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A new report calls chemical recycling a “dangerous deception” — and a former plastic lobbyist agrees

As petrochemical companies continue to inundate the world with cheap plastic products and packaging — much of which is designed to be used once and then thrown away — they’ve been heavily promoting one solution called “chemical recycling.” 

This catch-all term refers to processes and technologies that break plastics into their molecular building blocks and turn them into new products. In theory, chemical recycling is a promising way to deal with so-called “hard-to-recycle” plastics like wrappers and bags, which can’t be recycled using conventional methods.

But a new report from the nonprofits Beyond Plastics and the International Pollutants Elimination Network, or IPEN, says chemical recycling is a “dangerous deception” that will only exacerbate pollution and environmental injustice while failing to address the plastics crisis.

“The landscape of chemical recycling is littered with pollution and failure,” and relying on it is an “unreliable and polluting approach” to resolve the global plastics crisis, Jennifer Congdon, Beyond Plastics’ deputy director, told journalists at a press conference on Tuesday. She and the report co-authors called on President Joe Biden to place a national moratorium on new chemical recycling operations in the U.S. and urged international negotiators to disavow the process as part of the global plastics treaty that will be discussed during a third round of negotiations in Nairobi later this month.

Beyond Plastics and IPEN’s 159-page report begins with an overview of the plastic pollution crisis and companies’ “undeniable” failure to address it through conventional recycling methods. According to the Department of Energy, the U.S. plastics recycling rate is still only about 5 percent, despite decades spent trying to scale it up.

“The landscape of chemical recycling is littered with pollution and failure.”

Notably, this view is supported in a foreword by Lewis Freeman, former vice president of government affairs for the Society of the Plastics Industry — a major lobbying group that in 2016 changed its name to the Plastics Industry Association. According to Freeman, the plastics industry has long known that recycling “couldn’t realistically manage a significant amount of plastic waste,” but has “spent millions of dollars convincing the public otherwise.” Freeman implies that chemical recycling is an extension of this deception and raises doubts that it will contribute to an industry target of “reusing, recycling or recovering 100 percent of plastic packaging in the U.S. by 2040.”

The Plastics Industry Association did not respond to Grist’s request for comment.

To assess the state of chemical recycling in the United States, Beyond Plastics and IPEN looked at the country’s 11 chemical recycling facilities and found that only three are dedicated exclusively to producing feedstocks for new plastic products; the rest produce fuel to be burned, sometimes in combination with chemicals for industrial use. Four facilities are registered with the Environmental Protection Agency as generators of hazardous waste, and seven of them are located in areas where there is a higher-than-average concentration of people of color. This trend aligns with a pattern of environmental injustice within the plastics industry, which has concentrated pollution-intensive plastic production facilities near Black and low-income communities in Louisiana, Texas, and Pennsylvania

Meanwhile, the report finds that all of the facilities are working only at a “pilot” or “demonstration” scale and not at full capacity, despite efforts dating back to the 1980s to scale up chemical recycling technologies. Even if these 11 facilities were processing as much plastic as they say they can, Beyond Plastics and IPEN estimate they would only go through 460,000 metric tons of plastic waste per year — less than 1.3 percent of the amount generated in the U.S. annually.

These findings are consistent with those of other nonprofits and media outlets. A 2021 Reuters investigation, for example, found that 30 chemical recycling projects announced by 24 companies were either “still operating on a modest scale” or had closed down, while more than half were years behind schedule. A more recent investigation into one facility in North Carolina found that much of the plastic it processed was disposed of as toxic waste, despite advertisements claiming it to be an environmental success story.

“The only thing actually being recycled is the myth that recycling will solve the plastic pollution crisis,” the new report says. It raises concern about a spate of state-level laws backed by the American Chemistry Council, an industry lobbying group, to promote chemical recycling, including by loosening air emissions controls and eliminating monitoring requirements. At least 20 states have passed such deregulation laws.

The American Chemistry Council did not respond to Grist’s request for comment. 

A spokesperson for Alterra, which operates a chemical recycling facility in Akron, Ohio, said the report was “riddled with many misleading and erroneous conclusions” and specifically described as “defamatory” the claim that its facility was nearing the limits of its air emissions permit while operating at below full capacity. The company said Beyond Plastics “conveniently ignored” publicly available documents from a local air quality regulator showing that its facility’s emissions are “significantly below the limits of the air emissions permit.”

Beyond Plastics said Alterra’s criticism was “not based on fact,” and that the documents the company provided do not negate previous findings showing that its facility had nearly violated its air emissions permit, and that the Ohio EPA decided on two occasions not to take enforcement action against it. “We stand by our report,” said Judith Enck, Beyond Plastics’ president and a former regional administrator for the EPA.

Another operator, Nexus Circular, sent Grist snippets of its website’s FAQ page describing the chemical recycling process, and a third, ExxonMobil, said chemical recycling was a “proven, scalable technology to turn plastic waste that would otherwise go to landfill or incineration into valuable new products.” PureCycle, which runs a chemical recycling plant in Ironton, Ohio, declined to comment ahead of a quarterly earnings call on November 8. 

Six of the other seven companies whose chemical recycling facilities are named in the new report did not respond to Grist’s request for comment. Prima America Corporation, which operates a chemical recycling facility in New Hampshire, could not be reached because it does not have a website or a publicly listed phone number.

To stop greenwashing and prevent chemical recycling from further harming low-income communities and communities of color, Beyond Plastics and IPEN call for Biden to declare a moratorium on all new chemical recycling plants, a step that environmental groups have previously suggested the president can take without congressional approval. They also recommended that all existing facilities be subject to “full environmental impact assessments” from the EPA. All federal, state, and local subsidies and incentives for chemical recycling should be ended, the authors said, and no projects that turn plastic into fuel should be allowed.

On the international stage, countries are in the midst of negotiating a historic treaty on plastics. There’s nothing in the treaty yet about chemical recycling — it’s still a very rough draft — but Beyond Plastics and IPEN say it’s critical that negotiators fight for language that explicitly labels it an illegitimate solution to the plastic pollution crisis, potentially by classifying it as “waste incineration” rather than recycling, or by blocking it from counting toward mandatory recycling targets. The third round of negotiations is scheduled to begin on November 13, with the final treaty due by the end of next year.

“We do not want the treaty negotiators — or legislators or regulators — to be distracted by the false solution of chemical recycling,” Enck told journalists on Tuesday. Instead, she urged them to consider the simpler strategy of significantly reducing plastic production.

This story has been updated to include Beyond Plastics’ response to Alterra’s criticism of the report.

This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/accountability/a-new-report-calls-chemical-recycling-a-dangerous-deception-and-a-former-plastic-lobbyist-agrees/.

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

“Beat up badly”: Legal experts say trial appearance “went really poorly for Eric Trump”

Legal experts warned that Eric Trump’s testimony did not do his family any favors in the New York fraud trial that threatens to bring down the Trump Organization.

Eric Trump, like his brother Donald Trump Jr., before him, repeatedly blamed the company’s accountants for exaggerated financial statements that led Judge Arthur Engoron to issue a summary judgment finding the company and family liable for fraud before the trial even began.

His testimony concluded early on Friday with his father set to testify when the trial resumes on Monday.

“Eric done for the day, and leaves the stand having been beat up badly,” tweeted former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman. “He signed document after document, [including] for bank loans, that were inaccurate. He tries a combo of ‘I relied on the accountants’ and ‘I don't recall,’ but often flounders.”

Litman added that a “trial is a series of standout memorable moments — maybe 10 or so — surrounded by a lot of uneventful testimony. And so far the moments in the fraud trial have all broken for the NY AG & against the Trumps.”

CNN legal analyst Elie Honig said on Friday that the testimony “went really poorly for Eric Trump” and could complicate his father’s appearance on the stand next week.

"When he was deposed over a year ago he took the Fifth, he wouldn't answer anything other than his name and he took the Fifth as he is entitled to do,” Honig said.

"But the world has changed for Donald Trump," he continued. "Back then, there were all these swirling criminal investigations; none of the four indictments we have now had landed. The world was a bit more uncertain for him. A year and change later he's been indicted on four things, none relating to this particular fraud. If he takes the Fifth he protects himself against any of those cases roaring back to life."

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Honig warned that it’s possible that Trump “takes the stand and says something that piques prosecutors' interest, they may think maybe we should open a criminal case on him for fraud.”

"The risk of taking the Fifth is that the judge in this case, this civil case, can say I'm using that against you,” he added.

New York Attorney General Letitia James called out Eric and Donald Jr. in a video posted to social media, saying they "pretend that they were not involved in their family's fraudulent business. But the facts tell a very different story."


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Eric Trump "insisted that he had never heard about his father's statements of financial condition before our investigation,” she said. "He told us his job was just to pour concrete. But his emails tell a different story. On multiple occasions over the years, Eric Trump worked on his father's statements of financial condition. And he was intimately involved in lying about the values of properties, like Seven Springs and Briarcliff, to make his father appear richer than he actually was."

James ended with a warning to the former president ahead of his appearance next week.

"Next week, Donald Trump himself will take the stand. And while I am sure he will try to hide his wrongdoing behind taunts, threats, name-calling,” she said, “we will not be bullied out of uncovering the truth.”

Could graphic cigarette-style warning labels on meat products curb consumption?

A study conducted at Durham University, which was recently published in the journal "Appetite," found that warning labels including a graphic image "similar to those warning of impotence, heart disease or lung cancer on cigarette packets" could reduce the selection of meals containing meat by up to 10%, as reported by Damien Gayle at The Guardian.

The study "split 1,001 meat-eating adults into four groups and showed each group pictures of hot meat, fish, vegetarian, and vegan canteen-style meals." These were presented with "a health warning label, a climate warning label, a pandemic warning label or no label." The pandemic label was most effective at dissuading the participants from eating the meals with meat, followed by the health, then the climate warnings, at 10%, 8.8% and 7.4% respectively. According to Gayle, ultimately "researchers said the differences [between the warnings] were not statistically significant and that participants had judged the climate warnings to be the most credible."

In addition to contributing to climate change on a global scale, consuming meat can also result in many personal health issues as well. An October study recently revealed that people who routinely eat a lot of red meat — as well as processed meats — "may be increasing their risk of developing Type 2 diabetes."

 

“Combative” Eric Trump lost his “temper and raised his voice” during questioning on fraud

A state attorney's question to Eric Trump in the Trump Organization's ongoing fraud trial prompted the former president's son to throw up his hands in annoyance, according to reporters in the courtroom Thursday, per Mediaite.

Trump is an executive at the company, which, along with him, his father, his brother and other executives, is the defendant in a multi-million dollar civil fraud lawsuit brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James. In September, just ahead of the trial's start, New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron ruled in a partial summary judgment that the company had defrauded lenders and insurance companies to obtain better deals by drastically overvaluing their assets on statements of financial condition.

In addition to seeking $250 million in damages, James is also pursuing the suspension of the Trumps' ability to do business in the state. Though Engoron has granted that request, the ruling has been stayed pending appeal.

Eric Trump testified on Thursday after the state called him as a witness. During an exchange with state attorney Andrew Amer, Trump appeared "outraged."

“Eric Trump ventured a long explanation about why he did not agree with a complex point that Andrew Amer, the state lawyer, was trying to press,” The New York Times reported. “When he stopped, Amer asked him, ‘Are you done?’ Trump briefly appeared outraged. ‘He meant that seriously,’ the judge explained. The lawyer said he had not wanted to interrupt Trump.”

The New York Post reported that Trump “threw his hands in the air, appearing dumbfounded,” further stating that Engoron told Trump Amer did not intend his question as a jab. 

The testimony of Trump's older brother, Donald Trump Jr. ended earlier in the day Thursday. His sister and former Trump Organization executive Ivanka Trump is slated to take the witness stand

MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin detailed the differences between the brothers' testimonies, according to RawStory, noting the contrast between both men's questioning.

"It was sort of the tale of two brothers," she told host Chris Jansing, "because we think of Don Jr. and Eric as a pair, but really both temperamentally and otherwise, they could not be more different in their approaches to testimony today."

She pointed to Jansing's observation that Donald Trump Jr. deflected, denied responsibility and shifted blame to the accountants and lawyers who guided him, highlighting how the former president's eldest son has been "used to outsourcing things to other people" throughout his life.

"But the problem is, as an officer of the company and particularly as a trustee of his father's trust, there has to be a place where the buck stopped, and when his father was president, the buck stopped with he and Allen Weisselberg as the co co-trustees of the trust in which all the Trump Organization assets were put," Rubin said, adding that his direct examination by the state was "relatively pleasant and easy."

"Eric on the other hand, when he took the stand, has been combative from the start," she continued. "He doesn't want to give an inch. He didn't even want to admit that in 2012 he understood his father even had statements of financial condition."

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Rubin went to explain that the attorney general is trying to establish that the younger brother understood that provided financial statements to other people outside the company who relied on them, whether it be banks or the members of a North Carolina golf club that the Trumps purchased in 2012.

"When Eric was about to get off the stand, he finally showed a flash of Trumpian anger and basically said, 'Of course we have financial statements, we're a major corporation!'" Rubin said. "But he's been generally calm and collected if not particularly generous in his testimony so far."


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Other legal experts also criticized Trump's behavior during his testimony online, noting that his demeanor doesn't help his case.

"Eric loses his temper and raised his voice in questioning about his knowledge of TO's financial statements," former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman wrote on X, formerly Twitter. "Very bad form and comes off as defensive, though would be a bigger deal in a jury trial."

"If I were the judge, I’d make a credibility finding that specifically notes his demeanor," conservative attorney George Conway added. "No appellate court would reverse a factual finding here that the defendants are liars."

“Lessons in Chemistry” understands the assignment: Never forget that cooking is vital work

In the early ‘50s, when women were constantly reminded their place was in the kitchen, Elizabeth Zott (Brie Larson) subversively shapes that myth to suit her needs. Five episodes into “Lesson in Chemistry,” she has lost nearly everything — the love of her life, her job in a prestigious lab where the men in charge refuse to recognize her talents and her groundbreaking research, which was stolen and plagiarized by those same men. She’s also gained new friendship, a daughter — and an unlikely fan in Walter Pine (Kevin Sussman), the overwhelmed, divorced father of one of her girl’s classmates.

While life sifts and stirs around her, Elizabeth’s kitchen is her constant. “It is my lab that I also happen to cook in,” she explains to Walter, adding that she sells Tupperware to pay the bills while she pursues her scientific endeavors.

Walter is a local TV producer in need of something to replace a hilariously soporific embroidery show called “A Stitch in Time.” She is a harried mother who is upset that his daughter is stealing her daughter’s meticulously prepared lunches. Their platonic version of a meet-cute occurs when Elizabeth angrily storms into his office to dress him down for being a sub-par provider.

“As a parent, I will not compromise on good food,” she angrily declares. “Good food is a primary catalyst for which my daughter will grow. Good food is not a hobby. It is community, it is family and it is essential.” Then she provides him with a chicken pot pie recipe, along with a slice she’s prepared so he has a control to work with, and an oatmeal cookie – for his daughter, not him.

Every story about a scientist revels in its eureka moment. “Lesson In Chemistry,” being a eight-episode series, contains many, but takes its time in getting to this confrontation, which is when the proverbial lightbulb switches on for Elizabeth, lighting the path to her new career.

Elizabeth's star-making opportunity isn't simply a matter of luck, although she happens to walk into Walter’s life moments after his pig doggie boss Phil Lebensmal (Rainn Wilson) commands him to fire the sewing “crone” and find him a host who is “maternal” and “f**kable,” a suggestion that makes the good-hearted Walter cringe. It’s in Elizabeth’s assured confidence related to cooking, which she nails in the fifth episode, “CH3OOH,” once she’s accepted Walter’s offer to host a cooking show.

"Good food is not a hobby. It is community, it is family and it is essential."

They lock horns a bit as the two argue over the look and feel of the show – he irrationally presents her with a pink and baby blue kitchen that Elizabeth accurately describes as “revolting” and impractical — but on one matter Elizabeth is adamant.

“The thing is, TV needs to be inviting and fun,” Walter tells her.

“Cooking is not fun,” she responds. “It is vital work.”

Reading this may make it seem as if Elizabeth doesn’t enjoy cooking, but that isn’t the case at all. She values it profoundly, which is why she excels at it. She also recognizes that if she doesn’t do it, no one else will – or worse, a diner or restaurant will do the job, but not as healthily or delectably. The products of her efforts bring her satisfaction and joy but, as she says, it still counts as labor.

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“I take cooking seriously. And I know you do too,” she tells her audience as she opens her first episode. “In my experience, people do not appreciate the work and sacrifice that goes into being a mother, a wife, a woman. Well, I am not one of those people. At the end of our time here together, we will have done something worth doing. We will have created something that will not go unnoticed. We will have made supper, and it will matter. “

This outlook guides what eventually becomes Elizabeth’s show, “Supper at Six.” But I also wonder how our collective consideration of kitchen labor might have been altered had there been a show like Elizabeth’s in the '50s, '60s or beyond, one so brainy that she lists the formula for acetic acid instead of just saying vinegar, and the people watching aren’t put off but intrigued.

That isn’t the part to which I suspect many home chefs most relate, though. It’s the insistence on respect, which is downplayed in most cooking shows if not left out entirely. Alton Brown’s “Good Eats,” which accessibly emphasizes the science behind kitchen techniques and ingredient combinations, was an exception. In breaking down those principles he underlines the vital importance of the work we do in the kitchen. But nearly every other show starts from an assumption that cooking and baking are fun, magic, nothing but a good time.

There’s no blame meant in my calling this out. Rather, I'm simply saying that approach stands in contrast to the assumption that cooking is somehow a pastime instead of counting as part of what Oxfam estimated in 2020 to be around $10.8 trillion in unpaid labor women and girls contribute to the world economy. 

Cooking is chemistry, and chemistry is life, Elizabeth assures her audience.

Mind you, as someone who loves her kitchen and was raised on a TV diet of Julia Child’s public television shows, I often do view it as a hobby. When I have a craving for some dish or want to scratch a curiosity about a recipe I’ve never experimented with before, food preparation can be a satisfying, sensory-flooding experience. But I don't have kids to feed, and I also have easy access to takeout options on those nights when I'm not feeling it.

Ask a working parent with several children or anyone obligated to feed a large family if they love to cook, and you may get a different answer. Take my mother-in-law, who grew up on a farm in the 1950s and was sentenced to many years of making meals for a large group of hungry people, mainly ungrateful brothers, every day. Preparing food for people who didn’t appreciate the time and exertion required to feed them was such drudgery that when she finally got her own place, she embraced a life of canned foods and frozen dinners, barely touching her stove.

She watches a lot of TV. None of it is Food Network programming.

Lessons in ChemistryRainn Wilson in "Lessons in Chemistry" (Apple TV+)That’s why this adaptation of Bonnie Garmus’ book strikes the perfect balance between realism and fantasy. Phil’s sexism feels heightened but sadly still quite accurate by Reddit standards, and Larson’s interpretation of Elizabeth's pointedly precise, low-emotion rebuke of his heinous behavior is work of someone whose spent her entire adult life dealing with men like him.


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Phil believes the only thing viewers want is to see a sexy housewife making her man a drink. Elizabeth wants her audience to understand the molecular-level wonder that goes into making, say, the skin on roasted chicken crispier; also, she’s a single mother with two jobs.

“Men are always trying to explain, and women are expected to sit and listen,” she says calmly. “I do not want this job, but I need the money. And I will work harder than anyone to make this a show that I am proud of. But you want a show that perpetuates the myth that women are imbeciles, and the biggest decision of their day is what color they're going to paint their nails. I will not do that. And there is no amount of menace that will change my mind.”

“A man wants his wife to make him a drink after a long day at work,” Phil growls, “so make the f**king drink.”

“Why do you assume that his day was longer than hers?” Elizabeth calmly replies. 'Why don't you make the f**king drink?”

Cooking is chemistry, and chemistry is life, Elizabeth assures her audience, in a tone the men in the station’s test group say makes them feel “bored, “punished” and “lost,” while one of the two outnumbered women in the group, when she’s finally allowed to speak, says makes her feel “capable.”

It turns out to be the right alchemic blend for Phil’s low-rated station, proven by the phones ringing off the hook with viewers calling in to find out more about Elizabeth’s scientific approach to supposed women’s work. She's right — cooking is chemistry, and mastering that chemistry is vital, important work. If someone had gotten that message to everyone who took or takes what people do in the kitchen for granted a lot earlier in life, who knows how many more home chef geniuses there'd be?

New episodes of "Lessons in Chemistry" debut Fridays on Apple TV+.

 

“Sorry Princess Nepotism”: Experts trash Ivanka’s bid to duck testimony due to “hardship”

An appeals court on Thursday denied Ivanka Trump's request to postpone her upcoming testimony in her father's civil fraud trial in New York, shortly after she claimed she would experience "undue hardship" if forced to appear in court during a school week, CNN reports. “Ms. Trump, who resides in Florida with her three minor children, will suffer undue hardship if a stay is denied and she is required to testify at trial in New York in the middle of a school week, in a case she has already been dismissed from, before her appeal is heard,” her lawyer argued, in part, in a Thursday appeal.

Ivanka Trump's aim in filing the appeal was to block New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Engoron's previous order for her to testify until an appeal could be heard by a state appellate court. The Thursday filing also requested that the court pause the entire fraud trial against former President Donald Trump, two of his adult sons and his company until her appeal could be heard. But the stay motion was quickly denied in a Thursday night filing. 

Legal experts mocked Ivanka Trump online over her argument for appeal. "Don’t look now, but someone’s privilege is showing," MSNBC legal analyst Katie Phang wrote on X, formerly Twitter. "Sorry Princess Nepotism – you’re not above the law," Bradley Moss, a national security lawyer, added. "Not a good look for Ivanka trying to get out of testifying in fraud trial [because] it was 'middle of school week,'" former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman tweeted. "She lost motion and was roundly mocked. A horrendous week for the family/Trump brand even aside from trial, which is moving like a freight train tow a disastrous verdict."

Trump’s purge begins — with the Federalist Society

We here at Salon have been documenting Donald Trump's plans for his restoration ever since he was exiled to his Palm Beach social club on January 20, 2021. It was clear from that moment on that he was plotting his comeback and the people around him weren't just licking their wounds and preparing to move on, they were readying plans to ensure that Trump's second term permanently solidified their power. They've been hard at work ever since.

Their project began the previous fall, with a plan called "Schedule F" which was implemented just 13 days before the election. The presidential edict called for the stripping of all the executive branch departments, from the FBI to intelligence agencies to the Pentagon and, of course, the usual suspects at the EPA and the IRS. Biden reversed this upon taking office and Congress passed some roadblocks to trying it in the future but nobody believes they will be effective if Trump, or frankly, any Republican, once again assumes the presidency. (Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has endorsed this concept promising to "slit the throats" of government bureaucrats if he were to take office.)

A new Trump administration will not be unduly constrained by musty old traditions like "the rule of law" or "the Constitution."

Trump has continued giving speeches on the subject although they don't get much coverage in the mainstream media. In the summer of 2022, before he had announced his run, he addressed his own vanity "think tank," the America First Policy Institute:

“We need to make it much easier to fire rogue bureaucrats who are deliberately undermining democracy or, at a minimum, just want to keep their jobs. They want to hold onto their jobs. Congress should pass historic reforms empowering the president to ensure that any bureaucrat who is corrupt, incompetent or unnecessary for the job can be told—did you ever hear this—‘You’re fired, get out, you’re fired.’ [You] have to do it. Deep state. Washington will be an entirely different place.”

Needless to say, Trump's notion of who is corrupt, incompetent or necessary is purely dictated by their loyalty to him personally.

There is also Trump's Agenda 47, a laundry list of extremist right-wing "policies" described by Salon's Chauncy DeVega this way:

Agenda 47 would consist of an end to birthright citizenship, further criminalizing transgender people and the LGBTQI community more broadly, expanding the thought crime and other censorship laws to end the teaching of "critical race theory" and to defeat "Woke" and Black Lives Matter, attacking academic freedom and replacing it with "patriot education," implementing a national stop and frisk law, pardoning the Jan. 6 terrorists, putting homeless people in camps or some other designated area under threat of arrest, building high tech "freedom cities," ending the professional civil service and replacing it with right-wing political appointees and other such partisan agents, gutting the Department of Justice and other parts of the government that opposed Trump's attacks on democracy and the rule of law, executing drug dealers, starting a trade war with China, and making "peace" with Vladimir Putin by withdrawing support for the Ukrainian people and their freedom struggle. In many ways, Agenda 47 is a continuation of the fascist and other authoritarian policies Trump put in place during his first regime but now made even more extreme and cruel.

Sounds great, doesn't it?

And let's not forget Project 2025, a very special plan by the Heritage Foundation to be ready on Day One with a full roster of MAGA replacements for all those Deep State bureaucrats Trump and his minions will be firing. Peter Dans, the director of the 2025 Presidential Transition Project said, "We need to flood the zone with conservatives. This is a clarion call to come to Washington. People need to lay down their tools, and step aside from their professional life and say, ‘This is my lifetime moment to serve.’”

The Heritage Foundation has experience with this sort of thing. They were tasked with staffing the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) in Iraq, another daft Republican experiment to rebuild a fantasy government based entirely on their conservative ideology. You may remember how that turned out:

Andrew Burns, 23, a Red Cross volunteer who had taught English in rural China, felt going to Iraq would help him pursue a career in humanitarian aid. Todd Baldwin, 28, a legislative aide for Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), thought the opportunity was too good to pass up. John Hanley, 24, a Web site editor, wanted to break into the world of international relations. Anita Greco, 25, a former teacher, and Casey Wasson, 23, a recent college graduate in government, just needed jobs.

For months they wondered what they had in common, how their names had come to the attention of the Pentagon, until one day they figured it out: They had all posted their resumes at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative-leaning think tank.

They didn't have any experience doing things like building a stock market from scratch or running massive infrastructure reconstruction projects in a country that had been razed by "shock and awe," but the Heritage Foundation did make sure they were all staunchly pro-life, so there was that. The CPA was an utter disaster, of course. I think we can be sure that the same level of expertise will be tapped if Schedule F, Agenda 47 and Project 2025 are implemented.

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This week the New York Times reported on yet another project in the works, this one spearheaded by the odious Stephen Miller and Trump's former bodyman turned hatchet man, John McEntee. Under the auspices of yet another Trump-affiliated institution, the "MAGA ACLU" called American First Legal, these two have been tasked with finding legal advisers for a new Trump administration who will not be unduly constrained by musty old traditions like "the rule of law" or "the Constitution." Think John Eastman or Jeffrey Clark, although those two will likely no longer have law licenses by that time and may even be in jail. (It's unclear if that would be an impediment to serving in a new Trump administration,  however.)

What's most interesting about this new project is that they have decided that they no longer want the input or participation from the Federalist Society which is now considered a bunch of RINOs who can't be trusted:

“The Federalist Society doesn’t know what time it is,” said Russell T. Vought, a former senior Trump administration official who runs a think tank with close ties to the former president. He argued that many elite conservative lawyers had proved to be too timid when, in his view, the survival of the nation is at stake.

Such comments may surprise those who view the Federalist Society as hard-line conservatives. But the move away from the group reflects the continuing evolution of the Republican Party in the Trump era and an effort among those now in his inner circle to prepare to take control of the government in a way unseen in modern presidential history.

The purges have begun, I guess. It was only a matter of time.

All of these various agendas and projects are designed for one purpose only, to "deconstruct the administrative state" as former Trump adviser and podcaster Steve Bannon has called for. And considering the Republican Party track record, not to mention Donald Trump's, the prospects of it being successful are very dim. They aren't competent at much of anything when it comes to governing anymore but they are very good at tearing things down and causing chaos, destabilizing everything they touch. Unfortunately, I don't think there's been a worse time in our history for such a stress test on the US government and our democracy. It's important to make sure they don't get the chance to transform any of these plans into action.

“Crazy thing to say to a judge”: Experts stunned after judge explodes at Trump lawyer’s “misogyny”

The Manhattan judge overseeing Donald Trump’s civil fraud case blew up at the former president’s legal team for complaining about his law clerk on Thursday.

Judge Arthur Engoron, who previously issued a gag order and fined Trump twice for targeting law clerk Allison Greenfield, warned Trump attorney Chris Kise that he may expand the gag order after the lawyer made a comment about the clerk.

"Do not refer to my staff again," Engoron said, according to The Messenger, later adding: “She’s a civil servant.”

Trump previously attacked Greenfield on Truth Social, sharing a post falsely claiming that she was Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s, D-N.Y., “girlfriend.”

"Sometimes I think there's a bit of misogyny in you referring to my female principal law clerk," Engoron told Kise on Thursday, warning that he may expand the gag order to include Trump’s legal team.

“I am not a misogynist,” Kise told the judge, according to The New York Times, noting that he’s happily married and has a daughter.

"I assure you that’s not the issue," fellow Trump lawyer Alina Habba insisted, before complaining about Greenfield having improper influences over the judge and arguing she can’t be a misogynist because she is a woman, according to the Times.

Kise and Habba continued to accuse the clerk of bias, claiming that she had written notes to the judge against the defense, according to The Messenger.

Engoron at one point became so frustrated he slammed the table.

“I have an absolute unfettered right to get advice from my principal law clerk!” he exclaimed.

MSNBC’s Lisa Rubin reported that Kise took a shot at Greenfield before the judge’s explosion.

“I'll wait again to get the note that you have from Ms. Greenfield. You may have a question for me. Maybe it is about dinner,” Kise told the judge, according to Rubin.

“That is an absolutely crazy thing to say to a judge.  Nutso,” tweeted conservative attorney George Conway.

“Kise acts as if he's never been in court before,” wrote former federal prosecutor Elizabeth de la Vega, calling the attorney’s behavior “appalling.”

“Courthouse personnel shouldn't be the object of abuse by lawyers or parties, no matter who they are. Justice Engoron is absolutely right to protect his clerk,” wrote former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance.

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The Messenger’s report noted that while Habba was out of court on October 19, Kise got into a “verbal altercation” with two other female lawyers present in court, Greenfield and attorney general counsel Colleen Faherty, during a private huddle with Engoron. Though most of the conversation was inaudible to reporters, Faherty at one point snapped at Kise to “be more respectful.”

“No,” Kise shot back.

“That was rude,” Faherty said.

The exchange reportedly happened after Kise “made a dismissive comment in response to a question by Greenfield, questioned Faherty's intelligence, and then apologized,” according to The Messenger.

Former Trump fixer Michael Cohen, a key witness at the trial, told MSNBC that the incident was part of a pattern for Kise.

"Chris Kise, there's something seriously wrong with him," Cohen said. "He attacked me vociferously when I was on the stand, getting up, calling me all sorts of — that's all they do, is they know how to denigrate. It's not going to bode well for him. It's about the last thing that you want to do.”

New research is changing our understanding of cat emotions, from purring to their facial expressions

If you're lucky, you are reading this article while in the same general area as a cat. Like most people who interact with cats, you no doubt would like to better understand the enigmatic complexity of its mind. Does the cat like you or is it hostile? What does it mean when it purrs, closes its eyes or raises its ears? Do cats have a language that they share with each other? Why do we find their faces so adorable?

The astonished scientists discovered that the cats had at least "276 morphologically distinct facial expressions."

As it turns out, scientists have come closer to the answer some of these questions since the start of the 2020s. In the process, they are learning that cats are far more intelligent and sophisticated than even their greatest admirers might have believed — and much of this has to do with their unique relationship with another species: us.

Take a study held among a cat community in Los Angeles. Published in the journal Behavioural Processes in October, the research involved 53 adult domestic shorthair cats at a cat café known (appropriately) as CatCafé Lounge. As the cats went about their feline business, the researchers secretly recorded them, obtaining 194 minutes of footage with 186 different cat interactions. After poring through the material and analyzing each interaction in detail, the astonished scientists discovered that the cats had at least "276 morphologically distinct facial expressions."

Among other things, cats will close their eyes and move both their ears and whiskers forward when they are feeling friendly. When they are feeling aggressive, their tongues will flick across their lips while their pupils constrict and ears flatten against their heads.

“Our hope is to expand our sample size to include cats living in other locations … looking at the facial expressions of cats living in multi-cat homes, feral colonies," study co-author Brittany Florkiewicz, an evolutionary psychologist at Lyon College in Arkansas, told CNN.

Another recent study is also redefining how humans perceive cats. Until lately, it was widely believed that cats purr as a voluntary response to being happy. But new research in the journal Current Biology, the mechanics that go into what is widely known as purring may be closer to an involuntary response like snoring.


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The mechanics that go into what is widely known as purring may be closer to an involuntary response like snoring.

It all comes down to the difference between two schools of thought on cat purring: The myoelastic-aerodynamic theory of phonation and the active muscle contractions theory. Scientists who subscribed to the active muscle contractions theory believed that when cats purr in response to being comfortable or, conversely, to feeling stressed, they do so as a voluntary muscle contraction. By contrast, the myoelastic-aerodynamic theory of phonation holds that complex interactions involving aerodynamic stresses cause purring in cats, particularly as these stresses are applied to the free surfaces of the cats' vocal folds.

To test these theories, scientists studied eight larynges from cats with terminal illnesses that had been humanely euthanized. These were then placed in tubes which replicated the warm, moist air and other important conditions of a cat's breathing body. Ultimately this allowed the scientists to recreate the conditions necessary to induce the low-frequency phonation characteristic of purring. Although this study did not rule out the possibility that voluntary muscular contractions may play a role in purring, they proved that the connective tissue masses in the cats' vocal folds made it possible to create self-sustained low-frequency oscillations entirely on their own.

While this research is fascinating because it illuminates how cats pull off purring like never before, it may also mean that cats don't always purr to express pleasure. More research into purring is definitely needed, as David Rice, a biomechanical engineer at Tulane University, pointed out to Science. Rice, who has studied cat purring himself, criticized the use of dead over living cats, saying this experiment is “akin to removing the mouthpiece from a wind instrument and analyzing its sounds in isolation.”

Other recent studies have demystified the complexity of the feline mind, its behaviors and our relationship with them. Last year research in the journal Animal Cognition revealed that cats can distinguish between when a human they care about is talking to them versus another human.

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To determine this, the scientists analyzed 16 domesticated cats as they reacted to prerecordings of their owners' voices when speaking directly to them and then compared it to when the same voice was talking to another human. Not only did all of the cats react differently to the latter situation than the former, but they displayed another intriguing trait. Ten out of 16 cats became engaged when their owner spoke to them after showing decreased interest upon hearing a stranger's voice; eight of those same cats lost interest again when their owner then began talking to another human. This showed not only that the cats could distinguish between human voices, but cared about whether their owner was specifically addressing them or not.

Another 2022 study, this one in the journal Scientific Reports, found that cats are able to recognize both other cats and humans they know based on their specific names and faces. To learn this, the scientists placed cats in front of laptop monitors and displayed various images: Sometimes a photo of a familiar cat's face while hearing that cat's name, sometimes an experimenter's face while hearing their cat-friend's name, and so on. The scientists found that household cats would pay attention to a monitor for longer if the name they heard did not match the face on the screen. By contrast, the cats showed recognition when they saw a familiar face and heard the correct name matched with it.

Nancy Mace learns the lesson of Lauren Boebert and Marjorie Taylor Greene: MAGA is not for ladies

It's been a challenging few months for the ladies of MAGA in the House of Representatives.

Even before she was caught on video getting handsy with a date in public in September, Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo. faced tough re-election prospects, having nearly lost her once deep-red district in November 2022. Now she's facing cringeworthy headlines like, "Outraised and embattled, Lauren Boebert heads back to Colorado with a revamped campaign strategy." Even in this beat-sweetener, the Associated Press reporter can't quite make "vaping and groping with a date during a musical production of 'Beetlejuice'" sound like a mere "embarrassing moment" instead of a full-blown faceplant. 

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., was once perceived as the far-right power behind the throne of Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif. But she lost some MAGA cred this year when she was ousted from the ultra-right Freedom Caucus. Then McCarthy lost his job as speaker, leaving Greene cut off from both the mainstream GOP and the increasingly powerful radical right. Now Greene spends an inordinate amount of her time in incoherent Twitter beefs with Republican colleagues. 

And while Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., has succeeded at her goal of being on TV all the time, she's really only defined herself as an empty-headed attention addict. She never could coherently explain why she joined 8 Republicans to oust McCarthy, even as she grabbed at every microphone to share her non-reasons. Her stunt of marching through Congress in a skintight "scarlet A" T-shirt only reinforced the narrative that her only goal is getting on camera. Now her own staff has leaked internal documents to the Daily Beast thar expose her as "a politician obsessed with her public image and fixated on winning herself as much exposure as possible."


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It all seemed so promising for these three women when they first came to Congress in January 2021. Just combine the "who me?" innocent-sexy act of a pageant queen with the belligerence of the nastiest troll on Twitter, and voilá! Instant MAGA stardom. Activating the lizard brain bigotries of the GOP base works even better in conjunction with titillating their gonads, something Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ailes figured out a long time ago, when they put a "leg cam" on Fox News so male viewers could ogle the female anchors in their miniskirts.

Misogyny is the main MAGA recruitment tool.

But it does seem that, for these three, the novelty of being lady MAGAs is wearing off rapidly. On the GOP side, their popularity is diminishing and the enemies lists are growing longer. Part of this is that their power to "trigger the liberals" is fading. The reactions they're getting are less outrage and more of the pointing-and-laughing variety. This must worry them, as the strength of the MAGA celebrity is directly proportional to their perceived ability to offend. But ultimately, these three women seem done in by the impossible dilemma of trying to be a female leader in the deeply misogynist world of MAGA. 

There can be no doubting the ability of conservatives, aided by right-wing propaganda, to endure the cognitive dissonances caused by their own contradictions, from claiming Donald Trump is an honest man to justifying their own sadism in the name of Jesus Christ. But when it comes to gender, it really is hard to avoid the conflicts between the sexist expectations of the MAGA ideology and the lives of their provocative female celebrities. 

Put more simply: The lady MAGA is expected to be sexy, to thrill the boorish desires of her Trumpian audience, but also chaste, to prove her "Christian" bona fides. She is supposed to be a loud-mouthed troll, which is the lingua franca of the movement, but also to remember that her role as a woman is to be accommodating, submissive and placating to men.

These three women seem done in by the impossible dilemma of trying to be a female leader in the deeply misogynist world of MAGA. 

Paradoxical expectations bedevil most women in a male-dominated society. But the rest of us reserve the right to resist, through feminist thought and protest. The entire point of being a conservative woman is the rejection of feminism. Even in the GOP world, where hypocrisy is the norm, it's a tough sell to be all for sexism, unless you're the target. That's the most confounding contradiction facing the MAGA lady of all: She is there to justify the very sexism that is holding her back. 

Boebert's dilemma, of course, is the most obvious and hilarious. As historian Claire Potter wrote in her newsletter, Boebert's entire brand has been "Gun Chick," "a popular erotic figure on the right who we might tentatively define as 'the slutty girl next door—with a gun.'” The brand allows these women to technically be members of Congress, Potter noted, "but they don’t have to be taken seriously because it’s all just a joke" to their voters. She puts Greene in the same category. I'd argue Mace also belongs, especially after the "scarlet letter" stunt. 

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That she's pretending to be "surprised" just shows how much Mace is committed to the bit, because the only point in saying something so stupid is to capture that "Christ, what a bimbo" coverage. It's reminiscent of how Mace gave a speech at the National Prayer Breakfast where she carried on about how she skipped sex with her boyfriend to be there, pretending to be too dim to know that was inappropriate. 

But of course, Mace isn't Marilyn Monroe playing a dumb blonde in a movie. She's a member of Congress, and of a party that has constructed its identity around a conservative Christianity that is obsessively sex-negative. Mace herself just voted for Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., a man who blames the "sexual revolution" for mass shootings and whose wife equated all pre-marital sex with bestiality. Of course, none of these people are anti-sex for straight men. They love Trump in all his shameless sleaze. The relentless efforts to ban abortion and restrict birth control show that it's women they want to punish. Women in MAGA-land are expected to be sexy but not sexual. 

Boebert is tripping across that impossible expectation, of course. She's on an apology tour, trying to placate Republican voters who complain that her behavior is not "Christian." They aren't talking about how rude she was, either, since being rude to those urban liberals was always her major selling point. As Greene, who hates Boebert now (women can't really be friends in the sexist environs of MAGAland), ranted on Twitter, it's the "vaping groping." But Greene herself doesn't have a leg to stand on. She dumped her husband with haste after getting to Congress and now is running around with a loud-mouthed pig of a boyfriend. 

 https://twitter.com/RawStory/status/1708571540474692054

Greene is navigating the contradictions a little better than Mace and Boebert, who just seem pathetic these days. Part of it is that she was never quite as much a "Gun Chick" as the other two, presenting a mix that was heavier on the trolling and lighter on the cheesecake. But even so, her recent flailings suggest her act is getting a little threadbare. For the base, there was something initially thrilling about a woman performing the typically male role of the belligerent right-wing jerk. But as her recent erratic behavior shows, she's lost her Freedom Caucus buddies and her McCarthy squad has been pushed out into the snow. The GOP preference for women who are soft-spoken and submissive will always prevail. 

The MAGA movement would be nothing without misogyny. Male resentment over women's growing equality is what propelled Trump to victory over Hillary Clinton. Misogyny is the main MAGA recruitment tool, especially with young men. It's why ending abortion rights is their lodestar, even as it's incredibly unpopular. January 6 was an event where a group called the "Proud Boys" roamed Congress in hopes of assaulting female Democrats like Rep. Nancy Pelosi of California and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York. Along with racism and queerphobia, hating women is central to the MAGA brand. Of course there would be hard limits put on how far women could go with the movement. Not that anyone should pity them. They sold out other women for their own gain, making this a case of just desserts.

Mike Johnson is not a “culture warrior” — he’s an enemy of democracy

Republicans in the House of Representatives removed Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., from his position as speaker because he was viewed as too weak by Donald Trump’s MAGA loyalists. McCarthy’s successor, Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La., who was unanimously elected by his Republican colleagues – which includes the so-called “moderates” who blocked three other candidates before, is a Trump loyalist. He supported the criminal traitor ex-president’s coup attempt on Jan. 6 and the ongoing attempts to end American democracy by the MAGA movement. So while Trump may not have been elected speaker as some Republicans in the lower chamber had hoped for, he is still effectively their leader.

Ultimately, and much to the consternation of the mainstream news media and respectable political class — which are in a state of willful denial of this reality and its implications for the country — Trump and Trumpism are a symbol and a movement that are much greater than any one person. Trumpism and American neofascism will survive long past whatever may happen to the Dear Leader. Trump is a type of prototype for the future of American fascism.

And as speaker of the House, Mike Johnson will do Trump’s bidding. In his new role, Johnson is not just a “culture warrior," he is a leader. Literally two heartbeats away from the presidency, Johnson is a general in Trump’s and the neofascist movement’s war to end America’s multiracial pluralistic democracy.

The American news media and the country’s other political elites need to discard the “culture war” narrative as it applies to both Mike Johnson, specifically, and American politics, more generally.

The best way to understand Speaker Mike Johnson and what his rise to power represents is to ask some basic questions.

What does Johnson believe?

How has he behaved?

What would life be like in America if Johnson and others of his ilk were to get their way?

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Here are some answers.

Johnson rejects the Constitution’s separation of church and state. He is a “Christian Nationalist” who wants America to be a white Christofascist plutocracy and not a pluralistic democracy. In an excellent interview at Politico, historian Kristin Kobes Du Mez, author of  "Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation", explains how Johnson rejects real democracy in America:

I’ve noticed also in listening to his speeches that he is explicit about describing this country as a republic and not as a democracy. Inside these conservative Christian nationalist spaces, that is par for the course: that this is a republic, and it is a republic, again, founded in this biblical worldview, and that it’s not a democratic free-for-all. And so again, this is Christian supremacy.

If you align with this value system, then yes, you have the authority to shape our laws. If you do not, you have no business shaping our laws. He once said: “We don’t live in a democracy, because democracy is two wolves and a lamb deciding what’s for dinner.” Meaning, the country is not just majority rule; it’s a constitutional republic. And the founders set that up because they followed the biblical admonition on what a civil society is supposed to look like.

I think that’s really important here: His commitment is not to democracy. He’s not committed to majority rule; he seems to be saying he’s committed to minority rule, if that’s what it takes to ensure that we stay on the Christian foundation that the founders have set up….

For Christian nationalists, this is God’s country, and all authority comes through God. And the only legitimate use of that authority is to further God’s plan for this country. So what that means is any of their political enemies are illegitimate in a sense, and those enemies’ power is illegitimate, and they need to be stripped of that power. And it’s really been kind of shocking for me to have observed these spaces in the last handful of years, where conservative evangelicals are much more comfortable in just making that plain and no longer feeling a need to pay lip service to democracy or voting rights or those sorts of things.

Johnson believes that gays and lesbians are sick monstrous deviants whose humanity and behavior should be criminalized. He is so homophobic that he has convinced himself that “gay sex” somehow destroyed the Roman Empire

Johnson wants abortion to be banned everywhere in America because women should not have the freedom to make decisions about their own bodies and lives. This conclusion is a function of his belief that women are de facto chattel and the property of their husbands and other men.

Johnson is a biblical literalist who rejects science. He also believes the fiction-lie that America was founded on “biblical principles” as a “Christian Nation”; these beliefs are central to his approach to government, policy, and society.  

Johnson has used stochastic terrorism and eliminationist language against Democrats, liberals, and others who do not share his Christofascist ideology, a group he believes are collectively responsible for the ills of American society.

Of course, this is all dangerous bovine scatology.

Johnson also believes there should be a religious test for public office in America, which the United States Constitution expressly forbids. Johnson does not believe in the right to privacy, free speech, and other constitutionally guaranteed civil rights and freedoms.

At Mother Jones, David Corn further explains Johnson's worldview:

The Johnsons are diehard fundamentalists who believe every religion other than their brand of Christianity is false and that whatever is written in the Bible should dictate all conduct, rules, policies, and laws. As I reported earlier, Mike Johnson in 2016 exclaimed, “We’re living in a completely amoral society.” The only way out, according to him and Kelly, is to abide by the Bible.

This is a lot to absorb. We’re often uncomfortable discussing a politician’s faith. But in this case, Johnson acknowledges that his fundamentalism determines his politics and policy positions. As he said during a Fox interview, “I am a Bible-believing Christian. Someone asked me today in the media, they said, ‘It’s curious, people are curious: What does Mike Johnson think about any issue under the sun?’ I said, ‘Well, go pick up a Bible off your shelf and read it. That’s my worldview.'”…

This remark came after Kelly and Mike had repeatedly asserted that the Christian fundamentalist worldview—based entirely on what appears in the Old and New Testaments—is the only legitimate worldview.

Johnson was telling the folks in the pews that the only political candidates deserving support are those who share this worldview and who embrace the notion that the United States has been a Christian nation. This smacks of Christian nationalism and appears to be a religious test for politics.

In her newsletter, historian Heather Cox Richardson connects Johnson’s rise to power to the global right, white supremacy, Christofascism, and the American right’s many decades-long project to end social democracy in this country:

Like other adherents of Christian nationalism, Johnson appears to reject the central premise of democracy: that we have a right to be treated equally before the law. And while his wife, Kelly, noted last year on a podcast that only about 4% of Americans “still adhere to a Biblical worldview,” they appear to reject the idea we have the right to a say in our government. In 2021, Johnson was a key player in the congressional attempt to overturn the lawful results of the 2020 presidential election. 

In his rejection of democracy, Johnson echoes authoritarian leaders like Russia’s Vladimir Putin and Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, both of whom have the loyal support of America’s far right. Such leaders claim that the multiculturalism at the heart of democracy ruins nations. The welcoming of various races and ethnicities through immigration or affirmative action undermines national purity, they say, while the equality of LGBTQ+ individuals and women undermines morality. Johnson has direct ties to these regimes: his 2018 campaign accepted money from a group of Russian nationals, and he has said he does not support additional funding for Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression. 

The rejection of democracy in favor of Christian authoritarianism at the highest levels of our government is an astonishing outcome of the attempt to prevent another Great Depression by creating a government that worked for ordinary Americans rather than a few wealthy men. 


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The American news media and the country’s other political elites need to discard the “culture war” narrative as it applies to both Mike Johnson, specifically, and American politics, more generally, in this moment of democracy crisis and ascendant neofascism. “Culture war” and its related language is imprecise, distracting, diminutive, and in total obfuscates and minimizes the real dangers embodied by the right-wing’s revolutionary plans to end multiracial pluralistic democracy in America.

Instead, the mainstream news media and other political elites need to emphasize in plain and direct terms what will happen to everyday people in America if the Christofascists like Mike Johnson are able to achieve their goals.

In that new American dystopia, the lives of the average American will be shorter, more miserable, less free, even less economically prosperous and more precarious, sicker, and where basic decisions about their private lives and those of their families will be made by a small number of rich white men (and women) who believe that their personal God gave them special superpowers and magical insights that they can use to rule over other people. And if you are a woman, a black or brown person, gay or lesbian or transgender, an atheist, a Jew, a Muslim, or some other faith that is not state-approved, or a member of some other marginalized community life will be even worse as you will basically be made into a second- or third-class citizen – or lower – as your basic civic and human rights are systematically taken away from you.

Ultimately, the world that Johnson and the other Christofascists would like to impose on the American people will be hell for most it will actually be a paradise and heaven for them.

Is my dental floss actually toxic? Why TikTok is abuzz with “forever chemicals” in our oral care

In a world where health advice comes from so-called experts on Instagram and Tiktok, it’s increasingly more difficult to know what’s true and what’s not. It’s also likely you’ve recently come across a video on such platforms warning of the toxic dangers of dental floss.

It happened to me a few weeks ago when my mom came over to my house with a box of $10 “non-toxic” floss. My current, and cheaper, floss was putting my health at risk, she said. When I asked for more details, she said my floss has "forever chemicals" in it and those can get into my bloodstream via the act of flossing — or so she heard, on TikTok.

As a regular at my dentist, and twice-a-day flosser, I've never been told to stop using dental floss (although my dentist recently tried to sell me hard on a water flosser). Sure enough, a search on TikTok yielded a cascade of videos echoing what my mom told me. It’s true that The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) cites dental floss on a list of products that could contain PFAS, but does that mean that said floss is toxic and my health is at risk to be compromised in return? Is paying more for a non-toxic floss better?

Substances like PFAS and PFOA (perfluorooctanoic acid) are called forever chemicals because they essentially do not break down either in the natural environment or in our own bodies. From a technological perspective, it’s this durability that makes them so popular. Putting PFAS in a fabric will make them more protected against staining. PFAS on a cooking pan can create non-stick coatings. I have PFAS to thank for the invention of waterproof mascara. And yet, their popularity comes with a significant cost to human health. Forever chemicals have been linked to serious health issues like cancer, high blood pressure, infertilityhigh blood pressure, liver disease and low sperm count. Unfortunately, scientists suspect PFAS are everywhere and virtually indestructible. Until recently, they’ve been nearly impossible to destroy.

“This is the first study to show that using dental floss containing PFAS is associated with a higher body burden of these toxic chemicals.”

It turns out that TikTok videos claiming dental floss is toxic don’t just stem from the fact that so many products are full of forever chemicals. In 2019, a study published in the Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology found that women who flossed with Oral-B Glide dental floss had higher levels of PFHxS (perfluorohexanesulfonic acid), a type of PFAS, in their bodies compared to those women who didn’t. Scientists who conducted the study measured 11 different PFAS chemicals in blood samples taken from 178 middle-aged women.

To better understand the connection between flossing and PFAS levels in blood, the researchers proceeded to test 18 dental flosses for the presence of fluorine, a PFAS marker, using a technique called particle-induced gamma-ray emission (PIGE) spectroscopy. Six tested positive for fluorine — including all three Glide products.

“This is the first study to show that using dental floss containing PFAS is associated with a higher body burden of these toxic chemicals,” said lead author Katie Boronow.

In the study the authors said additional research was needed to better understand the potential of PFAS in floss traveling into saliva and being ingested. In an FAQ about the study, the authors further elaborated on why they believed floss was the culprit of higher PFAS levels in the women in the first place. Indeed, since people are frequently exposed to PFAS from multiple sources, it could have been something else. But the researchers explained that they used a model specifically to find out how much exposure can be attributed to each source, which would disqualify other sources. Using the same model, the researchers found that having stain-resistant carpet or furniture, or living in a city with a PFAS-contaminated drinking water supply, were also linked to elevated PFAS levels. Among African Americans, eating food prepared in coated cardboard containers were linked to higher PFAS levels.


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“Our model showed that there was a statistically significant association between flossing with Oral-B Glide and higher blood levels of PFHxS,” the authors stated. “This suggests that some of the exposure came from flossing.”

“Our model showed that there was a statistically significant association between flossing with Oral-B Glide and higher blood levels of PFHxS. This suggests that some of the exposure came from flossing.”

Scientists at the Silent Spring Institute, a research organization focused on uncovering environmental causes of breast cancer and other health-related topics, stated they first suspected that dental flosses were made with PTFE for a variety of reasons. First, Glide floss is a product manufactured by Gore (known by consumers for its waterproof “GORE-TEX” technology), which makes a variety of consumer and industrial products using polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) — more commonly known by its trade name, Teflon. On the Oral B website, it lists Polytetrafluorethylene floss (PTFE) as a type of dental floss and describes the material as one that “slides between the teeth easily and is less likely to shred compared to standard floss.”

Since this study, there haven’t been any additional studies published in a peer-reviewed journal specifically focusing on dental floss and PFAS. However, in September 2022, a health blog called Mamavation tested 39 different tooth floss products for fluorine, and found that 13 out of 39 products had indications of PFAS. On the high end, Oral-B Glide tested to have 248,900 parts per million (ppm) of fluorine. (Salon reached out to Glide and didn't receive a response before publication).

“Finding organic fluorine over 240,000 ppm in any product meant to go inside your mouth and thus could be easily ingested is very concerning,” Linda Birnbaum, scientist emeritus and former director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and National Toxicology Program, said at the time. “These levels that we are seeing from some of these dental floss products do not reflect levels that are safe for human consumption.”

“There is no reason for brands to continue to pollute the environment and our bodies by adding unnecessary, toxic ‘forever chemicals’ to products like dental floss.”

Birnbaum said PFAS could be building up inside consumers every time they floss their teeth, “creating a situation that can lead to chronic disease,” she said.

The good news is with the relatively little research available, scientists are hopeful that not all dental floss has PFAS.

“There are already a wide variety of brands that offer PFAS-free dental floss that work great,” Katie Pelch, a scientist with NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council), told Salon via email. “There is no reason for brands to continue to pollute the environment and our bodies by adding unnecessary, toxic ‘forever chemicals’ to products like dental floss.”

Pelch said it is concerning that some companies are using PFAS in dental floss. "Floss can be made to slide more easily between the teeth without risking exposure to toxic forever chemicals," Pelch said, adding that to avoid PFAS in floss, consumers should avoid products marketed as “gliding” or “nonstick” and look instead for products that list natural waxes.

The take away isn’t to stop flossing entirely. As recently as 2021 a study reported that flossing was associated with reduced cognitive impairment and dementia. Analyzing 172 participants, the researchers wrote "These results highlight the importance of preserving the health of the teeth and not just retaining the teeth." Teresa Yang, a dentist in Los Angeles, told Salon via email she’d like to see a follow-up to this study “to determine the significance of the floss PFA content relative to other sources.”

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"Don't overreact to one finding from a study of less than 200 women," Yang told Salon. "Rather, wait for additional research that either confirms or dispels the initial findings and provides more concrete and specific information."

Yang said flossing is "one of the best things you can do for your overall health." 

But scientists say this is yet another example for the need of restrictions on PFAS. 

"In the future, it should become easier to identify PFAS-free floss, as more states enact laws to reduce unnecessary uses of PFAS," Pelch said. "Minnesota recently became the first state to ban PFAS in dental floss, beginning in 2025."

Lisa Marie Presley read an early script for “Priscilla” months before dying and hated it

Reviews of “Priscilla" have been trickling in over the past few weeks, with critics expressing their varying opinions on Sofia Coppola’s take on "Elvis and Me" — the 1985 biography written by Priscilla Presley — but the harshest criticism yet has been from Elvis' daughter.

In an exclusive from Variety posted on Thursday, they excerpt angry emails written by Lisa Marie to Coppola after reading an early draft of the script just months before her death in January. Calling it “shockingly vengeful and contemptuous,” she pleaded with the director to spare her family public embarrassment and blasted her mom for supporting the film, fearing it would further strain their already fragile relationship. 

"My father only comes across as a predator and manipulative," she wrote in one of several messages. "As his daughter, I don’t read this and see any of my father in this character. I don’t read this and see my mother’s perspective of my father . . . I will be forced to be in a position where I will have to openly say how I feel about the film and go against you, my mother and this film publicly.”

Her mother — credited as an executive producer on the film — provided no comment to Variety on the subject of these emails and has had nothing but good things to say about the film and its director.

 

 

Trump jokes about electric tanks blasting countries in an environmentally friendly way

During a campaign event at Trendsetter Engineering, Inc. in Houston, Texas on Thursday, Donald Trump seemed to think it was hilarious that there's been a push for electric military tanks and boats. A horror — in his eyes, apparently — that he pins on Biden.

"With your vote, we will fire crooked Joe Biden. And we will reclaim America's destiny as the greatest energy superpower on the face of the Earth," Trump said to a cheering crowd. "Perhaps worst of all, Biden's insane. Mandates on so much. Including mandates on this [pantomimes giving himself a shot in the arm]. There's a move on now . . . all boats have to go electric. Army tanks have to go electric." To this, someone let out a furious-sounding noise.

"You know, we make the greatest tanks in the world. Army tanks. Because the tanks, if they're electric, you go into a country blasting the hell out of it, but at least we're doing it in an environmentally friendly way."

From here, he went into a bit about an electric tank needing to tow a battery source larger than the tank itself, which he called "really a problem." 

Don Jr. had some notes for the courtroom sketch artist during his second day of fraud testimony

On his second day of testimony pertaining to how much he knew (or claims not to know) about the Trump Organization's financial dealing's as part of his father's ongoing fraud trial, Donald Trump Jr. spent a bit of the session's downtime providing notes to the courtroom sketch artist.

According to artist Jane Rosenberg, who was on assignment for Reuters, the former president's namesake asked her to make him look "sexy," even going so far as to offer examples of what he was going for.

After being shown a courtroom portrait of former cryptocurrency mogul Sam Bankman-Fried, which Don Jr. said made him look like a "superstar," the artist let him know that not only was she not personally responsible for that particular portrait, but that no one else was either. 

"I said, 'That's fake,'" Rosenberg said. "It doesn't look anything like him, doesn't look anything like Sam Bankman-Fried … and there's no one in the courtroom drawing that."

For reference, this is the sketch Don Jr. wanted matched in general vibe for himself:

 

“The View” mocks Ron DeSantis for wearing shoe-lifts: “Call me petty. I am relishing this story”

“The View” couldn’t hold back their laughter while roasting Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis during Thursday's episode. Surprisingly, the topic of mockery wasn’t his politics or attacks on former president Donald Trump. Rather, it was DeSantis’ footwear.

Several social media sleuths recently claimed that DeSantis wears height-boosting insoles after photos of the governor’s bizarre-looking cowboy boots went viral on X and TikTok. Like clockwork, people shared posters and posts poking fun at DeSantis’ feet and stature (which he confidently asserted is 5’11”). Trump himself even shared one of the posts on the alt social media platform Truth Social.

Whoopi Goldberg compared DeSantis’ boots to those worn by Yosemite Sam, which elicited plenty of laughs from her co-hosts, notably Ana Navarro.

“Call me petty. I know you will; that’s never stopped me before! I am relishing and enjoying this story so much,” Navarro said. “Because, honestly, he has been terrorizing my drag queen friends in Florida for well over a year, because he has said that men in heels are a threat to society.

“It’s too bad he has no drag queen friends, ’cause maybe they would have taught him how to walk in heels!” she added.

When Sara Haines argued that she’s not a fan of people making fun of DeSantis’ height, Navarro countered, “We’re not picking on his height, he’s picking on his height! This is a complete self-own by Ron DeSantis."

Watch the full clip below, via YouTube:

“Racist and bigoted”: AOC claims AIPAC is an “extremist organization that destabilizes US democracy”

U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., on Tuesday dismissed the latest political attack by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee — the powerful anti-Palestinian rights lobbying group — on a lawmaker who rejected legislation endorsed by the organization.

AIPAC, the New York Democrat suggested, has little credibility when it claims to fight for democracy and security in the U.S. by supporting Israel's violent policies in Palestine.

Ocasio-Cortez responded to a social media post by AIPAC, which backs both Democratic and Republican political candidates as long as they unquestioningly support Israel's policies—including the war it has waged against civilians in Gaza in retaliation for an attack by Hamas last month. The group criticized Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., for being the only Republican who voted against House Resolution 771, which stated that the U.S. stands "with Israel as it defends itself."

AIPAC also denounced Massie on Tuesday for announcing he would vote against a separate resolution, scheduled to be taken up by the House Rules Committee on Wednesday, to send more than $14 billion in aid, including military funding, to Israel. AIPAC said in support of the proposal that "the U.S. is stronger when Israel is secure."

"AIPAC endorsed scores of January 6th insurrectionists. They are no friend to American democracy," Ocasio-Cortez responded to the group's comments on Massie.

U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez on Tuesday dismissed the latest political attack by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee—the powerful anti-Palestinian rights lobbying group—on a lawmaker who rejected legislation endorsed by the organization.

AIPAC, the New York Democrat suggested, has little credibility when it claims to fight for democracy and security in the U.S. by supporting Israel's violent policies in Palestine.

Ocasio-Cortez responded to a social media post by AIPAC, which backs both Democratic and Republican political candidates as long as they unquestioningly support Israel's policies—including the war it has waged against civilians in Gaza in retaliation for an attack by Hamas last month. The group criticized Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) for being the only Republican who voted against House Resolution 771, which stated that the U.S. stands "with Israel as it defends itself."

AIPAC also denounced Massie on Tuesday for announcing he would vote against a separate resolution, scheduled to be taken up by the House Rules Committee on Wednesday, to send more than $14 billion in aid, including military funding, to Israel. AIPAC said in support of the proposal that "the U.S. is stronger when Israel is secure."

"AIPAC endorsed scores of January 6th insurrectionists. They are no friend to American democracy," Ocasio-Cortez responded to the group's comments on Massie.

AIPAC in recent U.S. elections has spent millions of dollars to defeat progressive candidates such as Rep. Summer Lee, D-Pa., and former Ohio state Sen. Nina Turner — both supporters of Palestinian rights as well as pro-democracy reforms in the U.S. — with mixed success.

The group has also backed more than 100 GOP lawmakers who voted against certifying the 2020 presidential election results in support of former Republican President Donald Trump.

Despite its claims that it aims to make the U.S. "stronger," Ocasio-Cortez said, AIPAC is "an extremist organization that destabilizes U.S. democracy."

Massie's objection to H.R. 771 differed from that of Ocasio-Cortez and eight other Democrats who voted against it. He said on social media that he objected to provisions called for in the resolution, including sanctions, foreign aid commitments, and a broad "open-ended promise of military support."

Ocasio-Cortez and several of the other Democrats who opposed the resolution have joined calls for a cease-fire as Israel has bombarded Gaza with airstrikes, killing at least 8,796 Palestinians so far.

Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Wis., who backed the resolution and has not joined the call for a cease-fire, admitted that Ocasio-Cortez's comments summed up "how many feel about what AIPAC really is about."

"Rep. Mark Pocan is right," said Ocasio-Cortez. "It is past time for us to recognize how toxic of a presence AIPAC has been in our political system. They actively boost candidates who tried to overthrow the U.S. election and run smear campaigns on members of Congress who stand up for human rights. Enough."

Expert climatologist says the Earth is heating up even faster than predicted

Back in the 1980s, Columbia University climatologist Dr. James Hansen was a lonely voice warning humanity about the threat of man-made climate change. Aside from a handful of politicians (including future US Vice President Al Gore), Hansen's insights were largely ignored during that decade, though the fossil fuel industry was well aware of this growing problem and tried to downplay it. Flash forward four decades and the scientific community overwhelmingly agrees human-caused climate change is both real and an existential threat to humanity.

Now Hansen has come forward with a new study, published in the journal Oxford Open Climate Change, which shows that the Earth is heating up faster than experts previously predicted. The report warns that humans are already "in the early phase of a climate emergency" and that a surge of heat is "already in the pipeline." When this pushes global temperatures so high that they exceed 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels in the 2020s — and more than 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels before 2050 — humans will regularly experience "a new abnormal" including extreme heat, droughts and floods (due to sea level rise). The phrase "new abnormal" was coined by University of Pennsylvania climatologist Dr. Michael E. Mann, who added that climate change will get even worse "as long as we continue to burn fossil fuels and generate carbon pollution."

“The 1.5-degree limit is deader than a doornail,” Hansen told reporters on a call reported by CNN. “And the 2-degree limit can be rescued, only with the help of purposeful actions.”

Why can’t we just quit cows?

Cattle play a colossal role in climate change: As the single largest agricultural source of methane, a potent planet-warming gas, the world’s 940 million cows spew nearly 10% of all greenhouse gas emissions — much of it through belches and droppings.

As such, there’s an astonishing amount of time and money being funneled into emission control. On-farm biodigesters, for example, take a back-end approach by harvesting methane wafting from manure pits. A slew of research aims to curb bovine burps by feeding them seaweed, essential oilsand even a bovine Bean-O of sorts. The latest endeavor, a $70 million effort led by a Nobel laureate, uses gene-editing technology in an effort to eliminate that pollution by re-engineering the animals’ gut microbes.

Given the world’s growing appetite for meat and dairy, these novel ventures are crucial to inching us toward international and national climate goals. Yet they beg the question: Wouldn’t it be easier to ditch milk, cheese and beef for plant-based alternatives? Why fight nature when there's an easier solution, at least from a scientific perspective?

Research shows that even a modest skew away from meat-based diets can shrink an individual’s carbon footprint as much as 75%. As it turns out, however, untangling cows from the climate equation is enormously complicated — especially in the United States, where the industry, worth $275 billion annually, boasts the world’s fourth largest cattle population and is its top beef and dairy producer. Achieving a cheeseburger-free America faces formidable challenges. Beyond overcoming cultural shifts — the country’s per-capita consumption of mozzarella, to name one example, averages one pound a month — lies the challenge of meeting nutritional demands and rebalancing the intricacies of an agricultural, food and industrial economy inextricably linked to livestock farming.

For these reasons, greener diets are but one prong in a larger set of food-based solutions for curtailing human-caused climate change, said Stephen Sturdivant, an environmental engineer at the Environmental Protection Agency. “We need a comprehensive combination of strategies to achieve a truly sustainable future,” he said. “We can’t just cherry-pick our way to get there.”

The nation’s taste for meat and dairy is undeniable. In addition to a steady, decade-long-rise in beef consumption, which hit 20 billion pounds in 2021, Americans gobbled up 12% more cheese, butter and ice cream than in the previous year, continuing an upward trend that started half a century ago.

There’s a fundamental disconnect, though, between our growing demand for animal-based protein and its enormous carbon footprint. Producing a pound of steak generates nearly 100 times more greenhouse gas than an equivalent amount of peas, while cheese production emits eight times the volume of making tofu.

Although the American beef and dairy industries are among the most efficient in the world — due in part to better breeding, genetics and nutrition — they still leave a significant hoofprint. The nation’s 92 million cattle generate 4% of the country’s total greenhouse gases and account for 40%  of all agricultural emissions.

However, if those herds were to magically disappear, it wouldn’t eliminate the problem entirely. According to a peer-reviewed study, an animal-free agricultural system would shave just 2.6% off the country’s total greenhouse gas emissions. Of course, any reduction would be noteworthy given the nation’s outsized role in climate change — that drop would be equivalent to three times Portugal’s annual emissions — though that benefit would come with drawbacks.

With no livestock to feed, the acreage now used to grow silage and hay could be replaced with food crops. Yet because higher value fruits and vegetables require quality soil, specific climate conditions and ample water infrastructure, most of that land would be limited to growing calorie-heavy, hardy broad acre crops such as corn and soybeans — a system change that would add its own climate impacts.

In fact, agriculture’s current emissions are a result of a certain balance between crops and livestock, said Robin White, a professor of animal and poultry science at Virginia Tech and the lead author of the research. Crops need fertilizer, a resource often provided by livestock and producing synthetic versions is an energy-intensive process that typically requires fossil fuels and emits methane. Cattle also help keep agricultural byproducts — from fruit peels and pulp to almond hulls and spent brewery grains — out of landfills, reducing the carbon output of crop waste by 60%.

Eliminating the nation’s cattle and replacing feed production with food crops would create more food, White said, resulting in a caloric surplus of 25%. That abundance, however, would come with deficits in essential nutrients, as plant-based foods tend to fall short in vitamin B12, calcium, iron and fatty acids. (Although existing studies reflect good long-term health in vegetarians, research on those who eschew all animal-derived foods is inconclusive.)

Larger discussions around sustainability tend to overlook these complexities, said White. Food insecurity is often tied to caloric sufficiency, but doesn’t always reflect nutritional needs, particularly those of vulnerable populations. Pregnant, lactating and elderly women, for example, are susceptible to anemia and low bone density, mainly due to inadequate iron and calcium intake — nutrients readily available in red meat and dairy products and easily accessible to large swaths of the population.

“These types of nuances get lost,” said White, when we focus exclusively on the broader metrics of diet change. While balanced choices can work for individuals, keeping the country adequately fed and healthy is a complicated endeavor. “There’s an entire agricultural system behind that food production,” she added and changing the pieces within it requires careful examination.

Given the scale of the beef and dairy industries, the central role they play in feeding people and the difficulty of removing them from the economy, cattle clearly aren’t moving on any time soon. For that reason, there’s been no shortage of resources aimed at, quite literally, the gut of the emissions issue.

As with most ruminants, cattle make the most of a paltry diet, converting cud, grains and crop waste into muscle and milk. Extracting all that energy from cellulose and plant fibers requires the work of digestive microbes; cow rumens host entire colonies of bacteria, yeast and fungi that ferment complex carbohydrates into microbial protein, which they then absorb and volatile fatty acids, which they expel as methane and other gases.

Several dietary supplements have been shown to minimize bovine bloating. A twice-daily garlic and citrus extract can cut emissions by 20%, while a red seaweed additive can inhibit them by as much as 80% without impacting animal health or productivity or imparting detectable flavor to the resulting proteins. But having a transformative impact will require industrial-scale production and implementation. The promising strain of seaweed, for instance, prefers tropical waters and developing a supply chain robust enough to serve tens of millions of cattle with a daily intervention leaves a trail of unanswered questions regarding effective farming, processing and distribution techniques.

Ultimately, tinkering with the animals’ digestive system may hold the most scalable answer. Jennifer Doudna, who won the 2020 Nobel Prize in chemistry for pioneering the CRISPR gene-editing tool, is leading a University of California team that hopes to do just that. The recently launched project aims to identify the offending gut bacteria through metagenomics, another breakthrough technology that maps the functions of complex microbial communities, then restructure their DNA to produce less methane. The goal is to develop an oral treatment for calves that, once administered, will continue repopulating their rumen with the genetically modified microflora.

“We’re trying to come up with a solution to reduce methane that is easily accessible and inexpensive,” Matthias Hess, an associate professor at UC Davis and a project lead, said in an interview. It’s a fix that, if successful, could make a serious dent in tamping down cattle emissions the world over.

Their mission launched earlier this year, funded by the TED Audacious Project. Along with livestock, microbiomes generate nearly two-thirds of global methane emissions through landfills, wastewater and rice paddies. If successful, “our technology could really move the needle in our fight against climate change,” Doudna said in a recent TED Talk.

Even as science tries making cows more climate-friendly, the tide of consumption has seen a steady shift. In the last two years, the majority of Americans have upped their intake of plant-based foods, with almost half of Millennials and Gen Z-ers regularly eating vegan. But there’s also been another notable tip in the scale: Just 12% of the country eats half the nation’s beef. And for many in the meat-heavy minority, the perils of climate change seem to do little in nudging them toward planet-friendlier meals.

A global study of factors that encourage greener diets found that climate risk perception is but one influencing factor, along with health implications and economic circumstances. Yet it’s the people around us, said Sibel Eker, the report’s lead author, who hold the most sway in changing individual attitudes, beliefs and values — in other words, there’s power in herd mentality.

“If there are more vegetarians or flexitarians around you, you tend to think that this is the norm in society,” said Eker, a sustainable service systems researcher at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria. “So if you have the intention of changing your behavior, the social cost [to do so] becomes lower.”

In fact, when it comes to influencing environment-related behaviors such as recycling and ditching cars, social norms and comparisons are incredibly effective, far outpacing other drivers such as financial incentives and public appeals, according to a separate study by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences. And positive visibility and reinforcement — by individuals, a community or mass and social media — do more to encourage climate action than shaming people who aren’t fully on board, Eker said. Otherwise, it just makes the matter alienating and polarizing.

In the end, the overarching nature of the food system requires a collective approach to shrinking its enormous emissions. While there’s no denying the outsized environmental footprint of animal-based foods, dietary shifts are part of a much larger strategy around food-based climate action, said the EPA’s Sturdivant. Along with improved farming practices such as maximizing yields and minimizing inputs, reducing food loss and waste is just as critical. And for these reasons and more, Meatless Mondays, vegan Fridays and less polluting cows all have their place in mitigating the role cattle play in warming the world. 

Taylor Tomlinson to host “After Midnight,” taking the slot following Stephen Colbert’s “Late Show”

It looks like the Taylors of the world are having a moment.

CBS has named 29-year-old Taylor Tomlinson as the host of “After Midnight,” the show designated to take over the slot following “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.” Colbert, who serves as one of the show’s executive producers, announced the news on Wednesday’s show.

Her hire makes Tomlinson the only woman hosting a late-night show on broadcast television, essentially filling the job left vacant by James Corden when he retired from hosting “The Late Late Show” in the spring.

Late-night as a genre has been struggling to maintain its relevance in an era where the most up-to-the-minute comedy takes place on social media. Making Tomlinson the face of “After Midnight,” based on the four-season Comedy Central cult favorite “@midnight with Chris Hardwick,” both acknowledges that shift and may seek to capitalize on it. She's two decades younger than every other late-night host on TV right now.

While the format for this updated iteration hasn’t been revealed, Hardwick’s “@midnight” featured panels of comics and stars challenged to improvise jokes based on memes or trends drawn from what was once Twitter and other Internet platforms.

And Tomlinson is currently one of the most sought-after stand-ups working today, currently touring large theater venues as a result of her successful Netflix specials “Quarter-Life Crisis” from 2020, and “Look at You,” which came out in 2022.

Jo Firestone, who recently worked on “Ziwe,” will serve as head writer and co-executive producer along with co-executive producer Alexx Wells.Jack Martin, who served as the showrunner on all four seasons of “@midnight,” and Eric Pierce serve as the co-showrunners and executive producers. The new series will premiere in 2024.

“Complete nonsense”: Legal scholars demolish Trump claim of “presidential immunity” from prosecution

Donald Trump's legal team submitted a petition Wednesday night asking a federal judge to halt “all proceedings” in the former president's election interference case, arguing that he has “presidential immunity” from being prosecuted for his acts in office.

Trump lawyer John Lauro asked U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan for a complete stay until the question of presidential immunity is “fully resolved.”

Federal prosecutors have resisted Trump's efforts to dismiss election conspiracy charges by arguing that he "is not above the law," and should not be granted immunity for actions he took during his tenure in the White House. 

Trump, who is facing four separate criminal cases, has used various delay tactics to prolong the legal process. 

In his recent submission, Trump contends that the president should be free to serve without fearing future prosecution from political rivals, citing legal sources like the Federalist Papers and the key Supreme Court case Nixon v. Fitzgerald. 

This case established “an extremely deferential rule of immunity, holding that a president is immune for any actions arguably falling within the scope of his official duties, so long as they are not outside the ‘outer perimeter’ of those job responsibilities as president,” Norman Eisen of the Brookings Institution and Joshua Kolb, a former law clerk for the Senate Judiciary Committee, wrote in an op-ed at CNN

But granting Trump’s request for immunity would not only “derail the case,” it would also “elevate future presidents above the law,” they argued. 

Trump has also made other claims, the experts explained, like implying that since the federal executive branch has the responsibility to ensure that federal elections are lawful and as the leader of this branch, he was exercising an unquestioned federal authority in his actions related to the 2020 election. For this reason, he argues, that he shouldn't be subject to prosecution based under the principles of presidential immunity.

But such arguments about executive privilege appear, for the most part, to be asserted in “uncharted territory,” trial attorney Bernard Alexander told Salon. 

“Trump's basic claim, boiled down to its essence, is that he was above the law because he heads the branch responsible for enforcing election law,” Alexander said. “Under that logic, a president seeking to thwart the will of the electorate would never be subject to prosecution for sedition or insurrection. There would be no accountability.”

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Referring to Title 18 of the U.S. Code, which addresses matters like treason, rebellion, and similar offenses, sedition is defined as the federal crime of advocating for an uprising against or overthrow of the government through speech, publication, or organization, he explained. 

“The conduct in attacking Congress on January 6th appears to qualify as such conduct,” Alexander said. “The Insurrection Act of 1807 is a United States federal law that empowers the president of the United States to deploy U.S. military and federalized National Guard troops within the United States in particular circumstances, such as to suppress civil disorder, insurrection, or rebellion.”

In this instance, the acts of January 6 were “encouraged” by Trump, he added. As the president and leader of the federal executive branch, he “may have been engaged in sedition,” and neglected to suppress insurrection. Such acts would appear to help him achieve the goal of remaining President of the United States.  


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While the Constitution is “hazy” on a lot of things, on this point it’s abundantly clear, Justin Levitt, a professor at Loyola Marymount University Law School, told Salon. Trump’s argument is “charitably, complete nonsense,” he said. 

The states are in charge of the conduct of federal elections, except to the extent to which Congress overrides those state choices. Congress has created several federal laws that regulate how federal elections are run, but all of those are enforced by the Department of Justice through the court system, Levitt pointed out.

“Nothing that Trump was doing in 2020 was derived from any power that Congress gave, and therefore not in furtherance of any lawful presidential power; when he was in court, he was in court as Donald J. Trump and not as the United States (to the extent he was involved in any court cases after 2020, they were all filed by his campaign team, not by the DOJ), and when he was on phone calls looking to ‘find’ votes or conspiring to send in fake electors, that was entirely as a candidate and not as the President, because the President has no role in reviewing state election returns or sending in a state’s choice of electors,” Levitt said. “The indictments have been exceedingly clear about basing the charges only on private behavior, and not on anything legitimately governmental.”

Trump’s team has already shown their interest in delaying the proceedings however they can, but the prosecution and the judge have recognized that, he added.  

"By advancing these arguments, President Trump is testing the boundaries of presidential power: whether and the extent to which presidents and ex-presidents can be held accountable for actions that, for ordinary citizens (many of whom have now been convicted), would be a clear violation of the law," Alexander said.

The former president has pleaded not guilty to any of the charges. The trial in the case is slated to begin on March 4, 2024, in Washington, D.C.

“Priscilla”: Sofia Coppola delivers a sympathetic but ultimately suffocating portrait

The first image in “Priscilla” has the title character (Cailee Spaeny) sinking her feet into deep shag carpet at Graceland. It is a metaphor for how she will be immersed into Elvis’ (Jacob Elordi) world; she is one of his many possessions. How this happens and how she escapes it are the two bookends of Sofia Coppola’s sympathetic character study. 

Elvis may just want a doll he can lock in a gilded cage (a theme of all of Coppola’s work).

The film opens in West Germany 1959, where Elvis is doing his army service and Priscilla’s family is stationed. When Priscilla is invited to meet Elvis, she needs to get her parents’ permission to go. The encounter brings her drab life into full color. Elvis is lonely and homesick like Priscilla, and they bond slowly over the course of several meetings — which becomes an issue for the 14-year-old’s parents.

Elvis may be shy, with his polite, hesitant way of speaking (he uses an intimate voice, as opposed to his big performance one), and he does come alive singing, “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On” at a party. (That it is a Jerry Lee Lewis song is almost a wink at the creep factor; no Elvis songs are performed in the film, which is called “Priscilla” for a reason).

As the pair get chummy, they both fall in love. She has a secret smile on her face walking down the halls in high school, but there is a question of intent here. As “Priscilla” shows, Elvis is a gentleman, refusing to sleep with her. Priscilla is “mature for her age,” but her parents are still concerned. When Elvis arranges for Priscilla to visit him in Memphis after he is discharged, it cements their relationship. It also gives a hint of how limited her life with him will be. Elvis may just want a doll he can lock in a gilded cage (a theme of all of Coppola’s work). He also gives her drugs — to keep her awake, to help her sleep — ones he takes as well. 

PriscillaJacob Elordi and Cailee Spaeny in "Priscilla" (A24)

Their love is more shown that felt. She brings him breakfast in one scene; he gives her a gun. It is cute, perhaps, but Coppola’s detached perspective makes “Priscilla” uneven. The film is deliberately airless and suffocating, letting viewers feel how trapped Priscilla is in her situation. And despite outstanding period costumes, makeup and sets, it feels sterile. The film is full of textures, including Priscilla’s hair and clothes, which  Elvis also controls. Even when he has outbursts of anger — in one scene, he throws a chair at her — it only reveals that Elvis can be abusive. His behavior is erratic, illustrating that Elvis is nice except when he is not. 

It is not hard to see how Priscilla fell for the King who appeals to everyone. When he is rumored to be involved with Ann-Margaret, a costar on a film he is making, Priscilla, practically imprisoned in Graceland, gets jealous and angry. She tells him she needs to feel desired, but Elvis ignores her. He gave her a dog and then later, a child, but mostly he keeps her locked up as a doll in a dollhouse. 

The film is deliberately airless and suffocating, letting viewers feel how trapped Priscilla is in her situation.

Spaeny captures Priscilla’s conflicted emotions and experiences well. She is convincing as both a dreamy teenager and a wise-beyond-her-years young woman. It is nice to see her mature over the course of the film which spans from 1959 to the 1972. (There is an amusing sequence in 1964 Los Angeles, where Elvis becomes involved in beatnik-like philosophy that Priscilla disdains.) But mostly Coppola shows her to be this lonely young woman who is caught in a world she thought she desired.  

Elordi’s performance is equally magnetic, especially in scenes where Elvis is polite or seductive, as with Priscilla’s parents. But he also plays Elvis with a serious case of arrested development, wanting to spend time with his “boys.” He leaves Priscilla on her own for long stretches of time while he is off making movies and asks her to “keep the home fires burning.” Elordi’s take on Elvis is mostly low key, and he doesn’t try to emulate the King except vocally, which is appropriate. The actor’s height allows him to tower over Spaeny to such a degree that it only emphasizes her smallness next to his stature. Significantly, there is only one scene of Elvis performing, and it is him, seen from behind, in a show that Coppola shoots without music. 

Coppola is very deliberate with what she shows here, and there are fantastic tracking shots as Elvis leaves Priscilla alone (again), or a nice sight gag of Priscilla coming out of her high school graduation and seeing Elvis posing for photos with one of the nuns, a gun in his pants.

“Priscilla” however, seems a bit superficial in presenting all these images without much behind them. Priscilla’s loneliness is felt, no doubt, but that is all there is. The film is almost like the whispers Priscilla hears from her classmates gossiping about her in school. Everyone thinks they know the story, but there is more to it. Coppola doesn’t tell that more, she lets audiences infer that through the elliptical narrative that highlights her subject’s loneliness and abuse. Priscilla’s experiences may be an interesting and important aspect of Elvis’ legacy, but this film makes it only moderately engaging.

“Priscilla” opens in theaters nationwide Nov. 3.

 

Australian school students are experimenting with ‘space veggies’ in a NASA initiative

A pink glow is shining on the faces of enthusiastic students as they tend to plants in purpose-built grow boxes for space stations.

These students are the first in Australia to experience Growing Beyond Earth — a schools citizen science program from NASA and Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden in the United States.

In Australia, Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria is working with the La Trobe Institute for Agriculture and Food and Melbourne Archdiocese of Catholic Schools. The educational initiative ties into the Australian curriculum and gives students a unique introduction to gardening through science.

In this project, students grow plants in controlled conditions to test if they would be suitable for NASA missions, to help feed a future cadre of astronauts.

Plants evolved on Earth, so they might not grow so well in space. Before we start sending plants "off-world" to the Moon and Mars, we need to test their suitability. That way we can select the best for success.

                     

Gardening on the Moon and beyond

The NASA Artemis mission aims to establish a long-term presence on the Moon and send astronauts to Mars. If all goes to plan, humans will be living and working on the Moon by 2030.

Currently, astronauts on the International Space Station rely on a pre-packaged diet that is frequently resupplied. But in the long term, space gardens providing fresh, edible plants will be essential to maintain astronaut health and wellbeing.

For Growing Beyond Earth, students build the "growth habitat" inside a box roughly the size of a large microwave fitted with LED lights and sensors.

Then they plant the seeds of a leafy green called misome, which grows reliably and quickly — both on and off-Earth.

The students gain valuable experience in running their own experiments, including planting the seeds in pots and using growth media that match the NASA Vegetable Production System (Veggie).

They monitor growth and water use, making notes about plant size, color and fitness. Students learn what plants need, how fast they can grow, what can be recycled and how much can be harvested. Also, would anyone want to eat it?

Students can extend their skills in a second experiment to test other plant types. So far, nearly 200 plants have been trialled and several new candidate plants, including pak choi, cress and kale, were found suitable.

           

Introducing Growing Beyond Earth (FairchildChallenge)

         

Supporting the curriculum and connecting to nature

Growing Beyond Earth ties into the Australian curriculum through "science as a human endeavor". This relates to the role of science in society, including how scientific knowledge influences people's lives and can be used to make decisions.

A growing body of evidence shows student-led, activity-based projects lead to better learning outcomes. When students are exposed to real-world content, they remember it better, earn better grades and improve their critical thinking and problem-solving skills. These students can then apply their knowledge to new situations.

Another important part of the project is the connection with plants and nature. The positive effects of nature on wellbeing came to the fore during COVID lockdowns. Studies show indoor plants helped reduce mental stress during isolation and people chose to garden to connect with nature, release stress and address issues with food supply.

Nature has a strong influence on student learning too. Greater academic achievement and personal development comes from connection to the environment. For example, students in classrooms that have a view of nature report lower levels of stress and perform better on concentration tests compared to windowless rooms.

Better learning could also simply come from being in a good mood. Students are more interested and self-motivated during nature-based activities. This finding has very real implications for students who are normally disengaged.

Time spent with nature also has a greater influence on how we view the environment than knowledge of conservation alone. Simply knowing climate change is contributing to species loss is less likely to inspire conservation action than frequently observing environmental change during time spent outdoors.

Emotional connection with nature promotes interest in learning about sustainability and in turn, caring for natural resources.

 

Exploring an exciting new frontier

The influence of the Growing Beyond Earth program on student attitudes to gardens, conservation and food is still being assessed. As the program expands to more countries, it will track student achievement, career paths and leadership.

So far, surveys reveal Growing Beyond Earth students are more knowledgeable and confident about science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM) topics and related careers.

These students may go on to play crucial roles in building future crop production systems on Mars, designing space plants for food and medicines and using nature to improve the wellbeing of people experiencing isolation.

Kim Johnson, Senior lecturer, La Trobe University

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

Experts: “Testy” Eric Trump “cracks” on the stand after getting hit with emails disproving denials

Eric Trump “got testy and raised his voice” as the New York attorney general’s office pressed him on his father’s financial statements on Thursday, according to NBC News.

Eric Trump took the witness stand after his brother, Donald Trump Jr., and similarly sought to distance himself from the Trump Organization financial statements that prompted New York Attorney General Letitia James’ $250 million fraud lawsuit.

Eric Trump testified that he had "never worked" on the Trump Organization's statement of financial condition and "didn't know anything about it until this case came to fruition."

"I don't think I ever saw or worked on a statement of financial condition," he said. "I don’t believe I would have known about it — not what I did."

He later got “agitated” when he was questioned about a decade-old email in which he said the distribution of a summary of Trump’s personal finances should be limited and whether the reference was to a statement of financial condition that he testified he didn’t know anything about, according to NBC.

“I was not personally aware of statement of financial condition and I did not work on a statement of financial condition,” he said.

“Eric finally cracks a little, raising his voice in saying, ‘we are a major corporation. Of course we had financial statements,’” MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin reported.

He was then shown an email sent to him by a Trump employee in 2013 telling him that the employee needed information from Eric Trump to put together his father’s statement of financial condition.

Asked again if he knew about the statement, Eric replied, “it appears that way.”

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CNN legal analyst Norm Eisen tweeted that Eric, much like his brother, was “hammered” by the attorney general’s team on the stand: “Denies involvement in the financial statements. Immediately hit with emails to contrary.”

“Don Jr and Eric distance themselves from the Trump financial statements, found by Judge Engoron to be fraudulent,” wrote former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, who served on special counsel Bob Mueller’s team. “But as officers of the company, that is just not a ‘defense’ to operating a company engaged in fraud (which is what the judge already found).”

MSNBC legal analyst Katie Phang posited that “Junior and Eric seem to forget this is a bench trial, not a jury trial.”

“Judge Engoron is the finder of fact. So HE will decide the credibility of witnesses, among other important issues,” she wrote. “If these two blockheads think they can snow Engoron, they’re in for a rude awakening.”