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In true southern fashion, Dolly Parton says Miley’s cooking needs more bacon grease

It goes without saying that Dolly Parton is an icon through and through. While not to the same degree, her goddaughter Miley Cyrus is a superstar in her own right — and currently has a wildly popular song burning up the charts. While both ladies are masters of singing, acting, social justice causes, ringing in the New Year and much more, they’re also well versed in the kitchen.

Well…perhaps not Miley, at least according to Parton.

Miley — who was a vegan for years before shifting to a pescatarian diet, instead — may not be whipping up many dishes for Parton, who noted that her food “would have no taste.” Parton spoke with Insider via Zoom to discuss Duncan Hines and her down-home Southern cooking style, which obviously differs from Miley’s more streamlined, health-focused fare.

“Even if she cooked me something, I’m sure I’d have to doctor it up a little for myself,” Parton added. “I would have to add some bacon grease.” 

Of course, seeing as how Parton delivered this quip, it didn’t read as “shady” in any capacity, but more like a good-natured ribbing. 


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Parton does state that while “[Miley’s] gone through a lot of phrases of being vegetarian or vegan or whatever . . . in the earlier days or when her defenses are down, we still eat that good ol’ food like meatloaf.”

Parton’s line of Duncan Hines foods involves “Fabulously Fudgy” brownie mix and “Sweet Cornbread,” plus buttermilk biscuit mix and another brownie flavor.

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Bacon, a stalwart ingredient for many, is an especially highly-regarded ingredient in Southern cuisine at large, as noted by its inclusion in this Leslie Jordan family cornbread, as well as it being a fixture on the menu at Reba’s Place, Reba McEntire’s new restaurant in Oklahoma.

Fox News reporter “blindsided” after court filing reveals Carlson and Hannity tried to get her fired

Fox News hosts Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson conspired to try to get one of their colleagues fired for daring to fact-check false claims about the election, according to a nearly 200-page brief in Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation lawsuit against the network. 

In the days after former President Donald Trump’s 2020 election loss to President Joe Biden, Fox News correspondent Jacqui Heinrich accurately debunked a Trump tweet about Dominion that mentioned Hannity’s show by name, according to the brief, writing that “top election infrastructure officials” confirmed that “there is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised.”

On November 12, 2020, in a group chat between Carlson, Hannity, and fellow host Laura Ingraham, Carlson told Hannity to “please get her [Heinrich] fired,” in a series of messages obtained by Dominion. 

“Seriously…What the fuck?” Carlson wrote. “I’m actually shocked…It needs to stop immediately, like tonight. It’s measurably hurting the company. The stock price is down. Not a joke.” 

Carlson added that he “just went crazy on” Executive Vice President Meade Cooper “over it.”

Hannity told Carlson that he already mentioned the incident to CEO Suzanne Scott with the message “really?” and later texted the group, “I just dropped a bomb.”

“Sean texted me — he’s standing down on responding but not happy about this and doesn’t understand how this is allowed to happen from anyone in news,” Scott wrote in a message to Fox News President Jay Wallace and Fox News Senior Executive Vice President of Corporate Communications Irena Briganti, according to the court filing.

Scott added that Heinrich “has serious nerve doing this and if this gets picked up, viewers are going to be further disgusted.” 

By the next morning, Heinrich deleted her tweet, and replaced it with one that fact-checked Trump quoting another far-right channel, One America News. 

After the Dominion brief was unsealed on Thursday night, CNN senior media reporter Oliver Darcy revealed that “Heinrich was blindsided reading the details in the legal filing” and that she “was not aware of the efforts by top hosts behind the scenes to get her fired,” citing a source with direct knowledge.


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In addition to the shocking messages regarding Heinrich, several other texts mentioned in the Dominion court documents showed that several Fox News hosts and guests implied or baselessly claimed that the voting machines were part of a conspiracy to keep Trump from a second term despite admitting that the claims were “crazy.”

“The messages exposed Fox News as a propaganda network,” Darcy said Friday on CNN This Morning. “That’s what they do at the core.”

When asked about Dominion’s brief, Briganti, a spokesperson for Fox News, claimed that the voting machine company “cherry-picked quotes stripped of key context,” in a statement to Insider.

“There will be a lot of noise and confusion generated by Dominion and their opportunistic private equity owners, but the core of this case remains about freedom of the press and freedom of speech, which are fundamental rights afforded by the Constitution and protected by New York Times v. Sullivan,” her statement read. 

However, Darcy told the CNN panel that the leaked text messages “show in excruciating detail that the highest ranking executives at Fox News: Rupert Murdoch, Suzanne Scott, the CEO, as well as some of the top hosts like you just said, Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson, and Laura Ingraham, they knew, they privately knew the election claim frauds.” 

“Fraud claims from the Trump team were nonsense,” he added. “They used very harsh language to describe them. But they allowed the lies to take hold on the network’s air.”

The text messages revealed concerns among Fox News hosts and executives that viewers may abandon the network for its right-wing competitor, Newsmax.

“You remember that Donald Trump was attacking Fox News, was saying ‘turn the channel. Go to this Newsmax channel’ which is saturating the airwaves with election denialism. They were worried about this,” Darcy continued. “And not only did they turn a blind eye to the election lies, but they even in some cases tried cracking down on those fact-checking Trump.”

“Absolute hypocrisy”: GOP unveils bill to make Trump tax cuts permanent while howling about debt

A group of more than 70 House Republicans introduced legislation this week that would make elements of the 2017 Trump tax cuts permanent, delivering a huge windfall to the rich and choking off more federal revenue at a time when Republican fearmongering over the national debt is at a fever pitch.

Led by Reps. Vern Buchanan, R-Fla., and Michael McCaul, R-Texas, the TCJA Permanency Act, would cement into federal law tax cuts for individuals that are set to expire at the end of 2025.

The original 2017 tax law, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, made most of its corporate tax provisions permanent. In a statement Wednesday, the Biden White House said Trump and congressional Republicans “deliberately sunset portions of their tax giveaway” in order to “conceal how much their plan added to the debt.”

According to a Congressional Budget Office (CBO) analysis released last year, extending the individual provisions of the Trump-GOP tax law would cost around $2.2 trillion through 2032. A separate Tax Policy Center analysis estimated that the extension would deliver an average tax cut of $175,710 to the richest 0.1%.

“It’s no surprise that the House majority wants to spend trillions of dollars to extend the Trump tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans and biggest corporations—but it’s absolute hypocrisy from the same members who are pushing us to a debt limit crisis on claims they care about the deficit,” said Lindsay Owens, executive director of the Groundwork Collaborative.

“Congress should be working together to invest in worker and family priorities and increase taxes on the rich—not give them another handout,” Owens added.

“Republicans will cut taxes for the mega-rich and well-connected while holding our economy hostage to force punishing cuts to programs American families rely on.”

The House Republicans unveiled their legislation as they’re continuing to obstruct efforts to raise the nation’s borrowing limit in a bid to secure deep cuts to food aid, healthcare, and other critical social programs, claiming such spending reductions are necessary to address the rising national debt.

“The national debt is over $31 trillion,” McCaul tweeted last month. “We can’t afford to hand that down to our children.”

In a recent opinion column, Buchanan called the national debt a “ticking time bomb,” not mentioning that his party’s push to extend tax cuts for the rich would contribute to the total.

“The same Republicans who claim we can’t ‘afford’ to invest in affordable housing, better healthcare, and accessible child care aren’t blinking an eye at the fact their push to extend the Trump tax giveaways for the ultra-wealthy would add trillions of dollars to the federal deficit,” Rep. Brendan Boyle, D-Pa., the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, told MSNBC on Wednesday.

“Republicans will cut taxes for the mega-rich and well-connected while holding our economy hostage to force punishing cuts to programs American families rely on—that should tell you everything you need to know about Republicans’ priorities,” Boyle added.

Texts: Murdoch and Fox hosts knew election claims were “crazy” but worried facts hurt “stock price”

Top Fox News executives and hosts privately trashed the false election claims they aired but worried that fact-checking TrumpWorld’s lies would hurt their “stock price” and anger former President Donald Trump, according to texts and emails cited in a bombshell court filing by Dominion Voting Systems, which filed a $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against the network.

“Sidney Powell is lying,” host Tucker Carlson told his producer Alex Pfeiffer after an interview with the Trump-allied attorney, according to the filing, calling her a “fucking bitch.”

Fox Corporation Chairman Rupert Murdoch referred to claims peddled by Powell, who baselessly alleged that Dominion voting machines “flipped” votes from Trump to President Joe Biden, were “terrible stuff damaging everybody.”

“Really crazy stuff,” he wrote in an email to Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott of claims pushed by Powell and former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani, adding that it was “very hard to credibly claim foul everywhere.”

“Fact that Rudy advising [Trump] really bad,” Murdoch wrote, according to the filing.

Hosts also hit out at Giuliani, with Laura Ingraham referring to him as “such an idiot” and Sean Hannity lamenting that he was “acting like an insane person” following a disastrous press conference about the widely debunked fraud claims.

Executives and producers also expressed concerns about claims pushed by host Jeanine Pirro, going as far as canceling one of her episodes over concerns that “her guests are all going to say the election is being stolen.” Fox News producer Justin Wells said that the episode was cancelled because “she was being crazy,” according to the filing.

The texts were part of a nearly 200-page filing by Dominion in Delaware Superior Court ahead of a trial scheduled for April.

“Not a single Fox witness testified that they believe any of the allegations about Dominion are true,” Dominion argued in the filing. “Indeed, Fox witness after Fox witness declined to assert the allegations’ truth or actually stated they do not believe them, and Fox witnesses repeatedly testified that they have not seen credible evidence to support them.”

But even as they privately acknowledged that the claims pushed by Trump’s allies were false, Fox News hosts schemed to get a reporter fired for fact-checking the lies and expressed concerns that exposing their viewers to facts about the election outcome was hurting the network’s “stock price.”

Carlson and Hannity fumed after reporter Jacqui Heinrich tweeted that “top election infrastructure officials” confirmed that “there is no evidence that any voting system deleted or lost votes, changed votes, or was in any way compromised.”

Carlson texted Hannity demanding that Heinrich be fired, according to the filing.

“Please get her fired,” he wrote. “Seriously… What the fuck? I’m actually shocked… It needs to stop immediately, like tonight. It’s measurably hurting the company. The stock price is down. Not a joke.”

Hannity reached out to Scott about the report. Scott told Fox News executives Jay Wallace and Irena Briganti that Hannity was “not happy” about the fact-check and said Heinrich had “serious nerve doing this,” worrying that viewers would be “disgusted,” according to the filing. Heinrich soon deleted her tweet.


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Fox executives also expressed worries after host Neil Cavuto cut away from a White House press conference in which then-press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, who now works at Fox, pushed false election claims. Executives described Cavuto’s pushback as a “brand threat.”

Hosts also expressed concern that fact-checking the false election claims would anger Trump and potentially send viewers flocking to the far-right outlet Newsmax.

“He could easily destroy us if we play it wrong,” Carlson wrote to Pfeiffer, referring to Trump in another message as a “demonic force, a destroyer.”

Carlson and Hannity fretted that pushback on Trump threatened to hurt their ratings.

“The network is being rejected,” Carlson wrote to Hannity and Ingraham. “I’ve heard from angry viewers every hour of the day all weekend, including at dinner.”

“Same same same,” Hannity replied. “Never before has this ever happened.”

Murdoch also worried about competition from Newsmax, writing in an email to Scott that they “should be watched, if skeptically.”

He also expressed concerns about angering Trump and hurting the Republican Party’s chances in the January 2021 U.S. Senate run-off elections.

“We should concentrate on Georgia, helping any way we can,” Murdoch wrote. “We don’t want to antagonize Trump further, but Giuliani taken with a large grain of salt. Everything at stake here.”

By January 5, 2021, Murdoch was in full damage control mode, suggesting to Scott that Carlson, Hannity and Ingraham should go on the air to refute the false election claims.

“It’s been suggested our prime time three should independently or together say something like ‘the election is over and Joe Biden won,'” Murdoch wrote, adding that such a statement would “go a long way to stop the Trump myth that the election was stolen.”

Scott forwarded the email to another executive, expressing concern about “pissing off the viewers” with such a statement.

“Despite the internal recognition that the election was over, Fox did not retract its claims about Dominion,” the court filing said. “Instead, it kept defaming Dominion. To this day, Fox has never retracted the false statements it broadcast about Dominion.”

Fox News pushed back on the filing.

“Dominion has mischaracterized the record, cherry-picked quotes stripped of key context, and spilled considerable ink on facts that are irrelevant under black-letter principles of defamation law,” a Fox News spokesperson told NPR.

“There will be a lot of noise and confusion generated by Dominion and their opportunistic private equity owners,” Fox News said in a statement. “The core of this case remains about freedom of the press and freedom of speech, which are fundamental rights afforded by the Constitution and protected by New York Times v. Sullivan.”

Fox in a counterclaim alleged that Dominion’s $1.6 billion demand has “no factual support,” arguing that despite the months-long TrumpWorld smear campaign, the company is “in a solid financial position,” according to The Washington Post.

Fox attorneys argued in a brief that the network showed no “actual malice” because hosts that allowed false claims to be aired believed there was a chance the election might have been stolen.

“It is hardly unusual that some people in a newsroom (with the diverse political viewpoints one would expect) will disbelieve the allegations and hope that they ultimately prove false,” Fox’s lawyers wrote, “while others will keep an open mind in hopes that they prove true.”

One section of Dominion’s filing cited the bizarre source of one of the conspiracy theories aired by the network. Days after the 2020 election, host Maria Bartiromo interviewed Powell, knowing she would “respond with conspiracy theories about Dominion,” according to the filing.

The evidence came from a “source” in an email who pushed the Dominion conspiracy theory while also espousing a number of other bizarre claims.

The sender claimed that late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia “was purposefully killed at the annual Bohemian Grove camp… during a weeklong human hunting expedition,” and that former Fox News CEO Roger Ailes (who has been dead for years) and Murdoch “secretly huddle most days to determine how best to portray Mr. Trump as badly as possible.”

“Who am I?” the source wrote. “And how do I know all of this?… I’ve had the strangest dreams since I was a little girl… I was internally decapitated, and yet, I live… The Wind tells me I’m a ghost, but I don’t believe it.”

The Big Lie’s new plot: Trump just curiously flip-flopped on mail-in voting

Donald Trump’s Big Lie has always had many moving parts, and as strange as it may seem, there are new ones every day.

There was the charge that Trump was winning the election on election night only to lose as the count went into the next day, which Trump and his cronies suggested happened because the Democrats shipped in phony ballots in the dead of night once they realized they were losing. This was the so-called red mirage that everyone knew in advance would be weaponized to persuade Trump voters that the election had been stolen despite the fact that all the votes are never counted on election night. (Trump has said many times that he believes all counting should stop at midnight on election night as if any votes counted later are automatically suspect.)

Then there was the idea that election workers were literally stealing votes which Trump and company illustrated most vividly with their character assassination of Ruby Freeman and her daughter Shaye Moss who worked in Fulton County, Georgia. The two were accused of pulling fake ballots from suitcases hidden under tables at a ballot-counting center and passing a flash drive with phony election data from one to the other. None of this actually happened, of course. The ballots were legitimate ballots handled with the normal process and the alleged flash drive turned out to be a ginger mint. But it became an article of faith that workers like Freeman and Moss had stolen the election for Biden, leading to the necessity of having state legislatures overturn the electoral college votes to account for it.

There was also the accusation of massive vote fraud perpetrated by the voting machine companies who were allegedly working with everyone from the zombie corpse of Hugo Chavez to nefarious Italians using secret satellites to switch votes to the CIA director being injured while completing a secret CIA operation aiming to seize and destroy evidence of vote tampering on an election-related computer server. These charges led to states having to initiate recount after recount, some happening even a year after Trump was out of the White House, to prove the machines had been compromised.

Trump says he plans to “master the Democrats’ own game of harvesting ballots”

But perhaps the most essential piece of the Big Lie was the insistence that mail-in voting was a corrupt Democratic scheme to steal elections by “harvesting” ballots, meaning that someone could stuff the ballot box with illegitimate votes.


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Trump claimed the Democrats were sending mail-in ballots only to Democratic neighborhoods and to non-citizens and other ineligible voters. Trump demagogued that issue mercilessly and was joined in it by his Attorney General Bill Barr who flogged a nonsensical theory that foreign governments were somehow going to get their hands on blank ballots and vote in the election.

Some states have been doing vote by mail for years and the practice was being used in other places in 2020 because we were all being cautious due to the fact there was a deadly pandemic killing thousands of people every day. Trump never cared about that but cleverly set up vote-by-mail as a ready-made excuse in case he lost. In September of 2020, when asked at a press conference before the election if he would allow the peaceful transfer of power if he lost, Trump said, “we’re going to have to see what happens …get rid of the ballots and there will be a very peaceful … continuation of power. We all know what happened.

All of Trump’s silly, reckless claims were nonsense both before and after the election. He lost over 60 election lawsuits but he relentlessly pushed the Big Lie for two solid years, pounding it over and over again until it became an article of faith among most Republicans that the election had been stolen by the Democrats.

Here’s Fox News celebrity Tucker Carlson “just asking questions” last night:

We have been told repeatedly that because of the GOP’s poor showing in the 2022 midterms, with election deniers losing their races more often than not and GOP voters eschewing mail-in voting at Trump’s behest, Republicans are going to have to re-evaluate their belief in the Big Lie. They say they’re tired of losing. I noted a while back that even Trump himself is suddenly downplaying the Big Lie or, at least, he isn’t obsessing over it the way he did for the first two years. It comes up but now that the campaign is cranking to life, he has other things to talk about so it’s not as prominent. He knows he’s made his point, in any case.

60% of GOP voters still believe the Democrats stole the 2020 election. His job done, Trump is now switching gears and this week endorsed mail-in voting. But don’t imagine that it’s because he now believes that mail-in voting is legitimate. In a fundraising pitch earlier this week he wrote:

“The radical Democrats have used ballot harvesting to cancel out YOUR vote and walk away with elections that they NEVER should have won. But I’m doing something HUGE to fight back. Our path forward is to MASTER the Democrats’ own game of harvesting ballots in every state we can. But that also means we need to start laying the foundation for victory RIGHT NOW.”

In other words, he’s telling his people to use vote by mail again. (Republicans were way ahead of Democrats in doing that before he came along and blew up their program.) This is a good thing, This is the 21st century and there’s no reason people shouldn’t have the option of conveniently voting before election day.

But read what he says carefully. He’s not saying he was wrong, of course. But neither is he urging officials to encourage mail-in voting, early voting and “harvesting” because it is good for democracy and empowers voters. He still maintains that the Democrats are stealing elections.

Trump premiered the movie “2000 Mules” at Mar-a-Lago and praised it to the heavens. It is a propaganda film by convicted felon and GOP operative Dinesh D’Souza that claims Democratic ballot “mules” were paid to illegally collect and drop off ballots in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, resulting in Biden’s win. When Trump says he plans to “master the Democrats’ own game of harvesting ballots” that’s what he’s talking about. And it’s almost certainly what many of his followers will hear.

Vote by mail and early voting has been free of any kind of systemic fraud until now. It looks like Trump is looking to change that. 

Why are BP, Shell, and Exxon suddenly backing off their climate promises?

It wasn’t long ago that oil giants were trying to outdo one another with promises to cut carbon emissions and take on climate change. In 2020, the price for a barrel of oil briefly plunged below zero, and the world’s largest oil and gas companies portrayed themselves as getting serious about renewables. BP promised to slash its emissions, Shell pledged to go “net zero,” and ExxonMobil trumpeted its efforts to transform algae into fuel.

But in recent weeks, these oil giants have begun tapping the breaks on these much-publicized initiatives. BP walked away from its target to reduce emissions by 35 percent by 2030 — once lauded as the most ambitious, tangible goal in the industry — promising a cut between 20 to 30 percent instead. Shell said it would not increase spending on renewable energy this year, contrary to expectations. Meanwhile, Exxon has pulled back funding from its decade-long algae effort.

These quiet announcements coincided with their recent blockbuster earnings reports, which were celebrated by executives and excoriated by politicians like President Joe Biden, who called them “outrageous.” Buoyed by oil prices soaring above $100 a barrel last year, the oil giants roughly doubled their profits from the year before, with BP raking in $28 billion and Shell $40 billion. Exxon, the oil major that has been the least enthusiastic about renewables, reported even better results — $56 billion, up 143 percent from the year before and a record for a Western oil company. 

“We leaned in when others leaned out, bucking conventional wisdom,” said Darren Woods, Exxon’s CEO, in a call with investors, praising his company’s resistance to pulling back on fossil fuel production.

“You know, nothing like profits rolling in to make Big Oil show its true colors,” said Jamie Henn, the director of Fossil Free Media. “I think over the last few weeks, we’ve seen the industry take off the green mask that it has been wearing for the last few years and remind us of its true identity and its real business model, which is the continued extraction and production of fossil fuels at the expense of our climate and communities.”

So why are oil companies slowing down on renewables now, when they have plenty of cash to spend and the world is grappling with the alarming fires, floods, and droughts spurred by climate change? The ease of short-term profits when oil prices are high and the political cover provided by concern about “energy security” have played a large role. Heartened by last year’s flow of oil cash and dissuaded by the rising costs of installing wind and solar, executives are turning away from the longer-term payoffs promised by renewable investments. Climate advocates say that Big Oil’s recent moves should serve as a wake-up call for investors and regulators that oil companies plan to double down on fossil fuels for as long as it’s profitable.  

“If they’re not going to invest more on the energy transition now, then when?” asked Krista Halttunen, an energy researcher at Imperial College London.*

The war in Ukraine, and the ensuing fuel crunch as Europe and the United States sought to end imports of Russian oil and gas, has created more cover for BP and other companies to ramp up oil production in the name of energy security, said Trey Cowan, an oil and gas analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis. “They got the political will following what their will is at this point,” Cowan said. In a recent interview with the Wall Street Journal, Bernard Looney, the CEO of BP, said that its goal wasn’t just to deliver clean energy, but “affordable energy, secure energy.”

The rising costs of rare earth metals, used in wind turbines and solar panels, may also be slowing down oil companies’ spending on renewables. The cost of a stationary solar installation, for instance, rose 14 percent globally between the summers of 2021 and 2022, according to a BloombergNEF analysis.

BP has pushed back against criticism that it’s changing course. Earlier this month, the company updated its strategy to increase spending on low-carbon energy from $1 billion last year to between $3 and $5 billion each year by 2025.

After announcing Shell’s earnings at the beginning of February, Wael Sawan, the CEO, said that the company planned to increase natural gas production and would not be ramping up spending on renewables this year. In 2022, Shell’s capital spending on “low-carbon” initiatives (a broad definition that includes gas) had increased to $3.5 billion, almost a 50 percent increase over the prior year. But the potential clean-energy profits of tomorrow don’t make good business sense when oil and gas are making sky-high profits today, Sawan explained. “We cannot justify going for a low return,” he said during a conference call. “Absolutely, we want to continue to go for lower and lower and lower carbon, but it has to be profitable.”

There are also some unexpected reasons that oil giants might be backing off renewable investments now. Take Exxon’s recent retreat from experimenting with making low-carbon biofuels from algae, a venture that the company poured $350 million into over the last decade (in addition to spending about half that sum advertising the effort). Vijay Swarup, Exxon’s senior director of technology, told Bloomberg that algae still needed more work before deployment, so the company was prioritizing carbon capture and hydrogen instead.

Oddly enough, the Inflation Reduction Act, the landmark climate legislation that President Joe Biden signed into law last summer, might have something to do with it. It has shifted incentives for oil and gas companies, which, according to Cowan, are now looking to take advantage of new tax credits for projects that store and capture carbon dioxide.

Oil companies tend to like the idea of capturing carbon released from burning fossil fuels since it legitimizes their core business — selling fossil fuels. Not only can they continue to emit carbon, but they can also get tax credits for trapping and storing it. “It’s sort of a misaligned incentive of, ‘Hey, create carbon to go store it in the ground,'” Cowan said.

From an accounting perspective, it was also a good time for Exxon to end its research, he said. With its high profits, the company could write off the algae expenses as a loss without drawing a lot of attention to it.

Oil companies may be “emboldened” by their record earnings, but Cowan warns that many investors are wary of getting back into oil’s boom-and-bust cycle. In the long run, though, he bets that there will be an excess of oil on the market again, and that with less leverage over investors, oil companies will have to rein in the pollution they’re producing. “It all comes down to price at the end of the day,” Cowan said. “If prices are low, these oil and gas companies don’t look as desirable from an investment standpoint. That’s the bottom line.”

*Correction: A previous version of this story used a quotation from Bernard Looney that was misdated and out of context. This updated version removed that quotation and added new context about BP’s plans.


This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/economics/bp-exxon-shell-backing-off-climate-promises/.

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

Homes in flood zones are overvalued by billions, study finds

American homes in flood zones are overvalued by hundreds of billions of dollars, according to a study published on Thursday in the journal Nature Climate Change. Low-income homeowners in states controlled by Republicans are especially at risk of seeing their home values deflate as global warming accelerates. 

Flooding is a costly and deadly natural hazard across the United States. For decades, the Federal Emergency Management Agency offered flood insurance at discounted rates, incentivizing developers to build houses in flood-prone areas. The agency’s flood maps are also notoriously outdated. That has led to a dangerous situation for homeowners as they grapple with year after year of debilitating floods.  

The study, published by a group of academic, nonprofit, and government organizations that include the Environmental Defense Fund and the Federal Reserve, revealed that homes in flood zones are overvalued by as much as $237 billion.

The researchers found that coastal property owners and homeowners in states that have inadequate or nonexistent flood disclosure laws, such as Florida, where there are no disclosure laws and homes are overvalued by $50 billion, were particularly vulnerable to overvaluation. They also found that a large share of overvalued homes are in areas that FEMA says aren’t currently at significant risk of flooding, a signal that flood maps need updating. The study’s authors told Grist that states need to gauge and clearly communicate flood risk to homeowners regardless of whether their home is located in one of the agency’s “special flood hazard areas,” where flood insurance is mandatory for most mortgages. 

According to the study, low-income homeowners could see up to 10 percent of their market value disappear in coming years, a blow for those least able to withstand one. “What we find is that lower-income households are more exposed to risk of price deflation in the housing market,” Jesse Gourevitch, a fellow at the Environmental Defense Fund and a co-author of the study, told Grist. “If that bubble were to burst those households could be at risk of losing home equity.” 

The fallout from climate-fueled flood risk extends beyond individual homeowners to their larger communities. The study showed that cities in northern New England, eastern Tennessee, central Texas, Wisconsin, Idaho, Montana, and many coastal areas could see their budgets shrink if the true value of homes in flood zones were taken into account and property tax revenues declined as a result. 

“Many local governments are heavily dependent on property tax revenue for their overall budget,” Gourevitch said. “In areas with particularly high flood risk and where flood risk isn’t adequately priced into property value, there is this possibility that the assessed value of properties could fall.” 

Some states have passed laws that require sellers to disclose flood risk to buyers, which is a good way to hedge against the overvaluation described in the study. This week, the North Carolina Real Estate Commission approved a petition to give homebuyers the right to information about flood risk. But twenty-one states, including Georgia and New York, still keep homebuyers in the dark. Implementing disclosure requirements in those states could help address the future financial risk of flooding. 

The study “raises a lot of moral questions for policymakers about who will bear the costs of these climate impacts,” Gourevitch said. State and federal lawmakers may soon have to reckon with whether overvaluation is an individual burden or if it’s on the government to bail people out.


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

Tucker Carlson vs. Chelsea Handler: Why the right-wing is steaming mad about childfree women

It’s a cliche at this point to note that, for Republicans, every accusation is a confession. But it’s a cliche for a very good reason: They keep proving the point on an hourly basis. The latest example is so pathetic that one almost feels bad laughing about it. There is currently a spasm of performative anger from right-wing pundits over the fact that comedian Chelsea Handler is happy to be childfree. 

For those who are blessedly not in tune with the daily male whining that is the Fox News and Daily Wire universe, here’s what happened. Handler, who is guest hosting at “The Daily Show,” did a cute, harmless skit about the glorious day in a life of a childless woman. It was, due to being a joke, completely over-the-top. As a fellow childfree person, I can assure you we don’t dash off to Paris at a moment’s notice, and we certainly don’t have teleportation or time travel powers. But of course, that was the point: To mock not just the overbearing pressure to have kids, but the false assumptions that childless women are nothing but selfish hedonists. 

The way that the right-wing media freaked out over Handler’s video made it clear they see insecure, bitter men as their primary audience.

Naturally, the crybaby right-wing press lost their minds, going wild with accusations that Handler is secretly miserable and lonely. 

Tucker Carlson of Fox News brought on misogynist commentator Jesse Kelly to rave that feminists have been “lied to by their society forever that you can be a girlboss, and you can do anything a man can do—which everyone who’s ever seen a woman back up a vehicle knows that’s not true.” He kept going by claiming that for Handler — or any feminist, really — their “Valentine’s date for the tenth year in a row is a ten-year-old copy of ‘Magic Mike’ and a half-full bottle of Xanax, and you’re trying to pretend like you’re happy, but you’re not happy.”


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Note that almost none of this unhinged rant is actually about being childless at all. Babies don’t provide Valentine’s Day dates or parallel park for supposedly helpless women. No, Kelly is mad at women for not being dependent on men.

When Carlson calls the video “super-depressing,” it’s a classic psychological projection. He knows what actually depresses his largely male audience is not fears that women are lonely, but their own fears of being alone. The roots of this anger over women’s independence aren’t hard to surmise. It’s about insecure men who fear women won’t choose them willingly. Carlson is speaking to those who think their best bet at having a stable relationship is forcing women into economic and social dependence on men. 

Indeed, the way that the right-wing media freaked out over Handler’s video made it clear they see insecure, bitter men as their primary audience.

Ben Shapiro of the Daily Wire tweeted that Handler is “a deeply unhappy woman who keeps insisting she is REALLY REALLY SUPER HAPPY while her eyes say she’s dying inside.” Self-declared “Transphobe of the Year” Matt Walsh screeched, “She’s so happy, you guys. Okay? Nobody say she’s sad. She’s not. Definitely not.” Someone here is super defensive, but it’s not Handler. Handler is doing fine, but the audience hungry for this misogynist content is radiating pathetic divorced dude energy. 

Again, it’s quite telling how a video that’s about not having children was read, by the GOP punditry, as about not having a man. This comports with research that shows that opposition to reproductive rights has little to do with being “pro-life” but about anxiety over changing gender roles and anger over women’s independence. As I reported earlier this month, new polling data from PerryUndem shows that the best predictor of a person’s views on abortion is their levels of sexism. Opposition to abortion correlates strongly not with respect for life, but with beliefs like “it bothers me when a guy acts like a girl” or that women are incapable of making choices for themselves.

“This entire thing says a lot more about you than anyone else” is true across the misogynist landscape.

This defensive, angry reaction to Handler is part of this. Clearly, none of these men are actually worried about her wellbeing, or the wellbeing of childfree women in general. Instead, the emotion here is anger. They’re angry at women for wanting more out of life than a servile relationship with some man who takes them for granted. Babies only factor here because they’re seen as a tool to force women into subservience. It’s why the same people who support forced childbirth oppose improving our social safety net and health care system. The point of forcing women to have babies is to force them into dependent relationships with men. A robust social safety net that allows mothers to leave unhappy relationships would, in conservatives’ eyes, defeat the purpose of abortion bans and other policies meant to coerce childbirth. 


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These resentments against independent women are rarely far from the surface on the right.

David Futrelle, who tracks online misogyny at his blog We Hunted the Mammoth, recently posted a rant from an incel at a Reddit forum set up for the purpose of letting misogynists and feminists debate. Unlike the try-hard rants from right-wing pundits projecting their audience’s insecurities onto feminists, this incel admitted straight up he resents what he imagines is the glorious, stress-free — and most importantly, socially active — life of a single woman. “Multiple texts from your siblings, friends who are girls, friends who would probably date you if you gave them the chance,” he writes in a post titled, “How I imagine life as an attractive woman is like.” He continues to fantasize about how single women’s lives are full of friends, potential lovers, and fun, and how they are always “Dopamine up.” 

“Because you are a hot girl, you somehow received an invitation to a social event, or one of your friends did, and you are tagging along,” he writes, as if being invited to a party is the rarest and most impossible thing he could imagine. 

As his interlocutors pointed out, having friends and family who care about you, much less getting to go to parties, is hardly the sole province of the conventionally attractive single woman. “This entire thing says a lot more about you than anyone else,” one person replied. One is almost tempted to feel sorry for the original poster— but for the fact that his loneliness is likely the product of his misogyny and resentful personality. 

“This entire thing says a lot more about you than anyone else” is true across the misogynist landscape. Sometimes it manifests in fantasies, like those projected onto Handler, where sexist men imagine the women who rejected them are being punished with loneliness. Sometimes it comes in even more pathetic fantasies, like this incel’s belief that life is a cakewalk for anyone female and remotely attractive. Either way, it rarely has anything to do with the real lives of real women.

That’s the hex that toxic masculinity puts on men’s heads. It starts with a belief that men are entitled to have a woman to care for them and clean up with them. When they discover that women have minds of their own, and therefore aren’t interested the thankless role of being someone’s sex mommy, the entitlement turns to anger. And that rage is very profitable for the Tucker Carlsons and Ben Shapiros of the world. No wonder these pundits encourage their audiences to cultivate even more repulsive personalities that will result in more loneliness and rage, leading to even bigger profit margins at the Daily Wire and Fox News. Someone here is getting conned, alright, but it’s not Chelsea Handler or the people who had a laugh at her silly little “Daily Show” video. 

UFOs and CRT: Republicans are in a constant state of panic about the “other”

Space Aliens are real! And they are here!

I have always wanted to write a headline or lede like that one. I grew up listening to Art Bell’s radio show, Coast to Coast AM, and devouring books and documentaries about extraterrestrials (especially Area 51 and Barney and Betty Hill). I also found those early internet message boards about alien visitations and Roswell to be very exciting places.

I am 100% certain that I once saw a ghost. Famed paranormal investigators the Warrens even confirmed it. But alas, I have never seen a UFO or extraterrestrials in the flesh. While I have always wanted to write a headline or lede announcing First Contact, it would seem that I will have to wait for some other time in the future — if ever — to do such a thing.

Whatever these “unknown” objects in the sky are, they most certainly are not “aliens” from another planet or dimension.

For the last few weeks, America has been experiencing a low-grade panic about “UFOs” (or as the military refers to them “UAPs”) and a Chinese spy balloon. This national anxiety is not without cause or reason: over the course of the last week the U.S. military shot down several of these “UFOs” in a series of incidents over Alaska, Canada, and Lake Huron. The Chinese spy balloon was destroyed by the U.S. Air Force off the coast of South Carolina earlier this month.

The down-to-earth and mundane explanation for these “UFOs” is that they are balloons, drones, or some other manmade object under the control of a government (or unmentioned U.S. government agency), a corporation, university, or some other private organization or individual(s). Whatever these “unknown” objects in the sky are, they most certainly are not “aliens” from another planet or dimension.

On Thursday, President Biden told the nation that:

We don’t yet know exactly what these three objects were but nothing right now suggests they were related to China’s spy balloon program or that they were surveillance vehicles from … any other country. The intelligence community’s current assessment is that these three objects were mostly balloons tied to private companies, recreation or research institutions studying weather or conducting other scientific research….

We don’t have any evidence that there has been a sudden increase in the number of objects in the sky. We’re now just seeing more of them partially because [of] the steps we’ve taken to increase our radars, to narrow our radars. And we have to keep adapting our approach to dealing with these challenges.…  

As I watched how our national UFO panic threatened to become a repeat of the Battle of Los Angeles, I immediately thought about legal scholar and attorney Derrick Bell and his provocative science fiction short story “The Space Traders.” Published in 1992, “The Space Traders” explores racism and white supremacy and the very precarious citizenship and belonging that Black people are subjected to here in the United States. The book was also made into a 33-minute movie that was part of HBO’s now cult classic film anthology “Cosmic Slop” in 1994.

Science fiction gains its power through speculation and taking the familiar and real and then upending it to reveal a deeper truth. In the case of “Space Traders,” Bell’s intervention is that in the year 2000 a fleet of UFOs appears and offers a bargain. The aliens will give the United States a free source of endless energy and heal the environment if America’s leaders agree to give them all the African-Americans in the country. After much national debate, legislation is passed agreeing to the aliens’ demands. In an obvious and intentional allusion to the transatlantic slave trade, Black Americans are then marched off into the hulls of the huge spaceships to an unknown fate.

Derrick Bell was one of the “founders” of critical race theory. “The Space Traders” is an example of one of the core principles of critical race theory (CRT) that the law should be made more transparent and decipherable by all people because the law is an extension of Power that impacts their lives. Storytelling, metaphors, and allowing more voices to share their subjective and personal experiences of power and society are necessary tools for creating real social democracy. 

In their 1991 law journal article “Derrick Bell’s Chronicle of the Space Traders: Would the U.S. Sacrifice People of Color if the Price were Right”, Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic provide this context:

Legal storytelling is a means by which representatives of new communities may introduce their views into the dialogue about the way society should be governed. Stories are in many ways more powerful than litigation or brief-writing and may be necessary precursors to law reform. They offer insights into the particulars of lives lived at the margins of society, margins that are rapidly collapsing toward a disappearing center. This is not true just of our times. In Biblical history, storytellers for oppressed groups told tales of hope and struggle-for example, that of the Promised Land-to inspire and comfort the community during difficult times. Reality could be better-and, perhaps, will be.

Other storytellers have directed their attention to the oppressors, reminding them of a day when they would be called to account.” Stories thus perform multiple functions, allowing us to uncover a more layered reality than is immediately apparent: a refracted one that the legal system must confront. Until recently, law has aimed for consistency, for the “rule of law.”

Today we are beginning to realize that this universality was false, that it perpetrated exclusion.”‘ It cohered only by ignoring certain experiences, stories, and viewpoints. Today, these experiences and viewpoints are moving from the periphery to the center. Storytelling is one of the vehicles that propels this movement.

Bell is now much more widely known outside of the relatively small number of academics and other experts and activists who were influenced by his scholarship, teaching, and mentoring because of his association with the white supremacist bogeyman “critical race theory.” In reality, CRT is a very narrow and specialized field of study and theoretical framework that is almost exclusively taught at the advanced college, graduate and post-graduate level. CRT’s premise is basic and self-evident to any thinking and reasonable person who has even a passing knowledge of American society: This society (and the West) is structured around institutional and systemic racism and other forms of inequality. The law is not neutral – and cannot ever be truly neutral – because it reflects those broader dynamics of power.


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At the Atlantic, Wesley Lowery elaborates:

Bell began his legal career in the 1950s as a civil-rights attorney and later worked under Thurgood Marshall, but his best-known legacy is the early inspiration for what became known as “critical race theory,” or CRT—a discipline that applies a critical lens to legal statutes and precedents, considering not just the words on the page but the context in which they were drafted.

“From the perspective of critical race theory, some positions have historically been oppressed, distorted, ignored, silenced, destroyed, appropriated, commodified, and marginalized—and all of this, not accidentally. Conversely, the law simultaneously and systematically privileges subjects who are white,” Bell said during a 1995 speech at the University of Illinois in which he said CRT’s aim is “to empower and include traditionally excluded views and see all-inclusiveness as the ideal because of our belief in collective wisdom.”

In the decade or so since his death, Bell’s work has been subject to a steady stream of histrionics. The term critical race theory is now applied to any teaching on race that conservatives believe will upset white Americans. Critics claim that critical race theory is a form of “racial essentialism,” although it is, in fact, the opposite. CRT seeks to understand how intersecting identities factor into someone’s experience with our legal edicts and societal norms. It does not suppose that individuals can be defined solely by those identities. The aim is a country in which humans equally created are actually treated as such; that’s only achievable by understanding how the social concept of race continues to shape the American experience.

In the Age of Trump, CRT is now a type of empty signifier that the Republican fascists use to advance their project of scaring white people (and others invested in Whiteness) in order to gain power across the country as part of a larger project of ending multiracial democracy. To be certain, none of this is new. Republicans attacked President Barack Obama based on his association with Professor Bell while a student at Harvard Law. Now Republican leaders like Governors Ron DeSantis in Florida and Greg Abbot in Texas are using a moral panic about “critical race theory” as a way of instituting Orwellian Thought Crime laws where they censor books, monitor, harass and then fire teachers, librarians, and other educators.

Just as with the UFOs and balloons and the other many thousands of unidentified things in the sky at any given moment, Republican fascists and their forces are projecting their beliefs onto “critical race theory” as a way of advancing their own personal agendas.

These lie-filled, disingenuous attacks on “critical race theory” are designed to create an environment of threat and trauma for Black people and others who are targeted as “un-American” because they “scare” the “good white people” that DeSantis, Abbott and the other Republican-fascists have declared themselves the defenders of. Teachers, one Texas principal recently noted, “are scared to let their students decorate their doors for Black History Month because they are scared the board is going to label them as ‘woke.'”

Just as with the UFOs and balloons and the other many thousands of unidentified things in the sky at any given moment, Republican fascists and their forces are projecting their beliefs onto “critical race theory” as a way of advancing their own personal agendas. There is no “there there” with the “critical race theory” bogeyman. But facts and reality and the truth are not the ultimate point; scaring ignorant, gullible, and racist white people and feeding off of that dark energy as a way of getting more corrupt power in service to a fascist revolutionary political project is all that matters.

In addition to “The Space Traders”, I have also been thinking a lot about Rod Serling’s Twilight Zone TV series and its classic episode “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street,” which aired in 1960. In that episode, space aliens create chaos in one neighborhood as a way of testing how easy it is to manipulate human beings through paranoia and fear. The real monsters on Maple Street are not the aliens but rather the “good white suburbanites” who are running amok and attacking each other. At the end of the episode one of the aliens explains their plan. “Their world is full of Maple Streets. And we’ll go from one to the other and let them destroy themselves. One to the other…one to the other…one to the other–“

“The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street” closes with Rod Serling, the narrator, sharing the following wisdom with the audience:

The tools of conquest do not necessarily come with bombs and explosions and fallout. There are weapons that are simply thoughts, attitudes, prejudices – to be found only in the minds of men. For the record, prejudices can kill and suspicion can destroy, and a thoughtless, frightened search for a scapegoat has a fallout all of its own for the children…the children yet unborn. And the pity of it is…that these things cannot be confined to…The Twilight Zone!

Rod Serling’s wisdom and warning were as true at the height of the Cold War and Red Scare (and the Lavender Scare and COINTELPRO) as they are today with the Republican fascists and their white supremacist “critical race theory” moral panic.

In a post-Roe world, the quest to create a male birth control drug has a renewed urgency

Since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, many have wondered if the same legal logic that led to abortion bans could eventually be extended to female contraception. Already, some lawmakers have set the stage: back in July 2022, all but eight House Republicans voted against a bill that would codify the right to contraception. The vote took place amid concerns that the Supreme Court might overturn a decades-old ruling prohibiting states from banning contraceptives.

Fear and speculation in this regard has led to more American males getting vasectomies, as there is not a male equivalent to female contraceptive drugs like hormone-based birth control. 

Indeed, currently the only medical options for male birth control are vasectomies and condoms. Yet that could soon change, as researchers in the medical community have been slowly making progress on male birth control methods that are more akin to those offered to women — meaning shots or pills that would temporarily and reversibly render men infertile.

When the mice were paired with females to mate, zero pregnancies occurred. Nearly three hours later, the sperm began to move again. And nearly a day later, they resumed normal activity.

Unlike previous proposals for male birth control methods, the latest one could work on-demand and restore fertility within hours. The results from testing, which were published in Nature Communications, introduced the concept of male birth control that involved administering a compound called TDI-11861. In the study, the researchers injected 52 male mice with the experimental compound, which temporarily inhibited an enzyme called adenylyl cyclase (sAC), which helps sperm move. When the mice were paired with females to mate, zero pregnancies occurred. Nearly three hours later, the sperm began to move again. And nearly a day later, they resumed normal activity.

“The on-demand strategy we validate here, where a man will be temporarily infertile shortly after taking a single dose of a contraceptive agent, is qualitatively distinct from all other existing pharmacologic methods as well as known efforts to develop a male contraceptive,” the researchers noted.


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Melanie Balbach, a lead scientist on the study, told Salon that the idea of targeting the enzyme started two decades ago in her lab. Dr. Lonny Levin and Dr. Jochen Buck, co-authors of the study, discovered the potential of the protein.

“What they found was that as soon as the mice are missing that enzyme, they are infertile, and that means that the enzyme plays a crucial role for the fertility of the sperm,”Balbach said. “The problem was then that they found that that protein or that enzyme was not only in sperm and in the testis, slowly, they actually found it everywhere in the body, and back then the dogma in the field was that to develop a male contraceptive that is safe, it needs to be only in the male germline because otherwise they were afraid that there will be too many side effects.”

Researchers set about to study what the protein or enzyme did in the human body. Finally, a few years ago, a study found that two human males who were missing the enzyme completely were infertile, but otherwise perfectly healthy. This reignited the idea that this could be a viable potential male birth control.

A study for a promising hormonal male contraceptive in 2016 was halted because of side effects like extreme acne and mood disorder; notably, these are side effects that are often experienced with female hormonal contraceptives.

This isn’t the first time a pharmaceutical-based male birth control contraceptive has been touted and tested. As Salon reported in March 2022, research presented at a meeting of the American Chemical Society showed that a contraceptive compound called YCT529 made male mice temporarily impotent. During the trial, the male mice were given the pill everyday. Within four weeks it was observed to be 99 percent effective at preventing pregnancy in the female mice. However, four weeks after the male mice stopped receiving YCT529, they were able to impregnate the female mice again.

Previous trials into comparable male contraceptives have failed to catch on due to potential side effects. For example, a study for a promising hormonal male contraceptive in 2016 was halted because of side effects like extreme acne and mood disorder; notably, these are side effects that are often experienced with female hormonal contraceptives.

However, with both studies in mice that target enzymes instead, side effects have been minimal. What is unique about Balbach’s study is how fast it could potentially work in human males.

“It can be an on-demand approach and doesn’t have to be chronic, meaning the men would take the inhibitor everyday like they have to for a hormonal pill,” Balbach said. “That will also help to strongly reduce any potential side effects that could occur.”

But there are more steps to take before such a drug could be sold on the market. Balbach said they are working on testing the approach on rabbits, and then will have to move to a human trial, which could take six to eight years.

Balbach added: “We are not planning to develop the exclusive male contraceptive, so we hope we will be one option out of many options and that men actually can choose whatever they want.”

Alex Jones bankruptcy docs reveal he’s been “holding firearms” for Jan. 6 rioters

Infowars founder Alex Jones is currently facing bankruptcy after being hit with $1.5 billion in damages owed to the families of the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting he publicly claimed was a hoax.

On Thursday, a new filing associated with his financial standing revealed that Jones has been holding on to firearms for participants of the Jan. 6 riot. In a Huffpost article reporting on the details of the filing, they claim to have heard from Jones himself that the guns in question belong to Infowars host Owen Shroyer and video editor Sam Montoya, both of whom were charged for their actions during the riot.

“Both their lawyers respectively asked us if they could store those guns here while the cases were going on,” Jones said in a quote to Huffpost. “Due to the request of their lawyers we have … stored the guns here.”

Other assets listed in Jones’ filing include “three properties in Austin, Texas, along with a $1.5m plot of land, three vehicles, two boats, two guns and a cat,” as reported by BBC.

Jones filed for bankruptcy back in December claiming that even if the court allowed him a generous allowance, he would be unable to afford food. At the time of his initial filing, Infowars brought in an estimated $70m a year, according to The New York Times


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In October of 2022, Salon reported on the verdict reading which awarded $965m in compensatory damages to the Sandy Hook families. During that reading, Infowars host Owen Shroyer, owner of some of the guns being held by Jones, aired an emergency broadcast of his “War Room” show to cheer his boss on and make snide comments to the families saying that their checks will never arrive. 

“Woke communism”: How corporate America became the bogeyman of today’s anti-communist crusaders

Ron DeSantis, governor of Florida and perhaps the next president of the United States, is waging war against something he and many others on the right identify as “woke communism.” DeSantis even persuaded the Florida legislature to pass a Victims of Communism law, mandating that every November 7th (the anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia), all public schools in the state must devote 45 minutes of instruction to the evils of the red menace.

You might reasonably ask: What menace? After all, the Soviet Union fell apart more than 30 years ago and, long before that, communist parties around the world had dwindled in numbers and lost their revolutionary zeal. The American Communist Party was buried alive nearly three-quarters of a century ago during the McCarthy hysteria of the 1950s.

How then can there be a muscular rebirth of anti-communism when there’s no communism to face off against? The Claremont Institute, a right-wing think tank, explains the paradox this way: the powers that be of the present moment, including “education, corporate media, entertainment, big business, especially big tech, are to varying degrees aligned with the Democratic Party which is now controlled by Woke Communism.”

All clear now? A “cold civil war” is afoot, so we’re assured by DeSantis and crew, and if we don’t act quickly, “woke communism will replace American justice… the choice is between liberty or death.”

Naturally, Donald Trump has joined the chorus, declaiming that the Democratic Party functions as a cover for “wild-eyed Marxists.” People like Presidents Barack Obama and Joe Biden, formerly considered proud defenders of capitalism, are now censored as socialists. Steve Bannon, right-wing populist organizer and one-time Trump adviser, has attacked the Business Roundtable and venture capitalists like Larry Fink of Blackrock, the largest asset management firm in the world, because he’s determined to defend a “government of laws, not Woke CEOs.”

At the January gathering of the Republican National Committee, angry that Ronna McDaniel had held onto her position as its chairperson, right-wing activist Charlie Kirk put the matter in stark class terms: “The country club won today. So, the grassroots people who can’t afford to buy a steak and are struggling to make ends meet, they just got told by their representatives at an opulent $900/night hotel that ‘We hate you.'”

How surpassingly odd! Somehow, the “spectre” invoked nearly 200 years ago by Karl Marx in The Communist Manifesto, reflecting his urge to see the exploited and impoverished mobilized to overthrow capitalism, now hangs out at country clubs, corporate boardrooms, and the White House — all the redoubts of capitalism.

Listen to DeSantis. At a rally in Sarasota during the 2022 midterm elections, he got his loudest applause for denouncing corporate America — and not just for assaulting the Walt Disney company’s criticism of the state’s “don’t say gay” policy. He went after Wall Street, too, noting that the “masters of the universe are using their economic power to impose policies on the country that they could not do at the ballot box” and promising to “fight the Woke in corporate America.” A recent Gallup poll signals that he might be onto something, since the percentage of Republicans unhappy with big business has soared.

Once upon a time, anti-communism was the ideology of a ruling class under siege, warning that its enemies among hard-pressed farmers and industrial workers were intent on destroying the foundations of civilized life: private property, the family, religion, and the nation. Now, of all the unlikely suspects, anti-communism has become part of the ideological arsenal aimed at those very dominating elites.

Bankers and Bolsheviks

What happened? There’s certainly a history here. Start with Henry Ford, a folk hero to millions of Americans during the early decades of the twentieth century. He not only invented the Model T Ford but also helped articulate a new version of anti-communism. He was a notorious antisemite, even publishing a book in 1923 called The International Jew that warned of a Jewish conspiracy to take over the world. (It became a bestseller.)

Antisemitism had long traded on the stereotype of the Jew as Shylock, the usurious, heartless banker. Ford, who also hated bankers, sought something far grander than classic antisemitism. As he came to see it, the International Jew was conspiring not just with the titans of high finance but with their supposedly inveterate enemies, the Bolsheviks, whose tyranny in Russia was but a foretaste of the future. In America, as he saw it, financiers were secretly plotting with the Industrial Workers of the World and the Socialist Party to make war on capitalism, an unholy alliance of Wall Street, Jewish financiers, and the Kremlin, the Rothschilds and Lenin, seeking to unravel the very moral fiber of western civilization.

Together, so this line of thought went, they plotted to saturate a hard-working, family-centered, patriarchal, sexually orthodox, racially homogenous, god-fearing capitalist society with soul-destroying hedonism, allowing the bankers to make money and the Bolsheviks to find their way to power. After all, communists were atheists, who held the traditional patriarchal family in contempt, believed in both woman’s equality and racial equality, and felt no loyalty to the nation. Similarly, bankers worshipped Mammon, who had no homeland.

According to the automaker, evidence of this conspiracy of moral subversion lay in plain sight. After all, the commies were peddling pornography through their control of the movie business, while — it was the prohibition era — they saturated the country in bootleg gin. Because they were also the masterminds behind the publishing industry, they arranged an endless flow of sex and sensationalism in newspapers, magazines, and pulp novels. And “Jewish jazz,” bankrolled by the same circles, was on its way to becoming the national music, its rhythms an open invitation to the lewd and lascivious.

In the years just preceding Ford’s antisemitic outburst, the Palmer raids, conducted by United States Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer during and following World War I, had imprisoned and deported thousands of radical political activists, only heightening the panic about a coming communist revolution in America. But no one before Ford had ever imagined communists combining forces with the ruling class they presumably were out to overthrow. That was the bizarre eye-opener of a disturbed and disturbing moment and, mad as it was, should once again sound eerily familiar.

From anti-communism to anti-capitalism

That imaginary league of Bolsheviks and bankers would remain an undercurrent of popular superstition, while ant-icommunism began to mutate, coming to have ever less to do with communist movements and ever more with a perverse form of anti-capitalism.

As the giant corporation run by faceless functionaries in suits and ties along with vast government bureaucracies supplanted old-style family capitalism, a whole galaxy of moral and social certitudes about self-reliance, frugality, independence, upward mobility, and piety came under assault. The new order, capitalism on steroids, left a beleaguered and angry world of “little men” in its wake, overwhelmed by a sense of material and spiritual dispossession.

In the 1930s, President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal response to the Great Depression would only reignite the dark fantasies of Ford’s conspiracy-mongering. In those years, populist demagogue Father Charles Coughlin (known as the “radio priest” thanks to his charismatic weekly sermons listened to by millions) preached about how corporate capitalism was “privately sustaining in some instances the worst elements of Communism.” Coughlin grew increasingly hostile to the New Deal. Its bureaucracies, he claimed, meddled in family life, while its regulatory reforms were a disguised version of “financial socialism.” In 1936, he and fellow demagogues formed the Union Party to try (unsuccessfully) to stop Roosevelt’s reelection.

In the eyes of that radio priest, another antisemite by the way, Roosevelt was nothing less than America’s Lenin and his New Deal “a broken-down Colossus straddling the harbor of Rhodes, its left leg standing on ancient Capitalism and its right mired in the red mud of communism.”

Joseph McCarthy vs. the establishment

Though Ford’s and Coughlin’s outpourings were infected with a deep strain of antisemitism, the invective of Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy, whose name became synonymous with mid-twentieth century anti-communism, McCarthyism was not. He was after bigger game, namely the whole WASP establishment.

The Cold War with the Soviet Union provided the ostensible context for McCarthy’s ravings about “a conspiracy so immense and an infamy so black as to dwarf any previous venture in the history of man.” But his focus was far less on the Russians and far more on the upper-crust mandarins running the post-New Deal state.

Traitors to their class, as he saw it, figures like Secretary of State Dean Acheson or international banker John McCloy were, he insisted, closet communists. Yet, gallingly, they also hailed from the most privileged precincts of American society, places like the elite prep school Groton, Harvard, and Wall Street. McCarthy would mock their cosmopolitan associations, their Anglophilia, their gilded careers as international financiers and the heads of major corporations. He would typically portray Averell Harriman, the scion of a railroad and banking family (and a future governor of New York), as “a guy whose admiration for everything Russian is unrivaled outside the confines of the Communist Party.”

The notorious Senate “hearings” he held and the McCarthyism he promoted would prove potent enough to ruin the lives of countless teachers, writers, trade unionists, civil-rights activists, performing artists, journalists, even librarians who lost their jobs and worse, thanks to his infamous inquisitions. And in those years, much of the Republican Party would mimic his message.

Few were safe from such fulminations and McCarthy was anything but alone in delivering them. For instance, the son of a former president, Senator Robert Taft, known as “Mr. Republican” and a leader from the party’s midwestern heartland, was often hailed as its future presidential nominee. Running in the 1952 primaries, he told his supporters in Ohio that “if we get [Dwight D.] Eisenhower, we will practically have a Republican New Deal Administration with just as much spending and socialism as under [President Harry] Truman.” When he lost the nomination to the former World War II commander, Taft would rage that “every Republican candidate for president since 1936 has been nominated by Chase Bank.”

The imagery of tea-sipping, silk handkerchiefs, and silver spoons that spiced McCarthy’s savage depiction of the supposedly left-wing establishment pointed to a subtle shift in the political center of gravity of the anticommunist crusade. While the economic throw-weight of those capitalists-cum-communists remained in the crosshairs of the McCarthyites, cultural matters tended to take center stage.

Although the moral dangers of a supposedly communist-influenced New Deal-style state still preoccupied the senator and his legions of followers, his archetypical enemy came ever more to resemble Coughlin’s: not just left-leaning intellectuals but Ivy League financiers, bankers with “grouse-hunting estates in Scotland,” whom they saw as an aristocracy of destruction.

Liberty or death in the time of “woke communism”

Oscillating with the ups and downs of the economy, that version of anticapitalism regularly masqueraded as anti-communism. And all these years later, “woke capital,” the target of so much Trumpublican fury, is once again being labeled a communist phenomenon. That’s because so many Fortune 500 companies, leading banks, and mass-media outfits have had to come to terms with racial and gender equality, sexual and marital choice, and multicultural diversity — with, that is, the latest version of secularism generally.

Coca-Cola and Delta have even criticized Republican state voter-suppression laws. As early as 2015, corporate opposition forced Republicans in Indiana and North Carolina to back off anti-gay and anti-transgender legislation. In 2019, more than 180 CEOs posted a full-page ad in the New York Times announcing that restrictions on abortion were bad for business. A year later, Goldman Sachs established a $10 million fund to promote racial equality to “honor the legacy of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery.” After the January 6th insurrection at the Capitol, more than 50 companies said they would no longer contribute to the eight Republican senators who objected to certifying the presidential election.

Moreover, dominant financial and business interests depend on the various agencies of the state to subsidize profits and stabilize the economy. This feeds a government apparatus that has long been the bête noire of anticommunists. When the Covid-19 pandemic took down the economy, the 1% thrived, enraging many on the right as well as the left.

Refugees from the social revolutions in Venezuela and Cuba, who have gathered in significant numbers in Florida, no doubt resonate to the latest anticommunist dog whistles of Governor DeSantis in a way that echoes the sentiments aroused in the old days by the Bolshevik Revolution. But what really fires up the passions of Republicans is the tendency of modern capitalism to make peace with (and profit from) the social, racial, and more recently environmental upheavals of the last half-century. Resentment about this continues to ferment in right-wing circles.

The Republican Party now claims to be “standing between capitalism and communism.” But the capitalism it promotes — of the self-reliant entrepreneur, the pious family patriarch, the free-booting version of commerce that depended on racial and gender inequalities and brooked no interference from the state — has been on the defensive for a long time.

Yes, the DeSantis-style anticommunists of today do worry about the possible appeal of socialism to young people, but in real life, the “communism” they face off against is modern capitalism, or what one right-wing wit termed “capitalism with Chinese characteristics.” “Woke capital” or, if you’re the governor of Florida, “woke communism,” has indeed seized power.

Ironically, the woke-communist persuasion may be loony about “communism,” but they are unintentionally right that capitalism is indeed the problem. Capitalism exploits millions of workers, devours the environment, creates obscene inequalities in income and wealth, depends on war and the machinery of war, poisons the well of democracy, incites resentments, and destroys any instinct for social solidarity. But count on one thing: the wet dreams of today’s anticommunists when it comes to restoring some superannuated, idealized form of small-town capitalism are harmful fantasies of the first order. Indeed, they have already done much damage, and Governor DeSantis and crew will only make things far worse.

As climate change disrupts ecosystems, a new outbreak of bird flu spreads to mammals

Public health experts around the world are sounding the alarm as cases of a virulent strain of avian influenza called H5N1 rise in mammals. Bird flu has infected humans in the past, mostly people who work directly with diseased poultry, but there has never been widespread human-to-human transmission of the virus. If there were, it could be a catastrophe: The original H5N1 mutation had a 50 to 60 percent mortality rate in humans.  

The latest outbreak of H5N1, which began in the U.S. in late 2021, has resulted in the culling of 58 million birds thus far and led to a marked increase in the cost of eggs and poultry at the supermarket. It’s America’s second major surge of H5N1since the strain was first detected in southern China in the late 1990s — the first significant U.S. wave kicked off in 2014 and was contained mainly to the Midwest.

Since 2021, H5N1 has been found in at least 47 states. It’s circulating among wild birds, cropping up in wild mammals, and, crucially, bouncing between mink. That last development is what really has experts alarmed. More broadly, the H5N1 outbreak fits a pattern scientists have been ringing alarm bells about for years now: Climate change is throwing ecosystems out of whack and spurring the spread of disease, putting wildlife and human health at risk. 

Avian flu viruses are adapted to bind to birds’ receptor cells. Humans and other mammals have some avian-like receptors, but they’re typically buried deep in the lungs. Because of this anatomical quirk, it would take an enormous load of H5N1 for one infected mammal to dredge up enough of the virus to infect another mammal. Unless, of course, the virus evolved to bind to mammalian cells in the upper respiratory tract. 

That’s what appears to be happening now. Late last year, 50,000 mink on a mink farm in Spain were killed when lab tests showed the animals had contracted H5N1. A study published last month said that the virus had been spreading between the mammals, whose respiratory tracts have physiological similarities to humans’. It’s the first time such an outbreak has been documented. 

“It’s something we’ve never seen,” Jean-Pierre Vaillancourt, a professor in the department of clinical sciences at the University of Montreal in Canada, said. “Am I concerned? Hell yes, I’m concerned.” 

Recent isolated cases of H5N1 in various wild animal species are adding to experts’ unease. The virus has cropped up in seals, sea lions, dolphins, grizzly bears, foxes, and ferrets, many of which probably got the virus from eating infected birds. Globally, there have been six human H5N1 infections, including one death, in this surge of the virus, none of which was caused by one human giving it to another. But experts are keeping a close eye on H5N1 in case the virus continues to adapt to the point where it can easily infect humans and prompt person-to-person transmission. 

“We don’t want an avian H5N1 being adapted to mammals,” Juergen A. Richt, director of the Center of Excellence for Emerging and Zoonotic Animal Diseases, told Grist. “Obviously, the next level would be humans.” 

The past few years have seen an uptick in the size and pace of bird flu outbreaks. The virus has moved outside the bounds of its typical seasons, which coincide with birds’ spring and fall migrations. In the past year, H5N1 has been detected in the summer months in Italy, when high temperatures should have extinguished it, and in the depths of winter in Canada, when migrating birds are few and far between. The factors influencing these outbreaks are still largely unknown. The virus may be hanging out in the environment for longer or spreading with greater frequency and ease between birds. 

Vaillancourt suspects one overarching explanation. “How come this virus is popping up in the middle of summer in the Mediterranean Sea or when it’s minus 20 or 30 in a commercial farm in Canada?” he asked. “There’s close to 80 countries in the world with this problem, we’ve never seen that before. That’s why we’re seriously looking at climate change.” 

Studies have found that changing weather patterns fundamentally affect the way birds behave in ways that could influence the spread of bird flu. Rising temperatures and the seasonal changes they induce force birds to adjust their migratory patterns and converge in new combinations. Rising sea levels also affect where birds make their nests and lay their eggs, prompting species that don’t typically interact to make contact and share disease. 

“In the last two to three years, we have seen a drastic change in the pattern of circulation of H5N1 virus in wild bird population, with massive outbreaks and a wider set of species involved,” Marius Gilbert, a spatial epidemiologist at the National Fund for Scientific Research in Brussels, told Grist via email. He said scientists have been able to make links between climate change and bird migration, but figuring out the ways in which climate change may be influencing the spread of avian flu is a far more complicated and difficult task. 

Generally, research shows that climate change threatens to fundamentally restructure existing networks of animals, which creates conditions for diseases to find and infect new hosts, a process called “viral spillover.” More opportunities for disease sharing among a wide range of species, not just birds, may lead to more illnesses making the jump from animals into human beings, the way COVID did in 2019.  

Implementing wildlife disease surveillance networks — systems local governments can use to find and identify rogue pathogens in the wild before they infect humans — can help keep these illnesses at bay. When an illness such as H5N1 is detected on a farm, nearby public health departments should be able to quickly distribute tests to farmworkers and anyone else who comes in contact with a sick animal, so that people with infections can isolate. Wealthy countries like the U.S. should also be investing heavily in an mRNA vaccine for influenza, which could be rapidly tweaked to match H5N1 if it started to spread among humans and shared with the rest of the globe. (The U.S. has a small stockpile of non-mRNA H5N1 vaccines, but ramping up production would take months.) 

“We have many of the tools that are needed, including vaccines,” Zeynep Tufekci, a sociologist and an opinion writer for the New York Times, wrote in a recent column about H5N1. “What’s missing is a sense of urgency and immediate action.”

Mining law has barely changed since 1872. Can Congress agree on a fix?

This year has already brought some unusual setbacks for mining companies, thanks to the Biden administration. On January 26, the administration dealt a possibly fatal blow to Twin Metal Minnesota’s decades-long effort to reopen a nickel and copper mine near the Boundary Waters, the most visited wilderness area in the country. A few days later, the Environmental Protection Agency vetoed the proposed Pebble Mine, invoking the Clean Water Act to halt a gold and copper mine near one of the world’s largest spawning grounds for salmon in Alaska. 

The rejections were rare for the industry — in the case of the Pebble Mine, it was the first time that the Clean Water Act was used to stop a hardrock mine. While tribes and environmental organizations welcomed the news, mining companies and their allies in Congress criticized the Biden administration for standing in the way of its own clean energy goals. 

Metals like copper, nickel, and lithium are all used in electric vehicle batteries as well as for wind and solar energy storage; as such, they’ve been dubbed “critical” to getting the United States off fossil fuels. The landmark Inflation Reduction Act that Biden signed into law last summer aims to bolster domestic production of these minerals, with billions for mine development and tax credits for cars that use materials mined in the United States (or supplies from free-trade agreement partners). At the moment, there’s only one lithium mine in the country. 

“If Democrats were serious about developing renewable energy sources and breaking China’s stranglehold on the global market, they would be flinging open the doors to responsible mineral development here in the U.S.,” said Bruce Westerman, a Republican representative from Arkansas and the new chair of the House Natural Resources Committee, in a statement following the news about Boundary Waters.

Metals mining is the country’s largest source of toxic waste. But there are ways to get more of these critical metals that would minimize the damage to ecosystems and local communities. The problem, according to experts, is that the country’s outdated mining laws are blocking the path forward. 

Mining in the U.S. is largely governed by a Gold Rush-era law that hasn’t been significantly changed since Ulysses S. Grant was president; it includes no guidelines on tribal consultation, reclamation, or environmental protection. And it covers more than 90 percent of hardrock mines in the country. Environmental groups say the law makes it too easy for mining companies to pursue projects in places that put people and the environment most at risk.  

“You put a stake in the ground, go to the local Bureau of Land Management office, and file a fee and some paperwork,” said Aaron Mintzes, senior policy counsel for Earthworks, a nonprofit focused on preventing the destructive impacts of extraction. “As long as you discover minerals there, you have a valid mine play.” 

Unlike with oil and gas drilling and coal mining, hardrock mining on public lands doesn’t require companies to secure a lease from the federal government or pay royalties to develop minerals under the General Mining Law of 1872. 

According to Roger Flynn, founding director of the nonprofit law center Western Mining Action Project, the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service treat a mining claim as a right to mine and interpret the law as giving them little authority to deny a proposal. “The BLM and the Forest Service, with a few minor exceptions, have never said no to a major mine,” said Flynn.

Laws like the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act, and the Clean Water Act also govern mines; federal agencies are required to study and disclose the possible harm from mining, receive public input, and present alternatives. But Blaine Miller-McFeeley, a senior legislative representative with Earthjustice, says that because of how mining is regulated, adherence to these federal standards effectively becomes “a box-checking exercise” for companies. The level of pollution allowed is also so high, he said, that it’s hard to enforce any type of cleanup when a mine closes.

Patrick Donnelly, the Great Basin Director for the Center for Biological Diversity, says the lack of planning and guidance for where mines should be approved sets companies up for protracted legal battles. “We just give out mining permits to anybody, for any mining proposal, wherever it is,” Donnelly said. “If the mining industry [wasn’t allowed to] propose such terrible mines, maybe they wouldn’t get fought so much.” 

For their part, Republicans have taken aim at the environmental review and public participation processes required by the National Environmental Policy Act, known as NEPA, in order to speed up permitting. In a congressional hearing on energy and mining on Wednesday, they called for shortening the NEPA process and other reforms that conservationists say would weaken agencies’ ability to assess the environmental impacts of proposals and restrict the window of time in which communities have a say. 

Earlier in January, Representative Pete Stauber, a Republican who represents the Minnesota district that would have been home to the Twin Metals mine, introduced the Permitting for Mining Needs Act. The bill would set time limits on environmental reviews under NEPA and limit lawsuits to 120 days after a permitting decision. Stauber’s proposed legislation could become part of the larger permitting reform package that Westerman is trying to pass this spring. Last year, Westerman’s own bill, the Strengthening American Minerals Supply Chains Act, would have similarly streamlined the review process, while also prohibiting federal agencies from withdrawing permits and allowing companies to get waivers for certain types of pollution.

“Opening a mine in the U.S. typically involves multiple agencies and the navigation of tens or even hundreds of permitting processes,” wrote Ashley Burke, a spokesperson for the National Mining Association, in a statement to Grist. She said a lack of transparency, fuzzy timelines for environmental assessments, and little coordination between various agencies were reasons why the mining industry supported Westerman’s bill. “Ours is one of the longest permitting processes in the world for mining projects,” she said. 

Environmental lawyers contest that claim, pointing to a Government Accountability Office report from 2016 showing that permitting times ranged from 1 month to 11 years, but lasted 2 years on average. To Miller-McFeeley, that’s reasonable when compared with other countries where hardrock mining occurs, like Canada and Australia. The outlier mines that take longer to permit “are often the ones that are the most impactful or the most problematic,” he said.

The GAO report cited incomplete paperwork from mining companies and understaffed federal agencies as the two main reasons why the process can get bogged down. With the IRA’s infusion of $1 billion toward environmental analysis and permitting, environmental advocates say the process should speed up, allowing the BLM to get through the backlog of applicationsunder review without truncating the NEPA timeline. They also agree with efforts by Republican lawmakers to promote better coordination between the permitting agencies, but are critical of proposals to let one agency oversee the process. 

House Democrats are pulling together their own proposal for mining law reform, which they say would make the process more efficient while strengthening environmental standards and community protections. It would also set up federal guidelines for tribal consultation since the vast majority of “critical” metals are located on or near Native American reservations.  

“Right now, there really is no federal guidance [on tribal consultation],” said a policy staffer for the Democrats’ House Natural Resources Committee Energy and Mineral Resources Subcommittee. “It’s one of the places where we might be able to see bipartisan compromise because it’s hard for mining companies to operate without social license.”  

The House Democrats’ proposal is expected to build on the Clean Energy Minerals Reform Act, introduced last session by Representative Raúl Grijalva from Arizona, which would have created a leasing system for mines and required companies to pay royalties. 

Meanwhile, an interagency working group led by the Department of the Interior is working on recommendations to Congress for updating the 1872 mining law. The group is also drafting new rules that environmental advocates hope will give the BLM and the Forest Service more teeth in reviewing and deciding to approve new mines. A coalition of tribes, Indigenous groups, and conservation organizations has outlined their proposed revisions, which include clarifying the BLM’s authority to protect tribal resources and closing loopholes that allow the mining industry to avoid consultation with local communities near proposed mines. 

Take the Lithium Americas mine at Thacker Pass in northern Nevada. The company received its permits in February 2021, less than a year after it started its environmental review. But the project has been in court since then after conservation groups, a rancher, and two local tribes sued the BLM for failing to consider the project’s environmental impacts and failing to properly consult the tribes. On Monday, a federal judge upheld the mine’s approval but sent it back to the BLM for additional review of the mine’s right to dump its waste in the area.

“Thacker Pass used a fast-tracking process which overlooked key points about water reclamation at the end of the project,” said Gary McKinney, a member of the Duck Valley Shoshone Paiute Tribe and the People of Red Mountain, who is fighting the controversial mine. “The general public was kept from understanding the true negative impacts of lithium mining.”

If the mine goes through, McKinney said he would be concerned that lithium mining will destroy ancestral land in North America just as it has in South America

While the mining industry and Republican representatives emphasize the human rights abuses connected to the production of critical minerals abroad as a reason to expand mining at home, Mintzes from Earthworks says that doesn’t mean the U.S. should lower the bar and encourage more mining by weakening federal regulations. 

“The message from the GOP is, ‘Why have slave labor in the Congo source your cobalt when you can find it in the Boundary Waters?'” Mintzes said“The message from our community is that the State Department should use due diligence to root out slave labor everywhere, raising standards abroad and here, including through mining law reform.” 

John Fetterman being treated for clinical depression

Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman voluntarily checked himself into a hospital this week to receive treatment for clinical depression.

Fetterman’s decision to focus on his mental health at this time was explained on Thursday via a statement from Chief of Staff Adam Jentleson in which he said, “On Monday, John was evaluated by Dr. Brian P. Monahan, the Attending Physician of the United States Congress. Yesterday, Dr. Monahan recommended inpatient care at Walter Reed. John agreed, and he is receiving treatment on a voluntary basis.” 

Fetterman’s wife, Gisele, tweeted a statement of her own on Thursday saying “This is a difficult time for our family, so please respect our privacy. For us, the kids come first.”

“After what he’s been through in the past year, there’s probably no one who wanted to talk about his own health less than John,” Mrs.Fetterman furthered on Twitter. “I’m so proud of him for asking for help and getting the care he needs.”


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In the official statement from Fetterman’s Chief of Staff, it’s mentioned that the senator has “experienced depression off and on throughout his life,” but that it wasn’t until recent weeks that his condition became severe. 

Last week, Fetterman was treated for a different issue when he experienced a bout of dizziness and was examined by George Washington University hospital over the course of a two-day stay to rule out another possible stroke, according to his office. 

“Fetterman is FAR from the first senator do this. But he’s the first to have the stones to announce it,” tweeted veteran and author Jason Kander. “A stroke is obviously traumatic and I’m glad he’s addressing the understandable effect on his mental health too. He’s the real deal. This is awesome leadership.”

How Hormel exploited confusion over the natural label

Natural is a confusing term for consumers. As we explored in an episode of our podcast, “What You’re Eating,” most people don’t know what it means or if it’s a regulated term. Is it the same as organic? Does it mean animals were treated well or that food was produced without synthetic chemicals? Food companies take full advantage of that ignorance, using natural as a centerpiece in promotion campaigns that paint a picture of wholesome, simple production that often looks nothing like reality. But a recent settlement against Hormel Foods, a meat processor, marks a successful attempt to fire back against the food industry’s deliberate attempts to mislead the public.

Hormel’s misleading advertising

Hormel, the Minnesota-based food manufacturer, is perhaps best known for Spam, a canned lunch meat that’s about as far from most people’s idea of natural as you can get. While some of the company’s brands do have products much more in line with that vision (like Applegate, which does meet standards for animal welfare and environmental stewardship), natural certainly isn’t what many people expect from Hormel itself. So when it launched its Natural Choice brand, the company turned to aggressive marketing to shift that perception.

Ads for Natural Choice products evoked nature, using birds and flowers to paint a picture of a product that was produced in harmony with nature. In one TV spot, a family who was “on an all-natural kick” (as represented by a brimming wildflower garden, green roof and happy goat) discovered Natural Choice products as the way to go natural “without going all-out.” Altogether, the marketing campaign persuaded consumers that going with Natural Choice products was a wise investment in both their health and the environment. And the campaign was successful: By 2015, Natural Choice was one of the company’s fastest-growing brands.

In reality, the animals raised for the Natural Choice meats were no different than those raised for the rest of Hormel’s product lines. This means these animals were raised on factory farms, where antibiotic-heavy diets, growth-promoting drugs like ractopamine and tightly cramped conditions were all commonplace, a far cry from the images evoked in the brand’s advertising. Furthermore, numerous food safety violations in Hormel’s plants — like contamination from fecal matter or disinfectant chemicals — fly in the face of the idea that the products are any safer for consumers than other lunch meats. Arguing that the brand was advertising deceptively, the Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF) and Public Justice sued.

Natural: An exploitable loophole  

So why can Hormel claim its meat products are natural in the first place? Per the USDA, natural is a fairly open definition, “containing no artificial ingredient or added color,” and “only minimally processed in a manner that does not fundamentally alter the product.” And by that standard, Hormel’s Natural Choice products do technically qualify — but as is often the case with natural products, that technicality means very little. Natural products are not permitted to be cured with nitrates, but can be treated with celery powder that does exactly the same thing and leads to the same health problems despite qualifying as “uncured” and natural on a label, for example.

Internal documents from Hormel produced during discovery highlight that the company was both aware of consumer ignorance and eager to exploit it. Documents referred to celery powder and cherry powder as “loopholes” that allow different labeling of natural ham while being functionally the same as other kinds of hams.

Beyond exploiting technical loopholes in the natural label, Hormel also knowingly took advantage of consumer misconceptions about what natural means and used that to craft misleading advertising. As Public Justice and the ALDF laid out in their case, Hormel knew from consumer research that most consumers have a much broader idea of what natural guarantees than it really does, with a majority thinking it is a guarantee that animals were raised humanely or without preventive antibiotic use. Many also confuse it with USDA Organic, which actually comes with stringent production standards.

But this didn’t stop Hormel from evoking those connections in their advertising. In fact, media guides produced by the company show strategies for dodging questions about what natural means, with instructions to sidestep questions about preservatives and mislead the public about the company’s animal welfare practices.

“What’s great about these documents is that they show how deliberate the exploitation of the confusion is,” said Leah M. Nicholls, an attorney who worked on the case for Public Justice. Considering that whistleblowers and activists are often branded as conspiratorial by the food industry and its PR machine, seeing those strategies laid out so explicitly is an important reminder: Food companies aren’t innocent actors making occasional mistakes, they’re powerful organizations with the legal resources to find and exploit loopholes, many of which they helped create through their own lobbying efforts. Ambiguity around terms like natural is not an accident, it’s a convenient and exploitable way for marketers to sell products. And as Nicholls points out, Hormel is not the only company abusing that strategy.

Given the abundance of evidence against them, Hormel ultimately decided to settle the case. By agreeing to include clarifying language about what natural actually means on the Natural Choice website and to include that language in any future advertisements for the brand, Hormel shouldn’t be able to use such deliberately deceptive strategies to advertise their products going forward, though it may take a while to change the brand image that they’ve already built up with consumers. It’s an important victory against such a high-profile food company, but with so many other companies employing the same advertising strategies, the settlement is only the beginning of what’s needed to meaningfully alter the landscape around abuse of the natural label. Regulatory shifts, like Public Justice and the ALDF’s petition to remove the celery powder loophole, are also necessary for getting rid of ultimately meaningless marketing terms like natural.

The fight for greatest transparency

Public Justice was successful in getting Hormel to change its advertising, but it wasn’t the only victory scored in the case. The lawyers were also successful in getting most of the evidence in the case declassified, with many of the documents available on the Public Justice website. This is unusual, given that most companies designate their materials as confidential when they submit them for discovery, meaning that they won’t be available to the public regardless of outcome. In Hormel’s case, nearly all of the documents were initially marked as confidential.

But as Nicholls, who specializes in transparency in her other work with Public Justice, explains, “one thing that’s really important to us as an organization, not just with regard to our animal ag cases, is ensuring that as many documents are public as possible.” Not only do the revealed documents show how deliberately Hormel misled customers, they also help other advocates trying to expose the widespread abuses of the factory farm system. “Even if you don’t win your case, there’s a lot of good information out there that advocates can use, so transparency in litigation can move things forward regardless of the outcome.”

Declassifying the documents was a rare win for advocates, given that food companies have come to expect getting their way when it comes to transparency. Food companies have always relied on obscuring information to exploit workers, farmers and consumers, so pushes toward greater transparency are important for holding companies accountable. For their part, food and agriculture companies have been quite successful at protecting their activities from view. Animal rights activists are often prevented from releasing footage of abuse on factory farms by “ag gag” laws that make this kind of activity illegal, for example.

This deference towards food companies also extends to federal regulators like the FDA, where confidentiality practices that heavily favor food companies dampen the agency’s ability to effectively communicate about foodborne illness and other risks to the public. When paired with chronic understaffing and low resources, the company-protecting bureaucracy that’s so embedded at the agency means that enormous food safety outbreaks — like 2022’s infant formula crisis — are often revealed by whistleblowers long before corrective action can occur.

Ironically, many food companies list transparency as one of their core values that allows them to guarantee safe and healthy products. As the facts in cases like Hormel’s demonstrate, however, they’re both willing to mislead consumers about the true nature of their supply chains and eager to try and cover their tracks. But as demands for honesty and transparency become more common, companies are having a harder time using terms like natural to obscure their activities. As grocery expert Errol Schweizer pointed out on our podcast, suing companies over misleading advertising has “become its own little cottage industry,” with natural becoming “a total hot potato” for companies like Hormel, ultimately pointing to a future where exploiting misleading terms might become too much of a liability to be worthwhile.

Report urges capping U.S. prison sentences at 20 years to end mass incarceration

Policymakers should take steps to limit prison sentences in the United States—which incarcerates far more people than any other country and where the imprisoned population has soared 500% in recent decades—to 20 years for all crimes, a report published Wednesday by a leading criminal justice reform group argues.

“As the United States marks 50 years of mass incarceration, dramatic change is necessary to ensure another 50 do not follow,” asserts the Sentencing Project report, entitled Counting Down: Paths to a 20-Year Maximum Prison Sentence. “In no small part due to long sentences, the United States has one of the world’s highest incarceration rates, with nearly two million people in prisons and jails.”

The report continues:

The destabilizing force of mass incarceration deepens social and economic inequity—families lose not only a loved one, but income and childcare. By age 14, 1 in 14 children in the United States experiences a parent leaving for jail or prison. Individuals returning to the community face profound barriers to employment and housing. Meantime the communities most impacted by crime—poor communities and communities of color—disproportionately bear the burden of incarceration’s impacts. Long sentences affect young Black men disproportionately compared to every other race and age group. Twice as many Black children as white children have experienced parental incarceration. Mass incarceration entrenches cycles of harm, trauma, and disinvestment and consumes funds that might support investment in interventions that empower communities and create lasting safety.

“In the United States, over half of people in prison are serving a decade or longer and 1 in 7 incarcerated people are serving a life sentence,” the publication states. “To end mass incarceration, the United States must dramatically shorten sentences. Capping sentences for the most serious offenses at 20 years and shifting sentences for all other offenses proportionately downward, including by decriminalizing some acts, is a vital decarceration strategy to arrive at a system that values human dignity and prioritizes racial equity.”

The report notes that “in countries such as Germany and Norway, periods of incarceration rarely exceed 20 years, including for homicide offenses.”

While no country has yet implemented a 20-year incarceration limit, Russia caps women’s imprisonment at 20 years. In Norway, prison terms are limited to 21 years, with the possibility of extensions if the inmate is deemed to pose a continued danger to society. Anders Behring Breivik, the Norwegian white supremacist who massacred 77 people and injured hundreds more in a pair of 2011 attacks, was sentenced to 21 years behind bars. His first parole bid was denied last year.

“In countries such as Germany and Norway, periods of incarceration rarely exceed 20 years, including for homicide offenses.”

Cape Verde, Paraguay, and Portugal limit imprisonment to 25 years. Countries including Brazil, Nicaragua, Congo, Uruguay, and Venezuela have 30-year maximum sentences.

The report also aims to dispel fears that releasing violent offenders would lead to a surge in recidivism.

“Research shows that, while very serious, committing homicide is typically an isolated offense,” the report states. “When individuals who commit homicides return to the community, their likelihood of committing another homicide is extremely low, typically 1-3%.”

Liz Komar, sentencing reform counsel at the Sentencing Project and co-author of the report, said in a statement that “to end mass incarceration, the U.S. must dramatically shorten sentences. Lawmakers can do this by capping sentences for the most serious offenses at 20 years and shifting sentences for all other offenses proportionately downward, including by decriminalizing some acts.”

Sentencing Project co-director of research Ashley Nellis, who also authored the new report, said that “in large part due to long prison sentences, we have one of the highest incarceration rates in the world.”

“The destabilizing force of mass incarceration deepens social and economic inequity, while entrenching cycles of harm, trauma, and disinvestment,” Nellis added. “Mass incarceration also consumes funds that could instead support investments in the types of interventions that empower communities and create lasting safety.”

The report recommends seven legislative reforms “to cap sentences at 20 years and right-size the sentencing structure”:

  • Abolish death and life without parole sentences, limiting maximum sentences to 20 years;
  • Limit murder statutes to intentional killing, excluding sentences such as felony murder, and reduce homicide penalties;
  • Eliminate mandatory minimum sentencing and reform sentencing guidelines to ensure that judges can use their discretion to consider mitigating circumstances;
  • Provide universal access to parole and ensure timely review;
  • Eliminate consecutive sentences and limit sentence enhancements, including repealing “truth-in-sentencing” and “habitual offender” laws;
  • Create an opportunity for judicial “second look” re-sentencing within a maximum of 10 years of imprisonment, regardless of an individual’s offense; and
  • Shift all sentences downward, including by de-felonizing many offenses and decriminalizing many misdemeanors.

“Capping all sentences at 20 years is a challenging but feasible policy goal, as demonstrated by its success in other countries and a project worthy of advocates’ and policymakers’ attention,” the report concludes. “The path to a 20-year cap will be different in every jurisdiction, but all steps offer vital hope to people serving lengthy sentences and their loved ones.”

“Of course,” the authors added, “obtaining a proportional, fair system of justice will take more than just shortening sentences, but it is integral to a wholesale reimagining of public safety that focuses on healthy and empowered communities, transforming prisons, investing in evidence-based prevention, and pursuing restorative alternatives to the carceral system.”

A separate report published this month by the reform group Vera Institute of Justice also recommends capping U.S. prison sentences at 20 years.

“Severe sentences do not deter crime, retribution often does not help survivors of crime heal, and the U.S. sentencing system overestimates who is a current danger to the community and when incarceration is needed for public safety,” the authors argued. “Instead, we need a system that privileges liberty while creating real safety and repairing harm.”

“The United States must move away from sentencing policy rooted in retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation, which the evidence shows do not deliver safety and satisfaction,” the report asserts. “To reduce mass incarceration, prison sentences should be capped at 20 years for adults convicted of the most serious crimes and 15 years for young people up to age 25.”

“Other sentencing reforms should include removing prior conviction sentencing enhancements, abolishing mandatory minimums, and creating second-look resentencing options for those currently behind bars,” the paper adds.

“South Park” versions of Harry and Meghan are roasted for oxymoronic “Worldwide Privacy Tour”

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle aren’t feeling the love, not just from the British royal family, but stateside this time,

On Wednesday, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex were ruthlessly roasted in a new “South Park” episode, titled “The Worldwide Privacy Tour.” The Comedy Central animated series refrained from explicitly naming both Harry and Meghan and instead, mocked thinly veiled versions of Harry’s bombshell memoir “Spare” and the Netflix docuseries “Harry & Meghan.”

The episode spotlights the fictional Prince of Canada and his wife, who travel to the town of South Park in an attempt to seek privacy from the media. Their efforts include promoting the Prince’s book “Waaagh” — a clear parody of “Spare” — and publicly holding up protest signs that read, “We want our privacy!” and “Stop looking at us!”

In one scene, a “Good Morning Canada” host questions the Prince of Canada’s hypocrisy for exposing his family in a not-so-private manner and slams the Prince’s wife for wanting privacy while enjoying a celebrity lifestyle:

“Isn’t it true sir, that your questionable wife has her own TV show and hangs out with celebrities and does fashion magazines?” the host asks, seemingly referring to Meghan’s own prominence in Hollywood. “Well, I just think that some people might say that your Instagram-loving b***h wife actually doesn’t want her privacy.”

The Prince of Canada then angrily replies, “How dare you, sir! My Instagram-loving b***h wife has always wanted her privacy! And you know what else? To hell with Canada. We are leaving. We’ll go find some quiet place where we can be normal people.”

Elsewhere in the episode, Eric Cartman says, “We don’t care about some dumb prince and his stupid wife.” His buddy Kyle Broflovski adds, “I’m sick of hearing about them! I can’t get away from them! They’re everywhere in my f**king face!”

The Prince is also described as, “Royal prince, millionaire, world traveler, victim,” while his wife is described as “Sorority girl, actress, influencer, and victim” during a “branding manager” meeting.  


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The brutal episode follows a series of inflammatory comments attacking Harry and Meghan’s recent projects. During the release of the Netflix series, contentious TV personality Jeremy Clarkson penned an essay for The Sun, which has seen been taken down, in which he detailed his hatred for Meghan. Even worse, he expressed his hope for her to be publicly shamed similar to the infamous scene in “Game of Thrones” in which Cersei Lannister (Lena Headey) is made to walk through the town naked, with her hair chopped off as Septa Unella (Hannah Waddingham) accompanies her, ringing a bell and intoning “Shame!” as onlookers jeer.

“At night, I’m unable to sleep as I lie there, grinding my teeth and dreaming of the day when she is made to parade naked through the streets of every town in Britain while the crowds chant ‘Shame!’ and throw lumps of excrement at her,” Clarkson wrote.

Outspoken shock jock Howard Stern also criticized the docuseries, saying, “It’s been painful. I don’t — I wouldn’t stay with it, but my wife wants to watch it, so, you know, we have shows we watch, but they come off like such whiny b***hes. I gotta tell you man, I just don’t get it.”

Watch a preview of the episode, via YouTube:

 

NASA wants to explore Uranus. Here’s why that won’t happen until the 2040s

Neptune and Uranus have long been neglected when it comes to solar system exploration. Many astronomers think that is a shame, as these two planets are particularly weird outliers among the bodies that orbit the Sun. Uranus, for example, the seventh planet from our Sun, has a unique tilt that makes it appear to spin sideways, orbiting the Sun like a rolling ball while circled by nine, dense rings. Both Uranus and Neptune may also have diamond rain in their atmospheres.

Known as the Uranus Orbiter and Probe, the mission will most likely involve a cone-shaped probe that will dive down into Uranus’s atmosphere, coupled with a kind of satellite that will get stunning, up-close views of Uranus’s many moons.

The one and only spacecraft to visit either of them was the Voyager 2 spacecraft, which briefly zipped by in the late ’80s, more than three decades ago. When it did, the probe turned up more questions than answers. And given that space probe technology has dramatically improved since then, there’s a lot we still don’t know about these so-called “ice giants,” including how they formed, what their interiors are like, and what role they play in the positions and orbits of the outer planets.

NASA seems to understand this gap in our knowledge and is prioritizing a mission to Uranus. In a new editorial in the journal Science by Kathleen E. Mandt, a planetary scientist at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, lays out the case for traveling to Uranus, how we’d get there and what we’d potentially learn.

“The space science community has waited more than 30 years to explore the ice giants, and missions to them will benefit many generations to come,” Mandt writes.

Every decade, NASA employs the National Academies of Sciences to survey scientists about the most juicy, intriguing space missions to start planning. The most recent survey spanned the course of a year, in which the surveyors reviewed over 500 white papers, held 176 meetings and sat through more than 300 presentations, all of which were made even more difficult by the early days of the COVID pandemic. In spite of all this work, the survey is a good strategy to really understand what space targets experts think we should concentrate on. A trip to Uranus or Neptune emerged as a top contender.

“The “dearth of knowledge on the ice giants” was identified as a problem of highest priority for resolving in the coming decade,” Mandt writes. “It was ranked as the third-highest priority flagship in the 2013–2023 decadal survey, Visions and Voyages, following Mars Sample Return and the Europa Clipper, two missions now well advanced in their development.”

In other words, as other space missions proceed, Uranus and Neptune are becoming primary next objectives. The mission to Uranus is still in the early stages of development, but the basic design has already been fleshed out. Known as the Uranus Orbiter and Probe (UOP), the mission will most likely involve a cone-shaped probe that will dive down into Uranus’s atmosphere, coupled with a kind of satellite that will get stunning, up-close views of Uranus’s many moons.

We stand to learn a considerable amount about how these massive planets formed, as well as how our Solar System took shape approximately 4.5 billion years ago. A leading hypothesis is that the solar system began as a massive cloud of interstellar dust and gas that collapsed, perhaps from the shockwave of a supernova triggered by an exploding star. This collapse may have formed a nebula of swirling material, generating tremendous pressures and energy from which our Sun was born.


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Leftover gunk orbiting this whirling spiral of chaos began to clump together, warped by gravity into spherical shapes we call planets. Depending on their location and the materials available, the planets formed into either rocky worlds like Earth, Theia or Mars, or giant balls of gas and ice.

Neptune and Uranus are called “ice giants” because they consist of far more frozen water, ammonia, and methane compared to Jupiter and Saturn, the “gas giants.” We’ve obtained plenty of up close data from Jupiter and Saturn the past few decades, which has taught us a lot about how these behemoths formed. But there’s still a lot we don’t know about the composition of the atmosphere of Uranus and Neptune.

“Studying all four giant planets (Uranus, Neptune, Jupiter, and Saturn) is vital for reconstructing Solar System history,” Mandt writes. Investigating these objects can reveal some of the violent history of our Solar System’s past. “The Uranus system is especially interesting because it could bear testimony to a massive collision that tilted Uranus on its side.”

While NASA hasn’t formally announced a launch date yet, it will probably blast off between 2028 and 2038.

Did something massive smack into Uranus years ago, altering its orientation compared to the sun? We might know more if we take a closer look. And other surprises could be in store, though it’s not very likely that Uranus harbors extraterrestrial life. It is probably far too cold and chemically volatile to play host to even the most hardy of life, not even so-called “extremophiles.” However, the moons of Uranus could have liquid water, which is believed by most astrobiologists to be necessary for life to exist.

“The five largest moons, predicted to be cold dead worlds, all showed evidence of recent resurfacing, suggesting that geologic activity might be ongoing,” Mandt explains. “One or more of these moons could have potentially habitable liquid water oceans under an ice shell, making them ‘ocean worlds.'”

While it’s probably more likely that life, if it exists somewhere other than Earth, is hiding somewhere like Europa, a moon of Jupiter, the intriguing possibility is worth taking a gander in the further reaches of the Solar System. Studying Uranus and Neptune could also inform our quest to detect habitable exoplanets in other galaxies.

A potential mission is going to take a very long time to get to Uranus, because the ice giant isn’t exactly close to us. Approximately 1.6 billion miles (2.6 billion kilometers) away from Earth at its closest orbit, it takes sunlight 2 hours and 40 minutes to travel from the Sun to Uranus. Sending a probe there will take between eight and 15 years, especially if we want it to get there during a window that makes Uranus’s moons the most visible. While NASA hasn’t formally announced a launch date yet, it will probably blast off between 2028 and 2038, according to recommendations published last month in the journal Acta Astronautica.

That means we might not being gathering data on Uranus until the 2040s at the earliest. But when a probe does get there, it will spend many years surveilling Uranus — unlike Voyager 2 which spent only about six hours there before continuing on its way. As for Neptune, an orbiter may not arrive until 2049. Two decades or more is a long time to wait for more info on these mysterious ice giants, but given all the mysteries these two worlds are hiding, it will undoubtedly be worth the wait.

Kari Lake lawyers hit with bar complaints over “orchestrated effort” to “disrupt” election

A legal group is planning to file bar complaints against four lawyers representing failed Republican Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake in her baseless voter fraud litigation. 

A federal judge already sanctioned Lake’s lawyers in December, but new complaints from The 65 Project, a group targeting attorneys who advance illegitimate election fraud claims in court, means they could face suspensions or even disbarment.

The 65 Project told NBC News that they are filing bar complaints in Minnesota and Maryland against Lake attorneys Jesse Kibort, Joseph Pull and Andrew Parker, who are licensed to practice law in Minnesota, and Kurt Olsen, who is licensed in Maryland. 

The lawyers represented Lake and Mark Finchem, a failed Republican candidate for Arizona’s secretary of state, in April. They challenged the use of electronic voting machines, claiming that the devices were untrustworthy.

“This was [a] pre-planned, orchestrated effort to disrupt Arizona’s election even before it began and claim that there was fraud,” Michael Teter, the managing director of The 65 Project, told NBC.

The bipartisan nonprofit organization has filed dozens of complaints against attorneys in the past year alone, including Trump lawyer Alan Dershowitz, who is also listed as an attorney in the Lake suit.

Teter told NBC that he hopes their complaints will result in the suspension or disbarment of Lake’s attorneys, preventing future dubious election fraud litigation. 

“We saw hundreds of election deniers across the country run and lose, and yet very few of them were bringing lawsuits in the aftermath of their losses,” he told the outlet. “I think that’s partly attributable to our efforts in 2020.”

Lake in December shared that it was difficult to find representation for her case.

“We had attorneys who did walk away because the left is threatening them with their ability to make a living and practice law,” she said. “And some of our attorneys said, ‘Look, I got mouths to feed, I can’t do this case, I don’t want to be sanctioned.’ I got to a point where I said, ‘I’ll take anybody. We’ll take ‘Better Call Saul’ to come in here.'”


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The complaints against Lake’s lawyers come after Arizona’s top election official asked the attorney general to investigate Lake for potential campaign violations involving the disclosure of voter signatures.

A tweet from the candidate on Jan. 23 included an image containing 16 voter signatures. According to a letter penned by Secretary of State Adrian Fontes obtained by The Washington Post, the tweet violated a state law involving public inspection of voter registration records. 

The law states that records containing voter signatures “shall not be accessible or reproduced by any person other than the voter,” and Fontes wrote that violation of the law is a felony. 

Superior Court Judge of Maricopa County Peter Thompson also ordered Lake to pay $33,000 in fees to cover the cost of expert witnesses hired by her Democratic opponent, Gov. Katie Hobbs.

However, legal troubles and PR disasters haven’t stopped Lake from announcing that she is considering running for office once again: this time for U.S. Senate in Arizona in 2024.

Lake has also recently scheduled campaign-style events in Iowa, the state where Republicans will nominate their next presidential candidate.

“Here’s your headline: Kari Lake is on the warpath,” Lake said in an interview with the New York Times earlier this month.

In the interview, Lake also attacked Senator Kyrsten Sinema — who recently became an independent after leaving the Democratic party in December — and Rep. Ruben Gallego, a Democrat who is also running for the Senate seat. She called both politicians “radical leftists,” and said Sinema is “the furthest thing from an independent.”

“Someone somewhere said she did a couple of courageous things, well, she should do courageous stuff here every day,” Lake said of Sinema. “If you are blessed to be elected by the people, when you show up in Washington, D.C., you should be doing courageous acts every damn day.”

Lake attacked Gallego, calling him a socialist and referencing complaints by his former staff member, Ne’Lexia Galloway, who criticized him for not doing more to “speak up about the injustices” to people of color in his district in Phoenix. 

Other high-profile Arizona Republicans have stated that they are considering Senate campaigns, including sheriff of Pinal County Mark Lamb, businessman Jim Lamon, former GOP Senate nominee Blake Masters, and Karrin Taylor Robson, who previously lost her gubernatorial primary bid against Lake.

Biggest medical device company allegedly “groomed” doctors to unnecessarily overuse their products

On June 14, 2017, just before noon, a doctor made an incision near a patient’s groin. Kari Kirk, a representative for the world’s largest medical device company, Medtronic, looked on and began texting her colleague a play-by-play.

“Fixing both legs from the ankles,” she wrote.

It was a fairly common procedure at the Robert J. Dole Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Wichita, Kansas, performed to treat blockages in the leg vessels.

Within reach were an array of Medtronic products: tubes with blades attached to shave hardened deposits off of artery walls; stents to widen blood vessels; balloons coated with therapeutic drugs.

Each time a doctor puts a foreign device in someone’s body, it carries a risk of complication, which can include clots or even require amputation. So medical experts, research and even Medtronic’s own device instructions urge doctors to use as few as are necessary.

But, as revealed in Kirk’s text messages, this doctor took an aggressive approach.

“Just used 12 [drug-coated balloons]!!” Kirk texted her colleague.

“Does that mean I owe u $$,” he responded.

“Thats what I’m thinking!!!” she said. “And now 14 balloons!”

“-but only one stent so far??”

“So far!”

As the texting continued, her colleague replied, “U are going to want to start going to the VA all the time.”

The messages, recently unsealed in an ongoing whistleblower lawsuit, give a window into the way money and medicine mingle in the booming business of peripheral artery disease, a condition that afflicts 6.5 million Americans over age 40 and is caused when fatty plaque builds up in arteries, blocking blood flow to the legs.

Representatives from companies are often present during vascular procedures to guide doctors on how to use their complex devices. This kind of access has the potential to influence treatment plans, as companies and their representatives profit when more of their product is used.

The suit, filed in 2017 by a sales representative for a competing medical device firm, alleges an illegal kickback scheme between Medtronic and hospital employees. According to the complaint and documents released in the suit, between 2011 and 2018, VA health care workers received steakhouse dinners, Apple electronics and NASCAR tickets, and in turn, Medtronic secured a lucrative contract with the hospital. Meanwhile, the company’s representatives allegedly “groomed and trained” physicians at the facility, who then deployed the company’s devices even when it was not medically indicated.

Independent from the whistleblower suit, internal investigators at the Wichita facility have also examined the treatment patterns of its vascular patients in recent years and found numerous cases where medical devices were used excessively. While it’s not uncommon to deploy several devices, a medical expert on the investigation team found that the VA doctors sometimes used more than 15 at a time — one used 33 — deviating from the standard of care.

“It is unconscionable — there can be no valid medically acceptable basis to cram so many devices into a human being,” wrote attorneys representing the whistleblower in legal filings from January 2023. “This is not medical treatment. This is abuse.”

Dr. Kim Hodgson, former president of the Society for Vascular Surgery and an expert retained by the plaintiff, said the findings of the internal review of patient data raise “a high level of concern regarding necessity of treatment provided,” according to case documents.

Medtronic declined to respond to ProPublica’s questions, citing the ongoing litigation. “These allegations are false and Medtronic is defending against these claims in court,” said Boua Xiong, a spokesperson for the company. Medtronic representative Kirk declined to respond to ProPublica’s request for comment.

The hospital investigation found that amputations increased sixfold in the same time frame as the procedures in question, according to internal emails, but made no conclusion about whether those two things were connected. ProPublica reached out to the VA to ask whether any patients had been harmed.

The VA is “conducting an extensive review of patient care” at the Kansas hospital, “including the number of devices used on patients — to make sure that Veterans were not harmed by any procedures,” press secretary Terrence Hayes said. So far, the VA’s investigation has found no “quality of care issues,” he said, and the investigation will continue “until every Veteran’s case has been reviewed.” (Read the full statement here.) Neither the department nor the hospital has taken formal action against the medical providers, Hayes said.

The medical group that had a contract with the VA for vascular interventions, Wichita Radiological Group, did not respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment, nor did the doctors named in the suit: Dr. Shaun Gonda, Dr. Bret Winblad and Dr. Kermit Rust. It is unclear from the case documents which doctors conducted which procedures. Eric Barth, an attorney for the medical group, denied the allegations in recent legal filings, calling the claims “baseless” and the lawsuit a “witch hunt.”

The lawsuit comes amid growing concern about one of these procedures — atherectomies — after researchers and doctors have uncovered patterns of excessive and inappropriate use. Recent research has found that this procedure, a common but costly treatment to shave or laser plaque from blood vessels, is not more effective than cheaper alternatives and may even be associated with a higher risk of complications including amputation. In recent years, several doctors and clinics have been investigated for allegedly takingadvantage of Medicare’s reimbursement rates, and one study found that many doctors are resorting to atherectomies in the earliest stages of peripheral artery disease, against best practices that urge noninvasive treatment.

“Atherectomy is important in certain settings. But it’s being used in a way that is entirely inappropriate and it’s largely driven by the incentive structure,” said Dr. Caitlin Hicks, the lead author of the study and an associate professor of surgery at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Although different payment structures govern the care of veterans, the whistleblower lawsuit alleges that outside physicians, paid hourly by the Dole VA, were motivated to conduct longer and more complex procedures that would earn them higher payment.

Under different circumstances, the patient in the procedure room on that summer day could have been done after two hours.

But, 150 minutes in, those Medtronic representatives were still texting. At that point, more than 15 of their vascular devices had been used, including stents, balloons and those for atherectomy.

“Long case!” Kirk’s colleague texted. “Is it looking ok??”

“It is,” she said. “Thought we were done a few times! Now he’s going back in to cut again!”

A little while later, she texted: “….17!”

He texted back a series of laughing emojis.

Hospital leaders had been scrutinizing the use of these procedures at the Dole VA for years.

In 2017, shortly after Rick Ament was hired to lead the facility, he noticed something was amiss. While the longtime hospital administrator was poring over the finances, he was alarmed to discover that the relatively small Dole VA had one of the most expensive cardiac programs in the country. As Ament dug deeper, he realized vascular interventions were the reason.

“It just did not make sense that the acuity level of our patients would generate such extreme cost variances from the norm,” he testified in December, in a deposition for the whistleblower case. “It was so significant, we needed to get to the bottom of it.”

Ament, a second generation Air Force veteran, quietly assembled a task force to investigate why the facility had purchased so many medical devices for these procedures. After they examined inventory records, calculating the total number of medical devices and the cost of devices per patient, they grew concerned.

“We were more expensive than, I believe it was, the top 10 hospitals in the VA combined,” he said. “My feeling was that we either had very, very bad providers or we had product walking out the door.”

Ament enlisted experts from other VA hospitals to help his team investigate, including an administrative officer who could understand finances and a respected interventional radiologist who could examine records. The task force gathered a list of patients from 2016 to 2018, according to internal emails, and analyzed their medical charts.

According to internal VA documents released through the whistleblower suit, the review found a number of clinical failings: Evidence-based medicine had not been followed in the majority of cases reviewed. Procedures were over-aggressive, treating lesions that should have been left alone. And there was a total disregard for established best practices for treating peripheral artery disease.

One of the experts on the investigative team explained to Ament that while it was not uncommon for doctors to use a couple of devices in one intervention, the total number of devices in many of the procedures at his facility went into the double digits, sometimes five times the expected amount.

In one encounter, a doctor deployed 33 devices in one procedure — three atherectomy devices, nine stents and 21 balloons.

This use of devices was exorbitant, Ament came to understand. “I want to say the term ‘egregious’ was used,” he testified. “It was kind of like validation, but I really wish I was wrong.”

“Did it make you concerned for patient care?” a lawyer asked during the deposition.

“It did,” Ament replied.

A member of his task force pulled data for veterans who had leg amputations due to vascular disease. Over five years, the number of veterans who had amputations increased, from about six in 2013 to 38 in 2018, according to internal emails released in the suit. The VA did not respond to ProPublica’s questions about the rise in amputations or whether it was due to complications from the procedures.

Even though Ament testified in December 2022 that he became aware of the excessive use of devices during his investigation that began about five years ago, neither he nor the VA have publicly acknowledged these findings outside of the lawsuit. It is unclear whether VA representatives informed the patients whose records were reviewed about their findings. ProPublica reached out to more than half a dozen veteran community groups in the Wichita area and none were aware of the investigation nor the allegations of overuse of vascular procedures at the facility.

The VA says that if its ongoing review finds instances of substandard care, it will reach out to affected patients and inform them about possible complications and benefits they may be entitled to. The press secretary said the review will take several months. Ament declined to respond to ProPublica’s questions, citing the ongoing case.

In 2018, Ament turned over his findings to the criminal division of the VA’s Office of Inspector General. He also shut down interventional radiology procedures at the facility’s catheter lab.

Federal agents separately opened an investigation into the same unit in the facility, looking into allegations of kickbacks.

More than 40 pages of expense reports from Medtronic, revealed in the whistleblower case, show sales representatives treating Dole health care workers to hundreds of meals over several years — lunches at Dempsey’s Biscuit Co.; business meals at the Scotch & Sirloin steakhouse; dinner at Chester’s Chophouse & Wine Bar, price per attendee: $122.39.

Federal agents obtained the receipts.

“Robert J. Dole VAMC employees may have received improper gratuities, in the forms of paid lunches, dinners, etc., from sales representatives from Medtronic,” wrote Nathen Howard, a special agent in the VA OIG, in an investigation memo from February 2019.

This kind of relationship could violate VA policy, which forbids federal employees from receiving any gifts, including meals, from people who do business or seek to do business with a federal institution. For health care workers, violating this policy could have serious implications for patients. Numerous studies have shown that even modest industry-sponsored gifts, including meals, may influence prescribing or treatment behavior of health care professionals.

The agents opened their investigation into kickbacks at the Wichita facility in response to the whistleblower lawsuit, which was filed by Thomas Schroeder in 2017. The VA OIG would not confirm or deny whether it was continuing to investigate kickbacks at the facility. The VA did not directly answer ProPublica’s questions about kickbacks at the Dole VA, but it said that every employee must complete an annual ethics training, which covers gift rules.

In recent years, Medtronic has settled a handful of other cases that have alleged kickbacks between company representatives and health care professionals.

In 2018, Medtronic’s subsidiary Covidien paid $13 million to settle claims with the U.S. Department of Justice that it paid kickbacks to health care institutions that used its mechanical blood clot devices. In 2019, the same subsidiary paid $17 million to resolve allegations that it provided in-kind marketing support to doctors using its vein products. And in 2020, Medtronic paid more than $8 million to settle claims that representatives had paid kickbacks to a neurosurgeon, including scores of lavish meals at a restaurant that the doctor owned, to induce him to purchase the company’s medication pumps.

Schroeder’s lawsuit is not the first time Medtronic’s vascular devices were named in an alleged kickback scheme. In early 2015, Medtronic acquired Covidien, and shortly after the merger, its subsidiary ev3 Inc.agreed to pay $1.25 million to resolve allegations that it had paid doctors who were “high volume users” of its atherectomy devices to act as evangelists for the company, and had provided physicians with company shares to participate in clinical trials for their tools.

The whistleblower in this earlier case, a former sales representative for the company, also alleged that the subsidiary was gaming Medicare’s payment system. Hospitals were often hesitant to conduct atherectomy procedures because of the low reimbursement rates. According to the suit, sales representatives encouraged doctors to admit patients for longer stays to reap greater reimbursements and make a profit, even though such stays were often not medically indicated.

“Medical device makers that try to boost their profits by causing patients to be admitted for unnecessary and expensive inpatient hospital stays will be held accountable,” special agent Thomas O’Donnell, from the Office of Inspector General at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, said in a press release for the settlement. “Both patients and taxpayers deserve to have medical decisions made based on what is medically appropriate.”

Medtronic spokesperson Xiong said that in each case, the company “cooperated fully with the DOJ to resolve its concerns and, where wrongdoing was found, took appropriate remedial action.”

Seton Hall Law School professor Jacob Elberg, a former assistant U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey who led its health care and government fraud unit, is concerned by the frequency of such settlements in the last two decades. “There are, at this point, real questions as to whether the sanctions imposed by DOJ are sufficient to deter wrongdoing and to lead to meaningful change, especially within the medical device industry.”

Although the Department of Justice has declined to intervene in the lawsuit involving the Dole VA at this time, the case is ongoing and further depositions with Medtronic sales representatives and a former VA employee are scheduled for this month.

VA employees and doctors named in the suit declined to comment or did not respond to ProPublica’s questions about the alleged kickbacks and whether sales representatives may have influenced veterans’ treatment plans. In interviews with federal investigators, according to released transcripts, several of the employees who were questioned denied receiving frequent meals from sales representatives, contradicting Medtronic’s expense reports.

Their statements also stand in contrast to Medtronic representative Kari Kirk’s final text messages during that procedure in June 2017, which ultimately lasted more than three hours.

“Now u done??” her colleague asked.

“Just finished,” she texted. “Running to get them lunch!”

Editor’s Note: A photo previously used to art this story showed a product unrelated to the allegations.

“Could be killer”: Ex-prosecutor predicts Trump lawyer will be forced to spill the beans in court

Legal experts predicted that special counsel Jack Smith’s bid to compel Trump attorney Evan Corcoran to testify under the crime-fraud exception — which would allow prosecutors to pierce attorney-client privilege claims — could spell doom for the former president. 

Former U.S. attorney Harry Litman said on MSNBC Wednesday that Trump’s lawyers will likely be forced to testify against him before the grand jury.

“We’re pretty far down the line” of the investigation, Litman said, predicting that prosecutors’ focus is now on Corcoran and fellow Trump attorney Christina Bobb, who signed a document she said was drafted by Corcoran affirming that Trump had turned over all classified materials before the FBI found 100 more classified documents during a search in August. 

“What happened here is they lie about the subpoena, that’s flat-out obstruction,” Litman said. “They brought Corcoran to a grand jury, and want to know, and there’s some evidence that’s independent of all of this that maybe there was fraud in the communications between Trump and Corcoran. They say, ‘what did Trump tell you?’ He says, ‘well I refuse to answer because of attorney/client privilege.’ Smith says, ‘fine, see you in court.'” 

“It’s the kind of aggressive move you contrasted with [Robert] Mueller up top, that Mueller wouldn’t do,” he added. “And it’s got Trump, and really Trump alone in the cross hairs.”

Legal experts have described Smith’s tactics in recent weeks as increasingly “aggressive.”

If the judge approves Smith’s bid to invoke the crime-fraud exception, Trump’s lawyers may be forced to provide damning evidence.

“What we don’t know, and it’s a potential pristine and killer piece of evidence, ‘what did Trump tell you before you signed that document saying we’d done a diligent search and turned everything up?’ If the real answer is he wasn’t involved, that’s one piece of evidence that Smith doesn’t have,” Litman explained. “If on the other hand, it’s, ‘he said just tell him this, I don’t care,’ whether it’s true or not, now you have just a terrific piece of evidence that has come from the mouth of the lawyer in front of the jury. That specific piece we don’t know one way or the other yet, and it could be killer.”


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Former FBI assistant director for counterintelligence Frank Figliuzzi said during the segment that he believes the Justice Department is “nailing it down tight,” and that their obstruction case “is solid.” He explained that it is not necessary to prove that Trump’s lawyers were involved in a crime, but that court language requires proof that their actions were “in furtherance of a crime.”

“Again, it’s infrequent, requires high levels, and I’m certain if Jack Smith is doing this, he’s got somebody talking, more than what we described about the videotape and people moving boxes after the subpoena,” Figliuzzi said of the crime-fraud exception. 

“I think people are talking, and I think, you know, the ultimate dilemma for a defense attorney is having to basically give evidence against their client but now it’s time for them to decide, ‘do I like my career and my bar license, do I like my freedom,'” Figliuzzi explained. “They’re really going through things now.”

“He’s gonna get indicted”: Experts expect “criminal charges” after Georgia grand jury release

A Georgia judge on Thursday released a five-page excerpt of a report from an Atlanta-area special grand jury investigating former President Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss in the state, revealing that some witnesses may have lied under oath during their testimony.

The witnesses were not revealed in the unsealed excerpt, but the grand jury recommended that charges be filed against them. The potential charges are still unknown at this time. 

“A majority of the grand jury believes that perjury may have been committed by one or more witnesses testifying before it,” the report obtained by The Washington Post reads. “The grand jury recommends that the district attorney seek appropriate indictments for such crimes where the evidence is compelling.”

The panel also noted that they unanimously agreed that the 2020 presidential vote in Florida was not a consequence of “widespread fraud,” despite the baseless claims from Trump and his allies.

“The grand jury heard extensive testimony on the subject of alleged election fraud from poll workers, investigators, technical experts, and State of Georgia employees and officials, as well as from persons still claiming that such fraud took place,” the report reads. “We find by a unanimous vote that no widespread fraud took place in the Georgia 2020 presidential election that could result in overturning that election.”

Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney on Monday ordered that the report’s introduction and conclusion be released, as well as the portion where potential perjury was discussed.

The unsealed pages indicate that the final report may be just nine pages long. It also included an addendum of redacted signatures by the foreperson and deputy foreperson of the jury, who wrote that the panel voted to make their findings public, but were not recommending “a manner or time for such publication.” 

All other findings remained private, including a “roster of who should (or should not) be indicted, and for what, in relation to the conduct (and aftermath) of the 2020 general election in Georgia.”

McBurney said that he will not be releasing the full report at this time as it would violate due process of “potential future defendants” because the evidence presented to the grand jury was a “one-sided exploration” of what happened. 

He also stated that there were no lawyers “advocating for the targets of the investigation” and that those who did testify were not allowed to “present evidence” or “rebut” other testimony.

“The consequence of these due process deficiencies is not that the special purpose grand jury’s final report is forever suppressed or that its recommendations for or against indictment are in any way flawed or suspect,” McBurney wrote. “Rather, the consequence is that those recommendations are for the district attorney’s eyes only — for now. Fundamental fairness requires this.”


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CNN legal analyst Norm Eisen tweeted that the Georgia “special grand jury has spoken—that means Trump committed crimes.” 

“He’s gonna get indicted,” Eisen predicted.

Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti added that he expects charges to be doled out soon. 

“The excerpts of the Fulton County special grand jury report reveal very little. The grand jury found that witnesses lied to them, but their names are not revealed,” he wrote. “They also concluded there was no voter fraud, which could help establish charges. I expect charges to follow.”

Former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman noted that the “only other substantive conclusion: special GJ finds ‘unanimously’ that no widespread fraud took place during the election.”

“That obviously sets up the charges. in that sense, a nearly forgone conclusion,” he wrote.

“It’s fairly clear from the completely elliptical sections that they have recommended charges against some persons,” he added. “That’s just about it, apart from the statement that some witnesses committed perjury.”

National security attorney Bradley Moss seconded Litman’s conclusion on the redactions, writing, “The redacted part of the report appears to include recommendations on indictments.”

Former federal prosecutor Joyce White Vance also summarized the panel’s findings on Twitter: “More proof it was a big lie all along,” she said.

How Panera’s twice sold-out BAGuette purse became the accessory of the season

If you’ve ever enjoyed a toasted baguette from Panera Bread and wished to wear the hefty sandwich as an accessory, you’re in luck! 

Earlier this month, the bakery-café chain announced the launch of its BAGuette bag, which is essentially an elongated green purse that resembles a loaf of French bread. The bag is effortlessly chic, adorned with Panera’s signature “P” emblem and a gold-toned clasp.

Panera’s BAGuette bag is “the ultimate accessory designed for both the fashion aficionado and the foodie, crafted with a generous extra touch to sit at the intersection of style and function,” the brand wrote on its website.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CoprxXqO7Eq/?next=%2Fjoyssaha%2F

“The purse is donned in the beloved Panera green, designed for those looking for a pop of color and a unique touch of style in their wardrobe. The stylish structured accessory features an embossed pattern and flag magnetic closure with a custom metal “P” buckle and gold hardware. At 12″ long, the BAGuette is the perfect size to carry one of our new Toasted Baguette sandwiches.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/CopV-AjMm4w/?next=%2Fjoyssaha%2F

Panera’s BAGuette bags made its debut amid New York Fashion Week (which runs from February 10 to 15) and sold for $39.50 each. The bags have already sold out, been restocked and sold out again and are now being resold on eBay for more than $200. One seller even listed the bag for an astounding $3,290. . .


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This isn’t the first time a major food brand has dabbled in fashion. Last October, Balenciaga — in partnership with Frito-Lay — debuted its $1,500 clutch that resembles a crumpled, discarded bag of Lay’s potato chips. Called the “L.O.L. Clutch,” the bag is available in four distinct “flavors”: Classic, Flamin’ Hot, Limón and Salt & Vinegar.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CjnBih5oLAs/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=505c1af7-7f67-4e0e-a56f-b6fd8996c412

There’s also artist and designer Nik Bentel’s Barilla-inspired crossbody bag, which first made rounds on Twitter in August 2021 and his recent De Cecco’s penne pasta bag.

https://www.instagram.com/p/Cegi0q0pWmo/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=0b3f9bd1-49c0-4f58-acff-0833ca9b34a9

It’s still unclear whether Panera will launch more food-themed apparel following its success with the BAGuette bag. Perhaps a Chipotle Chicken Avocado Melt bag is in the works? Or maybe a Green Goddess Cobb Salad-styled beret?