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Uber CEO reveals his nightmarish experience while moonlighting as an Uber delivery driver

In a recent interview with The Wall Street Journal, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said his most nightmarish experience with the company occurred when he moonlighted as an Uber delivery driver. It wasn’t the riders that were an issue for Khosrowshahi but rather, the logistics of delivering food.   

“I was trying to deliver food and I couldn’t find where to drop it off,” Khosrowshahi said. “Trying to figure out the maze of apartment complexes was a challenge.” He continued, “The most fun was delivering food to a touch football game. I was like, ‘Where’s the building I’m supposed to be delivering to?’ It was a field. There was a bunch of dudes.”

Khosrowshahi’s stunt, which took place last September, was part of an effort to understand why the company was seeing a dip in driver recruitment at the time. The CEO himself came face-to-face with a series of challenges that drivers endure on the daily. There’s the faulty location systems, which make it especially difficult for drivers to navigate large apartment complexes. There’s the slimy practice of “tip-baiting,” where customers promise couriers with large tips only to reduce them after the delivery is made. And, of course, there’s boisterous and inconsiderate riders.

In his interview, Khosrowshahi added that improving drivers’ work conditions starts with corporate Uber employees “using our products” and “getting in the shoes of a driver.”

Attorney: Lawyers begging for cash should have “expected” Trump to throw them under the bus

Former President Donald Trump’s attorneys are in desperate need of cash after being indicted as co-conspirators in Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ sprawling racketeering investigation.

Jenna Ellis, a former attorney for Trump, who is among the 18 co-defendants indicted with felony racketeering and numerous conspiracy counts, publicly questioned why the super PAC MAGA Inc. isn’t covering the costs of her legal defense.

“I was reliably informed Trump isn’t funding any of us who are indicted,” Ellis wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “Would this change if he becomes the nominee? Why then, not now? I totally agree this has become a bigger principle than just one man. So why isn’t MAGA, Inc. funding everyone’s defense?”

Ellis tweeted the message responding to a post from Matt Schlapp, the American Conservative Union’s chairman, who suggested that the sooner Republicans “unify” behind a nominee, the sooner they can use resources to fund the defenses of everyone “indicted for being a Trump Republican.”

Ellis, who has been charged with violating Georgia’s racketeering laws and solicitation of violation of oath by a public officer, is using a crowdfunding campaign to raise money to “help her fight back” against the charges brought by Willis. 

Former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani also still hasn’t been paid for his efforts to keep Trump in power, according to The New York Times. He and his lawyer even “made personal appeals to the former president over a two-hour dinner in April at his Mar-a-Lago estate and in a private meeting at his golf club in West Palm Beach,” according to the report.

“Perhaps ‘how will I pay for my defense’ should have crossed the minds of Rudy Giuliani, Jenna Ellis and the others before they engaged themselves in the ways they did in service to their client,” V. James DeSimone, a California civil rights attorney, told Salon. “There are always public defenders they can turn to if they cannot afford an attorney. Trump owes them nothing — and he’s always known that.”

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Despite nearly a year of mounting expenses from various legal battles related to his efforts to keep Trump in office after the 2020 election, Giuliani’s team has consistently looked to the former president for financial support. 

However, even though Giuliani’s bills have strained his finances, the former president has mostly avoided committing to help even after making a vague promise during their dinner at Mar-a-Lago, sources familiar with the matter told The Times. 

“Any new lawyer knows you should have a written agreement, a retainer, and regular billing in place before starting any work for a client with Trump’s history of bankruptcies and debt-dodging,” DeSimone said. 

The former Trump lawyer is facing close to $3 million in legal fees, excluding the compensation he is owed for his efforts in helping Trump after Election Day, a person familiar with the matter told The Times. 


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“This shouldn’t surprise anyone,” DeSimone said. “Trump has been getting away with not paying bills all his life. For me, the issues involving what Trump owed Giuliani, about $3 million, for employing him as his attorney are exactly what Giuliani should have expected to happen.”

Michael Cohen, who was once Trump’s attorney but has now emerged as a prominent critic of the former president, told CNN that Trump is an “idiot” for not paying his alleged co-conspirators’ legal bills and was “absolutely” making a mistake by not paying Giuliani’s fees.

“Allegedly, from Rudy’s own mouth, he claims that he has smoking gun information about Donald,” Cohen said.

He added: “At the end of the day, when your life is basically hanging on the line, once again, you just don’t really want to throw another lawyer under the bus.”

How fast-food’s sleek redesign could signal a grim labor landscape

Strip away the Crunchwraps, the Big Macs, the PlayPlaces, the sentient taste buds and the nihilistic Facebook feeds and you’re left with American fast-food’s three cardinal virtues: profitability, uniformity and automation. 

Dotting the history of fast-food are numerous examples of both corporate leaders and franchise owners steering their restaurants towards providing ostensibly more streamlined, though increasingly depersonalized, experiences. For instance, in 2004, the New York Times published an article about how a McDonald’s franchisee located in Missouri outsourced his drive-thru order-taking to a call center in Colorado, a decision that, he told the publication, enabled him to take an additional 30 orders per hour with fewer errors. 

“People picking up their burgers never know that their order traverses two states and bounces back before they can even start driving to the pickup window,” wrote Michael Fitzgerald for the Times. 

Other locations, and even other restaurants, quickly followed suit. According to a later report, some McDonald’s locations in Oregon, Washington and North Dakota also relied on call centers for order-taking, while a few Jack-in-the-Box locations tried the drive-thru technology as well. This is the way that it goes in fast-food; one restaurant brand makes a move and, if it has even the shimmer of success, imitators are quick to follow. 

We saw this with the Chicken Sandwich Wars, and then again with the race towards fashion collaborations and chain gift shops. Fast-food restaurants are all even starting to look the same — and often that means they look like places where actual people don’t work. 

If you want to see a grim preview of the potential future of the fast-food labor landscape, look no further than the homogeneity of remodeled restaurant dining rooms. 

***

Step into your local Wendy’s this summer and you may notice that the restaurant looks different — revamped, perhaps. That’s because the popular burger chain is in the process of modernizing their restaurants nationwide, making sure they look more contemporary. Gone are the nostalgic sun-lit solariums bordered by fake hanging plants. In their place, are muted paint tones, touch-screens and sleek wooden booths. 

If you want to see a grim preview of the potential future of the fast-food labor landscape, look no further than the homogeneity of remodeled restaurant dining rooms.

The redesign, announced late last year, places an “emphasis on convenience, speed and accuracy,” CNN reported in August 2022. Restaurants will have new pick-up windows for delivery orders, so delivery drivers don’t even have to enter to grab their food. They will also have a new pick-up shelf and parking spots for mobile orders, along with a more technologically advanced kitchen and a swankier interior.

“To accelerate our business and expand our footprint across the globe, we must consistently meet the needs of our customers however they choose to engage with Wendy’s, whether that’s through a digital platform or in the drive-thru,” Wendy’s CEO Todd Penegor said in a press release.

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Wendy’s isn’t the only fast food restaurant that has altered their dining room to focus more on digital orders and automated processes, augmented by minimalist decor dictated by global design portfolios.

The chain’s redesign efforts came after several other fast food spots announced their plans to expand and rebrand their image. In May 2016, Taco Bell unveiled four new “urban edge” restaurant design concepts in hopes of redefining the overall fast food experience, both in the present and future. The chain also expanded with several new “Cantina” locations in urban settings that could serve alcoholic beverages. At the time, Taco Bell said it planned to continue remodeling older locations and open 2,000 new restaurant locations by 2022.

And of course, there’s McDonald’s, which in 2018 announced a $6 billion plan to overhaul most of its 14,000 U.S. restaurants by 2020. The makeover included new furniture and decor, remodeled counters for table service and “refreshed” exterior designs. The fast-food chain also shared plans to install digital kiosks for ordering, customizing and paying for meals, as well as easier-to-read digital menu boards in restaurants and drive-through lanes. Additionally, they planned designated parking spots for customers who order food through the chain’s mobile app.

The redesigns are driven in part by a desire for uniformity. As one of the members of McDonald’s retail design team wrote regarding the modernization efforts: 

McDonald’s, the company that put ‘fast food’ on the map over 60 years ago, knows how to make a hamburger with exact precision taste the same, whether you’re in Tokyo or San Francisco. But when it came to restaurant design, no two were the same. As the brand expanded globally, the US market realized that it needed to modernize experience and create consistency.

However, some of the dining room redesigns — which seemingly prioritize efficiency over the human touch — come at a time when tensions about the future of fast food labor are reaching a critical point. As Politico reported last week, a decadelong quest to organize fast food workers in the state has extended into the final weeks of California’s legislative session this month. 

“It is a watershed moment that industry leaders fear could have national ramifications. As a labor stronghold, California may be best positioned to be the first state in the country to deliver the long-elusive goal of unionized fast food workers,” Politico’s Jeremy B. White wrote. “But that has unleashed a ferocious counteroffensive from a franchise industry determined to protect its business model and confine the threat to California.” 

Meanwhile, fast-food employees in other cities across the country have gone on strike, pushing for higher wages and better working conditions, during what Bloomberg reported as the busiest year for strikes since 2000. 

***

In December, McDonald’s launched their first largely automated test location in Fort Worth, Texas, which, as The Guardian reported, drew the ire of activists “who criticized the fast food corporation for entertaining the idea of a costly automatic restaurant rather than pay its workers a living wage.” 

“Smaller than a typical McDonald’s, the location is geared towards customers on the go rather than those who plan to dine inside,” the publication reported. “It limits interactions between team members and customers and uses ‘enhanced technology that allows the restaurant team to begin preparing customers’ orders when they’re near the restaurant.'” 

Some of the dining room redesigns — which seemingly prioritize efficiency over the human touch — come at a time when tensions about the future of fast food labor are reaching a critical point. 

While a spokesperson for McDonald’s told The Guardian that the concept was “not fully automated” and employed a number of humans behind-the-scenes, and while technology critics have asserted that some of the consternation surrounding the development is overblown, many fast-food restaurants are turning to technology back-of-house to keep costs low and address the remnants of a pandemic-driven labor shortage. 

In January, CNBC reported that Miso Robotics’ Flippy 2 (a burger-flipping robot that uses artificial intelligence, computer vision technology and a mechanical arm) had been deployed to Chipotle, Wing Zone and White Castle, the latter saying that they planned to install 100 Flippy robots to work fry stations nationwide. “The tide has turned, this is no longer a question of are robotics coming to the industry,” said Jake Brewer, chief strategy officer at Miso Robotics. “It’s a foregone conclusion. The question is at what pace and in what form.”

According to the report, up to 82% of restaurant positions could, to some extent, be replaced by robots, and automation could save U.S. fast-food restaurants more than $12 billion in annual wages, per the restaurant consultancy Aaron Allen & Associates. 

This isn’t just a back-of-house issue. Yum Brands is the parent company to Taco Bell, KFC and Pizza Hut and during a monthly earnings call, the company’s chief financial officer, Chris Turner, reportedly said that he wants one part of all customer transactions to have a digital component, meaning that orders are processed through a restaurant’s website or mobile app, or at a restaurant kiosk. 

The company has a goal of going entirely digital, though no timeline for that transition was made public. Regardless, it’s another sign that the fast-food restaurant of the future is fast approaching — and these sleek remodels are one way corporations are preparing for that, with or without their current labor force. 

The sniff test is not reliable for food safety – here’s why

I should know better, but I admit that I do it too. I’ve just pulled some sliced chicken out of the fridge, as I set out to make up some sandwiches. I notice the chicken is within its use-by date, but I’m still suspicious. Another member of the family has unlovingly ripped open the packaging and the slices have been sitting exposed in the fridge for several days. Wondering if the chicken is still usable, I give it a good sniff, hoping for some evidence that it is still good or has gone off.

I should know better because I’m a microbiologist and I know that the microbes that I might be worried about making me sick have no smell. Yet, there I am, trying and failing to give myself confidence with the old sniff test.

It’s certainly true that some microbes create odors when they are growing. Favorites include the lovely smell of yeast in freshly risen or baked bread, which is in stark contrast to — and please excuse the toilet humor — the aversion we all have to the gaseous concoctions created by our microbes that come in the form of flatulence or bad breath.

These gases arise when microbial populations are growing and becoming abundant — when the metabolism of each microbial resident converts carbon and other elements into sources of energy or building blocks for their own cellular structure. However, the microbes that are most commonly associated with foodborne illness, such as Listeria and Salmonella, are going to be near impossible to pick up with the sniff test.

Even if present — and the risk is thankfully relatively low — these bacteria would probably be at such a small amount in the food that any metabolic action (and then odor production) would be entirely imperceptible to our noses.

Also, any eau de Listeria would be indistinguishable from the minor odors that would be made by the more abundant microbial species that are common and expected to be on our foods, and which cause us no health concerns.

Yes, there’s a very small chance that Listeria may be present in the smoked salmon that I picked up at the coastal smokehouse last week. But absolutely no chance that my olfactory senses can detect any hints of Listeria over the delicious smells of the dill and salts and smoke that make up the product.

Back to my sandwich construction. There’s even less of a chance of smelling any Salmonella on the tomato that I dug out from the fruit and veg drawer in the fridge — even if I had super Salmonella-smelling powers, which I don’t. If this pathogen was ever present on the tomato, it was probably introduced by contaminated water on the farm while the tomato was growing, so it is not on the surface of the tomato but within the tomato and doubly impossible to smell.

 

Spoiled food can smell, though

But it is possible to detect when food is spoiled — another action of microbes, as they eat away at food that has been left for too long or has been in the wrong storage conditions. This is one of the reasons why a more appropriate use of the sniff test is to suss out spoiled milk and help limit food waste, rather than throw out milk that might otherwise be safe. And for some foods — think of the microbial contribution to the finest cheeses — it is a culinary attribute to be malodorous.

While my wife disagrees with the aromatic attributes of some fermented foods, such as kimchi, and has banned them from the house, these are definitely not spoiled and should not be destined for the bin. Instead, for other foods, such as fresh fruits or vegetables or milk, I still pay heed to any odors suggestive of spoilage and take these as a warning to do a better job of storing that particular food type in the future — or to make less or buy less of it if I’m not eating it in time.

I also reflect that some of the causes of foodborne illness are still unknown to us. While many cases of illness are known to be caused by bacterial contaminants such as Campylobacter or the other microbes I’ve mentioned, there are just as many cases where we don’t yet know the source. But we’re getting better at this too, with scientists creating tools much more accurate than our nose at detecting food-borne pathogens.  

So, if I’m ever worried about becoming sick from my food, my energies are best spent on storing them at the right temperature and cooking them for the right amount of time, rather than trusting my nose to sniff out a pathogen. I wouldn’t even trust my nose to tell the difference between a cabernet and shiraz, let alone a Campylobacter and Salmonella.

Matthew Gilmour, Research Scientist; Director, Food Safety Research Network, Quadram Institute

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

Attorney: New bombshell report confirms Mark Meadows “ratted out Trump to the Feds”

Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows quietly decided to cooperate with special counsel Jack Smith’s prosecutors after they challenged former President Donald Trump’s claims of executive privilege, according to The New York Times.

Meadows “commenced a delicate dance” with federal prosecutors after receiving a subpoena from a grand jury over the winter, the outlet reported. Meadows initially declined to answer questions, citing Trump’s claims of executive privilege. But when Smith’s prosecutors challenge Trump’s claims, Meadows “pivoted” and “even though he risked enraging Trump,” decided to “trust” Smith’s team and quietly arranged to talk with them about both Trump’s efforts to stay in power and the Mar-a-Lago documents case, according to the report.

It’s unclear what Meadows told prosecutors and under what terms he was interviewed, though ABC News reported that Meadows undercut Trump’s claim that he “declassified” the national security documents he took home before leaving office.

But while Meadows’ cooperation prevented him from being named in the indictment in D.C., he was charged as a co-conspirator in the sprawling racketeering indictment in Georgia’s Fulton County.

Trump’s team has been “deeply suspicious” of Meadows for months but the discovery materials turned over by Smith’s team have given them visibility into what Meadows told prosecutors, according to the report.

“This witch hunt is nothing more than a desperate attempt to interfere in the 2024 election as President Trump dominates the polls and is the only person who will take back the White House,” Trump spokesman Steve Cheung told the Times.

National security attorney Bradley Moss called the report “confirmation that, under court order, Meadows ratted out Trump to the Feds.”

“What remains unclear is if he has some type of immunity deal,” he added.

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The Times report noted that Meadows’ plan to be quietly cooperative with prosecutors without agreeing to a formal deal is “hardly a novel strategy” but carries risks for both Meadows and Trump.

While Meadows’ goal was to provide information he believed he was legally obligated to disclose, he also used the law to push back on requests he considered “inappropriate or potentially dangerous to his own interests,” a source told the Times.

The turn appears to have been part of Meadows attorney George Terwilliger’s strategy for dealing with the legal threats.

“George believes witnesses are not owned by anybody,” a source who has worked closely with the attorney told the Times. “They’re not there for a person; they’re not there against any person; they’re not on one person’s side. They’re there to tell the truth.”


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After Meadows initially refused to answer certain questions during his first appearance before the grand jury, he gave an “unvarnished, privilege-free account” after he was ordered to return by U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, according to the report.

But in Georgia, Meadows fought efforts to compel his testimony and invoked his rights against self-incrimination when he appeared before a grand jury, the report added. The Fulton County indictment alleges that Meadows played a key role in the fake elector scheme and other efforts to keep Trump in power.

Meadows has already filed to try to move the case from Georgia to a federal court and Terwilliger indicated that he plans to argue that Meadows is immune from prosecution because his actions were part of his official duties as chief of staff.

Former federal prosecutor Richard Signorelli predicted that Meadows will ultimately only have two options in the D.C. case: be an “indicted non-cooperating defendant for which conviction will mean lengthy incarceration” or a “fully cooperating defendant which will preserve all or most of his freedom.”

“Not complicated,” he added.

Con artist Billy McFarland is back to sell us another Fyre Festival

Brace yourself for the second round of Fyre Festival. 

Billy McFarland, the co-creator of the failed and catastrophic luxury music festival, that spawned two documentaries was released from prison last year after spending almost four years in jail for pleading guilty to defrauding investors and wire fraud charges. Now McFarland is launching his second attempt at Fyre Festival set to take place in the Caribbean again at the end of 2024.

In a YouTube video posted Sunday, the convicted fraudster – attired in a luxurious white robe – says during his seven-month stint in solitary confinement he “wrote out this 50-page plan of how it would take this overall interest and demand in Fyre and how it would take my ability bring people from around the world together to make the impossible happen.”

According to the festival’s website, tickets are already on sale starting at $499 and going up to $7,999. The first pre-sale Fyre ticket passes are already sold out. These tickets would give the festivalgoer exclusive access to the festival and VIP access to attend events and pop-ups. 

The festival is scheduled for Dec. 6, 2024 for somewhere in the Caribbean. A lineup has yet to be announced. The first festival, co-sponsored by rapper Ja Rule, was an infamous cultural phenomenon as it took the internet by storm because of a viral cheese sandwich concertgoers were given as dinner. But also 350 people were brought to a festival site in the middle of a remote ideal without anywhere to sleep and no charter flights booked to leave.  

 

House Freedom Caucus threatens “reckless” government shutdown unless far-right demands are met

With Congress on August recess, the far-right House Freedom Caucus on Monday issued expected but unlikely-to-be-met demands for a stopgap funding bill that would avert an October government shutdown.

Members of the Senate and House of Representatives are set to return to Capitol Hill on the first and second Tuesday of September, respectively—giving them little time to pass full-year appropriations legislation before funding runs out at the end of next month.

Considering the time crunch, both Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) have recently signaled support for a continuing resolution (CR) that would give lawmakers a few more months to pass a larger package.

So far, McCarthy’s fractured conference has only passed one of 12 appropriations bills for fiscal year (FY) 2024. Among the GOP’s “five families” is the House Freedom Caucus (HFC), which does not publicly list its members but is made up of a few dozen legislators, including Chair Scott Perry (R-Pa.) and Vice Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio).

In terms of the appropriations legislation for the next fiscal year, the HFC said in a statement Monday that “we remain committed to restoring the true FY 2022 topline spending level of $1.471 trillion without the use of gimmicks or reallocated rescissions to return the bureaucracy to its pre-Covid size while allowing for adequate defense funding.”

“In the eventuality that Congress must consider a short-term extension of government funding through a continuing resolution, we refuse to support any such measure that continues Democrats’ bloated Covid-era spending and simultaneously fails to force the Biden administration to follow the law and fulfill its most basic responsibilities,” the caucus continued. “Any support for a ‘clean’ continuing resolution would be an affirmation of the current FY 2023 spending level grossly increased by the lame-duck December 2022 omnibus spending bill that we all vehemently opposed just seven months ago.”

The HFC declared that its members will refuse to support any CR that does not include the House-passed Secure the Border Act, “address the unprecedented weaponization” of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and “end the Left’s cancerous woke policies in the Pentagon undermining our military’s core warfighting mission.”

The Pentagon language likely relates to U.S. military policies on abortion and gender-affirming care as well as diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility while the DOJ comment is widely seen as a reference to investigations of former President Donald Trump, who has been indicted in four cases this year—including in two probes led by Special Counsel Jack Smith, who was appointed by U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland after the Republican announced his 2024 presidential campaign.

“We will oppose any attempt by Washington to revert to its old playbook of using a series of short-term funding extensions designed to push Congress up against a December deadline to force the passage of yet another monstrous, budget-busting, pork-filled, lobbyist handout omnibus spending bill at year’s end and we will use every procedural tool necessary to prevent that outcome,” the HFC added Monday. “Lastly, we will oppose any blank check for Ukraine in any supplemental appropriations bill.”

Democrats in Congress quickly warned that the faction of Republicans was up to no good, with Schumer saying in a statement Monday that “if the House decides to go in a partisan direction it will lead to a Republican-caused shutdown.”

Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton (D-Va.) said that “extreme House Republicans are now threatening to send us into a reckless government shutdown if they don’t get their way. A shutdown would be a disaster for Virginians—from missed paychecks to lapses in essential government services that families rely on.”

Referencing Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) wrote on social media that “House Republicans are determined to shut down the government and crash our economy. We will fight these MAGA extremists every step of the way. For. The. People.”

The New Republic‘s Tori Otten also suggested that “tanking the economy” could be the goal, noting that the HFC made similar demands earlier this year before McCarthy struck a debt ceiling deal with Democratic President Joe Biden, who is seeking reelection:

The government shutdown in 2018 cost the United States $11 billion, including $3 billion in economic activity that will never be recovered, the Congressional Budget Office said at the start of the following year.

With a presidential election on the horizon, the Freedom Caucus could be looking for ways to undermine Biden any way it can. Destroying the economy he’s helping to recover would do just that.

The Washington Post reported Monday that “White House spokesperson Olivia Dalton told reporters that she had no updates on whether Biden plans to sign a continuing resolution.”

Why heirloom seeds matter

The word “heirloom” likely conjures an image of the past, and when it comes to growing food, the implication is mostly accurate. But while some try to define heirloom cultivars by age — at least 50 years old, for example, or predating World War II — there’s another facet of the word “heirloom” that’s much more important.

“Heirloom seeds carry with them cultural distinctions,” says Brian Ward, assistant professor and seed researcher at Clemson University’s Coastal Research and Education Center. “Cultures have passed down the seed from generation to the next generation without any breeding going on,” with the lineage stewarded by a family or community. These seeds will always grow “true to type,” maintaining the same characteristics over time — “So your grandma’s tomato is the same tomato her grandma had.”

For Melissa Nelson, a professor of Indigenous sustainability at Arizona State University, “Heirloom seeds are deeply tied to cultural heritage.” Long before the supermarket existed, these cultivars were key to how we ate: “They produce seeds naturally that you can save and grow again for the next generation and also share with friends and family…You knew that your ancestors relied on them, so you want[ed] to keep them going.”

Safeguarding heirlooms may be more important now than ever, as the full scope of our current biodiversity emergency continues to come into focus. Studies have shown the crisis has been primarily driven by our food system, which puts species at risk through habitat destruction, inputs like fertilizers and pesticides and reliance on monoculture (growing one species at a time), in addition to carbon emissions that hasten climate change. But biodiversity is crucial for limiting climate change’s impact. With 34 percent of the country’s plants at risk of extinction, the time to protect them is now.

Heirlooms vs. Hybrids vs. GMOs

So what are the alternatives to heirlooms? Another common category is hybrid seeds, which are simply seeds from plants that have been cross-pollinated with a goal in mind. “Hybrids are carefully bred to produce specific characteristics,” explains Ashleigh Smith, managing editor at the seed company True Leaf Market, “including color, size, taste, disease resistance and more.” This can be useful in an agricultural context, especially in the face of increasing food insecurity and climate change. Hybrid seeds can be bred to create better yields, improved nutritional value or resilience to extreme temperatures or weather.

Hybrids aren’t a new concept, either. “People have been introducing different varieties within the same species for as long as we’ve been farming,” says Owen Taylor, cofounder of Truelove Seeds. But hybrid seeds became widely available commercially in the 1930s with the introduction of hybrid corn seed. “This translated to the food industry,” Taylor explains, “to breeding a new kind of vegetable that could be the same on any supermarket shelf in any part of the world.”

When specific traits are desired, such as taste or disease resistance, professional plant breeders carefully prepare two stable seed lines and cross-pollinate them to produce a predictable, reliable plant. But the genes that plant passes on to its own offspring are a variable mix of those of its parents; remixing those genes again doesn’t produce the same results when they recombine in the next generation of seeds. This means you can’t just save the seeds and get the same results next year — there’s no guarantee of the outcome and some of the second-generation seeds may even be infertile. For farmers who grow hybrid crops, that means buying new seeds every year. For home gardeners, Taylor says that makes hybrid seed-saving “extremely undesirable, because people want a certain color or performance.”

The type of breeding required to create hybrid seeds is distinctly different from the creation of seeds for genetically modified organisms (GMOs), sometimes referred to as genetically engineered (GE) seeds. A genetically engineered seed is created in the lab, Ward explains, “by inserting, deleting, mutating or removing a gene or amplifying a gene.”

GE seeds aren’t available for home gardeners, but are common in conventional agriculture, making up the majority of the U.S. corn and soybean crop. This widespread adoption has sped up consolidation of the seed industry and left farmers with even less control over their crops. “GMO seeds, like hybrid seeds, can’t be saved,” Nelson explains. “They’re often literally owned as property,” creating profit for large corporations. And while there aren’t well documented health impacts associated with GMO crops themselves, engineered traits like herbicide resistance have enabled the proliferation of chemical-intensive monocultures that seriously harm biodiversity both on and off the farm.

Indigenous communities have also expressed concern that genetically manipulating a seed is going too far. “From an Indigenous ethical standpoint,” Nelson continues, “this is playing God with our plant relatives.”

Why Grow Heirlooms?

When you bite into something like an heirloom tomato, it’s clear that generations of farmers and gardeners saved those seeds for a reason: Many heirlooms are known for their intense or unique flavor. “Growers who produce our seeds are stewarding those old varieties that taste like home,” says Taylor, who adds that immigrants and refugees in a new place often find the flavors of their culture in heirloom seeds.

But the longevity of these plants also says something in itself: “They have withstood storms and floods and they’re hardy, so they should be preserved for their genetic biodiversity and for agricultural diversity,” Nelson explains. Every time someone grows an heirloom seed, they are preserving that diversity and ensuring these seeds continue on for future generations; groups like Seed Savers Exchange connect people growing the same varieties so they can work together to ensure the plants aren’t lost forever.

Heirloom seeds are also key to food sovereignty — which allows people to choose what food they consume and control how and where it is grown. “For generations, heirlooms have saved communities from food scarcity,” says Smith. The last stage of a plant’s life cycle, after it flowers, is to produce seeds, which anyone can save and grow as long as they have soil, water and sufficient sunlight.

But seeds don’t just provide nutritious food; they can also provide insight into our past. “We see our seeds as relatives, as ancestors that have deep stories embedded in them,” Nelson explains, noting that seeds are sacred in many cultures. “They need to be restored and returned to their communities of origin and then shared.”

Taylor, for his part, prefers to call heirlooms “traditional seeds.” With vegetables and fruits now available year-round, often produced elsewhere and then shipped across the world, “they tell a story about ten thousand years of human relationships with food and plants,” he says, and “bring it back to a time when food was bred locally, super locally.” Heirlooms are more commonly grown by small farmers and home gardeners: “I would say the majority [who order] from us are small scale farms,” Taylor explains, “in particular CSA farms and urban farm community gardens, and some production farms, as well as distinct cultural communities.”

How to Grow Your Own

Want to grow heirloom seeds? Make sure to pay attention to where certain heirlooms grow best, since it can vary by region. Small or specialty seed companies, especially ones like Truelove Seeds and Seed Savers Exchange that are devoted to maintaining plant diversity, will offer seeds online, via seed catalogs or at local nurseries. Though not all open-pollinated seeds are heirlooms, heirloom seeds are always open-pollinated — meaning the plant is pollinated naturally, by air, insects, birds or other animals — and will often be labeled as such.

Another way to source seeds is by visiting farmers’ markets and talking to the very people who grow your food. “When I really like a potato or a broccoli or a bean, I ask the farmers,” says Nelson, who prefers to source seeds directly from them when she can. Nelson also recommends checking out the Alliance of Native Seed Keepers and the seed exchanges organized by the Native American Food Sovereignty Alliance. The crops known as the “Three Sisters”  — corn, beans and squash — are important for many Indigenous communities, who often steward heirloom varieties. “One we grow is Seneca white corn, also known as Iroquois white corn or Tuscarora white corn,” Nelson explains, along with Buffalo Creek squash, from the reservation of the same name. Heirloom bavi (tepary beans) have been grown for a millennium by the Indigenous communities of the Sonoran Desert, and the Tohono and Akimel O’odham continue to cultivate them today.

There are many other culturally significant — and delicious — heirloom fruits and vegetables you can find at the farmers’ market or grow at home, and many people and organizations looking after them. Some heirlooms are relatively famous, especially tomatoes (like Brandywines or Cherokee purples) but also favorites like lacinato kaleJimmy Nardello peppers or delicata squash. Others you may not even realize are heirlooms. Take lemon cucumbers — yellow, spherical and around the size of a big lemon — which might seem nontraditional but have actually been grown in the U.S. since the 19th century. Many heirlooms have deep roots in certain regions of the country: The southeast has a number of cultivars of collard greens, for example, which are the focus of the Heirloom Collard Project, spearheaded by Ira Wallace of Southern Exposure Seed Exchange in collaboration with other farmers and researchers. Their goal is to preserve and promote these heirloom cultivars, from cabbage collards to Brickhouse old collards to old timey blues, so future generations can enjoy them.

Michael Oher on where “The Blind Side” went wrong: “It didn’t show the work ethic I put in”

Professional athletes run up and down courts or across fields in their glory – before exiting their coliseums, in their designer threads, jumping into their quarter-million-dollar cars, and off to live their lavish lives. But what happens after you retire, and those big checks stop rolling in?

So many athletes go broke trying to maintain that lifestyle. NFL legend Michael Oher, who was homeless at times during childhood, explained that pressure and the harsh realities of life after professional sports on “Salon Talks.” The former Baltimore Raven and NFL champion is most known for his life being portrayed in the Academy Award-nominated film “The Blind Side,” starring Sandra Bullock (who won the Oscar for her role).

Oher filed a lawsuit claiming to be deceived and alleges that he was never legally adopted by Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy. The Tuohys now say they plan to end their conservatorship of Oher. The very way in which athletes like Oher are targeted is one of the subjects of Oher’s new book, “When Your Back’s Against the Wall.” 

Oher writes in detail about the ways in which he was misrepresented in “The Blind Side” and documents his continued journey and personal guide to success. “When Your Back’s Against the Wall” reflectively picks up on Oher’s life after football, in comparison to what he saw other athletes go through. He shares the principles that allow him to have a strong family and fulfilling life off of the field.

Watch Michael Oher’s “Salon Talks” episode here or read a Q&A of our conversation below to learn the truth about “The Blind Side,” how he is supporting fellow athletes from places of struggle and what it’s going to take for us to get him back in Baltimore.

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

I’m a diehard Ravens fan. I’m a Baltimore guy. I’m always rooting for you. How’s it going?

Good to talk to somebody from Baltimore. Everything’s great. Big Raven fan myself. Obviously won a lot of games for the Ravens.

“When Your Back’s Against the Wall” is such an important book. You are so passionate about the sport. I think a lot of athletes feel like they don’t really think about life after football. You do a great job touching on that.

My thought process, it was, sports was great. But for me I was using sports to be comfortable. From the time I can remember at three years old, I was homeless, in and out of foster care shelters, on the streets. When I got a chance to where I was going to be able to get a job, be an adult, I was going to do everything in my power so I can live a comfortable life. 

“I wanted a bigger legacy than what I had.”

You have to understand, especially as an athlete, it doesn’t last forever. I knew that. I understood very early on that I wasn’t the best athlete around. When we got in the middle of the streets to race, I almost lost. They used to have to give me 30 yards to run, a head start. Couldn’t jump. Wasn’t the fastest. Just all of that stuff. I understood where my talents were, and I knew I was going to have to outwork people, I knew I was going to have to outsmart. 

I knew sports weren’t going to be the end-all. That’s why I’m still chasing greatness and inspiring youth and motivating right now because I know the impact that I can have on someone who doesn’t have that ability to go out, be a big offensive lineman, and go out and get scholarships. It’s so much more. It’s so much more, and you could have less stress mentally and physically, and you can go have longevity at a career where you can work 20, 30 years, and it’s so many more opportunities out there other than sports and entertainment, and that’s what I want to drive home. And having a work ethic and having a routine, being consistent, being disciplined at something, at anything, and you can be great at it.

What’s one thing you don’t miss about playing in the NFL?

I enjoyed playing football. I don’t know, it’s not a lot. It’s not a lot because I appreciated, I didn’t take anything for granted about playing in the NFL. It’s a great game. It’s what got me out of poverty. It got me out of the environment that I was in into a better situation, a better life. So the NFL is great. 

I don’t know, probably the . . . I was going to say the fans, man, but nah. The fans talking trash about you, man, when you having a rough game.

I ain’t never played no professional sport, but I probably would’ve said practice. 

Nah, I enjoyed it. I enjoyed it. I enjoyed practice. Every practice to me was a game. I was the first one in the facility, the last one out. I took it all serious. I appreciated every second that I was in.

Do you think the league does enough to prepare athletes for retirement? Or that second act after you stop playing?

I think the NFL does a great job at putting the information in front of you. Now it’s up to you to meet them halfway to be able to go and do something with that information. The NFLPA [NFL Players Association], they send you tons of emails, they have internships for you. But with the NFL and college football, football is such a tough sport where you have to be into it mentally every day, 24 hours a day every day of the year. You can’t think about anything else but football.

I see the guys now, they’re doing other things off the field, but if you want to have a consistent, good career, your team want to win year in and year out, that organization is only focused on one thing, and that’s winning football games, and that’s the bottom line.

You talk about making that transition in the book. What are some of the things you feel like athletes and just fans of Michael Oher should know about what it took for you to make the transition?

Well, it’s hard. You’re doing something that you’ve been doing all your life: football. It all comes down for me, it was a legacy piece for me. I wanted a bigger legacy than what I had. When I walked away from the field, I was blessed to be in a position, I’m honored to have the platform that I have to be able to reach back out. 

“You have to understand . . . when I moved in with the family, I was an All-American football player already.”

The way that I grew up, no kid should have to grow up, and I know there’s so many other hopeless kids out there who think their life’s over right now. I was one of those kids at one point. But I knew if I gave some effort, if I met this world halfway, and I was doing the right thing every day, going to school on my own from the time I was in third grade, not getting involved in the gangs and the violence that was around me and not joining that atmosphere.

That’s what I’m doing right now. That’s why I wrote this book. ‘Cause there’s so many of those kids out there like myself who don’t realize the potential that they have, but it’s up to guys like yourself, guys like me, who know what potential looks like, who’s able to go out here and create a podcast and be able to talk to guys like me. You have to reach back out and find the potential, see the kid who wants to do great things that don’t have the resources and opportunities and point them in the right directions. They have to want it for themselves. If you don’t want it for yourself, it’s not going to happen at all. So you have to meet people halfway and also have to look yourself in the mirror and tell yourself, what I’m doing is not the correct way of doing things. So I think that’s the most important.

In the book you do a deep dive into your relationship with “The Blind Side.” I’ve heard bits and pieces of how you felt about the actual film throughout the years, so it was really, really good hearing it from you. I think a lot of people who are watching this and who are going to read your book would like to hear talk about the differences between the Michael that we all met on screen versus the Michael in real life, and how do you bridge that gap?

From the time I was three years old to 18, that’s when the movie really started to portray my life. I had ambition, very grateful for the platform. It’s still inspiring and motivating people across this world, so I’m grateful for that. But at the end of the day, I had drive, I had ability to want to succeed and be something, and it didn’t show the work ethic that I put in to get to that point. You have to understand, that came out in 2009, so when I moved in with the family, I was an All-American football player already.

And people don’t get that from the film.

I was 18, and I moved in with them a couple of weeks before my senior year of high school. I had been through the journey that I had already traveled, a success in its own, coming from where I came from. So you have to give some credit right there. That’s what I want young people to understand and not look at something and say, “I’m waiting on my savior, I’m waiting on this quick fix, I’m waiting on someone to come and give me this handout.” That was never my mentality.

I was putting it in my mind that I was going to be something from 11 years old when I started this journey. I wanted to be successful. It didn’t have to be football, it didn’t have to be sports. I was going to be a positive influence on society, if I had to have three, four jobs. I was going to be working. I was going to be doing something that can give me longevity, can give a peace of mind, can give me comfort.

I think it missed in those aspects, but I wouldn’t be who I was. That’s a small part of my story. Have to get credit. From ninth, 10th, 11th grade, I was sleeping on the floors of other people’s houses, getting to school, and just fighting, so you still have to put the work in. It doesn’t matter where you are or what you’re going through, what situation you’re in, as long as you have that want to in you. It’s a lot of simple things. Some of the principles in the playbook that I have in this new book, “When Your Back’s Against the Wall,” they’re in there, and if you’re feeling hopeless, you’re paralyzed with fear that you can’t go on and you can’t get it done, pick up this book right here, and it’ll change your life.

The whole second part of the book is just you sharing that kind of knowledge and wisdom. Do you feel like there were a whole lot of lessons that you didn’t have when you were in the league?

These lessons right here helped me get through the NFL. Being positive, having that work want-to mentality. Like I said, in the NFL, I was the first one in the facility, last one out the facility. In the locker room, that’s where it counts the most. That’s what I love more than anything because you can be yourself.

Outside the locker room, people think they know you, and you’re misunderstood. So no, I think that these lessons here, they can translate into anybody. If you’re not reaching the accolades that you want to reach, if you’re not climbing a ladder in your field, at your job, you have to look yourself in the mirror and ask yourself, “Am I putting in the extra work before? When it’s time to clock out, am I running out the door, or am I putting extra work in to get better?” 

When I was reading it, I’m like, “Damn.” I’m in my 40s now, but I think about some of the things I wish my 40-year-old self could say to my 20-year-old self. I felt like you had the opportunity to just reflect and to just talk about all of these things you’ve learned throughout the years and put them together in one place. 

“I felt that I did great things on the field, but the game that I’m playing now, it’s even better.”

That’s just growth and learning. That’s about growing and learning. Of course, if I could go back, you’d change some things. But unfortunately you can’t do it. so what I’m doing now is even talking to my younger self or someone who is already headed for greatness, but they need a tool. I was always chasing tools, but I didn’t have the correct circle around me to feed me.

For me, I’ve always wanted, I love being around people that are better than me, that are smarter than me. Then I can be myself, I can grow even more. Because it’s a lot of people who don’t like being around people. They like to be the big fish in a big pond, and I’m the total opposite because I’ve been at the very bottom already, so I’m just happy to be there. I’m happy to be there, and I’m getting fed knowledge, wisdom. I’m bettering myself every day. You need that circle around you that’s better, that’s smarter. It does wonders for you at every level.

I like how you also put a focus on mental health in the book. I felt like it’s been stigmatized so much in our community, but now we’re finally starting to pay attention to it in a different way. Do you feel like we’re making changes? Could we be the first generation that actually gets it right?

Most definitely. I think we’re talking about it. When you start talking about anything, that’s the first step because it’s like everybody that’s dealing with something, they got their hand in their pocket, and then once that first person raises their hand and asks the question now, you’ve answered a question for everybody else in the room who was, “Man, I’m glad he asked that.” 

“You have to find and let people in so that you can be a better person.”

I think especially this generation here, we’re more vulnerable, and we’re gaining that strength to let people in and understanding and wanting help. I’ve never shied away from help. I embraced it because I knew I needed help and someone who knew how to help me heal at every aspect of my life from the earlier years all the way til now. I know that I’m still growing, and I started off late in life with everything because I was alone on this journey for a long time, so you have to find and let people in so that you can be a better person.

What’s next for you?

Well, my foundation [Oher Foundation] right now. I’m putting a lot of time into that. I’m partnering with schools that have a great educational background. I’m placing a success coordinator, a mentor staff inside the school, and I’m sending kids like myself who don’t have the resources and opportunities to go out and get a better education. That was so pivotal for me once I started to be around other like-minded individuals like myself with the community, with education. 

That mentorship is the key. The mentor staff, the success coordinator that we’re placing in that school, so someone like me can talk to and go get information, life-changing information, so they won’t be behind once they go to college or once they get to the NFL, that’s when they start to learn about investments and so many different things. We want to start this with these kids who are coming through the foundation right now. So I think that’ll be an immediate impact on the lives of the kids that’s coming through. I’m spending a lot of time with that and changing lives. And like Kobe Bryant said, “Chasing greatness is inspiring the next generation.” I felt that I did great things on the field, but the game that I’m playing now, it’s even better.

“Truly an idiot”: Michael Cohen says Trump making a big mistake by not paying attorneys’ legal fees

Former Trump attorney Michael Cohen warned on Monday that former President Donald Trump is making a mistake by not covering his indicted attorneys’ legal costs. Former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani recently traveled to Mar-a-Lago to plead for Trump to cover his mounting legal costs stemming from his efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Fellow former Trump attorney Jenna Ellis also complained on Monday that she was told “Trump isn’t funding any of us who are indicted.”

“Let me just be very clear when it comes to paying money: He is truly an idiot,” Cohen told CNN. “He has not learned yet that the … three people you don’t want to throw under the bus like that: your lawyer, your doctor, and your mechanic,” he told Collins. “Because, one way or the other, you’re gonna go down the hill and there’ll be no brakes.” Cohen added that Trump was “absolutely” making a mistake by not paying Giuliani’s fees after he teased “smoking gun information” about Trump. “He’s gonna need to speak,” Cohen predicted. “And he’s gonna need to speak before everybody else does.”

Ring Nebula revealed: Webb captures the extraordinary beauty of a dying star

Although it’s a well-known fact in astronomy, many people don’t realize that when we see the Ring Nebula — the famed celestial oculi known as M57, whose hypnotic blue iris dazzles the northern constellation of Lyra — what we’re actually seeing is the slow-motion death throes of a white dwarf star.

The catastrophic beauty of a dying star reaches its farewell crescendo when its crucible core surges with ionizing heat. The chemical light of its firework-spray nebula explodes in Technicolor spikes, wisps, rings — wild arcs that rip through the dark as the star thrashes off its atmosphere, shedding luminous clouds, as the Ring Nebula has, for thousands of years. Where once humans could only see the blurry glow of the Ring Nebula’s distant fire, the latest images from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope have now given us a startlingly sharp map of its radiant halo and intricate inner-ring filaments, allowing us to discover for the first time what our own sun’s final hours might look like.

In a Monday release from NASA, Cardiff University’s Roger Wesson describes the Webb-enabled discovery thus: “A surprising revelation was the presence of up to ten regularly-spaced, concentric features within this faint halo. These arcs must have formed about every 280 years as the central star was shedding its outer layers. When a single star evolves into a planetary nebula, there is no process that we know of that has that kind of time period. Instead, these rings suggest that there must be a companion star in the system, orbiting about as far away from the central star as Pluto does from our Sun. As the dying star was throwing off its atmosphere, the companion star shaped the outflow and sculpted it.”

The Ring Nebula’s dense halos aren’t the Webb’s only discoveries, though. To learn more about the wonders revealed through the new telescope, feast your eyes on the latest batch of images capturing the birth of new stars, the extraordinarily detailed pictures of the famous Pillars of Creation — or even glimpse the earliest strings of the cosmic web, the filamentary structure of 10 threaded galaxies, considered a blueprint for all creation.

“Dude is losing it”: Trump jokes about fleeing to Russia “with Vladimir” in Fulton Truth Social rant

Former President Donald Trump on Monday fumed over a judge setting a $200,000 bond in his Fulton County election conspiracy case. “The failed District Attorney of Fulton County (Atlanta), Fani Willis, insisted on a $200,000 Bond from me,” he wrote on Truth Social after his lawyers met with prosecutors in Atlanta to discuss the terms of his bond. “I assume, therefore, that she thought I was a ‘flight’ risk – I’d fly far away, maybe to Russia, Russia, Russia, share a gold domed suite with Vladimir, never to be seen or heard from again. Would I be able to take my very ‘understated’ airplane with the gold TRUMP affixed for all to see. Probably not, I’d be much better off flying commercial – I’m sure nobody would recognize me!”

“Dude is losing it,” tweeted national security attorney Bradley Moss.

“Can you believe it? I’ll be going to Atlanta, Georgia, on Thursday to be ARRESTED by a Radical Left District Attorney, Fani Willis,” Trump wrote in another post, accusing Willis of raising money off “this WITCH HUNT” and coordinating his prosecution with President Joe Biden. “He better get this stuff out of his system now because his bond conditions are not going to allow some of this type of commentary pending trial,” Moss wrote after a judge barred Trump from making “direct or indirect threats of any nature” against any defendants, witnesses, victims or “against the community,” including “posts on social media or reposts of posts made by another individual on social media.”

Trump’s delay tactic may backfire as Jack Smith pulverizes “faulty” attempt to push trial to 2026

Special counsel Jack Smith’s team pushed back on former President Donald Trump’s effort to delay his D.C. election conspiracy trial until 2026 over the amount of evidence to be turned over in discovery.

Molly Gaston, a prosecutor on Smith’s team, said in a filing on Monday that Trump’s lawyers incorrectly suggested that cases involving conspiracy charges typically take 29.4 months to reach a conclusion, noting that the analysis was skewed by drawing from cases between September 2021 and October 2022, a time frame in which just 22 cases went to trial amid the COVID pandemic, according to Politico.

“This small and skewed sample provides no help to the Court in deciding an appropriate trial date,” Gaston wrote. “The question here is when it is appropriate to start trial in this case, and statistics regarding the length of time from indictment to sentencing in other … cases have no bearing on that decision,” she added.

Prosecutors also pushed back on Trump’s team’s claim that it needed three years to review the evidence turned over in discovery. Trump’s lawyers said the pages of evidence are “taller than the Washington Monument, stacked on top of itself eight times, with nearly a million pages to spare.”

“The defendant cites inapposite statistics and cases, overstates the amount of new and non-duplicative discovery, and exaggerates the challenge of reviewing it effectively,” Gaston wrote, arguing that there is no need to individually review all of the 11.5 million pages of evidence.

“In cases such as this one, the burden of reviewing discovery cannot be measured by page count alone, and comparisons to the height of the Washington Monument and the length of a Tolstoy novel are neither helpful nor insightful,” she added.

Gaston also noted that nearly half of the evidence turned over by prosecutors has long been available to Trump’s legal team, including 3 million pages of documents obtained from Trump entities, a million pages publicly available from the House Jan. 6 committee’s investigation and hundreds of thousands of pages that came from the National Archives. The remaining pages will be delivered in digitally searchable format, Gaston wrote, including three million pages of documents obtained from the Secret Service.

Smith has proposed starting the trial on January 2, 2024, a short period of time that he justified by citing his efforts to organize evidence to turn over to Trump’s team and the public’s right to a speedy trial.

“[T[he Government took on the task of providing the defense a set of key, organized documents that the Government views as some of the most pertinent to its case-in-chief,” Gaston wrote in Monday’s filing. “The Government provided these materials in load-ready files so that the defense can review them quickly in the same manner as the Government did — through targeted keyword searches and electronic sorting.”

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“The defendant’s proposed trial date, however, rests on the faulty assertion that it is necessary for a lawyer to conduct a page-by-page review of discovery for a defendant to receive a fair trial,” Gaston added. “But the defendant can, should, and apparently will adopt the benefits of electronic review to reduce the volume of material needed to be searched and manually reviewed.”

Former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner on MSNBC noted that U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan, who is overseeing the case, warned Trump’s attorneys at an earlier hearing that she may accelerate the trial date if Trump says or posts things that interfere with the court’s ability to pick a fair and impartial jury, which Kirschner alleged Trump had already done.

“I also think when the defense team, Trump’s defense team, throws out a date that is two and a half to three years down the road, April 2026, it shows that they are not really engaged in legitimate lawyering,” he added. “It really feels like they are assistant campaign chairman at this point. That will help, I think, push Judge Chutkan to an earlier trial date if they are not trying to legitimately present a trial date that is an honest assessment of how much time they think they are going to need.”

“He learned from studying Hitler’s speeches”: Leading civil rights lawyer on 20 ways Trump is a copy

A new book by one of the nation’s foremost civil liberties lawyers powerfully describes how America’s constitutional checks and balances are being pushed to the brink by a president who is consciously following Adolf Hitler’s extremist propaganda and policy template from the early 1930s—when the Nazis took power in Germany.

In When at Times the Mob Is Swayed: A Citizen’s Guide to Defending Our Republic, Burt Neuborne mostly focuses on how America’s constitutional foundation in 2019—an unrepresentative Congress, the Electoral College and a right-wing Supreme Court majority—is not positioned to withstand Trump’s extreme polarization and GOP power grabs. However, its second chapter, “Why the Sudden Concern About Fixing the Brakes?,” extensively details Trump’s mimicry of Hitler’s pre-war rhetoric and strategies.

Neuborne doesn’t make this comparison lightly. His 55-year career began by challenging the constitutionality of the Vietnam War in the 1960s. He became the ACLU’s national legal director in the 1980s under Ronald Reagan. He was founding legal director of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School in the 1990s. He has been part of more than 200 Supreme Court cases and Holocaust reparation litigation.

“Why does an ignorant, narcissistic buffoon like Trump trigger such anxiety? Why do so many Americans feel it existentially (not just politically) important to resist our forty-fifth president?” he writes. “Partly it’s just aesthetics. Trump is such a coarse and appalling man that it’s hard to stomach his presence in Abraham Lincoln’s house. But that’s not enough to explain the intensity of my dread. LBJ was coarse. Gerald Ford and George W. Bush were dumb as rocks. Richard Nixon was an anti-Semite. Bill Clinton’s mistreatment of women dishonored his office. Ronald Reagan was a dangerous ideologue. I opposed each of them when they appeared to exceed their constitutional powers. But I never felt a sense of existential dread. I never sensed that the very existence of a tolerant democracy was in play.”

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A younger Trump, according to his first wife’s divorce filings, kept and studied a book translating and annotating Adolf Hitler’s pre-World War II speeches in a locked bedside cabinet, Neuborne noted. The English edition of My New Order, published in 1941, also had analyses of the speeches’ impact on his era’s press and politics. “Ugly and appalling as they are, those speeches are masterpieces of demagogic manipulation,” Neuborne says.

“Watching Trump work his crowds, though, I see a dangerously manipulative narcissist unleashing the demagogic spells that he learned from studying Hitler’s speeches—spells that he cannot control and that are capable of eroding the fabric of American democracy,” Neuborne says. “You see, we’ve seen what these rhetorical techniques can do. Much of Trump’s rhetoric—as a candidate and in office—mirrors the strategies, even the language, used by Adolf Hitler in the early 1930s to erode German democracy.”

Many Americans may seize or condemn Neuborne’s analysis, which has more than 20 major points of comparison. The author repeatedly says his goal is not “equating” the men—as “it trivializes Hitler’s obscene crimes to compare them to Trump’s often pathetic foibles.”

Indeed, the book has a larger frame: whether federal checks and balances—Congress, the Supreme Court, the Electoral College—can contain the havoc that Trump thrives on and the Republican Party at large has embraced. But the Trump-Hitler compilation is a stunning warning, because, as many Holocaust survivors have said, few Germans or Europeans expected what unfolded in the years after Hitler amassed power.

Here’s how Neuborne introduces this section. Many recent presidents have been awful, “But then there was Donald Trump, the only president in recent American history to openly despise the twin ideals—individual dignity and fundamental equality—upon which the contemporary United States is built. When you confront the reality of a president like Trump, the state of both sets of brakes—internal [constitutional] and external [public resistance]—become hugely important because Donald Trump’s political train runs on the most potent and dangerous fuel of all: a steady diet of fear, greed, loathing, lies, and envy. It’s a toxic mixture that has destroyed democracies before, and can do so again.

“Give Trump credit,” he continues. “He did his homework well and became the twenty-first-century master of divisive rhetoric. We’re used to thinking of Hitler’s Third Reich as the incomparably evil tyranny that it undoubtedly was. But Hitler didn’t take power by force. He used a set of rhetorical tropes codified in Trump’s bedside reading that persuaded enough Germans to welcome Hitler as a populist leader. The Nazis did not overthrow the Weimar Republic. It fell into their hands as the fruit of Hitler’s satanic ability to mesmerize enough Germans to trade their birthright for a pottage of scapegoating, short-term economic gain, xenophobia, and racism. It could happen here.”

20 Common Themes, Rhetorical Tactics and Dangerous Policies

Here are 20 serious points of comparison between the early Hitler and Trump:

1. Neither was elected by a majority. Trump lost the popular vote by 2.9 million votes, receiving votes by 25.3 percent of all eligible American voters. “That’s just a little less than the percentage of the German electorate that turned to the Nazi Party in 1932-33,” Neuborne writes. “Unlike the low turnouts in the United States, turnout in Weimar Germany averaged just over 80 percent of eligible voters.” He continues, “Once installed as a minority chancellor in January 1933, Hitler set about demonizing his political opponents, and no one—not the vaunted, intellectually brilliant German judiciary; not the respected, well-trained German police; not the revered, aristocratic German military; not the widely admired, efficient German government bureaucracy; not the wealthy, immensely powerful leaders of German industry; and not the powerful center-right political leaders of the Reichstag—mounted a serious effort to stop him.”

2. Both found direct communication channels to their base. By 1936’s Olympics, Nazi narratives dominated German cultural and political life. “How on earth did Hitler pull it off? What satanic magic did Trump find in Hitler’s speeches?” Neuborne asks. He addresses Hitler’s extreme rhetoric soon enough, but notes that Hitler found a direct communication pathway—the Nazi Party gave out radios with only one channel, tuned to Hitler’s voice, bypassing Germany’s news media. Trump has an online equivalent.

“Both Trump and Hitler intensified their assault on objective truth by deriding scientific experts, especially academics who question Hitler’s views on race or Trump’s views on climate change, immigration, or economics. For both Trump and Hitler, the goal is (and was) to eviscerate the very idea of objective truth, turning everything into grist for a populist jury subject to manipulation by a master puppeteer.”

“Donald Trump’s tweets, often delivered between midnight and dawn, are the twenty-first century’s technological embodiment of Hitler’s free plastic radios,” Neuborne says. “Trump’s Twitter account, like Hitler’s radios, enables a charismatic leader to establish and maintain a personal, unfiltered line of communication with an adoring political base of about 30-40 percent of the population, many (but not all) of whom are only too willing, even anxious, to swallow Trump’s witches’ brew of falsehoods, half-truths, personal invective, threats, xenophobia, national security scares, religious bigotry, white racism, exploitation of economic insecurity, and a never ending-search for scapegoats.”

3. Both blame others and divide on racial lines. As Neuborne notes, “Hitler used his single-frequency radios to wax hysterical to his adoring base about his pathological racial and religious fantasies glorifying Aryans and demonizing Jews, blaming Jews (among other racial and religious scapegoats) for German society’s ills.” That is comparable to “Trump’s tweets and public statements, whether dealing with black-led demonstrations against police violence, white-led racist mob violence, threats posed by undocumented aliens, immigration policy generally, protests by black and white professional athletes, college admission policies, hate speech, even response to hurricane damage in Puerto Rico,” he says. Again and again, Trump uses “racially tinged messages calculated to divide whites from people of color.”

4. Both relentlessly demonize opponents. “Hitler’s radio harangues demonized his domestic political opponents, calling them parasites, criminals, cockroaches, and various categories of leftist scum,” Neuborne notes. “Trump’s tweets and speeches similarly demonize his political opponents. Trump talks about the country being ‘infested’ with dangerous aliens of color. He fantasizes about jailing Hillary Clinton, calls Mexicans rapists, refers to ‘shithole countries,’ degrades anyone who disagrees with him, and dreams of uprooting thousands of allegedly disloyal bureaucrats in the State Department, the Environmental Protection Agency, the FBI, and the CIA, who he calls ‘the deep state’ and who, he claims, are sabotaging American greatness.”


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5. They unceasingly attack objective truth. “Both Trump and Hitler maintained a relentless assault on the very idea of objective truth,” he continues. “Each began the assault by seeking to delegitimize the mainstream press. Hitler quickly coined the epithet Lugenpresse (literally ‘lying press’) to denigrate the mainstream press. Trump uses a paraphrase of Hitler’s lying press epithet—’fake news’—cribbed, no doubt, from one of Hitler’s speeches. For Trump, the mainstream press is a ‘lying press’ that publishes ‘fake news.'” Hitler attacked his opponents as spreading false information to undermine his positions, Neuborne says, just as Trump has attacked “elites” for disseminating false news, “especially his possible links to the Kremlin.”

6. They relentlessly attack mainstream media. Trump’s assaults on the media echo Hitler’s, Neuborne says, noting that he “repeatedly attacks the ‘failing New York Times,’ leads crowds in chanting ‘CNN sucks,’ [and] is personally hostile to most reporters.” He cites the White House’s refusal to fly the flag at half-mast after the murder of five journalists in Annapolis in June 2018, Trump’s efforts to punish CNN by blocking a merger of its corporate parent, and trying to revoke federal Postal Service contracts held by Amazon, which was founded by Jeff Bezos, who also owns the Washington Post.

7. Their attacks on truth include science. Neuborne notes, “Both Trump and Hitler intensified their assault on objective truth by deriding scientific experts, especially academics who question Hitler’s views on race or Trump’s views on climate change, immigration, or economics. For both Trump and Hitler, the goal is (and was) to eviscerate the very idea of objective truth, turning everything into grist for a populist jury subject to manipulation by a master puppeteer. In both Trump’s and Hitler’s worlds, public opinion ultimately defines what is true and what is false.”

8. Their lies blur reality—and supporters spread them. “Trump’s pathological penchant for repeatedly lying about his behavior can only succeed in a world where his supporters feel free to embrace Trump’s ‘alternative facts’ and treat his hyperbolic exaggerations as the gospel truth,” Neuborne says. “Once Hitler had delegitimized the mainstream media by a series of systematic attacks on its integrity, he constructed a fawning alternative mass media designed to reinforce his direct radio messages and enhance his personal power. Trump is following the same path, simultaneously launching bitter attacks on the mainstream press while embracing the so-called alt-right media, co-opting both Sinclair Broadcasting and the Rupert Murdoch-owned Fox Broadcasting Company as, essentially, a Trump Broadcasting Network.”

9. Both orchestrated mass rallies to show status. “Once Hitler had cemented his personal communications link with his base via free radios and a fawning media and had badly eroded the idea of objective truth, he reinforced his emotional bond with his base by holding a series of carefully orchestrated mass meetings dedicated to cementing his status as a charismatic leader, or Fuhrer,” Neuborne writes. “The powerful personal bonds nurtured by Trump’s tweets and Fox’s fawning are also systematically reinforced by periodic, carefully orchestrated mass rallies (even going so far as to co-opt a Boy Scout Jamboree in 2017), reinforcing Trump’s insatiable narcissism and his status as a charismatic leader.”

10. They embrace extreme nationalism. “Hitler’s strident appeals to the base invoked an extreme version of German nationalism, extolling a brilliant German past and promising to restore Germany to its rightful place as a preeminent nation,” Neuborne says. “Trump echoes Hitler’s jingoistic appeal to ultranationalist fervor, extolling American exceptionalism right down to the slogan ‘Make America Great Again,’ a paraphrase of Hitler’s promise to restore German greatness.”

11. Both made closing borders a centerpiece. “Hitler all but closed Germany’s borders, freezing non-Aryan migration into the country and rendering it impossible for Germans to escape without official permission. Like Hitler, Trump has also made closed borders a centerpiece of his administration,” Neuborne continues. “Hitler barred Jews. Trump bars Muslims and seekers of sanctuary from Central America. When the lower courts blocked Trump’s Muslim travel ban, he unilaterally issued executive orders replacing it with a thinly disguised substitute that ultimately narrowly won Supreme Court approval under a theory of extreme deference to the president.”

12. They embraced mass detention and deportations. “Hitler promised to make Germany free from Jews and Slavs. Trump promises to slow, stop, and even reverse the flow of non-white immigrants, substituting Muslims, Africans, Mexicans, and Central Americans of color for Jews and Slavs as scapegoats for the nation’s ills. Trump’s efforts to cast dragnets to arrest undocumented aliens where they work, live, and worship, followed by mass deportation… echo Hitler’s promise to defend Germany’s racial identity,” he writes, also noting that Trump has “stooped to tearing children from their parents [as Nazis in World War II would do] to punish desperate efforts by migrants to find a better life.”

13. Both used borders to protect selected industries. “Like Hitler, Trump seeks to use national borders to protect his favored national interests, threatening to ignite protectionist trade wars with Europe, China, and Japan similar to the trade wars that, in earlier incarnations, helped to ignite World War I and World War II,” Neuborne writes. “Like Hitler, Trump aggressively uses our nation’s political and economic power to favor selected American corporate interests at the expense of foreign competitors and the environment, even at the price of international conflict, massive inefficiency, and irreversible pollution [climate change].”

14. They cemented their rule by enriching elites. “Hitler’s version of fascism shifted immense power—both political and financial—to the leaders of German industry. In fact, Hitler governed Germany largely through corporate executives,” he continues. “Trump has also presided over a massive empowerment—and enrichment—of corporate America. Under Trump, large corporations exercise immense political power while receiving huge economic windfalls and freedom from regulations designed to protect consumers and the labor force.

“Hitler despised the German labor movement, eventually destroying it and imprisoning its leaders. Trump also detests strong unions, seeking to undermine any effort to interfere with the prerogatives of management.”

15. Both rejected international norms. “Hitler’s foreign policy rejected international cooperation in favor of military and economic coercion, culminating in the annexation of the Sudetenland, the phony Hitler-Stalin nonaggression pact, the invasion of Czechoslovakia, and the horrors of global war,” Neuborne notes. “Like Hitler, Trump is deeply hostile to multinational cooperation, withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the Paris Agreement on climate change, and the nuclear agreement with Iran, threatening to withdraw from the North American Free Trade Agreement, abandoning our Kurdish allies in Syria, and even going so far as to question the value of NATO, our post-World War II military alliance with European democracies against Soviet expansionism.”

16. They attack domestic democratic processes. “Hitler attacked the legitimacy of democracy itself, purging the voting rolls, challenging the integrity of the electoral process, and questioning the ability of democratic government to solve Germany’s problems,” Neuborne notes. “Trump has also attacked the democratic process, declining to agree to be bound by the outcome of the 2016 elections when he thought he might lose, supporting the massive purge of the voting rolls allegedly designed to avoid (nonexistent) fraud, championing measures that make it harder to vote, tolerating—if not fomenting—massive Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, encouraging mob violence at rallies, darkly hinting at violence if Democrats hold power, and constantly casting doubt on the legitimacy of elections unless he wins.”

17. Both attack the judiciary and rule of law. “Hitler politicized and eventually destroyed the vaunted German justice system. Trump also seeks to turn the American justice system into his personal playground,” Neuborne writes. “Like Hitler, Trump threatens the judicially enforced rule of law, bitterly attacking American judges who rule against him, slyly praising Andrew Jackson for defying the Supreme Court, and abusing the pardon power by pardoning an Arizona sheriff found guilty of criminal contempt of court for disobeying federal court orders to cease violating the Constitution.”

18. Both glorify the military and demand loyalty oaths. “Like Hitler, Trump glorifies the military, staffing his administration with layers of retired generals (who eventually were fired or resigned), relaxing control over the use of lethal force by the military and the police, and demanding a massive increase in military spending,” Neuborne writes. Just as Hitler “imposed an oath of personal loyalty on all German judges” and demanded courts defer to him, “Trump’s already gotten enough deference from five Republican [Supreme Court] justices to uphold a largely Muslim travel ban that is the epitome of racial and religious bigotry.”

Trump has also demanded loyalty oaths. “He fired James Comey, a Republican appointed in 2013 as FBI director by President Obama, for refusing to swear an oath of personal loyalty to the president; excoriated and then sacked Jeff Sessions, his handpicked attorney general, for failing to suppress the criminal investigation into… Trump’s possible collusion with Russia in influencing the 2016 elections; repeatedly threatened to dismiss Robert Mueller, the special counsel carrying out the investigation; and called again and again for the jailing of Hillary Clinton, his 2016 opponent, leading crowds in chants of ‘lock her up.'” A new chant, “send her back,” has since emerged at Trump rallies directed at non-white Democratic congresswomen.

19. They proclaim unchecked power. “Like Hitler, Trump has intensified a disturbing trend that predated his administration of governing unilaterally, largely through executive orders or proclamations,” Neuborne says, citing the Muslim travel ban, trade tariffs, unraveling of health and environmental safety nets, ban on transgender military service, and efforts to end President Obama’s protection for Dreamers. “Like Hitler, Trump claims the power to overrule Congress and govern all by himself. In 1933, Hitler used the pretext of the Reichstag fire to declare a national emergency and seize the power to govern unilaterally. The German judiciary did nothing to stop him. German democracy never recovered.”

“When Congress refused to give Trump funds for his border wall even after he threw a tantrum and shut down the government, Trump, like Hitler, declared a phony national emergency and claimed the power to ignore Congress,” Neuborne continues. “Don’t count on the Supreme Court to stop him. Five justices gave the game away on the President’s unilateral travel ban. They just might do the same thing on the border wall.” It did in late July, ruling that Trump could divert congressionally appropriated funds from the Pentagon budget—undermining constitutional separation of powers.

20. Both relegate women to subordinate roles. “Finally,” writes Neuborne, “Hitler propounded a misogynistic, stereotypical view of women, valuing them exclusively as wives and mothers while excluding them from full participation in German political and economic life. Trump may be the most openly misogynist figure ever to hold high public office in the United States, crassly treating women as sexual objects, using nondisclosure agreements and violating campaign finance laws to shield his sexual misbehavior from public knowledge, attacking women who come forward to accuse men of abusive behavior, undermining reproductive freedom, and opposing efforts by women to achieve economic equality.”

Whither Constitutional Checks and Balances?

Most of Neuborne’s book is not centered on Trump’s fealty to Hitler’s methods and early policies. He notes, as many commentators have, that Trump is following the well-known contours of authoritarian populists and dictators: “there’s always a charismatic leader, a disaffected mass, an adroit use of communications media, economic insecurity, racial or religious fault lines, xenophobia, a turn to violence, and a search for scapegoats.”

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The bigger problem, and the subject of most of the book, is that the federal architecture intended to be a check and balance against tyrants, is not poised to act. Congressional representation is fundamentally anti-democratic. In the Senate, politicians representing 18 percent of the national population—epicenters of Trump’s base—can cast 51 percent of the chamber’s votes. A Republican majority from rural states, representing barely 40 percent of the population, controls the chamber. It repeatedly thwarts legislation reflecting multicultural America’s values—and creates a brick wall for impeachment.

The House of Representatives is not much better. Until 2018, this decade’s GOP-majority House, a product of 2011’s extreme Republican gerrymanders, was also unrepresentative of the nation’s demographics. That bias still exists in the Electoral College, as the size of a state’s congressional delegation equals its allocation of votes. That formula is fair as far as House members go, but allocating votes based on two senators per state hurts urban America. Consider that California’s population is 65 times larger than Wyoming’s.

Meanwhile, the Supreme Court’s majority remains in the hands of justices appointed by Republican presidents—and favors that party’s agenda. Most Americans are unaware that the court’s partisan majority has only changed twice since the Civil War—in 1937, when a Democratic-appointed majority took over, and in 1972, when a Republican-appointed majority took over. Senate Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s blocking of President Obama’s final nominee thwarted a twice-a-century change. Today’s hijacked Supreme Court majority has only just begun deferring to Trump’s agenda.

Neuborne wants to be optimistic that a wave of state-based resistance, call it progressive federalism, could blunt Trump’s power grabs and help the country return to a system embracing, rather than demonizing, individual dignity and fundamental equality. But he predicts that many Americans who supported Trump in 2016 (largely, he suggests, because their plights have been overlooked for many years by federal power centers and by America’s capitalist hubs) won’t desert Trump—not while he’s in power.

“When tyrants like Hitler are ultimately overthrown, their mass support vanishes retroactively—everyone turns out to have been in the resistance—but the mass support was undeniably there,” he writes. “There will, of course, be American quislings who will enthusiastically support an American tyrant. There always are—everywhere.”

Ultimately, Neuborne doesn’t expect there will be a “constitutional mechanic in the sky ready to swoop down and save American democracy from Donald Trump at the head of a populist mob.” Whatever Trump thinks he is or isn’t doing, his rhetorical and strategic role model—the early Hitler—is what makes Trump and today’s GOP so dangerous.

“Even if all that Trump is doing is marching to that populist drum, he is unleashing forces that imperil the fragile fabric of a multicultural democracy,” Neuborne writes. “But I think there’s more. The parallels—especially the links between Lugenpresse and ‘fake news,’ and promises to restore German greatness and ‘Make America Great Again’—are just too close to be coincidental. I’m pretty sure that Trump’s bedside study of Hitler’s speeches—especially the use of personal invective, white racism, and xenophobia—has shaped the way Trump seeks to gain political power in our time. I don’t for a moment believe that Trump admires what Hitler eventually did with his power [genocide], but he damn well admires—and is successfully copying—the way that Hitler got it.”

“Set your watches”: Experts say there’s “no chance” Trump won’t violate strict bond conditions

Former President Donald Trump said he will surrender to Georgia authorities on Thursday after his lawyers reached an agreement on his bond with Fulton County prosecutors.

“Can you believe it? I’ll be going to Atlanta, Georgia, on Thursday to be ARRESTED by a Radical Left District Attorney,” Trump complained on Truth Social after his bond was set at $200,000.

It will be Trump’s fourth arrest in five months, this time on charges accusing him of illegally conspiring to overturn his 2020 election loss in the state. Trump’s post came after his attorneys met with prosecutors in Atlanta to discuss the terms of his bond, according to the Associated Press.

Trump’s bond conditions stipulate that he not violate any laws and appear in court as directed. The consent order, approved by Judge Scott McAfee, also says that Trump “shall perform no act to intimidate any person known to him… to be a codefendant or witness in this case or to otherwise obstruct the administration of justice.”

Politico reported Kyle Cheney noted after bond was set for Trump and co-defendants John Eastman, Kenneth Chesebro and Scott Hall, only Trump “has explicit and expanded witness intimidation restrictions.”

The document says that Trump shall “make no direct or indirect threat of any nature against any defendant” or witness, including individuals designated in the indictment as unindicted co-conspirators 1-30. Trump shall also “make no direct or indirect threat” against any victim or “against the community or to any property in the community.”

“The above shall include, but not limited to, posts on social media or reposts of posts made by another individual on social media.”

New York University Law Prof. Ryan Goodman highlighted the warning against reposting posts by others, which the former president has repeatedly done to target investigators, witnesses and judges.

“Those conditions are tailored for former President Trump,” he wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

“We know what Donald Trump does, he does this over and over again,” CNN legal analyst Elie Honig said Monday. “He tweets or Truth Socials things out in coded language, and sometimes he does tend to repost things others have posted and then try to distance himself. I think it’s a very smart move to call out that tactic and say, ‘That’s something we know you do, and we’re not going to tolerate it.'”

Georgia State Law Prof. Anthony Michael Kreis expressed surprise that Trump’s lawyers agreed to an agreement so “sweeping and vague” given “their client’s penchant for attacking anyone on a whim and the fact he’s running for president.”

“Barring a real come-to-Jesus moment, the only way Trump doesn’t violate his Fulton County consent bond conditions is if his lawyers confiscate his phone,” he wrote.

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“What is the over/under on how long it takes Trump to violate these bond conditions?” wondered former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti.

“One day,” predicted national security attorney Bradley Moss.

“Set your watches folks because there’s little chance he’ll comply,” echoed Georgia State Law Prof. Eric Segall.

But former U.S. Attorney Barb McQuade predicted that it would be “difficult for a judge to use the ultimate hammer, which is to revoke the bond and jail Donald Trump while awaiting trial.”


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“Being jailed in the Rice Street Jail while he awaits trial is certainly no picnic, so I think we’ll see things that come close to the line,” she told MSNBC. “I think he will try to push a warning before he goes any further because it will be a difficult decision for a judge to revoke the bond. But if a judge is really doing his job, he is going to see that his job is to enforce the law and to manage this case, regardless of any political consequences that might come.”

Former Trump attorney Michael Cohen predicted that there is “no chance” Trump will comply with his bond conditions but “probably nothing will happen.”

“I mean, maybe they’ll increase his bond and then they’ll do it again,” he told CNN. “And then maybe even a fourth time. But Donald can’t help himself. When he has a hatred — or an ire for somebody, he cannot help but get it off his chest. And the only way he can do it is through his ‘untruth social.'”

Cohen, who has been repeatedly attacked by Trump on Truth Social, said most people “can’t understand how devastating it is” to be targeted by him.

“I applaud the judge for putting restrictions on him,” he added. “And I understand the argument about the First Amendment, that they’re stifling the former president, the Republican presumed nominee. I get it. But Donald with his, you know, with his dog whistle, truly has the ability to change people’s lives.”

What’s most likely going on in Area 51? A national security historian explains why it isn’t aliens

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com.


What is most likely going on in Area 51? – Griffin, age 10, South Lyon, Michigan


One of the reasons people can never be entirely sure about what is going on at Area 51 is that it is a highly classified secret military facility. It was not until 2013 that the U.S. government even acknowledged the existence and name “Area 51.”

This information came out as part of a broader set of documents released through a Freedom of Information Act request, which is something regular citizens and groups can do to ask the U.S. government to provide details about government activities. In this case, the request made public formerly classified CIA information regarding the historical development and testing of the U-2 spy plane. The information also revealed where it was tested: Area 51!

As a national security historian, I know there’s a long history of secrets at Area 51. I also know that none of those secrets have anything to do with space aliens.

The place

The base commonly referred to as Area 51 is located in a remote area of southern Nevada, roughly 100 miles (161 kilometers) from Las Vegas. It is in the middle of a federally protected area of the U.S. Air Force’s Nevada Test and Training Range, now known as the Nevada National Security Site, which is inside the larger Nellis Air Force Range.

a map showing the city of Las Vegas in the bottom right corner and an inset of the United States in the bottom left corner with Southern Nevada highlighted

Area 51, the yellow rectangle in the center of the map, is tucked in the middle of the much larger Nellis Air Force Range. DEMIS BV via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Area 51 is the name on maps for the area within the Nevada National Security Site where the government carried out secret operations. The airfield at Area 51 is called Homey Airport, and the overall facility is often referred to as Groom Lake. Groom Lake is a salt flat, or dried-out lake, adjacent to the airport.

The history

In the early years of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union, both nations sought new technological developments that might give one country more power than the other. A great amount of information about scientific achievements, such as on rockets or weapons – but also even on ways to grow more food or make fuel more efficient – was kept secret as an issue of national security.

A key part of not fighting another world war was, and still is, developing technologies to see what the other side is doing – that is, surveillance technologies that can spy on the enemy. The information gathered by new and improved surveillance technologies about new innovations with planes and weapons was very important to governments.

This meant that both the surveillance information and the technology to get it were closely held national security secrets. Very few people in the governments of the U.S. and Soviet Union knew about the secrets from the 1940s all the way up until the end of the Cold War in 1991.

Central to all this was the U.S.’s U-2 spy plane. It could fly higher than other airplanes and was made to travel over targets all around the world to take high-resolution photographs and measurements. Area 51 was selected in 1955 to test the U-2 in part because its remote location could help keep the plane secret.

Area 51 became the test site for other secret new aircraft. This included the A-12, which, like the U-2, was a fast-flying reconnaissance plane. The A-12 was first test flown at Homey Airport in 1962. It had a bulging disc-like center to carry additional fuel. Its shape and shiny titanium body could well have been responsible for some people’s reports about seeing spherical ships, also known as flying saucers.

Another important – and odd-shaped – aircraft first tested at Area 51 was the stealth fighter known as the F-117. It first flew at Homey Airport in 1981.

Secrets and speculation

“More Flying Objects Seen in Clark Sky,” read the June 17, 1959, headline in the Reno Evening Gazette newspaper. Reports like this of unidentified flying objects in the 1950s and 1960s fueled controversy and attention for Area 51. This was for three main reasons:

  1. Area 51 was highly secret and not publicly accessible.
  2. The area was home to test flights of secret new airplanes that moved fast and in different ways than expected.
  3. The Cold War was an era of political tension, and there were many movies and TV shows about space aliens at the time.

When the government does not tell the public the full truth, no matter the reasons, secrets can lead to wild speculation. Secrecy can leave room for conspiracy theories to develop.

Area 51 remains off-limits to civilian and regular military air traffic, a decade after the government acknowledged its existence. The 68 years of government secrecy has helped to amplify suspicions, speculation and conspiracy theories. These conspiracy theories include crashed alien spaceships, space aliens being experimented on, and even space aliens working at Area 51.

There are much simpler explanations for what witnesses have seen near Area 51. After all, the public now knows about what was being tested at Area 51, and when. For example, as U-2 and A-12 flights increased in the 1950s and 1960s, so did local sightings of UFOs. As balloons and planes crashed, and secret testing of new technologies as well as captured Soviet equipment continued, so did reports of UFO crashes and landings.

In fact, many UFO sightings match almost exactly with dates and times of flights of then-classified experimental aircraft. We also know that prototype drones and more recent versions have been tested at the site.

In the end, there is no reason to think that anything other than earthly technologies have been behind the strange sights and sounds at Area 51.

This article has been updated to correct the descriptions of the name Area 51 and the U2 spy plane’s capabilities.


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New Trump poll proves Obama and Clinton were right: The GOP base are deplorable, bitter clingers

“Hurt dogs sure do holler.” That was the saying that came to mind in 2008 when then-candidate for president Barack Obama drew outrage from Republicans because he described their voters as “bitter” people who “cling to guns or religion or antipathy toward people who aren’t like them.” The phrase came to mind again in 2016, when Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton used the memorable phrase “basket of deplorables” to describe supporters of Donald Trump. Since a cardinal rule of politics is “insult your opponent, but never their voters,” the mainstream media picked up and amplified the umbrage-taking from Republicans. 

What wasn’t discussed very much in all this media coverage: The truth value of either Clinton’s or Obama’s comments. And what a shame, because both of them were right.

New polling out this week from CBS News proves, as many feared, Trump’s fourth set of indictments — he now faces 91 felony charges across four jurisdictions — has only caused the GOP to rally around their seething orange leader. (And let’s not forget this comes after a jury recently found him responsible for sexual assault.) Trump has surged to 62% support in the Republican presidential primary poll, and 73% of those backing Trump say it’s because, not despite, of his massive criminal exposure. 

And, in a poll finding that really is astonishing, Trump voters claimed they trust the notorious fraudster more than anyone. A whopping 71% of Trump voters claim “what he says is true.” Only 63% of them say that about family and friends, 56% about conservative media figures and 42% about religious leaders. 

The word that comes to mind is “cult.” 


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“Cult leaders must be dynamic, charismatic, and convincing because their goal is to control their members to acquire money or power-related advantages,” said Joe Scarborough on MSNBC in response to the poll Monday.

Political scientist Brian Klaas tweeted, “you need to understand what an authoritarian cult of personality is, because that’s what it has become.”

Even Trump’s primary GOP opponent, Florida’s Gov. Ron DeSantis, got involved, telling an interviewer, “A movement can’t be about the personality of one individual,” and that it’s not a “durable movement” if it’s just “listless vessels.”

MAGA is a cult, but it’s a mistake to view Trump followers like DeSantis does, as “listless vessels” for Trump. Take this poll with a strong grain of salt, as it’s unlikely that so many people are so delusional as to truly see an honest broker in the chronic liar and criminal that is Trump. Instead, the poll is a reminder that Trump backers are both deplorable and bitter clingers. 

When a MAGA-American picks up the phone and hears a pollster from the hated “liberal media” ask them questions about Trump’s indictments and general trustworthiness, they aren’t answering the question asked. What they’re really hearing, over and over: “Are you ready to admit that you were wrong and liberals were right all along about Trump?” And the answer is a big, fat “hell no,” because the first rule of MAGA is to never, ever, under any circumstances, admit that liberals might be right about something.

It would be funny if these folks weren’t a massive threat, and not just to democracy. As Obama said, they bitterly cling to their guns. Violence is the inevitable result of all this rage.

That poll doesn’t measure a sincere belief in Trump’s trustworthiness. It measures people who, consumed with bitterness towards the more liberal majority, are clinging to Trump even harder in a pathetic bid to save face. Which, as anyone who has studied cults can tell you, is a surprisingly strong factor in why people squelch their doubts to stay in the cult. They were warned so many times that this was a mistake that they stick around, hoping to prove the skeptics wrong. 

The rally-round-Trump effect is fundamentally an eff-you-liberals response. This is demonstrated by the way this sentiment surges around every embarrassing reminder that the man is a criminal, and an idiotic one at that. There’s a pattern emerging to the MAGA reaction to Trump indictments. The first swell of emotions is a tantrum, full of “how dare you” screaming, as they metaphorically (or literally in some cases) follow their leader’s ketchup-throwing ways. Once that crybaby reaction fades, however, you can see concerns about betting it all on a profligate criminal start to seep in. As a Washington Post analysis of the polls before the Georgia indictments show, the overall trend shows Republicans more willing than ever to admit Trump is a bad person and a criminal. But that willingness dries up temporarily in the face of new indictments, as their ascendent emotion is defensiveness. Plus, when pollsters word questions more carefully to avoid provoking Republican spite, Trump’s indictment bump disappears. 


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It’s unsurprising that the conniption fit is especially strong after the RICO charges against Trump and 18 co-conspirators were announced in Atlanta because the face of these indictments is Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis. A Black woman having the power to charge Trump triggers both the racism and the sexism that fuels the Trumpist movement. When the prosecutor reading charges is Jack Smith, a stern-looking white man from the Justice Department, it’s a lot harder for Republicans to tap that bitter clinger energy that makes them so deplorable. But now they’re in high dudgeon because they refuse to accept a world where a Black woman has the right to make accusations against a rich white man. 

It would be funny if these folks weren’t a massive threat, and not just to democracy. As Obama said, they bitterly cling to their guns. Violence is the inevitable result of all this rage. They may not be rioting at the courthouse, but, as I wrote in March, the MAGA fury is being redirected at women, LGBTQ people, and racial minorities, the people that MAGA believes they shouldn’t have to share power within a democratic system. There was yet another reminder this weekend of how bad things have gotten when a California store owner named Lauri Ann Carleton was murdered by a 27-year-old man. The reason the 66-year-old mother of nine was shot in cold blood? Because, police say, she flew the LGBTQ pride flag outside her clothing store, Mag.Pi.

The irony of all this is, if you read both Obama and Clinton’s comments in context, they were actually far more charitable than the media coverage would lead one to believe. Obama was lamenting that “the jobs have been gone now for 25 years and nothing’s replaced them” in Pennsylvania and the rural Midwest. That, he said, is why it’s “not surprising then they get bitter” and are attracted to hateful rhetoric “as a way to explain their frustration.” Similarly, Clinton was sympathetic, saying that while half of Trump’s supporters are just ugly people, others “feel that the government has let them down” and are “desperate for change.”

“Those are people we have to understand and empathize with as well,” she said of people who, in turn, were chanting about her: “Lock her up!” 

For the sake of brevity and sanity, I’ll take a pass at relitigating ye ol’ “economic anxiety” debates here. (If you’re interested in digging in, though, I recommend Zack Beauchamp’s recent analysis at Vox.) But whatever the cause, we can see the result in the polling: Millions of people whose hackles are raised far too high for them to even start to calm down and ask themselves if Trump is really the hill to die on. Trump is barely literate, but, likely due to his own narcissism, he’s especially adept at manipulating people’s ego defense mechanisms. He’s managed to get his followers to believe that, if they admit he sucks, it’s as good as saying they also suck. That’s hard for anyone to do, but especially people who have spent their whole lives being told they’re the only “real” Americans. 

The irony here is that this stubborn unwillingness to face the truth about Trump is a big factor in the MAGA deplorability. Having the humility and grace to let liberals be right about Trump would crack open the door to the possibility there are other things liberals are right about, from the facts of history to vaccines to climate change. Republican voters aren’t really the dead-eyed zombies DeSantis invoked. But it may be something worse: Millions of grown adults slamming their hands over their ears and singing loudly, “nah nah I can’t hear you.”

“Democracy needs its gatekeepers”: The Republican Party is too corrupt to care about the country

Last week, ex-president Donald Trump and 18 other co-defendants were indicted in Fulton County, Georgia for a range of serious crimes in connection with the Jan. 6 coup attempt and larger nationwide plot to overturn the 2020 election. Trump and his co-defendants are being charged under Georgia’s racketeering laws, which are typically used to combat organized crime and other complex criminal organizations. If convicted of violating Georgia’s RICO laws, Trump and his codefendants will have to serve a minimum of five years in prison. The charges in Georgia come after Trump was indicted and arrested in Washington, D.C. for his alleged crimes in connection to Jan. 6. In total, Trump faces hundreds of years in prison for the range of crimes he has now been charged with.

Pro-democracy Americans were jubilant in response to these events. With the criminal indictments in Georgia, those jubilant voices were even louder and more joyous and rapturous.

But with the indictment in Georgia, where are we really in the ongoing story that is the Age of Trump? Are the news media and political class – and many among the general public – so desperate to escape the Age of Trump that they are possessed by wish-casting, denial, and other forms of unhealthy optimism, seeing what they want to see instead of what is actually there because the latter is too frightening and upsetting?

Or are the walls truly closing in on Donald Trump? Is the nightmare that is the Trumpocene finally nearing its end?

In an attempt to make sense of what comes next in this truly historic and unprecedented moment with Donald Trump and the future of American democracy, I recently asked a range of experts for their thoughts and insights.

Their answers have been lightly edited for clarity

Katherine Stewart is an investigative reporter and author who has covered religious liberty, politics, policy, and education for over a decade. Her latest book is “The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism”. Stewart’s journalism has been featured at the New York Times, NBC, the New Republic, and the New York Review of Books.

The crisis we face today is a crisis of American democracy and specifically a crisis of the Republican Party. Part of what makes the crisis very difficult to address is that attempts to call out the problem – like this – are often characterized as partisan, “shrill,” or one-sided, and thereby relativized and minimized. But the fact remains that a substantial part of the population is made up of essentially authoritarian voters – people who, having witnessed the corruption, the coup attempt, and the ongoing festival of criminality that is Trump, continue to support him. And that’s a real problem. It’s not easy to understand how you can have a functioning democracy when a substantial part of the population is essentially prepared to dynamite it.

Democracy needs its gatekeepers, and it needs leaders in all parties who are willing to stand for principle and defend institutions. The leadership of the Republican Party has demonstrated a degree of corruption, hypocrisy, and cravenness in its quest for power that many would not have anticipated but that now stares us in the face.

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This betrayal of America’s democratic ideals will be an enduring legacy of this period. But unfortunately, history won’t take care of itself. The big question for the coming year is whether the Republican Party digs even further into the dirt with Trump in this election cycle, or if it finds some ignominious way of separating him from the nomination. (The noble path—rejecting his candidacy on principle—is inconceivable in today’s Republican Party and has in any case already been foreclosed.)

Certainly, Republicans appear to be in denial about the actual crisis in their party. Some seem to think that it’s just about Trump, a single bad actor. In fact, at this point the GOP has proven itself to be profoundly un-American in its current form. It is viciously anti-democratic and committed to engineering and entrenching minority rule. It is dependent on dark money and its alliances with ideological extremists, and it knows it doesn’t have a chance of winning elections without systematically targeting its base of voters with disinformation and conspiracies.

Trump has completely and utterly destroyed the Republican Party.

The GOP shows signs of being every bit as toxic after Trump. The fact that Ron DeSantis is the runner-up for the nomination makes the case. Banning books, banning the teaching of subjects, demonizing groups of people, replacing democratically elected officials with political cronies, platforming racists and misogynists — that is the DeSantis program. It is what Trump did, and arguably a little bit sharper in its realization.

Thanks to the GOP’s embrace of conspiracies and disinformation, we are unable to achieve the kind of consensus about basic facts and assumptions that allows for meaningful debate. This is evidenced by the fact that the Republican Party and its captive Supreme Court is consistently pushing policies that do not have popular support, such as restrictions on reproductive medicine, absence of gun safety laws, and tax cuts aimed primarily at the rich — and yet we are unable to deal with these challenges.

This points, again, to the crisis of the Republican Party. On most substantive policy issues having to do with economics, taxation, defense, reproductive rights, gun safety and others, Democrats are staking out positions that are not just in the mainstream but command significant majorities in most cases. Republicans, meanwhile, continue to talk about further attacks on reproductive healthcare rights, cuts in Social Security and Medicare, continue to side with gun manufacturers over children and their parents, continue to favor tax cuts for the wealthy, and push a range of other positions that are intrinsically unpopular.

Whatever the explanation for their electoral success, such as it is, the bottom line is that they have in one way or another coopted a democratic form of government to achieve undemocratic ends. Donald Trump didn’t invent this crisis, but he embodies it, and he made it dramatically worse.

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

I continue to assume Trump will win the GOP nomination with little trouble. While legal accountability for all he has done is absolutely critical, I think the real demise of Trump will only come when the people soundly reject him for the second time.  With all his lawbreaking, that’s not how this should be settled in a country that abides by the rule of law. But given where things stand today, I believe that’s how it will have to be settled.

The Trump lens remains a too narrow way to view today’s politics. The bigger picture is that we are engaged in a deeper struggle for democracy itself. The attack on democracy we are undergoing began before Trump ever announced for president the first time. If he were locked up tomorrow, it would continue. Gerrymandering, voter suppression, blunt-force attacks like Ohio’s Issue 1, and increasing attacks on the rule of law: all are part of a deeper, state-based attack on democracy that is fraying the core principles of our nation.

And while this deeper and wider attack on democracy explains the downward spiral of extremism and anti-democracy we see in so many states, I agree that too few still see that THIS is the bigger picture reality we must contend with. And until we see it that way, we won’t overcome it in a sustained way.

Cheri Jacobus is a former media spokesperson at the Republican National Committee and founder and president of the political consulting and PR firm Capitol Strategies PR.

I’m rarely an optimist, but I see the Age of Trump hitting the downslide.  But it may get worse before it gets better. 

Rabid MAGA Trump cultists who think they also wear that cloak of immunity if they hitch their wagon to him, are waking up to the shock of being held accountable. Be it Rudy Giuliani, Jenna Ellis, or the rank-and-file MAGA threatening the lives of those who hold Trump accountable, they are finding out what the term “FAFO” means. The violence Trump is urging is being dealt with immediately, tamping it down, and sending a message that this particular aspect of the “era of Trump” is no longer tolerated.  From the FBI Utah assassination raid to the arrest of a woman threatening the life of the randomly-appointed judge in the Trump case in DC, that invincibility that Trump has engendered in his cult following is diminishing.

I suspect cameras in the courtroom will further erode the sheen his MAGA followers see in him, as they will see he is treated as any other criminal defendant in the American justice system. The somewhat pedantic but necessary details and finer points of the process will apply to Donald J. Trump, just as they applied to each January 6th defendant, and each of Trump’s 18 fellow defendants in Georgia.

Similarly, with the RICO charges in Georgia helping to set the stage for charges in other states where Trump and his fake electors tried to steal the election, each defendant that arrogantly believed Trump — and therefore also they — were above the law — will be smaller. Diminished. And treated like any other common criminal. The death knell of the cult.

I disagree that the media is eager to turn the page on Trump. Gorging on Trump ratings is one reason we got Trump in the first place.  Now, it’s merely a matter of which way each network scores those ratings. In terms of supporting Trump, the worm doesn’t actually turn until Rupert Murdoch says so.  That MSNBC ratings topped FOX News and CNN combined on “indictment night” may trigger FOX into creating a bit of distance from Trump.  Their 2015-2016 Trump ratings helped put Trump in the White House. The weakening of those ratings may be what ensures he never returns.

Wajahat Ali is the author of “Go Back To Where You Came From.” He is also a columnist for The Daily Beast, MSNBC Daily and co-host of the Democracy-Ish Podcast.

I hope we’re in the Return of the Jedi phase, but without Ewoks. The MAGA empire will try to the end to defend their withered, desiccated, golden calf but the walls are caving, the resistance is strengthening, accountability looms around the corner, and a few of his allies will definitely betray him because these porcelain dolls are too fragile to spend a day in prison. 91 counts is a lot of bullets to dodge, but if anyone could escape accountability, it would be Trump, a man who has been cocooned, privileged, sheltered and elevated his entire life due to his wealth, Whiteness, celebrity. Now, he has his own weaponized and radicalized cult army in the form of the GOP and right-wing media. I remain both hopeful and skeptical that justice will be served, but I still can’t imagine this man spending a day in prison. I just hope it’s enough to deter enough voters in 2024.

There’s a blind side in America when it comes to acknowledging the primary role of racism and white supremacy that drives Trump’s base and the right-wing ecosystem. For nearly seven years we’ve read study after study that has revealed that it’s primarily cultural anxiety and not economic anxiety that binds MAGA to Trump and yet the zombie narrative still persists. If institutional power and its stenographer actually confronted this reality, they’d have to admit there are double standards in place – top down – that create unfair advantages that benefit those with wealth and light skin. That shattered the nonsense myth of “pulling yourself up from your bootstraps” and “trickle-down economics” and forces us to confront our role in perpetuating injustice and inequities. It also means we have to actually confront white supremacist extremism, the number one domestic threat in America. Instead, we infantilize, coddle, normalize and excuse white rage, and by extension, MAGA. We still haven’t learned.

Rick Wilson is a co-founder of The Lincoln Project, a former leading Republican strategist, and author of two books, “Everything Trump Touches Dies” and “Running Against the Devil: A Plot to Save America from Trump – and Democrats from Themselves”.

Trump is the frontrunner and the eventual GOP nominee for President. He has a commanding lead, controls the levers of power within the party, and is only gaining ground. None of the other candidates have exhibited any ability to cut into his lead and bring the MAGA cult members who dominate the party into their campaign.

The indictment in Georgia is sweeping in its scope and details how Trump has turned the GOP into his own personal crime family. But the trial will take years to resolve itself. MAGA will not be stopped in a courtroom, only through the ballot box.

The nation is facing a serious crisis. Trump is leading a crime family masquerading as a political party. He empowers individuals who believe violence is a political tool, support racism and misogyny, and don’t want anything to do with governing – only obtaining power. 

Trump has completely and utterly destroyed the Republican Party. The party of Reagan is no longer a legitimate party concerned about policy. It is an authoritarian force with designs on taking control of the nation and destroying any opposition to its bankrupt vision.

There is only one party that believes in the rule of law and supports democracy – and that is the Democratic Party led by President Biden. If we are to turn the page on this dark moment in American history, then MAGA must be defeated and a new party must take the place of the Republican party.

Democrats need to come to the realization the election will be contested between President Biden and Donald Trump, and that Trump can win. This will be a close election and no one can afford to sit it out because they want different choices. Anyone who cares about democracy needs to be working to re-elect President Biden. 

This fish changes its color like a chameleon. New research suggests it can “see” with its skin

When Lorian E. Schweikert, Ph.D., reeled in a hogfish on a fishing trip to the Florida Keys, she noticed something strange after setting it down on the deck of the boat. Hogfish are known for their camouflaging capabilities, but the one Schweikert captured had transformed its color and texture to match the boat deck — after it was already dead.

“It seemed to be doing it by sensing the environment directly,” Schweikert told Salon in a phone interview. “[I thought], ‘Maybe the skin can see its environment.'”

Hogfish, octopuses and geckos are some of many color-changing animals that carry light-sensitive proteins called opsins that help them change colors in different environments. It was generally thought opsins functioned as a response to the external environment, but new research conducted by Schweikert — inspired by what she saw on the fishing trip — introduces a new hypothesis: The fish might actually be using the proteins as a sort of internal mirror to monitor themselves.

“It looks like it’s watching its own color change performance,” Schweikert said. 

A hogfish changes color when pigment-containing cells called chromatophores interact with light. When light hits them, they expand or contract, concentrating more or less pigment to create colors. The fish can turn a sandy beige to match the ocean floor and hide or change into flashy colors to scare off predators.

In a 2018 study, Schweikert’s team found hogfish possess an opsin specifically sensitive to blue light in their skin, she said. In a study published Tuesday in Nature Communications, they found these blue light receptors were actually buried below the color-changing cells in the fish.

Closeup of hogfish skinSeen through a microscope, a hogfish’s skin looks like a pointillist painting. (Lori Schweikert, University of North Carolina Wilmington)

“That was surprising because If you can detect blue light with the skin, we thought it would be superficial in the skin, right at the top,” Schweikert said. “Instead, we found it highly localized right beneath those color-changing cells.”

In other animals with color-changing abilities, color-changing cells or chromatophores are located in the same cell as the animal’s light sensors, said Thomas Cronin, Ph.D., a biology professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, who was not involved in this research. Notably, this study showed light sensors were located in different cells than the chromatophores, Cronin told Salon in a phone interview.

Hogfish (Lachnolaimus maximus)Young hogfish displaying red-mottled phase, Lachnolaimus maximus. (Wild Horizons/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

“It means, first of all, there has to be some method of communicating through the expansion system how much light is being sensed,” Cronin said. “Second, it means in some way, the message from the light absorption system has to go someplace outside of itself — either by hormones or nerves — to get the message back to the filter that it should be expanding or contracting more.”

“How would you know you changed color correctly? For these animals, they need a system to know because otherwise, they’d die.”

How exactly that communication works isn’t clear, but Schweikert hypothesizes that the system is working as a feedback system to keep the camouflage in check. She compared it to our blood pressure changing when we stand up quickly to ensure we don’t pass out. The body can sense pressure changes by monitoring or “watching” itself and adjusting appropriately to what it “sees.”

“Imagine you had to get dressed in the morning, but you didn’t have a mirror and you couldn’t bend your neck,” Schweikert said. “How would you know you changed color correctly? For these animals, they need a system to know because otherwise, they’d die. They’re using color change for camouflage, for thermal regulation, for all of these things. They need to get the color right.”

A pointy-snouted reef fish called the hogfish can change from white to spotted brown to reddish depending on its surroundings.A pointy-snouted reef fish called the hogfish can change from white to spotted brown to reddish depending on its surroundings. (Photos courtesy of Dean Kimberly and Lori Schweikert)

The process working inside the hogfish is similar to the earliest method of color photography, the autochrome process, in which light travels through plates covered in millions of tiny red, green and blue-colored potato starch grains to produce color.

“The animals can literally take a photo of their own skin from the inside,” Duke biologist Sönke Johnsen, one of the study co-authors, said in a statement. However, it’s still not clear whether fish can actually “see” this change and there’s no evidence that this system is connected to the central nervous system.

“The critical thing the eye has is a lens, which focuses light to create an image,” Schweikert said. “But in the skin, without any optical elements that would allow image formation, it doesn’t appear dermal photo recognition, or light detected by the skin, is capable of creating images of what’s around these animals that they would need to know about [like] what the sea floor looks like or an approaching predator or mate.”

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As we increasingly move toward incorporating artificial intelligence into our daily lives, lessons can be drawn about natural processes like these, Schweikert said. Photochromic sunglasses, or glasses that change to sunglasses in sunlight, already use a similar process, Cronin said.

“Whether it’s developing smart robots, self-driving cars or other autonomous systems, we can draw principles from natural systems like this to better our own technology,” Schweikert said.

How wealthy “super emitters” are disproportionately driving the climate crisis — while blaming you

Climate change is primarily caused by humans burning fossil fuels, as well as other activities that produce greenhouse gases. But that blame is not evenly distributed amongst the entire human species.

A recent study published in the journal PLOS Climate emphasizes that the society’s elites are disproportionately responsible for the extreme weather events linked to climate change like heatwaves, droughts, floods, tropical storms, hurricanes and rising sea levels. Indeed, as corresponding author Jared Starr described American greenhouse gas pollution, “the top 1% of households are responsible for more emissions (15-17%) than the lower earning half of American households put together (14% of national emissions).”

“Our study is the first to link US households to the greenhouse gas (GHG) pollution generated when creating their incomes,” Starr, a graduate student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst’s Department of Environmental Conservation, told Salon in an email. “I think this offers a fundamentally different perspective on carbon pollution responsibility and new insights into emissions inequality. We found that the highest earning top 10% of households are responsible for about 40% of U.S. GHG.”

Although the United States only includes roughly five percent of the world’s population, it is accountable for more than a quarter of the activity fueling climate change. This is in large part because of America’s dominance as the world’s foremost economic power — a dominance reflected in its large investor class, which because of its wealth is figuratively steering Earth off of the climate cliff.

“The top 1%’s emissions would be the size of five Empire State buildings stacked on top of each other and the top 0.1%’s emissions would be taller than Mount Everest.”

“For the first time, we also quantify the share of emissions related to investment,” Starr explained. “The share of emissions coming from investments increases as we move up the income ladder. For the top 0.1% households, more than half of their emissions are coming from investment income.” Starr used a visual analogy to illustrate his point.

“If we picture this on a graph and imagine the bottom 10% households’ emissions (1.6 metric tons) are the size of average home, then the top 1 percent’s emissions would be the size of [five] Empire State buildings stacked on top of each other and the top 0.1%’s emissions would be taller than Mount Everest,” Starr told Salon. “This scale of emissions inequality was unknown before our study. I think it is a climate justice issue and it poses a fundamental challenge to our political system to respond to this level of emissions disparity.”

The study has a term for the super-rich who emit so much carbon: “super-emitters,” which covers households with emissions greater than 3,000 metric tons of CO2 per year. As the authors write, “For pre-tax income, we estimate about 43,200 U.S. households or 34% of the top 0.1% households are super emitters with the supplier framework.” They pointed out that “almost all super emitting households come from the top 0.1% income group” and “had average incomes of over $10.6 million (supplier) and $11.5 (producer).” Overall “in 2019, fully 40% of total U.S. emissions were associated with income flows to the highest earning 10% of households.”

Dr. Michael E. Mann, a professor of Earth and Environmental Science at the University of Pennsylvania, wrote a 2021 book called “The New Climate War” that discussed how climate change “inactivists” (fossil fuel businesses, political conservatives and others financially or ideologically inclined to oppose climate change science) spread misinformation about climate change to muddle the public discourse. The book specifically delves into how these groups falsely claim that all of humanity is collectively responsible for this pollution crisis — therefore making it seem like an individual problem where rich and poor alike are equally culpable — as opposed to a crisis predominantly caused by the wealthy’s behavior.

“The inequality in energy use is a great argument for progressive climate pricing,” Mann, was not involved in the recent study, told Salon. “For example, Canada has instituted a progressive carbon tax where revenue is preferentially returned to low-income earners and families.”


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It simply does not support the notion that individual choices make much of a difference when it comes to stopping the overheating of the planet. Only the wealthy can make that difference.

Mann added that “the solution to the climate crisis isn’t going to be voluntary behavioral change — it’s going to have to be systemic change, including climate policies such as a carbon tax, fee and dividend, etc. that disincentivize carbon-intensive lifestyles.” He also pointed out that when people talk about lifestyle changes, it’s important to stress that only the super-affluent should be making those sacrifices. “If we want a just transition, we need to make sure that the pricing structure is progressive, so low income earners who have had the least role in creating this problem not only avoid financial hardship but potentially benefit financially,” Mann wrote.

As Starr explained, the new study provides crucial support to the observation Mann and other climate scientists have made about the scientific evidence: It simply does not support the notion that individual choices make much of a difference when it comes to stopping the overheating of the planet. Only the wealthy can make that difference.

“I think for the last couple decades the dominant cultural argument has been that fixing climate change is everyone’s responsibility and that if we just make different choices as consumers then we can ‘fix this,'” Starr told Salon. “I think we should all obviously try to make less carbon intensive choices as consumers. But as consumers we often have very limited choices, time, knowledge, etc. over the carbon content of the goods and services we buy. This is not a problem that individual consumers can solve alone — it is a systemic problem.” Because fossil fuel use is baked into our current economic system, the vast majority of people are disempowered even as a small group of Americans become “exceedingly rich.”

“Let the political class explain to the rest of the public why they think it is ok for a small group of people to enrich themselves while leaving the rest of society and future generations an uninhabitable planet.”

“While we all may bear some responsibility for climate change, our work shows that very wealthy households should bear the majority of responsibility, since these emissions are occurring to enrich them and they are reaping the most benefits,” Starr pointed out. “While we often think in this ‘consumer responsibility’ way, when we think about why businesses actually produce goods and services it isn’t to benefit the consumer, but to create value for shareholders (shareholder primacy).”

The study also identified racial inequities in how different groups are responsible for carbon emissions, reporting that Black households, on average, have a carbon footprint of 19 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent from both supplier and producer emissions. In comparison, White Hispanic households show slightly higher emissions with 26 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent from suppliers and 25 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent from producers but the most significant emissions can be observed within White non-Hispanic households. They have 40 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent from suppliers and 36 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent from producers.

This is not the first study to demonstrate that wealthy individuals are literally destroying the planet. A study from earlier this year in the journal Nature Sustainability demonstrated that “urban elites are able to overconsume water while excluding less-privileged populations from basic access.” Similarly, a study from the journal Cleaner Production Letters found that wealthy individuals produce more greenhouse gases than poor individuals, particularly due to their extensive use of private aircraft and yachts, as well as their massive real estate holdings all over the planet. Meanwhile in 2020, a study in the journal Nature Communications detailed how the “affluent citizens of the world are responsible for most environmental impacts and are central to any future prospect of retreating to safer environmental conditions.”

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Starr was unambiguous when describing to Salon the political implications of the latest scientific evidence.

“What we have done in this study is revealed to the public and policymakers the scale of emissions disparity,” Starr pointed out, adding that the research is open source and available to the public. “Let the political class have that information and then explain to the rest of the public why they think it is ok for a small group of people to enrich themselves while leaving the rest of society and future generations an uninhabitable planet. Let them show the other 99% of us whose interests they are there to represent. And let us hold them to political account for their choice.”

Legal experts say the answer is clear: Trump’s actions have already disqualified him from presidency

After three indictments of former President Donald Trump, the fourth one in Georgia came not as a surprise but as a powerful exposition of the scope of Trump’s efforts to remain in power despite losing the 2020 presidential election.

New conservative legal scholarship spells out how and why those actions – which were observed by the public over many months – disqualify Trump from serving in the presidency ever again. And our read of the Georgia indictment, as longtime lawyers ourselves, shows why and how that disqualification can be put into effect.

The key to all of this is the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which states that “No person shall … hold any office, under the United States … who, having previously taken an oath … to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof.” Trump took that oath at his inauguration on Jan. 20, 2017.

Both Trump’s Georgia indictment, and his federal indictment in Washington, D.C., cite largely public information – and some newly unearthed material – to spell out exactly how he engaged in efforts to rebel against the Constitution, and sought and gave aid and comfort to others who also did so.

Legal scholars William Baude and Michael Stokes Paulsen, conservatives themselves and members of the conservative Federalist Society, have recently published a paper declaring that under the 14th Amendment, Trump’s actions render him ineligible to hold office.

We believe the Georgia indictment provides even more detail than the earlier federal one about how Trump’s actions have already disqualified him from office, and shows a way to keep him off the ballot in 2024.

Disqualification is automatic

Trump’s supporters might argue that disqualifying him would be unfair without a trial and conviction on the Jan. 6 indictment, and perhaps the Georgia charges.

But Baude and Paulsen, using originalist interpretation – the interpretive theory of choice of the powerful Federalist Society and Trump’s conservative court appointees, which gives full meaning to the actual, original text of the Constitution – demonstrate that no legal proceeding is required. They say disqualification is automatic, or what’s known in the legal world as “self-executing.”

Recent public comments from liberal constitutional scholar Laurence Tribe and conservative jurist and former federal judge Michael Luttig – who has characterized the events before, during and since Jan. 6 as Trump’s “declared war on American democracy” – suggest an emerging bipartisan consensus supporting Baude and Paulsen.

Backed by history

This is not a theoretical bit of technical law. This provision of the 14th Amendment was, in fact, extensively used after the Civil War to keep former Confederate leaders from serving in the federal government, without being tried or convicted of any crime.

Few former Confederates were charged with crimes associated with secession, rebellion and open war against the United States. And most were pardoned by sweeping orders issued by President Andrew Johnson.

But even though they had no relevant convictions, former Confederates were in fact barred from office in the U.S.

In December 1865, several who had neither been convicted nor been pardoned tried to claim seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. But the House clerk refused to swear them in. It took an act of Congress – the 1872 Amnesty Act – to later restore their office-holding rights.

There is no requirement in the Constitution that the disqualification be imposed by any specific process – only that it applies to people who take certain actions against the Constitution.

A path through the states

For the U.S. in 2023, we believe the most realistic avenue to enforce the 14th Amendment’s ban on a second Trump presidency is through state election authorities. That’s where the Georgia indictment comes in.

State election officials could themselves, or in response to a petition of a citizen of that state, refuse Trump a place on the 2024 ballot because of the automatic 14th Amendment disqualification.

Trump would certainly challenge the move in federal court. But the recent disqualification proceedings against former North Carolina Congressman Madison Cawthorn provides a road map and binding legal precedent affirming the 14th Amendment as a valid legal ground for disqualification of a candidate for federal office.

The Georgia indictment against Trump and allies exhaustively details extensive acts of lying, manipulation and threats against Georgia officials, as well as a fraudulent fake elector scheme to illegally subvert the legitimate 2020 Georgia presidential vote tally and resulting elector certification.

Trump’s failure to accomplish what is tantamount to a coup in Georgia and other swing states set the stage for the violent insurrection of Jan. 6, 2021, that sought to achieve the same result – Trump’s fraudulent installation to a second term.

A sample ballot from Georgia in 2020, which includes the names of candidates Joe Biden and Donald Trump.

The top of a sample Georgia ballot from 2020 – will Trump be able to get on the 2024 ballot? DeKalb County, Georgia

In fact, the Georgia scheme is included in Special Counsel Jack Smith’s federal indictment as one of the methods and means in “aid” of the larger Jan. 6 federal conspiracy against the United States.

Baude and Paulsen acknowledge that “insurrection and rebellion” are traditionally associated with forced or violent opposition. But we see the broader set of actions by Trump and his allies to subvert the Constitution – the Georgia vote count and fake elector scheme included – as part of a political coup d’etat. It was a rebellion.

Georgia as a bellwether

So what makes the Georgia scheme and indictment compelling for purposes of disqualifying Trump from the 2024 Georgia ballot?

There are minimally six aspects revealed in the latest indictment that we believe justify Georgia – under Section 3 of the post-Civil War Fourteenth Amendment – keeping Trump off the ballot:

  1. The racketeering scheme was a multifaceted attempt to subvert Georgia’s own part of the 2020 electoral process;

  2. The officials on the receiving end of the unsuccessful racketeering scheme were elected and appointed Georgia officials. …

  3. … whose actions to reject election subversion vindicated their own oaths to uphold the Constitution and laws of the United States as well as Georgia’s;

  4. Most of these officials were and are Republicans – including Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger, Governor Brian Kemp and former Lt. Governor Geoff Duncan;

  5. These officials will, in 2024 as in 2020, collectively determine who is qualified to be on Georgia’s presidential ballot; and

  6. These officials’ testimony, and related evidence, is at the heart of the proof of the Georgia racketeering case against Trump.

In other words, the evidence to convict Trump in the Georgia racketeering case is the same evidence, coming from the same Georgia officials, who will be involved in determining whether, under the 14th Amendment, Trump is qualified to be on the 2024 presidential ballot – or not.

Little if any additional evidence or proceedings are needed. The Georgia officials already hold that evidence, because much of it comes from them. They don’t need a trial to establish what they already know.

How could Trump avoid this happening? A quick trial date in Atlanta with an acquittal on all counts might do it, but this runs counter to his strategy to delay all the pending criminal cases until after the 2024 election.

With no preelection trial, there will likely be no Trump on the 2024 Georgia ballot, and no chance for him to win Georgia’s 2024 electoral college votes.

Once Georgia bars him, other states may follow. That would leave Trump with no way to credibly appear on the ballot in all 50 states, giving him no chance to win the electoral votes required to claim the White House.

 

Joseph Ferguson, Co-Director, National Security and Civil Rights Program, Loyola University Chicago and Thomas A. Durkin, Distinguished Practitioner in Residence, Loyola University Chicago

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

“It’s too freaking hot”: Dozens die in Texas prisons with no air conditioning amid record heat wave

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At least 41 people have died in stifling, uncooled prisons of either heart-related or unknown causes during Texas’ relentless and record-breaking heat wave this summer, according to a Texas Tribune analysis.

Relatives of those who died and prison rights advocates insist at least some of those deaths were caused by the heat. More than a dozen of the prisoners were in their 20s or 30s, with at least four people 35 and under reportedly dying of cardiac arrest or heart failure. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice says no prisoner has died from the brutal heat in its facilities since 2012, around the time the agency began being bombarded with wrongful death and civil rights lawsuits over the heat.

On Monday, Democrats on the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Accountability implored Republican Chair James Comer to launch an investigation into conditions at prisons enduring sweltering temperatures, especially in Texas. The request follows the Republican committee members’ investigation into conditions for defendants jailed on charges related to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

“The capacity of prisons and jails to adequately prepare for and provide resources to meet the increasingly extreme weather caused by climate change deserves immediate attention from this Committee,” the Democrats, including Texas Reps. Greg Casar and Jasmine Crockett, wrote. “If Committee Republicans are serious about conducting oversight of the conditions within prisons and correctional facilities, and not just playing politics with a single facility, it is critical that you demand that facilities across the country hold inmates in a humane environment and not limit your interest to a single facility.”

Comer’s office did not immediately respond to questions about the letter.

More than two-thirds of Texas’ 100 prisons don’t have air conditioning in most living areas inside the concrete and steel buildings where officers and prisoners work and live. With little to no ventilation and temperatures routinely soaring into the triple digits outside, the thermometer reading often rises even higher inside the prisons.

Since June, at least a dozen prisoners have died from reported cardiac arrest or heart failure in uncooled prisons on days when the regions’ outdoor heat indices were above 100 degrees, according to a Texas Tribune analysis of prison death reports and weather data. At least another 29 have died of what are still unknown causes pending autopsy results.

The death count is likely higher, as prisons have 30 days to report a prisoner’s death to the state.

Mothers and sisters of prisoners who died this summer insist the heat and indifference killed their loved ones, condemning TDCJ for failing to recognize the heat as a cause of death. Heat deaths are often undercounted and misclassified, according to medical experts, and an abundance of studies link an increase in fatal heart failures to extreme heat.

TDCJ spokesperson Amanda Hernandez said Monday that her agency alone does not determine cause of death; rather a medical examiner decides if deaths are heat-related. In at least one death, the agency said officials believed the man was on drugs.

Relatives also argue the agency’s reports are unreliable given that it reports more heat illnesses for staff than prisoners, despite employees being able to leave after their shifts.

TDCJ has reported 35 employee heat-related illnesses this year, but only 14 among prisoners, despite seemingly unending reports from prisoners and their loved ones of men and women passing out or experiencing other symptoms of heat exhaustion.

Under court scrutiny, TDCJ in recent years has implemented a variety of mitigation strategies for the heat, including providing fans and ice water to prisoners and allowing requests for cold showers and respite relief in air-conditioned parts of the prison, like the chapel or barbershops. But every summer, a plethora of prisoners and their supporters claim that such policies aren’t followed.

“They have respite areas where people can go to get cooled off, but you rarely see them in there because we’re too short handed, and this is why. It’s too freaking hot,” a prison officer at the Wainwright Unit in East Texas said, asking to remain anonymous for fear of losing her job.

TDCJ has been chronically understaffed for years, and officer unions often point to the debilitating heat as a major reason employees leave.

In the congressional letter, the Democrats noted that the Texas Legislature has rejected attempts to put money directly toward air conditioning its prisons, despite increasingly hot summers and a surplus in the state budget this year.

“State legislators prevail with the mindset that allowing inmates to suffer from excessive heat is appropriately ‘tough on crime,'” the representatives said, concluding “the problem of prison conditions demands serious attention by Congress, and we hope that you will join us in this critical endeavor.”

Hernandez said the letter ignores that lawmakers have set aside funds to air condition Texas prisons, including $85 million allocated for the upcoming biennium. The $85 million was given for TDCJ to use on “deferred maintenance projects,” not specifically for air conditioning. Hernandez previously would not say whether the money was specifically intended for that purpose.


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2023/08/21/texas-prison-heat-deaths/.

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To adapt to climate change, California pays the banks that are part of the problem

California is spending billions to shore up its defenses against heat, flash floods, rising seas and other effects of climate change. But to do this, it is, ironically, working with the very institutions that are financing the fossil fuel activity causing the crisis.

To sell bonds that finance various initiatives, including massive projects that help the state deal with effects of the climate crisis, California relies on banks to find investors willing to purchase them. Bonds are like loans that the state pays back to investors over time, plus interest. Banks that help sell the bonds are “underwriters” for the bonds.

Now the California Legislature is considering a climate resiliency bond worth $15.5 billion. It’d be a general obligation bond, meaning the state can repay it in a wide variety of ways. (Other kinds of bonds are tailored more specifically to certain agencies and institutions, such as public works, veterans affairs and state university systems.) The bond comes in response to Gov. Newsom’s broad budget cuts across the board, including climate resiliency spending, in response to a deficit.

Other bonds, totaling $28.68 billion, are also under consideration by the Legislature for new spending on affordable housing, updating educational facilities, and constructing treatment shelters for people experiencing homelessness. A  group advocating for cleaner energy will ask lawmakers to require that any infrastructure built with bond financing be free of fossil fuel gas hookups. Instead, they want new buildings to be electrified and powered with renewables like wind and solar, in line with the state’s decarbonization plan.

By themselves, the bonds are already large compared to previous state bond issuances. If all four pass the Legislature and get approved by voters next year, they would represent the biggest set of general obligation bonds ever issued by the state. Yet to sell the bonds to investors, California may end up paying millions to banks that are also financing oil, gas and coal projects.
 


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The state is already committed to selling billions of dollars’ worth of climate adaptation bonds thanks to a 2018 measure. The California Treasurer’s Office recently held a sale for bonds intended to mitigate coastal impacts of rising seas, wildfires, drought and flooding. Underwriters included JPMorgan Chase (whose security division is simply called J.P. Morgan), Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, TD Group, Goldman Sachs and Barclays.

They are among the banks that sent $742 billion to the fossil fuel industry in 2021, as Capital & Main reported in March. California has paid these banks a total of $73.2 million for underwriting services since 2019.

Some have even worked with fossil fuel producers and distributors in the state. JPMorgan Chase, the world’s leading fossil fuel funder, backed Pacific Gas & Electric with $10 billion; the utility lobbies for fossil fuel gas. Goldman Sachs recently advised Chevron to invest in biofuels refining, which presents its own planet-warming risks, while Morgan Stanley actively recommends Chevron’s stock to investors.
 


A growing number of banks, all in Europe, have committed to quitting fossil fuels in some form.


 
For climate activists who want California to sever these ties, it presents a moral dilemma for the banks, which they see as profiting off both sides of the climate crisis.

“California’s investments in climate resilience should not contribute to the profits of banks that are financing the expansion of fossil fuels and undermining California’s efforts to reduce emissions,” said Deborah Moore of the activist group Third Act, which recently held protests against banks invested in fossil fuels.

In addition, members of the Sunrise Project, a group that examines the financial industry’s role in fueling the climate crisis, have argued that California’s economic power enables it to pressure banks on oil and gas if it imposed stricter guidelines for bond underwriters. (Disclosure: The Sunrise Project is a financial supporter of Capital & Main.)

The State Treasurer’s Office chooses underwriters every two years. Among the criteria it considers are competence in marketing bonds, whether a bank is also a creditor of the state and even if a bank has diverse owners. But fossil fuel financing has never been a consideration.

California also contracts with smaller banks that may not hold fossil fuel securities. But Wall Street and large international banks tend to have greater access to potential investors, not to mention political connections and global influence in major ways.

A growing number of banks, all in Europe, have committed to quitting fossil fuels in some form. Nearly half of Europe’s largest banks will now restrict lending for new oil and gas development. France’s La Banque Postale dropped its oil and gas clients in 2021, the first to do so. The commitments are in line with the Paris Agreement of limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 F).

Time has likely run out to keep temperatures below this catastrophic threshold; a recent paper authored by dozens of climate scientists suggested we’ll surpass it in 10 to 15 years. Radical societal transformations away from fossil fuels, including many trillions in spending on clean energy technologies and infrastructure, would limit the damage.
 


Already California has faced up to $100 billion in damages from extreme weather events exacerbated by climate change, such as wildfires and drought, just from 2015-2020.


 
In response to questions, the California State Treasurer’s Office said that it “understand[s] and support[s] the urgent need to transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources to address the global climate emergency and believe[s] the continued greening of our economy, a task our office also assists with in other areas, may have a more meaningful and lasting impact” than excluding fossil fuel financiers from its bond market.

The state treasurer’s greening efforts include sales tax breaks for companies manufacturing battery parts and other renewable energy components and tax-free bond financing for companies implementing certain pollution controls and materials recycling.

The strategy of pressuring banks to take a position on fossil fuels is already in use, but recently more from industry-friendly conservatives. Republicans in 37 states have introduced 165 pieces of legislation proposing to penalize banks, pension funds and other firms for using environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) criteria to conduct their business.

Texas, for example, banned municipalities from working with banks if the banks restrict lending to fossil fuels or gun companies in some way. The law was written by a think tank funded by fossil fuel companies. It appears to have hurt the state’s economy: The drop in competition for bond underwriters cost Texans $300 million-$500 million.

Whether or not California faced similar consequences from a pro-climate rule for underwriters, divestment supporters say the benefits of fighting the climate crisis outweigh potential losses. Already California has faced up to $100 billion in damages from extreme weather events exacerbated by climate change, such as wildfires and drought, just from 2015-2020. These costs are set to increase.

Other effects, such as rising seas from melting ice at the poles, are happening more gradually but are no less worrisome, experts and land planners say.

During a February presentation hosted by the Coastal Conservancy, which has received $71.5 million from a state climate bond since 2021, U.S. Geological Survey geologist Patrick Barnard described the danger California faces as the Pacific Ocean continues to swallow coastlines.

Sea levels will rise by “a foot over the next 30 years,” Barnard warned. “Bottom line: What we experienced over the last 100 years, we’ll get in the next 30 years, across the country but also for California.”

Why we’re also celebrating Britney Spears’ divorce

Britney Spears and her long-term partner, Sam Asghari have decided to call it quits and everyone’s celebrating – the pop star, as well as her fans.

Last week, it was reported that Asghari filed for divorce from Britney after six years together citing “irreconcilable differences.” He is asking for spousal support and his legal fees to be paid by Britney.

The couple was together through the end of Britney’s tumulous court battle against her father, Jaime Spears, and his control over her through an “abusive” 13-year-long conservatorship. 

After the divorce filing went public, the pop star threw herself festivities that seemingly looked like a divorce party. She shared with her followers a video of a man licking up and down her leg, and a group of shirtless men holding her horizontally by a pool. 

Despite the shock and pain of the breakup, she said, “I’m actually doing pretty damn good.” 

Asghari also posted on his story: “After 6 years of love and commitment to each other, my wife and I have decided to end our journey together. We will hold onto the love and respect we have for each other and I wish her the best always.”

Despite that statement, Pagesix rumors were circling that following the court filing, Asghari was testing their prenuptial agreement which is set in place to protect Spears’ estimated $60 million personal fortune. But in a statement to The Hollywood Reporter, he denied that he had any intention to challenge the prenup and allegations that he threatened to extort his soon-to-be ex-wife. 

“All these claims are false, as no negative intention has ever been directed towards her and never will be. Sam has always and will always support her,” Asghari’s representative told THR.

So why is the internet, especially Britney fans, rejoicing as if she’s been freed of a controlling conservatorship again? Her fans alleged that her marriage to Asghari acted as another form of control in a long line of men who have sought to control the singer’s life and fortune. Numerous posts across social media emphasized the same #FreeBritney sentiments that called attention to the alleged exploitation she faced during the conservatorship. 

While he supported Spears during the trial, spoke out against her father and the conservatorship — people were still unsure of Asghari’s role in her’s life. In 2021, shortly after Britney’s conservatorship was terminated, the couple revealed to the public they were engaged on social media. Oscar-winning actress Olivia Spencer commented on the post urging her to “sign a prenup.”

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The widespread concerns for Britney’s relationships with men date as far back as the late ’90s because she grew up in the public eye as a sexual object for the media, men and the public to exploit. As a sexualized minor in the ’90s, she publically stated that she was waiting until marriage to have sex but her then-boyfriend Justin Timberlake revealed on a radio show that they had slept together. Her second marriage with Kevin Federline took a nose dive shortly after it began in 2004, citing “irreconcilable differences” and of course their bitter custody battle over their two sons. It was during this time that her father put her under the infamous conservatorship that would have her under lock and key for 13 years. 

Under all these circumstances, her marriage to Asghari was supposed to be a positive change in the star’s embattled life but the relationship allegedly derailed as Spears found more freedom after the end of the conservatorship. Her newfound freedom allegedly changed the dynamic in their relationship, feeling like Asghari was encroaching on her independence.

That’s why seeing Spears party with a slew of her friends in Los Angeles is almost a relief — people are overjoyed that she is relishing her freedom and independence. For a woman who has been tied down to men’s whims throughout her adolescence and her adulthood, it’s refreshing to see her stay the same — unapologetically voicing her vulnerability while dancing in her underwear on Instagram or throwing a divorce party filled with random men.