of immunity is clearly something that they would hear, because for the most part, they haven’t dealt with that as it pertains to an American president,” White said. “But the idea that the judge is able to say ‘Mr. Trump is not able to speak about this case’ happens a lot, and it’s been litigated time and time again, so it’s not shocking in any way that this has been a losing argument from day one, and I think it will continue to be a losing argument. The judge has an obligation to control his courtroom and protect his staff and the integrity of the process.”

Susan Collins claims she won’t back Trump if he wins the GOP nomination

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, has said she will not endorse former president Donald Trump if he wins the GOP nomination for the 2024 presidential election.

As the Hill reported on Wednesday, when asked if she could envision supporting Trump if he secures the nomination, Collins said, "I do not at this point."

Trump edged out Republican running mate and former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley in the New Hampshire primary on Tuesday; however, Haley had vowed to stay in the race for the nomination. Colling expressed approval at this decision, saying, “I’m glad to hear last night that Nikki Haley is determined to stay in [the race.] I think the more people see of her, particularly since she appears to be the only alternative to Donald Trump right now, the more impressed they will be." 

As The Hill noted, Collins is a power player when it comes to having legislation passed in Congress, and was also one of seven Senate Republicans who voted to convict Trump in 2021 in connection to inciting the deadly Capitol riots on Jan 6. Collins argued that the insurrection "was the culmination of a steady stream of provocations by President Trump," per Bangor Daily News. "My vote in this trial stems from my own duty to defend the Constitution of the United States," she said. "The abuse of power and betrayal of his oath by President Trump meet the constitutional standard of high crimes and misdemeanors."

The Maine senator was also one of three Republican senators who voted in opposition to Trump’s attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act in 2017. Collins's turning away from the former president is all the more noteworthy because, as The Hill pointed out, an increasing number of GOP senators are vocalizing support for Trump as the 2024 elections grow nearer. 

Hillary Clinton sends message to Margot Robbie and Greta Gerwig after “Barbie” Oscars snubs

Hillary Clinton offered a few kind words to Margot Robbie and Greta Gerwig after the “Barbie” star and director failed to secure individual Oscars nominations.

“Greta & Margot, while it can sting to win the box office but not take home the gold, your millions of fans love you,” Clinton wrote in a social media post Wednesday. “You’re both so much more than Kenough. #HillaryBarbie.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/C2fSiFmOSLH/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=eadc361c-0df0-43ff-a7eb-aa5735347062

“Barbie” racked up eight Academy Award nominations this year, including best costume design, music, production design, best picture (for which Robbie was named as a producer) and adapted screenplay writing (for which Gerwig was named as a writer). Many fans, however, took issue with the fact that Gerwig wasn’t nominated for best director and Robbie wasn’t nominated for best actress.

Ryan Gosling, who received an Oscar nomination for best supporting actor for his role as Ken, spoke out against the lack of recognition for Robbie and Gerwig in the Oscars nominations list:

“No recognition would be possible for anyone on the film without their talent, grit and genius. To say that I’m disappointed that they are not nominated in their respective categories would be an understatement,” Gosling wrote in a statement. “Against all odds with nothing but a couple of soulless, scantily clad, and thankfully crotchless dolls, they made us laugh, they broke our hearts, they pushed the culture and they made history. Their work should be recognized along with the other very deserving nominees.” 

America Ferrara, who earned an Oscar nomination for best supporting actress for her role as Gloria, and fellow co-star Simu Liu also criticized the Oscars for snubbing both Robbie and Gerwig.

House Republicans cry James Comer’s “clueless investigation” is a “disaster”: report

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., is losing support among his GOP colleagues over his handling of the Biden impeachment probe, with some declaring the inquiry chocks up to a "clueless investigation" at best and a "disaster" at worst. 

“One would be hard pressed to find the best moment for James Comer in the Oversight Committee,” one House Republican lawmaker, speaking anonymously to protect relationships, told The Messenger. “It’s been a parade of embarrassments.”

As the 2024 presidential election draws closer, Comer's impeachment investigation is nearing its conclusion with no hard-hitting accusations to level against President Joe Biden. More than a dozen Republican lawmakers, senior aides and strategists told The Messenger that how little the probe has accomplished has whittled down the faith they had in the Kentucky Republican.

Some top Republicans in the party take issue with the investigation's lack of focus, with the probe following obscure lines of inquiry, including claims of influence peddling and foreign bribery, and looking Hunter Biden's artwork sales and loan agreements between the president and his brother.

“Comer has cast a wide net and caught very little fish. That is a big problem for him,” a personal Donald Trump ally told the outlet.

Republicans' growing distrust in the chairman, however, does not sway their trust in the grounds for the probe. GOP sources said that the thousands of financial documents and slate of testimony from witnesses have offered viable points of contention, including allegations that then-Vice President Biden was connected to a bribery plot in Ukraine. 

The problem lies in Comer's mismanagement of the investigation, which some believe has fumbled their chances of landing an impeachment of the president by the 2024 election.

“James Comer continues to embarrass himself and House Republicans. He screws up over and over and over,” a source close to GOP leadership told The Messenger. “I don’t know how Republicans actually impeach the president based on his clueless investigation and lack of leadership.”

Comer's back and forth with Hunter Biden over the president's son sitting for a closed-door deposition in the investigation was a common example of such "embarrassments."

Earlier this month, Republicans were readying to hold the younger Biden in contempt of Congress for dodging the deposition, despite Hunter Biden expressing interest in providing a public testimony. Two weeks ago, during an Oversight Committee hearing intended to discuss the contempt resolution, the younger Biden made a surprise appearance that sparked outcry and dissension among the lawmakers.

“It seems like they got played by Hunter Biden,” one senior House GOP aide told the outlet. “It was a disaster. They looked like buffoons.”

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GOP members have also taken issue with Comer's Fox News and Newsmax appearances about the probe, where they bemoan his promises of "bombshell information" that he later fails to deliver on, The Messenger reports. One source cited the committee's first impeachment hearing in September, widely recognized as a blunder, with one star GOP witness acknowledging the investigation did not yet have enough evidence to move forward with an impeachment. 

Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., also told the outlet that Republicans have privately complained about the committee's last hearing. “Republicans believe the Oversight Committee has been a complete failure in all these theatrical hearings that never deliver on their promise,” Moskowitz said, explaining that after the last hearing Republican committee members told him it "was a complete debacle for them.”

“This is why we shouldn't pick our chairman based on how much money they raise,” another member told Moskowitz, according to the Florida Democrat.

ATrump ally told The Messenger that Comer “set the bar too high” for what constitutes an impeachable offense by trying to prove that Joe Biden accepted a direct payment from his son or brother, James Biden, during the committee panel's dive into the transactions, which the White House dismissed as regular loan repayments.

Proving such a transaction was not necessary, the Trump ally said, explaining that the bar shouldn't be that high for impeachment. “Congress determines what is a high crime and misdemeanor,” the source said.

A Comer spokesperson defended the legislator, saying he has "made it clear this investigation's legislative purpose is to ban influence peddling and reform federal ethics laws."

"Now that we are in an impeachment inquiry, the Oversight Committee, along with the Committees on the Judiciary and Ways and Means, are continuing to follow the facts to determine whether President Biden's conduct warrants articles of impeachment," the spokesperson added.


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One Republican lawmaker told The Messenger he elevated his concerns about Comer's leadership to Speaker Mike Johnson, whose office, according to the lawmaker, said Johnson was aware of the issue and agreed but couldn't really take any action. A spokesperson for the speaker denied that the exchange occurred.

In a statement to the outlet, Johnson said he is "fully supportive" of Comer's work. 

"I am grateful for the superb efforts of Chairman Comer," Johnson said. "Without his and the other investigators’ work, we wouldn’t have uncovered the millions in foreign funds going to the Biden family, the dozens of exchanges between the President and Hunter Biden’s clients, and the litany of lies the White House has told."

Comer's critics, however, have their eyes set on the calendar, with the time between now and the 2024 presidential election dwindling to under 10 months. For them, the probe into the president and his family, has lagged since the GOP gained control of the House last January. 

"You have to start producing," a Trump ally told The Messenger. "The base is starting to get more and more frustrated with him because they see all this smoke but they don’t see the movement."

Are you a big time snacker? Try this chunky salt-free homemade chocolate granola

I was playing around with leftovers, some extras from my amateur chef cooking escapades, and came up with a salt-free dark chocolate granola mix for my fellow serial munchers. 

Maybe one day I'll understand why a 43-year-old guy like me tends to snack so much, as if I'm some sort of teenager who needs the energy to grow taller. Excessive munching does not make me grow taller . . .  it makes me grow wider, but still, I munch. 

I need a snack in the morning, I need a snack to work out, I need a snack after I work out, something to nibble on while I write, and to enjoy something crunchy before I go to sleep or while I'm in bed at night.

Sometimes these snacks consisted of blueberries, cherries, grapes or a mix of them all. But like we all know too well, those healthy snacks tend to go bad quickly and leave you reaching for the popcorn, pretzels and chips that you should only be enjoying in moderation.

The combination of the healthy options expiring as soon as you reach for them, the stress that comes with life in general and the fact that if you use a chip clip on that bag of pretzels, then there's a good chance they may never expire, kind of makes you forget about the whole idea of moderation. 


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The healthiest quick fix for me, though, was to start buying unsalted pretzels, unsalted popcorn, unsalted restaurant style tortilla chips, and making my own unsalted salsa. High blood pressure runs in my family or really every Black family, which means I must be cautious about these things, in addition to having a four-year-old daughter.

If your child sees you munching all day, then they will want to munch all day as well, so you better make it healthy. Enter my granola. 

This recipe is delicious and a win-win for you and your little one. 

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Salt-free dark chocolate granola
Yields
20 servings
Prep Time
10 minutes
Cook Time
25 minutes

Ingredients

5 cups old-fashioned rolled oats 

2 cups raw slivered almonds 

1 cup raw pecans

1 cup raw sunflower seeds

½ teaspoon cinnamon

½ cup olive oil

½  cup raw agave nectar

1 cup plus 1 tablespoon honey 

¾ teaspoon vanilla

1 cup dark semi-sweet chocolate chips

 

Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees fahreinheit. Mix all the ingredients in a bowl until evenly mixed.

  2. Line baking pan with parchment paper then fill with granola mix. Spread evenly. 

  3. Bake for about 25 minutes and then let cool for about 30. 

“There was nothing sexy about it”: Crystal Hefner says sex with Playboy mogul Hugh Hefner was bad

Crystal Hefner is baring it all in her memoir “Only Say Good Things: Surviving Playboy and Finding Myself,” which delves into her life inside the Playboy mansion. In it, Crystal alleges that her late husband, Playboy mogul Hugh Hefner, was pretty bad at sex, despite being an advocate for America’s sexual revolution. 

Crystal, who is now 37, began dating Hefner in January 2009 when the former was 21 and the latter was 60 years her senior. The couple officially tied the knot on December 31, 2012, following a tumultuous engagement. Crystal lived in the Playboy Mansion until her husband died in 2017 at age 91.

In her memoir, Crystal recounts the first time she met Hefner at a Halloween party at the Los Angeles mansion, where she was asked to take part in a group sex session with Hefner. The sex, Crystal says, was devoid of any kissing, romance or intimacy.

“This was a well-oiled and well-practiced sequence of events. One that went the same exact way every time,” she writes. “Picking some girls from the party and bringing them up. Changing into the uniform for the job: silk pajamas. The dimming of the lights. The music. The porn. Passing the pot. And then the sex.”

Amid her marriage to Hefner, Crystal says the sex never improved and remained “odd and robotic.” She adds that no one dared to critique Hefner on anything, particularly sex. “I think when you have so much money and power and so many 'yes people' around you, you just stick with your own narrative in your mind,” she says. “And then everyone else just goes along with it.”

Crystal says she was “relieved” once the sex stopped in 2014. “There was no more bringing girls home, no more performances,” she writes. “For years, I had been keeping up the Playboy charade for Hef, for the public.”

Velveeta makes its mark on fans’ lips with its cheesy 14-karat gold drip lip cuff

Velveeta, the famed velvety smooth prepared cheese product, is ringing in the new year with new “drip” for their fans to don.

What’s “drip” you may ask? In the world of fashion, “drip” is slang for embodying both style and swagger. An individual who has “drip” is cool. They’re hot. They’re confident. And they’re who everyone wishes they could be. 

According to Velveeta, no one knows “drip” better than them. They are after all the creators behind the physical drip of their original cheese sauce and the “unapologetic drip that embodies living ‘La Dolce Velveeta.’” Velveeta’s latest “drip” comes in the form of a cheesy face jewelry. The brand is rolling out its 14-Karat gold Drip Lip Cuff, crafted in partnership with celebrity designer, George the Jeweler. Velveeta is inviting its fans to own the drip like never before by wearing it proudly.

“Velveeta has been best known for its cheesy goodness and melty drip that proudly graces fans’ lips, and for the last several years, our goal has been to breathe new life into this legacy brand through unique and unexpected collaborations and creations,” Stephanie Vance, Brand Manager for Velveeta, told Forbes. “We’re always looking for ways to insert ourselves into culture and trends, celebrate our fans, and give them more ways to love Velveeta — whether in food form, like the Veltini, symbolically with like Pinkies Out polish, and now fashionably with the Drip Lip Cuff.”

The lip cuff, Vance added, strives to “empower” its wearers to step out with “an unapologetic confidence that encourages you to live life by your own rules.” It also heightens the brand’s founding principle of “making outrageous pleasure a way of life.”

Velveeta’s latest initiative adds to a growing trend of major food brands joining forces with fashion to launch new merchandise, boost overall sales and spur hype. The trend itself proves to grow more outlandish as it continues to persevere. Last year, Pizza Hut, in partnership with Chain — the Los Angeles based pop-up culinary collective — released its limited-edition reversible Hut Hat. The reversible bucket hats touted Pizza Hut's iconic red roof on one side and a checkered design with black, white and red on the other. A few months later, Panera introduced its chic BAGuette bag, which was essentially an elongated green purse that resembles a loaf of French bread. The bags initially sold out, then were restocked only to sell out again. They were so popular that several folks later resold them on eBay for anywhere between $200 to a whopping $3,290. 

Velveeta x George The Jeweler lip cuff14-Karat gold VELVEETA Drip Lip Cuff, crafted in partnership with celebrity designer, George the Jeweler (Photo by Noah Fecks)In the wake of Velveeta’s Drip Lip Cuff, perhaps it’s a bit too far-fetched to conclude that food-and-fashion partnerships have gone too far. But they’re certainly breaking boundaries and challenging our thoughts on what certain brands are capable of creating. If you had asked me ten years ago about the possibility of a 14-Karat gold Drip Lip Cuff from a brand of cheese analogue, I would have laughed and surely said no. 

Velveeta’s lip cuff flaunts 14-Karat gold and is priced at a whopping $77, which is significantly more expensive than Velveeta’s signature cheese products. Practically speaking, would loyal consumers spend their $77 on buying a single lip cuff or 25 boxes of Velveeta’s Original Big Bowl Cheese & Shells (which is available for just $3 on Amazon)? I’d like to think it would be the latter.


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Velveeta’s lip cuff, in its essence, is gimmicky. But gimmicky products, as we’ve seen, have actually been quite clever. Such food-fashion products are rarely revered for their practicality but rather, their impracticality. Food fashion isn’t meant to be functional, it’s mainly meant to be shocking. There’s something incredibly alluring about rocking a limited-edition piece of jewelry or clothing and flaunting it on social media in exchange for several likes, clicks or views. It’s attention-grabbing. It’s enticing. And it encourages others to spend their money on the product in question.

Take for example fast food’s partnerships with high fashion in the past. Frito-Lay collaborated with international fashion house Balenciaga to debut a $1,500 clutch that resembles a crumpled, discarded bag of Lay's potato chips. There’s also Jeremy Scott's McDonald's-inspired Moschino collection, complete with Golden Arches-decked handbags on plastic food trays. And there’s Charlotte Olympia's and Kate Spade's Chinese takeout box-inspired purses. None of these products are financially feasible, nor are they a necessity. Instead, they are made to elicit awe. In the same vein as fast food and cheap eats, such products provide us with instant gratification and a quick hit of pleasure.

In the age of social media, major food brands are finding new ways to boost hype in an effort to garner more consumers. It’s hard to say what Velveeta — or any other food brand — will come up with next. Whatever it is, it will certainly be anything but boring.

Jon Stewart to return to “The Daily Show” as part-time Monday evening host

Jon Stewart makes his long-awaited return to "The Daily Show" — but only on Mondays.

Stewart, who revamped and hosted the political satire series for 16 years previously, will also return to executive produce during the 2024 election cycle, The Associated Press reported.

Stewart will join a list of other "The Daily Show" correspondents like Dulce Sloan, Michael Kosta, Ronny Chieng and Desi Lydic who will help steer ship this year as the show moves on without a permanent host after Trevor Noah's departure.

“Jon Stewart is the voice of our generation, and we are honored to have him return to Comedy Central’s 'The Daily Show' to help us all make sense of the insanity and division roiling the country as we enter the election season,” Chris McCarthy, president and CEO of Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios, said in a statement.

“In our age of staggering hypocrisy and performative politics, Jon is the perfect person to puncture the empty rhetoric and provide much-needed clarity with his brilliant wit,” he continued.

In 2015, Stewart left the show he helped craft into a vehicle for strong political commentary. Following Stewart's retirement, Noah took up the mantle for seven years until he decided to move on. This year, the show also received an Emmy for its work under Noah's leadership.

However, Stewart didn't give up political commentary when he left "The Daily Show." The comedian starred in the political and social issues-driven show “The Problem With Jon Stewart” in 2021, but it was canceled by Apple TV+.

Trump is suddenly turning on his own: “I don’t need any advice from RINO Kayleigh McEnany on Fox”

Donald Trump lashed out at his former press secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Tuesday after she suggested that he pivot away from attacked GOP opponent Nikki Haley, whom he defeated in the New Hampshire primary.

During his victory speech to supporters and in subsequent posts to his TruthSocial platform, Trump repeatedly mocked Haley, calling her "DELUSIONAL." During an appearance on Fox News on Tuesday, McEnany, who now works for the cable network, voiced disapproval of her former boss' message, noting that it "was a speech to dispose of the last remaining competitor, if you could call it that.”

“She’s [sic Haley] still significantly behind him, he’s pulling a majority support, but to get her out of the race. I would suggest that adopting a general election tone is what you do at this point, and here’s why I say this," McEnany continued. "This was actually a fairly good night for Joe Biden. When you look at our voter analysis, only 10% said, 'I would not vote for Joe Biden if he’s the nominee.' He won a plurality of voters who said he was too old, he won a majority of voters who were upset about the Gaza war. When you look at the Republican Party, seven in ten Nikki Haley voters said, ‘I would not vote for Trump.’ There was a Des Moines Register poll, 43% said, ‘No, I wouldn’t vote for Trump.'”

She continued: “If I’m Trump, I sit back and I exclusively focus on the general election."

"I take the posture of a presumptive nominee. I focus on, number one, uniting the party, and number two, winning the independents, which Nikki Haley won 55-39%. That’s what I would do. Nikki Haley, I mean, the closest margin is 30% in the states ahead. For all intents and purposes, he’s the presumptive nominee.”

The ex-president, for his part, was not happy the unsolicited advice. Responding to McEnany with another angry rant, Trump wrote on TruthSocial, "I don’t need any advice from RINO Kayleigh McEnany on Fox. Just had a GIANT VICTORY over a badly failing candidate, ‘Birdbrain,’ and she’s telling me what I can do better. Save your advice for Nikki!” In a separate post, Trump fumed, “CNN & MSDNC TREATED MY BIG, DOUBLE DIGIT VICTORY OVER BIRDBRAIN, BETTER THAN FOX!”

Groundwater resources are drying up across the globe. New research suggests we can fight the drip

Humans rely on groundwater for many things, but especially our food. Roughly 30 percent of all the planet's available freshwater comes from groundwater, or water that is found underground in the spaces between rocks, soil and sand. It is primarily used for agriculture and billions of humans are dependent on it, facing severe food deprivation without it. A study published this month in Nature Water even details how aquifer depletion also makes it harder to resist historic droughts, such as the record-breaking dry spells unleashed by climate change.

Which makes it pretty alarming that groundwater levels are dropping across the globe, often at increasing rates, as new research in the journal Nature have now estimated the full scope of the problem: Groundwater is on the decline in 71% of the aquifers studied.

"Addressing the groundwater problem can help secure future food production."

The scientists from the University of California, Santa Barbara reviewed nearly 1,700 aquifers all over the planet, including national and subnational records over a century including 300 million water level measurements from 1.5 million wells. Among other things, they learned that rates of groundwater declined aggressively started in the 1980s and 1990s, then became even worse from 2000 to the present. One statistic stands out: The accelerating rates of decline occurred at almost three times the pace that would have happened in the same number of locations if it had occurred by chance.

"We demonstrate that most of the places with accelerated groundwater level declines also had declining rainfall over time," co-author Dr. Scott Jasechko at the Bren School of Environmental Science and Management at the University of California, Santa Barbara told Salon by email. "This finding demonstrates that climate variability and change can impact water supplies underground as well as above-ground."

Groundwater-fed irrigation of maize in Kabwe, ZambiaGroundwater-fed irrigation of maize in Kabwe, Zambia. (Photo by Mark Hughes)

Jasechko identified a variable in addition to climate change that is causing the groundwater depletion.

"Groundwater is vital to global irrigated agriculture," Jasechko pointed out. "There are places where groundwater pumping for irrigation, to support food production, is leading to groundwater depletion. Our work highlights some relatively rare cases where groundwater depletion has been addressed via interventions, including policy changes and water engineering."

He later added, "Groundwater depletion is a threat to global irrigation. Addressing the groundwater problem can help secure future food production."

This is not to say that climate change should be downplayed as a cause for groundwater depletion. Quite to the contrary: The researchers studied precipitation variability data for 542 aquifers spanning a period of four decades, and found that 90% of those experiencing accelerated declines were in places where conditions have gotten drier. This has probably both increased the demand for water and reduced the actual amount of groundwater available.

At the same time, there can be an occasional silver lining to climate change: When conditions become wetter, groundwater levels can be replenished.


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"Rising groundwaters can lead to flooding of coastal cities, waterlogging of farmlands and salinization of groundwaters and soils."

The news isn't all grim, as the authors noted that in 16% of the aquifer systems that suffered groundwater declines in the 1980s and 1990s, the trend was actually reversed. Given that this was only half as common as would have statistically occurred by chance, this statistic does not indicate any larger trend of groundwater restoration — but it does show that certain techniques of restoring groundwater levels can be effective. 

The researchers cite as one example the Bangkok basin in Thailand, where groundwater levels fell in the late-twentieth century before shallowing out in the early 21at Century. Experts attribute that reversal to regulations such as licensing of wells and groundwater pumping fees. There is also the Abbas-e-Sharghi basin in Iran, which saw its groundwater levels go up after water was rerouted there from the Kharkeh Dam. Similarly, managed aquifer recharge projects have helped restore aquifer levels west of Tucson, Arizona.

"Some of these cases indicate that aquifers that were heavily exploited before 1980 are recovering," the authors write. "Aquifer recovery can potentially ameliorate the consequences of groundwater pumping (for example, 'land subsidence')."

Yet even the seeming blessing of rising groundwater can prove to be problematic, as they explain: "Rising groundwaters can lead to flooding of coastal cities, waterlogging of farmlands and salinization of groundwaters and soils. Rising groundwater levels maybe driven by reductions in groundwater withdrawals or increases in recharge rates owing to land clearing, irrigation or managed aquifer recharge."

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Other research has also painted an alarming picture of human groundwater use. A 2023 study in the journal Geophysical Research Letters found that a tremendous amount of groundwater has been extracted from beneath our feet — more than 2 trillion tons of groundwater between 1993 and 2010, in fact — and that as a result the True North Pole has shifted at a rate of 4.36 centimeters per year (or more than 1.7 inches).

For context, the True North Pole is determined by where our globe's axis of rotation intersects with the surface. This is distinct from the northernmost magnetic pole, which is the point where Earth's magnetic field points vertically downward, although the two locations are relatively close to each other.

The study has "very important practical implications," co-author Dr. Clark R. Wilson, a professor of geological sciences at the University of Texas at Austin, told Salon at the time. "Knowing via measurements from several space geodetic techniques (and also being able to predict in the future) the precise location of the rotation axis within Earth is essential to making the Global Positioning System and other satellite navigation systems work. This is because the rotation axis location is essential to convert the ranges to the GPS satellites into geographical locations on Earth."

As groundwater depletion demonstrates, humans are radically altering our home planet through climate change. Our reliance on groundwater presents a vulnerability for our species, one that could lead to massive suffering in our species' future, especially if we manage it irresponsibly — all while our overheating planet exacerbates the problem.

“Never forget the system is rigged”: Why America Ferrera’s “Barbie” nomination is the one we needed

“Always stand out and always be grateful. But never forget that the system is rigged.”

That famous line from America Ferrera’s show-stopping “Barbie” speech about the impossibility of being a woman may be the easiest to quote from memory on any Tuesday.

On the morning that the 2024 Oscar nominations were announced, though, the line hit differently – that one, and the observation about having to always be extraordinary, but somehow always doing it wrong. Could that apply to Oscar voters? They were the ones who left top star Margot Robbie out of the best actress race while nominating Ryan Gosling’s performance as Ken.  

Ferrera represents all the Barbie girls who matured into a world constantly hitting them with the message that, contrary to what the doll promised, women cannot do or be anything.

Judging by the post-announcement murmurings, the more shocking snub was the choice to leave Greta Gerwig out of the best director competition while making “Killers of the Flower Moon's" Martin Scorsese the most nominated living director in Oscars history.

If Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences voters wanted to prove that Gerwig was on to something by making patriarchy the main villain in “Barbie,” then well done.

However, we come not to entirely bury Oscar in beach sand but praise the Academy for giving the most important performance of the movie its due: Ferrera’s supporting actress nomination, a well-deserved acknowledgement after being passed over by the Golden Globes.

This Oscar nomination, Ferrera’s first, places her among eight Latinas recognized in the category’s history, out of which two actors, Rita Moreno (1961’s “West Side Story”) and her 2021 "West Side Story" costar Ariana DeBose have won a statue.

As Gloria, an administrative assistant to the all-male top brass at Mattel, Ferrera represents all the Barbie girls who matured into a world constantly hitting them with the message that, contrary to what the doll promised, women cannot do or be anything.

BarbieAmerica Ferrera, Ariana Greenblatt and Margot Robbie in "Barbie" (Warner Bros.)It’s not for a lack of trying, as we know. Nearly all the significant societal woes we’re dealing with in 2024 are the result of great swaths of American voters, men and women alike, deciding that 2016 wasn’t the right time for an over-qualified but not likable enough woman to become president.

Patriarchy put the other guy in the White House, a philandering racist and sexist who tried to overturn the legitimized results of the 2020 direction has also been deemed a rapist by a civil jury in a lawsuit brought against him by journalist E. Jean Carroll.

That man loaded the Supreme Court with nominees who overturned Roe v. Wade and are set to open the floodgates to massive, well-funded deregulation efforts that stand to deliver flurries of body blows to vital independent agencies including the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). And he doesn't even beach or love horses!

Gloria, meanwhile, is a normal woman doing her best to get by in such a place – a boring mom with a boring job “and a daughter who hates me!” – as she tells her unappreciative teen Sasha (Ariana Greenblatt). Gloria lives in a city where the air is notoriously polluted and in a country hostile to people who look like her, especially women. Why wouldn’t she pass the time by drawing Irrepressible Thoughts of Death Barbie, Full-Body Cellulite Barbie and Crippling Shame Barbie? Life has already awakened her to the realization that her house would not include a slide with a pool.

Grown women watching “Barbie” can relate more closely to Gloria than Robbie’s Barbie because of that monologue. The fact that it's delivered at the literal lowest point for the living doll, after Barbie has collapsed and refuses get up again, believing Barbie Land to be utterly lost to a patriarchal coup, bedazzles its poignance.

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It also makes up two minutes and 20 seconds of a nearly two-hour movie – a triumphant peak in a performance throughout which Ferrera’s Gloria legitimizes Barbie as a power fantasy.  Alec Baldwin won awards attention for his diatribe in 1992’s “Glengarry Glen Ross,” which amounted to around seven minutes of meaningful screentime. Ferrera visibility in “Barbie” outstrips that by quite a bit, consistently building to that moment as Barbie’s friend and teacher.

But as she lists all the ways that being a woman in impossible, Gloria isn’t acting the part of Barbie’s gushing hype-squad, as the rest of the Barbies were before being brainwashed to serve Kens. She's simply speaking as an overworked mother with a kid who doesn’t have time for others’ self-pity but, through meeting her childhood hero, maintains the hope that life can be better for her and her daughter.

She’s talking to Barbie, but she’s also addressing everyone figuring out a way back from the pandemic’s “every person for themselves, by themselves” mentality. And she reaches a conclusion that doesn’t wrap it all up in a bow by pointing to a way out or assuring us that it’ll get better. It simply conveys an understanding along with reminding the listener that we have to keep going.

“I'm just so tired of watching myself and every single other woman tie herself into knots so that people will like us,” Gloria says. “And if all of that is also true for a doll just representing women, then . . . I don't even know.”

Women make up about half the population . . . [yet] out of the 250 top grossing films in 2023, women account for only 16% of directors.

At least Oscar recognizes the soliloquy’s significance along with honoring that its substantive power is rooted in Gerwig’s writing, which Ferrera helped her craft. Consequently, Gerwig and her partner Noah Baumbach received an Oscar nod for best adapted screenplay, which is among the eight nominations “Barbie” earned. That includes best picture, for which Robbie is nominated as  a producer.

Even so, the best director category has five slots and included “Anatomy of a Fall” filmmaker Justine Triet alongside Christopher Nolan, favored to win for “Oppenheimer.” Arguments are already breaking out in defense of Jonathan Glazer’s directing work on “The Zone of Interest” of being worthy of notice. Many more moviegoers noticed Gerwig’s work, not to mention the fact that this category has been male dominated since . . . forever.

BarbieBarbie (Warner Bros)Women make up about half the population. Yet in the recently released Celluloid Ceiling report by San Diego State University’s School of Theater, Television and Film, its 26th, it states that out of the 250 top grossing films in 2023, women account for only 16% of directors, a figure that decreases to 14% of the top grossing 100 films. And what was 2023’s highest-grossing movie again?

“Barbie,” whose global box office gross sits at just under $1.45 billion. One can’t accuse the marketplace of failing to notice the movie's creative achievement. If Oscar must deny its director and star their due in their respective individual categories, that only further validates what Gloria was saying about all the rules being too contradictory – “and nobody gives you a medal or says thank you!” – but we get it. And maybe that knowing is enough to keep our chin up for Ferrera’s prospects on Oscar night.

The 96th Academy Awards will be broadcast live on Sunday, March 10 on ABC.

[CORRECTION: A previous version of this story had erroneously stated Alec Baldwin won an Oscar for his role in "Glengarry Glen Ross," and conflated Lupita Nyong'o's nationality with her ethnicity.]

 

Trump’s “unhinged” New Hampshire rant hands E. Jean Carroll’s team “more ammunition”: legal expert

Donald Trump may have provided writer E. Jean Carroll's legal team with additional fodder to trounce him in her second defamation lawsuit against the former president, one legal expert argued.

MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin took to X/Twitter following Trump's win against former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley in the New Hampshire primary on Tuesday night and a bizzare victory speech that Haley spokesperson Nachama Soloveichik described as "unhinged." The ex-president dedicated a decent amount of time to lambasting Haley after securing the victory, and according to Rubin, some of his remarks could be just what Carroll's attorneys need. 

“'I don’t get too angry; I get even,'" Rubin quoted Trump as having said after his win, "giving E. Jean Carroll’s lawyers more ammunition for cross-examination should he testify in the ongoing trial." Carroll, the longtime columnist who alleged that Trump sexually assaulted her in a New York department store dressing room in the late 90s, is now embroiled in a second defamation trial against the ex-president because he continued to reject her claims even after being found liable for sexual abuse and defamation last spring. 

Meat and dairy industry giants hold the plant power behind many vegan brands

"Cast a vote for a greener planet, lower food bills, better health and kindness to animals. And you don't even have to wait for a general election," states the global Veganuary campaign that encourages people to eat plant-based throughout January.

Transforming the world's food system through large-scale reduction in meat production is essential if we are to preserve the planet's natural ecosystems. But I don't believe Veganuary's solution is the way to do that.

While the switch to eating vegan food may seem empowering, it places an unrealistic pressure upon consumers to drive the shift to plant-based foods. By failing to highlight the state-backed corporate power at the heart of the food system, Veganuary arguably disempowers its followers.

In collaboration with Charis Davis, MA student in development studies at SOAS University of London, I researched the ownership structure and marketing strategies of several plant-based food companies. We found that many brands that are celebrated for sustainable plant-based food production are owned by giant meat and dairy companies implicated in allegations of large-scale environmental destruction.

Take Vivera, a pioneer in plant-based food. The Dutch company produces a wide range of vegetarian and vegan food, such as vegan hot dogs, plant salmon fillets, Tex Mex strips and vegan steak. The Vivera website suggests that consumers should buy vegan products to "make a huge difference for human health and the wellbeing of the planet" and states that "you can improve the world with every bite you take by eating plant-based foods".

However, Vivera's online marketing and product packaging do not highlight to consumers that it is owned by JBS, the world's largest meat producer. Every day JBS's global operations slaughter 8.7 million birds, 92,600 hogs and 42,700 head of cattle, according to the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, a US-based thinktank.

JBS's purchase of Vivera in 2021 does not signify a move away from meat. Shortly after acquiring the plant-based food company, it announced plans to invest US$130 million in two of its US beef processing plants, to increase cattle slaughtering capacity by around 300,000 a year. JBS is the biggest purchaser of cattle from the Amazon and therefore a major contributor to deforestation.

Another case in point is Alpro. The well-known manufacturer of vegan dairy products was bought by Danone in 2017 in response to the growing popularity of milk alternatives. But the language on Alpro's website, for example "doing your bit with every bite or sip", seems at odds with Danone's claims to be the number one leading brand worldwide for fresh dairy products.

Cow's milk creates three times more greenhouse gas emissions, uses ten times as much land and twice as much freshwater than plant-based alternatives, according to calculations by the website Our World in Data.

While Danone is expanding into the plant-based market, this does not imply a retreat from its core dairy product lines. As one food industry newsletter put it: "The company . . .  is looking to cross-promote its plant-based and traditional dairy beverages to households where individuals dabble in both categories."

Both cases exemplify a broader trend where giant meat and dairy-based conglomerates, including JBS and Danone, are buying up smaller plant-based food companies as part of their corporate expansion strategies, according to a 2022 report by IPES-Food, a coalition of food system experts.

At present, meat and dairy producers are supported by mega state subsidies. In the EU and US, livestock farmers receive about 1,000 times more subsidies than plant-based and cultivated meat producers.

Yet Veganuary's apolitical stance ignores the support the meat and dairy industries receive from rich-country governments. While the planet desperately needs a major shift away from meat production and consumption, mega food corporations probably won't be the ones to lead the transition to a greener planet.

 

How to support plant-based food production

A significant step change would require governments to do at least three things. First, they should impose hefty fines upon and potentially confiscate the land of corporations that damage the environment through meat and dairy production.

Second, governments should reorient subsidies into plant-based food production instead of supporting agro-industrial meat production. Third, they should expand public welfare to help cash-strapped consumers to buy plant-based products.

Such moves may seem farfetched, but in the context of the existential threat of climate breakdown, they are arguably quite moderate. However, success requires  strong political leadership, something that has been sidelined by Veganuary's celebration of consumer power.

We urgently need to channel the growing public awareness of the environmental damage wrought by the current food system, through voting and large-scale social movements, into a political force that paves a way forward for genuinely climate-friendly diets.

In response to the issues raised by this article, a spokesperson for Danone said:
"At Danone, we stand by the fact that both dairy and plant-based foods can contribute to a healthy sustainable diet. With many more people choosing to diversify their food choices, our portfolio allows us to provide a wide range of dairy and plant-based options to best meet their different needs and inspire healthy and sustainable choices in both categories."

Veganuary and JBS were both approached for comment but no response has been received.


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Benjamin Selwyn, Professor of International Relations and International Development, Department of International Relations, University of Sussex

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

“DELUSIONAL”: Trump’s rant against Nikki Haley gets weirder on Truth Social

Despite securing the victory at the New Hampshire primary on Tuesday, Donald Trump still took to his TruthSocial platform to rant about Republican opponent Nikki Haley. Former federal prosecutor and editor-in-chief of MediasTouch network Ron Filipkowski shared a selection Trump's posts on X/Twitter, noting how the former president was "melting down after telling his people for a week he was going to win by 30."

"HALEY said she had to WIN in New Hampshire. SHE DIDN'T!!!" Trump wrote, adding "DELUSIONAL" in another Truth posted shortly thereafter.

twitter.com/RonFilipkowski/status/1749977846485762454

The ex-president also hit out at Haley in his post-race speech to his supporters, poking fun at her for speaking to supporters after the primary was called. “I have to tell you — it was very interesting, because I said, ‘Wow what a great victory,’ but then somebody ran up to the stage all dressed up nicely when it was at 7, but now I just walked up, and it was at 14,” Trump said. “Let’s not have somebody take a victory when she had a very bad night. She had a very bad night." The ex-president continued by observing how, “I felt I should do this, because I find in life, you can’t let people get away with bullshit. You can’t. And when I watched her in the fancy dress … I said, ‘What’s she doing?’ We won. And she did the same thing last week.”

Trump also took aim at New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu, a Republican, for his endorsement of Haley, saying, “This guy — he’s got to be on something. I’ve never seen anybody with energy. He’s like hopscotch."

Speaking to Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., who was standing behind him on stage, Trump said, “Did you ever think [about how] she actually appointed you, Tim? … And you’re the senator of her state? You must really hate her." Haley's home state is South Carolina, where she served as governor from 2011 to 2017. 

“I just love you,” Scott replied with a laugh. 

Nikki Haley’s campaign hits back after Trump trashes her in combative victory speech

Nikki Haley fired back at Donald Trump Tuesday after the former president took aim at her during his New Hampshire primary victory speech. Trump dedicated a portion of his remarks to bemoaning Haley's decision to remain in the 2024 contest, highlighting her "very bad night" and calling her an "imposter" who's still "hanging around" despite losing both last night and in last week's Iowa caucus. 

"We beat her so badly," Trump told his crowd of supporters, adding: "I can say to everybody, ‘Thank you for the victories, it’s wonderful’ or I can go up and say, ‘Who the hell was the imposter that went up on the stage before and claimed a victory?’ She did very poorly actually.”

Haley's communications director was quick to deliver a sharp response, swiping at Trump's lackluster wins. “Two states have now voted in the presidential race, and Donald Trump barely received half of the vote — not exactly a ringing endorsement for a former president demanding a coronation," Nachama Soloveichik said. “His angry rant was filled with grievances and offered the American people nothing about his vision for our country’s future,” Soloveichik continued. “This is why so many voters want to move on from Trump’s chaos and are rallying to Nikki Haley’s new generation of conservative leadership.”

Trump won 54 percent of the vote, 11 percent more than Haley's 43 percent, in the New Hampshire primary. Following the results announcement, Haley congratulated the GOP frontrunner but declared that the race is "not over," adding, "New Hampshire is first in the nation. It is not the last in the nation.” She came in third place in last week's Iowa primary, following closely behind Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who ended his presidential bid Sunday. 

Trump’s New Hampshire victory speech shows he’s running out of time to hide

After his win in the Iowa caucuses last week Donald Trump came to the microphone and gave an uncharacteristically gracious victory speech. It was actually standard stuff, exactly what you'd expect from any candidate except him. In these situations, the job is to try to soothe the hurt and disappointment of voters who opposed you in order to bring their followers to your side as you go through the process. Trump actually tried to do that, prompting the usual round of "he's pivoting!" from the talking heads. But, as usual, that little burst of decency was short-lived. Last night in New Hampshire, he gave one of the most boorish victory speeches anyone has ever given.

He is obviously extremely angry at Nikki Haley for not losing bigger, dropping out of the race instantly and begging for the privilege of endorsing him for president. And he made no bones about it. Apparently, he believes that it's even inappropriate for her to appear before her supporters and pledge to continue the race, even though that's what candidates always do:

Then he seemed to threaten her, making the robotic sycophants standing behind him laugh like a pack of hyenas as he cast out crude innuendo, weirdly claiming that if she won she would end up under investigation for "little stuff she doesn't want to talk about."

He even attacked her clothing.

The real low point was when he made Senator Tim Scott humiliate himself and figuratively lick his boots on stage by pointing out that he was the senator from Haley's home state and she had appointed him, making it clear that Scott stabbed his former benefactor in the back for Trump's benefit.

"You must really hate her," Trump said of Haley, at which point Scott eagerly wagged his tail at the attention and came to the microphone to proclaim, "I just love YOU!" It was simply nauseating to watch. It's pretty clear Scott is auditioning for the Mike Pence love-struck lackey award in Trumpworld and he did a good job. Someone, probably Trump himself, even told him that if he wanted to be considered for the job of dutiful doormat he needed to get himself a lady stat, and he got that done right away. Whether Trump ultimately chooses him remains to be seen but no one can say that he didn't give it all he's got.

Jeff Sharlet on Twitter expressed what I suspect was many people's feeling of revulsion at the display:

"I hold Tim Scott in contempt, but the depth of self-abasement here is hard to look at. All the more so for understanding how Trump's supporters see it, a racist innoculation against charges of racism that in turn "permits" more racism."

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As for the speech itself, I think Republican strategist Mike Murphy said it best:

He's more than just sick and needy, however. He's also truly showing real signs of mental degradation. He's saying things in his speeches that are just incomprehensible and he's doing it a lot. For instance, after noting that Haley said South Carolina is next on the calendar, he noted that Nevada is actually next and then weirdly proclaimed, "I'm pleased to announce we just won Nevada!"

Now it's true that Nevada has a bizarre system with the state requiring a state-run primary instead of a caucus but the GOP there holding a caucus anyway. But it's not taking place next month and Haley was never participating in it anyway. What's he talking about?

It's been a while since the country has seen Trump in all his glory but he's back and he is much less coherent than he used to be. His "jokes" are obscure and mystifying and he doesn't seem able to communicate his thoughts with clarity. For example, this sort of thing is common:

This is becoming a major campaign problem for him. He's always had a mercurial temperament and he remains astonishingly ignorant about government, history, economics etc. even though he's done a full term as president. And there were instances as president when he appeared to have developed an odd verbal glitch, as if he couldn't grasp the right word and said the wrong one instead, repeatedly:

This past week he did something similar but much worse when he blamed Nikki Haley for failing to protect the capitol on Jan. 6. He was obviously lying again about Nancy Pelosi but he said Haley's name repeatedly in a way that was very odd, seemingly unable to stop saying it. I don't know what kind of medical problem that might be, but it's clearly something. And it's happening a lot.

As journalist Jonathan Karl said on "Good Morning America,"

"Donald Trump is truly confused about who Nikki Haley is, thinks somehow that she was in charge of security at the Capitol on January 6th. We've seen him confuse Joe Biden with Barack Obama, he thinks that he beat Obama. We saw at one point, he talked about how Biden was going to get us into World War II… There have been several moments on the campaign trail where he has seemed, quite frankly, out of it."


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He's been doing this for a while and people are only now starting to notice because he's much more present on television. Here's a glaring example from last September in South Carolina:

When I came here everyone thought that [Jeb] Bush was gonna win. And then they took a poll and found out trump was up by about 50 points. Everyone said "what going on?" They thought Bush because Bush supposedly was a military person. Great. You know what he was —- he got us into the middle east, how did that work out, right?"

He has said at different times that he ran against George W. Bush and Barack Obama and beat them. This isn't just normal slips of the tongue. There's something very weird about how he is mixing people up like this all the time and speaking in incomprehensible fragments.

I think he knows something is wrong because he keeps talking about how he aced the "cognitive test" which he also claims he has taken more than once. And he's talking about it constantly:

That's not quite the brag he thinks it is.

I wrote about this some months ago and noted that he's terrified of losing his mental faculties because his own father had Alzheimer's disease. He knows what it looks like and I suspect that when he gazes in the mirror to put on his make-up in the morning he recognizes what's looking back at him. And it's getting worse. 

“It’s not game over – it’s game on”: why 2024 is an inflection point for the climate crisis

In 2024, global climate trends are cause for both deep alarm and cautious optimism. Last year was the hottest on record by a huge margin and this year will likely be hotter still. The annual global average temperature may, for the first time, exceed 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels – a threshold crucial for stabilising the Earth’s climate.

Without immediate action, we are at grave risk of crossing irreversible tipping points in the Earth’s climate system. Yet there are reasons for hope.

Global greenhouse gas emissions may peak this year and start falling. This would be an historic turning point, heralding the end of the fossil fuel era as coal, oil and gas are increasingly displaced by clean energy technologies.

But we must do more than take our foot off the warming accelerator – we must slam on the brakes. To avoid the worst of the climate crisis, global emissions must roughly halve by 2030. The task is monumental but possible, and could not be more urgent. It’s not game over – it’s game on.

Our planet in peril

Last year, Earth was the hottest it’s been since records began. The onset of El Niño conditions in the Pacific Ocean helped drive global temperatures to new heights. The European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service found 2023 was 1.48°C warmer than the pre-industrial average.

Warmer global temperatures in 2023 brought extreme events and disasters worldwide. They included deadly heatwaves in the northern hemisphere summer, devastating wildfires in Canada and Hawaii, and record-breaking rains in many places including Korea, South Africa and China.

Last year was also the warmest on record for the world’s oceans. More than 90% of heat from global warming is stored in the world’s oceans. Ocean temperatures are a clear indicator of our warming planet, revealing a year-on-year increase and an acceleration in the rate of warming.

The warming oceans meant for parts of 2023, the extent of sea ice in the Earth’s polar regions was the lowest on record. During the southern hemisphere winter, sea ice in Antarctica was more than one million square kilometres below the previous record low – an area of ice more than 15 times the size of Tasmania.

This year may be hotter still. There is a reasonable chance 2024 will end with an average global temperature more than 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. Governments have agreed, through the Paris Agreement, to work together to limit global warming to 1.5°C, because warming beyond this threshold poses enormous dangers for humanity.

The agreement refers to long-term trends in temperature, not a single year. So breaching 1.5°C in 2024 would not mean the world has failed to meet the Paris target. However, on long-term trends we are on track to cross the 1.5°C limit in the early 2030s.

As the planet warms, we are now at grave risk of crossing irreversible “tipping points” in Earth’s climate system – including the loss of polar ice sheets and associated sea-level rise, and the collapse of major ocean currents. These tipping points represent thresholds which, when crossed, will trigger abrupt and self-perpetuating changes to the world’s climate and oceans. They are threats of a magnitude never before faced by humanity – one-way doors we do not want to go through.

The age of fossil fuels will end

In 2024 there are also many reasons for hope.

At the COP28 United Nations climate talks in December 2023, governments from nearly 200 countries agreed to accelerate the transition away from fossil fuels in this crucial decade. The burning of fossil fuels is the primary cause of the climate crisis.

We have the technology needed to replace fossil fuels across our economy: in electricity generation, transport, heating, cooking and industrial processes. In fact, surging market demand for clean energy technologies – wind, solar, batteries and electric cars – is now displacing polluting technologies, such as coal-fired power and combustion engine vehicles, on a global scale.

The world added 510 billion watts of renewable energy capacity in 2023, 50% more than in 2022 and equivalent to the entire power capacity of Germany, France and Spain combined. The next five years are expected to see even faster growth in renewables.

Sales of electric vehicles are also booming – growing by 31% in 2023 and representing around 18% of all new vehicles sold worldwide. In Australia, sales of electric vehicles doubled last year and are expected to continue to grow strongly.

Toward a peak in global emissions

The accelerating shift toward clean energy technologies means global greenhouse gas emissions may fall in 2024. Recent analysis from the International Energy Agency (IEA), based on the stated policies of governments, suggests emissions may in fact have peaked last year. The finding is supported by analysis from Climate Analytics, which found a 70% chance of emissions falling from 2024 if current growth in clean technologies continues.

A growing number of major economies have passed their emissions peaks, including the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom and Japan.

China is currently the world’s biggest emitter, contributing 31% of the global total last year. But explosive growth in clean energy investments mean China’s emissions are set not only to fall in 2024, but to go into structural decline.

What’s more, China is currently undergoing a boom in clean energy manufacturing and a historic expansion of renewables – especially solar. Similarly explosive growth is expected for batteries and electric vehicles.

A peak in global emissions is cause for optimism – but it won’t be nearly enough. Greenhouse gas emissions will still accumulate in the atmosphere and drive catastrophic warming, until we bring them as close to zero as possible.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warns global emissions must roughly halve by 2030 to keep the 1.5°C goal within reach. The task is monumental, but possible.

Graph showing how climate policy shifts and clean energy use are bringing the world closer to an emissions peak

Climate policy shifts and clean energy use are bringing the world closer to an emissions peak – but governments need to do more. Climate Council, adapted from Carbon Brief analysis and based on IEA data.

Next steps for Australia

Australia is making great strides in rolling out renewable energy. But state and federal governments are undermining this progress by approving new fossil fuel projects.

Every new coal, oil or gas development endangers us all. Australia must urgently reform its national environmental law – the Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act – to end new fossil fuel developments.

Similarly, Australia’s gains in renewable energy have been offset by rising emissions in other sectors, notably transport. It’s time to implement long-promised fuel efficiency standards and get these emissions down.

Beyond these immediate next practical steps, Australia has much work ahead to shift from fossil fuel exports to clean alternatives.

The opportunity for Australia to play a major positive role in the world’s decarbonisation journey is undeniable, but that window of opportunity is narrowing fast.The Conversation

Wesley Morgan, Research Fellow, Griffith Asia Institute, Griffith University

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