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A rose in every cheek: 100 years of Vegemite, the wartime spread that became an Aussie icon

There are roughly 22 million jars of Vegemite manufactured in the original Melbourne factory every year. According to the Vegemite website, around 80% of Australian households have a jar in the cupboard.

The cultural status of Vegemite is so enduring that, in 2022, the City of Melbourne Council included the smell of the factory at 1 Vegemite Way, Fishermans Bend, in a statement of heritage significance.

Vegemite first hit Australian supermarket shelves in 1923, but it took a while to find its feet.

Indeed, the now classic spread may have failed into obscurity as “Parwill” if not for a very clever advertising campaign in the second world war.  

         

A product of war

Vegemite has German U-boats to thank for its invention.

When the first world war began in 1914, Australians were big fans of Marmite, the British yeast extract spread.

As the Germans began sinking ships full of British supplies to Australia, Marmite disappeared from the shelves. Due to the conditions of its patent, Marmite could only be manufactured in Britain.

As a result, there was a gap in the market for a yeast spread.

Fred Walker, who produced canned foods, hired food technologist Cyril P. Callister to create a homegrown yeast spread using brewer’s yeast from the Carlton Brewery.

Callister’s experiments produced a thicker, stronger spread than the original Marmite. Callister’s inclusion of vegetable extracts to improve the flavor would give the spread its name, Vegemite, chosen by Walker’s daughter from competition entries.

Australians were wary of Vegemite when it first appeared on grocery shelves, perhaps due to brand loyalty to Marmite.

To try and combat this, Walker renamed Vegemite “Parwill” in 1928 as a play on Marmite: “if Ma might, Pa will”.

This rebrand was short-lived. Australians were not any more interested in Parwill than they were in Vegemite.

 

A nutritious food replacement

In the 1930s, Walker hired American advertiser J. Walter Thompson. Thompson began offering free samples of Vegemite with purchases of other Kraft-Walker products, including the popular Kraft cheese.

Kraft-Walker also ran limerick competitions to advertise Vegemite. Entrants would write the final line of a limerick to enter into the draw to win a brand new car.

It would take another world war, however, before Vegemite became part of Australian national identity.

The second world war also disrupted shipping supply routes. With other foodstuffs hard to come by, Vegemite was marketed as a nutritious replacement for many foods. One 1945 advertisement read:

 

If you are one of those who don’t need Vegemite medicinally, the thousands of invalids and babies are asking you to deny yourself of it for the time being.

 

With its long shelf life and high levels of B-vitamins, the Department of Supply also saw the advantages of Vegemite. The department began buying Vegemite in bulk and including it in ration kits sent to soldiers on the front lines.

Due to this demand, Kraft-Walker foods rationed the Vegemite available to civilians. Yet the brand increased advertisements. Consumers were told Vegemite was limited because it was in demand for Australian troops due to its incredible health benefits.

One ad told Australians:

 

In all operational areas where our men and those of our Allies are engaged, and in military hospitals, Vegemite is in great demand, because of its value in fighting Vitamin B deficiency diseases. That’s why the fighting forces have first call on all Vegemite produced. And that is why Vegemite is in short supply for civilian consumption. But it won’t always be that way. When the peace is won and our men come home, ample stocks of this extra tasty yeast extract will be available for everyone.

 

This clever advertising linked Vegemite with Australian nationalism. Though most could not buy the spread during the rationing years, the idea that Vegemite was vital for the armed forces cemented the idea that Vegemite was fundamentally Australian.

Buying Vegemite was an act of patriotism and a way to support Australian troops overseas.

 

Happy little Vegemites

In the postwar baby boom, Vegemite advertisements responded to concerns about the nation’s health and the need to rebuild a healthy population.

This emphasis on Vegemite as part of a healthy diet for growing children would remain the key advertising focus of the next 60 years.

The ear-catching jingle was composed in the early 1950s, first for radio and then later used in the 1959 television ad.

The link between Australian identity and Vegemite was popularized internationally by Men At Work’s 1981 song Down Under, with the lyrics “He just smiled and gave me a Vegemite sandwich”.

The 1980s also saw the first remake of the 1950s television campaign, re-colorizing it for nostalgic young parents who had grown up with the original.

In February 2022, the first international arrivals welcomed back into Australia post-COVID were greeted with a DJ playing Down Under, koala plushies and jars of Vegemite.

On Vegemite’s centenary in 2023, the unassuming spread is now firmly cemented as an Australian cultural icon. Love it or hate it, Vegemite is here to stay.

Hannah Viney, Researcher, Monash University

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

Astronomers analyze alien rivers on Mars and Titan

Rivers on Earth are abundant, in spite of climate change that is evaporating many water sources. In 2018, scientists estimated that rivers and streams, excluding land with glaciers, covered nearly 300,000 square miles across the world.

But rivers aren’t as prevalent in the rest of the solar system. As it stands, astronomers believe that there are only two other worlds in our solar system where rivers have flowed: Mars and Saturn’s largest moon, Titan. Rivers on Mars haven’t flowed for billions of years, but the red planet has been rocked by many cataclysmic events that stripped away its liquid water. All scientists can see today are the degraded remnants of rivers.

However, with Titan, astronomers believe that much of its surface is filled with liquid, but unlike on Earth, the liquid in question is not H2O, but liquid methane. (Yes, it would smell as bad as you imagine.)

We may learn more about Titan’s makeup in a decade or so. In 2027, NASA’s Dragonfly mission is scheduled to launch from Earth, embarking on what will be an eight year journey to Titan, the second-largest moon in the solar system. Similar to the Perseverance rover on Mars, the goal of this astrobiology mission is to advance our world’s understanding of the “building blocks of life” and to look for signs of life on Titan, which will include understanding the presence of rivers.

But since that is years away, planetary scientist Samuel P. D. Birch, who is also a professor at Brown University, and colleagues used data from rivers on Earth and a little bit of math to unlock clues about rivers on Mars and Titan, and what that can tell us about their climates. Their findings were published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday.

“It’s hard to know what the climate was like on Mars — was it warm, was rainfall flowing across the surface, or was it just glaciers that were melting?” Birch told Salon. For Titan, thanks to data collected by the Cassini spacecraft flybys, scientists have “coarse,” and “grainy images” of the moon, but not much data about what’s happening on the surface. “So we had to come up with some sort of method where we could make predictions of what the rivers were doing and therefore what the climate was like.”

Saturn; Moon; TitanSaturn with moons (Getty Images)

“We had to come up with some sort of method where we could make predictions of what the rivers were doing and therefore what the climate was like.”

On Earth, Birch said he thinks of rivers as “conveyor belts” that are draining continents of their sediments, and delivering them to other locations. In his words, they are almost “mechanical” in a way. From a data perspective, a river’s depth, width and flow are often adjusted to meet the demands of how this sediment moves. “So we took advantage of this regularity on Earth to then make predictions about what rivers on other planets are doing. So we do the inverse — we measure how wide they are, how steep they are and then we can predict how much fluid and sediment is flowing through them or was required to flow through them to give them that shape.”

Using a method called dimensionless hydraulic geometry, Birch and his colleagues landed on a couple of predictions based on both worlds. Birch said he and his colleagues solved a “geometry problem” regarding how long it would take for the littler rivers to fill the deltas that the Perseverance and Curiosity rovers explored on Mars. This gave them a better understanding of how the Martian rivers flowed over prolonged time periods of time.

“It requires a long time basically, because they’re not very big rivers that are flowing into very big deltas,” Birch said. “So it’s always going to take kind of a long time, and it’s anywhere from as low as I think 20,000 or so years, up to millions of years. It’s a big range, which is quite a long time for there to be liquid water stable on the surface. Was it raining a little bit and then super dry in between? We couldn’t tell that. But we could tell how long it takes for a little river to build this big delta.”


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On Titan, Birch said, there are rivers similar in size to the Mississippi river flowing into seas that are bigger than the Great Lakes here on Earth. Birch and his colleagues found, to their surprise, that the rivers on Titan move quite slowly and require less energy to mobilize to sediment.

PerseveranceNASA’s Perseverance (Mars 2020) stores rock and soil samples in sealed tubes on the planet’s surface for future missions to retrieve in the area known as Jezero crater on the planet Mars. (NASA/Getty Images)“The sediment is very buoyant, it’s not floating, but it’s closer to floating than the sediment here on Earth, so it takes less energy to pick up a particle and move it,” Birch said. “And the reason it’s slower is because it rains very infrequently on Titan.”

On Titan there are rivers similar in size to the Mississippi river flowing into seas that are bigger than the Great Lakes here on Earth

On Titan “infrequently” means that it can be years in between storms.

“Titan is kind of arid, but when it does rain, these rivers can pick up and move stuff, and that was our finding there,” Birch said. “And then the other thing that I thought was super exciting, because the rivers are so buoyant it just takes like a little trickle to mobilize sediment on Titan.”

Birch said these findings emphasize that Titan is “the most exciting place for exploration in the solar system.”

“It has this active hydrologic system, as we call it, on Earth. It’s the water cycle where you have evaporation off of the oceans and precipitation on the land and then rivers carry that back down to the ocean,” Birch said. “It has that similar type system with a totally different fluid, and it’s not clear why Titan is the only other place that has this in our solar system.”

Birch added that understanding rivers on other worlds “leverages how regular rivers are on earth,” and simultaneously “shows the universality of physics that’s driving these.”

“Joy Ride” delivers a full-frontal subversion of sexuality for Asian women

Name a movie where there’s full-frontal female nudity, and it’s not sexualized. I’ll wait. 

If you answered “Joy Ride,” you’d be correct. The raunchy and (clearly) R-rated road trip comedy, directed by Adele Lim and written by Teresa Hsiao and Cherry Chevapravatdumrong, stars Ashley Park, who plays Type A attorney Audrey, as she journeys to Beijing with her friends for a work trip that quickly devolves. 

This vagina is not meant to turn you on. 

Throughout the movie, bare genitalia is teased. Whispers of an elaborate and colorful vagina tattoo on Audrey’s friend Kat (Stephanie Hsu) come up again and again. When the proverbial skirt finally drops, courtesy of Kat’s long train getting snagged during her K-pop dance routine, it’s shocking for two reasons.

On one hand, full-frontal female nudity doesn’t happen often in theaters, which makes Lim’s choice to go there a bit surprising. On the other hand, when women’s bodies are revealed, they are often depicted in a strictly sexual light. But this vagina is not meant to turn you on (and no before you ask, it’s not Hsu’s actual anatomy either). The large and intricate tattoo surrounding it makes the scene light-hearted and comical. For once, the vagina gets to be a regular body part. It gets the penis nudity treatment that for so long has been a site for comic relief while avoiding objectification. 

This is just one of the many ways that the movie subverts how women have been portrayed onscreen. It’s the women in the movie who make the d**k jokes, cunningulus references and share threesome anecdotes. They are unapologetically sexual and in charge of their desire but, crucially, not sexualized. This portrayal critically undermines how Asian women’s sexuality has been harmfully depicted throughout Hollywood.

“Female sexuality in previous R-rated movies, or in previous movies just in general, is usually played for sexuality. It is played for titillation. It is played as females are the hot sexy ones, and male nudity, that’s the stuff that’s usually mined for jokes. We wanted to flip that a little,” Chevapravatdumrong told Salon.

Hsiao added, “In this movie, the characters are allowed to be wild and raunchy, but they’re doing it on their own terms. [. . . ] When you look back at a lot of these other movies, the women are just there the nags or they’re there to be the foil. Whereas in our movie, our characters are the ones making the jokes, but also being the butt of the jokes.” 

Pop culture would have you believe that Asian women are overly promiscuous, just bursting at the seams to have sex with you, follow orders and submit. This trope, sometimes referred to as Lotus Blossom or China Doll, is defined by media and cultural studies professor at University of Wisconsin, Madison, Lori Kido Lopez, as the Asian woman who “is very quiet and submissive and can’t speak for herself. Oftentimes, the plot revolves around her literally needing to be saved . . . and needing the white man to both romance her and do things for her that she could never do for herself.” We see this in “Miss Saigon, Memoirs of a Geisha” and Stanley Kubrick’s “Full Metal Jacket.” 

In Kubrick’s 1987 movie, the infamous line, “Me love you long time,” delivered by a Vietnamese sex worker (Papillon Soo Soo) to two American GIs, has long haunted Asian women everywhere. In depicting this woman as an obedient sex worker, it reinforces the idea that Asian women are objects that exist to serve men, a stereotype that has real-world implications like increased violence against the Asian American community. This includes the case of the 2021 Atlanta spa shooting, where Robert Aaron Long predominantly murdered Asian women because he had a “sex addiction” and viewed the Asian women as “a temptation” he wanted to eliminate.

Joy RideSabrina Wu, Ashley Park, Stephanie Hsu and Sherry Cola in “Joy Ride” (Ed Araquel/Lionsgate)If they’re not portrayed as sex workers and other hypersexual damsels in distress, then Asian women in Hollywood fall on the other end of the spectrum, that of the Dragon Lady. This stereotype sees Asian women as deceitful and evil temptresses. The most famous example of this is O-Ren Ishii (Lucy Liu) in “Kill Bill: Vol. I” or Alex Munday (also Lucy Liu) in “Charlie’s Angels.” As the Dragon Lady, Liu’s characters wield sexuality in order to lure men, seduce them and then kill them. The moral of the trope hammers home the notion that Asian women are dangerous, largely because of their weaponized sexuality.

“The characters are allowed to be wild and raunchy, but they’re doing it on their own terms.”

“Joy Ride” is where these stereotypes go to die. No one in the ensemble is d**kmatized, docile or a siren. Just try telling Lolo (Sherry Cola) what to do. Lolo does what she wants and who she wants. When she’s not making sex-positive, penis-shaped artwork, she talks proudly of sex, getting her pleasure and saying what’s on her mind, however real or TMI that might be. 

“Sex isn’t shameful; it’s beautiful like the noises,” she tells basketball star Baron Davis (who plays himself in the movie), right before the pair make various hissing, moaning, choking and slurping “sex” sounds. Thirsty and candid, Lolo’s a far cry from the Lotus Blossom trope or the deceitful Dragon lady. And the movie takes this as a given — no one is shaming or coming onto Lolo because of it. It makes sense why the friend group chooses to sing a K-Pop rendition of Cardi B‘s “WAP.” What lyric is more emblematic of reclaiming sexual desires than “There’s some whores in this house?”

Even Lolo’s grandmother, Nainai (Lori Tan Chinn), isn’t meek about sex. When she gives Audrey a dress to meet her birth mother in, she tells her it’s the same one she wore when she was deflowered and then flashes her a cheeky smile.

Perhaps the scene that most explicitly subverts tropes about Asian women’s sexuality is when the characters meet the Chinese Basketball Association, who save the day by rescuing the friends from being stranded on the road. At their gym, Lolo, Kat and Audrey stare, almost salivating, at the men. Slow-motion close-ups of the men’s bodies are pointed reversals of how women are often the ones being objectified in movies, particularly when it comes to raunchy comedies.

Each of the crew then embarks on their own sexual endeavors with the basketball team. Audrey gets her “Eiffel tower” moment with Kenny (Chris Pang) and Arvind (Rohain Arora). The men’s attentions are focused on her pleasure, proving that two heads are not only better than one, but can also go down simultaneously. Audrey, ever the one to be in control of her own life, is the dominant one here, pulling the men’s hair back, directing them and swinging their heads around. She directs them with so much gusto that the men bash heads and get a concussion. 

The other men don’t fare much better either, and the comedy is all the better because of it. Kat, struggling to remain monogamous and abstinent with her religious fiancé, is working off the cocaine-induced horniness at the gym. There she runs into Todd (Alexander Hodge) whose sweaty shirtlessness is not helping. When she pulls a muscle, he whips out his Theragun (which is not an innuendo). The quick vibrations of the bulb speak to Kat on a sensual level. She uses him and his gun to find her pleasure. Like Audrey, she takes charge, directing Todd to point it this way and that. Her climax comes at the direct expense of his pain, when the massager ends up aggressively vibrating against his crotch, putting him out of commission for future games. 


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Unlike so many movies that linger on women’s bodies and male pleasure during sex scenes, this one drastically flips the script, using men almost to their breaking point for women’s pleasure. Each sex scene is everything that Sam Levinson’s “The Idol” isn’t. Lim keeps the women in charge, reclaiming sex from something that’s done to Asian women to something they dictate instead. Even Deadeye (Sabrina Wu) who, in place of having sex, has a dance-off with one of the basketball players, offers a refreshing break from the ways Asian people are depicted as perpetually horned up. When the men hobble out of the rooms the next morning, beaten and bandaged, it’s as humorous as it is empowering.

In an age where representation can easily become a tokenized marketing buzzword, “Joy Ride” offers a more nuanced portrayal that upends the hypersexualization of Asian women characters. It’s testament to how representation is not just a matter of putting people of color onscreen but also behind the camera, in positions of power and in the writers’ room. 

Sarah Silverman is suing OpenAI and Meta for copyright infringement

Comedian and author Sarah Silverman is one of the three lead plaintiffs filing class-action lawsuits against OpenAI and Meta each over dual claims of copyright infringement. Alongside Silverman are authors Christopher Golden and Richard Kadrey, who all allege that OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Meta’s LLaMA illegally obtained text from their literary works — namely Silverman’s 2010 best­selling memoir “The Bedwetter: Stories of Courage, Redemption and Pee,” Golden’s book “Ararat” and Kadrey’s book “Sandman Slim” — using “shadow library” websites (like Bibliotik, Library Genesis, Z-Library, and more) without the consent of — or compensation to — the authors.

In the OpenAI suit, the trio allege that when ChatGPT “was prompted to summarize books written by each of the Plaintiffs, it generated very accurate summaries . . . which means that ChatGPT retains knowledge of particular works in the training dataset and is able to output similar textual content. At no point did ChatGPT reproduce any of the copyright management information Plaintiffs included with their published works,” per Variety. And in the Meta suit, the plaintiffs allege that their books were accessible in illegally acquired datasets Meta used to train its LLaMA (Large Language Model Meta AI) language models. The suits — filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, San Francisco Division — seek class-action status and unspecified monetary damages.

The lawyers representing Silverman, Golden and Kadrey filed a similar lawsuit against OpenAI last month for authors Paul Trem­blay (“The Cabin at the End of the World”) and Mona Awad (“Bunny” and “13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl”). Both Awad and Tremblay claimed their books, which are copyrighted, were unlawfully “ingested” and “used to train” ChatGPT because the chatbot generated “very accurate summaries” of the novels, per the complaint obtained by The Guardian.

Last summer’s deadly heat wave killed 61,000 Europeans: Study

Last year, Europe had its hottest summer on record. The soaring temperatures led to wildfires and evacuations in some regions, with initial data suggesting it caused nearly 20,00 deaths. Today, a new report published in the journal Nature Medicine estimates that number is closer to 61,672 people in Europe who perished from heat-related causes between May 30 and September 4, 2022. The researchers found that extreme heat disproportionately affected women and the elderly during the heatwave. Heat-related mortality was 63 percent higher in women than men. An estimated 4,822 deaths occurred among those under the age of 65 while nearly 37,000 deaths occurred among those over the age of 79.

To make their estimates, researchers obtained temperature and mortality data for the period 2015 to 2022 for 823 regions in 35 European countries to estimate heat-related mortality for each region and week of the summer period. The countries with the highest number of heat-related deaths over the entire summer were Italy (18,010 deaths), Spain (11,324) and Germany (8,173). Previously, the highest heat-related deaths in Europe happened during the summer of 2003 during a major heatwave. Over 70,000 excess deaths were recorded that summer.

"The fact that more than 61,600 people in Europe died of heat stress in the summer of 2022, even though, unlike in 2003, many countries already had active prevention plans in place, suggests that the adaptation strategies currently available may still be insufficient," Hicham Achebak, researcher and co-author of the study, said in a news release. "The acceleration of warming observed over the last ten years underlines the urgent need to reassess and substantially strengthen prevention plans, paying particular attention to the differences between European countries and regions, as well as the age and gender gaps, which currently mark the differences in vulnerability to heat." The news comes as high temperatures broke records multiple times last week, signifying that climate change will continue to make extreme heat the "new abnormal."

Are artificial intelligence detectors biased against non-native English speakers?

Artificial intelligence programs that can generate text at the click of a button are becoming prolific, with the most popular among them services like ChatGPT, which boasts hundreds of millions of monthly users. Despite the usefulness of these tools, many humans cannot tell the difference between something written by a person and something written by a machine. As a result, they can fuel disinformation or even facilitate cheating in academia. To combat this rise in AI-generated reading, some “GPT detectors” have been rolled out, which can allegedly spot the difference — but they may come with their own biases.

A recent opinion piece in the journal Patterns calls into question the accuracy of GPT detectors, finding that they’re biased against non-native English speakers. The authors also found that it’s easier to fool these detectors by using more detailed prompts in the first place. “This raises a pivotal question,” the authors write. “If AI-generated content can easily evade detection while human text is frequently misclassified, how effective are these detectors truly?”

Overlooking the biases in GPT detectors “may lead to unintended consequences, such as the marginalization of non-native speakers in evaluative or educational settings,” they conclude. As such, this is yet another stark example of how technology can reflect inherent prejudices in society. The authors caution against using GPT detectors in certain settings, especially educational environments with non-native English speakers, and recommend a thorough evaluation of this technology and its limitations as it becomes more widespread.

“I’m old news”: Chef Robert Irvine opens up about “Restaurant: Impossible” cancellation

Robert Irvine took to Twitter to share why he thinks Food Network canceled his hit show “Restaurant: Impossible,” which ran on cable for 22 seasons. The show followed Irvine as he attempted to revive restaurants on the precipice of demise with a $10,000 budget and plenty of creativity and hope. In just two days, Irvine and his loyal team worked tirelessly to redesign restaurants, update their menus, strengthen their business strategies and attain local customers.

“I’m old news and although the show is a GREAT show that helps small business and families / communities it’s not a show that they believe fits into who or what they want or the younger viewers like,” Irvine wrote in a quote tweet to a fan. “I really have no idea, all I know is j will come to [the] to help all those in need regardless.” When another fan suggested that fans of the show should start a petition to help bring it back, Irvine responded, “I don’t think any amount of fans telling Foodnetwork to bring it back will do anything.. to change their mind.” He continued, “They have a different idea of what the viewers want and @Rest_Imposs isn’t in that .. so we will move on and see what happens next .. when i know i will let you know lol.”

In another tweet, Irvine agreed that unlike “Restaurant: Impossible,” Food Network’s current lineup of shows are more akin to game shows: “Yes you are correct , most shows are that way .. quick easy and can put them in a studio and knock out many shows in a day which makes them cheaper and easier to do .. but our show was just as cheap.” The departure of “Restaurant: Impossible” is one of Food Network’s many recent changes. Earlier this year, Giada De Laurentiis parted ways with the network after serving 21 years as a host and chef personality. De Laurentiis revealed in an Instagram post that she had signed a multi-year deal for unscripted series production with Amazon Studios instead.

The FDA is urged investigate an influencer-sponsored energy drink already banned in UK schools

Senator Chuck Schumer called on the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Sunday to investigate Prime brand energy drinks over its potentially dangerous levels of caffeine. The beverage brand, founded by YouTube stars Logan Paul and KSI, became a grocery store sensation after its launch and quickly found its fan-base among teens and pre-teens. Prime is touted as zero sugar and vegan, but a closer look revealed that the drink has elevated levels of caffeine — 200 milligrams per 12 ounces, which is equivalent to about half a dozen cans of Coke or nearly two Red Bulls.

“One of the summer’s hottest status symbols for kids is not an outfit, or a toy — it’s a beverage,” wrote Schumer in his letter to the FDA. “But buyers and parents beware because it’s a serious health concern for the kids it so feverishly targets.” Although the brand does contain a “not recommended for children under 18” disclaimer on its bottles, Prime asserted that Prime Hydration, a separate sports drink, contains no caffeine and is more suitable for its younger fans.

Schumer, however, argued that there was little to no difference in the online marketing of the two drinks: “A simple search on social media for Prime will generate an eye-popping amount of sponsored content, which is advertising,” he wrote. “This content and the claims made should be investigated, along with the ingredients and the caffeine content in the Prime energy drink.” Per the Guardian, Prime is banned from some schools in the United Kingdom and Australia where pediatricians also warned of its possible health risks on young children, like heart problems, anxiety, and digestive issues.

Marine detained after 14-year-old girl missing for 18 days found in barracks

A 14-year-old California girl who was missing for 18 days was found in the barracks of San Diego’s Camp Pendleton last month and a Marine was taken into custody by military police.

The San Diego County Sheriff’s Department (SDSO) confirmed last week that the girl disappeared on June 9 and was reported missing on June 13 before she was found in the barracks on June 28. According to a California-based NBC News affiliate, the child’s aunt told reporters that the girl — who has learning disabilities — was sold to a Marine for sex.

“The security looked her in the face and allowed this man to bring a minor on to base,” her aunt told reporters. “Due to her age, she could not have given this consent.”

The girl’s grandmother told reporters that the delay in reporting the child’s absence to the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department was because the child had previously run away but always returned home quickly. 

The Marine has not been identified publicly nor formally charged, remaining in the custody of his command as Naval Criminal Investigative Service and the San Diego Human Trafficking Task Force investigate.

Former Trump lawyer linked to right-wing websites accused of scamming people

Oprah Winfrey looked upset.

The photo caught her midsentence, her left hand jabbing at the camera.

“They are twisting everything,” the TV icon was quoted as saying, under a red “BREAKING NEWS” banner.

The ad featuring the Winfrey image and quote ran on the conservative website DC Swamp Tales. It directed readers to a webpage that resembled a news article. The text spun a narrative about a television interviewer who unfairly berated Winfrey for promoting a revolutionary product that could “reverse Dementia instantly & for good.”

But there was no such dispute. Winfrey’s quote was fake, and her name and likeness were used without permission. The product, a low-dose, cannabis-derived gummy supplement, does not treat dementia, let alone reverse it.

“These ads are false. Oprah Winfrey does not have anything to do with these products,” Nicole Nichols, a spokesperson for Winfrey’s company Harpo Inc., told ProPublica.

Such scam ads have proliferated on right-wing websites worldwide in the past eight months. They use fake endorsements from celebrities including Winfrey, country music singers Dolly Parton and Reba McEntire, Twitter and Tesla owner Elon Musk, actor Ryan Reynolds, Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau and former German chancellor Gerhard Schröder to promote dubious medicines and cryptocurrency frauds. Conservative publishers make money from each click on a deceptive ad, exploiting their like-minded readers.

The ads were placed by AdStyle, an ad network whose corporate website lists it as being registered in Delaware with an office in Boca Raton, Florida. Its website said it is “trusted by” major brands including Toyota, Ikea, EA Games and L’Oréal. But Florida and Delaware corporate registries have no record of AdStyle, which appears to be operated by a Latvian couple living in Italy. Spokespeople for Toyota and Ikea said they could not find any records of those companies working with AdStyle. EA Games and L’Oréal did not respond to queries.

“These ads are certainly terrible,” said Kirsten Grenier Burnett, a spokesperson for McEntire. Spokespeople for Trudeau, Musk, Reynolds, Shröder and Parton either did not respond or declined to comment.

This month, after reporters contacted AdStyle, the “trusted by” assertion and the brand logos were removed from the company’s website.

Since November, reporters for ProPublica, Sweden’s Expressen newspaper, the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, and Paper Trail Media in Germany have viewed hundreds of AdStyle ads across scores of right-wing websites. The vast majority of the ads were outright scams or made seemingly exaggerated claims. “This 197-Year-Old Man’s Longevity Secret Makes Your Cells 4 TIMES Younger,” one pitch proclaimed.

AdStyle ads are often displayed on a network of more than a dozen U.S. conservative outlets connected to a lawyer whose clients have included former President Donald Trump. Advertisers pay AdStyle to show their ads to web users, and the company splits the revenue with its publisher partners. Its ads are easy to spot because they carry the AdStyle logo.

The prevalence of scam ads on AdStyle and its many partnerships with right-wing sites around the world exemplify how conservative publishers, politicians and operatives profit from fleecing their fellow right-wingers — and how some players take the strategy global. Even the editorially conservative National Review has acknowledged “the right’s grifter problem.”

Deceptive ads abound on Trump’s Truth Social network, while his former campaign chair Steve Bannon and other supporters face federal charges for running an alleged fraudulent donation scheme to build a privately funded border wall. (Bannon has pleaded not guilty to money laundering, fraud and conspiracy charges. Two other people have pleaded guilty.)

A recent New York Times investigation revealed how a group of conservative operatives had raised close to $100 million using robocalls that asked for money to help veterans and first responders. Only 1% of the money went to those causes. And this month ProPublica reported on an IRS whistleblower complaint alleging that leaders of 2020 election denialist nonprofit True the Vote had used donations for personal gain. True the Vote said the complaint was without merit.

Digital advertising has made it easy and lucrative to target people on the internet with scam ads and donation pitches. Besides AdStyle, other networks and social media platforms have carried scam ads. Earlier this month, Harpo filed two federal lawsuits against people and companies it said used Winfrey’s name and trademarks without permission to market weight loss and CBD gummies. Both cases are pending. Harpo did not sue AdStyle. Asked why, Winfrey’s company declined to comment.

It’s unclear who ultimately owns AdStyle and how much money it and its publisher partners earn from the scam ads. Ad networks like AdStyle act as a middleman by connecting advertisers with publishers. An advertiser signs up with a network, uploads the ads it wants to run, identifies the kind of people it wants to reach, and sets the price range it’s willing to pay each time someone views or clicks on an ad.

Meanwhile, the network signs deals with publishers to place ads on their websites in exchange for a share of the revenue. It’s unclear how AdStyle splits revenue with publishers, but ad networks typically take between 20% and 50% of the revenue generated.

In the U.S., AdStyle primarily works with right-wing sites operated by two companies, Saber Communications and Digital Communications LLC, located a few doors down from each other in Fredericksburg, Virginia.

The companies are owned by Andrew Coelho and Michael Rothfeld, political marketers with ties to former U.S. representative and presidential candidate Ron Paul and his son, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul. Federal Election Commission records show Saber provided digital marketing services to Rand Paul and PACs that support him. Ron Paul’s 2012 presidential campaign paid Saber close to $8 million.

With names like Liberal Hack Watch, DC Dirt Sheet and DC Swamp Tales, most sites in the Saber/Digital Media Communications network publish content with a pro-Trump bent. Four other sites produce Christian content or travel and lifestyle advice for conservatives.

Through their websites, Rothfeld and Coelho collect the email addresses of American conservatives and target them with paid political and marketing messages.

“I am a professional junk mailer,” Rothfeld said in a 2012 talk to the Young Americans for Liberty National Convention, according to BuzzFeed News. “I am a professional telemarketer. I’m a professional spammer — like, a hundred million pieces of, emails a month. And I’m a professional negative campaigner. And I’m damn proud of all four.”

Until 2020, Digital Communications listed David Warrington as its registered agent. The Virginia-based Warrington was also the agent for at least seven now-defunct LLCs connected to websites in the Rothberg/Coelho network.

Warrington represented Trump in his dealings with the Jan. 6 congressional committee. His clients have also included Jessie Benton, a Texas political consultant convicted of illegally funneling money to Trump’s campaign on behalf of Roman Vasilenko, who has been described as a “Russian naval officer turned multilevel marketer.” Vasilenko, who was not charged, did not respond to requests for comment through his social media accounts.

Warrington said he represents Rothfeld, Coelho and their companies. He provided a statement from Saber about the AdStyle ads on its sites.

AdStyle is “by far our least active ad service, delivering less than 3% of total banner impressions on the sites we manage,” the statement said. “For the sites that still host their ads in low-priority positions, their ads currently generate an average of $11 per month per site.” He declined to comment further.

Rand Paul and the Trump campaign did not respond to requests for comment, nor did Ron Paul when he was contacted through his institute and social media accounts.

In Sweden, AdStyle works with Samnytt, one of the country’s leading far-right sites. In 2021, its publisher and political editor, Mats Dagerlind, was convicted in a Stockholm court of gross defamation against a Syrian-Swedish journalist for calling him a “jihadist undercover.” Dagerlind was fined about $2,800 plus court costs and given a suspended sentence. The site’s CEO is Kent Ekeroth, a politician affiliated with the Sweden Democrats, a nationalist party that pursues anti-immigration policies.

In a statement to the Expressen newspaper, Dagerlind said the site does not control the content of ads placed by AdStyle. “Due to political persecution from the establishment in Sweden, Samnytt has been blocked from using the more established ad exchanges,” he said. (Google Ads, for example, do not appear on Samnytt.)

In Germany, AdStyle places ads on far-right sites such as Journalistenwatch, which a previous ProPublica investigation identified as a source of false information.

“We don’t care because we think our readership is smart enough to not be scammed,” said Conny Axel Meier, a member of Journalistenwatch’s board and editorial team. “I don’t really care what advertising is going on. After all, we work with a lot of advertising partners. We don’t control the advertising, we don’t care, we can’t check them all.” He plans to continue working with AdStyle “as long as I don’t get a letter from a public prosecutor’s office,” he added.

The celebrities featured in the scam ads on these and other sites change depending on the location of the person viewing the ad. In Germany, scam ads featured Shröder and former tennis star Boris Becker. In Sweden, they used Stefan Persson, the majority owner of fast fashion retailer H&M and the country’s richest person. In each case, the ads placed by AdStyle sent readers to websites promoting fraudulent cryptocurrency investment schemes that can cause people to lose their life savings.

“These are 100% incorrect and false claims,” said Kristina Stenvinkel, a spokesperson for Persson’s family company. “It is very regrettable that there are people who fabricate and mislead by exploiting and using public figures for their own gain.”

On its LinkedIn page, AdStyle says it was founded in 2015 by “a small group of great minds in Boca Raton.” Its website gives an address there. But building management and a lessor of office space there said AdStyle isn’t a tenant.

At least five profiles for current AdStyle employees on LinkedIn use headshots that exhibit characteristics of AI-generated images, such as mismatched earrings and unrealistic backgrounds. ProPublica could not find the employees in public records. One actual employee is Anna Bella Burjak, whose LinkedIn profile says she is the company’s director of business development.

Burjak is married to a web developer named Leonid Volinski, whose name appears in a domain registration linked to AdStyle. Originally from Latvia, the couple used to live in Israel but recently moved to a town roughly 60 miles from Venice, Italy.

When reporters visited the couple’s residence, Burjak and Volinski declined to comment. Within a day, AdStyle had removed the investment and dementia scam ads from the network, including the Winfrey ad.

“We have taken immediate action to reinforce our systems and processes, working diligently to enhance our ad approval mechanisms to better prevent the appearance of misleading or low-quality advertisements,” the company said in an unsigned email. “We are actively reviewing and refining our content moderation policies.”

“Everything is a spritz, nothing is a spritz”: Notes on creativity, cocktails and bad copies

There comes a point in the life cycle of every trend when the item at its center has been so thoroughly spun, tweaked and pushed forward that it no longer bears a resemblance to its original form. I think this is likely a global inclination, but one that also often feels undeniably American. Italian semiotician and author Umberto Eco said as much in his seminal Il costume di casa, or "Faith in Fakes," in which he attempted to unfurl "America's obsession with simulacra and counterfeit reality."

Wax museums, the Vegas Eiffel Tower, Disney World's EPCOT Center, holograms — these were all examples he gave of how imitations and copies have been turned into mainstage attractions. This isn't necessarily a bad thing; however, I've been thinking a lot about our inclination to relentlessly iterate, especially in the world of food and drink, and what impulse we're (myself included) actually feeding when we do so. 

Last week, for instance, I had been off work for a few days and upon my return, opened my inbox to find 15 emails from various PR companies and beverage directors about their respective versions of a spritz. Now, I like an effervescent, session-able cocktail as much as the next girl, but 15 seemed a little excessive. Out of curiosity, I typed the term "spritz" into the search bar to see how many emails containing the term were sitting in my archives, which I clean out every six months or so. 

There were 122, going back to "Spritzmas" in December. 

The trend, of course, has been going on much longer than that. Aperol Spritzes have come in and out of fashion in the States before, but this current stretch of popularity really extends back to 2018 or so, when The New York Times noted that "it's officially the drink of the summer, thanks to an aggressive marketing campaign by Campari." Since then, the Aperol Spritz has been declared dead, was promptly resurrected and then eventually thrust into the hands of Aubrey Plaza and copious "White Lotus" extras

For a while, I would scroll through Instagram and every few photos would be punctuated with a picture of a striking orange-red cocktail served with a juicy citrus slice. But much in the way that social media has turbo-charged the distribution of trends, something about it also seems to accelerate the desire to make just a little tweak. And then another. And another. 

We have all seen this firsthand with charcuterie boards. I'm not a dogmatist when it comes to the thorny concept of "authenticity" in relation to food, but just for reference, the etymology of the word is a combination of the French chair and cuite, or cooked flesh. The term traditionally referred to prepared meat products like sausages, ballotines and pâtés, which were preserved and then served. 

In the States, along with the rise of New American cuisine, charcuterie boards became a little more bespoke. There was the addition of cheese from a local dairy farm and honey from local bees. Perhaps a few house-made pickles and maybe some grainy mustard aged in a beer barrel from the microbrewery down the block. At a certain point online, the distinction between a cheese plate and a charcuterie board began to dissolve. 

When an appetizer sampler from Chili's — complete with sticky wings, Southwest eggrolls and sliders — could ostensibly qualify as charcuterie under the ever-broadening guidelines, it may be time to reassess the situation.

Then someone added waffles to the mix and the machinations that underpin Pinterest went into overdrive pumping out version after version of "charcuterie boards" containing shoestring fries, Halloween candyhot cocoa, whipped butter and crab legs. Again, I'm not a huge stickler for tradition, but I do think that when an appetizer sampler from Chili's — complete with sticky wings, Southwest eggrolls and sliders — could ostensibly qualify as charcuterie under the ever-broadening guidelines, it may be time to reassess the situation. 

Such is the case now with spritzes. After checking my inbox last week and seeing a 9-ingredient cocktail containing both homemade honeydew syrup and Sprite categorized as a "simple spritz," and another containing bourbon and no bitters, I reached out to my friend Nic, a bartender-turned-beverage program consultant in Detroit. "Hey, what does a 'spritz' actually mean?" I asked. 

"Everything is a spritz," he texted. "Nothing is a spritz. Long live the spritz." 

Then, he clarified that it's traditionally a three-ingredient cocktail containing prosecco, digestive bitters and soda water. When I asked why he thought there were all of these boundary-pushing versions of spritzes popping up, he replied with one word: "TikTok." 

Eco points out several times throughout "Faith in Fakes," which was published 43 years before the advent of TikTok,  that our desire to publicly iterate isn't a novel inclination. Rather, it taps into our cultural prioritization of excess:

In America you don't say, 'Give me another coffee'; you ask for 'More coffee'; you don't say that cigarette A is longer than cigarette B, but that there's 'more' of it, more than you're used to having, more than you might want, leaving a surplus to throw away—that's prosperity.

Social media both demands and indulges excess. You can search any term — charcuterie, handbag, spritz,  houseplant — and be presented with seemingly limitless versions. But even in a world where the boundaries between content makers and content consumers are increasingly blurred, there is still a desire for novelty, though that doesn't necessarily result in any real creativity. 

Why make an interesting, unique cocktail (that doesn't remotely resemble a spritz) and slap the word "spritz" on it? Why make a gorgeous breakfast platter and try to shoehorn it into the charcuterie section of Instagram? All for what? To indulge the whims of an algorithm? 

And when assessing my discomfort with the landscape of incessant copies, I think that at the root of it is likely some discomfort with my own creative practice,  both in and outside the kitchen. 

It takes some bravery to create something, however small, that could be perceived as off-trend. It takes even more bravery to make something that people may not notice at all. But as our digital landscape seems to become more and more flat thanks to the advent of reply bots and AI-generated posts, I do think that it's worth it to at least try. 

I'm not sure that I always accomplish that, but I know that we all have to start somewhere. Maybe I'll start with the contents of my next cocktail

Long-shot GOP candidate’s offer: 10% commission on every donation you bring him

Republican presidential hopeful and biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy is offering a deal to his supporters that he believes could upend political fundraising in the U.S.: Every supporter who brings Ramaswamy a donor will get a 10% cut of the donation. Ramaswamy has dubbed the kickback deal “Vivek’s Kitchen Cabinet” and called the offer “a revolution” in grassroots campaigning. It could also be described as bringing the gig economy to ground-level, small-donor politics.

“As a political outsider and first-time candidate, I was stunned to discover the degree to which the political class cashes in on the electoral process. I found out that most professional political fundraisers get a cut of the money they raise — why should they monopolize political fundraising? They shouldn’t,” the 37-year-old Ramaswamy, viewed as an extreme long shot for the 2024 GOP nomination, said in a Monday video release. As reported Monday by Politico, any would-be political gig workers will have to clear a background check with Ramaswamy’s campaign before they can start earning affiliate commissions. Politico also reports that Ramsawamy has already spent $10.5 million of his own money on his run and is prepared to spend as much as $100 million for it. His fundraising solution, he says, follows a pattern that has informed his business practices from the beginning: a commission-based, gig-economy model. 

“He kicked me in my balls”: Michigan Republicans brawl at local meeting

A Saturday meeting of Michigan’s GOP state committee reportedly resulted in one person being sent to the emergency room after a brawl broke out at the host hotel.

As reported by The Detroit News, Wayne County Republican James Chapman was trying to get into the state party’s meeting room at the Doherty Hotel by jiggling the door handle when Clare County Republican Party Chair Mark DeYoung opened the door from inside. 

“He kicked me in my balls as soon as I opened the door,”  DeYoung told the outlet while being interviewed in the ER, adding that he had suffered a broken rib and intended to press charges against Chapman. 

Chapman, however, said DeYoung was the one who swung first after threatening to kick Chapman’s ass. DeYoung denied that, though, claiming Chapman squared up first — rushing DeYoung and slamming him into a chair.

One of the individuals involved in the fight gave Detroit News’ Craig Mauger a warning for any would-be future Michigan brawlers: 

“When you see me taking my glasses off, I’m ready to rock,” Chapman said. 

Although the dust-up took place outside the actual meeting room, members inside got an eye full.  

“From my clear vantage point a kerfuffle occurred outside our meeting room. We recessed for 5 minutes. It had nothing to do with the content of our meeting,” said committee member Kristin Lee. 

This isn’t the first time, some members of the Michigan GOP got froggy — nor the first time one of them was jumped at the Doherty Hotel.

As pointed out by HuffPo on Monday, an April meeting of the Michigan Republican Party leadership in the same building also turned to party infighting. The incident resulted in significantly less ball-kicking, however, with the spat ultimately defused after one woman sloppily shoved the face of another. 

Donald Trump keeps stepping on Ron DeSantis’ spotlight

It’s still a long way until the first Republican primaries but unless something changes quickly, it is looking more and more grim for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and more and more secure for former President Donald Trump. The polls in the early primary states show that Trump is still polling at least 20 points higher than DeSantis, whose numbers continue to drop.

DeSantis appeared on Fox News’ Maria Bartiromo’s show this weekend and insisted that he’s floundering because the news media doesn’t want him to be the nominee, which isn’t true at all. If anything they were champing at the bit for a real horse race against Trump because that would make for excellent copy. But it is reasonable to ask why DeSantis has been sinking in the polls over the last few months.

The consensus among the pundit class seems to be that he’s just unlikable so the more people see of him the less they like him. I suspect there’s some truth to that. But it may just be the contrast between him and Trump, the political superstar. As Kate Briquelet of the Daily Beast reported from the Moms for Liberty presidential cattle call after Trump’s keynote speech:

“He has so much charisma,” a man told me in the elevator afterward. “The guy is just electric! I love DeSantis, he’s my guy, but he doesn’t have the same charm.”

I long ago chalked up this inexplicable attraction to Trump to the fact that his following still views him as a celebrity, which he was before he got into politics, and now they have turned him into a superhero. He really isn’t seen as a politician at all. Poor, dull Ron DeSantis can’t compete with that.

There’s no doubt that Trump’s cult of personality is very powerful and it almost has a life of its own. But there is more to it than that. It’s about his message as well.

Unlike DeSantis, Trump understands that the base isn’t just about the culture war defined by the outrage of the day or some far-right think tanker’s obscure jargon-laden hobby horse like “DEI” or “CRT.”

We know all about Ron DeSantis’ message by now. He’s been relentlessly pushing his “anti-woke” agenda and enacting it in every way he could manage in Florida to show that he is the guy who will make the MAGA crowd’s internet memes come true. There is nobody out there who takes the culture war as seriously as DeSantis and he doesn’t just confine himself to a few hot button issues, he embraces all of them. There is literally nothing else he seems to care about.

Yair Rosenberg in the Atlantic submits that DeSantis turned Florida into a right-wing hellscape and obsessively said the word “woke” for a year and a half as his strategy to win Iowa which is full of white conservative evangelical voters. I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s true but it’s yet another example of his general ineptitude. It’s certainly possible that he could ride the culture war to a win in Iowa just as President Ted Cruz, President Mike Huckabee and President Rick Santorum did but let’s just say it’s a little bit short-sighted to create your entire persona and record for the purpose of winning the state that specialized in producing also-rans. Since 1980, a GOP candidate who won Iowa (aside from incumbents) only went on to win the nomination twice.


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And anyway, it appears that Trump is likely going to win Iowa because the conservative evangelicals like him too. It’s not as if he isn’t a hardcore culture warrior too. Despite DeSantis’ attempt to paint him as soft on “the gender issue” (which seems to be the issue that has the Iowa evangelicals all riled up) he’s got some nasty anti-trans policies he can point to, like his order to expel transgender members of the military when he was president and his orders to redefine sex discrimination to exclude protections for transgender people in educationhousing, and employment, as well as health care. And he’s announced that when he is returned to the White House he will “revoke every Biden policy promoting the chemical castration and sexual mutilation of our youth and ask Congress to send me a bill prohibiting child sexual mutilation in all 50 states.” Trump has even gone so far as to promise, “on Day One, I will sign an executive order instructing every federal agency to cease the promotion of sex or gender transition at any age, they’re not gonna do it anymore,” which even the anti-trans warrior DeSantis hasn’t proposed.

Trump is also taking credit for reversing Roe v. Wade and is fine with the “parents’ rights” movement pushing Christian education in public schools. He and DeSantis spar over the pandemic response but that issue is rapidly losing salience. In other words, DeSantis can’t really get to Trump’s right no matter how hard he tries. When Trump says stuff like “‘Democrats are pushing the transgender cult” on young people while “persecuting Christians” and “demonizing patriots'” it goes straight to the wingnut lizard brain. Nobody does it better.

But unlike DeSantis, Trump understands that the base isn’t just about the culture war defined by the outrage of the day or some far-right think tanker’s obscure jargon-laden hobby horse like “DEI” or “CRT.” Sure, he’ll go along with it. (Remember how he would blurt out that he was going to do away with “Common Core” during the 2016 election?) But his themes are much simpler and much broader. He understands that what moves the Republican base is their grievance writ large and he speaks directly to that.

Much of the Trumpian rhetoric that penetrates the national consciousness is about his personal legal travails and his persecution complex — but that plays into the grievance in new ways in this campaign. He claims he’s being indicted “for you,” his loyal followers, and that he’s the only thing standing between the government and them. That’s the superhero appeal.

And he knows that what drives the base isn’t really sincere concern about “woke ideology” or Christian morality. (That’s obvious since he is a corrupt libertine, pathological liar and they love him anyway.) What drives them is a loathing of their perceived enemies and it applies to whatever those enemies are doing whether it’s supporting Ukraine’s fight to repel the invasion by Russia or teaching that slavery was bad and had long-term consequences that still reverberate today. The details don’t really matter. Whatever the “other side” is against they are for and vice versa, without regard to the substance.

Donald Trump understands this. He told them in his announcement speech, “I am your retribution” which is what they really care about. DeSantis’ laundry list of “anti-woke” achievements misses the big picture. None of that really resonates unless you can tap into the emotional wellspring of resentment and sense of injustice that fuels the MAGA right. Trump does that instinctively because he is one of them.

The Republican base yearns to be a movement (some might call it a cult) rather than a political party and under Donald Trump, they’ve completely moved beyond politics as we used to define them. DeSantis is just another politician — and that’s the last thing these people want. 

Trump’s violence has been normalized: Why the media ignored MAGA’s threat against Barack Obama

Donald Trump has spent more than seven years planting millions of seeds of violence, hate, and chaos all over the United States. He is a constant gardener who has sowed a horrible crop.

Last Thursday, Trump posted on his Truth Social disinformation platform what he believed to be the Washington D.C. home address of former president Barack Obama. What happened next was both predictable and what Trump obviously intended. One of Trump’s followers, a man authorities say participated in the Capitol riots on Jan. 6, 2021, appears to have been intent on assassinating Barack Obama and acted on his Great Leader’s encouragement to such violence. According to the Justice Department, 37-year-old Taylor Taranto traveled to D.C. with two firearms and hundreds of rounds of ammunition. And as the Associated Press reports: 

On the day of his June 29 arrest, prosecutors said, Taranto reposted a Truth Social post from Trump containing what Trump claimed was Obama’s home address. In a post on Telegram, Taranto wrote: “We got these losers surrounded! See you in hell, Podesta’s and Obama’s.” That’s a reference to John Podesta, the former chair of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 Democratic presidential campaign….

He was arrested outside of the former president’s residence.

Taranto is not alone. Political scientists, law enforcement, and other experts have shown that millions of Trumpists and other right-wingers support using violence to return Trump and the MAGA movement to power. Of that group, it is estimated that there are many thousands who are willing to directly engage in acts of violence and terrorism, as seen on Jan. 6 and elsewhere.

A new report by the public watchdog and government transparency and accountability group CREW details how almost 200 of Trump’s followers believed they were following his commands when they attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6:

In letters to federal judges, federal court filings, and appeals to the public, these defendants and their legal representatives have made it clear that Trump’s repeated false statements and calls to action drove their actions that day. These findings bolster those of the January 6th Select Committee which found Trump was the “central cause” of the attack on the Capitol…. CREW’s analysis bolsters the evidence that January 6th was the result of organized efforts by Donald Trump and his allies to halt the certification of a free and fair election by force.

If Trump’s cultist had been successful in his mission to kill or otherwise do serious harm to Obama (and presumably his family) last week, the United States would have experienced a level of shock and trauma and resulting tumult that I do not want to contemplate – this pain would have been especially extreme for Black Americans.

Yet, many Americans have not heard about these events.

Why is this? There are many reasons that include a profound level of denial and an irresponsible choice (and act of cowardice) by the American mainstream news media (with some notable exceptions) to either outright ignore or otherwise downplay the violence of Trump and the Republican fascists and MAGA movement and larger white right. Somehow, the mainstream news media and its gatekeepers have incorrectly concluded that such a choice will magically return the country to “normal.” 

The mainstream news media also believes that it is in its financial interests to not alienate Trump’s followers and other “conservatives” and members of the right. For example, see the recent changes at CNN. Thus, a commitment to false standards of “balance” and “fairness” and “bothsideism” and “centrism” gives way to a platform for Republican fascists, members of the Trump regime and other malign actors who can launder and circulate their poison even more widely. The mainstream news media has also been conditioned and intimidated into such behavior by the American right through false accusations of mostly non-existent “liberal bias.” 

Careerism among mainstream rank-and-file reporters, journalists and editors encourages a type of groupthink and aversion to speaking too boldly and too directly and too consistently about the dangers to American democracy and society embodied by Donald Trump and today’s Republican Party and larger white right. In all, getting promoted and playing it safe by representing “the consensus”, i.e. the herd mentality, matters more than telling unpopular truths.

The mainstream news media are also members of the elite class. They value access to Trump, the Republican Party, and other centers of right-wing power and influence more than they do staying true to their responsibilities of holding the powerful accountable as the Fourth Estate in a democracy. The mainstream media, both the institution and the people in it, are also of “the system” and will cling to it no matter how damaged and failing it is. Thus, there exists a desperate need to normalize Trumpism and today’s Republican Party and conservative movement no matter how extreme and antidemocracy they have now become.


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In the case of Trump’s cultist who was on a mission to assassinate Obama, many in the news media will likely defend not amplifying that story by claiming that the suspect in question may be emotionally disturbed or mentally ill. That, however, does not minimize or somehow erase the danger to Obama. Moreover, the alleged would-be assassin’s mental health is a legal matter that is separate from the fact that Trump (again) targeted Obama for violence. Trump’s incitements to and direct threats of violence against Obama are part of a much larger pattern of behavior that must be highlighted and not ignored as something “everyone knows.” 

Trump’s incitements to and direct threats of violence against Barack Obama are part of a much larger pattern of behavior. He is now suggesting that special counsel Jack Smith should be “put out to rest.” He has also asserted – absurdly — that Smith and President Biden are cocaine addicts (Trump went so far as to suggest that Smith is a “crackhead”). Trump has repeatedly made threats and encouraged violence against President Biden, Attorney General Merrick Garland and other prosecutors and law enforcement who are daring to hold him accountable for his public crime spree. In addition to Trump’s threats of a “final battle” and revenge, the ex-president and coup plotter has repeatedly suggested that Biden and other leading Democrats are traitors and enemies of the nation who should be punished accordingly to save the country.

Trump is now sending out a series of fundraising emails directly accusing President Biden and his family of being guilty of “treason.” Historically, the punishment for treason is death. During the 2016 campaign, Donald Trump directly threatened Hillary Clinton with “Second Amendment people” – which means gun violence and death.

Trump has publicly and repeatedly stated that his followers who participated in his Jan. 6 coup attempt by launching a lethal attack on the Capitol are “political prisoners” and “patriots” who he will pardon if he becomes president again.

Donald Trump is the leader of the Republican Party and its presumed 2024 presidential nominee. Republican elected officials and other senior members of the party are echoing Trump’s threats of violence and other lawbreaking including support for the Jan. 6 terrorists. Trump’s MAGA cultists and other right-wing militants are displaying black flags as a signal that they will offer no quarter or mercy to the Democrats, liberals, and other “enemies” in what they believe is an imminent second American Civil War.

For several decades, the right-wing news media and propaganda machine echo chamber, anchored by Fox News, has encouraged eliminationist and other massive widescale violence against Democrats (“Demorats”), liberals (“libtards”), progressives (“commies”, “socialists”), black and brown people (“anti-white”, “leaches”, “takers not makers”, “welfare queens”, “Woke” and “BLM”), migrants and refugees from Latin and South America and other nonwhite countries (“rats”, “rapists”, “poison”, “snakes”, “infestation”, “vermin”), Muslims (“terrorists”), atheists (“godless” and “evil”), feminists and others who believe that women should have reproductive rights and freedoms (“feminazis” and “baby killers”), the LGBTQI community (“groomers” and “pedophiles”) and others deemed to be the “enemy” because they are not “real Americans”, meaning White right-wing “Christian” authoritarians and “conservatives”.

These threats of eliminationist and other forms of violence have only escalated and become even more extreme and common throughout the Age of Trump and beyond as the country descends into what journalist Jeff Sharlet has described as a slow civil war.

In a recent conversation here at Salon, Sharlet elaborates:

As a society and country, America is going to experience and have to go through fascism. We’re not in it now. There’s a fascist movement now. It drives me crazy. People say, “Well, it’s not like the Hitler regime.” No, it’s not. That was a regime. We don’t have a fascist regime. We could with a fascist movement. It’s worse post-Trump than it was during Trump’s presidency.

I am sympathetic to the argument that in some ways it is unfair to fully blame the American people for their failure to truly comprehend the existential danger to their society, democracy – and yes, safety and lives – embodied by Donald Trump, his MAGA movement, and the Republican fascists and larger white right.

As an institution, the American mainstream news media has failed the public.

However, the American people, like the mainstream news media and the country’s responsible political class and other elites, have now had more than seven years of experience with the Trumpocene and its horrors. As such, for them and their leaders to continue to live in a state of denial is now a choice – and a very dangerous one which will not save any of them in the end.

“Gun violence has created a lot of anxiety”: The forgotten survivors of shootings speak

Over the extended Fourth of July holiday, as has become all too normal in the U.S., there was a numbing series of 16 mass shootings in 13 states and Washington D.C. Random people were chased down in Philadelphia by a shooter seemingly inspired by Donald Trump. People were gunned down at an Independence Day festival in Fort Worth, Texas. Thirty people were hit with bullets in Baltimore at a neighborhood party. And another 11 people were shot at a block party in Shreveport, Louisiana. The bloodshed just went on and on, leaving at least 15 people dead and nearly 100 more injured. 

The damage from mass shootings is truly overwhelming. The press efforts to package the trauma in small enough bites for their audiences to understand, however, has led to an unfortunate tendency: giving focus solely to those who die. Headlines often only include the death count. Victim lists tend to only be those who perished. It’s understandable to focus mainly on the worst outcomes, but in reality, mass shootings have exponentially more victims than those who died. The casualties include the injured, traumatized and bereaved. The ripples of pain are ceaseless. 

In the new book “The Forgotten Survivors of Gun Violence: Wounded,” editors Loren Kleinman, Shavaun Scott, Sandy Phillips and Lonnie Phillips put the focus back on those who survive but are forever changed. Kleinman spoke with Salon about the book and the need to keep not just the fallen but the wounded in the conversation about gun violence. 

This interview has been edited for clarity and length

This book is especially pertinent right now, with the shootings that happened over the holiday. Many of them got minor attention because most victims survived and that’s now jaded we are now. Tell me more about the book. 

“Wounded” is a short collection. It’s about 20 personal essays written by survivors of both visible and invisible wounds. Invisible wounds, meaning things like PTSD related to gun violence. Visible wounds such as getting shot in a limb or ending up in a wheelchair. Of course, many people have both. 

I follow the subject of shootings, especially mass shootings, very closely. And one thing that does drive me a little nuts about the media coverage is how it focuses exclusively on the deaths. Don’t get me wrong, that’s obviously the most serious part. But often we only see the death toll and there’s little discussion of those who were injured or traumatized. How much more damage are we overlooking when we just focus on the people who were killed in the shootings?

It’s sad that we have to even ask the question. I’ve done this work for the last five years, interviewing both survivors and their families. There’s a huge impact that goes beyond the bullet wound or the shooting. There are financial implications. There are people that become destitute because they don’t have insurance or it doesn’t cover the extent of their injuries.  Some people have multiple reoccurring surgeries, that they’re going to have throughout their life. There’s not a “back to normal” for them. This loss is catastrophic. What ends up happening is that they grow around the grief. They don’t grow out of it.

“Watching this very traumatic response unfold, I wish more people would really see this, and really bear witness to this trauma. Are we really caring for the people that are grieving in this catastrophic event?”

It’s the community that suffers. It’s the family that suffers. The friends that suffer. The financial implications are very rarely spoken about.

People have the misconception that somebody gets shot, then they’re going to the hospital, they’re getting a couple of stitches and they move on with their life. But depending upon the kind of bullet, the kind of gun, where it hits you in the body, it can be a complete life changer. There are people that are in this book that will never walk again. We just had a gentleman that recently passed away, Kevin, from his wounds that were inflicted upon him years ago. It was just a random shooting coming home from a basketball game. It’s way more than “here’s the band-aid, move on.”


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People have to live with this every single day of their lives. Their families have to live with it every single day of their lives. Oftentimes the families are the caregivers. Oftentimes the families break apart. There’s a huge mental health implication. I don’t think that we talk about that as often as what, as what we need to. 

We’re coming off of a particularly brutal July 4th holiday. It was especially bad this year. A lot of cities, including Philadelphia where I live. The number of people killed was relatively small compared to what we’re used to. But the total number of people shot was really high. So we’re looking at a lot of survivors. How do you think about the media coverage of these kinds of shootings, where it’s more people wounded than murdered?

I hate to say it, but I almost expect something to happen now every Fourth of July. Somebody is going to get shot and die from that wound. Somebody is going to survive from that wound. Sometimes the people that survived from that wound might run into complications months later, and not even realize it.

I often wonder where the survivor voices are in all of this. Where is the space that we allow survivors to wrap their minds around it? There will be a press conference, or a survivor that’s crying and just in complete disarray. It always breaks my heart, because I’m thinking about how many other people who have survived a shooting, and are watching this. The discussion automatically goes to the debate about the Second Amendment or gun control. These are people. These are our friends, our family, our community. This is the gritty reality these people have to live with for the rest of their lives.

There is a huge community of gun violence survivors that they can connect with. But in the moment, people are in such shock. They’re often crying but are not really present, almost still trying to figure out what’s going on. Watching this very traumatic response unfold, I wish more people would really see this, and really bear witness to this trauma. Are we really caring for the people that are grieving in this catastrophic event?

It is absolutely important to mourn the dead, and I don’t want to take away from that. But I think the Parkland shooting felt to me like the first time that there was sustained media attention to the stories of the survivors. The kids themselves made themselves the story. What are your thoughts on Parkland? How did that change the conversation?

It’s still amazing what these kids have done. I mean, they’re not kids anymore, right? They’re adults. It was so important that they’re demanding that we know their story is vital. If you’re not hearing the story, if we’re not bearing witness to the story, then you’re saying to me that it did not exist, you know, that we did not exist.

There are plenty of other survivor groups, such as that borne out of the Columbine community for, for example. But I think it’s a different time. The Parkland survivors had the benefit of social media. Still, you’re still sharing your story and there’s still a huge vulnerability to that. There will be people who won’t take it seriously or people dismissing it. You’re pouring your heart out and sharing the most intimate details of your life. You’re hoping that people will connect with it and you’re hoping that the story will change the pattern.

There are definitely tons of strides, real changes in legislature. But it’s still not enough. That doesn’t mean that we stop sharing our story. We still need people to witness what that aftermath looks like. What Parkland did was open up that dialogue. It really brought together an incredible number of survivors from communities from, from the 90s, and even from the 60s. Survivors from the University of Texas tower shooting came out and told their story. 

When we think of survivors of shootings, we think of people who were shot or were there at the shooting. We may even think about the family members of people who were shot. How do you place other folks that are affected directly? I’ve interviewed surgeons who work in hospitals and have had to deal with shooting victims. Firefighters, EMTs, theses are survivors of shootings, in the sense that they have to help victims. Where do you put the helpers in the constellation of survivors?

That’s a really wonderful question. I definitely think that trauma surgeons or first responders are a group that are not tapped into enough. That’s definitely something that I’ve really been considering for a next project. There are people that gun violence will touch that you don’t even think of it. I didn’t think that I was going to be as affected as I was, doing these projects. Carrying the weight of that story is also going to affect you.

Those are the ripple effects of gun violence, what we read, what we see, the people that we care for. For me, it brought out a lot of different emotions. Just being scared to go to the places where the people that I spoke to were shot, or where their children were killed. Being a parent myself, I worry when I drop my child off to school. Am I gonna see them again? Gun violence has created a lot of anxiety for a lot of people, millions of people. That’s also something that we don’t talk about. Being exposed to gun violence even though you weren’t shot, even though you weren’t there that day. It touches every aspect of our life, whether we think about it or not.

Mass shootings especially are meant to be a public spectacle. The mass shooter picks people at random so that everyone in the community feels like, even if they weren’t there that day, it could have been them. At this point we all have a story of someone we know who barely missed a mass shooting. It’s a terrifying thing to think about. It gets hard to separate “survivor” and everyone else. 

Whenever a shooting happens, a certain part of the country goes directly towards talking about the Second Amendment. At the same time, l want to say, these are also your people. We’re all breathing together. Like this is not, this doesn’t exclude you. When are people going to realize that this is close to home. It’s everywhere. There are a ton of emotions that come from that, and it’s something that we have to really face.

988, one year later: Has the rollout of this crisis lifeline actually improved mental health?

For the last year, three memorable numbers could make a big difference in someone’s life: 988. Americans with phone access, whether cellular or landline, could dial or text the three-digit code to receive suicide prevention and mental crisis support. The service, which is free, anonymous and available 24/7, was introduced as an update to the 1-800-273-8255 number, which can be harder to remember.

However, just because the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline exists doesn’t mean that every American experiencing a mental crisis in the last year used the 988 lifeline or even knew about it.

In the 11 month period ending May 31, 2023, over 4.5 million calls were made to the 988 lifeline. However, the untrackable number is how many people didn’t call. Those who weren’t aware of the crisis line are unable to be accounted for, whether due to stigma or just lack of awareness.

Instantaneous mental health support and telehealth have increasingly become a staple of suicide prevention at a time when it is a leading cause of death for Americans. In 2021, suicide was the second-leading cause of death for those aged 10 to 14 and 25 to 34, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The COVID pandemic marked not only a rise in suicide but also the use of virtual mental health care.

It’s no easy task maintaining a workforce of dispersed and independent 988 call centers, but despite this, roughly 469,000 callers in May 2023 faced a drastically lowered wait time: Just 35 seconds on average, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ SAMHSA, which is a significant drop from the previous average of 140 seconds.

“A year ago we were saying, would it work? Would the demand outpace the capacity?” Bob Gebbia, CEO of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, told Salon.

So far, Gebbia’s questions seem to have been answered, as contacts are up and wait times are down.

A huge swath of Americans are seemingly unaware of the 988 lifeline’s existence, with an estimated 75% still in the dark

A monthly call volume approaching half a million represents a significant increase from the 46,000 calls the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline fielded in 2005, its founding year. The number gained popularity following the 2017 release of the song “1-800-273-8255″‘ by the American rapper Logic, which according to the journal BMJ, further destigmatized the use of a crisis line.

Despite the increased awareness, in 2020 the FCC required a simpler number be designated for a national suicide prevention and mental health crisis line, slated for activation by all U.S. telecommunication providers by July 16, 2022.

A year later, Gebbia is predicting 988 will receive five to nine million calls in its second year, up from nearly 4.5 million in year one of its operation. This increase is due to a slew of factors, including increased awareness and a decreasing stigma. However, a huge swath of Americans are seemingly unaware of the 988 lifeline’s existence, with an estimated 75% still in the dark, according to Gebbia. A recent poll by The Pew Charitable Trusts found an even greater disparity, with only 13% of adults having heard of the lifeline and its purpose.

For someone experiencing a mental crisis, this gap in public awareness is likely one of the reasons leading them to neglect calling 988 or instead dial 911. As 911 and 988 haven’t been widely integrated with one another, this may only be beneficial under certain scenarios. Not only are behavioral health calls to 911 not guaranteed to be rerouted to 988, a 911 call all too frequently leads to the unnecessary dispatch of law enforcement to a mental health crisis.


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This avoidable response is increasingly becoming lethal. To cite one example, Raul de la Cruz, a mentally ill man living in the Bronx, was shot by police within 28 seconds of law enforcement arriving at his father’s apartment. According to the New York Times, last year “police responded to about 171,000 calls about ‘E.D.P.s’ — emotionally disturbed people.”

With the expected increase of 988 calls in year two, Gebbia and others are worried about the already strained mental health workforce being unable to sustain capacity. This industry-wide concern is why Gebbia has been advocating before Congress for an increase in federal funding. His call to raise the lifeline’s annual $500 million budget to $800 million could mean higher pay to incentivize participation in the mental health workforce.

“I would hope that with our allies in Congress who are really mental health champions, that they will fight for additional money,” Gebbia said. “This is not a Republican or a Democratic issue.”

Every 988 Lifeline center operates independently of one another, so the workforce challenges can be manageable in one area while another lacks a mental health workforce.

“I would hope that with our allies in Congress who are really mental health champions, that they will fight for additional money. This is not a Republican or a Democratic issue.”

The Biden-Harris Administration has invested nearly $1 billion toward the 988 Lifeline, including $200 million this past May. The recent funding expanded local capacity for the 988 Lifeline, including funding geared (and available now) specifically toward federally recognized Indian Tribes, tribal organizations, and Urban Indian Organizations. It also included follow-up care of suicidal persons who called the 988 Lifeline.

Given that mental health is a highly stigmatized topic, one often engulfed in stereotypes, many misunderstandings surrounding the 988 Lifeline may exist after a year of its use. Importantly, the lifeline can be contacted by anyone in emotional distress, not only those experiencing suicidal ideation, Dr. Tia Dole, Chief 988 Lifeline Officer at Vibrant Emotional Health told Salon by email. In a society that is still known to promote the notion that it is “not okay to not be okay,” it can be presumed there is room for progress on the front of non-emergency mental health cases utilizing the lifeline.

“Unfortunately, so many people avoid asking for help and seeking help that then they wait until they’re in crisis and that’s when they need 988,” Gebbia said. “We’d love to see 988 avoided if we could.”

Instead, Gebbia hopes individuals will receive adequate mental health support prior to ever being in a crisis and needing the lifeline. However, there is no prerequisite to calling 988. The service is open to anyone, whether experiencing a crisis or not.

Despite stigmas and stereotypes, mentally ill individuals are significantly more likely to be the victims of violence than perpetrators

Another possible public misperception is that callers will be outed or have a professional arrive at their door following a call. However, there is no way for callers to be tracked, as 988 doesn’t enable geo-location sharing. The only information the mental health professional receives is that which the caller voluntarily shares.

Some stigmatized barriers like this are exacerbated in historically marginalized communities. For Black individuals experiencing suicidal thoughts or a mental health crisis, the commonly held fear of police arriving following a 988 lifeline call is ever present, according to Gebbia. This disparity in cultural adoption, access to care and equitable rollout is similar to the mobile response units cities are actively rolling out to appropriately respond to mental health crises.

This city-by-city rollout is to prevent law enforcement, who aren’t typically trained in mental crisis de-escalation, from arriving on the scene of a behavioral health crisis. Despite stigmas and stereotypes, mentally ill individuals are significantly more likely to be the victims of violence than perpetrators. However, these mental health response units aren’t always efficiently linked to the local 988 lifeline, a city-by-city logistical feat that Gebbia is hopeful will change.

Further work to address equitable access was taken just this month when the Lifeline’s LGBTQI+ pilot line became a permanent LGBTQI+ subnetwork. This addition, which comes with the option of connecting a caller with a counselor trained explicitly to support LGBTQ+ community members, is part of the lifeline’s efforts to serve specific demographics often experiencing a heightened risk of suicide, such as veterans.

“This social responsibility relies on all of us, including federal, state, and local governments, public and private payors, to ensure that life-saving interventions are continuously available as quickly as possible,” Dr. Dole told Salon by email.

Judging from these baseline measurements, year one of the 988 lifeline has been a success. More calls are answered, (45% year over year ending May 2023), while wait times have fallen from over two minutes. If the stigma of seeking mental health care continues to fade, it is likely more calls to 988 will be dialed, which means the workforce fielding these calls can expect a greater workload. As far as equitable reach and a sustainable workforce, mountable hurdles are ahead for 988 to become more than just a number and actually measurably decrease rates of suicide

“And Just Like That,” Miranda ruined Che for viewers

See if you can relate to this scenario: Someone who was once adjacent to your social circle, and who wasn’t quite your cup of tea, turns up in your life unexpectedly. It could be at a party, or the grocery store — wherever it is, you take a few minutes to say hello and realize they aren’t as terrible as earlier impressions led you to believe. Against all odds, this person may be growing on you. The more you think about it, maybe you realize your issues with them may not have had anything to do with who they naturally are, but who they turn into around other people.

What I’m suggesting is that our mass recoiling at Sara Ramirez’s Che Diaz on “And Just Like That…” may be misdirected. Perhaps – nah, let’s stop pussyfooting and call it like it is. Our problem isn’t with Che. It’s who Che became around Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon), a former fave who is acting out the worst version of herself in her 50s.

And Just Like ThatCynthia Nixon in “And Just Like That” (Craig Blankenhorn/Max)

This isn’t news to anyone who survived the first season of the “Sex and the City” spinoff, where Miranda distinguished her midlife awakening from that of Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker) and Charlotte (Kristin Davis) by cheating on her husband with Che, Carrie’s nonbinary former boss who hosted a podcast while identifying as a stand-up comic.

Miranda ruins moods.

I cannot sum up how poorly introduced Che was as succinctly as Vox’s Alex Abad-Santos, who describes them as “an assembly of blue-linked Wikipedia entries on ‘queer,’ ‘non-binary,’ and ‘podcaster.'” Che’s a polyamorous horndog full of swagger, flavors viewers enjoy in other shows — Kate Moennig‘s Shane McCutcheon from “The L Word” comes to mind.  But along with being sophomorically written in Season 1, Che’s main mortal sins were delivering a painfully unfunny set to a crowd heroically doubling over with fake laughter and busting up Miranda and Steve (David Eigenberg).

Neither of those was the character’s fault. The show’s writers failed Che at the comedy club in New York and fail them again at The Comedy Store in Los Angeles, where they pop up in the second season. The writers are responsible for their material, not Ramirez, although the actor reportedly worked closely with the “And Just Like That” team to develop their character.

But Miranda also failed them at nearly every major juncture before and since, which further clarifies with each new episode.

Hating Che is an easy sport. People wanted to throttle them for assigning Miranda the appalling nickname Rambo and diddling Miranda in the kitchen while a post-surgery, bedridden Carrie wet herself.

But, and hear me out here, have you considered Miranda’s role in all this? It’s not as if Che is some queer mesmerist who ensnared Miranda by forcing weed smoke down her stupefied pie hole. Miranda is the one who snuck back to the club where Che was performing in the first season episode “When In Rome…” She was the one who hit them with the opening line quoted from her workout water bottle.  

Ugh.

Miranda, in her 50s, is a walking, talking strap-on awkwardly drooped over granny panties. 

A hop and skip from New York to Los Angeles later, Miranda wrecks Che’s sitcom pilot shoot by sneaking a phone into the studio and leaving the ringer on, which quite predictably pierces the silence engulfing a tender TV moment and murders it cold.

There are different ways to look at this scene, depending on how much you detest Che. Their hate club may point to it as observable proof of their self-centeredness which, duh. They’re a performer trying to break into Hollywood. Find me one of those who isn’t nursing a starved ego, and I’ll sell you my unicorn.

Looking at it from another angle, Che is a person who has been grinding toward a goal for years only to have their shot compromised by their girlfriend’s insistence on prioritizing her teenager’s boo-hooty-hooing over a puppy love breakup. In Amsterdam.

Let me preface what I’m about to say by identifying myself as a tattooed person who appreciates the ease and comfort of full-coverage underwear: Miranda, in her 50s, is a walking, talking strap-on awkwardly drooped over granny panties. 

While this refers to a scene where Miranda toys with that kink before abandoning it to her relationship insecurities, there is no better instance of an image capturing everything that’s wrong with this character. Miranda cartoonishly struggles with a leather and chain body harness while wearing the finest from Target’s lingerie line, only to give up midway through and redirect Che’s desires with a dinner offer.

And Just Like ThatOliver Hudson and Sarah Jessica Parker in “And Just Like That” (Craig Blankenhorn/Max)

Miranda feigns being open, but she’d rather shape Che’s world to her liking instead of fulfilling the reason for her move to L.A., the purpose of which was to be in her lover’s world.

We used to appreciate Miranda’s rigid, pragmatic cynicism. Out of the original quartet, she was the person who kept everyone anchored to reality. Usually that made her the cloud that always threatened bad weather but the “Sex and the City” writers understood that sometimes a little rain is refreshing.

Now she’s another graying ween turning a tattoo artist into her therapist, or the spoiler in a threesome with Che’s ex-husband Lyle (Oliver Hudson). Once she yells about her charley horse what might have been a saucy turn degrades into an awkward limb pile because that is Miranda’s avocation. She ruins moods.


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I get the compulsion to blame Che for everything that’s still wrong with “And Just Like That” since the new season has yet to add as much dimension to other characters who deserve more expansion. Nya Wallace’s (Karen Pittman) entire personality is that flaming car GIF from “Waiting to Exhale.” Sarita Choudhury’s Seema Patel is worth spending more time with, but that was true last season too.

But if we resent Che for being more rounded out in these new episodes than they are, that could be because Che’s overall improvement makes Miranda’s obnoxiousness tougher to ignore. 

Che yelling at Miranda for derailing a scene they drilled extensively and were concerned about getting right seems shallow and ridiculous, but so is Brady (Niall Cunningham) and his failure to launch, a product of Miranda and Steve’s preposterous accommodation.

This week the Internet went wild over Steve’s angry man bod, glimpsed as he channels his rage into a speed bag installed in what used to be the bedroom he shared with his estranged wife. Whether this is just healthy expression or worrisome is open to interpretation. But from a purely physical standpoint, Miranda’s abandonment has done wonders for his fitness regimen.

Could that absence make us view Che a bit more fondly? Who can say. In any event, we’ll never be rid of Miranda. Carrie’s brunch observation about jism (which, though unappetizing, is consistent with this show) also applies to Ms. Hobbes. Carries says it’s “like an old friend that gets on your nerves, you know? I think I’d miss it if it were gone.”

Probably. But we may appreciate the people closest to her more if Miranda left them and us alone for a while to become their better selves — for all of our sakes.

New episodes of “And Just Like That…” stream Thursdays on Max.

 

Mental health experts propose new subtypes of depression. Will it actually improve treatment?

Like the name implies, a traumatic brain injury is extremely serious. But the damage can be just the start of long-term health problems. After a person experiences a traumatic brain injury (TBI), like a concussion from a sports injury, there’s an increased chance that a person will also experience depression.

In fact, it’s estimated that nearly half of people with a traumatic brain injury will develop depression within the first year. This is alarming given that 1.5 million Americans experience such an injury every year, with 230,000 people requiring hospitalization. Despite being common, the mental health effects can hinder a person’s recovery and be difficult to treat. Up until now, doctors have treated this kind of depression with antidepressants and cognitive behavioral interventions. Frustratingly, these interventions don’t always work.

“We’ve been thinking that maybe rather than using psychological or chemical treatments, we should be using structurally-oriented treatments,” Dr. Shan Siddiqi, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, told Salon. “We have some preliminary data showing that structurally-oriented treatments, specifically targeted brain stimulation treatments, seem to work for these people, unlike the other medical treatments.”

“We have believed for a long time that TBI after depression is somehow different, but we have never proven it.”

Siddiqi’s latest research, published this month in the journal Science Translational Medicine, suggests that the kind of depression that occurs after a traumatic brain injury is different from other types of depression. In the study, researchers propose the new subtype named “TBI affective syndrome.” The research adds more evidence to the belief that some psychologists, neurologists and psychiatrists have long held, but have found it difficult to scientifically prove: that there are many subtypes of depression. This new study could contribute to changing the way the mental health condition is treated in the future.

“We have believed for a long time that TBI after depression is somehow different, but we have never proven it,” Siddiqi said, adding that there are a few reasons why it’s been difficult for scientists to definitively demonstrate, such as limited technology. “What we had to do was identify clusters of symptoms that go together, and then see if they predict treatment outcomes. And it didn’t work. It turns out that symptom clustering alone is not good enough.”

Instead, Siddiqi said experts needed a “biological filter.” Thanks to updated imaging technology, he might have found just that, as detailed in the new study. Specifically, Siddiqi and his colleagues looked at brain scans from people with depression after a TBI, people who had depression without a TBI, and brain scans of people with and without post-traumatic stress disorder.

The researchers found that brain circuits associated with depression were activated in both people who had the mental health condition with and without a TBI. But by comparing the images, it became clear that the ways in which these circuits operated were different. The new imaging technique specifically looked at how oxygen is moving in the brain, providing scientists with detailed maps of the brains of 273 adults with traumatic brain injuries.

“The reason why the different way is important is because it tells us there’s a different entity happening, a different disease process,” Siddiqi explained. “With people with traditional major depression, these circuits are under-connected, there’s less connectivity in the circuits, and after a brain injury, there seems to be increased connectivity of these circuits.”

While that might sound like a positive change, Siddiqi said that’s not the case.

“Our study doesn’t prove exactly what is wrong with them,” Siddiqi said. “It might be that they’re trying to compensate for something and that’s why they go in the opposite direction — or it might be that they’re trying to work harder. There are a lot of possible explanations for which we’re not sure about, but what we can say is that they’re affected in different ways, suggesting there’s a different disease process going on.”


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In June, scientists at Stanford Medicine conducted a study published in the journal JAMA Network Open, also proposing a new category of depression, called the cognitive biotype, estimating that it accounts for 27 percent of depressed patients and that it is not effectively treated by antidepressants.

“Our findings suggest the presence of a cognitive biotype of depression with distinct neural correlates, and a functional clinical profile that responds poorly to standard antidepressants and instead may benefit from therapies specifically targeting cognitive dysfunction,” the authors concluded.

“One of the big challenges is to find a new way to address what is currently a trial-and-error process so that more people can get better sooner,” said Leanne Williams, the study’s senior author in a press statement. “Bringing in these objective cognitive measures like imaging will make sure we’re not using the same treatment on every patient.”

Dr. Carla Marie Manly, a clinical psychologist and author of “Joy From Fear,” who was not involved in either of the studies, told Salon via email that there is no “one size fits all” cure for depression.

“People often make the significant error of clumping all cases of depression into one category, but depression is heterogeneous,” Manly said. “Research continues to reveal what clinicians have long suspected: depression has many different root causes and manifests differently in each person.”

As a psychologist, Manly said it’s exciting that science is providing a “personalized approach” to addressing depression, and said she believes it will help support better treatments.

“Current research is homing in on subtypes of depression; this approach will support treatments that are fine-tuned to the actual root causes of the depression,” she said. “The target-practice approach to treating depression and other mental health disorders leaves clients frustrated and feeling broken due to the high rates of ineffective treatment and remission.”

Manly added she wasn’t surprised by the study that showed depression after a traumatic injury is different. Siddiqi said he hopes that at the very least, his latest study helps destigmatize depression after a traumatic brain injury.

“Since we found this, I’ve been telling my own patients about it, and they feel a little bit reassured by the fact that there is actually some sort of structural association of what they’re feeling,” Siddiqi said. “Now that we’ve localized the dysfunction, it’ll be a lot easier for us to figure out how to tailor that treatment.”

DeSantis wants to remove China’s trade status if elected president

If elected president, Ron DeSantis says “he would aim to revoke China’s permanent normal trade relations status,” according to Reuters. The Republican Florida Governor said as much during an interview with Fox News on Sunday, adding, “I think we probably need Congress but I would take executive action as appropriate to be able to move us in that direction.”

Per the outlet’s reporting, “The Senate voted in 2000 to grant that status to China as it prepared to join the World Trade Organization . . . The status is a legal designation in the US for free trade with a foreign nation.” Calling China “the No 1 geopolitical threat this country faces,” the presidential hopeful is up against Trump in the next election, “who leads the Republican field currently in the polls with DeSantis a distant second.” Trump has said “he would give China a 48-hour deadline to get out of what sources familiar with the matter say is a Chinese spy facility on the island of Cuba 90 miles (145 km) off the U.S. coast.” 

“We’re going to have a new commitment to hard power in the Indo-Pacific. At the end of the day, what China respects is strength,” DeSantis said during his interview with Fox News. “If you’re showing strength and we have hard power to back it up, they’re going to be much less aggressive. My fear is, under Biden, his weakness is really inviting China to do more.” Weighing in on China via Truth Social on Saturday, Trump seemed to be in line with his opponent, saying, “We have a corrupt, incompetent leader in Biden — He has taken millions of dollars from other countries like China. He is totally compromised!”

 

“Mocktail” no more: Why bartenders want to change what we call non-alcoholic drinks

In the not-so-distant past, ordering a non-alcoholic drink at a bar or restaurant usually amounted to nothing more than seltzer combined with some sort of saccharine — often inexplicably blue — syrup. The two liquids wouldn’t be mixed in any sort of meaningful manner, so you’d be left with a flat, dull seltzer and a pool of sludge in the bottom of your glass . . . yum? 

Ordering them was often an ordeal as well, one that required requesting a cocktail and then saying “. . . um, but could it come without the liquor?” You’re not a child at an all-inclusive resort trying to get a tropical piña colada to sip on in the pool. You’re an adult trying to order a drink. It shouldn’t be this challenging. 

However, this is thankfully changing. According to NielsenIQ, a data analytics company, the market for nonalcoholic beer, wine and spirits grew more than 20% last year and more than 120% over the last three years. The market now sees almost $400 million in annual sales, and with that newfound prevalence, there are definitely better options for a spiritless cocktail, but a big question still remains: What should those beverages be called? 

You’re an adult trying to order a drink. It shouldn’t be this challenging. 

Monikers like “mocktail” and “virgin” have long been standbys, but as bartenders across the country are becoming increasingly intentional about the non-alcoholic beverages they serve — and customers are becoming more intentional about how and what they drink — beverage professionals say it may be time to consider naming alternatives. 

“I think that the industry may be moving away from the term ‘mocktail’ probably because people are now taking non-alcoholic offerings just as seriously as alcoholic options,” said Allie Ballin, co-owner of the Wildset Hotel and Ruse Restaurant. “Now, ‘mocktails’ are just as thoughtfully created as cocktails, and craft brewing and wineries are adding quality NA options to their arsenal.” 

This sentiment is echoed by James Simpson, the beverage director and partner in Destination Unknown Restaurants, a D.C.-based restaurant. He told Salon Food that the word “mocktail” conveys a knock-off of something — which was unfortunately the standard in the industry for a long time — however, he has found “that the rise in the popularity of non-alcoholic drinks has given us more room to make beverages without alcohol and put them right on the cocktail menu alongside alcoholic cocktails.” 


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Of course this isn’t a brand new idea; Julia Momose — A Chicago-based bartender, mixologist and the creative director of Kumiko, a Japanese dining bar —told Michelin in 2018 that she would “like to petition that we cease referring to the non-alcoholic drinks we serve as ‘mocktails’ and assign a name more befitting the care and the skill that goes into the beverage.” However, it’s one that is certainly gaining popularity in tandem with the development of non-alcoholic beverage programs, like the one at ilili in New York City. 

“Words are very important in shaping our guest experience, so from the inception of ilili’s NA program, we embraced and taught ‘soft cocktail’ over ‘mocktail,” said the restaurant’s beverage director, Chris Struck, who continued saying that the latter was a term best saved “for a list of Shirley Temple-esque drinks that might be served at a middle school talent show.”

As Struck said, changing the naming conventions around non-alcoholic drinks is often an exercise in hospitality. 

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Elizabeth Parker, who is the general manager of D.C.’s Lutèce, joined the team back in May 2022 while feeling “disenchanted by finding little or no engaging beverage options when dining out,” which resulted in the beverage program growing exponentially since. According to Parker, the restaurant’s Sans Alcohol program features selection of alcohol-free spirits, bitters and botanicals to create seasonal non-alcoholic cocktail menus, which includes drinks like the Jalisco Heartbreaker, made with Spiritless Jalisco 55 (a popular tequila alternative which, per Lutèce bartender Allison Desy, has ” has wonderful ginger and vanilla notes”), rosemary, hibiscus tea and bubbly club soda. 

The menu also allows bartenders the ability to make non-alcoholic versions of classic cocktails like negronis, Manhattans, old fashioneds and Apérol-esque spritzes. 

“Diners shouldn’t need to sacrifice the creativity, complexity and social inclusion of craft cocktails just because they don’t want the alcohol,” Parker said. Furthermore, she notes the intentionality and the fact that it’s not some sort of ephemeral venture, stating “This section of our menu was not developed for Dry January, Sober October or No-vember. We champion creating delicious cocktails with or without alcohol year round for all of our guests to pair with our menu, augment their dining experience and most importantly — to enjoy!” 

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Will Patton, the beverage director at Bresca and Jônt, speaks to the importance of the hospitality aspect

“We champion creating delicious cocktails with or without alcohol year round for all of our guests to pair with our menu, augment their dining experience and most importantly — to enjoy!”

“One of the staples of elevated dining is never say ‘no’ to a guest. So if someone doesn’t imbibe, we want to be able to ‘yes’ while not compromising our standards,” Patton said. “We are very proud of our cocktail selections so it’s important to take as much pride in our non-alcoholic beverages as well.” 

He points to the Citronnade a la Menthe, served at his restaurants, which is a “a play on the traditional mint lemonade served in French bistros. We prepare a cardamom lemon cordial and mix it with Moroccan tea before lightly fermenting for 48 hours. This doesn’t add any discernible alcohol, less than a kombucha, but does lighten the sugar content and add a spumante amount of fizz.”

As someone who is currently abstaining from alcohol, I’m agnostic over what to call these carefully-crafted beverages. Spirit-free, zero-proof, soft cocktail, whatever — just don’t call it a Shirley Temple (though I’ll never turn down some grenadine in my drink).

Thanks for nothing, DEA. Fifty years later, drugs are deadlier and more abundant than ever

As of this week, the United States has “enjoyed” half a century under the thumb of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), a wing of the Department of Justice established in 1973 by former President Richard Nixon. Instead of truly addressing the deepening drug problem in the U.S., the DEA has worsened public health outcomes related to drug use, promoted racially stigmatizing policies, stomped on civil liberties and burned stacks of cash in a vain effort to control the uncontrollable.

There’s no denying the drug situation in the U.S. is dire. Approximately 1 million people have died of overdoses since 1999, many of these deaths driven by powerful opioids like illicit fentanyl and its many analogs. Nonetheless, polydrug use — the mixing of multiple substances — is a far more lethal combination than any drug on its own, as well as the true underbelly of this drug crisis disaster.

Despite decades of increased funding, more seizures and more policing, the DEA cannot seem to make a dent in this crisis. The body count from overdoses continues to rise, and there’s no end to the flow of drugs into the U.S.

In fact, the situation seems to be intensifying, given that many drug mixtures sold as “heroin” now include the animal tranquilizer xylazine, which can incapacitate users for up to eight hours and generate horrific skin lesions. Recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicates a 276% increase in overdose deaths in which xylazine was detected between January 2019 and June 2022.

While xylazine has been on the radar of some drug policy experts for years, the DEA only recently seemed to notice this growing issue. Its response has been more of the same policing tactics that, regardless of the substance, have gotten us nowhere in the last five decades.

With few exceptions, every illicit drug sold on the streets has medical value in the right context.

In fairness, the agency doesn’t really have the necessary tools available to accomplish tackling the overdose crisis. Addiction and chaotic drug use are inherently health issues. Trying to wedge them under the purview of law enforcement is thus a fool’s errand. (The same goes for policing abortion and gender-affirming health care.) In light of the stark failures of the drug war, it’s clearly time to abolish the DEA and invest in public health strategies that are actually effective.

Disrupting the narcotics supply with guns drawn, drug-sniffing dogs snarling and helicopters circling doesn’t incentivize anyone to stop using drugs. But it does generate chaos that increases the risk of death, to say nothing of the civilians who regularly die in botched drug raids. None of this will ever discourage someone with a serious drug problem to stop using — just like it would be absurd to address rising diabetes and obesity cases by jailing people who artificially spike their blood sugar.

The kernel of the DEA’s authority rests on the puritanical view that some drugs are “good,” while others are “bad.” Not only is this a deeply moralistic view, but also it’s an unscientific one. With few exceptions, every illicit drug sold on the streets has medical value in the right context. Cocaine is useful as a topical anesthetic in nasal surgeries; methamphetamine is prescribed for narcolepsy, ADHD and extreme obesity; and fentanyl is used daily in hospitals across the country for surgery and cancer pain. It’s not the chemicals themselves that are the issue, but rather how they’re applied.

This bizarre logic doesn’t only lack scientific rigor: It has real-world implications for how the DEA operates and who it operates against.

The DEA was inaugurated not long after the passage of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), a contradictory piece of legislation that categorizes drugs into “schedules” based on their perceived harms and medical use. Heroin is Schedule 1, which indicates it has a high level of “abuse potential” and zero medical value. Morphine, the naturally-occurring painkiller widely used in hospitals, is Schedule 2, because although it can be as addictive and deadly as heroin, it’s seen as having some medical value under a doctor’s guidance.

Psychedelics like MDMA (sometimes called ecstasy or molly) and psilocybin mushrooms are all Schedule 1, despite a growing body of research that these drugs have broad therapeutic value. Marijuana, too, is Schedule 1 despite the fact that THC, the active ingredient in cannabis, has been a prescription drug, approved by the Food and Drug Administration, since the 1980s.

Tobacco and alcohol, two of the most destructive and deadly drugs on the planet, are not scheduled — at all. Despite millions of annual deaths attributed to smoking and drinking — tobacco alone kills 8 million people globally every year, according to the World Health Organization — these drugs don’t garner the same scrutiny as others. This is one example of how the CSA, the backbone of the DEA’s authority, is riddled with logical errors, arbitrary exclusions and poor quantification of perceived harms.


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This bizarre logic doesn’t only lack scientific rigor: It has real-world implications for how the DEA operates and who it operates against. Not only does this have a trickle-down effect on local police departments by loading their priorities to focus on drugs at the expense of preventing other crimes and arming them with military-grade equipment, but also these policies have been largely exported across the planet, creating global health inequities that target some groups of people above others.

Low-income neighborhoods and communities of color have long been disproportionately targeted by what Nixon dubbed the “War on Drugs.” Speaking with journalist Dan Baum in 1994, John Ehrlichman, the Watergate co-conspirator who served as one of Nixon’s key drug war architects, left nothing to the imagination as to why this drug policy was implemented:

“The Nixon campaign in 1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two enemies: the antiwar left and Black people. You understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make it illegal to be either against the war or Black, but by getting the public to associate the hippies with marijuana and Blacks with heroin, and then criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid their homes, break up their meetings and vilify them night after night on the evening news. Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we did.”

Civil rights attorney and author Michelle Alexander describes this brutal campaign that has relished in racial profiling and mass incarceration as “the New Jim Crow,” writing in her book of the same title that “African Americans are not significantly more likely to use or sell prohibited drugs than whites, but they are made criminals at drastically higher rates for precisely the same conduct.”

The sentencing disparities for crack cocaine versus powdered cocaine are only one example of this bias in action. Nkechi Taifa, president of the social justice advocacy firm the Taifa Group, described the situation succinctly writing for the Brennan Center for Justice:

“Since the late 1980s, a combination of federal law enforcement policies, prosecutorial practices and legislation resulted in Black people being disproportionately arrested, convicted and imprisoned for possession and distribution of crack cocaine. Five grams of crack cocaine — the weight of a couple packs of sugar — was, for sentencing purposes, deemed the equivalent of 500 grams of powder cocaine; both resulted in the same five-year sentence. Although household surveys from the National Institute for Drug Abuse have revealed larger numbers of documented white crack cocaine users, the overwhelming number of arrests nonetheless came from Black communities who were disproportionately impacted by the facially neutral, yet illogically harsh, crack penalties.”

This gulf was slightly addressed by the 2010 Fair Sentencing Act, but the law was still riddled with disparities, simply reducing the ratio of punishment from 100:1 to 18:1. The American Civil Liberties Union described this as a “compromise” that “reflects outdated and discredited assumptions about crack cocaine. Because crack and powder cocaine are two forms of the same drug, there should not be any disparity in sentencing between crack and powder cocaine offenses — the only truly fair ratio is 1:1.”

The law wasn’t even retroactively applied until the 2018 First Step Act was passed, which means this reform didn’t do much to help anyone arrested for crack cocaine before 2010.

Despite similar drug policy reforms, especially the legalization of cannabis and psychedelics in some states, echoes of Nixon-era drug war strategies are creeping back up across the country, even in states controlled by Democrats. This includes drug homicide laws, in which individuals who sell or share drugs with someone who dies from them, are charged with murder. Even “progressive” Colorado recently adopted such a law, though Wyoming and Utah rejected similar bills.

The most effective way to address a rotten system is to eradicate it, not attempt to reform it.

While the DEA isn’t responsible for sentencing, it is responsible for enforcing these disparities. The most effective way to address a rotten system is to eradicate it, not attempt to reform it. We know from decades of experience that criminalization really never stops certain activities; it merely facilitates underground markets that are far more dangerous. In other words, the drug war amplifies the hazards of drugs. One of these cause-and-effect relationships is known as the Iron Law of Prohibition, which posits that when psychoactive substances are prohibited, they will become more potent and thus easier to smuggle due to their lesser volume. Fentanyl, for example, is potent in low dosages, making it much easier to transport across borders than heroin or opium, which is why we will likely never be rid of it.

The Iron Law can also be demonstrated in the proliferation of moonshine over beer and wine during nationwide alcohol prohibition more than a century ago. This “experiment” in trying to ban booze is largely judged by historians and drug policy experts as an abject failure, especially given its repeal in 1933. But it doesn’t matter what drug it is — the Iron Law will still incentivize more potent narcotics in the face of stricter penalties.

There’s good evidence to suggest that the DEA both understands this dynamic and is aware of its own impotence against drug cartels. Its leadership knows it cannot hope to unravel underground markets with more of the same badge and gun strategies. In a 2000 interview with Frontline, Robert Stutman said, “We, as a nation, should have learned the lesson a long time ago that you cannot depend on law enforcement to solve the [drug] problem.” The retired special agent for the DEA added that “interdiction strategies, of all of the strategies, is the most foolhardy because it literally takes money and throws it against the wind.”

“We, as a nation, should have learned the lesson a long time ago that you cannot depend on law enforcement to solve the [drug] problem.”

What Stutman didn’t mention is that it would, in fact, be antithetical to the DEA’s own interests of self-preservation to win the drug war — if victory were even a possibility. With more than $1 trillion spent on the drug war since 1971, and the DEA’s ever-increasing budget, currently some $3.28 billion per year, there’s a lot of cash at stake. Winning would mean the DEA would be out of a job.

Victory would also mean less opportunity for the DEA to skim off millions of dollars via drug money laundering schemes, such as in 2015, when a Justice Department report revealed that DEA agents were attending lavish sex parties funded by Colombian drug cartels. José Irizarry, a disgraced former DEA agent now serving a 12-year federal prison sentence after confessing to involvement in the scheme, told the Associated Press (AP) last year that DEA agents are well aware they cannot make a dent in the drug trade.

“The drug war is a game,” Irizarry told the AP. “It was a very fun game that we were playing.”

In the fallout of the scandal, the Justice Department’s Office of Inspector General began an external probe into the agency in 2021, and it is currently scrutinizing whether DEA director Anne Milgram improperly awarded $4.7 million in no-bid contracts to hire past associates.

This barely scratches the surface of scandals at the DEA, including the disastrous Operation Fast and Furious, in which guns were sold to straw purchasers in an attempt to track them to Mexican drug cartel leaders. Unsurprisingly, the agencies lost track of the weapons, many of which were eventually used in violent crimes. Also, for 15 years, the DEA violated the Constitution via warrantless spying on the phone calls of domestic citizens. It was only after Reuters and the New York Times revealed this program that it was stopped in late 2013. The agency regularly conducts wide-scale, unconstitutional dragnets, such as building a national network of license plate scanners to spy on drivers.

“The drug war is a game. It was a very fun game that we were playing.”

But these sorts of scandals only scratch the surface of the violence that the DEA has left in its wake. It rarely, if ever, takes responsibility when its intelligence operations result in the deaths of dozens, or even hundreds, of people. For example, a joint investigation by ProPublica and National Geographic examined the DEA’s outsized role in a 2011 massacre in Allende, Mexico. The agency’s shoddy handling of intelligence is likely what led to cartels murdering an estimated 300 people in the small ranching town near the U.S.-Mexico border.

These incidents, which are hardly anomalies or scandals in the distant past, amount to the broader “collateral damage” that occurs when coercing other countries to join us in our drug war — or risk having armed DEA agents on their doorsteps. Horace Bartilow of the University of Kentucky and Kihong Eom of Kyungpook National University wrote in Foreign Policy Analysis in 2009 that “the DEA has often encouraged Latin American governments to militarize the drug war, consequently creating an environment in which the drug trade and the accompanying violence and human rights violations continue to increase.”

The DEA’s use of violence and fear, its tactical disruption of communities, its mishandling of budgeting — all in a fruitless attempt to wage a war its leadership knows is unwinnable — do not depict a bureau that is competent or effective. Half a century later, we have the worst drug crisis in American history, and the primary organization tasked with handling it is instead squandering funds better spent on harm reduction while protecting systemic inequality.

Is the alternative to a corrupt, useless organization like the DEA to let illicitly-manufactured drugs swamp our communities? Of course not. This is a false dichotomy. Public health experts advocate for a public health-centered approach incorporating addiction treatment on demand, which must be voluntary, and broad access to addiction medications like buprenorphine and methadone is critical. Harm reduction services, which run the gamut from syringe access to naloxone distribution to supervised consumption, are all important stop gaps to preventing death.

None of these strategies will totally eliminate drug use in the U.S. — but this isn’t possible in the first place. If the level of policing we have now could stop drug use, it would have made an impact already. When every metric is trending in the opposite direction, it’s time to admit that the immense focus on supply instead of demand isn’t helping.

If the level of policing we have now could stop drug use, it would have made an impact already.

In fact, it’s making things worse, quite like putting out fires with gasoline. We know there’s strong evidence to suggest that drug busts actually increase the risk of fatal overdose rather than decreasing them, and it’s far from a fringe belief to advocate for alternative approaches. Last month, a group of United Nations experts appointed by the Human Rights Council called for an end to the War on Drugs, arguing that this “conflict” doesn’t address drugs, but rather targets people.

“The international community must replace punishment with support and promote policies that respect, protect and fulfill the rights of all,” the policy experts said in a statement. “We urge member states and international bodies to supersede their current drug policies with ones grounded in the principles of the application of a comprehensive, restorative and reintegrative justice approach. Effective, community-based, inclusive and preventive measures are equally important.”

It’s hardly the first time members of the U.N. have made such policy proposals. Last year, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres urged the adoption of “science-based treatment and support services for drug users [treating] them as victims who need treatment rather than punishment, discrimination and stigma.”

Bodily autonomy doesn’t only apply to reproductive freedom, the right to identify as one pleases or access to clean air and water. It also includes what chemicals you put inside your body. In 2016, at the 30th Special Session of the General Assembly on the World Drug Problem, Sanho Tree, a fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies who directs its drug policy project, made it clear how the Drug War is a human rights violation:

We’re going to look back someday — or at least the next generation will look back — and ask why did you ever go around incarcerating human beings for what they do to their own bodies? It’s a profoundly absurd concept. Where in the Constitution of the United States does it say the government has the right to kick down your bedroom door and throw you into prison for something that you do with your own body, absent harm to anyone else?

There’s a sovereignty of the corpus. Your body belongs to you. You were born a free and independent human being. You’re not a subject of a king. You’re not property of a state. And what you choose to do with your lungs, with your veins, with your brain, with your mouth, with your stomach or any other orifice, either recreationally, sexually or anything else, absent harm to others, should be your own business. Because if you don’t own your body, what do you own?

At nearly every turn, the DEA violates these basic principles of sovereignty. If you add up the duration of every major war in U.S. history, from the Revolutionary War to the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, there are roughly 64 years of armed conflict over more than two centuries of American history. The War on Drugs is now 50 years old — and there’s no end in sight. It’s finally time to admit that it cannot be won.

California promises better care for thousands of inmates as they leave prison

California has agreed to improve health care for newly released prison inmates who are disabled, including through a series of measures that advocates say will help almost everyone trying to make the transition from incarceration.

Attorneys representing inmates say proper care during the transition from prison has long been lacking and can lead to homelessness. A recent study found that 1 in 5 Californians experiencing homelessness came from an institution such as prison or jail.

The state agreed in June to release inmates with a 60-day supply of their prescription medications, up from the previous 30-day requirement, and promised to replace medical equipment lost within the first month of an inmate’s being released from prison. Officials will also submit applications for Medi-Cal, California’s version of Medicaid, on their behalf at least 90 days before they’re discharged.

The agreement will benefit at least 11,000 parolees who have physical, developmental, or mental health disabilities, or nearly a third of the state’s 36,000 parolees, inmates’ attorneys estimated. But many of the provisions will aid most inmates being released, even those without a qualifying disability.

The improvements “should help shut the revolving door between homelessness and incarceration that prevents far too many people with disabilities from succeeding on parole and reintegrating into the community,” said attorney Ben Bien-Kahn, one of the lead negotiators on behalf of inmates.

California corrections officials declined comment.

The June agreement is the latest to come from a nearly 30-year-old class-action lawsuit brought on behalf of inmates and parolees who have trouble seeing or hearing or have mobility, learning, mental, or kidney disabilities. A federal judge found in 1996 that the state violated the Americans with Disabilities Act in its treatment of inmates and parolees.

Seven years ago, attorneys pushed the state to do a better job planning for the release of inmates with disabilities. They sent a demand letter to state officials two years ago that ultimately led to the agreement to change the state’s parole process for the disabled.

By moving to providing a 60-day supply of prescriptions, the state is promising to double the amount of medication it previously provided inmates upon their release, which should be enough to cover parolees until their health coverage kicks in. A federal receiver who controls the state prison medical system had made that change in February 2022, after earlier negotiations with inmates’ attorneys, and it’s now written into the parole policy.

The state agreed to release inmates with appropriate medical equipment, such as canes, wheelchairs, and walkers, and promised to replace lost or damaged equipment in the first month without charge.

And the state will generally require that applications be filed for inmates’ Medi-Cal, Social Security, and veterans’ benefits at least 90 days before their release, making delays less likely.

“Most people on parole and who they are releasing to parole are going to end up benefiting from this,” Bien-Kahn said.

About 95% of parolees are eligible for Medi-Cal. According to a recent state report, about 17% of Medi-Cal applications and 70% of Social Security applications were still pending when inmates were released, leaving them at least temporarily without health insurance or income.

“The transition from prison to parole is fraught with danger for all parolees, but especially those with disabilities,” the attorneys’ letter said in arguing for better care.

Among examples, it said a former inmate was released without his wheelchair, walker, and cane, and with no help applying for his Social Security benefits or Medi-Cal. He was left “at extreme risk of being homeless” after he had to wait several months after his release for coverage to begin to receive inpatient care for a neurological condition.

And Bien-Kahn said in an email that attorneys learned this June of a paraplegic with disability-related incontinence who became homeless after he was released without any planning, following more than four decades in prison.

Attorneys said both men were told there was no appropriate transitional housing available for them, another area addressed in the agreement. The demand letter cited a study that found “being released homeless or marginally housed puts ex-offenders in almost immediate risk of failure.”

To help fix that, officials agreed to assess the disability, medical, and mental health needs of every parolee, information that will be used to place them in transitional housing and provide services in the community. And state-funded transitional housing programs will be barred from rejecting parolees because of a disability.

This article was produced by KFF Health News, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation. 

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF—an independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF.

Home cooked: How lockdown helped me learn to love cooking as a new dad

The early days of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 was a real-life horror movie. 

One day I’m on stage, reading to hundreds of people, cracking jokes, having those weird unauthorized pics taken of me — you know, the ones where they catch your face all-twisted mid-laugh. We celebrated everything we could, bouncing from fancy restaurant to the filthiest dive bars we could find every week. Life was grand. 

And then the world shut down, and in an instant, we couldn’t go anywhere. Our coworkers became strangers as we flipped to Zoom. There were no more events, no bar-hopping and all fine dining came to a halt unless they figured out takeout. We were responsible for feeding ourselves. Yikes, because like most people know, I hated home-cooked meals, mainly because I hate doing dishes. 

My wife has always been a great cook. She can whip up a couple of mean pasta dishes, barbeque chicken and broil a hell of a steak. She’s made great Jamaican curry, jerk dishes and a serious gumbo. Wifey has dinner and lunch mastered. As far as me, I’m the breakfast guy. I can hook up an egg: scrambled, folded, veggie omelet, bagel sandwich, waffles, pancakes and all that. So, we weren’t entering the pandemic as kitchen pedestrians.

However, the lockdown turned us into culinary legends, at least in our opinion. 

My plain scrambles and folded eggs transformed into shrimp and lobster omelets with mushrooms, shaved parmesan and a spinach garnish. My wife found so many different ways to cook Chilean sea bass and crab cakes, and mastered the art of making sub shop-style cheese steaks. She also became a weekend grill-master in her own right by making enough lamb chops, steaks and chicken wings for huge Sunday feasts and was our lunch for most of the week. 

We also had fun experimenting with different blended cocktails made with fresh fruits and put our own spin on classic dishes like shrimp and grits and summer pasta salads.

Sure, we missed sitting at a corner table in one of our favorite restaurants in the middle of a great conversation over half-empty wine glasses when a server interrupts us and says, “The chef sent this out, especially for you.” But we stuck to the rules — no dining out, no hanging out, no going outside. 

We had a newborn baby at home and were dedicated to not getting sick. We scrubbed the groceries with Lysol weekly, washed our hands 2,000 times a day, and in the spite of the tragedy happening in the world, we become closer as a couple, but more importantly, as a family.

And it worked — because not only did we avoid COVID until well after the vaccine came out, but felt the healthiest we have ever been and saved a ton of money. 

Now, for most Americans, the early days of the pandemic lockdown seem like something that happened ages ago. We are back at restaurants, back overspending and celebrating after events. Everybody’s back in the world, but I’ll be lying if said I didn’t miss all of those gourmet dishes my wife and I created, in addition to the extra time we created for each other. No, I don’t want another pandemic, but I do wish we could find a way to recreate that feeling.