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Mike Pence flip-flips on “very serious” Trump indictment: “I can’t defend what is alleged”

Former Vice President Mike Pence told The Wall Street Journal that he cannot defend former President Donald Trump’s actions alleged in the Justice Department’s indictment.

Pence, who previously said he opposed indicting Trump, told the outlet that “these are very serious allegations.

“And I can’t defend what is alleged,” he said. “But the President is entitled to his day in court, he’s entitled to bring a defense, and I want to reserve judgment until he has the opportunity to respond.” 

“No one is above the law” the former veep added, while cautioning that “as Americans, you’re innocent until proven guilty.”

“The suggestion that there were documents pertaining to the defense capabilities of the United States and our allies, our nuclear program, to potential vulnerabilities of the United States and our allies . . . ” Pence said. “Even the inadvertent release of that kind of information could compromise our national security and the safety of our armed forces. And, frankly, having two members of our immediate family serving in the armed forces of the United States, I will never diminish the importance of protecting our nation’s secrets.”

While Pence was unwilling to back Trump — who defended MAGA supporter’s threats to “hang Mike Pence” during the Jan 6 Capitol insurrection — he underscored the Justice Department’s role in Trump’s arrest, which he claimed came “after years of politicization.”

Pence cited the DOJ’s part in “two and a half years of a Russia hoax,” adding that “it’s hard for me to believe that politics didn’t play some role in this decision” to indict Trump. The former veep also indicated that he feels Attorney General Merrick Garland, who appointed special counsel Jack Smith to head the Mar-a-Lago documents probe, should publicly disclose “what if any role he played, or his judgment played, in the decision to move forward with an unprecedented indictment of a former President of the United States.”

Like many other disgruntled members of the GOP — such as Sen. Lindsey Graham, S.C., and House Judiciary Chairman, Jim Jordan, R-Ohio — Pence bemoaned the parallels he and other Republican lawmakers have identified between Trump’s indictment and Hillary Clinton’s emails, sent from a personal account in 2016.

“I think millions of Americans are deeply troubled by this indictment, particularly given the fact that Hillary Clinton engaged in very similar behavior in the 2016 campaign and did not face indictment. And we’ve got to have equal treatment under the law in this country,” Pence told the Journal. “My bottom line is this: I think the American people have lost confidence in the Department of Justice, not just because of this, but because of, really, a long series of abuses that have come to light.”


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Pence, who is running against Trump in the Republican presidential primary, also stated that if elected, he would “give the Department of Justice a fresh start, with men and women who are respected on both sides of the aisle for their commitment to the law. And I’ll leave it at that.”

Longtime conservative Judge J. Michael Luttig, who advised Pence ahead of his role in certifying the 2020 election results on Jan. 6, rejected allegations of political bias in the charges against Trump.

“There is not an Attorney General of either party who would not have brought today’s charges against the former president,” Luttig wrote on Twitter. “He has dared, taunted, provoked, and goaded DOJ to prosecute him from the moment it was learned that he had taken these national security documents.”

Trump at any point since leaving office could have returned the documents, he wrote. 

“But for whatever reason, he decided that he would rather be indicted and prosecuted,” Luttig added. “After a year and a half, he finally succeeded in forcing Jack Smith’s appropriately reluctant hand, having left the Department no choice but to bring these charges lest the former president make a mockery of the Constitution and the Rule of Law.”

Judge greenlights Carroll CNN town hall defamation claim — and “implicitly rejects” Trump defense

E. Jean Carroll, the columnist who sued former President Donald Trump for sexual battery and defamation last month and won, can pursue a $10 million related defamation case, the judge who presided over the trial said Tuesday.

U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled that Carroll could amend her original defamation suit after Trump argued for its dismissal on the grounds that the jury had concluded he had not raped her, Reuters reports. The Manhattan jury found Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation and awarded Carroll $5 million in damages.

Though Kaplan did not elaborate on his reasoning, he said he may do so later.

“We look forward to moving ahead expeditiously on E. Jean Carroll’s remaining claims,” said Caroll’s lawyer Roberta Kaplan, who has no relation to the judge.

Trump lawyer Alina Habba, who was in Miami Tuesday as the former president pleaded not guilty to federal charges in the DOJ’s classified documents probe, through a spokesperson argued that the New York writer should not be permitted to change her legal theory in the defamation case “at the eleventh hour” to align with the verdict. 

Carroll pursued a revision to the defamation suit she originally filed in 2019 after Trump denied the rape to a White House reporter and claimed Carroll was not his “type.” Her proposed amendment would incorporate the jury’s verdict in the May trial as well as the insults Trump hurled her way during his CNN town hall the following day.

Trump did not attend the trial but is appealing the verdict, alleging that he would experience “extreme prejudice” if Carroll were permitted to “retrofit” her lawsuit by swapping “rape” with “sexual assault” 71 times.


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Though New York’s Adult Survivors Act, which granted adults a one-year window to sue over sexual abuse long after it had occurred even if the statue of limitations had expired, did not exist when Carroll filed her suit, she could make the case that Trump’s original comments caused her greater financial and reputational harm to justify greater damages.

“Judge Kaplan grants E. Jean Carroll’s amended complaint, implicitly rejecting DOJ position that Trump was acting in scope of employment when defamed her,” former U.S. attorney Harry Litman said of the ruling on Twitter. “Now falls to DOJ to determine whether to adhere to the Trump Admin position, given what it called overtaking subsequent events.”

The Justice Department had previously argued that it should be substituted for Trump as the defendant in the defamation case, which would bring an end to Carroll ‘s $10 million suit as the government can not be sued for defamation. On June 9, the department asked for permission to reassess its position because it had been “overtaken by events.”

“And that means adding Trump’s idiotic additional recent statements, which make the scope of employment issue far less important,” Litman added.

In his Tuesday order, Judge Kaplan gave the Justice Department until July 13 to complete the assessment.

“This is so insane even for Fox”: Fox News calls Trump “president,” labels Biden “wannabe dictator”

Fox News host Brian Kilmeade on Tuesday mistakenly referred to Donald Trump as the “president” of the United States before a Fox News chyron labeled President Joe Biden a “wannabe dictator.”

The former president delivered a speech at his Bedminster, N.J. golf course hours after his arrest and arraignment on 37 federal felony charges, claiming that the troves of boxes found at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida were rife with all sorts of personal belongings, rather than classified national security documents. 

“I hadn’t had a chance to go through all the boxes,” he said. “It’s a long tedious job. Takes a long time, which I was prepared to do, but I have a very busy life. I’ve had a very busy life. They make it more busy, because you’re always fighting.”

“These boxes were containing all types of personal belongings. Many, many things. Shirts and shoes and everything,” Trump added.

Ahead of the speech, Fox host Brian Kilmeade told viewers: “Let’s take in the last moments. This is the president of the United States about to address a crowd of reporters. Also the first time after being indicted on federal charges, first time in history.”

Briefly after broadcasting Trump’s speech, Fox aired a split screen showing Trump’s speech and Biden speaking at the White House.

“Wannabe Dictator Speaks At The White House After Having His Political Rival Arrested,” the network’s chyron said.

“This is so insane,” tweeted Vanity Fair columnist Molly Jong-Fast. “This is so insane. This is so insane even for fox.”


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“If there’s no corporate entity like Dominion to sue, there’s no low Fox News won’t sink to. No surprise here,” wrote Vigeland, the co-host of the “Majority Report,” referring to the conservative network’s nearly billion-dollar settlement with Dominion Voting Systems in a defamation suit pertaining to false election claims peddled by Fox. 

Former Trump White House communications director Alyssa Farrah Griffin argued that the politically divisive chyron was an example of fodder for the United State’s “adversaries.”

“America’s adversaries LOVE this,” Griffin tweeted. “They weaponized the information space to pit Americans against 1 another. The goal: make political rivals enemies-not just Americans w/diff views. It’s working. Trump made it easier. Dividing us within is easier than beating us on the battlefield.”

Shawn Fluharty, a Democratic lawmaker in West Virginia, called the network an “absolute joke of a ‘news’ organization.”

“Instead of working to save journalism from years of fake news clamoring, Fox would rather work to further destroy it,” he wrote. “Every real news organization, regardless of size, should be calling them out.”

“The chyron was taken down immediately and was addressed,” a Fox News person said in a statement 

Trans children need gender affirming care — and scientists say Republican bans hurt vulnerable kids

The United States is an unbearably hostile place for transgender children, and the problem is only getting worse. At the time of this writing, there are 20 states where trans minors do not have access to medical experts who specialize in trans health, even though they previously had that right.

In states like Arkansas, Idaho, Iowa, Alabama, Oklahoma and Tennessee, new laws have been passed that prohibit trans children from using bathrooms that match their gender identities. In North Dakota, the House of Representatives is working on a bill that would fine institutions which receive state funding (like public schools) as much as $1,500 for using pronouns for trans people that match their authentic gender identities.

“I’m sickened by the way politicians all over the country are using ignorant soundbites to score political points and then literally write policy based on those same sound bites.”

Naturally, supporters of these kinds of laws attempt to lean on some ostensibly “scientific” logic to rationalize their actions, and perhaps the most succinct summary of that defense comes from Florida surgeon general Joseph A. Ladapo: “While some professional organizations, such as the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Endocrine Society, recommend these treatments for ‘gender affirming’ care, the scientific evidence supporting these complex medical interventions is extraordinarily weak.”

The cruel irony behind these types of arguments is that their exact opposite is actually true: The scientific evidence overwhelmingly demonstrates that gender affirming care is safe and effective.

Rebecca Jordan-Young, PhD., the chair of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Barnard College and co-director of Columbia University’s Precision Medicine and Society Program, believes this is an especially important topic in light of the growing number of anti-trans policies sprouting up.

“I’m sickened by the way politicians all over the country are using ignorant soundbites to score political points and then literally write policy based on those same sound bites,” Jordan-Young told Salon in an email.

“Gender affirming care is a very thorough, complex process of evaluating a child in the context of their own physical mental health”

Take the American Academy of Pediatrics, the largest association of pediatricians in the United States and a group whose collective assessment on the matter is being cavalierly tossed aside by Republicans. According to Michelle Forcier MD, a professor of pediatrics at Brown University’s Alpert School of Medicine, the organization’s 2018 guidelines provide “a very nice summary and overview” of the conclusions reached by most medical literature on the subject.

“Gender affirming care is a very thorough, complex process of evaluating a child in the context of their own physical mental health and their psychosocial supports and environment,” Forcier pointed out. The recommended medical care does not — as many right-wingers seem to wish would happen — challenge a trans child’s understanding of their own body, with the obvious goal of “convincing” the trans person that they somehow don’t understand themselves as well as the anti-trans movement. As with any patient, doctors are encouraged to listen carefully to children and take their concerns seriously. Doing so is the only way to advocate for the child’s best interest.

“There is no evidence that risk for mental illness is inherently attributable to one’s identity of TGD [transgender or gender-diverse],” the guidelines explain. “Rather, it is believed to be multifactorial, stemming from an internal conflict between one’s appearance and identity, limited availability of mental health services, low access to health care providers with expertise in caring for youth who identify as TGD, discrimination, stigma and social rejection.”

If after empathetic listening a child is determined to be trans, the next step is gender affirming care. This is not — as conservatives claim — “a kid comes into clinic and says they’re trans, and you say, ‘Yes, and here’s a bag of pills and hormones or surgeries!’ That’s just not how it works in real life,” Forcier explained.

In fact, gender affirming care can look like any number of things. The main consideration is the patient’s comfort and health, which can be as highly individualized as a person’s fingerprints. For some children, all they will ever want is mental health care and a loving support network. Others will reach the age when doctors believe their bodies are ready to experience hormone treatments and other medical procedures and, if they wish to have them, their medical team will have their back. As it turns out, one of the reasons that conservatives are so adept at misleading the public into thinking that trans rights advocates want to perform sex reassignment surgeries on little children is because they wrongly lump in that specific procedure with all gender affirming care.

“One misconception about gender confirming medical care is that doctors are performing surgeries on young children for gender transition,” explained Sahar Sadjadi, a medical anthropologist and assistant professor in the Department of Social Studies of Medicine at McGill University, in an email to Salon. “It has spread as a result of the disinformation produced by the media hostile to trans children, as well as the broadness of the word ‘child.’ If you call a 17-year-old who decides to have a surgical procedure a ‘child,’ and then claim that children are being operated on, you can create a climate of panic where people imagine genital surgeries are underway on 5-year-olds.”

In fact, Sadjadi points out, to the extent that gender-related surgeries do occur on children, it is in contexts that the public finds generally acceptable, such as for children who are born intersex. This is in spite of the fact that those surgeries actually are opposed by many medical professionals, although the anti-trans laws in states like Texas and South Dakota explicitly allow them.


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Attacks on trans people are “part of a broader white nationalist ideology that promises the restoration of white patriarchal family.”

“Early surgeries to ‘correct’ the genitals of those children are not medically necessary, but are actually highly invasive surgeries corrected to make the child aesthetically conform to what clinicians and parents feel is the child’s gender,” Jordan-Young pointed out. “These surgeries are still frequently performed across the US, in spite of medical protocols that officially suggest any genital surgeries should be delayed, and in spite of international human rights organizations identifying these surgeries as abusive (based on long-term follow up data on how the surgeries actually affect intersex people).”

Similarly, when children who choose to have physiological procedures performed are suddenly cut off from them — whether by political persecution or more mundane (but no less harmful) developments like poverty or health insurance frustrations — their bodies as well as minds suffer immensely. One does not need to look only at children to see this.

“Depriving someone of their hormone replacement therapy affects multiple organs of their bodies from the bones to the heart and skin,” Sadjadi observed. “When it happens abruptly, drastic physiological and psychological symptoms could ensue. For many trans people, achieving a body that is socially recognized as the gender they identify with is psychologically vital, and in certain situations necessary for survival.”

Of course, when all is said and done, the debate over trans children’s medical care is not really about what is in the best interest of trans children. It is instead an attempt to effectively erase them from existence, to gaslight a generation of marginalized young people into believing their identities are lies — or else subject them to a world of overt persecution. For all of the talk from transphobes about wanting to protect children from bad science, the truth is that denying trans children gender affirming care makes no scientific sense except as part of a right-wing political agenda.

“Political abuse and scapegoating of trans children and adults by the far right to galvanize those afraid of the loss of familiar gender relations, have dire consequences for the well-being of individual and communities who now have to live under heightened threats of violence,” Sadjadi explained. “Such political and legislative interference in scientific and clinical matters and bullying health-care providers will have a chilling effect on research on gender affirming care and more broadly, the scientific culture and practice. But this is the goal of those who launch these attacks.” Sadjadi added that the attacks on trans people are “part of a broader white nationalist ideology that promises the restoration of white patriarchal family.”

Jordan-Young confirmed Sadjadi’s assessment, arguing that trans people of all ages “are being callously and viciously used as pawns in a game that’s not at all about the well-being of children. As Sahar has noted, it’s about protecting the white patriarchal family, by cultivating the fantasy that ‘others’ — anyone who violates those norms — can simply be eliminated.”

If one wishes to approach the subject from a non-political perspective, then the best thing to do is look at the evidence from trans people themselves. As Forcier concluded, “I’ve had 20 to 25 years of experience in terms of providing medical care. A [trans] child is thinking about this long before they talk about it with their parents. Oftentimes not all the time, some kids are pretty quick and spontaneous, but many young people think about this for a while before they bring it up to their parents. And then typically they and their parents might say, ‘Let’s go talk to a medical provider, or a psychiatric or mental health provider, to find out what this means for you.”

From there it is the beginning of a long journey that every child and their family must undertake together. It is a journey which people who care about trans children overwhelmingly agree should be regarded as private — meaning the government has no place inserting its subjective moral values into the equation.

The end result, very often, is a happy, healthy child who grows into a happy, healthy adult. If that is not the goal of medical care, then what is?

Trump’s defenders get caught up in the corruption

Happy Birthday Donald Trump. Today is the first day of the rest of your life. A mere lad of seventy-seven, you have a very exciting year ahead of you, running for president for the third time while facing multiple felony charges in both New York and Miami (and very likely Washington DC and Atlanta too!) And you will be the center of attention once again, just the way you like it.

Yesterday, Donald Trump was arraigned on 37 federal felony charges for his decision to abscond with extremely sensitive classified documents, store them haphazardly in his wide-open beach club and then refuse to give them back to the government when asked politely to do so. Unless the special counsel’s office has found some evidence that will explain this bizarre behavior, we will probably be left arguing about Trump’s motives forever. Was it a psychological need to hoard them or simply a product of his extreme mental disorganization? Did he see a monetary value in them or perhaps he had it in mind to use them as leverage for his political future, as he did when he extorted the Ukrainian president to help him sabotage Joe Biden’s campaign? We may never know why he did it, but the government doesn’t need to prove that. It’s enough that he committed a very serious national security breach and then refused to cooperate when they offered for over a year to let it slide.

There was some nervousness as to whether his calls to the MAGA faithful to protest would result in big crowds descending on the Miami courthouse and causing a confrontation along the lines of January 6. A motley crowd of fringe weirdos marched around dressed in costume and carrying huge Trump flags but it was very tame. The Proud Boys didn’t even turn up and they’re headquartered in Miami.

The GOP establishment has taken back the wheel and they are now driving the MAGA bus.

As my colleague Amanda Marcotte pointed out, this is likely because there really isn’t any logical demand as there was with the “Stop the Steal” rally. What are they going to do, chant “Hang Jack Smith?” Moreover, Trump followers don’t really protest, they gather in large numbers to party and see their Dear Leader speak, and he clearly had no intention of holding a press conference on the courthouse steps as another defendant might do. He rolled in with a large convoy and then sneaked out the back in his SUV, a vague apparition behind the darkened windows, just two blurry disembodied hands making the thumbs up sign.

And anyway, as Marcotte points out, while nobody seems to be eager to violently storm another government building at the moment, MAGA is operating on a number of different fronts these days. Republicans in Congress have jumped into the protest breach with threats of hearings and work stoppages and blocking of nominations as a way of showing their support for Trump. Activists are writing hysterical social media posts and the right-wing media is fulfilling its duty to the movement as well:

As you can see, Joe Biden is the “dictator” while Donald Trump on the right appeared before an adoring crowd at his Bedminster golf club to confess to more crimes and whine incessantly about the unfairness of it all. New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman was at the event and she reported:

[B]y 2021, as investigations began into his efforts to thwart the transfer of power, he had come to see another campaign as a shield against prosecutions. But that grandeur — and legal insulation — had vanished on Tuesday. Instead, Mr. Trump’s team tried to create the sense of a man still in power. In Bedminster, he spoke with the white columns of the main house of his New Jersey golf club behind him. The indictment became another backdrop for the ongoing Trump Show.

So far the GOP presidential candidates are unable to quit Trump’s Grand Pageant either despite the fact that their rival has now been indicted on very serious charges of endangering national security. Even those voters who really want a different candidate than Trump have to see that for the pathetic weakness it is. Talk about throwing one right over the plate.


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With the exception of former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie not one of them has offered a full-throated condemnation of Trump’s behavior. Most of them can’t even bring themselves to say “everyone is innocent until proven guilty and I will await the verdict of the jury.” They’re all rushing to defend him with shallow “whataboutism” and attacks on the “deep state” and alleged unequal justice that somehow is supposed to give Trump a get-out-of-jail free card.

Trump is actually in a weakened state but these GOP leaders have absorbed the self-serving Trump crusade against the “deep state.”

CBS News poll taken after the indictment was released on Friday found that 76% of likely Republican primary voters believe the charges are political. Only 12% believe the classified documents hoarded by Trump were a national security risk. And 80% said that a conviction would not preclude him from being president! A Morning Consult poll released on Tuesday found that Trump got a bump, from 55% to 59% in the wake of the indictment. 538s polling average showed a similar uptick.

We all knew that he could shoot someone on 5th Avenue and not lose any voters but it’s still a little jarring to realize that the Republican Party is so thoroughly Trumpified that they don’t even care if he is found to have stashed nuclear secrets next to the toilet.

It is a truism that elected Republican officials are terrified of that Trump base and that’s why they cannot bring themselves to defy him, no matter what he does whether it’s bragging about assaulting women, coddling dictators or inciting insurrections. Now he’s charged with serious violations of national security laws and they are once again falling in line behind him. But maybe that conventional wisdom is backwards now. Trump is actually in a weakened state but these GOP leaders have absorbed the self-serving Trump crusade against the “deep state.” They have convinced themselves it is true and/or beneficial for them to claim that Democrats have done the same and got away with it.

Here is supposedly serious national security expert Senator Tom Cotton, for example:

Some, like Senate Intelligence Committee member and former Trump critic Marco Rubio wring their hands over how terribly divisive it is and warn that Democrats have opened Pandora’s box by, I guess, failing to fire the whole Justice Department for bringing charges against Trump:

This is yet another sign of the ideological bankruptcy of the Republican Party as it goes into the 8th year of Trump’s dominance. It’s not that Trump’s crazy base is ungovernable and they have no choice but to go along if they want to keep their seats. The establishment has taken back the wheel and they are now driving the MAGA bus. They don’t have to do this. They want to. 

“That is not a defense”: Ex-Mueller prosecutor says Trump’s post-arrest speech was a “confession”

Former President Donald Trump on Tuesday spoke to supporters at his Bedminster, N.J. golf club hours after he was fingerprinted, booked and pleaded not guilty to 37 federal criminal charges in Miami, declaring that he had “every right to take these documents.”

Trump pleaded not guilty to charges that he illegally retrained national security information and sought to obstruct the investigation into the missing records.

“Whatever documents a president decides to take with him, he has the right to do so. It’s an absolute right. This is the law,” Trump declared in his speech.

That is not the law. While the Presidential Records Act allows Trump to retain “personal” records like family photos, it requires the National Archives to “assume responsibility for the custody, control, and preservation of, and access to, the Presidential records of that President.”

“There is absolutely no legal authority that supports the idea that a president could assert, for example, that classified records are ‘personal.’ That would still be true even if such records were declassified,” Jason Baron, former director of litigation for the National Archives and Records Administration, told CBS News, adding that Trump  “simply is wrong in saying that he had an absolute right to take official documents with him when he left office.”

Trump also claimed that “the president enjoys unconstrained authority to make decisions regarding the disposal of documents.”

But the Presidential Records Act says that the National Archives must sign off on any disposal of presidential records.

Trump during his speech decried his indictment as “the most evil and heinous abuse of power in the history of our country” even though more than a dozen of his former administration officials admit the allegations in the indictment are damning.

“There is not an Attorney General of either party who would not have brought today’s charges against the former president,” prominent conservative Judge Michael Luttig tweeted on Tuesday. “He has dared, taunted, provoked, and goaded DOJ to prosecute him from the moment it was learned that he had taken these national security documents.”


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Trump accused President Joe Biden of having his “top political opponent arrested on fake and fabricated charges of which he and numerous other presidents would be guilty, right in the middle of a presidential election in which he is losing very badly.”

Trump then went on to vow to do the same thing he accused Biden of doing – appointing a prosecutor to investigate his opponent.

“I will appoint a real special prosecutor to go after the most corrupt president in the history of the United States of America, Joe Biden, and the entire Biden crime family,” Trump said.

Former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, who served on special counsel Bob Mueller’s team, zeroed in on Trump’s claim that he had “every right” to take the documents he is charged with violating the Espionage Act over.

“Those statements that you just played are admissible as admissions, regardless of whether Donald Trump takes the stand or not. Those are admissions. So, that is–part of what he said is just a straight-out confession. It’s not a defense. It’s a confession,” Weissmann told MSNBC.

“He said, ‘I could take these,'” Weissmann later added. “When you are charged with the illegal retention, the illegal possession of the documents, it is not a good idea to say, ‘Hey, you want to know why I took these? Because I could. That is not a defense to that charge. That is an admission to the charge.”

Biden admin implores states to slow Medicaid cuts after more than 1 million enrollees dropped

Too many Americans are losing Medicaid coverage because of red tape, and states should do more to make sure eligible people keep their health insurance, the Biden administration said Monday.

More than a million Americans have lost coverage through the program for low-income and disabled Americans in the past several weeks, following the end of pandemic protections on April 1, according to the latest Medicaid renewal data from more than 20 states.

After a three-year pause, most states have now resumed checking which Medicaid recipients remain eligible and dropping those who no longer qualify or don’t complete required paperwork. About 4 in 5 people dropped so far either never returned the paperwork or omitted required documents, federal and state data show.

Xavier Becerra, secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, decried those numbers in a letter sent to state governors on June 12.

“I am deeply concerned with the number of people unnecessarily losing coverage, especially those who appear to have lost coverage for avoidable reasons that State Medicaid offices have the power to prevent or mitigate,” he wrote.

The Biden administration outlined several optional steps states can take to ensure everyone who still qualifies for the safety-net health insurance program stays covered. For instance, states can pause the cancellations to allow more time to reach people who haven’t responded. Health insurance companies that manage Medicaid plans can help their enrollees fill out the paperwork.

Some states were already choosing to take extra time. Though Wyoming began renewals in May, the state is being “deliberately cautious” and won’t drop people for incomplete paperwork until July or August, state Health Department spokesperson Kim Deti said. Oregon won’t start those cancellations until October.

Officials in other states have demonstrated no eagerness to slow the cuts.

About 10 percent of Arkansas’ Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program enrollees have already been dropped, nearly all because they didn’t complete paperwork. Arkansas is speeding through the redeterminations in just six months, while most other states are taking about a year, as HHS recommended. Despite outcry from some federal lawmakers and advocates, Medicaid officials in the state wrote on June 8 that they would continue to “swiftly disenroll” people who no longer qualify.

That could be disastrous, said Joan Alker, executive director of Georgetown University’s Center for Children and Families. “My big worry is that we could lose millions of families quickly. It’s going to be very hard to get them back.”

Becerra also wrote that he is “particularly concerned” about children losing coverage, although the administration doesn’t know exactly how many kids have been dropped. States don’t have to report numbers by age to federal authorities, said Dan Tsai, director of the Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services.

Tens of thousands of kids are losing coverage, according to data from states that shared it. In Indiana, of the 53,000 dropped in the first month, a third were kids. In South Dakota, more than half were kids. In Arkansas, nearly 55,000 kids were dropped in the first two months.

Becerra also urged governors to work more directly with families at risk of losing coverage. State agencies should team up with schools, faith-based groups, pharmacies, and other community organizations to help enrollees better understand how to stay on Medicaid, he wrote.

In most states, people who still qualify for Medicaid but lose coverage because of state errors or incomplete paperwork have 90 days to ask for their coverage back.

Some officials view the large number of paperwork-related cancellations as no big deal because people can reapply if they still qualify. But it’s not that simple, Alker said. Many people don’t know their appeal rights, and the grace period doesn’t apply to all adults in several of the hardest-hit states.

Alker said states will temporarily save money from not having to pay for enrollees’ care. But in the meantime, people won’t be able to afford their regular medications. Some will end up in the emergency room sicker than before, she said. “There’s really nothing good that comes out of these gaps in coverage.”

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Why MAGA didn’t riot at Trump’s arrest: Republicans in Congress vow to wage a civil war from within

In the days before Donald Trump showed up for his second arrest — his first on federal charges — there was a flurry of media concern about another January 6-style MAGA riot. Even though there had not been any violence in response to Trump’s first indictment on state fraud charges in New York City, this fear was justified. The online chatter in response to this set of charges was uglier and more violent than it was in the Manhattan case, with Trump fans promising “MAGA will make Waco look like a tea party” and “I want blood.” Major Republican figureheads joined in the hysterics, with failed Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake declaring, “If you want to get to President Trump, you are going to have go through me” and threatening gun violence. Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona tweeted, “Eye for an eye.” Trump had held back for a few days from the violent rhetoric, but as the arrest grew nearer, he started dropping hints that he would like a MAGA follower to hurt special prosecutor Jack Smith’s wife.

On Tuesday, a cranky Trump made his appearance in court while a crowd of redhats waved Trump flags outside, but there was no violence.

This is what some security experts expected, since the situation was very different than January 6, 2021. For one thing, MAGA suffers a much stronger fear of consequences after 1,000 plus of the Capitol rioters were arrested for their role in the insurrection. As Harvard’s Juliette Kayyem noted in the Atlantic, the electoral count vote was also “a one-time event that his supporters felt highly motivated to disrupt.” It’s not clear even to the yahoos who worship Trump how rioting at a courthouse would do much to derail the march of justice. 


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None of this means that all this chatter about “civil war” is irrelevant, however. There’s another, disturbing reason that MAGA didn’t resort to violence on Tuesday: Unlike on January 6, they’re feeling reassured that the GOP leadership agrees with them that it’s time to destroy a nation that has rejected their ideology. Plus, Republican leaders have a lot more power to achieve their goal of decimating American government from the inside, making the use of violence feel less necessary to MAGA activists who would like to see democracy destroyed.

That much was evident from the majority of Republican responses to the Justice Department’s indictment of Trump. In the struggle between Trump and basic principles of American governance, most Republican leaders choose Trump. Sen. J.D. Vance, R-Ohio, for instance, pompously declared that he will block all DOJ appointments in retaliation unless the Department of Justice drops the criminal case against Trump. “We have to grind this Department to a halt,” he insisted. 

The implications aren’t subtle: Vance would deny other Americans access to justice, in order to keep Trump from being held accountable for his crimes.

Victims of crimes ranging from fraud to theft to murder depend on the DOJ to handle the crimes against them. Just this week, the infamous Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski, died in federal prison. Before he was caught, Kaczynski, killed three people and maimed 23 others, some permanently. Vance’s plan is to cripple the DOJ’s ability to capture criminals like Kaczynski, all so Trump can commit all the crimes he would like without fear of consequence. 

Republican leaders have a lot more power to achieve their goal of decimating American government from the inside, making the use of violence feel less necessary to MAGA activists who would like to see democracy destroyed.

This unhinged GOP hatred of basic American institutions is not just about the DOJ and Trump. Vance is borrowing his strategy from Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., who has been pulling a similar stunt geared towards undermining the ability of the American military to function. Tuberville has been blocking all military promotions, all because he opposes the policy of supporting service members who need abortion. The implications of his behavior are also not subtle: He’d rather leave Americans vulnerable to attack from foreign armies than accept the majority view that women deserve human rights. 


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As I noted in the Standing Room Only newsletter on Tuesday, the nature of Trump’s crime in itself underscores how much the GOP is on board with the insurrectionist desire to tear down the United States, at least as it currently exists. That can get lost in the press coverage, most of which is focused on the play-by-play of court proceedings instead of how serious Trump’s actions were. But let’s be blunt: Trump made secret information about our military’s capabilities and contigency plans available to spies from hostile foreign powers. At least one of those governments, Russia, openly longs to end American democracy.

Yes, the indictment only mentions two specific instances of Trump showing the documents to people with no legal authority to see them, who all seem to be American citizens. But, of course, those are the people actually spoke to federal authorities. We can guess any Russian or Chinese spies who availed themselves of the Trump-granted access did not speak to the DOJ about what they saw. As former DOJ official Mary McCord told Reuters last year, “Even just retention of highly classified documents in improper storage – particularly given Mar-a-Lago, the foreign visitors there and others who might have connections with foreign governments and foreign agents – creates a significant national security threat.”

In 2019, when Trump was still president, a possible Chinese spy was arrested after successfully getting through security at Mar-a-Lago. She was deported last year, after serving an 8-month sentence. Another woman reportedly connected to a Russian oligarch, Inna Yashchyshyn, spent 2021 and 2022 kicking around Mar-a-Lago under a fake name, where she likely could walk into the ballroom or other rooms where Trump had stashed top military secrets. Most experts assume that the lax security and Trump’s eagerness to let in anyone who pays for a membership means there are other spies who just haven’t been caught. 

But why should Republicans care? Much of the leadership now fully agrees with the MAGA movement that the U.S. is an evil place. Why should they worry about foreign plots and schemes to destroy the country they hate? Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga. explained her views on this front in response to Trump’s arrest. 

Setting the gaslighting language about a “free country” aside, the gist is not obscure. This isn’t just a dislike of a Democratic president, but an argument that the current system of governance is illegitimate and should be usurped.

The current iteration of the GOP smells quite a bit like Vichy France, the puppet government that controlled France during the Nazi occupation. Some may have seen going along with the Nazis as survival, fo course. But there’s little doubt that Vichy France was rife with fascist sympathizers who were happy to see their democracy toppled.

Modern Republicans don’t even have the excuse of guns pointed at their heads. They’re backing a guy who attempted a coup and made military secrets accessible to hostile foreign powers, for a simple reason: Because they want to. Because if democracy means accepting the wishes of a majority of Americans that reject them, then democracy has to go. 

So really, there was no need for MAGA to riot.  Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., rushes forward to defend Trump’s crimes. Most of Trump’s supposed opponents for the Republican nomination are equally eager to argue that he should be above the law. There’s no Trumpian assault on American democracy, whether it’s attempting to overthrow our government or being the best friend of foreign dictators, that Republican leaders won’t back. MAGA knows they have powerful people willing to destroy American democracy from the inside. There’s really no reason for the ordinary redhats to resort to violence. 

On Trump’s federal indictment: A historic low brings hope

Last Friday, the Department of Justice (DOJ) publicly shared its indictment against the traitor ex-president Donald Trump for crimes connected to the Espionage Act where it is alleged that he willfully stole and then participated in a conspiracy to hide top secret and other highly classified government information about America’s nuclear weapons capabilities, war plans, strategic vulnerabilities, and perhaps even the identities of some of the country’s highest placed and most valuable “human sources,” i.e. spies.

It is also alleged that Trump shared those secrets with his guests and others at his Mar-a-Lago compound. Displaying utter contempt for the safety and security of the United States and its citizens, Trump kept the aforementioned documents in many dozens of boxes that were left unprotected in a bathroom, closets, the basement, a ballroom, and other easily accessible places. As documented by the FBI and other law enforcement, foreign intelligence operatives from hostile countries such as Russia and China have previously been caught infiltrating Mar-A-Lago.   

National security and other experts have described the potential impact of Trump’s alleged violations of the Espionage Act on the country’s security as devastating and without peer.

On Tuesday, Donald Trump was formally arraigned and arrested at a federal courthouse in Miami. As both expected and predicted, the event was a spectacle where a large crowd, which included both supporters and opponents of Donald Trump and his MAGA movement, gathered outside the courthouse and in the surrounding area. Despite calls for violence, both direct and implied, by Donald Trump and his spokespeople and other agents, no such large-scale incidents took place in Miami.

The indictment and arrest of ex-president Donald Trump for committing federal crimes is truly historic, a word that is often overused, but in this case, most certainly applies. The United States has experienced nothing in its almost 250-year history like Trump, a former president and commander-in-chief, and his alleged crimes and overall betrayal of the nation. This is true of his alleged violations of the Espionage Act, specifically, and his time in office more generally. If Trump receives the maximum punishment, he could potentially be put in a maximum security prison for more than 20 years. Given his advanced age, Trump would likely die in prison if convicted in the Mar-a-Lago case.

As these historic events unfolded last week, I was on “vacation”, which in this context means traveling home to attend to the range of responsibilities that we only children and striving members of the working class have towards our aging parent(s) and/or other parental figures and vulnerable people we love and care for. I promised myself that I would not watch or otherwise follow the news. I also promised myself that I would not even talk about the news or that Man and his evil scheming and plotting. Given that my mother, like many older Black people, watches MSNBC, CNN, PBS, and C-SPAN and other news and current events programming most of the day, keeping that promise to myself was not an easy task. My promise to stay away from the news was finally broken on Thursday when Donald Trump’s imminent federal indictment for crimes connected to the Espionage Act was made public.

My mother does not have the internet where she lives. The cell phone service is also unreliable. As a solution, I decided to go to the local mall so that I could access the internet and track these developing events in more detail. Like most malls in America, this one is now mostly empty. There are only two anchor stores left. Macy’s is struggling to hold on, but for how long? There is a jewelry kiosk and a small business that fixes phones. Of course, there is the obligatory pretzel vendor and a teriyaki fast food restaurant in the food court. Older people don’t even take their morning laps in this mall anymore; it is too depressing even for them.

As I sat in the food court watching the people nearby and surveying the news about Trump’s historic indictment (and waiting for that precise moment — which arrived very quickly — when the 24/7 cable news and other members of the commentariat inevitably ran out of ways to say the same thing ten different ways) I kept thinking about George Romero’s classic 1978 horror film “Dawn of the Dead.”

In so many ways, we the Americans (the political class, the news media, other elites and everyday people as well), especially in this age of democracy crisis and the culture of cruelty, are like those zombies, the undead ghouls, aimlessly wandering in the mall. Romero’s “Dawn of the Dead” was an incisive critique of consumerism and the false choices of capitalism and “the market” and how having access to more material things does not equal freedom or real human choice and self-worth or a good society. But Romero’s film was also a broader critique of an increasingly empty American culture that was and is experiencing an existential crisis of meaning and direction.Thus, the film’s now iconic dialogue and explanation for why the zombies flock to the mall even though they are dead: “Some kind of instinct. Memory of what they used to do. This was an important place in their lives.”

Even after at least seven years of experience with the Age of Trump, so many Americans continue to cling to the old order and its myths and lies about how the country’s democracy is immortal and forever, a “shining beacon” for the world, America is an “exceptional and indispensable nation” whose institutions are “strong” and where the “guardrails are strong” because of “law and order.” These delusions are particularly strong among the elites and professional (white) centrists and “institutionalists” in the mainstream news media and other areas of civil society and the public sphere who have been able to use their various forms of privilege to convince themselves that they are safe from American neofascism, the Trumpocene, the Republican fascists, and the other malign actors who are working to end the country’s multiracial pluralistic democracy. Ultimately, the rot that vomited out Donald Trump and his MAGA movement and this befouled version of the Republican Party and the larger “conservative” movement will not be cured or stopped even if Trump himself is put in prison for his many obvious crimes.

It is understandable and natural for good Americans and other decent human beings who believe in justice to celebrate and even feel some joy at the idea and increasing likelihood that the traitor ex-president and evildoer Donald Trump (and by proxy his MAGA cultists and other fascist and authoritarian loyalists and voters) will finally be held accountable for his decades-long crime spree.

However, among the mainstream news media and Church of the Savvy, the celebration and relief (and of course obsolete habits such as horse race journalism) has largely drowned out the much more important conversations about how the nation arrived at this tragic point where a supremely and obviously dangerous person such as Donald Trump could win the presidency in 2016 and be poised to do so again in 2024, not despite his criminality but because of how his law-breaking and other antisocial behavior makes him even more popular among the many tens of millions of people who still support him and the Republican Party.


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There were a few notable outliers among the mainstream news media who dared to emphasize the tragic aspects of Donald Trump’s arrest and indictment and how the country arrived at such a juncture.

At CNN, Stephen Collinson wrote:

Trump is due in court in Miami on Tuesday to answer a 37-count indictment that alleges he willfully retained classified documents after he left office and refused to return them.

His appearance will be an earthshaking, and even tragic, moment in the history of a republic that has endured for more than two centuries after being founded on the principle that no leader has absolute power or should be above laws that apply to other citizens.

Tuesday will be a grave day that could rip even deeper divides in an already estranged country, especially given that Trump supporters have already once resorted to violence in a bid to overturn the will of the people after the ex-president refused to accept his loss in a democratic election.…

Yet as painful as a presidential indictment will be for the country, a decision not to indict Trump for such horrendously careless treatment of classified documents would not just send a message that the powerful are above the law. It would also risk signaling that such cavalier behavior is acceptable – or at least is too difficult to prosecute.

At The Washington Post, E.J. Dionne reflected on how Trump’s actions speak to the moment:

In fact, Trump’s intrigues around classified material bring home so many aspects of what has made his public life so odious: his belief that the rules do not apply to him; his propensity for lying; his disrespect for the responsibilities of a president; his treatment of office as a private possession; and his view of foreign policy (and everything else) as a transactional drama revolving solely around himself.

Smith’s decision to bring charges challenges Trump on all these fronts. But our nation is at this tragic point in its history not because of Smith or Garland. It is rooted in a much earlier choice.

Trump has told us who he is throughout his life. The content of his character was obvious the moment he announced his presidential candidacy and brought into even sharper relief during the 2016 campaign. We got to this point because of the workings of our electoral system and because 62,984,828 Americans were willing to take a chance on him even though many of them knew he was flawed. Those flaws have come back to haunt him — and us.

In an attempt to gain some clarity and perhaps even benefit from a corrective intervention against my own reasonable and earned cynicism about what Donald Trump’s indictment and arrest for federal crimes really means (or not), I asked political analyst and author David Rothkopf for his insights. I have a great deal of respect for his level-headed thinking and experience.

There are many ways to view the Trump indictment. The wrong one is to see it as politics or more of just Trump being Trump. Trump put the national security of the United States at risk. He obstructed justice to hide it and to hold on to the documents he stole. He apparently, in the eyes of the Justice Department engaged in a conspiracy to do so. These are serious charges that have, in the past, landed people in jail. Whether Trump spends any time in jail, a conviction on any of these counts would, I believe, damage Trump’s standing even with his supporters. All that being said, another way to see this is the message it sends to the world. Finally, we are emphatically stating that no one is above the law in our society. Other nations, most other big democracies in fact, have seen their leaders charged. Finally doing so to a president in the US will underscore that this fundamental principle of democracy is being upheld. Finally, there are many leaders around the world—mostly unsavory ones—who declared themselves part of Team Trump. That is proving to be a big mistake. And this is only the second of four likely series of indictments he will face this year. It may be only the third most severe. For all those who say with certainty none of this will hurt Trump and it may help him, I say, “Nonsense.” We don’t know. We’ve never seen this. But I am glad we’re seeing it now.

Hope by itself is not a bad thing. Hope in a time of democratic crisis and other great troubles is essential if one is to escape. We the Americans will not escape the Trumpocene without such hope; learned helplessness and despair will lead to our defeat and the end of the country’s multiracial pluralistic democracy.

Encouraged by Rothkopf’s intervention, I have decided to hold hands with “pessimistic optimism” and the hope that Donald Trump (and the other members of his coup cabal and de facto crime family) will finally be held accountable by the law and punished for his many crimes against democracy and the American people. Pessimistic optimism rejects the gullibility and naivete that is being sold by the hope peddlers and others in the so-called “resistance” and the professional centrists in the mainstream news media and commentariat and punditry with their extremely premature cheers and joyful noise that “Trump is done for!”

In the real world, fascists, authoritarians, demagogues, and other evildoers such as Donald Trump and his ilk are very lucky with their crimes against society and human decency – which is how such people and forces rise to power. I remain deeply worried that Donald Trump will be saved in the end by some deus ex machina moment where he is snatched to safety once again, claims victory, and rides his indictment(s) and arrest(s) to a second term as President of the United States.

But for now, and perhaps for the next few days, I will allow myself the feeling that something does feel like it has changed in the Trumpocene where we the Americans may finally be closer to the end of the beginning of this national nightmare than we were even a few days or weeks ago.

Make the American flag great again

I’m just old enough to remember Republican outrage after Yippie leader Abbie Hoffman was arrested, in 1968, for desecrating the symbol of our democracy. Called to be dressed down by members of the House Un-American Activities Committee, he’d appeared wearing an American flag as a shirt. Decades later, surprised by seeing Joint Chiefs Chairman Air Force Gen. Richard Myers wearing a flag shirt on Memorial Day in Washington, DC, in 2005, writer, activist, and Yippie co-founder Paul Krassner made the obvious connection to Hoffman, who as the police led him away had been heard to remark, “I only regret that I have but one shirt to give for my country.”

Well, look at the flag these days: It’s ubiquitous, appearing not only on baseball caps and T-shirts (this Disney Mickey U.S. Flag T-shirt should be a collector’s item, at least in Florida), but on pins and bumper stickers, the union downward, all black, or clutched in a screaming bald eagle’s talons. The flag appears on guns and on NRA merchandise. And it flies at night and in rainstorms, “bigly” over banks and used-car lots and the whatevers and whatnots of strip malls because Congress eagerly loosened the rules of display back in the bicentennial year, 1976. Our flags are polyester now, said the lobbyists (with fists full of dollars), so there’s no need to lower them.

Flying the flag became an understandable mania after 9/11. So, the venerable Stars and Stripes flap away, 24/7, in all weather conditions, seldom if ever taken down with any ceremony, until they are faded and ragged. We’ve all seen them.

Where I worked long ago, some of us marveled at the mechanical flagpole outside the entrance to the building that hoisted and lowered the flag on a schedule from a slot near the bottom of the pole. At the end of the day, the flag would just be sucked in. We saw it as a perfect combination of heartless capitalism and faux corporate patriotism: they’d happily dispensed with the job of the person who once did that or, at least, that meaningful part of the job. You can imagine the manufacturer’s slogan: We took away the work of caring for the flag — but none of the patriotism! We made the connection: The company would, as technology allowed, also take away the meaningful parts of our jobs.

It was just a short hop, skip and jump to all of us then watching Donald J. Trump practically dry-humping the flag (“I don’t even ask”) with that hideously transparent smirk on his face, which seems to say, Vlad was right. They’re actually buying this! How many American flags, one wonders, has our endlessly disgraceful and felonious former president violated? If only the sullied flags could testify. Reasonable people of various non-despot­–supporting political stripes (you know, Americans) would be wise to reclaim the “Star-Spangled Banner,” the great symbol of our nation, from those who have used it far too long as a mere prop of chauvinism, that unthinking, excessive patriotism. (If you’re a veteran, I completely defer to your right to display the flag anywhere and everywhere.) As uncomfortable as it might feel at first, all of us should join our Republican uncles and third cousins once removed and fly the flag at home.

Why are those absurdly huge flags flying over that bank, grocery, and car lot?

We must reclaim our sense of duty to this always fragile democratic republic, imperfect as it is, lest it be twisted into something that looks awfully like fascism by performative super-patriots pumped up with grievances about others. A frightening number of people in what was once known as the Party of Lincoln, some even members of Congress, apparently have a deeper affection for the Stars and Bars or, rather, its battle flag. Other Trumpists stiff-arm salute a different flag, one representing an utterly evil movement inspired by our most shameful history — one of a myriad of basic historical and sociological realities that Ron DeSantis and others don’t want young people to learn in school because they might correctly feel ashamed of aspects of our history.

At some point around 1971, when Hoffman won his appeal from a three-judge federal court, I was also wearing an American flag dress shirt. There’s a photo in a box (which I now must find) of my very conservative father hugging me as I wore it, likely on my birthday. He may have bought it for me, or more likely my mother, a lifelong liberal, had. In any case, I don’t think I’d wear such a thing now, and not just because prominently wearing the flag has become a symbol for citizens who have a right-wing ideology.


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I have started flying “Old Glory” at home on special days, like today. It’s made in the U.S.A. (unlike my Rural King caps, which, like so much sold at Walmart and other bastions of so-called American pride, are made elsewhere). I’m doing it as a mild form of protest against what I see as its misuse adorning private businesses. During my childhood, I saw flags flying only over schools, libraries, the city hall and other civic buildings we shared and had stakes in as citizens. They were markers of our togetherness, of our social contract. I just want to show due respect.

The offense is to allow the flag to vanish into ubiquity and not be handled with care by children and other citizens.

Why are those absurdly huge flags flying over that bank, grocery, and car lot? You know why, and it’s not about patriotism. Let’s call it what it is: a hypocritical mercantile form of “patriotism,” a misuse of the red, white, and blue. If a supporter of book banning or voter suppression wears the American flag, they become a walking contradiction of terms. I’m flying the flag and reading more deeply about the history of the country because I’m getting older and acutely aware that our democracy is under constant attack now, from outright repugnant fascists (think, say, Steve Bannon or Roger Stone) to those who would like to sell authoritarianism as “illiberal democracy,” as Hungary’s “strongman” Viktor Orban markets it, making it a simulacrum of the real thing. It is what John Quincy Adams, fearing oligarchy, called “the smokescreen of democracy.”

One might argue that compared to the despot-admiring white Christian nationalists and plain old religious grifters in the Trumpist Party who ban books and fight their culture wars and have no interest in governing for all the people, our founding fathers were in spirit, if not always in deed, eminently “woke.” Consider that the next time a Republican who supports censorship or bad mouths the free press or pushes their personal religious beliefs on the rest of us invokes one of the founders. Using the flag in protest is quintessentially American; the flag cannot be degraded as its status as a potent symbol is being acknowledged. Those smarty-pants Yippies understood that. Burn it, sure, or wear it as a shirt if you’re hauled in to testify to the government on your “un-American” activities. As the Supreme Court has ruled, you have that right. But to wear it on caps and T-shirts saps its power (again, veterans are exempt from any criticism from the likes of me; if I were a veteran, I’d be wearing the flag every minute of the world, as my paternal grandmother might have said). But, generally speaking, if the flag is everywhere, it’s nowhere.

In the sixties, liberals and progressives burned the flag and wore it mockingly as clothing; in response, Reagan Republicans supersized it. That backlash made perfect sense. But given the right’s turn toward authoritarianism, to referring to their political opponents as “the enemy” and “groomers” and daily trafficking in other disinformation, it’s time for the rest of us to reclaim our share of the flag (and the founders and the whole notion of patriotism) — not as some sort of capture the flag game — but to teach our children and grandchildren the actual history of our country, the critical importance of the free press, the civics lessons many schools stopped teaching. The offense is to allow the flag to vanish into ubiquity and not be handled with care by children and other citizens.

Fly it on the official days, which I note tellingly includes Father’s, but not Mother’s, Day. (I think I’ll also honor Aug. 4, designated “Freedom of the Press Day” for one year, in 1985, and also my wife’s birthday.) Don’t allow our Republican friends and family members (especially Trumpists) to monopolize the most potent symbol of democracy the world has ever known, especially when some of them are working tirelessly to undermine it. Still, we do progress as a nation for all. Our flag does, after all, fly over a country that made Juneteenth a national holiday.

You’re misusing the term ‘trauma bonded’

Recently, a former Starbucks barista on TikTok described her employment experience as “lowkey” just “trauma bonding.” From dealing with “Karens” to rushing multiple drink orders or receiving requests like a breakfast sandwich as “extra toasted,” there’s no question that — as previously reported by the Guardian — many Starbucks employees have struggled working in a fast-paced environment that’s understaffed while facing verbal abuse from customers. But is that technically “trauma bonding”?

Describing a workplace as “trauma bonding” isn’t unique to this one TikTok video. The hashtag #traumabonding on TikTok has 206.2 million views. Another popular TikTok that recently went viral showed Kelly Ripa saying “work friends are crucial for your health,” to which a TikTocker interjects and says: “It’s called trauma bonding.” In the comments section, people note that the “worse the job, the better the friends.” Over the last five years, the search term “trauma bonding” has increased steadily in Google searches.

The term “trauma bond” was first coined by Patrick J. Carnes, Ph.D., the founder of the International Institute for Trauma and Addiction Professionals (IITAP), in 1997. In the paper, Carnes used it to describe the bond that is formed between an abuser and a non-abuser which creates a dysfunctional attachment style.

“What we see is highly addictive attachment to the persons who have hurt the clients,” Carnes explained. “The clients may even blame themselves, their defects, their failed efforts. The clients strive to do better as their lives slip away amongst all the intensity.”

Carnes said that this “highly addictive attachment” to the abuser is most likely to be experienced in domestic violence, dysfunctional marriages, religious abuse, cults and workplace exploitation. Today, therapists say that “trauma bonding” is most commonly used in clinical settings when referring to domestic abuse — and that it’s misguided to use it as a way to describe a bonding that happens in the workplace under capitalism. 


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“Trauma bonding is what happens when a person has been in an abusive relationship and they feel the need to go back to the relationship, even though they’ve been highly abused,” Dr. Joy Berkheimer, a licensed marriage and family therapist (LMFT) told Salon. “They’re in this cycle of the person pretty much professing their love and having them come back, even though they’ve been mistreated, even though they’ve been treated poorly.”

“Trauma bonding is what happens when a person has been in an abusive relationship and they feel the need to go back to the relationship.”

Berkheimer said when this happens, a person’s body goes through a “withdrawal,” as if a person was addicted to a drug. “Your body is almost telling you, the pain will go away if we just get one more hit,” Berkheimer said. “Your body is reacting so strongly.” Berkheimer added one difference between trauma bonding and Stockholm syndrome, which is when a victim identifies with and empathizes with their captor or abuser, is that the person experiencing trauma bonding knows that they are surviving abuse. “It’s so blatant in your face that being there is dangerous,” she said.

Psychologist Dr. Carla Manly, a clinical psychologist and author of “Joy From Fear,” told Salon that the misuse of the term “trauma bonding” is an unintended consequence of heavy social media use, where people tend to casually toss around mental health diagnoses and even provide ways to “diagnose themselves.” 

“Unfortunately, the trend of overusing or misusing terms such as ‘trauma bonding’ dilutes the meaning and significance of serious mental health concerns,” Manly said. “For example, when people on TikTok casually state that they are ‘trauma bonded’ with their coworkers due to employment issues, they are unknowingly using a term that is intended to describe a relationship where a victim is bonded to a perpetrator who has engaged in repeated, cyclical abuse.”

Indeed, Manly pointed out that a trauma-bonded victim can become “deeply attached to the abuser in ways that defy rationality” — perhaps not someone who would go ahead and vent about it on social media.

“The trend of overusing or misusing terms such as ‘trauma bonding’ dilutes the meaning and significance of serious mental health concerns.”

Berkheimer said people are likely using the term to describe a state of survival from something — like how people survived the pandemic. “But that’s not really the clinical definition of trauma bonding,” she said. “I guess you could be closer together if you all had to survive something together, you all had to watch something atrocious, but it’s not the clinical terminology for it.”

There is a sociological term to describe the bonding people feel after surviving a disaster, like a wildfire or hurricane, and how those affected often feel a unique sense of togetherness that they don’t experience in everyday life, which usually results in an abundance of altruistic behaviors. This collective sense of belonging can become something that people are reminiscent of years later, despite it being placed against the backdrop of horrific tragedy. This is called bounded solidarity, and sociologists pin the origins of it to “The Communist Manifesto” by German philosopher Karl Marx.

But in terms of trauma bonding in the workplace, therapists see this on the same plane as people overusing the word “depressed,” “anxious,” or “trauma.”

“As with other terms such as ‘depression’ and ‘trauma’ that are frequently misused or overused, the frivolous use of serious psychological terms harms our appreciation of — and ability to support — those who truly suffer from mental health concerns,” Manly said. “Although popular culture doesn’t intend to disparage or undermine those with mental health issues, it’s important for society as a whole to wake up to the significant downside of using serious mental health terms lightly and loosely.”

Toxic air requires social contract update yesterday

Last week’s hemispheric wildfire smog exposed just how unprepared we are for the climate crisis that’s already upon us particularly when it comes to the millions of essential workers that have no choice but to work outdoors often without access to healthcare or health insurance.

By Wednesday June 7, 75 million Americans were under an air quality alert with New York City’s air quality index hit 484 which is considered as “hazardous”. According to the American Lung Association anything above a 300 reading “everyone should avoid all physical activity outdoors.”

In the United States, where our founders found nature in the form of its wilderness so abundant, we’ve exploited our air, water, and earth-bound resources as if they were limitless despite uncomfortable evidence to the contrary.

Even now, as the limits in terms of breathable air become evident, commercial interests will do all they can to push back against any attempt to regulate their unfettered exploitation of these resources in the courts, in Washington and in our state capitals where their campaign donations buy access.

Last week’s Canadian wildfire plume was a continental scale disaster certainly visible from space that required a bi-lateral strategy as well as a cohesive and coherent state, county and municipal response that focused on mitigating the impact on the essential workforce as well as the general public.

NJ STATE WORKERS HOME EARLY

Here in New Jersey, Governor Phil Murphy sent state workers home early on June 7 “due to worsening air quality conditions” and was accused by a 101.5 host of being in an “alternate reality” because “everyone else … seemed to be dealing with it”.

Under this worldview, public sector employers should make sure that their occupational health standards do not exceed the non-existent ones throughout the rest of the economy.

Murphy’s action for state workers contrasts quite favorably from the essential worker’s perspective when compared to other public employers in the region. Across the Hudson, New York City had a disjointed response with some municipal agencies being pro-active in trying to protect those with pre-existing conditions in their workforce while others had to be prompted by their labor unions.

You think we could expect more from a city that continues to pay such a dear price for its failure to protect hundreds of thousands of first responders and survivors from the air quality fallout from the 9/11 WTC attack and clean up.

On June 7th the United For ALICE project, which advocates for low-income households, tweeted that it was workers in this cohort that had to work outside that were “especially at risk” if they suffered with chronic health conditions and inadequate health insurance coverage.

Charlene Obernauer, executive director of the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health, said that even some union truck drivers were working without the proper PPE in our region during the smog alert when officials were saying the general public should shelter in-doors.

“Everything that was put out was about going indoors but what if your work was outdoors?” Obernauer asked. “And we are not even scratching the surface of what the non-union workforce is experiencing on the job. This is exactly the same group of people that responded throughout the pandemic who were now working outside without protection and without any information about what they should be doing, how to stay safe and it’s the same issue with air quality while not having access to the proper PPE.”

NOT A ONE OFF

“This is not a one-time crisis,” said Marcy Goldstein-Gelb, co-executive director of National Conference on Worker Safety and Health. “Dangerous pollution in the air we breathe will be a fact of life for years to come, because climate change has greatly increased the occurrence of wildfires and other extreme weather events.”

“Right now, only one of 50 states — California — has specific safety rules which protect workers from wildfire smoke,” said Goldstein-Gelb. “We urgently need nationwide, federal standards to protect workers from smoke, heat stress and extreme weather events. Paid sick leave, a basic and humane standard for all workers, is more important than ever at a time when daily life and work activities are exposing hundreds of millions of people to the risk of respiratory and cardiovascular diseases.”

Three years after the onset of the COVID pandemic which claimed the lives of thousands of healthcare professionals, first responders, transit personnel and other essential workers, labor was once again expected to just suck it up preferably with a mask on if they had one.

The American Postal Workers Union tweeted June 8 that “air quality in many states on the East Coast is deteriorating rapidly due to the wildfires in Canada. Remember, all employees voluntarily wear a face mask at any time.”

At that point, the White House estimated that the number of Americans under an Air Quality Index Alert and “experiencing the effects of smoke resulting from devastating wildfires burning in Canada” had grown to more than 100 million.

In President Biden’s June 8 statement, he went on to describe how he was directing “the National Interagency Fire Center to respond promptly to Canadian requests for additional firefighters and fire suppression assets such as air tankers.”

By that point there were over 425 active wildfires in Canada and nearly 10 million acres had burned, 17 times the 20-year average, according to the White House which said that since last month it had sent 600 state and federal firefighters, roughly one and a fraction of a firefighter per fire.

The scale seemed off-like using your garden hose on a house fire.

President Biden’s statement recounted that he had asked Secretary of Transportation Buttigieg to keep him “informed about his progress in ensuring that we proactively manage the air traffic implications of the deteriorated air quality based on lessons learned from prior incidents.”

In our region, the smog had become so pervasive that officials at Newark Liberty and LaGuardia the FAA delayed incoming flights due to poor visibility.

Also, on the list of agencies President Biden looped in were the Environmental Protection Agency and the Centers for Disease Control who were going to offer detailed recommendations on how Americans could protect themselves from the effects of wildfire smoke.

Noticeably absent in the White House statement was any reference to the U.S. Department of Labor.

SMOG OF WAR

On June 9th the Department of Labor announced on its website that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration was “offering employers important information to help protect outdoor workers from exposure to wildfire health hazards.”

“Wildfire smoke exposure can create major health hazards for outdoor workers. These hazards can be reduced with knowledge, safe work practices and appropriate personal protective equipment,” said Assistant Secretary for Occupational Safety and Health Doug Parker. “I urge all employers to have plans and preparations in place to protect workers by preventing or minimizing exposure to hazardous air quality.”

“The most significant hazard from wildfire smoke is exposure to particulate matter, tiny particles of partially burned material less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter, that can enter the lungs and even the bloodstream and is linked to serious health problems, including lung, heart and kidney disease,” the DOL explained. “Workers exposed to smoke-polluted air may experience heat stress, eye, and respiratory tract irritation, and suffer from exposure to other respiratory hazards caused by hazardous substances such as heavy metals entering the atmosphere. Employers should prepare for and plan to implement procedures to reduce exposures to smoke when necessary.”

The deadly air had been hanging around for a few days by then.

Failure to anticipate this clear and present danger to the outdoor workforce can have particularly serious ramifications for the millions of Americans in this cohort who have pre-existing respiratory issues like asthma and heart disease. But as we saw with COVID, we really don’t have our arms around these issues particularly in the communities where access to healthcare is problematic where essential workers are often concentrated.

Wellness of this workforce on and off the job has long been neglected and is just not anybody’s responsibility except for the individual workers themselves. And perhaps most importantly we don’t know how many of those essential workers toiled in places like meat packing plants or in other critical industries where they also lacked health insurance and so were really off the radar.

HIDDEN FIGURES

Consider that the U.S. is just four percent of the world’s population but recorded 12 percent of the planet’s COVID deaths and that the federal government has no real idea of how many of the 1.12 million Americans who died from COVID were infected where they worked and in turn spread the deadly disease on the job and at home.

And quite frankly, with the way corporations run the show in Washington and our state capitals, there’s very little appetite to address the intersectionality between our for-profit healthcare system and the vulnerability of the underinsured essential workforce and the spread of infectious disease.

Addressing it would offend all the most powerful and deep pocketed interests that profit off of the 

medical industrial complex that has a death grip on our politics.

The only government data on occupational COVID deaths was kept by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for nursing homes. Since June 2020, 3,009 nursing home workers have died from COVID with the country averaging 18 nursing home worker COVID deaths per week, according to the AFL-CIO research report.

“The true impact of COVID-19 infections due to workplace exposures is unknown,” the AFL-CIO asserted in its recently released annual report Death on the Job: The Toll of Neglect, “Limited data show that more than 1.5 million nursing home workers have been infected.”

Despite decades of progress in worker safety since the creation of the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration in 1970, there’s troubling evidence of deadly backsliding particularly for the nation’s Black and Latino workers, according to a comprehensive analysis from the AFL-CIO, the nation’s largest labor federation.

In 2021, the fatality rate for Black workers spiked from 3.5 to 4.0 per 100,000 workers with more than 650 dying on the job, the most in nearly two decades,” according to the AFL-CIO’s report. 

“Latino workers have the greatest risk of dying on the job, with a fatality rate at 4.5 per 100,000 workers that has grown by 13 percent over the past decade,” according to a press release that accompanied the report released to mark Worker Memorial Day on April 28. “There was also a slight uptick in deaths for Latino workers in 2021” with the overwhelming majority of the 1,130 who died being immigrants.

Currently, the federal government spends just $3.99 per worker on workplace safety compliance and “underreporting is widespread” with fewer than 2,000 state and federal inspectors to inspect and monitor the country’s almost 10.8 million workplaces. As a consequence, the AFL-CIO reports, with only one inspector for every 77,334 workers, it would take 190 years for OSHA to inspect each site over which it has jurisdiction once.

Now, consider what the future holds for these populations that already have a much higher incidence of chronic diseases like asthma in a world where hazardous Air Quality Index days become more common. Throw in the 21st century mix infectious airborne disease outbreaks and failure to provide healthcare universally and you have public health ramifications we can’t afford to ignore.

NAKED ON THE FRONTLINES

We already know from a 2021 study done by researchers with the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) that workers in “three broad occupation groups—food preparation and serving; building and grounds cleaning and maintenance; and construction trades—had significantly lower levels of health care access for all four measures, compared with workers in general.”

“Lack of health insurance and underinsurance were common among subsets of essential workers,” the NIOSH researchers concluded. “Limited access to health care might decrease essential workers’ access to medical testing and needed care and hinder their ability to address underlying conditions, thereby increasing their risk of severe outcomes from some infectious diseases, such as COVID-19. Improving access to health care for all workers, including essential workers, is critical to ensure workers’ health and workforce stability.”

Dr. Edward Zuroweste is a physician and the founding director of the Migrant Clinicians Network, an international non-profit that serves migrant and immigrant workers. He’s concerned that there’s not been sufficient study done on the impacts on the health of the essential workforce that didn’t have the option of working remotely during the COVID pandemic.

“It is interesting that the country seems to have moved on — everybody’s just so tired of hearing about COVID that they don’t want to do a deep dive into looking at how we can prevent this from happening the next time and that’s really my biggest concern right now,” Zuroweste said. “This is not the last pandemic. So, what have we done to make ourselves more resilient for the future? And unfortunately, I don’t see what we’ve done to do better next time … it seems like the workers are dispensable like a commodity, especially essential workers.”

Zuroweste notes that in working with migrant farm workers as well as with itinerant natural disaster cleanup crews he’s flagged lack of access to basic healthcare as a major occupational health risk. “We are a country that is showing that without having universal affordable healthcare available causes deaths in the people that can’t get it,” Zuroweste said.

How much more at risk is this workforce upon which we so rely in the new era of hemisphere wide hazardous atmospherics? Indeed, how much more at risk are the tens of millions of essential workers who are also citizens? There’s a real exposure here.

UNION ELVIS LEFT THE BUILDING?

Even as risks to workers grow exponentially, unions represent just 10 percent of the American workforce, down dramatically from the 1950s when roughly a third of workers were represented. Millions of workers are increasingly part of a so-called gig economy where they work for entities that don’t pay into social safety net protections like social security or disability.

When these workers fall ill or are disabled the corporations that profited from their labor are insulated from liability but not society.

Almost 100 years ago, under the leadership of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Congress passed the Social Security Act as a safety net for the vagaries of market capitalism. Surely an increasingly hostile climate requires a similar reassessment.

In 1944, toward the end of his presidency, legal scholar Cass R. Sunstein tells us FDR was still thinking big with what he wanted framed as a second economic Bill of Rights for the American people that would be “a new basis of security and prosperity that can be established for all — regardless of station, race, or creed.”

Among the list of economic rights FDR proffered was the “right to adequate medical care and the opportunity to achieve and enjoy good health as well as “the right to adequate protection from the economic fears of old age, sickness, accident, and unemployment.”

Writing in 2004, Sunstein observed the general public was “increasingly distressed by social insecurity, perhaps above all that of health care under laissez-faire auspices and that “a generalized right to decent health care can attract, and is attracting, widespread support. There is a growing concern that tens of millions of working people do not earn enough money to support their families.”

Last year, in a survey conducted by the Kaiser Family Health Foundation almost half of U.S. adults surveyed said they were having difficulty affording health care costs. “About four in ten U.S. adults say they have delayed or gone without medical care in the last year due to cost, with dental services being the most common type of care adults report putting off due to cost,” according to KFH.

The U.S. for profit health care system that’s rooted in scarcity consistently ranks as the most expensive in the world with the poorest outcomes when compared to similarly situated nations.

It would seem having a healthy workforce that’s free of infectious disease would be fundamental to a robust economy and protecting public health but that’s not what our current system delivers.

In the era of infectious disease pandemics and hazardous air quality from a climate in crisis, universal healthcare needs to be seen as a fundamental labor right.

Peace for Ukraine courtesy of China?

All wars do end, usually thanks to a negotiated peace agreement. Consider that a fundamental historical fact, even if it seems to have been forgotten in Brussels, Moscow, and above all, Washington, D.C.

In recent months, among Russian President Vladimir Putin’s followers, there has been much talk of a “forever war” in Ukraine dragging on for years, if not decades. “For us,” Putin told a group of factory workers recently, “this is not a geopolitical task, but a task of the survival of Russian statehood, creating conditions for the future development of the country and our children.”

Visiting Kyiv last February, President Joseph Biden assured Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, “You remind us that freedom is priceless; it’s worth fighting for, for as long as it takes. And that’s how long we’re going to be with you, Mr. President: for as long as it takes.” A few weeks later, the European Council affirmed “its resolute condemnation of Russia’s actions and unwavering support for Ukraine and its people.” 

With all the major players already committed to fighting a forever war, how could peace possibly come about? With the U.N. compromised by Russia’s seat on the Security Council and the G-7 powers united in condemning “Russia’s illegal, unjustifiable, and unprovoked war of aggression against Ukraine,” the most likely dealmaker when it comes to ending this forever war may prove to be President Xi Jinping of China.

In the West, Xi’s self-styled role as a peacemaker in Ukraine has been widely mocked. In February, on the first anniversary of the Russian invasion, China’s call for negotiations as the “only viable solution to the Ukraine crisis” sparked a barbed reply from U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan who claimed the war “could end tomorrow if Russia stopped attacking Ukraine.”

When Xi visited Moscow in March, the statement Chinese officials released claiming that he hoped to “play a constructive role in promoting talks” prompted considerable Western criticism. “I don’t think China can serve as a fulcrum on which any Ukraine peace process could move,” insisted Ryan Hass, a former American diplomat assigned to China. Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, pointed out that “China has taken sides” in the conflict by backing Russia and so could hardly become a peacemaker. Even when Xi made a personal call to Zelensky promising to dispatch an envoy to promote negotiations “with all parties,” critics dismissed that overture as so much damage control for China’s increasingly troubled trade relations with Europe.

The Symbolism of Peace Conferences

Still, think about it for a moment. Who else could bring the key parties to the table and potentially make them honor their signatures on a peace treaty? Putin has, of course, already violated U.N. accords by invading a sovereign state, while rupturing his economic entente with Europe and trashing past agreements with Washington to respect Ukraine’s sovereignty. And yet the Russian president relies on China’s support, economically and otherwise, which makes Xi the only leader who might be able to bring him to the bargaining table and ensure that he honors any agreement he signs. That sobering reality should raise serious questions about how any future Beijing-inspired peace conference might happen and what it would mean for the current world order.    

For more than 200 years, peace conferences have not only resolved conflicts but regularly signaled the arrival at stage center of a new world power. In 1815, amid the whirling waltzes in Vienna’s palaces that accompanied negotiations ending the Napoleonic wars, Britain emerged for its century-long reign as the globe’s greatest power. Similarly, the 1885 Berlin Conference that carved up the continent of Africa for colonial rule heralded Germany’s rise as Britain’s first serious rival. The somber deliberations in Versailles’s grand Hall of Mirrors that officially ended World War I in 1919 marked America’s debut on the world stage. Similarly, the 1945 peace conference at San Francisco that established the U.N. (just as World War II was about to end) affirmed the ascent of U.S. global hegemony.

Imagine the impact if, sooner or later, envoys from Kyiv and Moscow convene in Beijing beneath the gaze of President Xi and find the elusive meeting point between Russia’s aspirations and Ukraine’s survival. One thing would be guaranteed: after years of disruptions in the global energy, fertilizer, and grain markets, marked by punishing inflation and spreading hunger, all eyes from five continents would indeed turn toward Beijing.

After all, with the war disrupting grain and fertilizer shipments via the Black Sea, world hunger doubled to an estimated 345 million people in 2023, while basic food insecurity now afflicts 828 million inhabitants of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Should such negotiations ever prove fruitful, a televised signing ceremony, hosted by President Xi and watched by countless millions globally, would crown China’s rapid 20-year ascent to world power.

Forget Ukraine for a moment and concentrate on China’s economic rise under communist rule, which has been little short of extraordinary. At the founding of the People’s Republic in 1949, China was an economic lightweight. Its massive population, 20% of the world’s total, was producing just 4% of global economic output. So weak was China that its leader Mao Zedong had to wait two weeks amid a Moscow winter for an audience with Soviet leader Joseph Stalin just to plead for the industrial technology that would help rebuild an economy devastated by 12 years of war and revolution. In the decade following its admission to the World Trade Organization in 2002, however, China quickly became the workshop of the world, accumulating an unprecedented $4 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves.

Instead of simply swimming in a hoard of cash like Scrooge McDuck in his Money Bin, in 2013 President Xi announced a trillion-dollar development scheme called the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Its aim was to build a massive infrastructure across the Eurasian landmass and Africa, thereby improving the lives of humanity’s forgotten millions, while making Beijing the focal point of Eurasia’s economic development. Today, China is not only an industrial powerhouse that produces 18% of the global gross domestic product, or GDP (compared to 12% for the U.S.), but also the world’s chief creditor. It provides capital for infrastructure and industrial projects to 148 nations, while offering some hope to the quarter of humanity still subsisting on less than four dollars a day.

Testifying to that economic prowess, for the past six months, world leaders have ignored Washington’s pleas to form a united front against China. Instead, remarkable numbers of them, including Germany’s Olaf Scholz, Spain’s Pedro Sánchez, and Brazil’s Lula da Silva, have been turning up in Beijing to pay court to President Xi. In April, even French President and U.S. ally Emmanuel Macron visited the Chinese capital where he proclaimed a “global strategic partnership with China” and urged other countries to become less reliant on the “extraterritoriality of the U.S. dollar.”

Then, in a diplomatic coup that stunned Washington, China took a key step toward healing the dangerous sectarian rivalry between Shia Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia by hosting a meeting of their foreign ministers in Beijing. As the Saudis’ chief oil customer and Iran’s largest creditor, Beijing had the commercial clout to bring them to the bargaining table. China’s top diplomat Wang Yi then hailed the restored diplomatic relations as part of his country’s “constructive role in facilitating the proper settlement of hot-spot issues around the world.”

Geopolitics as a Source of Change

Underlying the sudden display of Chinese diplomatic clout is a recent shift in that essential realm called “geopolitics” that’s driving a fundamental realignment in global power. Around 1900, at the high tide of the British Empire, an English geographer, Sir Halford Mackinder, started the modern study of geopolitics by publishing a highly influential article arguing that the construction of the 5,000-mile-long Trans-Siberian Railway from Moscow to Vladivostok was the beginning of a merger of Europe and Asia. That unified land mass, he said, would soon become the epicenter of global power.

In 1997, in his book The Grand Chess Board, former U.S. National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brezinski updated MacKinder, arguing that “geopolitics has moved from the regional to the global dimension, with preponderance over the entire Eurasian continent serving as the central basis for global primacy.” In words particularly apt for our present world, he added: “America’s global primacy is directly dependent on how long and how effectively its preponderance on the Eurasian continent is sustained.”

More than a quarter-century later, imagine geopolitics as a deep substrate shaping far more superficial political events, even if it’s only noticeable in certain moments, much the way the incessant grinding of the planet’s tectonic plates only becomes visible when volcanic eruptions break through the earth’s surface. For centuries, if not millennia, Europe was separated from Asia by endless deserts and sprawling grasslands. The empty center of that vast land mass was crossed only by an occasional string of camels traveling the ancient Silk Road.

Now, thanks to its trillion-dollar investment in infrastructure — rails, roads, pipelines, and ports — China is fundamentally changing that geopolitical substrate through a more than metaphoric merger of continents. If President Xi’s grand design succeeds, Beijing will forge a unified market stretching 6,000 miles from the North Sea to the South China Sea, eventually encompassing 70% of all humanity, and effectively fusing Europe and Asia into a single economic continent: Eurasia.

Despite the Biden administration’s fervid attempts to create an anti-Chinese coalition, recent diplomatic eruptions are shaping a new world order that isn’t at all what Washington has in mind. With the economic creation of a true Eurasian sphere seemingly underway, from that Iran-Saudi entente to Macron’s visit to Beijing, we may be seeing the first signs of the changing face of international politics. The question is: Could a Chinese-engineered peace in Ukraine be next in line?  

Pressures on China for Peace

Such growing geopolitical power is giving China both the motivation and potentially even the means to negotiate an end to the fighting in Ukraine. First, the means: as Russia’s chief customer for its commodity exports, and Ukraine’s largest trading partner before the war, China can use commercial pressure to bring both parties to the bargaining table — much as it did for Iran and Saudi Arabia.

Next, the motivation: while Moscow and Kyiv might each exude confidence in ultimate victory in their forever war, Beijing has reason to grow impatient with the economic disruptions radiating out across the Black Sea to roil a delicately balanced global economy. According to the World Bank, almost half of humanity (47%) is now surviving on seven dollars a day, and most of them live in Africa, Asia, and Latin America where China has made massive, long-term developmental loans to 148 countries under its Belt and Road Initiative.

With 70% of its lands and their rich black soils devoted to agriculture, Ukraine has, for decades, produced bumper crops of wheat, barley, soybeans, and sunflower oil that made it “the breadbasket of the world,” providing the globe’s hungry millions with reliable shipments of affordable commodities. Right after the Russian invasion, however, world prices for grains and vegetable oils shot up by 60%. Despite stabilization efforts, including the U.N.’s Black Sea Grain Initiative to allow exports through the war zone, prices for such essentials remain all too high. And they threaten to go higher still with further disruption of global supply chains or more war damage like the recent rupture of a crucial Ukrainian irrigation dam that’s turning more than a million acres of prime farmland into “desert.”

As costs for imports of fertilizer, grain, and other foodstuffs have soared since the Russian invasion, the Council on Foreign Relations reports that “a climbing number of low-income BRI countries have struggled to repay loans associated with the initiative, spurring a wave of debt crises.” In the Horn of Africa, for example, the sixth year of a crippling drought has pushed an estimated 23 million people into a “hunger crisis,” forcing the governments of Ethiopia and Kenya to balance costly food imports with the repayment of Chinese loans for the creation of critical infrastructure like factories, railroads, and renewable energy. With such loans surpassing 20% of gross domestic product (GDP) in nations like Ghana, Malaysia, Pakistan, and Zambia, while China itself holds outstanding credits equivalent to 25% of its GDP, Beijing is far more invested in global economic peace and stability than any other major power.

Beyond Western Fantasies of Victory

At present, Beijing might seem alone among major nations in its concern about the strain the Ukraine war is placing on a world economy poised between starvation and survival. But within the coming six months, Western opinion will likely start to shift as its inflated expectations for Ukrainian victory in its long-awaited “spring counteroffensive” meet the reality of Russia’s return to trench warfare.

After the stunning success of Ukraine’s offensives late last year near Kharkiv and Kherson, the West dropped its reticence about provoking Putin and began shipping billions of dollars of sophisticated equipment — first, HIMARS and Hawk missiles, then Leopard and Abrams battle tanks, and, by the end of this year, advanced F-16 jet fighters. By the war’s first anniversary last February, the West had already provided Kyiv with $115 billion in aid and expectations of success rose with each new arms shipment. Adding to that anticipation, Moscow’s own “winter offensive” with its desperate suicide attacks on the city of Bakhmut suggested, as Foreign Affairs put it, that “the Russian military demonstrated… it was no longer capable of large-scale combat operations.”

But defense is another matter. While Moscow was wasting some 20,000 lives on suicide assaults on Bakhmut, its specialized tractors were cutting a formidable network of trenches and tank traps along a 600-mile front designed to stall any Ukrainian counteroffensive.

Ukraine’s troops will probably achieve some breakthroughs when that offensive finally begins, but are unlikely to push Russia back from all its post-invasion gains. Remember that Russia’s army of 1.3 million is three times larger than Ukraine’s which has also suffered many casualties. In March, the commander of Ukraine’s 46th Air Assault brigade told The Washington Post that a year of combat had left 100 dead and 400 wounded in his 500-man unit and that they were being replaced by raw recruits, some of whom fled at the very sound of rifle fire. To counter the few dozen “symbolic” Leopard tanks the West is sending, Russia has thousands of older-model tanks in reserve. Despite U.S. and European sanctions, Russia’s economy has actually continued to grow, while Ukraine’s, which was only about a tenth the size of Russia’s, has shrunk by 30%. Facts like these mean just one thing is likely: stalemate.

Beijing as Peacemaker

By next December, if Ukraine’s counteroffensive has indeed stalled, its people face another cold, dark winter of drone attacks, while Russia’s rising casualties and lack of results might by then begin to challenge Putin’s hold on power. In other words, both combatants might feel far more compelled to sit down in Beijing for peace talks. With the threat of future disruptions damaging its delicate global position, Beijing will likely deploy its full economic power to press the parties for a settlement. By trading territory, while agreeing with China on reconstruction aid, and some further strictures on Ukraine’s future NATO membership, both sides might feel they had won enough concessions to sign an agreement.

Not only would China then gain enormous prestige for brokering such a peace deal, but it might win a preferential position in the reconstruction bonanza that would follow by offering aid to rebuild both a ravaged Ukraine and a damaged Russia. In a recent report, the World Bank estimates that it could take $411 billion over a decade to rebuild a devastated Ukraine through infrastructure contracts of the very kind Chinese construction companies are so ready to undertake. To sweeten such deals, Ukraine could also allow China to build massive factories to supply Europe’s soaring demand for renewable energy and electric vehicles. Apart from the profits involved, such Chinese-Ukrainian joint ventures would ramp up production at a time when that country is likely to gain duty-free access to the European market.

In the post-war moment, with the possibility that Ukraine will be an increasingly strong economic ally at the edge of Europe, Russia still a reliable supplier of cut-rate commodities, and the European market ever more open to its state corporations, China is likely to emerge from that disastrous conflict — to use Brzezinski’s well-chosen words — with its “preponderance over the entire Eurasian continent” consolidated and its “basis for global primacy” significantly strengthened.

Voting maps throughout the Deep South may be redrawn after surprise Supreme Court ruling

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Election maps across the Deep South are likely to be redrawn because of a surprise Supreme Court ruling that upheld a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, changes that could alter the balance of power that has given Republicans a razor-thin majority in Congress.

The court’s 5-4 decision in Allen v. Milligan, written for the majority by Chief Justice John Roberts, affirmed the section of the act that prohibits maps drawn to dilute minority voting strength. It was an unexpected victory for a law passed in 1965, which has been gradually dismantled under the Roberts court.

The Supreme Court is now expected to rule quickly on a similar challenge to election maps pending in Louisiana, which could create another congressional district favorable to Democrats in addition to the one in Alabama.

And a racial gerrymandering case from South Carolina is moving toward oral arguments in October. Republican state leaders appealed a decision from a three-judge federal panel that found illegal targeting of Black voters in a map that gave the GOP control of the state’s last remaining swing district. If the panel’s decision is upheld, the Republican-led legislature will have to redraw the lines for the 1st Congressional District.

Republicans won a slim majority in the House in 2022 as legal challenges over redistricting simmered, including the one in Alabama, which the court stayed until after the election. If all of the redistricting challenges were resolved in favor of minority plaintiffs, that could dramatically impact the composition of Congress in 2024. David Wasserman, a senior editor at Cook Political Report, said states creating new majority-minority districts may also need to reconfigure numerous surrounding districts, further altering election maps.

The ruling did not expand the Voting Rights Act but merely maintained the status quo. Nevertheless, it was an unexpected setback to the Republican Party’s redistricting operation. Alabama’s Republican-led Legislature drew only one seat offering an opportunity for Black candidates to win. Black Alabama voters had hoped to create a second congressional district that would offer an opportunity for an additional seat for a minority candidate. Today, 2 in 7 Alabama voters are Black but 6 of 7 congressional seats are held by white politicians. Republicans argued in a court brief that Democrats were “exploiting” the opening created by the Alabama case to make a power grab.

Roberts’ opinion brought a strongly worded dissent from conservative Justice Clarence Thomas, who accused the majority — including his colleague Brett M. Kavanaugh — of creating a “consciously segregated districting system” in the name of the Voting Rights Act.

But the South Carolina case offers a case study in how nuanced redistricting cases can be. A ProPublica story in May showed that one of the state’s most powerful Democrats, Rep. Jim Clyburn, made recommendations behind the scenes to protect his seat. That ultimately also helped the GOP. Lawyers for South Carolina Republican leaders argued that they did not intentionally target Black voters and followed Clyburn’s wishes.

Any state with a long history of “extremely polarized” voting is likely to feel the impact of the Alabama decision, which relied heavily on expert analysis of “airtight data” of racial voting patterns, said Christian R. Grose, a University of Southern California political science professor.

A pending federal case in El Paso, Texas, brought by MALDEF, a Latino civil rights organization, challenges maps drawn in 2021 by the Texas Legislature that limited the number of districts in which Black and Latino people make up the majority of eligible voters. Nina Perales, MALDEF’s vice president for litigation, said she’s encouraged by the Alabama decision, which “affirmed the traditional test” for fair maps and “closed the door on fringe theories that undermine voting rights.”

The Louisiana case was put on hold while the court considered Alabama, and minority groups believe a favorable decision could unlock a second majority Black district in the state. Louisiana’s Republican attorney general, Jeff Landry, asked the court in a letter to schedule oral arguments in the dispute.

In Florida, a map drawn by Gov. Ron DeSantis and approved by the Legislature may have violated the state constitution in eliminating a congressional district held by a Black Democrat. Voting rights groups have challenged the map, and a Democratic consultant told the Tampa Bay Times that the Alabama decision could signal to the courts that race is a legitimate factor to consider in redistricting.

Richard Pildes, a constitutional law professor at New York University, said the Alabama case shows that states now have new technologies that “allow plaintiffs to search out potential VRA districts in ways not possible in prior decades.” This makes it harder for states to make excuses that they could not draw maps offering opportunities for minority voters.

Marina Jenkins, executive director of the National Democratic Foundation, which provided legal support for the Alabama plaintiffs, said she expects the court to move quickly to send some of the disputed maps back to state legislatures for redrawing. The process will not always be smooth, she said, since some of the lawmakers have resisted efforts to broaden minority representation. If legislatures do not act, the courts could step in to remedy the mapping errors.

Democrats in Alabama believed the Supreme Court thwarted minorities in 2022 by delaying its consideration of the case until after the election.

“We’re obviously very happy to see success in the case and excited that voters will be able to have more fair representation,” Jenkins said. “But it is obviously disappointing that this could have been representation that those voters already had.”

Watchdog says 14th Amendment, not indictments, can bar Trump from presidency

On Monday morning, a nonprofit government watchdog organization called out former President Donald Trump, implying that his actions in the final weeks of his presidency should disqualify him from serving in any office again.

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) wrote in a tweet that while there isn’t a federal law barring former presidents from running for office if they’ve been indicted of a crime, a constitutional amendment does bar some people from running if they’ve engaged in or encouraged others to participate in an insurrection.

“Donald Trump has been indicted twice,” CREW said in its tweet, referring to Trump’s federal indictment last week alleging that he mishandled sensitive government documents after leaving the White House, as well as his indictment in New York state court alleging that he used hush money payments in furtherance of criminal action. “That doesn’t necessarily disqualify him from serving as president, but the Constitution’s 14th Amendment does.”

The third clause of the 14th Amendment states that no person who has “previously taken an oath…to support the Constitution of the United States” may serve in office again if they have “engaged in insurrection” against the country, or “given aid or comfort” to those who did. How this provision may be enforced is left ambiguous, but it’s widely assumed a court action declaring someone an insurrectionist would suffice.

It’s possible that another Department of Justice (DOJ) indictment, relating to Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election, could include insurrectionist charges against the former president. However, CREW and its president, Noah Bookbinder, have previously promised to file a lawsuit against Trump in order to block him from running.

Many political observers have described the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol — which began moments after Trump delivered an incendiary speech to his followers outside the White House — as an “insurrection,” as its aim was to prevent Congress from certifying the 2020 presidential election. Under this line of argument, Trump’s speech could feasibly be seen as giving “aid” to those who attacked the Capitol.

In a letter directed to Trump in late 2022, Bookbinder promised that he and CREW would block Trump from running in the 2024 presidential election, “based on [his] engaging in the insurrection that culminated on January 6, 2021.”

“The evidence that you engaged in insurrection as contemplated by the Fourteenth Amendment — including by mobilizing, inciting, and aiding those who attacked the Capitol — is overwhelming,” Bookbinder told Trump.

So far, such a lawsuit has not yet materialized, even as Trump has been on the campaign trail for the GOP nomination.

Although CREW rightfully pointed out that indictments cannot prevent a person from running for the presidency, a majority of Americans think Trump should be disqualified from office if he’s convicted.

Fifty-two percent of Americans believe Trump has committed a serious crime at some point in his life, according to a Yahoo News/YouGov poll conducted at the end of May. Furthermore, 62 percent of the poll’s respondents said that being found guilty of a serious crime — including being indicted for mishandling secretive government records — should disqualify a person from the presidency. Just 23 percent said that if Trump is indeed convicted it shouldn’t prevent him from running for president.

Legal experts destroy Trump’s defense: “Every single iota of evidence” came from his “own people”

Donald Trump’s lawyer Evan Corcoran, who was hired by the former president to defend him against a federal investigation involving his handling of sensitive documents, has now become a key witness in the Mar-a-Lago case.

When the indictment of Trump was unsealed on Friday, Corcoran, identified in the documents as “Trump Attorney 1”, offered comprehensive insight into Trump’s role in attempting to block government efforts to retrieve classified documents.

“These are contemporaneous renditions of what was going on,” Catherine Ross, a constitutional law professor at George Washington University, told Salon.

Corcoran’s notes are an exception to the rule against hearsay, she added, saying he was memorializing his conversations and “didn’t just make stuff up.”

His notes provided prosecutors with a “road map” to build their case, The New York Times reported. The indictment revealed that Trump exerted pressure on Corcoran to obstruct investigators in their efforts to recover classified materials, even going as far as suggesting that he lie to investigators and withhold the documents entirely.

Ross added that even after being advised in the “strongest terms” that he has to comply with the subpoena, Trump said he didn’t want anyone looking through his boxes and suggested, “What happens if we just don’t respond at all or don’t play ball with them?”

“Wouldn’t it be better if we just told them we don’t have anything here?” he asked, according to the indictment. “Well look isn’t it better if there are no documents?”

His alleged comments reveal that Trump wanted the “documents to disappear” and relied on having a certification prepared suggesting that DOJ already had everything, Ross pointed out. 

“These are things that only Corcoran can substantiate, and he has contemporaneous notes, so he can testify ‘I heard this,'” she said, underscoring the importance of his testimony. 

Special counsel Jack Smith, who is overseeing the investigation, obtained Trump’s lawyer’s notes after D.C. Judge Beryl Howell pierced the protections offered by attorney-client privilege once prosecutors persuaded her that Trump may have used Corcoran’s legal advice in furtherance of a crime.

In addition to Corcoran’s notes, prosecutors also relied on text messages from several of Trump’s employees and a recording made by one of his aides, The Times reported. They also obtained phones and subpoenaed documents from a broad range of his advisors.

But Corcoran’s notes serve as crucial evidence that underpins the most serious criminal charge against Trump: conspiracy to obstruct justice, which carries the potential penalty of a 20-year prison sentence.

“Corcoran’s testimony clearly demonstrates Trump’s criminal intent and that is crucial,” Temidayo Aganga-Williams, partner at Selendy Gay Elsberg and former senior investigative counsel for the House Jan. 6 committee, told Salon. “Importantly, Corcoran is someone that President Trump himself handpicked to act on his behalf on very sensitive matters – that will make it only more difficult for President Trump to now attack Corcoran’s credibility.”

Corcoran’s recollection of the conversations he had with the ex-president exposes the extent to which Trump went in order to evade compliance with the subpoena.

In one meeting, Corcoran explicitly told Trump that he would search Mar-a-Lago for subpoenaed documents. Corcoran describes how he examined the boxes in the storage room and assembled a folder containing 38 classified documents to hand over to federal prosecutors.

During a discussion about the folder, Trump gestured with a “plucking motion” using his hand, as recounted by Corcoran, implying that “if there’s anything really bad in there, like, you know, pluck it out.”

The person tasked with defending the former president could very well serve as the government’s top witness in proving that Trump committed a coverup.

Trump, who has a penchant for turning any investigation into a political spectacle, is also relying on his legal team to delay the case.

“If President Trump’s team were to file a motion to suppress evidence of Corcoran’s statements, such a motion is likely to fail,” Aganga-Williams said. “The unsealed indictment facially demonstrates that the crime-fraud exception does indeed apply because President Trump used Corcoran’s legal services to further a crime.”


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His legal team has already filed a sealed motion in Washington requesting all of the grand jury transcripts to look for examples of prosecutors misusing the grand jury, The New York Times reported.

“We always know that Trump wants to slow down, slow down, slow down,” Ross said, adding he is “peppering the other side with motions.”

“This is also part of the strategy of delegitimizing the special counsel and the indictment by saying the grand jury was somehow corrupted and that is part of their public strategy,” she said. 

Since the charges were filed in the Southern District of Florida, which isn’t a Democratic stronghold, Trump’s legal team could use this to their advantage and stir up “conspiratorial and anti-rule of law sentiments,” attempting to convince the jury that the evidence was anti-Trump, Ross said. 

“But there are many reasons why no one should take that seriously because every single iota of evidence presented in the indictment comes from Trump’s own people,” Ross said. “Not a single Democratic witness, not a single document generated by somebody who was not just a supporter, but they were all in Trump’s inner circle.”

Another aspect of the case that could work in favor of Trump is how the arguments are handled by Aileen Cannon, the federal judge in Florida who was assigned the case. Cannon came under intense scrutiny because of her past rulings in Trump’s favor in a case related to the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago last summer.

Cannon was nominated by Trump in his last year in office and has less than three years of judicial experience. 

Previously, Cannon delivered a contentious ruling in response to a lawsuit filed by Trump, which slowed the FBI’s examination of classified documents seized at Mar-a-Lago. 

However, her decision was subsequently overturned by a conservative panel of judges from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit.

“So is she going to now say to herself, I was eviscerated by the 11th Circuit, that’s the circuit my court is in,” Ross said. “Let me try and do a good job on this case and be cautious or is she going to proceed the way she was proceeding before and really try to help Trump every inch of the way?”

“Dumpling Daughter” reveals how “the best dumplings take patience, time and experience”

Growing up, just slightly behind Italian cuisine, my family probably most enjoyed Chinese and Chinese-American food, whether at buffets, in restaurants or via takeout at home.

My mother swore by the spicy mustard for dipping the crispy noodles, my dad loved “General TSO, white meat, only” and fried rice (with no onions) and my brother had an inexplicable adoration for shrimp and lobster sauce . . . when he was maybe seven years old. My dad was also a massive proponent of P.F. Chang’s. 

This instilled the same love for the cuisine in me, such as when I’d order takeout in college or scamper out of the office in a job I had in the city in order to head over to a dumpling shop a few blocks over for lunch. Those were some of my favorite lunches, too: filling, deeply satisfying and incredibly cheap, I looked so forward to those forays when I’d hurriedly leave the office to enjoy a brief respite, always chockfull of dumplings.

Clearly, Chinese and Chinese-American cuisine has had a special place in my food memory landscape, so when I saw the striking cover of “Dumpling Daughter,” a new cookbook by Nadia Liu Spellman with recipes from her mother (and iconic chef) Sally Ling, I knew I wanted to speak with her. Ling and her husband helmed the stalwart, eponymous Boston restaurant that was a landmark within the Chinese fine dining cuisine back in the 1980s — and now Nadia is continuing the “family business,” if you will. 

Dumpling Daughter is also more than a cookbook: Spellman also has various Dumpling Daughter locations throughout Massachusetts, as well as an online store stocked with dumplings, buns, sauces and more. I spoke with Spellman to get the ins and outs of growing up in a family with such a storied chef mom, bridging the gap between Chinese fine dining, Chinese takeout and at-home iterations — and, of course, her favorite dumplings. 

If you’re interested in reading more, check out the book.

Dumpling Daughter Heirloom RecipesDumpling Daughter Heirloom Recipes (Photo courtesy of Dumpling Daughter)

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

The cookbook is stunning. Do you have a favorite recipe in it? (I know, this probably seems like an impossible task!)  

I simply cannot pick! My cravings are different everyday and I like to eat depending on my mood. The weather affects my cravings and since I was little, I would eat different types of food in different seasons. 

Nadia Liu Spellman and her mother, Sally LingNadia Liu Spellman and her mother, Sally Ling (Photo courtesy of Dumpling Daughter)

Of course, your mom opened her restaurant in 1984; how did that influence permeate your childhood and upbringing? How did the restaurant’s influence meals at home? 

I was lucky to grow up in a foodie family where our own restaurant was the most high-end Chinese in the city or even the country, at the time. When you’re little you only know what your parents expose you to, so for me it was normal to eat fine Chinese cuisine. At home our food was also fine, light and delicious, as it was prepared by my mom! I loved all the food my parents exposed me to when I was little, because it was truly all amazing. I definitely knew when something was not tasty or appealing to me, because there was so much excellent food in my life in comparison.

What is one of the most egregious examples of the difference between Chinese food and “Americanized” Chinese food? 

This is less of a difference and more of an important misconception. Many Americans think that Chinese food is mostly fried and filled with MSG, which is not TRUE! My cookbook dives into important facts about MSG and shares a variety of ways to cook Chinese food that isn’t fried. 

Another difference I’ve seen comes with how the food is eaten culturally. Americans often order one dish for themselves and enjoy it alone. This is different from the tradition and way that Chinese food is typically enjoyed. Chinese food is designed to share. Whether rich or poor, casual or fancy, Chinese meals are designed to enjoy either family style or banquet style.  In a family style setting, all the food is in the middle of the table and everyone shares all the dishes, promoting a balanced meal and a little bit of everything. In a fancy Chinese banquet, the group is served dish by dish with time in between, similar to a French prix fixe meal. Food should be enjoyed in balance and never eat too much of one thing!


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What initially inspired you to create Dumpling Daughter? 

I realized that my favorite food memories of my childhood were all sitting around a table with family with plates filled with steamy dumplings. As I got older, those meals would become less and less because we all got busier with life. As an adult, I made dumplings at home with my friends and quickly learned they had never done it before. I realized how special my childhood was. I had these amazing generational experiences and flavors, but my American friends did not. Americans have always viewed dumplings as an appetizer and not as a main meal. In China, dumplings are an event, an experience and a main meal. That was my ultimate inspiration for Dumpling Daughter. To bring the incredible Chinese culture stateside. 

Nadia Liu Spellman and her mother, Sally LingNadia Liu Spellman and her mother, Sally Ling (Photo courtesy of Dumpling Daughter)

Do you have any go-to ingredients or secret techniques for the most absolutely top-tier dumplings? 

The best dumplings take patience, time and experience. Without these key ingredients, they are just normal dumplings. Ha! In addition, great quality pork and fresh ingredients set you up for top tier dumplings.

Not counting dumplings, which recipes in the book are most impactful or symbolic to you?   

My grandmother’s Beijing meat sauce is very symbolic to me. When I was little, I was always excited to go to my grandmother’s house because she would make either dumplings or her Chinese Bolognese sauce with white noodles. I waited for Sunday to come because I wanted this rich and comforting noodle dish. When my grandmother was diagnosed with cancer, I took her to her chemotherapy treatments and I told her that one day I would share her meat sauce with the world. In the last two years of her life, we cooked the recipe she knew by heart five different times, each time I measured the ingredients she prepared. Finally I took the average measurement of every ingredient and recreated her recipe. Every time I smell her sauce or see a customer order it, my heart is filled with nostalgia and emotion.

Do you prefer fried or steamed dumplings? 

Again, depends on my mood! But I usually love steamed in the colder months and crispy in the summer months.

What is the ideal dumpling dipping sauce?

I grew up eating vinegar, soy sauce and chili paste as a quick and easy combination from the fridge.

What are your top tips for beginners looking to become dumpling aficionados?  

To make the best dumplings, practice makes better. Never perfect. The truth is that everyone likes different styles of dumplings and there is no wrong way to execute a recipe. As long as a dumpling is fully enclosed, has a skin and a stuffing, then it’s a dumpling.  There are over 40 breeds that came from the first northern style Chinese dumpling and they are all different, unique and delicious.

Nadia Liu SpellmanNadia Liu Spellman (Photo courtesy of Dumpling Daughter)

I was fascinated by the demarcations or chapters, if you will, of the cookbook: from tasting the world and building a restaurant to feeding my family. Can you tell me a bit about that conceptualization process?  

My editors loved the journey the cookbook took, starting with me growing up in a foodie family and tons of childhood anecdotes, all the way to my role in the kitchen today. They urged me to share stories big and small, personal and fun. My team that helped me with the book suggested that I bring the reader through the journey of my life through stories and recipes that I enjoyed during that period of my life. Every recipe sparks a memory and a moment and my team encouraged me to share every dish that is meaningful to me.

Is there anything else about dumplings, Chinese cuisine or Dumpling Daughter that we haven’t covered that you’d like to share?

Everyday I am thankful and grateful for the journey I have experienced. Every decision I have made in life (with luck and timing) and in work, has brought me to where I am today. Sharing dumplings and flavors from my family with as many people as I can is my goal every day. I feel indescribable joy when sharing these recipes and stories.

“Not guilty”: Arrested Trump formally arraigned on 37 criminal charges — set free without conditions

Former President Donald Trump pleaded not guilty to 37 charges in the Justice Department’s Mar-a-Lago probe during his formal arraignment in Miami on Tuesday.

“Not guilty,” Trump attorney Todd Blanche told Magistrate Judge Jonathan Goodman after the former president was arrested, taken into custody by U.S. Marshals and booked at the courthouse.

Trump reportedly underwent fingerprinting but did not take a mugshot.

The judge allowed Trump to leave the courthouse without any bail or conditions, according to CNN. Prosecutor David Harbach told the judge that the government “does not view either defendant as a flight risk.”

Trump is expected to be assigned a probation officer, according to CNN. The judge also ordered him not to have any contact with witnesses in the case, according to ABC News.

“Trump had his arms folded and periodically spoke to his attorney Todd Blanche while in the courtroom,” according to CNN. The former president was “stonefaced” during his appearance, according to MSNBC.

Trump is charged with 31 counts of violating the Espionage Act by illegally retaining secret national security documents after leaving office, five counts related to concealing possession of the classified documents and making false statements to the FBI.

Trump’s co-defendant, his body man Walt Nauta, is also expected to plead not guilty.

Trump called on his supporters to “FIGHT” and protest outside the courthouse but few Trump fans actually showed up.

Trump lashed out on Truth Social ahead of the arraignment, attacking special counsel Jack Smith, who led the investigation after he was appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland last fall.

“This is the Thug, over turned consistently and unanimously in big cases, that Biden and his CORRUPT Injustice Department stuck on me,” Trump fumed. “He’s a Radical Right Lunatic and Trump Hater, as are all his friends and family, who probably ‘planted’ information in the ‘boxes’ given to them. They taint everything that they touch, including our Country, which is rapidly going to HELL!”

The indictment, unsealed last week, alleges that Trump illegally took highly sensitive national security documents home and sought to prevent his attorney from turning over all of the classified documents in his possession to the government in response to a grand jury subpoena and having his attorneys submit a false declaration claiming all the documents had been returned. Trump is also accused of holding sensitive documents in a Mar-a-Lago bathroom and a ballroom where events were held and showing them to others.

Trump has denied any wrongdoing while firing off a series of dubious defenses, including a claim that he declassified all of the documents that he took home, which he claimed he could do with his mind. But a recording obtained by the special counsel’s team revealed Trump admitting that he had a classified document that he could not show to others because it was not declassified.


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Much of the indictment is based on notes and testimony provided by Trump attorney Evan Corcoran after a D.C. judge allowed prosecutors to pierce attorney-client privilege after agreeing with the DOJ that Trump may have used the attorney’s services in furtherance of a crime.

Trump’s team is expected to ask Judge Aileen Cannon, a controversial Trump appointee expected to be the lead judge on the case, to block the evidence from being used at trial. Trump’s lawyers have also alleged prosecutorial misconduct because one of the prosecutors mentioned Walt Nauta’s lawyer’s application for a judgeship during an interview.

Legal experts say that while Cannon could influence certain things in the case, as she did when she appointed a special master and blocked the FBI from using the seized classified documents, the evidence against Trump is damning.

“It’s a very detailed indictment, and it’s very, very damning,” former Trump Attorney General Bill Barr told Fox News on Sunday. “This idea of presenting Trump as a victim here, a victim of a witch hunt, is ridiculous. Yes, he’s been a victim in the past. Yes, his adversaries have obsessively pursued him with phony claims. And I’ve been at his side defending against them when he is a victim, but this is much different.”

Barr said he was “shocked by the degree of sensitivity of these documents and how many there were, frankly.”

“We can’t forget here that this entire thing came about because of reckless conduct of the president,” Barr furthered. “If he had just turned over the documents, which I think every other person in the country would have done. They’re the government’s documents. They’re official records. They’re not his personal records.”

The case for compost: Why recycling food waste is so much better than sending it to landfill

Most food and garden waste in Australia comes from homes. Australian households waste 3.1 million tons of food each year. That’s more than five kilograms each household per week.

Over half of all household waste is food organics and garden organics, also known as “FOGO“. These scraps and clippings take up space in landfill and, when they rot, emit dangerous greenhouse gases.

The federal government’s National Waste Policy Action Plan aims to increase the organic waste recycling rate from 47% to 80% by 2030 and halve the amount sent to landfill. This won’t happen on its own — we need investment and action.

Food and garden waste can be captured and turned into compost. Composting is no longer just the domain of the home gardener or eco-warrior. It’s happening at commercial scale, through services such as council collection from homes.

A federal government fund is building new composting facilities and supporting other food and garden organics recycling projects. The South Australian government has invested in council trials of weekly green bin collection and fortnightly rubbish collection.

But more must be done. Recycling food waste into high-quality compost is a win-win solution, for people and the planet. Here, we explain why.

           

Scrap Together is a community education program from EPA NSW helping councils harvest FOGO.

         

Compost is a winner for the climate

When food rots in landfill, in the absence of oxygen, the process releases a potent greenhouse gas called methane.

Composting is different because the microbes can breathe. In the presence of oxygen, they transform waste into valuable organic matter without producing methane. They recycle organic carbon and nutrients into compost, which can be used to improve soil health and productivity.

This process also captures and stores carbon in the soil, rather than releasing it as carbon dioxide (CO₂) to the atmosphere.

In Australia, organics recycling (including food and garden organics, biosolids and tree wastes) saves an estimated 3.8 million tons of CO₂ from entering the atmosphere each year. That’s equivalent to planting 5.7 million trees or taking 877,000 cars off the road.

Soils can profit from compost because globally an estimated 116 billion tonnes of organic carbon has been lost from agricultural soils. This has contributed to rising CO₂ levels in the atmosphere.

Promisingly, compost can restore soil organic carbon while also boosting health and fertility. Compost improves soil structure and water retention. It’s also a source of essential nutrients that reduces the demand for costly fertilizers.

The opportunity presented by soils to draw down atmospheric CO₂ levels was brought to global awareness in the 2015 global Paris Agreement, via the “4-per-mille” initiative.

Translated from French, it means increasing the organic carbon stored in global soils by 0.04% each year (4 per 1000) would neutralize increases in atmospheric CO₂. In other words, CO₂ would remain constant rather than continue to increase. That would make a substantial contribution to mitigating climate change.

           

Introducing the international “4 per 1000” Initiative.

      

Farming with precision

Our research has investigated how compost can benefit global agriculture.

We found that in most cases where compost is applied as a generic product to agricultural land, the benefits are not fully realized. But if suitable composts and application methods were aligned with target crops and growth environments, crop yields can be increased and organic carbon in soils replenished.

We call this a “precision compost strategy”. Using a data-driven approach, we estimate global application of this strategy has potential to increase the production of major cereal crops by 96.3 million tonnes annually. This is 4% of current global production and twice Australia’s annual cereal harvest.

Of great relevance for Australia’s farms, precision compost has the strongest effects in dry and warm climates, boosting yield by up to 40%. We now need to develop this strategy for the specific needs of farms.

Compost has the potential to restore 19.5 billion tonnes carbon in cropland topsoil, equivalent to 26.5% of current topsoil soil organic carbon stocks in the top 20 cm.

Give FOGO a go-go

The amount of food and garden waste in Australia is growing at a rate six times faster than Australia’s population and 2.5 times faster than GDP.

But less than a third of Australian households have access to food waste collection services. A national rollout has been pushed back from 2023 to the end of this decade so there is time to overcome some roadblocks. This includes uptake by community and high quality composting.

This waste stream offers a huge opportunity for landfill diversion and compost production. The cost benefit alone is compelling: Councils can save up to A$4.2 million a year on landfill levies by diverting 30,000 tons of waste (based on A$74 to 140 per tonne of waste, with levies increasing).

Preventing food in the home from being wasted should be top priority. But for unavoidable food waste, turning it into high-quality compost makes perfect sense.The Conversation

Susanne Schmidt, Professor  – School of Agriculture and Food Science, The University of Queensland and Nicole Robinson, Research Fellow, School of Agriculture and Food Sciences, The University of Queensland

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

James Marsden loves playing his “Jury Duty” alter ego, a narcissistic jerk who’s “off his rocker”

James Marsden is not a jacka**, but he loved playing one on TV. In “Jury Duty,” Marsden shows up to do his civic duty alongside a room full of average mortals and nonchalantly lets everyone know how famous he is. As he ingratiates himself with Ronald Gladden, the easygoing hero of the documentary-style comedy, Marsden can barely contain his excitement at being recognized.

What Gladden doesn’t know is that this version of James Marsden is not the real Marsden. The civil case he and the other jurors are considering isn’t real, either. The only real element in this production is Gladden. And Marsden, working with the show’s creators Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky (who worked together on “The Office“) along with showrunner Cody Heller, was adamant about ensuring that Gladden emerge from the story as its hero.

Based on the escalating popularity of “Jury Duty,” that direction is striking a chord. Viewers have fallen for Gladden’s sincerity and forbearance, especially when he responds to characters like David Brown’s tech apparatus-obsessed Todd by showing him “A Bug’s Life” to let Todd know that he understands and accepts him. (The next day, Todd shows up to court wearing “chair pants.”) 

Augmenting Gladden’s goodness is Marsden’s terrible behavior. While Gladden naturally makes the strangers he’s sequestered with for two and a half weeks into friends, Marsden’s alter ego tests everyone’s patience by constantly talking about a role he’s up for in a fake prestige drama titled “Lone Pine.” 

Jury DutyRonald Gladden and James Marsden star in Jury Duty (Courtesy of Amazon Freevee)

“He’s constantly looking to get his feathers stroked,” Marsden tells Salon in a conversation conducted over Zoom. “But he’s not on set having his ego coddled by everyone. He’s there with a bunch of other normal people serving their civic duty. He’s not used to not being the center of attention.”

So Jacka** James Marden yanks our attention to him. But in a cast stacked with improvisational actors, Marsden is the highest-profile personality and the one with the least amount of improv experience. Yet he blends in easily and plausibly.

Marsden’s recent appearances in “Dead to Me,” “Party Down” and “Westworld” have established him as the type of performer who’s comfortable as a guest or co-star. In Gladden, he found someone worth supporting onscreen and off. 

They still text, a note that adds yet another layer of sweetness to a show where kindness carries the day. That may be why the recently released commentary edition of “Jury Duty” is as enjoyable to experience as the first go-round with the show – you can tell these people genuinely like and care about each other. 

Marsden spoke about the cast’s chemistry and the fun of playing the worst version of himself in our wide-ranging conversation.

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

What are some of the things that the conversation around “Jury Duty” is teaching you about the impact it has made?

Well, the fact that I’m still here that we’re still talking about it, to be honest. You always hope that something’s going to take off and catch like wildfire, like this thing has done. But I didn’t anticipate it, to be honest. So I was expecting maybe a week’s worth of interviews.

I mean, listen, it’s been a joy. I love sitting here chatting with you. That, to me is a barometer for how well the show is doing, like you taking the time out to chat with me today, a month and a half after it opened. I think it’s been around that amount of time, right?

It’s been around for a while.

Every day, there’s somebody going, “‘Jury Duty’ is the best show on TV right now.” And it’s a real testament to what we pulled off, and it’s a testament to I think, Ronald . . . having him at the center of it and being the spirit of the show, and his sort of pure-heartedness.

Jury DutyThe cast of Jury Duty (Courtesy of Amazon Freevee)

I’ve been watching TV professionally for more than two decades now. I remember and when I first saw this, I thought to myself, “Oh: It’s ‘The Joe Schmo Show.’  I don’t know if you saw that show when it was on Spike TV. “Jury Duty” is not that, of course. It turned out to be something totally different.

I actually never saw “The Joe Schmo Show.” And I did that on purpose, just because I didn’t want anything in my head to dictate what the show was going to be. I also didn’t want to get too scared because . . . I heard mixed things about it.

But you tell me. I’ve seen Nathan Fielder’s “The Rehearsal,” and I saw “Nathan For You,” and obviously all of Sacha Baron Cohen’s stuff, but that’s about it.

“I’ve never done anything like this before. And Jacka** James Marsden is off his rocker.”

Well, first of all, Matthew Kennedy Gould ended up coming off as total sweetheart,  But I don’t necessarily know that his sweetheart nature was what the producers meant to highlight. I think they wanted to feature somebody kind, but a little bit gullible. Also, it was a send-up of all reality competition shows like “The Bachelor” and “Survivor.” Even though the people around him are not behaving terribly, they are in this heightened environment. [Of note: TBS is reviving “The Joe Schmo Show” in response to the popularity of “Jury Duty.”]

In “Jury Duty,” you have Ronald, this kind, wonderful, but also smart, very emotionally intuitive person. Then you bring him into a very realistic non-reality setting, allegedly to participate in a documentary. . . . So we have this whole idea of, here’s someone who’s going into a situation expecting he’s being filmed. With that expectation, it seems to be a small miracle that he didn’t at some point, say, “Hold on for a second,” and then look to see if there are hidden cameras. How much do you think that fear of being found out added to the comedy?

The fear was absolutely what kept us focused and balanced and making sure that we don’t go too silly with everything. Because when you read the scripts, you’re kind of like, “This is absurd.” . . . So I think the fear of blowing it was a limiter to how broad the comedy could go. We had to keep it in the zone of, “This could actually really be happening.”

And like you said, he’s a really smart guy. But I think the greatest quote from Ronald was, “For me to be suspicious, to think that all of this was fake and everyone around me was an actor, that none of the trial was real, for me to assume that was so much more absurd than the absurd little things here and there that were scripted. Because,” he was like, “why would anyone think that there’s a show built around me?” I didn’t word it the right way, the way he did, but I think that was really profound. It’s so much crazier for me to think that what this reality really is, is actually happening. Does that make sense?

It makes complete sense.

Yeah. That’s way crazier and way more absurd looking than any of the scripted stuff we had going for him.

Jury DutyJames Marsden stars in Jury Duty (Courtesy of Amazon Freevee)

I think there were moments where he kind of was like, “Is this a reality show?” And then we would just dial it back and, you know, and then [there would be] six hours of boring court. And then he was like, “OK, well, maybe it’s not a reality show, because why would they be spending money on six hours of boring droning on in court?

That was the “reality bank” that the producers refer to in the commentary.

Right. So we’d feed that every day, especially early on. It was important to establish that we didn’t go out of the gates with silly stuff. . . . Once he got comfortable, and we got to know him a bit, and we as characters got a little agitated with the process, or like, overtired or annoyed that the whole thing, we could start pushing some of the other comedy beats. But, you know, you said just going back to your question, like, I’ve never done anything like this before. And Jacka** James Marsden is off his rocker.

I remember thinking halfway through filming, I was like, “What are we doing? I don’t even know if it’s funny. I don’t know if it’s working. I don’t know if the cameras are catching my bits.” Because you’re going nonstop. The cameras never yelled, “Cut.” You just always had to make sure if you’re doing a little something, you look around and see if there’s a camera on you.

Just to make sure that I do not miss this: did you know how to do the sign spinning that you did in the background during deliberation?

Oh, no. All I was thinking was, today is a light day for my character. He’d be annoyed that the most important part of the jury process – the deliberation, where they try to get a unanimous vote – that his voice does not count at all. I just was thinking he’s going to be as obnoxious as he can and try to draw attention to himself in whatever way possible. So I literally was just looking around the room for props. I was like, “What can I do in the background of everyone else else’s important interviews?”

That, by the way, that’s court evidence, spinning.

Jacka** James Marsden took evidence and turned it into, like “Mattress Sale Here.”

It just shows how obnoxious he can be.

You did a great job. I would have bought whatever product you were bringing to my attention.

Well, thanks for that. James Marsden would appreciate the compliment. And he would have probably told you that he played a sign spinner in a movie once.


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I want to ask you about that James Marsden. It seems to me that there’s a certain type of actor who is willing do what you did, and with glee and joy. I don’t think that every actor would do it. Maybe I’m wrong in that.

No, I think you’re right. I mean, I don’t know. I think now, in hindsight, a lot of actors would be like, “Yeah, I want to do that.” But I don’t know, I wasn’t really seeing the danger there. What we do is so much fun. And it should be fun. And I’ve learned to never take myself too seriously with all of that.

I’m wondering if you brought any awareness of what people might be saying about you or celebrities to this character, this other version of James Marsden. Or did you just think, “What would this guy do that I would never do?”

Yeah, I think that was more of the latter of what you just said.  One of the traits of a narcissist is not knowing that you’re a narcissist, right? That you don’t really care about other people’s days, or what’s going on in their lives or you only want to hear your horoscope. You don’t want to listen to anyone else’s dreams. So I loved that, to be given permission to play that character.

In real life I get noticed, I get my photos taken, but not to a crazy degree where it’s really encroaching on my privacy. But to be able to make fun of yourself and poke fun a bit, I don’t know. I’m making fun of the fact that he doesn’t get noticed as much as he wants to. And that’s actually kind of a reality, right? I don’t get noticed all the time. But now, the irony is that “Jury Duty” has sort of put me in a slingshot and at least for now. I’m getting recognized everywhere, because of this show.

“People are wanting to see more real stuff…But also, I feel like they’re a little more sensitive to, ‘Hey, let’s not do anything cruel.'”

What do you think was the worst thing that James Marsden did that you’re surprised that he got away with, in terms of how Ronald reacted?

I would say destroying the birthday party, flipping the cake was a pretty extreme thing for him to do. I was worried about that moment because it was written in the script that I just destroy it – I pop every balloon, I throw cake at people, obscenities would just go on. The guy has an absolute breakdown. And I saw immediately after I flipped the cake that Ronald was a little bummed out. And I couldn’t do any more. I just had to stop there. Have a little argument, look like an a**, embarrass myself, because I thought it was a pity party for him. But I think that was the biggest thing.

I didn’t want to feel like we’re traumatizing poor Ronald. The producers, I was driving them crazy throughout. But to their credit, they were all on the same page of, “Let’s be nice to this guy. Let’s never make him the butt of a joke.”

You can tell there was a lot of care taken with Ronald.

There was. I wasn’t going to do it unless we did protect him that way. Like, he was never going to be the source of the comedy as far as humiliating him, because I just think that’s unfair. It’s not an equal playing field, you know?

Jury DutyJames Marsden and Ishmel Sahid star in Jury Duty (Courtesy of Amazon Freevee)

Let me approach what I first asked you in a different way: What do you think it is about the show that is most connecting to audiences?

I would say a couple of things. One, I think the audience is hungry for something original. We’re in a sort of risk-averse environment right now, where we only want to do IP stuff that’s been done before and reimagine it for a younger audience, because it’s safe. And that’s OK; I’m not slamming that. But you know, it’s exciting sometimes to take some big swings and try to do something different. Because I feel like the audience will respond to that, or at least they have the potential of them responding to it.

But I think the real thing of why it’s working is that there is a good-natured feeling to it at the end. And when I watch it, I feel like we were successful in keeping that our North Star through the whole time, of making sure we’re protecting this guy, and we really are genuinely celebrating him and his nature by the end of it.

People are wanting to see more real stuff, more reality-based stuff. But also, I feel like they’re a little more sensitive to, “Hey, let’s not do anything cruel. Let’s show off the fact that this guy is a hero. Let’s highlight it.”

Now that “Jury Duty” is out, the precise circumstances of the production cannot be replicated. I don’t know if you disagree with that.

No. I mean . . . I think there’s a there’s a version you could do, but it would have to be a new cast. I would think that if they’re going to try to replicate this, that it would be a completely different backdrop. I don’t know that it would be jury duty, I think it’d be a different scenario. But yeah, unless we just decided to do “Jury Duty 2” and have the whole thing be scripted, and Ronald be an actor in the show. But that would be like, “OK, now we’re making ‘The Office.'”

Right. That would lose a little bit of the magic.

And it might be a little self-indulgent. But I don’t know. It’ll be interesting to see what they do next, because I know Amazon’s probably chomping at the bit to give them another season of something.

To that end, there was so much discussion of “Lone Pine” that there was a moment where I wondered, “What if ‘Lone Pine’ were an actual movie?”

I definitely want to make that movie. I don’t know if it would last two hours but I would love to make a 15-minute short.

Would it be a comedy with a heightened dramatic tone?

I don’t know. Maybe it’ll be like a real pretentious, serious drama. And you can either laugh if you think it’s funny or not. That’s my view on it. Do you remember “Tropic Thunder”?

Oh my gosh, yes.

Remember the trailers in the beginning of the movie? That’s what I want it to be.  If I did that with “Lone Pine” – which, I’m hell-bent on making this happen – I would approach it like a mediocre actor has been given an opportunity to win an Oscar and he has to squeeze it into these 15 minutes of film.

I really hope this happens.

We’ll figure out a way of doing it. And Ron has got be in it. We’ve got to get Ronald in “Lone Pine.” And then Chris Pine’s got to come in and do a cameo as well.

All episodes of “Jury Duty” as well as a newly-released cast commentary edition are streaming on Amazon Freevee.

Republican mocked over ridiculous Trump defense: “There are 33 bathrooms at Mar-a-Lago”

Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., offered a bizarre defense of indicted former President Donald Trump after he was accused of storing sensitive national security secrets in a Mar-a-Lago bathroom.

Donalds hours before Trump’s arraignment on Tuesday argued on CNN that special counsel Jack Smith’s indictment is “plain ridiculous” before turning to discuss images of documents being stored in a bathroom at Mar-a-Lago.

“You guys are throwing up the pictures about they were in a bathroom or on a stage,” Donalds said. “As somebody who has been to Mar-a-Lago, you can’t walk through Mar-a-Lago of your own accord because Secret Service is all over the place. So if the documents are in a place, they are in a room, depending on the time of year, you can’t even get into said room.”

“There are 33 bathrooms at Mar-a-Lago!” Donalds added. “So don’t act like it’s in some random bathroom that the guests can go into. That’s not true!”

Donalds’ comments came one day after House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., was asked whether it was a “good look” for Trump to have stowed documents in the bathroom and attempted to compare Trump’s case to classified documents found in the garage of President Joe Biden’s Delaware home 

“I don’t know. Is it a good picture to have boxes in a garage that opens up all the time? A bathroom door locks,” he said.

The lawmakers’ defense of Trump was widely mocked.

“Needless to say, this is not an argument Trump’s lawyers will make in court,” tweeted national security attorney Bradley Moss.

“When is someone going to tell these people that bathrooms lock from the inside?” tweeted Jonah Goldberg, editor-in-chief at The Dispatch.

Former FBI agent Pete Strzok pointed out that the photos included in the indictment show that files were also stored on stage at a Mar-a-Lago ballroom, not just the bathroom.


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“Everyone knows that hiding top secret materials in your bathroom and refusing to turn them over to the feds isn’t a crime as long as it might be challenging for the thousands of people passing through your club to access them,” quipped The Daily Beast’s Matt Fuller.

“No one ever talks about the 32 bathrooms that didn’t have boxes of classified documents in them,” tweeted George Washington University Prof. Jeffrey Bingenheimer. 

“Planted info”: Trump rages on Truth Social hours before arraignment after he can’t find new lawyer

Former President Donald Trump lashed out at special counsel Jack Smith on Truth Social just hours before his arraignment in a Miami courthouse on Tuesday.

Trump was criminally charged last week in connection to his mishandling and retaining of troves of national security documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida after departing from the White House.

On Monday, the former president vowed to “go after” President Joe Biden and his family in an all-caps post.

 

“NOW THAT THE ‘SEAL’ IS BROKEN, IN ADDITION TO CLOSING THE BORDER & REMOVING ALL OF THE ‘CRIMINAL’ ELEMENTS THAT HAVE ILLEGALLY INVADED OUR COUNTRY, MAKING AMERICA ENERGY INDEPENDENT, & EVEN DOMINANT AGAIN, & IMMEDIATELY ENDING THE WAR BETWEEN RUSSIA & UKRAINE, I WILL APPOINT A REAL SPECIAL ‘PROSECUTOR’ TO GO AFTER THE MOST CORRUPT PRESIDENT IN THE HISTORY OF THE USA, JOE BIDEN, THE ENTIRE BIDEN CRIME FAMILY, & ALL OTHERS INVOLVED WITH THE DESTRUCTION OF OUR ELECTIONS, BORDERS, & COUNTRY ITSELF!” Trump wrote.

On Tuesday, Trump took specific aim at Smith, who has spearheaded the Mar-a-Lago probe since being appointed to the case by Attorney General Merrick Garland in November 2022. Smith is also investigating the ex-president for his efforts in attempting to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, as well as his role in stoking the violence that led to the deadly Capitol insurrection. 

Trump, who initially claimed that the FBI may have “planted” evidence during its August 2022 search of Mar-a-Lago, recycled his claim once again on Truth Social

“This is the Thug, over turned consistently and unanimously in big cases, that Biden and his CORRUPT Injustice Department stuck on me,” Trump raged. “He’s a Radical Right Lunatic and Trump Hater, as are all his friends and family, who probably ‘planted’ information in the “boxes” given to them. They taint everything that they touch, including our Country, which is rapidly going to HELL!”

Trump intends to plead not guilty at his Tuesday afternoon arraignment, he told conservative radio host Howie Carr.

“I’ll just say not guilty,” Trump said. “I didn’t do anything wrong. I did nothing wrong. Presidential Records Act, it’s not even a criminal event. There is no criminality here. It’s ridiculous.”

After several of his top attorneys resigned following news of the indictment, Trump and his legal defense team were forced to scramble for reinforcements. The Guardian reported that the MAGA team was ultimately unsuccessful after several Floridian lawyers declined the opportunity — including Howard Srebnick and David Markus — partly owing to Trump’s highly volatile, risky, and difficult nature as a client. Other expressed concerns included reputational damage and the strength of the indictment, The Guardian reported. 

MAGA attorneys Todd Blanche and Chris Kise will appear in court to represent Trump on Tuesday. The former president’s co-defendant and personal valet, Walt Nauta, will be represented by lawyer Stanley Woodward. 

Do you need to wash rice before cooking? Here’s the science

Rice is a staple food for billions of people in Asia and Africa. It’s also a versatile ingredient for many iconic dishes from around the world, including dolmades from Greece, risottos from Italy, paella from Spain and rice puddings from the United Kingdom.

Despite its universal appeal, the question asked in every kitchen, be it a professional one or your own home, is whether you should pre-wash (or rinse) your rice before cooking.

 

What do chefs and cooks say?

Culinary experts claim pre-washing rice reduces the amount of starch coming from the rice grains. You can see this in the cloudy rinse water, which studies have shown to be the free starch (amylose) on the surface of the rice grain produced by the milling process.

In culinary circles, washing is advocated for some dishes when a separated grain is sought after. Yet for other dishes such as risottos, paella and rice puddings (where you need a sticky, creamy effect), washing is avoided.

Other factors, such as the type of rice, family tradition, local health warnings and even the perceived time and effort required will influence whether people pre-wash their rice.

 

Is there evidence that washing rice makes it less sticky?

A recent study compared the effect of washing on the stickiness and hardness of three different types of rice from the same supplier. The three types were glutinous rice, medium grain rice and jasmine rice. These different rices were either not washed at all, washed three times with water or washed ten times with water.

Contrary to what chefs will tell you, this study showed the washing process had no effect on the stickiness (or hardness) of the rice.

Instead, the researchers demonstrated the stickiness was not due to the surface starch (amylose), but rather a different starch called amylopectin that is leached out of the rice grain during the cooking process. The amount leached differed between the types of rice grains.

So, it’s the variety of rice — rather than washing — that’s critical to the stickiness. In this study, glutinous rice was the stickiest, while medium grain rice and jasmine rice were less sticky and also harder as tested in the laboratory. (Hardness is representative of the textures associated with biting and chewing.)

 

You may still want to wash your rice, though

Traditionally rice was washed to rinse off dust, insects, little stones and bits of husk left from the rice hulling process. This may still be important for some regions of the world where the processing is not as meticulous and may provide peace of mind for others.

More recently, with the heavy use of plastics in the food supply chain, microplastics have been found in our foods, including rice. The washing process has been shown to rinse up to 20% of the plastics from uncooked rice.

This same study found that irrespective of the packaging (plastic or paper bags) you buy rice in, it contains the same level of microplastics. The researchers also showed plastics in (pre-cooked) instant rice have been found to be fourfold higher than in uncooked rice. If you pre-rinse instant rice, you could reduce plastics by 40%.

Rice is also known to contain relatively high levels of arsenic, due to the crop absorbing more arsenic as it grows. Washing rice has been shown to remove about 90% of bio-accessible  arsenic, but it also rinses out a large amount of other nutrients important for our health, including copper, iron, zinc and vanadium.

For some people, rice offers a small percentage of their daily intake of these nutrients and hence will have a small impact on their health. But for populations that consume large amounts of heavily washed rice daily, it could impact their overall nutrition.

Another study looked at other heavy metals, lead and cadmium, in addition to arsenic; it found that pre-washing decreased levels of all these from between 7–20%. The World Health Organization has warned of the risk of arsenic exposure from water and food.

Arsenic levels in rice vary depending on where it’s grown, the cultivars of rice and the ways it is cooked. The best advice remains to pre-wash your rice and ensure you consume a variety of grains. The most recent study in 2005 found that the highest level of arsenic was in the United States. However it is important to keep in mind that arsenic is present in other foods including products made from rice (cakes, crackers, biscuits and cereals), seaweed, seafood and vegetables.

 

Can washing rice prevent bacteria?

In short, no. Washing rice will have no effect on the bacterial content of the cooked rice, as high cooking temperatures will kill all bacteria present.

What is more concerning is how long you store cooked rice or washed rice at room temperature. Cooking rice does not kill the bacterial spores from a pathogen called Bacillus cereus.

If wet rice or cooked rice is kept at room temperature, this can activate the bacterial spores and they begin to grow. These bacteria then produce toxins which can not be deactivated by cooking or re-heating; these toxins can cause severe gastrointestinal disease. So, make sure you avoid keeping washed or cooked rice at room temperature for too long.

Evangeline Mantzioris, Program Director of Nutrition and Food Sciences, Accredited Practising Dietitian, University of South Australia

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

“A lot more information to come”: Christie predicts more evidence will drop after Trump indictment

Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie lit into former President Donald Trump after he was indicted last week on 37 criminal counts in the Mar-a-Lago probe.

Christie, who is challenging Trump for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, said at a CNN town hall on Monday that Trump’s alleged mishandling of classified documents was “awful” and predicted “a lot more information to come.”

“It is a very tight, very detailed, evidence-laden indictment, and the conduct in there is awful,” he said. “What I can tell you, for sure I know about that indictment, is there’s probably about a third of the evidence they actually have is in that indictment.”

“There will guaranteed be a lot more. When you’re a prosecutor, you never put every card on the table before the trial,” Christie added, alleging that Trump is “voluntarily putting our country through this.”

“This is vanity run amok. Ego run amok. … Everyone is blaming the prosecutors. He did this.”

Trump, who was indicted by a federal grand jury last week, is slated to appear for an arraignment at a Miami courthouse on Tuesday.

Christie also addressed members of the GOP who have accused the Justice Department of weaponizing law enforcement against Trump.

“We’re in a situation where there are people in my own party who are blaming DOJ. How about, blame him? He did it,” Christie said.

“He flew the boxes up to New Jersey for summer vacation. What is this, like, they’re a family member?” Christie said of the national security documents Trump reportedly retained. “Seriously, I’ve got to have my boxes with me. Let me ask you a question. What exactly was he doing with them? Did someone remind him he’s not the president anymore?”

Christie previously supported Trump after dropping out of the 2016 Republican primary and briefly headed his transition team before being iced out. Christie ultimately broke with Trump over his fraudulent election claims and the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot.


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“It was a mistake in 2016 not to confront Donald Trump early,” Christie said while announcing his bid for the presidency at an event in New Hampshire last week. “I am going out there to take out Donald Trump, but here’s why: I want to win. And I don’t want him to win.”

“It’s the last throes of a bitter man who only wants power back for himself,” he said of Trump’s re-election campaign.

Trump also drew criticism from fellow Republican candidate Nikki Haley, who previously argued that the Mar-a-Lago probe was evidence of “prosecutorial overreach.”

During an appearance on Fox News, Haley criticized the Justice Department while also dinging Trump for his conduct “if this indictment is true.”

“One, the DOJ and FBI have lost all credibility with the American people. And getting rid of just senior management isn’t gonna be enough to fix this. This is gonna take a complete overhaul and we have to do that,” Haley said.

“Two, the second thing can also be true. If this indictment is true, if what it says is actually the case, President Trump was incredibly reckless with our national security,” she added. “More than that, I’m a military spouse. My husband’s about to deploy this weekend. This puts all of our military men and women in danger if you’re going to talk about what our military is capable of or how we would about invading or doing something with one of our enemies. And if that’s the case, it’s reckless, it’s frustrating, and it causes problems.”