Spring Sale: Get 1 Year, Save 58%

Tart, savory and sunny: Here are Salon Food’s top 5 lemon recipes to welcome spring

If there’s one piece of cooking advice that I can give to everyone, it’s this: Never underestimate the power of the lowly lemon. 

Known as nature’s most versatile fruit, lemons take the center stage in countless sweet and savory dishes. There’s classic lemon bars, which are made from a lemony brown butter shortbread crust topped with confectioners’ sugar. There’s lemon meringue pie, which has been described as “the lemon recipe of all lemon recipes” by Food52’s Kelly Vaughan. There’s also asparagus with lemon-pepper marinade — a recipe courtesy of Bryant Terry — and spaghetti pasta with lemon-parmigiano sauce (you can never go wrong with adding lemon zest in your pasta!).

Of course, we can’t appreciate lemons without mentioning the cocktails. A few honorable mentions include the candy-inspired Lemon Drop Martini, the simple Vodka Sidecar, the classic and straightforward Lemon Lavender Gin Rickey and the sunny Limoncello e Pepe.

There’s truly no shortage of lemon recipes to try and enjoy. That’s why Salon Food went ahead and compiled a list of the top five lemon recipes you have to try this spring.


Want more great food writing and recipes? Subscribe to Salon Food’s newsletter, The Bite.


When life gives you lemons, slice them, juice them, zest them and enjoy!

01
Lemon Rosemary Cookies
Rosemary Shortbread CookiesRosemary Shortbread Cookies (Getty Images / Julie Vinogradov / 500px)

These Italian-inspired cookies from columnist Bibi Hutchings are infused with fresh lemon zest and rosemary, making them the perfect treat to enjoy on a beautiful sunny day.

 

To start, combine flour, cornmeal, rosemary and salt in a bowl. Then beat a mixture of butter, sugar, egg, lemon zest, lemon juice (optional) and vanilla until light and fluffy. Stir in the flour mixture and beat before shaping the dough into a 1 1/2″ diameter log and storing it in the refrigerator. Slice the dough into 1/4″ cookies and place on a cookie sheet. Bake the cookies at 350 degrees for 15 minutes or until they’re a light golden color on the edges.

 

As Hutchings wrote, “Fresh lemon and rosemary paired together not only tastes great but smells intoxicating. When you bake these cookies, the beautiful fragrance that permeates your home is better than anything I’ve ever diffused from DoTerra or Young Living.”

02
Citrus Cooler Cookies
Citrus cooler cookiesCitrus cooler cookies (Ashlie Stevens)

Another sweet recipe from Hutchings is the lemony citrus cooler cookies, which flaunt the strong flavors of lemons (preferably Meyer lemons) and satsuma oranges (navel oranges also work!).

 

These cookies call for both the juice and peel of one orange and one small lemon. The mixture is then beaten with butter, sugar, flour, soda and salt to make a compact dough. To shape the cookies, gently flatten the small balls of dough with your fingers or the back of a wet spoon. Bake the cookies for 10 to 12 minutes at 350 degrees or until golden. Once finished and cooled, top them with a lemon-orange-flavored icing.

 

Per Hutchings, these cookies are just the thing for the transition from warmer to cooler weather. But, they are also great for the opposite as we go from the cold temperatures of winter to the warm temperatures of spring.

03
Bucatini with Spinach, Brown Butter Cream and Toasted Hazelnuts
Cheese Ravioli in Brown Butter Sage SauceCheese Ravioli in Brown Butter Sage Sauce (Getty Images/JacobVanHouten)

This super-quick pasta dish from Salon’s Michael La Corte is the perfect meal to enjoy on weeknights. It’s also incredibly delectable and comforting. Take it from La Corte, who wrote, “Anchored by brown butter, this recipe soars, taking those standard yet reliable components to new heights by not only gussying up the ingredient list but also adding a bit more time and heat.” 

 

The first step is to prepare the bucatini by boiling a large pot of water and adding a sprinkle of salt. In a large pan or skillet, make the brown butter sauce by melting one stick of high-quality, unsalted butter and swirling it until it’s nice and toasty. Add garlic, Better than Bouillon, a cup of water and the starchy pasta water and cook over low heat. Then add heavy cream, lemon juice and lemon zest and cook until the sauce beautifully coats the back of a spoon. Add spinach and drained pasta to the finished brown butter sauce. Toss well and cook for about a minute before serving the pasta with chopped hazelnuts, lemon zest, chives and grated cheese.

04
Caramelized Lemon Cacio e Pepe
Chickpea PastaChickpea Pasta (MAry Elizabeth Williams)

Cookbook author, food writer and influencer Andy Baraghani knows that lemons are a star in numerous delicious dishes. That’s why he came up with a recipe for caramelized lemon cacio e pepe. This isn’t your traditional cacio e pepe — which typically calls for just pasta, grana padano, starchy pasta water and black pepper. Baraghani’s recipe takes the classic pasta dish a step further by incorporating lemons, chickpeas and plenty of Parmesan cheese.

 

To start, prepare a pound of your favorite pasta (spaghetti, linguine, bucatini . . . you name it!). In a large pot or Dutch oven, sauté the slices of one small lemon in olive oil. Once the lemons are lightly browned, transfer them to your serving bowl and add the chickpeas into the oil and cook. Add garlic, salt and lots of pepper and stir well. Then add starchy pasta water to the chickpeas mixture and stir in the butter. Transfer the pasta to the sauce and cook, slowly adding Parmesan cheese. Turn off the heat, stir in the caramelized lemon slices, serve and enjoy!

05
Garlicky, Lemony Fried Chickpeas
Fried ChickpeasFried Chickpeas (Mary Elizabeth Williams)

Mary Elizabeth Williams’ recipe for a summer snack is simple, satisfying and addicting. Inspired by Baraghani’s “The Cook You Want to Be: Everyday Recipes to Impress” and food blog “Appetizer Addiction,” Williams’ homemade recipe can also be enjoyed as a side dish or a light supper. 

 

First, heat 1⁄4 cup of vegetable oil in a large pan or skillet before adding one 15-ounce can of drained and dried chickpeas. Cook the chickpeas for about 10 minutes or until they are browned and started to pop. Then add garlic and the slices of one small lemon and stir. Remove the chickpeas from the heat and top with salt and pepper. Enjoy them while they are still hot and crispy! 

 

Williams can attest that these chickpeas are “enthusiastically welcomed by guests, but also that they’re far too good to save for only when guests are around.” 

 

“So, go ahead and make them — even if just for yourself — and toast the achievement of getting though another long day.”

Trump stokes infighting among his own lawyers. His former attorney says “legally that is suicidal”

Donald Trump’s legal team has been “plagued by infighting” — and the former president has continued to stoke tensions among his attorneys even as he faces multiple local and federal criminal investigations, according to The Wall Street Journal.

The Manhattan district attorney is investigating Trump’s role in wire payments sent to adult film star Stormy Daniels in 2016, while the Fulton County, Ga., district attorney is probing Trump and his allies’ attempts to overturn the state’s presidential election results. Special counsel Jack Smith is delving into the handling of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago, as well as his role in the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot. But behind the scenes, Trump’s team has “suffered frequent turnover due to clashes over personality and legal strategy,” according to WSJ.

In attempts to keep up with Trump’s antics, his lawyers have “questioned each other’s tactics and competence behind the scenes and have urged contradictory approaches,” according to the report.

Trump himself has intentionally stoked the infighting by pitting his attorneys against each other, “at times calling advisers to ask what they think of his legal team’s performance and calling other lawyers to ask them to join or replace members of his team,” according to the report.

Former Trump White House attorney Ty Cobb asserted that rather than driving a wedge between his attorneys, Trump should focus on finding a leader of the group to streamline different investigations unfolding at once.

“He plays his own captain, and legally that is suicidal,” Cobb told WSJ. “His strategy, to the extent there is one, appears totally reactive.” 

Chris Kise, one of Trump’s lawyers, told the outlet that the report was “sheer nonsense.”

“You are working on disparate paths but ultimately everyone is on the same team,” he said, adding that Trump’s behavior is not so unusual. “Does he listen all the time, no,” Kise said. “But in more than 30 years as a lawyer I have never had a client who listens all the time.”


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Advisers told The Wall Street Journal that Trump’s throng of attorneys envision his current predicament to be steeped in politics as opposed to legality, fearing more for the inconvenience of an indictment amid his 2024 presidential campaign than any potential legal consequences suffered. 

Despite the ostensibly rampant infighting, Trump spokesperson Steven Cheung claimed that the ex-president’s campaign is prepared to combat any legal roadblocks in the future.

“This operation has been fine-tuned since 2016,” Cheung said. “Dealing with these types of news cycles, you learn to get good at it. We have a full-spectrum response operation on the campaign that can deal with anything that comes our way.”

Tucker stokes fears of “trans terrorism” — claims trans movement is “natural enemy” of Christianity

Fox News host Tucker Carlson stoked anti-trans fears in the wake of Monday’s Nashville school shooting, warning of what he described as the rising threat of “trans terrorism.”

Carlson cited the deadly shooting at the Covenant School, a private Christian school, to assert a broad and unfounded claim that trans people are waging a war against Christians.

“Why are some trans people so angry, and why do they seem to be mad specifically at traditional Christians?” Carlson asked. 

Carlson attempted to justify his claim by citing several examples of acts of violence committed by gender non-conforming individuals. He singled out a suspect in a plot to assassinate Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Nicholas Roske, as well as Anderson Lee Aldrich, the suspected perpetrator of a shooting at a gay bar in Colorado whose attorneys have stated is non-binary.

“And now this,” Carlson said. “And there could be more.”

The transgender movement “is the mirror image of Christianity, and therefore its natural enemy,” Carlson claimed.

“In Christianity, the price of admission is admitting [that] you’re not God,” he continued. The transgender movement, Carlson said, “takes the opposite view.”

“‘We can change the identity we were born with’: Christians can never agree with this statement because these are powers they believe God alone possesses. That … failure to acknowledge a trans person’s dominion over nature incites and enrages some in the trans community — people who believe they’re God can’t stand to be reminded that they are not.”

Carlson predicted a growing battle between the transgender movement and Christians in the coming years.

“Christianity and transgender orthodoxy are wholly incompatible theologies. They can never be reconciled. They are on a collision course with each other. One side is likely to draw blood before the other side,” he said. “That’s what we concluded last week. Yesterday morning, tragically, our fears were confirmed.”


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Carlson wasn’t the only Republican to deflect from rising gun violence by casting blame on transgender people.

“Everyone can stop blaming guns now,” tweeted Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., suggesting testosterone hormones and other medications for mental illness contributed to the Nashville suspect’s rampage.

Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, shared similarly transphobic remarks on Twitter, arguing that “if early reports are accurate that a trans shooter targeted a Christian school, there needs to be a lot of soul searching on the extreme left. Giving in to these ideas isn’t compassion, it’s dangerous.”

The New York Times reported that hate crimes rose twelve percent in 2021, according to F.B.I. data. Attacks spurred by a person’s sexual orientation comprised 16 percent of crimes reported.

“Illegal and egregious union busting”: Howard Schultz takes the hot seat in Bernie Sanders’ hearing

When Starbucks founder Howard Schultz appears before U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders’ Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions on Wednesday, he can expect a grilling. Sanders has long had Schultz in his sights. The man who built Starbucks into a global coffee chain has fiercely resisted his workers’ efforts to unionize.

The hearing will be a faceoff between two high-profile leaders who have positioned themselves as champions of workers, said Steven Greenhouse, a longtime labor reporter who is now a senior fellow at the Century Foundation. But Schultz’s image as a kinder, gentler capitalist has been tarnished by hundreds of labor violations and an anti-union campaign that has drawn rebuke from the National Labor Relations Board, as well as some of Starbucks’ own investors. “Bernie will bring much more attention to his charges that Starbucks and Schultz are engaged in illegal and egregious union busting,” Greenhouse said. The bully pulpit effect of the hearing “will turn up the heat on Starbucks because Bernie has such a big following, especially among young Americans,” Greenhouse said.

Schultz’s departure as CEO, two weeks earlier than expected, could have public relations benefits for Starbucks, giving the impression “that it is turning a new page, even if that new page turns out to be the same as the page that was just turned,” said Greenhouse. Laxman Narasimhan, a former chief executive officer of Reckitt, a multinational consumer goods company, took the reins from Schultz last week.

That Schultz is being called before the committee Sanders chairs next week is a testament to the surprising power of a youth-led national organizing campaign that first took root less than 18 months ago at a group of stores in Buffalo, New York. Those workers — or “partners” in Starbucks parlance — see this as a moment of accountability for Schultz and Starbucks.

“A lot of partners are really excited,” said Josie Serrano, a Starbucks barista. On a Saturday in March, the Long Beach store where they work was abuzz with talk of the hearing. “We had a partner from a nonunion store who was so excited to work a shift with us because she wants to talk to us about everything that’s been going on. She would love her store to be unionized,” Serrano said.

Despite that enthusiasm, truly holding Starbucks accountable for the unfair labor practice charges covering hundreds of allegations in dozens of states presents challenges. Labor law is so “weak” and “broken,” according to Benjamin Sachs, professor of labor and industry at Harvard Law School, that “even the best NLRB is fairly hamstrung in what they can do.

“We need a better stronger set of labor laws if we want to protect workers’ rights to unionize and maybe this hearing will highlight that fact,” he added.

Meanwhile, Sanders and his fellow committee members will have much to discuss with Schultz. Early this month, an NLRB administrative law judge issued a hefty 218-page decision in which he ruled that Starbucks had violated the National Labor Relations Act hundreds of time through “egregious and widespread misconduct demonstrating a general disregard for the employees’ fundamental rights” in the Buffalo area alone. Nationally, Starbucks Workers United, which represents most Starbucks workers who have unionized, has accused the company of illegally firing more than 200 workers because of their involvement in organizing for a union.  

The firings have had a chilling impact, said Tyler Keeling, a barista who has worked for seven years at Starbucks. The campaign in Buffalo inspired him to begin organizing a union at his Lakewood, California store, which held an election last May. When calling workers interested in organizing, “I haven’t had a call where one of their questions hasn’t been, will I get fired?” said Keeling.

Still, Starbucks’ most effective anti-union strategy is not the firings or store closings that the union charges have also come in retaliation for organizing. Greenhouse argued in The Guardian that it has been the company’s decision to give raises and new benefits to its nonunion workers while withholding them from its unionized employees. For its part, Starbucks has said that the company is prohibited from offering benefits to its unionized workers without engaging in collective bargaining, and that the store closures have come in response to safety concerns at those locations. The NLRB has brought a complaint asserting that Starbucks has illegally discriminated against union members by failing to offer them the same benefits as nonunion workers.

Rachel Wall, director of corporate communications for Starbucks, said the company has “been clear [that] all partners have a right to make their voice heard when it comes to union issues, and we do train managers that no partner can be disciplined or threatened with discipline for engaging in lawful union activity.”

Wall said Starbucks plans to “consider all options to obtain further legal review” of the administrative law judge’s March ruling, which requires the reinstatement of seven Buffalo-area workers. The judge determined those workers had been fired in retaliation for organizing, and he awarded back pay and damages to more than two dozen others whom the judge concluded had suffered retaliation. “The remedies that were ordered are just inappropriate given the record in this matter,” Wall said. Those fired “were separated following clear violations” of Starbucks policies and “not related to, or in retaliation for, any protected concerted activities, as the decision contends,” Wall wrote in an email. Starbucks has accused the NLRB of coordinating with the union to improperly influence the outcome of a union election. House Republicans have supported Starbucks by initiating a probe into the matter.

Schultz, who came out of retirement in March 2022 to serve as interim CEO, has reportedly taken the unionization campaign personally. When asked by New York Times reporter Andrew Ross Sorkin last June if he would ever embrace the union, he answered with a simple no, prompting an unfair labor practice charge from Starbucks Workers United.

Schultz was nominated on Thursday to sit on the Starbucks board of directors. Now that he is no longer CEO, it’s unclear what role he will play in steering the company’s response to the unionization effort. At a November 2021 meeting in Buffalo, before he had returned to the company, stores closed so that workers could listen to Schultz deliver a speech to Starbucks employees. “These workers were forced to attend this meeting while every Buffalo-area store was closed to listen to Mr. Schultz one month prior to union elections that were held in the area,” Sanders wrote in a letter to Starbucks’ general counsel in early March. That meeting, Sanders wrote, “makes clear the enormous power and influence Mr. Schultz has over labor policy at Starbucks even when he is not the official CEO of the company.” Sanders penned his letter after Schultz initially refused his invitation to appear before the HELP committee. Schultz changed his mind after Sanders said he would hold a committee vote to subpoena Schultz.

At the Buffalo address to workers in November, Schultz held Starbucks up as a model employer willing to buck conventional corporate wisdom by providing health coverage to part-time employees, stock options and free tuition to online college. The speech was punctuated with a refrain that was a window into his philosophy on unions: “Who forced us to that? Pushed us to do it? No one. We did it because we thought it was the right thing.”

At Starbucks board meetings, two empty chairs are placed at the table, one symbolically representing customers, the other workers. The empty chairs were Schultz’s idea. Some employees say they want a real seat at the table. They say they face an increasingly grueling work environment, harassment from customers and difficulty cobbling together enough hours to qualify for health benefits. “We don’t really have a living wage. We have benefits that are really hard to obtain, and they’re not accessible to a lot of people. And we also just have scheduling that is so inconsistent that we just never have the hours that we really need to even get those benefits or even just to pay our bills,” Serrano said.

Serrano is hopeful that the new CEO will bargain in good faith with the union, and make Starbucks a better workplace. Serrano, like Keeling, has attended bargaining sessions only to have Starbucks representatives leave after just a few minutes — a pattern that has been repeated around the country. Starbucks has objected to having union members attend bargaining sessions via Zoom, charging that those sessions are being recorded. The union and Starbucks have filed unfair labor practices charges against one another over the claims. No union stores have signed contracts with the company.

“A lot of us are excited to see Howard Schultz answer to these injustices,” Serrano said.  At the same time, they said, “We want to work with Starbucks.” Serrano said that if Starbucks stopped “acting in bad faith,” the two sides might reach an agreement “that would not just benefit us but would, in the end, benefit the company.”

Ron DeSantis should be second-guessing his race for the White House — Trump is just getting started

Nobody has ever absorbed the right-wing politics of grievance as eagerly as Donald Trump.

In anticipation of his possible run for president in 2016, one of Trump’s smartest moves was to deploy aide Sam Nunberg to listen to talk radio for him and give him a rundown on all the talking points floating around in the right-wing fever swamp. He was a CNN guy but he knew that whatever Fox News and Rush Limbaugh were talking about was what the base of the Republican Party was interested in and that’s where he would aim his candidacy. As it happened, Trump found that he and they were very much on the same wavelength. He didn’t even attempt to please the political establishment or cater to their needs.

Trump runs almost entirely on instinct. He’s bragged openly that he doesn’t need to learn anymore because he already knows everything he needs to know. In business, he refused to look at marketing data and analyses because he trusted his personal vibes over a bunch of pointy headed numbers crunchers. He hired people because they genuflected to him, not because they had any expertise. And he always leaned heavily on nepotism. His showboating celebrity style gave him his television show and resulting branding deals that kept him successful long after his father’s money ran out.

Whatever their differences and similarities in style and approach, it’s clear that both Trump and DeSantis are joined at the hip with the most ideologically extreme elements of the Republican Party.

Trump’s main 2024 rival, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, is taking a more systematic approach to figuring out what the base wants.

DeSantis is notoriously stiff and unspontaneous, without any of Trump’s rhetorical flourishes that make him sound like the guy at the end of the bar to the MAGA crowd. But just as Trump listened in on the talk radio jungle drums to understand what the GOP base wanted to hear, DeSantis is hiring right-wing propagandists who have gained prominence during the Trump years for trolling, shitposting and memes. Some of them, like Chris Rufo, are affiliated with right-wing think tanks despite being little more than Trump-era internet stars, while others, such as his press secretary Christina Pushaw, are simply hard core online warriors, highly tuned in to that zeitgeist. He’s even gone deep diving into the dark waters of the fever swamps, hiring a new staffer ( and possible speechwriter) who has cavorted with the Nazi Nick Fuentes. And it was announced this week that the think tank from which the legal justification for Trump’s coup attempt was hatched, the Claremont Institute, has jumped aboard the DeSantis campaign. He’s covering all his bases.

It’s not that Trump didn’t do the same thing in some very specific instances. The most obvious comparison to Rufo, who specializes in domestic culture war combat and is likely responsible for DeSantis’ tiresome, obsessive focus on “woke,” would be Trump’s selection of the odious Stephen Miller as his senior adviser on immigration. And by all accounts, DeSantis is heavily reliant on his wife as his main adviser much as Trump leaned on son-in-law Jared Kushner and eldest daughter Ivanka. Now Trump’s campaign is warning potential DeSantis staffers will be ineligible to join the Trump campaign or another Trump White House.

Whatever their differences and similarities in style and approach, it’s clear that both Trump and DeSantis are joined at the hip with the most ideologically extreme elements of the Republican Party. Trump has used his rhetorical power to make people believe what is demonstrably false and DeSantis has found ways to leverage the power of government to change the system on the ground. They are two sides of the same coin. The question now is whether the Republican base understands the difference — or if they care. They always say they loved Trump’s “policies” but when asked to name them it’s usually something amorphous like “he made America respected again” or “the economy was great.” What they really loved about him is the “own the libs and the foreigners” circus. Can DeSantis’ laundry list of “anti-woke” accomplishments compete with that?

The early reviews aren’t great. Despite all the hoopla around DeSantis’ campaign, the latest polls show that whatever momentum he had coming out of his 2022 re-election victory has slowed significantly. And part of the reason is that that victory was overrated as a selling point anyway. As former GOP strategist Stuart Stevens pointed out on Twitter:

Bill Weld won Ma. by 30. Pete Wilson won Ca. by 10. Rick Perry won Tx by 12. How’d they do? It means nothing in a presidential race.

More important than that, however, is the fact that DeSantis seems to be one of those politicians who doesn’t make a great first impression. He sounds good on paper but when people get a closer look they’re left kind of meh. This is a person who doesn’t really benefit from too much hype.

But DeSantis is flailing a bit for the same reason there’s a trail of dead presidential hopes in Trump’s wake: nobody knows how to deal with him. The early skirmishes in the primary campaign have been less than impressive. Trump has given him a stupid nickname, Ron DeSanctimonious, which the Harvard and Yale grad DeSantis fatuously tried to claim he couldn’t pronounce (because he’s just a good ole country boy, dontcha know?) And Trump grossly insulted him by suggesting he “groomed” high school girls during the prep school teaching year DeSantis never mentions. In other words, Trump is letting loose the beast.


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


But he also released a pretty good serious critique which DeSantis is also going to have to grapple with:

It turns out that DeSantis’ Florida isn’t all that. Nobody in the world knows more about dishonest PR than Donald Trump. His super PAC, MAGA Inc., has even filed an ethics complaint against DeSantis.

DeSantis has been all over the place in response to all this. He ignored him and then tried to be cutesy and then tried to piggyback on his disastrous Ukraine policy only to flip-flop days later. It’s obvious that his numbers started slipping when Trump engaged. His fellow Florida Republicans, former Gov. Jeb Bush and Sen. Marco Rubio, could have told him all about that.

Now there are reports that donors are getting antsy with some allies suggesting that he should wait until 2028 when the big orange monster is finally out of the game. It’s probably too late for that, however. He’s gone too far to back out now. He’s just going to have to fight it out for a while and see if he can survive.

Like Trump, DeSantis understood that the extreme wing of the GOP is now at the helm and he has carefully calculated a campaign aimed at winning them with demonstrations of his ability to bring their wish list into reality. The problem is that they don’t actually want that — they want the show. And Ron DeSantis just isn’t a very good entertainer. 

“Restore my account immediately”: MTG rages after Twitter restricts her account for “vengeance” post

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., demanded Elon Musk “restore” her account after it was restricted on Tuesday.

Greene and other right-wingers launched anti-trans attacks after a shooter that police said was transgender killed six people, including three children, at the Covenant School, a private Christian school in Nashville. The far-right has since seized on reports from Fox News and other outlets that trans activists are planning a “TransDay of Vengeance” on April 1, an event that was apparently promoted before the Nashville attack.

The event appears to have been promoted by Our Rights DC, a group that has a little more than 1,000 followers on Twitter, according to The Hill. “The Trans Day of Vengeance event about which Greene shared information is a spin on Trans Day of Visibility, which takes place on March 31 every year, and is being planned by Trans Radical Activist Network (TRAN), a new trans-led nationwide activist movement,” according to the LGBTQ+ rights outlet Them. TRAN disavowed the event, stressing that “we don’t encourage violence.”

Greene on Twitter baselessly claimed that “antifa” was organizing the alleged event. Greene repeatedly reposted a purported poster for the event while complaining about Twitter’s actions to remove it. She said her account was ultimately suspended.

Ella Irwin, Twitter’s head of trust and safety, wrote that the company removed more than 5,000 tweets that included a poster for the alleged event.

“We do not support tweets that incite violence irrespective of who posts them,” Irwin wrote. “‘Vengeance’ does not imply peaceful protest. Organizing or support for peaceful protests is ok.”

Irwin added that the company did not impose strikes against accounts that shared the poster.

“We just restricted the media being shared,” Irwin wrote. “There is no impact to users for having tweeted it unless it is reposted after removal or was posted with additional calls for violence/ wishes of harm.”

But Greene lashed out on her personal account, accusing Twitter of whitewashing the “threat of Antifa driven trans-terrorism.”

“This is a lie,” Greene wrote of the claim that her account had not been impacted.

“My Congressional account was suspended for 7 days for exposing Antifa, who are organizing a call for violence called ‘Trans Day of Vengeance.’ The day after the mass murder of children by a trans shooter. Restore my account immediately,” Greene demanded, tagging Irwin and Twitter owner Elon Musk.


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Greene’s claims come after she faced backlash for stoking anti-trans rhetoric in the wake of the Nashville shooting.

“How much hormones like testosterone and medications for mental illness was the transgender Nashville school shooter taking? Everyone can stop blaming guns now,” Greene tweeted on Monday.

Critics trashed Greene’s comment, noting that 98% of mass shootings are committed by men and there is no evidence linking hormones to violent behavior. Trans people are four times more likely to be victims of violent crime, according to a study by UCLA’s Williams Institute.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., slammed Greene’s “absolutely disgusting” comments.

“She should be looking into a mirror as to why she’s defending and posing with the same weapons that are being used to kill children, teachers and educators,” Ocasio-Cortez told The Independent.

A growing number of right-wingers have used the Nashville shooting to stoke anti-trans sentiment. Donald Trump Jr. baselessly alleged on Monday that there is an “epidemic of trans/non-binary mass shooters.”

Shannon Watts, the founder of the gun safety group Moms Demand Action, told NBC News that it seems “the list of what gun extremists have blamed for mass shootings keeps growing: violent video games, mental health, not enough doors, too many doors, and now gender identity.”

“What they don’t want to talk about is that only in America is a shooter able to get their hands on the assault weapons — one equipped with an arm brace — that were used to commit this atrocity,” she said.

“Every study available shows that transgender and non-binary people are much more likely to be victims of violence, rather than the perpetrator of it,” the Human Rights Campaign said in a statement following the shooting. “Regardless of the reason for this shooting, the use of violence is reprehensible and we renew our call for common-sense gun safety.”

Klamath countdown: Researchers hustle before largest dam-removal project begins

Next year will be the big year. By the end of 2024 the Lower Klamath River will run free for the first time in a century, enabling fish like salmon and steelhead to reclaim 400 miles of river habitat in California and Oregon.

The removal of four dams on the river — the largest dam-removal and river-restoration project to date — got the official go-ahead late last year after two decades of work from the region’s Tribes and other advocates.

But before next year’s much-anticipated demolitions begin, a lot remains to be done.

The smallest of the four dams, Copco 2, will come down in 2023, and crews will improve roads and bridges, move a municipal water line, and build a new fish hatchery.

Map of Klamath Basin and dam removal project

PHOTO: The Klamath River watershed and the four dams slated for removal. (Map by Klamath River Renewal Corporation)

Proponents expect dam removal to help resuscitate a beleaguered river where dams have blocked migratory fish and warm reservoir waters have spurred toxic algae growth and fed deadly fish parasites. But evaluating the ecosystem after dam removal — and understanding how to manage a changing river — requires a firm understanding of how all the river’s components function today.

To accomplish that, researchers have spent years gathering information on everything from salmon to algae to bats. And now, as they enter the critical final year, they’re hustling to collect as much data as they can before the dams finally come down.

“It’s an exciting time for the river because dam removal has been a long time coming,” says Laurel Genzoli, a researcher from the University of Montana who has been studying algae and water quality on the Klamath. “But it’s also a stressful time, because this is the last summer to collect data with the dams in place, and we have to make sure we have everything we think we might need.”

Long-Term Data

The uphill political battle to remove the dams began two decades ago. But the effort only started gaining widespread support in the past few years. Thankfully researchers have been studying the river for a longer time, amassing comprehensive data that could form the baselines for future comparisons.

Many of these researchers are affiliated with universities, or state and federal agencies, and some are from the region’s Tribes. Upstream are the Klamath Tribes in Oregon. And along the lower Klamath River in California are the Yurok, Karuk, Hoopa Valley, Quartz Valley Indian Community and the Resighini Rancheria.

“We’ve been monitoring fish populations for decades — how many fish are spawning, how many are being captured, how many juvenile fish are out-migrating,” says Barry McCovey Jr., a fisheries biologist from the Yurok Tribe. “As far as salmon populations go, we’ve been tracking that closely for a long time.”

Recovering salmon populations for Tribes’ cultural and subsistence needs, and for the health of the ecosystem, is a key goal for river restoration.

Tribes have also been involved in more than a decade of research in partnership with state agencies, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and researchers from the Oregon State University to track the fish disease Ceratanova shasta, a parasite that’s decimated salmon populations.

That work began independent of dam removal, but it’s become increasingly important because researchers expect a free-flowing river will help reduce the deadly parasite.

The same is true for water quality, which Tribes have tracked for years.

“That work didn’t begin because of dam removal, but the baseline data will be helpful afterwards,” says Genzoli, who works with Tribes from the lower Klamath River to gather data on water quality.

She’s also studying the growth of algae and other aquatic plants. Driven in part by a large amount of upstream nutrients, the river produces a lot of algae. Too much can clog fishing nets, and some can be toxic, endangering wildlife and human health.

Clumps of algae floating on the river surface.

Algae on the Klamath River. Photo: Tara Lohan

Robert Lusardi, a research scientist at the University of California, Davis and a fish scientist for the nonprofit California Trout, is working with the Yurok Tribe and others to study the aquatic invertebrates which feed on those plants, as well as water temperature and chemistry. “Those are really good indicators of change in the system,” says Lusardi.

That baseline data will be important. “When the dams come down, we’ll start doing this same work in the river that’s currently under the reservoirs and it will help us evaluate how the river and tributaries are recovering,” says McCovey.

Moving up the food chain, another group of researchers is studying an animal that often feeds on aquatic insects — bats.

Barbara Clucas, an associate professor in the Department of Wildlife at Cal Poly Humboldt, works with her graduate student Ryan Matilton and other researchers to collect baseline data on the species of bats in the region and their activity levels.

As the diversity or abundance of invertebrates change after dam removal, so might their predators.

“I would imagine that dam removal would change bats’ prey base,” says Clucas. “That could impact when and where we see them. It’s possible that looking at how their diversity, abundance or activity levels change could give an indication of the health of the system overall.”

Dam-Removal Research

While some long-term monitoring will be useful for post-dam study, other efforts have been initiated specifically for dam removal.

One of those is extensive research and mapping by the U.S. Geological Survey of how sediment will move, and what effect that could have on streamside vegetation and the downstream estuary.

Other work has targeted fish — a main conservation priority.

Lusardi has been studying where salmon go in the basin, including the mainstem of the Klamath and its tributaries, by examining fish ear bones — or otoliths. The researchers began by measuring how much of the element strontium was present in the water in different parts of the basin. Most tributaries have very distinct strontium signatures.

“When juvenile salmon rear in the basin, depending on where they are, they’re picking up these strontium signatures in their ear bones,” he explains. “When they come back as adults and they spawn and die, we pull the carcasses out of the river, remove their otoliths, and send them to the lab to be analyzed.” Based on the strontium values, they can learn where the juveniles spent their time.

Working with the Fish and Wildlife Service and the Yurok Tribe, they’ve spent two years collecting otoliths.

“This will provide a baseline of understanding how fish use the basin below the dams now,” he says. After the dams come out, they’ll be able to track returning fish to understand how they’re moving back into the longer reach of the river and tributaries they couldn’t reach before.

Lusardi is also involved in another project with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, the Klamath Tribes, the National Marine Fishery Service, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to better understand how spring-run Chinook will use the basin.

Once numerous throughout the watershed, these native fish are now limited to only one tributary below the dams. Last year the researchers released 1,500 acoustically tagged juveniles above the dams by Upper Klamath Lake and have followed how and when they’re out-migrating. They’re set to do another release this spring.

Photo of earthen dam with reservoir in background.

The earth-filled hydroelectric Iron Gate Dam, powerhouse and spillway on the lower Klamtha River near Hornbrook, Calif. in 1962. Photo: D.L. Christensen / California Department of Water Resources

“We’ve got a really good idea of when they were leaving the tributaries, when they’re moving into Upper Klamath Lake, and how quickly they’re moving through the lake,” he says. “It’s giving us a really good idea of how spring-run Chinook might use the basin [after dam removal] and should be really useful for adaptively managing them in the future.”

Science, People and Decisions

Another area of study enabled by funding from Oregon Sea Grant pairs university researchers from Oregon State University with University of Montana’s Genzoli and the Yurok Tribe to look at how dam removal will affect water quality, the aquatic food web, and water use by the diverse groups that live in the basin.

“We’re partnering with the Yurok Tribe to expand our knowledge about the river and about how decisions can be more equitable,” says project leader Desiree Tullos, a professor of river engineering at Oregon State University.

There are three parts to the project. The first is understanding the connections between water quality and the food web, which can create good or bad habitat for fish, aquatic plants and toxic algae.

Second is the people part. They’re working with stakeholders in the basin, including Tribal members, landowners, ranchers, irrigators and environmental advocates to inform decision making about managing water quality with an eye toward equity.

That scientific and social research will then inform the third part of the project — decision modeling.

“We’re going to bring all those data on the people and the ecosystem together and run a bunch of computer simulations,” she says. That might include looking at how recreation or opportunities for Tribes could change if water quality is managed in a different way.

Models can tell them “if we restore 1,000 acres of wetland in the upper basin, would that get us to a place where there’s no longer toxic algal blooms, or do we need 10,000 acres of wetland?” she says. “And then how does that change if there’s more droughts or more wildfires in the future? Or how does it change if we use a decision process that the Tribe follows, or a local NGO, or the Bureau of Reclamation?”

Funding Issues

All of this research is just a sampling of what’s being undertaken on the river. And while much of it is done in collaboration, there’s no overarching entity — or fund — responsible for overseeing pre-dam removal study.

Last year an op-ed from two well-known experts, fish scientist Peter Moyle and geomorphologist Jeffrey Mount, lamented as much.

“Although more than $450 million has been allocated for the dam removal, to our knowledge, little has been allocated to fund the science needed to evaluate it,” they wrote. “This is a mistake.”

Despite that, researchers have found money from disparate sources — government agencies, universities, nonprofits, private foundations. And they’ve established their own working groups and conferences to share information and drive further collaboration.

“People are sticking with it and dedicated to continuing to do what we can to try to collect data and understand how these changes are affecting the river,” says Genzoli. But she admits that some bigger picture connections could be missed between areas of specialty.

Making sure the science is funded, “is the most important thing,” says Lusardi. “Not just to document what’s happening, but to adaptably manage the river [after dam removal] too.”

Tribal Leadership

While researchers may lack a central — and robust — monetary fund, they do have another valuable resource that’s helped deepen their understanding of the river: Tribes.

“Tribal members were essential in driving the politics of dam removal forward, but they have also been maintaining long-term water quality, fisheries and wildlife records of this river in a way we don’t see on most rivers,” says Genzoli.

And it’s not just the western scientific data Tribes have collected, but their traditional knowledge of the ecosystem.

“Tribes have been on the landscape since time immemorial,” says Tullos. “They can tell us things about what a wet versus a dry year is that don’t rely on discharge measurements, but on their observations of where the river was or how bad the algae was in that year. We can get these really full data sets by piling on what we, western scientists measure, with what Indigenous folks understand about the system. By bringing together these multiple ways of knowing, that gives us a much richer understanding.”

And that can help drive an ambitious goal.

“A lot of people would say that this is just a huge fish-restoration project and it’s going to really be great for salmon,” says McCovey. “But for me, it’s so much more than that.”

It’s in their culture as Yurok people to restore balance to the world and ecosystem, he says. To be “people who fix the world.”

“The act of removing those dams and restoring that energy flow from the upper basin to the lower basin is an act of our cultural identity,” he says. “From a Tribal perspective, we are helping to restore that balance, and in a small way, we’re helping to fix the world.”

As Americans drift apart on guns, parents worry whether a playmate’s parents have firearms at home

On Monday, a school shooter in Nashville shot through the windowed doors of a private Christian school and proceeded to kill three adults and three children under the age of 11. Sadly, the tragedy in Nashville is not an isolated event, but part of a larger trend: As reported by the nonprofit advocacy group Gun Violence Archive, 59 children were killed by gun violence just in the first 87 days of 2023.

Yet mass shootings in schools are not the only sites where children are being killed by guns. In the last few months, accidental shootings in U.S. homes have killed multiple children; these shootings often come as a result of unsupervised children finding and playing with an adult’s legally-owned gun. In early March of this year, a three-year-old in Texas shot and killed her four-year-old sister after finding a loaded semi-automatic pistol. In Alabama, a four-year-old accidentally shot his 8-year-old brother in early March. And in February in Louisiana, a six-year-old died after finding an unlocked and loaded handgun in his home.

“I know some people think it might be uncomfortable to have that conversation, but it literally could save a life,” Creighton said. 

Earlier this year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) finalized firearm mortality data for 2021, concluding that among those killed by gun violence in 2021, 2,571 were children under the age of 17. That marked a 12.7 increase from 2020, they noted. Moreover, a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis found that firearms are the leading cause of death for children in the United States. Contrast that to other wealthy countries, where firearms rank no higher than the fifth leading cause of death.

Given these dire statistics, it is no wonder that online parenting forums are rife with anxious parents asking how to broach the issue of whether there are guns at their kids’ friends’ homes. Indeed, given the deep cultural and political divides around guns in the United States, asking a playmate’s parent about the accessibility of firearms in their house is an understandably fraught topic.

Colleen Creighton, director of the End Family Fire program at the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, told Salon in an interview that it is “absolutely” a discussion topic parents today have to contend with when organizing playdates. 

“I know some people think it might be uncomfortable to have that conversation, but it literally could save a life,” Creighton said. “And not even just for playdates. . . . if you’re traveling for the holidays with family members — grandparents, relatives, friends — it should be commonplace. We don’t hesitate to ask about peanut allergies, and other allergies, we need to be able to fold in more messaging about guns.”

Creighton pointed to some high-profile cases in which a child was shot at a friend’s house because of the presence of an unsecured gun. For example, in 2021, a 15-year-old named Christian Petillo was shot at a sleepover in Arizona in an accident. Since then, his parents have been working with legislators to pass a common-sense gun law in the state; dubbed Christian’s Law, it would require gun owners to keep guns and ammunition locked in a storage container. When not secured, guns would have to be on one’s person or in close proximity; violators would be subjected to a civil penalty of at least $1,000, as reported by the Arizona Mirror. The bill was recently introduced in the state House of Representatives. 


Want more health and science stories in your inbox? Subscribe to Salon’s weekly newsletter The Vulgar Scientist.


Creighton said gun safety has become a concern for American parents today, perhaps more so than previous generations — because, in short, there are so many more guns.

“There are a lot more guns in circulation right now than there were previously, and different kinds of guns too,” Creighton said. The Brady Center, Creighton noted, is “concerned” about 3-D printed guns and ghost guns, both of which can be constructed in stages without a background check. Creighton said that with these two possibilities for at-home gun construction, guns are becoming more accessible and, in some cases, untraceable. 

According to an analysis of 41 targeted school shootings which occurred from 2008 to 2017, 76 percent of firearms used were obtained from a student’s home, or a relative or friend’s home.

Semi-automatic weapons known as “AR-15-style” rifles have also become more commonplace as a proportion of the overall number of firearms. This type of semi-automatic weapon was used in the recent Nashville school shooting, and are known to be especially deadly because of their ability to lacerate organs. As Salon previously reported, there are an estimated 19.8 million AR-15 style rifles circulating in the country — a significant increase from the 8.5 million that were circulating before the federal assault weapons ban expired in 2004.

Dr. Joseph Sakran, director of emergency general surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital and a gun violence survivor, previously told Salon that these guns can be especially devastating for children. “It’s not uncommon to see bones that are disintegrated,” Sakran said. “You can have tissue that looks incredibly jagged and even has become necrotic in how it looks and how it feels — because, again, that energy and that blast effect has really impacted and caused this kind of cavitation.”

Creighton said the rise of firearm accidents and gun violence involving children is due to inadequate gun laws in many states. 

“A lot of states and communities have differing gun laws,” Creighton said, noting that “safe storage” is often not legislated for or well. “There are a couple of national bills that haven’t gone anywhere that are requiring safe storage,” Creighton said. Much gun violence “stems from having loose access to firearms,” he added. 

Moreover, many school shootings happen because of adults not properly storing firearms in their homes. According to an analysis of 41 targeted school shootings which occurred from 2008 to 2017, 76 percent of the time firearms used were obtained from a student’s home, or a relative or friend’s home.

According to the most recent reports about the Nashville shooting, the 28-year-old shooter hid weapons in the family home, which the shooter’s parents allegedly didn’t know about. In that case, the shooter reportedly legally purchased seven weapons from five local stores.

Last week, prior to the Nashville shooting, the Brady Campaign launched a new addition to their life-saving End Family Fire campaign, focusing on what can happen when an unsecured gun is misused. 

“This latest effort from End Family Fire taps into the wider ramifications that an unsecured gun can have in a way our campaign has never done before,” said President Kris Brown. “For the first time, we have expanded our effort to show the impact of unsecured firearms being misused both inside and now outside of the home, like in a school.”

USDA to help farmers navigate the murky world of soil carbon offsets

When Congress passed an omnibus spending bill in December, it included a bit of bipartisan climate legislation that had been languishing on the Hill since its introduction in 2020. The Growing Climate Solutions Act, supported by climate advocates and farmers alike, was devised to get the nation’s growers to adopt climate-friendly practices by encouraging their participation in the carbon market. 

The bill’s backers hope the law will make it easier for farmers and landowners to get paid for storing carbon in their fields and forests. Farmers have struggled to navigate the complex web of companies offering to help them sell carbon credits, and have been confused by the number of different standards that exist for measuring carbon. They’re also worried about being fairly compensated.

But it’s unclear how the law will address farmers’ biggest concerns. A U.S. Department of Agriculture program created by the legislation may help by disseminating information and bringing some federal scrutiny to the unregulated credit market. Yet it does nothing to address key questions about the underlying science of soil carbon sequestration, and whether carbon offsets are even an effective way to incentivize it.

“The Growing Climate Solutions Act is a step in the right direction,” said Giana Amador, co-founder of Carbon180, a nonprofit that advocates for policies that support removing carbon from the atmosphere. “But we need a lot more investment in science, research and development, and early demonstration projects that give us a lot more certainty about the carbon being stored.”

The Biden administration’s climate strategy includes investing in so-called nature-based solutions like storing carbon in soil. One review of sequestration strategies found it is “practically achievable” for U.S. croplands to soak up 250 million metric tons of carbon per year, or about 4 percent of what the country emitted in 2020. Some of the methods analyzed included planting crops in the off season to pull more carbon into the soil, a practice called cover copping; reducing tillage, which can limit the carbon-releasing decay of organic matter in the soil; and converting cropland to grasses or other perennials.

Farmers are increasingly interested in these techniques, which also help retain nutrients, reduce erosion, improve water filtration, and prevent nitrogen from running off into streams and watersheds. But absent financial incentives, the risk of embracing such changes can seem too high, the rewards too uncertain. A growing number of startups are eager to help farmers adopt them by generating credits for the carbon they store and selling them as offsets to anyone looking to reduce their emissions footprint. 

Paul Overby, who grows sunflowers, canola, and other crops in North Dakota, started working with the startup Indigo Ag to sell carbon credits a few years ago. He urged his state’s congressional delegation to support the Growing Climate Solutions Act because he wants others to do the same. He said many of his peers don’t understand the role carbon plays in soil, or how it can be sequestered or released. “There’s an opportunity for farmers to make a little money, to help them do good things for the environment,” he said. “In a lot of cases, they’re going to be helping themselves and their farm as well.”

The law directs the Department of Agriculture to spend the next several months reviewing the carbon market, looking at the number and types of companies involved in the generation and sale of credits, the level of demand for them, and what might improve participation. Eventually, the agency is expected to create an online resource where farmers and landowners can learn about how to generate credits and browse a directory of companies offering technical assistance and carbon storage verification services.

That’s not exactly what Indiana farmer Brent Bible had in mind when he testified in favor of the legislation before the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry in 2020. He’d already experimented with no-till farming and planting cover crops on parts of his land with the help of several USDA grants, including one from the Environmental Quality Incentives Program. Bible told lawmakers that the financial challenges many farmers face inhibit wider adoption of sequestration practices. He saw potential in the carbon credit market, but so far, its cost and complexity outweighed any benefits. 

When Bible testified, the Growing Climate Solutions Act was pitched as a certification program in which the U.S. Department of Agriculture would vet companies providing technical assistance and verification. He told Grist he hoped the legislation would help farmers identify reputable partners and bring standardization to a market with more than a dozen protocols, each with different requirements and approaches to measuring how much carbon is sequestered. “I know that a bushel of corn weighs 56 pounds, that’s the standard,” he said. “There needs to be that same type of standardization in the carbon space. That’s how you build confidence around a market.”

But the bill Biden signed on December 29 permits any company to sign up for inclusion on the USDA’s site. And although it directs the agency to publish “widely accepted protocols” for generating carbon credits, it doesn’t otherwise regulate these guidelines or create a clear path to the kind of standardization that would give farmers, and those buying their credits, confidence. 

It also doesn’t address some known challenges, not the least of which is measuring how much carbon is being stored. “Right now, we don’t have the technology to accurately measure soil carbon in a cost efficient and scalable way,” said Cristel Zoebisch, a senior policy advisor at Carbon180. Some scientists say there’s insufficient evidence that techniques like no-till and cover cropping can increase soil carbon by any meaningful degree. The Inflation Reduction Act provided $300 million for the USDA to support greenhouse gas data collection and accounting. Carbon180 wants to secure additional funding for research, standards development, and demonstration trials in the 2023 Farm Bill, a legislative package that governs a number of federal agricultural programs. 

There’s a risk that in the meantime, a federal directory of carbon credit companies “could give a veneer that the carbon markets are more mature than they really are,” said Eric Slessarev, a soil ecologist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

Part of the challenge is that scientists are still untangling a central mystery around soil carbon. “Why does some soil carbon persist? And why does the remainder not? And how does that play out differently in different places?” said Slessarev. “We know that these things are place-dependent, but we don’t quite understand how or why.”

Another fundamental question is whether offsets are an appropriate tool for funding sequestration in the first place. One reason Bible has not signed up to generate carbon credits is that many of the companies offering them require a commitment of at least five years, if not 10 or 20. A lot can happen in that time, he said. What if flooding or drought require a change in land management practices? How can someone be sure a carbon credit company won’t go bust? Anyone leasing land can’t guarantee the owner won’t sell it. “It’s tough to be able to know what the future looks like,” Bible said. 

At the same time, a decade or even two of carbon sequestration is inadequate because the carbon dioxide spewed into the atmosphere by those buying offsets will remain there for millennia.

“​​I don’t think we’re ever going to get to a point where soil organic carbon is going to be exchangeable with fossil fuel emission, even if we were to get really, really good at measurements,” Slessarev said. “There’s just no way to know how persistent the carbon will be. It depends on not just biophysical factors that people like me can evaluate, but socio-economic ones.”

Bible understands the challenge. He’s not sure what the answer is, but he’s confident that practices like cover cropping and reduced tillage make a difference. “It’s doing something and that’s more than what we’ve done in the past,” he said. “I think we all agree that we have to think about doing something to change the trajectory that exists.”


This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/agriculture/usda-to-help-farmers-navigate-the-murky-world-of-soil-carbon-offsets/.

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

Trump wants Americans to think society is an apocalyptic wasteland: Mass shootings help him

“We’re not gonna fix it.”

Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee was blunter than some of his fellow Republicans, who mostly ran away from reporters or offered bland “thoughts and prayers” in response to Monday’s school shooting in Nashville that left three kids, three school employees and the shooter dead. But Burchett, a hardline Trumpist who voted in support of Donald Trump’s attempted coup in 2021, was certainly on message with what the Republican Party is telling America: Abandon all hope. 

“I don’t think you’re going to stop the gun violence,” he continued, arguing that the only thing that could possibly work is mass conversion to his version of Christianity. “As a Christian, we talk about the church. I’ve said this many times, I think we really need a revival in this country.”


Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics? Subscribe to her newsletter Standing Room Only.


This religious pablum is just a fig leaf, of course, for what is essentially a nihilistic message. It’s as if Burchett took Karl Marx’s saying about the “opiate of the masses” as a blueprint. This rhetoric is about denying that change on Earth in possible, and suggesting that people focus on praying for miracles that never come. 

This is grim stuff, but very on-brand for Republicans. They are, after all, a party still completely in the thrall of Trump, whose main campaign message is that America is a hellscape beyond redemption, and that the only viable response is about “retribution.” Last Saturday, his “burn it all down” message assumed a new metaphorical meaning, as he held a rally in Waco, Texas, on the 30th anniversary of the FBI’s standoff with a group of doomsday cultists who ultimately chose to die by fire rather than surrender their illegal weapons. Trump’s speech was a cut-rate version of the apocalyptic ravings of Waco cult leader David Koresh, full of talk of how the country is “failing,” our society has “collapsed” and the upcoming presidential election is its “final battle.” The trappings of the rally, which opened with a video montage of the Jan. 6 insurrection, only enhanced the Armageddon messaging

There is little doubt what mental space Trump wants his followers in: Rage. Despair. Fear. Trump’s policies may not be all that different from the far-right views of Ronald Reagan, but as Heather Digby Parton noted at Salon recently, the sunny optimism of Reagan’s “morning in America” rhetoric has been uprooted and replaced with a doom-and-gloom message. The last thing MAGA stands for, in fact, is making America great, much less “great again.” These are people caught up in a dark fantasy that they live in a zombie movie. 

Trump wants his followers in a state of constant rage, despair and fear — but he only harnessed and exaggerated an existing apocalyptic mindset on the right that goes back at least to Obama.

Trump has his own self-interested reasons for the doomsday messaging, especially in light of the growing possibility that he may actually face legal consequences for his life of crime. But he didn’t invent these ominous attitudes among modern Republicans. He instead has harnessed and exaggerated an existing apocalyptic mindset on the right that dates at least back to the ugly “Tea Party” reaction to the election of Barack Obama. For more than a decade now, Republicans have felt (with some justification) that they benefit if voters feel assailed by fear and despair, and have done everything in their power to create and augment those vibes.


Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics? Subscribe to her newsletter Standing Room Only.


Turn on Fox News on any given night, and you’ll get a full blast of it. In the fantasy America of that network’s talking heads, American cities have been burned to the ground and residents can’t leave their homes without being shot or robbed. Viewers are encouraged to believe they’re one stray “politically incorrect” word away from being “canceled” by “woke mobs.” A firehose of lies about antifa, Black Lives Matter and LGBTQ activists paints a profoundly delusional picture of an America taken over by criminals and degenerates. Schools, they’re told, are “grooming” kids for sexual abuse. 

No one doubts that the U.S. has problems, but none of these hysterics reflect the reality outside of Republican TV screens. Even crime, although rising in response to the global pandemic, remains exponentially lower than it was in the 1980s and ’90s. Like most of the fears that animate the right, that’s a phantasm, propped up to keep their adrenaline coursing and their rational faculties shut down. 

Mass shootings, which are both legitimately terrifying and attention-grabbing, are a boon to a party that thrives on fear and anguish. Unlike most of the terror porn churned out by right-wing media, the horror of Monday’s shooting in Nashville was all too real: The shooter blowing out windows and stalking hallways. The fleeing children. The weeping parents. The cops rushing the building to take the killer out. Unlike antifa riots or the fictional fires burning down American cities, that actually happened. 

It’s no wonder the immediate Republican response to mass shootings is to fight like hell to block anyone who tries to slow down the mayhem. This isn’t not just about the political power of the NRA anymore — the gun lobby has lost much of its financial clout. But Republicans believe that mass anxiety benefits them, so anything that keeps the public on edge is a political win. Most of the time, they have to make up the threats to scare people. Not with mass shootings, though, which are real and occur day after day, week after week in America. 

Even before Monday’s shooting, we had another round of discussions about the need for a ban on assault rifles, driven by a Washington Post report about how guns like the AR-15 are even deadlier than handguns. As Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, said on Twitter, guns like the ones used in Monday’s shooting are “weapons of war.” They exist only for the purpose of mowing down large numbers of people quickly and have no relationship to the “self-defense” claims of the gun rights lobby. 


Want more Amanda Marcotte on politics? Subscribe to her newsletter Standing Room Only.


Of course, the reason Republicans are so eager to defend the supposed right to own assault rifles has nothing to do with self-defense. As Trump’s Waco rally demonstrated, there’s a concentrated effort to convince Republican voters that this is a country already at war with itself. Trump was unsubtly invoking the vibes of far-right militia movements, which arm themselves explicitly because they imagine militaristic conflicts such as race wars or violent clashes with federal authorities. Taking assault rifles off the streets would be a direct attack on one of the most powerful propaganda techniques Republicans use to keep their voters in a combative state of mind. 

In response to this, progressive activists and Democrats must resist giving into despair. Yes, it can feel hopeless at times, especially when Republicans have far more political power than their numbers really should grant them, thanks to gerrymandering, voter suppression and the undemocratic nature of the Senate and the Electoral College. But forlorn and adrift is exactly what the right wants. Depressed people give up. Hopelessness feeds itself. The only way to break the cycle is to believe that things can get better with enough hard work. Look to places like Michigan, where a big Democratic win in the midterms has already led to rapid change. Optimism isn’t foolish. It’s the best weapon — really the only one — the left has to defeat Republican nihilism.

Putin’s nuclear posturing is heinous — but reckless U.S. policy led the way

Vladimir Putin’s announcement over the weekend that Russia will deploy tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus marked a further escalation of potentially cataclysmic tensions over the war in neighboring Ukraine. As the Associated Press reported, “Putin said the move was triggered by Britain’s decision this past week to provide Ukraine with armor-piercing rounds containing depleted uranium.”

There’s always an excuse for nuclear madness, and the United States has certainly provided ample rationales for the Russian leader’s current display. American nuclear warheads have been deployed in Europe since the mid-1950s, and current best estimates say 100 are there right now — in Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Turkey.

Count on U.S. corporate media to (appropriately) condemn Putin’s announcement while dodging key realities of how the U.S., for decades, has been pushing the nuclear envelope toward conflagration. The U.S. government’s violation of its pledge not to expand NATO eastward after the fall of the Berlin Wall — instead, the alliance expanded into 10 Eastern European countries — was only one aspect of official Washington’s reckless approach.

During this century, the runaway motor of nuclear irresponsibility has been mostly revved up by the United States. In 2002, George W. Bush withdrew the U.S. from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, a vital agreement that had been in effect for 30 years. Negotiated by the Nixon administration and the Soviet Union, the treaty declared that its limits would be a “substantial factor in curbing the race in strategic offensive arms.”

His lofty rhetoric aside, Barack Obama launched a $1.7 trillion program for further development of U.S. nuclear forces, under the euphemism of “modernization.” To make matters worse, Donald Trump pulled the U.S. out of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, a crucial pact between Washington and Moscow that had eliminated an entire category of missiles from Europe since 1988.

This madness has been resolutely bipartisan. Joe Biden quickly dashed hopes that he would be a more enlightened president about nuclear weapons. Far from pushing to reinstate the canceled treaties, from the outset of his presidency Biden has boosted measures like placing anti-ballistic missile systems in the new NATO nations Poland and Romania. Calling them “defensive” does not change the fact that those systems can be retrofitted with offensive cruise missiles. A quick look at a map would underscore why such moves were so ominous when viewed through the Kremlin windows.


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Contrary to his 2020 campaign platform, Biden has insisted that the United States must retain the option of first use of nuclear weapons. His administration’s landmark Nuclear Posture Review, issued a year ago, reaffirmed rather than renounced that option. A leader of the organization Global Zero put it this way: “Instead of distancing himself from the nuclear coercion and brinkmanship of thugs like Putin and Trump, Biden is following their lead. There’s no plausible scenario in which a nuclear first strike by the U.S. makes any sense whatsoever. We need smarter strategies.”

Daniel Ellsberg — whose book “The Doomsday Machine” truly should be required reading in both the White House and the Kremlin — summed up humanity’s dire predicament and imperative when he told the New York Times days ago: “For 70 years, the U.S. has frequently made the kind of wrongful first-use threats of nuclear weapons that Putin is making now in Ukraine. We should never have done that, nor should Putin be doing it now. I’m worried that his monstrous threat of nuclear war to retain Russian control of Crimea is not a bluff. President Biden campaigned in 2020 on a promise to declare a policy of no first use of nuclear weapons. He should keep that promise, and the world should demand the same commitment from Putin.”

We can make a difference — maybe even the difference — to avert global nuclear annihilation. This week, TV viewers are reminded of such possibilities by the new documentary “The Movement and the ‘Madman,’” available from PBS. The film “shows how two antiwar protests in the fall of 1969 — the largest the country had ever seen — pressured President Nixon to cancel what he called his “madman” plans for a massive escalation of the U.S. war in Vietnam, including a threat to use nuclear weapons. At the time, protestors had no idea how influential they could be and how many lives they may have saved.”

In 2023, we have no idea how influential we can be and how many lives we might save — if we’re really willing to try.

“We have to fight”: LGBTQ kids stage walkouts, marches against anti-trans bills

LGBTQ advocates are taking to the streets to protest the coordinated legislative attacks on transgender people nationwide after successfully beating back bans on gender-affirming care for trans youth in West Virginia and Wyoming.

Trans activists have organized demonstrations at capitol buildings across the country and are currently coordinating protests for Trans Day of Visibility on March 31 and Trans Day of Vengeance on April 1. Activists have planned rallies at the state capitol of Georgia, which recently became the 10th state to ban gender-affirming care; Tucson, Arizona; the Missouri state capitol; Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaNew York City; and the Kansas state capitol, among others.

“We are here and we will not allow ourselves to be erased,” Trans Radical Activist Network, a group organizing a Washington, D.C. rally to stop trans genocide, wrote in a tweet.

Independent reporter and transgender activist Erin Reed told Truthout that the protests draw on a long history of LGBTQ resistance.

“I’ve seen #DIYHRT trending and I’ve seen mutual aid being one of the ways people are responding [to anti-trans legislation],” she said. “I’m also seeing tactics that we haven’t seen since the ACT UP era … the tactics we’re seeing right now are more resistant and show resolve in the face of these policies being passed.”

The AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) is a grassroots direct action group that was founded in the 1980s to advocate for AIDS research, treatment and policy change. ACT UP organizers famously choreographed public “die-ins” to draw attention to their demands, taking aim at lawmakers, Wall Street, the Catholic Church and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Transgender activists have returned to these tactics as anti-trans policies are being introduced in statehouses across the country.

Trans and queer youth in particular have been targeted this legislative session, with state lawmakers implementing transgender sports bans, “Don’t Say Gay” laws, gender-affirming care bans, and restrictions on the teaching of queer history and LGBTQ social movements in schools.

Far right lawmakers have attempted to justify bans on gender-affirming care by citing the completely false statistic that 80 percent of trans kids will eventually detransition. But these claims are nothing more than fabricated right-wing talking points the most recent study shows, as more than 97 percent of trans youth continue to identify as trans as adults.

Meanwhile, half of all transgender youth have lost or are at risk of losing access to gender-affirming care, despite studies showing that access to such care reduces suicidality among trans youth by 73 percent, and major depression among trans youth by 60 percent.

According to the Trevor Project, 71 percent of LGBTQ youth — including 86 percent of trans and nonbinary youth — say that debates on anti-LGBTQ bills in state legislatures have negatively impacted their mental health.

“I fear the suicide rates and mental health crisis this will cause the community,” Reed said on Twitter.

Kids across the country have been voicing their opposition to these laws, staging school walkouts in cities including Morgantown, West VirginiaIowa CityOrlando, Florida; and Denver, Colorado.

“We wanted to fight to show support for other people who are like us,” Alex Pacheco, a 15-year-old high school freshman, told 9News at a Colorado walkout in solidarity with LGBTQ students in Florida. “We need to keep going forward instead of backwards.”

The Queer Youth Assembly, a queer youth-led movement serving LGBTQ people under the age of 25, has organized marches for LGBTQ autonomy in most states.

“We call for an end to violence and hatred directed toward all people,” the organization said in a petition on their website. “We ask for empathy and clear actions to support our queer, trans, BIPOC, and disabled communities who survive every day despite the world we live in.”

On Friday, trans youth in Colorado held a march for queer and trans youth autonomy at the Denver capitol building, calling for a world where the safety, autonomy, and joy of queer children is protected. The march was attended by hundreds of queer youth, local teachers, drag queens, survivors of the Club Q massacre and allies. Students from Denver’s East High School, where multiple students have died from gun violence over the past few weeks, called for an end to gun violence in addition to LGBTQ rights.

“Kids like me are under attack across the nation,” said one 14-year-old speaker at the march. “Do we not deserve the same rights and freedoms as the people who write the laws? If the children are the future, please leave us with one.”

Another speaker was Ophelia Peaches, an 18-year-old drag queen and high school student from Aurora.

“We need to be loud,” she said. “We need to be loud enough so those kids in red states that are being silenced can hear us. We are here and we are powerful.”

Other speakers included Rep. Brianna Titone (D), Colorado’s first trans lawmaker, who recently introduced legislation that would make Colorado a “refugee state” for trans youth seeking gender-affirming care, and Rep. Leslie Herod (D), Colorado’s first openly LGBTQ Black legislator.

“Our rights are under attack every single day,” Herod said. “Even as you stand up and fight back, you are forced to endure the pain and hatred that is forced upon you every day.”

Numerous LGBTQ people, many of whom were Black and trans, have been murdered this year. Last year, the Human Rights Campaign released a report on the “epidemic of violence” against transgender and nonbinary people. At least 34 trans people were killed in 2022, with multiple trans people murdered in the Club Q shooting.

Queer youth organizers at the Denver rally read the names of dozens of trans community members who had been murdered.

“It isn’t fair,” said one organizer. “I don’t want to read the names of 50 people each year who were murdered for being queer. We have to fight.”

“We want to be loud,” they said, pointing at the capitol building. “We want them to hear us. It is the first step for making change.”

We can’t predict tornadoes with high accuracy. Scientists are trying to change that

It seemed like a nightmare come to life, as tornado after tornado devoured communities across the United States. At one point 30 million people were deemed to be at tornado risk as the series of devastating twisters struck large sections of the Deep South — including Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia — leaving at least 26 people dead and thousands of buildings in ruins. Even as the afflicted Americans attempt to piece together their lives, there remained warnings of even more possible tornados and thunderstorms. Experts agree that, although tornadoes are among the most unpredictable forms of extreme weather, we are better at anticipating them now than ever before.

We owe much of that to real-life storm chasers like Jana Houser.

It was Houser’s first storm chasing experience: May 12, 2004. Because tornadoes often do not show up where and when they are expected, storm chasers frequently come home empty-handed. Not Houser. During her maiden voyage in Medicine Lodge, Kansas, she saw seven tornadoes in a single day.

The future Ohio State meteorologist was only a student at the time. She recalled how her college professor, though “usually mild mannered,” became “visibly and audibly anxious” as the group of scientists lost sight of one particular tornado they had been chasing in their mobile radar truck. Ominously, the other chase vehicle could see the slippery cyclone right behind a hill, even though Houser’s group could not. Then, all of a sudden and out of nowhere, the behemoth was terrifyingly close.

“The lead [scientist] said we were fine, but the tornado got closer and closer,” Houser remembered. “Finally we bailed. I was driving the 10-ton radar truck into a 45 mph headwind… peddle to the floor, going 40 mph ourselves. I was so giddy on the high of escaping and seeing a tornado for the first time in my life that I was laughing hysterically!”

“I’ve seen things that just don’t compute. I mean, an entire house destroyed except for the interior bathroom. And you walk into the interior bathroom and you open the medicine cabinet, and all the medicine pill bottles are all perfectly untouched.”

Tornadoes — or rotating funnels of air connected to the Earth and either a cumulonimbus or the base of a cumulus cloud — are dangerous because of their immense power, which Houser barely escaped. The famous Fujita Scale exists solely to classify different levels of tornado intensity, with “moderate” tornadoes (F1) having wind speeds of 73-112 mph and “incredible” tornadoes (F5) reaching 261-318 mph. This makes F5s so large that “strong frame houses [are] lifted off foundations and carried considerable distances to disintegrate.”

Scientists have only started to understand twisters, and what progress they have made is because — as Iowa State University geology and atmospheric sciences professor William Gallus wrote to Salon — core pieces of tornado-tracking technology like radar and computers are becoming more sophisticated. The only reason it has been harder to predict tornadoes than thunderstorms, blizzards, droughts, hurricanes and other types of extreme weather is that feisty funnels defy traditional weather-tracking methods.

Or, more simply put: twisters do not behave like other types of extreme weather such as hurricanes. 

“Because of [tornadoes’] small-scale, our normal array of weather stations [are] too far apart for us to get the kind of data we need to really help us predict them, and even understand all the atmospheric factors that lead to their creation,” Gallus explained.

While it may seem counterintuitive to describe tornadoes as “small-scale,” a twister’s funnel does not cover the large areas of mileage captured by hurricanes, blizzards, thunderstorms and other extreme weather events. That means that it is difficult to design technology that sits in the right position to measure these tornadoes.

What’s more, even if one could accurately anticipate when and where tornadoes will appear, they are generally so destructive that they would demolish normal weather stations.


Want more health and science stories in your inbox? Subscribe to Salon’s weekly newsletter The Vulgar Scientist.


“One big challenge right now is that two storms can be spinning just as fast and look the same on radar, but one will produce a tornado and one will not. To understand the reasoning for such differences is almost like finding a needle in a haystack.”

“Because we cannot predict them ahead of time, we instead have to wait until the storm has formed and we can see what is happening  from radar,” Gallus pointed out. “But even with radar, the radar beam is pointed slightly upward, and this complicates the accuracy of our warnings, since very rapid rotation seen by radar at the base of the clouds may not necessarily mean the rotation extends to the ground — i.e., is a tornado.”

Yet radar technicians keep making advances, including “dual-polarization radar” that sends out two beams polarized in different planes, which can identify the nature of precipitation and thereby “predict when during a thunderstorm a tornado is likely to form.” Moreover, computer scientists have developed new models that include large numbers grid points so that extreme weather events in general can be seen “on finer scales.” That is why, when experts see a thunderstorm rotating, they can issue an informed warning of a possible tornado.

Yet tornado prediction isn’t an especially refined science. To improve prediction, Gallus advocates for more weather data on finer scales; increased computer power to run more rigorous models; and ambitious research projects for gathering tornado-based data during storms to better understand how tornadoes are created.

“One big challenge right now is that two storms can be spinning just as fast and look the same on radar, but one will produce a tornado and one will not,” Gallus observed. “To understand the reasoning for such differences is almost like finding a needle in a haystack.”

Houser had her own list of proposed improvements, telling Salon that “our understanding would really improve if we could better observe temperature and moisture characteristics within the storm and the near environment in a three-dimensional space.” Scientists also need to better understand how precipitation and friction interplay with each other to lead to tornado formation, as this information has “major impacts on storm structure and properties like the temperature of the air within the storm, and the nature of the near-ground wind field which is where rotation that becomes tornadic is most critical to understand.”

“I’ve seen things that just don’t compute. I mean, an entire house destroyed except for the interior bathroom. And you walk into the interior bathroom and you open the medicine cabinet, and all the medicine pill bottles are all perfectly untouched.”

Even though scientists have a long way to go to comprehensively predict tornadoes, that does not mean we also have not come a long way since the deployment of the Doppler radar network in the 1990s.

“In some ways tornadoes are fairly easy to predict nowadays,” explained Jason Naylor, an associate professor at the University of Louisville’s Department of Geographic and Environmental Sciences, in an email to Salon. “The Storm Prediction Center does an excellent job of identifying days that are favorable for tornadoes, and the general area where tornadoes might occur. However, meteorologists cannot say that a tornado will occur at some specific location at some specific time.”

“For example,” Naylor continued, “meteorologists can predict that, on a particular day, tornadoes are very likely to occur in central Oklahoma. But they can’t predict that a tornado will go through a specific area and a particular time.”

Until that happens, there will continue to be tragedies as tornadoes strike unsuspecting victims. Victor Gensini, an associate professor at Northern Illinois University’s Department of Earth, Atmosphere, and Environment, recalled one of the more bizarre sights he has beheld in his years of studying these monstrous vortices.

“I’ve seen things that just don’t compute,” Gensini recalled. “I mean, an entire house destroyed except for the interior bathroom. And you walk into the interior bathroom and you open the medicine cabinet, and all the medicine pill bottles are all perfectly untouched.”

Behind the Latter-day Saint church’s vast wealth are two centuries of financial hits and misses

During the first weekend of April 2023, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will hold its semiannual General Conference in Salt Lake City. Tens of thousands of members will attend in person, with millions watching from home.

Over two days, Latter-day Saints – often called “Mormons” – will hear an array of talks from religious leadership. But another speaker will likely be a member of the church’s auditing department, who, if he follows tradition, will state that the institution’s financial activities from the past year were “administered in accordance with Church-approved budgets, accounting practices, and policies.” No further specifics are typically provided.

This yearly ritual may seem striking in the face of the church’s February 2023 agreement to pay a US$5 million fine in a settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. According to its press release, the SEC concluded that the church went to “great lengths” to “obscure” its investment portfolio. A church statement expressed “regret” that its leaders had followed faulty legal counsel and insisted that the fine would be paid through “investment returns” rather than members’ donations.

The settlement came on the heels of other controversies about the church’s taxes and financial portfolio, which journalists and whistleblowers have estimated at around $100 billion.

These revelations have raised questions concerning the ethics of a religious organization amassing such a large amount of wealth, and how it is balanced with charitable giving. But headlines often overlook the long and surprising history of the modern church’s financial success – as well as the continued anxiety surrounding its economic reserves.

Share and share alike

Mormonism was born through the spiritual quest of Joseph Smith, who was raised amid America’s Second Great Awakening during the early 1800s, a period of Christian revivals. His parents were religious seekers who struggled to find a fulfilling church, and tussled with the young country’s financial turbulence. Smith’s father had lost savings in an ill-fated ginseng deal, plunging the family into two decades of poverty.

It is no surprise, then, that when Smith formed his own church, its teachings included a sharp critique of the capitalist system. Early converts to what was originally called the Church of Christ, organized in 1830, were encouraged to consecrate all their goods to their new religious community so it could redistribute resources to those in need.

It was one of many communal experiments Americans attempted during the antebellum period as religious innovators offered alternatives to what they believed was a dangerous and uncaring economic system. Smith’s earliest revelations denounced individualism and urged believers to share their property and resources with one another.

Yet financial difficulties, personal clashes and other challenges doomed the experiment from the start. Within just a few years, the new church’s leaders had already abandoned the consecration ideal. In its stead, Smith directed members to donate “surplus property” to help pay off the group’s immediate debts and then to donate “one tenth of all their interests annually.” This commandment commenced a practice of tithing that still exists today, though it has been interpreted in different ways over the years.

Hardscrabble years

Over the first two decades of the church’s existence, the Latter-day Saints had to relocate their headquarters multiple times – including seven years in Nauvoo, Illinois, a focus of my historical research. By the time the Saints reached Utah’s Great Salt Lake in 1847, leaders and members alike largely embraced the economic system that Smith had previously decried.

A black and white drawing of a small main street, with mountains in the distance.

A drawing of Salt Lake City from a book published in 1875. Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

A series of national economic crises during the late 19th century further tested the church’s finances and financial ideals. In addition, the government’s decision to prosecute polygamists amid growing criticism of the church’s “plural marriages” crippled the region’s economy until Latter-day Saint leaders renounced the practice in 1890.

Facing financial ruin, the church’s prophet and president in 1899, Lorenzo Snow, urged members to redouble their commitment to tithing. The church formalized its expectation that members donate 10% of their annual income to remain in good standing. To this day, Latter-day Saints are expected to meet with local bishops every year and state that they have paid a full tithe.

By 1907, Snow’s successor, Joseph F. Smith, jubilantly announced that tithing income had paid off all the church’s loans. He even predicted that if the current rate continued, “we expect to see the day when we will not have to ask you for one dollar of donation for any purpose.”

Bust to boom

Donations only increased over the following decades, however, as the church continued to grow rapidly. The prosperity of the 1950s enabled an ambitious construction agenda for the next decade, as the church built over a thousand new meetinghouses and temples for its exploding membership.

Yet high spending, poor financial management and unwise or unlucky investments brought another financial crisis, and the church soon found itself cash-poor. By 1962, the budget had amassed a $32 million deficit. Leaders ceased offering detailed financial reports, which had been inconsistent yet common staples at the church’s General Conference.

Things started looking up the next year when N. Eldon Tanner, a successful Canadian politician and businessman, joined the church’s leadership and modernized its financial structure, investing any surplus. The church was once again on solid financial footing by the end of the 1960s, though it did not resume the release of detailed financial reports. Instead, Tanner empowered a private economic team to continue growing the faith’s portfolio.

Decades of membership growth, tithing donations and lucrative investments resulted in the modern church’s massive accumulation of wealth. This financial success has enabled it to oversee a worldwide church with nearly 17 million members of record, tens of thousands of employees and countless volunteer and charitable programs.

A grand-looking church building with tall spires lit up at night.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints’ historic temple in Salt Lake City, Utah. George Frey/Getty Images

Its investments became so profitable in the early 2000s that, according to the SEC report, church leaders explored ways to shield their success from the public. According to one whistleblower, church authorities feared that greater transparency would discourage members from further tithing.

Giving to God

While the church reports giving over $1 billion in charitable aid last year, some members and observers alike critique leaders for not donating more, given the vast size of its investment portfolio, which is almost twice the size of Harvard’s endowment.

The issue also raises important ethical questions regarding a religious institution’s obligations toward its own members. Should Latter-day Saints, especially those who are struggling financially, still donate a tenth of their income to a church whose reserves are likely deep enough to pay off more than a decade of expenses? The seeming discrepancy between the transparency required of individual members and the church’s own lack of accountability has unsettled some members.

Yet many believers emphasize that their tithing’s purpose is not merely to add to the church’s coffers but to help build the kingdom of God – their donations are primarily offered for spiritual reasons, not worldly ones. And investments are also a safety net for the faith’s growth: Leaders likely hope it can support rapidly growing membership in lower-income countries.

As absurd as it may be to call a $100 billion dollar portfolio a “rainy day” fund, the church’s turbulent history may have led leaders to see it as just that.

 

Benjamin Park, Associate Professor of History, Sam Houston State University

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

The war of surprises in Ukraine: Could there be one surprise too many?

Some wars acquire names that stick. The Lancaster and York clans fought the War of the Roses from 1455-1485 to claim the British throne. The Hundred Years’ War pitted England against France from 1337-1453. In the Thirty Years’ War, 1618-1648, many European countries clashed, while Britain and France waged the Seven Years’ War, 1756-63, across significant parts of the globe. World War I (1914-1918) gained the lofty moniker, “The Great War,” even though World II (1939-1945) would prove far greater in death, destruction, and its grim global reach.  

Of the catchier conflict names, my own favorite — though the Pig War of 1859 between the U.S. and Great Britain in Canada runs a close second — is the War of Jenkins’ Ear (1739-1748). It was named for Captain Robert Jenkins of the East India Company who, in 1738, told the British House of Commons that his ear, which he displayed for the onlooking parliamentarians, had been severed several years earlier by a Spanish coast guard sloop’s commander. He had boarded the ship off the Cuban coast and committed the outrage using Jenkins’s own cutlass. If ever there was cause for war, that was it! An ear for an ear, so to speak.

If I could give Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine a name for posterity, I think I’d call it the War of Surprises, because from the get-go it so thoroughly confounded the military mavens and experts on Russia and Ukraine. For now, though, let me confine myself to exploring just two surprising aspects of that ongoing conflict, both of which can be posed as questions: Why did it occur when it did? Why has it evolved in such unexpected ways?

It’s NATO’s Fault

Though a slim majority of experts opined that Putin might use force against Ukraine many months after his military buildup on Ukraine’s border began in early 2021, few foresaw an all-out invasion. When he started massing troops, the reigning assumption was that he was muscle-flexing, probably to extract a promise that NATO would cease expanding toward Russia.

Some context helps here. NATO had just 16 members at its Cold War peak. More than three decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, it has 30 — 32 when Finland and Sweden, which sought membership after Putin’s invasion, are allowed to join. Long before Putin became president in 2000, Russian officials were already condemning the eastward march of the American-led former Cold War alliance. His predecessor Boris Yeltsin made his opposition clear to President Bill Clinton.

In October 1993, as Secretary of State Warren Christopher prepared to travel to Russia, James Collins, chargé d’affaires at the American embassy in Moscow, sent him a cable warning that “NATO expansion is neuralgic to Russians.” If continued “without holding the door open to Russia,” he added, it would be “universally interpreted in Moscow as directed against Russia and Russia alone — or ‘Neo-Containment,’ as Foreign Minister [Andrei] Kozyrev recently suggested.”

In February 2008, eight years into Putin’s presidency and about a month before a NATO summit in Bucharest, Romania, William Burns, then the American ambassador to Moscow and now the director of the CIA, sent a cable to Washington focusing on Ukraine. “NATO enlargement, particularly to Ukraine,” he warned, “remains an ’emotional and neuralgic’ issue for Russia.” That same month, in a memo to President George W. Bush’s National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, Burns wrote that Ukraine’s entry into NATO would cross “the brightest of all red lines” for Russia’s leaders. “I have,” he continued, “yet to find anyone who views Ukraine in NATO as anything other than a direct challenge to Russian interests.”

Such diplomatic missives had little effect as NATO expansion became the centerpiece of Washington’s new security order in Europe. In April 2008, at Bush’s urging, NATO finally took a fateful step at that Bucharest summit, declaring that Ukraine and Georgia would, one day, join its ranks.

Now, it was one thing to include former Soviet allies from Central Europe in NATO, but Ukraine was another matter entirely. In the eyes of Russian nationalists, the two countries shared a centuries-long set of cultural, linguistic, ethnic, and religious ties with Ukrainians, not to mention a 1,426-mile-long border, a point Putin made in a 7,000-word essay he wrote in July 2021, tellingly titled “On the Historical Unity of Russians and Ukrainians.”

Putin, who never regarded Ukraine as an authentic state, saw the Ukrainians’ overwhelming December 1991 vote in favor of independence as a deep injustice. The Russian newspaper Kommersant reported that he told George W. Bush at a NATO-Russia Council meeting held during that 2008 Bucharest summit, “Ukraine is not even a state. What is Ukraine? A part of its territory is Eastern Europe, another part [Ukraine east of the Dnipro River], and a significant one, is a donation from us.” He later added ominously that, if Ukraine entered NATO, it would lose Crimea, its sole Russian-majority province, and the Donbas, its Russophone east. In his 2016 book, All the Kremlin’s Men, Russian journalist Mikhail Zygar confirmed that Putin had indeed threatened to destroy Ukraine, were it to join NATO.

Those who blame NATO for the present war point to just such evidence. And it can’t be denied that NATO expansion created tension between Russia and the West, as well as Russia and Ukraine. But the alliance’s Bucharest promise that Ukraine would become a member someday didn’t make Putin’s war any less surprising.

Here’s why: between then and the invasion moment, NATO never followed through on its pledge to take the next step and provide Kyiv with  a “membership action plan.” By February 2022, it had, in fact, kept Ukraine waiting for 14 years without the slightest sign that its candidacy might be advancing (though Ukraine’s security ties and military training with some NATO states — the U.S., Britain, and Canada, in particular — had increased).

So, the NATO-was-responsible theory, suggesting that Putin invaded in 2022 in the face of an “existential threat,” isn’t convincing (even if one believes, as I do, that NATO’s enlargement was a bad idea and Russian apprehensions reasonable).

It’s Democracy, Stupid

rival explanation for Putin’s war is that it stemmed from his fear of liberal democracy. Under his rule, Russia had become steadily more authoritarian until the state was embodied in a single person: him. Putin’s greatest fear, so this explanation goes, was the specter of Russians thronging the streets demanding more freedom — and so, his departure. For that reason, he curbed the media, exiled opposition figures, allegedly had others like Anna Politkovskaya and Boris Nemtsov killed, and jailed Alexei Navalny, Russia’s most prominent dissident and the person most likely to lead a grassroots rebellion against him.

According to this account, Putin can’t imagine Russians turning against him spontaneously, since he played such a crucial role in putting the 1990s — a decade of economic collapse, fire sales of state property to sleazy “oligarchs,” rising poverty, and potential civil war — behind them. Instead, he built a strong state, imposed order, crushed the Chechens’ attempted secession, paid off Russia’s massive debt early, rebuilt the army, revved up the economy, and left the country standing tall as a great power once again.

So, if Russians do protest en masse (as they did from 2011 to 2013 against rigged elections), it must be thanks to instigation from abroad, as was supposedly true in adjoining countries like Georgia during its 2003 Rose Revolution, Kyrgyzstan during its 2005 Tulip Revolution, and Ukraine during its Orange Revolution that same year. Putin, this narrative continues, hated the “color revolutions” because they created turmoil in regions he deemed Russia’s sphere of influence or in which, as former president Dmitry Medvedev put it, the country has “privileged interests.”

But his real beef against citizen rebellions in Russia’s neighborhood, according to this explanation of what sparked the invasion, is that they might inspire insurrection in Russia. And when it came to that, he especially feared such events in Ukraine. In 2014, after all, its “revolution of dignity” culminated in the ouster of a Russian-friendly president, Viktor Yanukovych. For Putin, in other words, that revolt hit too close to home. He reacted by annexing Crimea (after a referendum that violated Ukraine’s constitution), while working to foster two separatist “republics” across the border in Ukraine’s Donbas region. A little more than a month before his invasion at a meeting of the Russia-led Collective Treaty Organization, he warned that “we will not allow the realization of so-called color-revolution scenarios” and promptly dispatched 2,500 troops to Kazakhstan following a revolt there.

As for Ukraine, while it may be an imperfect democracy, it was certainly making progress. Its elections were cleaner than Russia’s and its media far freer, as political parties competed, governments were voted in and out of power, and civic groups multiplied. All of this, so goes the argument, Putin found intolerable, fearing that such democratic ideas and aspirations would eventually make their way to Russia.

As it happens, though, none of this explains the timing of his invasion.  

After all, Ukraine had been moving toward political plurality for years, however slowly and unevenly, and however far it still had to go. So, what was happening in 2021 that could have taken his fear to new heights? The answer: nothing, really. Those who claim that NATO was irrelevant to the invasion often insist that the deed sprang from Putin’s ingrained authoritarianism, dating back to his days in Russia’s secret police, the KGB, his love of unchecked power, and his dread of uppity citizens inclined to rebellion.

The problem: none of this explains why the war broke out when it did. Russia wasn’t then being roiled by protests; Putin’s position was rock-solid; and his party, United Russia, had no true rivals. Indeed, the only others with significant followings, relatively speaking, the Communist Party and the Liberal Democracy Party (neither liberal nor democratic), were aligned with the state.

According to yet another explanation, he attacked Ukraine simply because he’s an imperialist through and through, yearns to go down in history as Putin the Great (like Russian tzars Peter the Great and Catherine the Great), and has been transfixed by far-right thinkers, above all the exile Ivan Ilyin, whose remains he arranged to have returned to Russia for reburial.

But why then did a Russian ruler seized by imperial dreams and a neo-fascist ideology wait more than two decades to attack Ukraine? And remember, though now commonly portrayed as a wild-eyed expansionist, Putin, though hardly a peacemaker, had never previously committed Russian forces to anything like that invasion. His 1999-2009 war in Chechnya, though brutal, was waged within Russia and there was no prospect of outside intervention to help the Chechens. His brief military foray into Georgia in 2008, his landgrab in Ukraine in 2014, his intervention in Syria in 2015 — none were comparable in their size or audacity.

Do I have a better explanation? No, but that’s my point. To this day, perhaps the most important question of all about this war, the biggest surprise — why did it happen when it did? — remains deeply mysterious, as do Putin’s motives (or perhaps impulses).

God Doesn’t Favor the Bigger Battalions

Once Russian troops did cross Ukraine’s border, just about everyone expected Kyiv to fall within days. After that, it was assumed, Putin would appoint a quisling government and annex big chunks of the country. The CIA’s assessment was that Ukrainian forces would be trounced in no time at all, while Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark Milley reportedly told members of Congress that resistance would fizzle within a mere three days. Those predictions briefly seemed on the mark. After all, the Russian army made its way to the northern suburbs of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv — think of a military bent on capturing Washington, D.C., reaching Bethesda, Maryland — before being stopped in its tracks. Had it taken that city, we would be in a different world today.

But — perhaps the biggest surprise of all — the far weaker Ukrainian army not only prevented what was then considered the world’s second-greatest military superpower from taking Kyiv, but in September 2021 ejected Russian forces from the northeastern province of Kharkiv. That October, it also pushed them out of the portion of the southern province of Kherson they had captured on the right bank of the Dnipro River. In all, Ukrainian forces have now retaken about half the territory Russia occupied after the invasion.

As winter approached that year, the crescent-shaped frontlines extending from northern Luhansk Province (one of two that make up the Donbas region) all the way south became the scene of World War I-style trench warfare, with both sides throwing their troops into a virtual meat grinder. Still, since then, despite having overwhelming superiority in soldiers and firepower — the estimated artillery exchange ratio between the two forces has been put as high as 7:1 — Russia’s advance has been, at best, glacial, at worst, nonexistent.

The Russian army’s abysmal performance has perplexed experts. According to American, British, and Norwegian estimates, it has suffered something on the order of 180,000-200,00 casualties. Some observers do believe those numbers are significantly too high, but even if they were off by 50%, the Russian army’s casualties in one year of fighting would exceed by perhaps twofold the losses of the Soviet Union’s Red Army during its 10-year war in Afghanistan.

Russia has also lost thousands of tanks, armored personnel carriers, and helicopters, while vast amounts of equipment, abandoned intact, have fallen into Ukrainian hands. All of this, mind you, after Putin initiated a mega-bucks military modernization drive in 2008, leading the Economist to declare in 2020 that “the Russian military dazzles after a decade of reform” and NATO had better watch out.

For the surprising evolution of the war, unlike so much else, I do have an explanation. Military experts typically dwell on what can be counted: the level of military spending, the number of soldiers, tanks, warplanes, and artillery pieces a military has, and so on. They assume, reasonably enough, that the side with more countable stuff is likely to be the winner — and quickly if it has a lot more as Russia indeed did.

There is, however, no way to assign numerical values to morale or leadership. As a result, they tend to be discounted, if not simply omitted from comparisons of military power. In Ukraine, however, as in the American wars in Vietnam in the last century and Afghanistan in this one, the squishy stuff has, at least so far, proven decisive. French emperor Napoleon’s dictum that, in war, “the moral is to the physical as three to one” may seem hyperbolic and he certainly ignored it when he led his Grande Armée disastrously into Russia and allowed the brutal Russian winter to shred its spirit, but in Ukraine — surprise of surprises — his maxim has held all too true, at least so far.

When it comes to surprises, count on one thing: the longer this war continues, the greater the likelihood of yet more of them. One in particular should worry us all: the possibility, if a Russian defeat looms, of a sudden escalation to nuclear war. There’s no way to judge or measure the probability of such a dreaded dénouement now. All we know is that the consequences could be horrific.

Though neither Russia nor the United States seeks a nuclear war, it’s at least possible that they could slide into one. After all, never, not even in the Cold War era, has their relationship been quite so poisonous, only increasing the risk of both misperception and overreaction born of worst-case thinking. Let us hope, in this war of surprises, that it remains nothing more than another of the scenarios strategists like to imagine. Then again, if as 2021 began, I had suggested that Russia might soon invade Ukraine and begin a war in Europe, you would undoubtedly have thought me mad.

When gun violence came to my school, the district added even more guns

This week, it was Nashville. Last week, it was my child’s school district. In an incident you may have already forgotten, because more gun violence has happened since, a gun went off at a Denver high school last Wednesday, injuring two school administrators. The 17-year-old suspect was later found to have died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to police.

A mere day after the incident, the Denver School Board unanimously decided to allow armed police officers back into the city’s high schools. This is in direct opposition to the removal of such officers from the schools, which was decided by the school board back in 2020.

Only a few days after the Denver shooting, a shooter in Nashville killed six people, including three children, at an expensive, private Christian school, shattering some parents’ mistaken belief that shootings only happen at public schools. No school — or place — in America is safe. But one thing that won’t keep our children safer? 

More guns, including more officers in schools with guns. 

Three years ago, the Denver School Board kicked armed officers out of schools following the murder of George Floyd. This was an action supported by parents and advocates alike, and a movement across the country. At that time, the Denver Public Schools had a contract with the city’s police department to supply armed officers to schools. As Chalkbeat reported, the school district also had “its own force of armed and unarmed campus security officers.” A little over half of schools in the United States had at least one armed officer in 2019.  

What message does it send to children, so recently traumatized by a gun going off in their school, to see still more guns?

But the death of Floyd, who was murdered by a white police officer in 2020, and the racial justice protests that ensued, prompted Denver, like other cities, to end its contract with the police department. Denverite reported the decision to remove armed officers “was not a decision made lightly, but it was one many saw as necessary to keep kids from negative police interactions.” 

That went out the window in the wake of last week’s gun violence. What message does it send to children, so recently traumatized by a gun going off in their school, to see still more guns, now on the hips of officers patrolling their hallways?

Armed officers in schools do little to curb violence, and in fact, may have the opposite effect. Poynter and many others have reported on the numerous studies that armed school officers do not prevent school shootings. The Trace wrote that “gunmen have often targeted schools with armed guards,” citing four major 2018 school shootings, including Florida’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where the attacked schools had armed guards: “In all four of those cases, guards failed to stop the gunman from killing.” School shooters are rarely deterred by armed officers, and as a 2021 study reported, “The presence of a weapon increases aggression. Whenever firearms are present, there is room for error, and even highly trained officers get split-second decisions wrong.”

Officers with guns in schools also increase the danger for students of color and disabled students. Education Week wrote, “The presence of school resource officers contributes to an increase in disciplinary actions, particularly among Black and Hispanic students and students in special education programs.” Over a period of five years, officers in Denver schools gave tickets to – or arrested – over 4,500 students for infractions such as truancy. Approximately 80% of those officer-disciplined students were Black or Latino. 

Mental health is a footnote.

The rush to return armed officers to schools is a rash one, meant to placate (mostly white) parents while amping up the danger for all marginalized children. It also doesn’t serve them, doesn’t serve any student. What would be helpful for them? An increase in mental health resources and support.

Mental health is a footnote in the Denver shooting stories. Denverite writes, “two mental health professionals will be” at high schools, along with a pair of armed officers, until the end of the 2023 school year. But one doesn’t cancel out the other. It’s also not enough. Mental health should be a part of regular school curriculums, and should have been for years, starting in elementary or preschool. Counselors should be more than simply around; they should have meetings easily and regularly — for students and for their whole families. 

Students shouldn’t have to miss school, be pulled from class, come in early or stay late to see a counselor. What if meetings were required for all students, to further reduce the shame of seeking help? How much are these armed officers costing schools — and how many more trained counselors, therapists and mental health resources could schools afford without them?


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


If you’ve never gotten a panicked text from your child whose school is on lockdown; if you’ve never picked up a child, jittery and hypervigilant, after a traumatic incident of gun violence, it may only be a matter of time. Our country keeps going precisely the wrong way with more guns in schools, not less — and more violence and not enough help.

 

 

Trump, Bush tax cuts have largely driven national debt issues since 2001: report

Republicans’ major tax cuts for corporations and the rich are overwhelmingly the drivers of current issues over the national debt, which the GOP is using as an excuse to force through cuts to welfare and government spending that are not contributing nearly as much to the debt, a new report reveals.

Over the past two decades, increases in the U.S.’s debt ratio, or the proportion of the national debt to the economy, have largely been driven by major tax overhauls done by Republicans under Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump, according to an analysis from the liberal Center for American Progress (CAP).

The cuts have added $10 trillion to the national debt since the Bush tax cuts were enacted in 2001 and Trump’s in 2017, the report finds. In that time, the cuts have caused more than half — 57 percent — of the increase in the debt ratio. That proportion jumps to a whopping 90 percent if the stimulus packages following the Great Recession and COVID-19 recession are excluded from the analysis.

At the same time, spending has not contributed nearly as significantly to the debt ratio. Before the Bush tax cuts were made permanent in 2012, spending was projected to not exceed revenues for 65 years, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated — but, the next year, the CBO found revenues were expected to fall below program spending and the debt ratio would begin rising indefinitely.

Had Congress and the White House not implemented such drastic tax cuts from 2000 on, report author Bobby Kogan says, the national debt would remain stable indefinitely. As it is, Kogan has projected that the tax cuts will grow to surpass 100 percent of the increase in the debt ratio.

“Despite the rhetoric of runaway spending, projections of long-term primary spending have decreased, but projections of long-term revenues have decreased vastly more,” the report says.

“The United States does not have a high-spending problem; it has a low-tax problem,” Kogan concluded.

The findings are a clear demonstration of the Republican spin cycle wherein the party cuts government revenue, creating a spending “crisis.” This causes the slowing of bureaucracy as government agencies lay off workers, and potentially cut welfare benefits; the negative perception of government services is then used to justify further tax cuts and spending cuts, and the cycle continues. The ultimate result of these cuts is the funneling of money from the working class, who are still paying a disproportionate proportion of their incomes into taxes compared to the wealthy and corporations.

This tactic is a major player in the current standoff over the national debt. Economists have warned that playing brinkmanship with the national debt, which officials predict will need to be raised this summer, would be disastrous for the fragile COVID economy.

But Republicans are doing it anyway, threatening to block the debt ceiling from being raised until Democrats fold to their demands while whining about the supposed irresponsibility of the national debt. These demands include proposals like cutting Social Security or, considering the vast unpopularity of that plan, less-splashy cuts to other programs that would nonetheless jeopardize the health of the climate and the working class.

“The billionaire bailout”: FDIC chair says the biggest deposit accounts at SVB held $13 billion

In prepared testimony for a Senate Banking Committee hearing slated for Tuesday morning, the chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation reveals that the 10 largest deposit accounts at Silicon Valley Bank held a combined $13.3 billion, a detail that’s likely to intensify criticism of federal regulators’ intervention in the firm’s recent collapse.

When SVB was spiraling earlier this month, the FDIC, Treasury Department, and Federal Reserve rushed in to backstop the financial system and make all depositors at the California bank whole, including those with accounts over $250,000—the total amount typically covered by FDIC insurance.

“At SVB, the depositors protected by the guarantee of uninsured depositors included not only small and mid-size business customers but also customers with very large account balances,” FDIC chief Martin Gruenberg writes in his prepared testimony. “The ten largest deposit accounts at SVB held $13.3 billion, in the aggregate.”

Gruenberg goes on to estimate that the FDIC’s $125 billion Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF)—which is financed primarily by assessments on insured banks and “backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government”—took a $20 billion hit as a result of the SVB intervention.

According to Gruenberg, nearly 90%—$18 billion—of the DIF loss stemming from SVB is “attributable to the cost of covering uninsured deposits.” He added that the DIF absorbed a roughly $1.6 billion cost to cover uninsured deposits at Signature Bank, which failed shortly after SVB.

The FDIC chair’s testimony comes as federal regulators continue to face scrutiny for glaring oversight failures in the lead-up to the collapse and backlash over the emergency response, which many have characterized as a bailout for the wealthy and well-connected given SVB’s role as a major lender to venture capital and tech startups.

Billionaire Peter Thiel, whose firm was accused of helping spark a bank run by advising clients to pull their money from SVB, told the Financial Times that he had $50 million in a personal account at the bank when it failed earlier this month.

“The bailout really did protect billionaires from taking a modest haircut,” Matt Stoller of the American Economic Liberties Project tweeted in response to Gruenberg’s testimony.

Writing for The American Prospect on Monday, Revolving Door Project researcher Dylan Gyauch-Lewis called the federal government’s swift action in the wake of SVB’s failure “a good illustration of the enormous class bias in American policymaking.”

“As soon as corporations and the wealthy run into trouble, elites trip over themselves, discarding both law and precedent, to rescue them,” Gyauch-Lewis wrote, noting that federal regulators had to classify SVB’s collapse as a “systemic risk” to the financial system—a disputed characterization—in order to legally guarantee deposits over $250,000.

For contrast, Gyauch-Lewis added, “consider student loan forgiveness. The legal justification is clear as day, and the authority itself is used regularly. According to the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act of 2003, the Education Department can forgive student loans as it sees fit in a national emergency.”

“At bottom, the core reason SVB’s depositors got bailed out had little to do with morals or even financial risk,” Gyauch-Lewis argued. “It happened because they had rich and powerful friends with the ear of the president’s chief of staff. Broke students don’t. The students have to organize and campaign for decades to get something far worse than what they wanted, and for that to hang in the balance at the Supreme Court. The SVB depositors just had to whine on Twitter and make a few calls.”

“That could be the ballgame”: Experts say “sharply incriminating” Pence testimony could doom Trump

A federal judge on Tuesday ruled that former Vice President Mike Pence must testify before a grand jury about conversations he had with former President Donald Trump leading up to the Jan 6 insurrection. 

In a still-sealed ruling, Chief Judge James Boasberg of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., indicated that Pence will be able to decline questions pertaining to his own actions on the day of the Capitol riots but rejected bids from both Pence and Trump seeking to limit questions about his discussions with the former president, per CNN. Pence and Trump could appeal the ruling but it’s unclear if they will do so.

Pence, who did not participate in the House select committee’s Jan. 6 probe, offered several telling details in his memoir published last year. Pence wrote that Trump criticized him for being “too honest” several days before Jan 6, over Pence’s refusal to partake in flipping the 2020 presidential election results.

“Hundreds of thousands are gonna hate your guts,” Trump allegedly told Pence in a New Year’s Day phone call. “People are gonna think you’re stupid.”

Pence wrote that he replied, “Mr. President, I don’t question there were irregularities and fraud. It’s just a question of who decides, and under the law that is Congress.”

Special counsel Jack Smith, who is heading the Justice Department investigation into Trump’s efforts to overturn the election, subpoenaed Pence for testimony and other documents earlier in the year. In February, Pence announced that he was going to “fight the Biden DOJ subpoena” on the grounds that it was “unconstitutional and unprecedented.” CNN reported that Pence is contesting the subpoena under the Constitution’s Speech or Debate Clause, which protects lawmakers from particular law enforcement actions related to their legislative roles. 

The judge ordered Pence to testify about “any potentially illegal acts committed by Mr. Trump,” a source told The New York Times.

“That could be the ballgame,” predicted New York University Law Prof. Ryan Goodman, adding that the carveout the judge gave Pence was “very narrow.”

“To be clear, Pence’s motion resulted in a narrowing of his testimony, but he is required to testify regarding illegal activity, which is the focus of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigation. That’s what matters,” explained former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti.


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman explained that Pence “must testify about alleged Trump illegality” under the judge’s order.

“That is consistent with construing the speech and debate argument as a limited immunity like executive privilege. It also corresponds to the most important evidence from Pence,” he tweeted. “What does Smith most need from Pence? The one on one conversations with Trump where Trump ripped him to shreds (vulgarly) & showed his ruthless determination to break the law. What does he least need? The senate public deliberations that the court said Pence may be able to shield,” he added.

“Pence can’t evade the law and telling the truth anymore,” tweeted former Watergate prosecutor Jill Wine-Banks, adding that Pence’s testimony will “greatly improve” the DOJ’s case against Trump.

“Pence has some of the most sharply incriminating evidence of Trump’s criminal conduct AND his criminal intent,” wrote former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner. “Plus, it looks like the courts are done letting Trump and his lackeys weaponize court delay.”

Five tips on how to keep family meals delicious, nutritious and stress-free

Eating together regularly as a family has long been promoted as a simple solution for improving health and wellbeing.

We have been told that to achieve these proposed benefits we must follow an idealistic, age-old formula all family members at the table, happily sharing a home-cooked meal and chatting without distractions. But the modern reality includes time-poor families, fussy eaters, siblings at odds and stress about what meals to cook — not to mention cost-of-living pressures. This combination can make achieving family meals difficult, if not impossible, for many families.

Research tells us families who eat together frequently are more likely to have better diets, better family functioning and children with higher self-esteem. But these studies cannot tell us whether the family gathering over a meal is causing these outcomes. It might be just as likely that families who eat well are more likely to eat together.

But how can we make family meals more realistic and less stressful?

 

We’re not sure what the link is

Our previous systematic review attempted to unpack this relationship. But we weren’t able to provide conclusive answers, largely due to limitations with study designs. Researchers didn’t look at factors like physical activity, screen time and sleep separately. And they measured “success” differently across studies, making them hard to compare.

So, we do not know with certainty the family meal is beneficial for health, only that there’s a statistical link between families that eat together and family health.

And we do not know which aspect of the family meal may be responsible. The answer might relate to food quality, screen use, mealtime atmosphere or family conversations.

 

A nightly challenge

In Australia, family meals often happen in the evening because it is one of the few times of day families are at home at the same time. Around three quarters of young children engage in family dinners with their caregiver more than five nights per week.  

Although many parents consider family mealtimes important, they can also be stressful to achieve.

Family meals are more than what happens at the table. They require intent, effort and planning. This labor can become a relentless cycle and it’s most commonly mothers who shoulder the burden. Many find it tough going.

 

Managing mealtimes

The work continues once the family is seated together.

Having pleasant mealtimes and meaningful conversations may not happen naturally. Again, it is often mothers who manage the relationships and emotions around the table.

And mealtimes can become more complicated when there are multiple kids in the mix. Some parents allow TV or other screens to encourage kids to eat and to avoid arguments. This strategy has been linked with less-than-optimal dietary intakes, but can make mealtimes possible and more manageable.

 

5 tips to ease the pressure

So, how can we rethink what a successful and meaningful family meal looks like? Here are five ideas for starters:

1) It doesn’t have to be dinner

Opportunities to eat together come at different times of the day and not all family members have to be present. A meaningful eating occasion can be as simple as sharing a snack with the kids after school.

2) It doesn’t need to be perfect

There is no shame in reheating a frozen meal, throwing together pasta and sauce, serving your veggies raw, eating on a picnic rug in the living room or occasionally watching a family TV show.

3) Don’t force the conversation

Meals are a great time to communicate, but this does not always come easily after busy days at work and school. Simple word games, listening to music and quiet time can be just as enjoyable.

4) You don’t have to do it alone

Get creative in the way you share family meal tasks with kids and partners. You could design the family menu together, have a shopping list everyone can contribute to or divide the washing up.

5) There’s no magic number

There is no number of meals that is right for every family. It’s all about opting in how and when you can.

 

Rethinking family meals

When it comes to family meals, there is no one-size-fits-all solution. We need better promotion of realistic and achievable family meals, to reduce the pressure placed on already overburdened families.

We must also consider whether systemic changes are required to support parents to have the time and energy to bring their families together for a meaningful shared meal. This could include supporting workers to finish early for meal preparation or providing more affordable, healthy convenience foods. We could also look to other cultures for inspiration.

More evidence is needed to understand which components of the family meal are most beneficial, so that we can prioritize these. Innovative research methods, such as mealtime observations in households with a range of cultures and compositions, could explore how eating occasions unfold in real time.

Family meals can be a positive experience, with the potential for good health outcomes. But they could be even better if we reduce all the pressure and expectations that surround them.

Georgia Middleton, Associate Lecturer, Flinders University; Eloise Litterbach, Postdoctoral Researcher, Deakin University; Fairley Le Moal, Postdoctoral researcher in Sociology, Flinders University, and Susannah Ayre, PhD Candidate, Queensland University of Technology

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

Ex-prosecutor warns DA may be looking at “other charges” against Trump as key ally testifies

Former National Enquirer publisher David Pecker testified Monday before the grand jury investigating former President Donald Trump’s alleged role in a 2016 hush-money payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels, according to The New York Times

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s investigation centers around a $130,000 payment made by Trump’s former personal lawyer Michael Cohen, who was reimbursed by the Trump Organization.

Daniels first considered selling her story about the alleged affair to the National Enquirer, when Pecker was the tabloid’s publisher, according to federal prosecutors. But Pecker and the tabloid’s editor, Dylan Howard took that information to Cohen, who negotiated with Daniels’ attorney to purchase her silence for $130,000. 

When he was slow to pay, Howard pressed Cohen to get the deal done to keep Daniels from revealing their discussions about suppressing her story, according to The Times. 

The prosecution needs to establish that Pecker can corroborate Cohen’s story and prove that Trump was aware that the money was going toward paying off Daniels, said William “Widge” Devaney, former assistant U.S. attorney in the District of New Jersey.

“What Pecker can possibly offer is that this was all part of a larger scheme,” he told Salon.

Pecker also served as the former chairman of American Media Inc., which publishes the Enquirer. He took on a new role as an executive adviser in August 2020 after he and AMI came under campaign finance scrutiny, CNN reported

AMI signed a non-prosecution agreement with prosecutors, which ruled out charges for the tabloid publisher over its role in securing hush money from Cohen.

AMI admitted to paying $150,000 to former Playboy model Karen McDougal in cooperation with members of Trump’s presidential campaign to prevent her from making her claims of an affair with Trump public during the 2016 race.

A longtime ally of Trump, Pecker agreed to monitor potentially damaging stories about the former president during his 2016 campaign, according to The Times.

“On August 5, 2016, McDougal signed a limited life-story rights agreement granting A.M.I. exclusive ownership of her account of any romantic, personal, or physical relationship she has ever had with any ‘then-married man,'” the New Yorker reported.

AMI had exclusive rights to McDougal’s story, which it never ran, a practice known as “catch and kill.”

At least nine witnesses have testified since the grand jury that was impaneled earlier this year by Bragg. It has heard twice from Pecker, who also testified in January. 

The DA’s office has signaled to Trump’s lawyers that the former president could be facing charges soon by offering him the chance to testify before the grand jury, which almost always indicates an indictment is close.

“The timing is very much up to Alvin Bragg on when they ask the grand jury to vote the indictment,” Devaney said. “It may be that he’s also looking at potentially other charges to try to bolster this.”


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Trump has repeatedly denied wrongdoing in connection with the payment to Daniels and her claims of an affair. If charges are filed against him, it would be the first time in U.S. history a former president is criminally indicted.

He is also facing multiple criminal investigations, including a DOJ probe into his handling of classified documents and a Georgia investigation into his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

Trump could potentially face other charges in the hush money probe for threatening the district attorney, Devaney pointed out.

In recent weeks, he has attacked Bragg on social media calling him an “animal” and alleging the Manhattan DA’s office is “corrupt & highly political.” Trump even encouraged his supporters to “protest” his widely anticipated arrest.

Some critics have compared his violent rhetoric around his potential indictment to his rhetoric ahead of the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

“What Trump is doing with respect to fomenting potential violence against the district attorney and law enforcement and just in general, is really horrendous,” Devaney said. “We rely in this country, on the unfettered operation of our justice system. And when people really start trying to throw wrenches into the cogs, that’s problematic. When people are threatening or fomenting violence against prosecutors and law enforcement, that is really problematic.”

Would dating Roman Roy be so bad? A defense of the “Succession” slime puppy

Slime puppy. Little worm. Someone who “couldn’t get a job in a burger joint.” These are but a taste of the many, many insults lobbed at Roman Roy, the youngest sibling of the “Succession” clan. Roman (Kieran Culkin, in the role he was born to play) has returned with the rest of his spoiled enclave for the fourth and final season of the HBO hit about the aging patriarch of a media empire and his wealthy, dysfunctional family. 

Unlike most of his family, content to stab others in the back, Roman will stab you openly in the face.

Once upon a time, everybody loved Raymond, but in the HBO show, everyone loves to hate on Roman. He’s the baby. He’s weird. He can’t even sit right. In every scene with Roman, he moves like a stray cat in pain, tightly wound with unresolved trauma, unable to be still and often, disbelieved despite being the smartest of his siblings. His sexual proclivities are not only out there, they’re common knowledge, mocked frequently by his brothers and sister (who frankly, each have their own issues with intimacy).

He puts the filthy in filthy rich. But as boyfriends go, Roman wouldn’t be the worst. Think about it. He’s sensitive. He’s been through hell and continues to live there. He’s the most open-minded, nontraditional one in his storied often stodgy family, and once he decides he wants you, he’ll defend your honor, like a petite, greasy knight.

The Roy family has made a blood sport out of criticizing each other, and Roman certainly gets his barbs in. His insults often land more solidly than the others’ digs — again, because he’s secretly the most intelligent of them all. It takes a strong wit to come up with quick lines like “Thought I heard a clown car pulling up,” when his brother Connor (Alan Ruck) arrives. As Vulture writes, “The best thing about a Roman Roy insult is that he often says them to someone else in front of the person he’s insulting.” His quips are fast, subtle and muttered. Blink and you’ll miss them. 

He’s up for anything. And anyone. His romantic type is: person.

Roman is too smart to pass up good jokes — his impulsiveness means he can’t let an opportunity slide — but he often utters them so much like an aside, they seem almost to be for himself. Despite the family tradition of cruel ribbing, Roman is the most non-judgmental. He’s just telling the truth. He can’t fake it. He says what comes into his head and lacks the “pretend to be normal” mask his siblings have perfected. He sucks at the “whole corporate flirt thing,” “the metro poser bulls**t.”

He also sees through people, directly telling them he hates them, if indeed he does. Unlike most of his family, content to stab others in the back, Roman will stab you openly in the face. When Shiv (Sarah Snook) tells him she loves him, he insults her and walks away while she grins like a jack-o’-lantern. He knows it’s not real.

SuccessionJeremy Strong, Sarah Snook and Kieran Culkin in “Succession” (Photograph by Claudette Barius/HBO)Roman is always searching for realness and because of this, he’s up for anything. And anyone. His romantic type is: person. He’s willing and ready to try, offering to marry Gerri (J. Smith Cameron). Or, to kidnap her. His relationship with the older Gerri, which begins with an unexpected, sadomasochistic phone call, is one of the most interesting aspects of the show, partly because it’s not explained away. Does Roman have mom issues or fear of real intimacy or just likes older women or maybe all of the above plus extra? We may never know.

SuccessionSarah Snook, Kieran Culkin and Jeremy Strong in “Succession” (Photograph by Claudette Barius/HBO)He doesn’t pressure his girlfriends into sex — possibly because he’s not actually having intercourse, maybe ever — but Roman’s non-judgmental nature extends into the bedroom (or the bathroom, with Gerri barking insults behind the door). He’s never going to kink-shame. He’s never going to mock someone in the bedroom, as he himself has been unkindly mocked by partners. Yes, he sent lewd texts but he’s an equal opportunity lewd text sender. The Instagram feed of Overheard LA, in a post about “Succession” characters as LA residents, wrote that Roman’s age range on a dating app would be “18-90.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CqMIbDmPeos/?hl=en

Let the least damaged among us cast the first stone. And Roman is definitely not that. But he knows he’s messed up, unlike his family members who continue blithely on, hurting others until they do or don’t figure it out. Roman has self-knowledge. He seems like he could or would go to therapy (he’d fall in love with his therapist, though, perhaps especially if they were mean to him). The AV Club describes Roman as “an a**hole with feelings,” writing “there are some lines Roman will not cross when it comes to family — even if his siblings will.” 


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


The person he’s hardest on is himself. Roman tries to spare others’ feelings. He considers them, at least, refusing to sign the mean letter Shiv wrote about Kendall (Jeremy Strong). As a survivor of family abuse, Roman spends a lot of energy trying to smooth over conflict, trying desperately to patch a sinking ship, throwing himself in the water to drown if he has to.

He’s the Roy with empathy, which does make him boyfriend material. The other reason Roman and Gerri are so compelling together is because Roman seems truly to care for her. And to see her: an older woman, a mother, in a male-dominated work force. He advocates for her. He sticks up for her. He calls her a “stone-cold killer b***h” with so much respect in his voice and admiration in his eyes.

Roman can’t hit the ball (thanks, Dad) but he would go to bat for you, every time. And unlike the rest of his family, you know exactly where you stand with him. He’s for real, even if his reality is unbearably difficult. 

House Republican summarizes party’s response to rampant school shootings: “We’re not gonna fix it”

Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., insisted that there was nothing Congress could do in response to Monday’s school shooting at Nashville’s Covenant School, which marked the 131st mass shooting this year.

Burchett, who represents Knoxville, told reporters on the steps of Capitol on Monday that Congress is powerless to affect the rise in mass shooting deaths.

“We’re not gonna fix it,” he said. “I don’t see any role that we could do other than mess things up, honestly.”

Burchett offered his solution to rising gun violence: “You’ve got to change people’s hearts.”

“As a Christian, we talk about the church,” he added. “I’ve said this many times, I think we really need a revival in this country”

Burchett is a member of the uber-conservative Republican Study Committee, which maintains close ties with the National Rifle Association. 

Burchett after Monday’s shooting said in a statement that he and his family “are praying for everyone at The Covenant School, especially the families of the shooting victims.”

“No one should have to go through that kind of horrific event or lose a loved one like that,” he wrote. “I’m so thankful to those brave folks who brought down the shooter and took care of the students and their families.”

Republican leaders in Congress have similarly rejected the idea of pursuing gun safety legislation.

“I would say we’ve gone about as far as we can go unless somebody identifies some area that we didn’t address,” Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, the No. 2 Republican in the Senate, told The Hill when asked about background checks and other gun legislation.

“You’re not going to see us move anything remotely at the federal level for red-flag legislation,” added Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C.

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., insisted that taking guns away is “not the answer” to gun violence. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., went further, arguing that more “good guys with guns” was the solution to the country’s gun violence epidemic.

President Joe Biden’s administration blasted Republicans following the Nashville shooting, which claimed the lives of three children and three adults after a 28-year-old shooter entered the Covenant School, where they were a former student. 

“How many more children have to be murdered before Republicans in Congress will step up and act to pass the assault weapons ban, to close loopholes in our background check system or to require the safe storage of guns,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said during a Monday press conference. “We need to do something.”

“President Biden has taken more action than any president in history on gun safety — from nearly two dozen actions including the executive order he just signed… to the bipartisan safer communities act legislation he signed into law after the [shooting] tragedies in Uvalde and Buffalo,” she continued. “He also believes it’s not enough. We must do more. And he wants Congress to act because enough is enough.”


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


Democrats on Tuesday pushed to pass gun legislation, which stands little chance in the divided Congress.

“We must give families the peace of mind to send their kids to school without fearing for their lives,” Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif., argued at a Monday press conference, adding that “we need reasonable Republicans to come to the table to make this happen.”

Rep. Jennifer McClellan, D-Va., sought to appeal to Republicans focused on “parental rights,” asserting that the “number one right parents should have is the ability to send their children to school and not worry about if they’ll come back.”

After Nashville, Democrats want to force a floor vote on assault weapons ban. They probably can’t

America and the world woke up on Tuesday morning with an especially agonizing case of déjà-vu: Three children under age 10 and three adults were shot dead yesterday at a Nashville school. The apparent shooter was a 28-year-old former student armed with an assault-style rifle, who was then killed by police. It was the 128th mass shooting in the U.S. so far in 2023. According to Pew Research, 63% of Americans want Congress to pass more gun control laws, Republicans, who control a narrow majority in the House of Representatives and a filibuster-proof minority in the U.S. Senate, are unlikely to pass any.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., who has been an outspoken advocate for gun control since the Sandy Hook shootings in his state more than 10 years ago, has co-sponsored the current legislation — originally introduced by Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California — that would ban assault rifles. On Monday, Murphy suggested that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., should bring his legislation to the Senate floor and force a vote while the world is watching. 

“I think America wants to see where people stand on some of these issues,” Murphy said. 

Other Democrats also sounded calls for additional measures.

“We can’t say that we’ve solved this problem or even addressed it seriously when incidents like today in Nashville, Tennessee, continue in America,” said Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., on Monday. “We need to pass more reforms.”

In an interview earlier this month for “Salon Talks” about his role negotiating the 2022 passage of a historic bipartisan gun reform measure, the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, Murphy told Salon the measure has so far been a success. 

“Has it made a difference? The short answer is it has. A group of us went out to the National Criminal Background Check system a couple of weeks ago, Republicans and Democrats, and got a briefing. Lots of people have been denied weapons that absolutely shouldn’t have them,” Murphy said. 

“A lot of young buyers who were in crisis who were going to buy a weapon who no doubt were going to use that weapon to either kill themselves or to kill others have been stopped from getting that weapon because of the law that we passed. That’s just one example of the lives that have undoubtedly been saved already by this legislation.”

On Monday night, Murphy told CNN he still believes in the possibility of bipartisan cooperation on additional measures. 

“I understand that was a difficult vote for some Republicans — the first time that they ever crossed the NRA,” he said. “But I think they’ve seen that the sky hasn’t fallen.” Referring to Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the Republican who helped pass last year’s legislation, Murphy said, “I take him at his word that he’s continuing to show interest in finding common ground where we can find it and maybe we’ll be able to get there and build on the success of last year’s bill.” 


Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.


In the wake of the Nashville school shooting on Monday, President Biden again called on Congress to pass a ban on assault weapons.

“We have to do more to stop gun violence. It’s ripping our communities apart,” Biden said from the White House. “Ripping at the very soul of the nation. And we have to do more to protect our schools so they aren’t turned into prisons. I call on Congress, again, to pass my assault weapons ban.” 

Biden essentially echoed statements made earlier on Monday by First Lady Jill Biden and White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.

“Once again,” Jean-Pierre told reporters, “the president calls on Congress to do something before another child is senselessly killed.”

Cornyn, who led GOP negotiations during the passage of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, called Biden’s remarks “the same old tired talking points.” 

The president was “not offering any new solutions or ideas,” Cornyn told CNN. “If he does, I think we should consider them, but so far, I haven’t heard anything.” Asked whether he believed there were Republican votes for further gun reform efforts, Cornyn said, “I do not.” 

On extending background checks, Cornyn added, “I would say we’ve gone about as far as we can go, unless somebody identifies some area that we didn’t address.”

As Al Weaver of The Hill reports, other leading Republicans, including Sens. John Thune, R-S.D., and Thom Tillis, R-N.C., threw more cold water on any possibility of greater support for gun reforms. 

Are Republicans open to more gun reform? The short answer is no: “I would say we’ve gone about as far as we can go,” said Sen. John Cornyn.

Earlier this month, Biden signed an executive order that rolled out implementation plans for the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which included increasing the number of background checks required to buy guns, cracking down on law-breaking gun dealers, promoting secure firearm storage and giving executive agencies more muscle to monitor gun trades and shootings. 

House GOP leadership has consistently denounced additional gun reforms and promised united opposition. According to a Tuesday report in The Hill, nothing about that has changed and it’s unclear whether House Democrats could even force a vote, but may not have the necessary support. 

Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-Va., reportedly suggested during a closed-door Democratic caucus meeting that her party should consider a “discharge petition,” under which a simple House majority could force the reform measures to the floor for a vote. Even so, Democrats would need five Republican votes to make that happen, which does not appear likely.

Rep. Jared Huffman, D-Calif., summarized the problem: “Pretty hard to count to five in that group; I can count to two or three.”