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11 easy dinner recipes for when it’s been a loooong week

As a line cook, I spent most of my time making dinner for other people, some time thinking about cooking for myself, and no time ever actually preparing dinner at home. When I stopped cooking in restaurants, this equation changed, slightly. While I now give myself time to make dinner at home, most nights I’m not that interested in spending more than thirty minutes in my kitchen. (I guess Rachael Ray had it right all along.)

For me, weeknight dinners should be enjoyable to eat, but always easy to make. Though the possibility of the occasional weeknight kitchen catastrophe will never quite disappear, I can confidently report that the 11 recipes below will make easy, delicious meals after even the worst of weekdays.

Our favorite easy weeknight meals

1. Pesto Risotto for One with Shrimp

This risotto requires you to stand and stir for 18 minutes, and — according to the recipe developer — that pretty much counts as meditation. If mindfulness always produced a pesto and shrimp risotto, I’d practice it a lot more.

2. 30-Minute Roast Chicken

“A roast chicken! In 30 minutes!” This sounds like a scam, but it doesn’t taste or smell like one. A roast chicken is my perfect weeknight meal: It’s my immediate dinner, tomorrow’s lunch, and likely tomorrow’s dinner as well. Roasting a chicken is meal prepping, the relaxed way.

3. Overstuffed Chicken and Broccoli Quesadillas

Re: roast chicken being the gift that keeps on giving. This is the perfect recipe to turn your leftovers into something equally delicious, but completely different. If you don’t have roast chicken in your fridge, I implore you to try one of my signature moves: Pick up a rotisserie bird from the grocery store and claim to have made it from scratch.

4. Chickpea, Spinach, and Chorizo Frittata

Go ahead, call the meal police — I am having breakfast for dinner forever. This will remain especially true if “breakfast” is a frittata where chorizo, chickpeas, and spinach get to mingle.

5. Spicy Garlic Noodles with Crumbled Tofu and Cucumber Salad

I like this recipe because noodles are comfy, easy, and likely already in your pantry. Also, the contrast between the warm, garlic-heavy noodles and cold, bright cucumber salad makes each bite balanced and exciting. We like that.

6. Noodles with Tuna and Peas (“Tuna Pea Wiggle”)

According to the recipe developer, this dish was originally designed to be made with minimal equipment on a sailboat in the middle of the ocean. After a few grueling weekdays, my kitchen often shares similar utility. Make this dish when you think all is lost.

7. Weeknight Salmon with Baby New Potatoes and Fresh Dill by Joanna Gaines

Using just one sheet pan, make yourself perfectly tender potatoes and salmon. Top with dill and lemon for acid and freshness.

8. Chickpea Vegetable Bowl with Peanut Dressing

This bright, crunchy chickpea veggie bowl serves four and costs between $7 and $10 to make. It’s perfect on its own or as a base for fish, chicken, or tofu.

9. Weeknight Chicken Parm

Like a hug from a loved one, no one outgrows the comfort of chicken parm. This particular recipe comes together quickly (just 25 minutes), but doesn’t sacrifice any of the flavor you’d expect from homemade chicken parm.

10. One-Pot Kale and Quinoa Pilaf

I love this one-pot, veggie-forward pilaf because I can easily make a ton of it and then eat it for days on end without ever getting bored.

11. Chopped Kitchen Sink Salad with Yogurt Dressing and Bottarga

This recipe works as a template to transform any vegetables you have in your refrigerator into a bright and crisp salad. Top with bottarga — or even parmesan — to add a bit of umami.

Trump rages at McCarthy on Truth Social for defending “coward” Capitol cop who shot Ashli Babbitt

Former President Donald Trump on Thursday night slammed House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., for defending Lt. Michael Byrd, the Capitol Police officer who fatally shot Capitol rioter Ashli Babbitt on January 6th, 2021.

Hours after McCarthy said that Byrd was “doing his job” by trying to defend lawmakers from Trump-backed rioters on January 6th, Trump took to Truth Social to call out McCarthy for defending an officer whom Trump decried as a “thug.”

“I totally disagree with the Speaker of the House, Kevin McCarthy, in that the Police Officer ‘Thug,’ who has had a very checkered past to begin with, was not just “doing his job” when he shot and killed Great Patriot Ashli Babbitt at point blank range,” Trump said. “Despite trying to keep him anonymous, shielded, and protected, this MISFIT proudly showed up on NBC Fake Nightly News ‘bragging’ about the killing.”

Byrd never bragged about killing Babbitt, though he did say his actions were justified given the threat she was posing to lawmakers on January 6th.

Despite this, Trump ended his post with another attack on the officer.

“He was not a hero but a COWARD, who wanted to show how tough he was. ASHLI BABBITT WAS MURDERED!!!” he railed.

In fact, Ashli Babbitt was trying to break into House chamber on January 6th when lawmakers were still being evacuated. As she was crawling through a shattered window adjacent to a door that police had barricaded to prevent rioters from reaching members of Congress, Byrd shot her after warning her and other rioters to get back.

A Capitol Police investigation of the incident cleared Byrd of any wrongdoing.

Why some dogs love to sing along with humans

Droopy eared, long-faced Basset hounds may seem to have little in common with fluffy, wolf-like Alaskan malamutes, but both breeds share at least one notable trait: They love to howl. Other breeds like Pomeranians and Chihuahuas are equally vocal, albeit with yips and yowls rather than bellowing howls. Owners of vocal dogs may engage in the parlor trick of howling or singing in order to induce howls in their pet, much to the delight of their guests. Some so-called “singing” dogs have become YouTube famous for their talents.

So what makes these pack animals, not too far removed from wolves, engage in such overtly human behavior? And could dogs, in theory, genuinely enjoy ruffing along with the Baha Men’s “Who Let The Dogs Out?” — or would they would always simply be barking dogs?

Salon reached out to experts to answer questions like these and learned, among other things, that dog vocalization is a complicated science.

For one thing, as Florida veterinarian Dr. Doug Mader told Salon, it is a common mistake to assume that “howling” and “singing” are somehow one and the same thing.

“They are different scientifically,” explained Mader, author of “The Vet at Noah’s Ark,” by email. “Howling is a form of canine communication. Dogs will howl, especially across longer distances, and others will respond with their own howl. Dogs will also howl or vocalize to their owners in an attempt to communicate emotions such as hunger, fear, anxiety, etc.”

A 2009 study published in The Veterinary Journal says dogs seem to bark not for each other, but for human benefit.

“Singing,” by contrast, requires the qualities inherent to music like harmony, pitch, melody and tempo. Mader pointed to a recent study by researchers from the University of Vienna, and published by the Royal Society of Biological Sciences, which indicated that dogs modulate their vocalizations in ways extraordinarily similar to those performed by humans when they try to sing to music. This strongly suggests that, in their own inimitable canine fashion, dogs who appear to be singing are in fact doing exactly that.

But just because dogs can (perhaps) sing doesn’t mean they have perfect pitch.

“That said, limited data exists that supports a dog’s ability to perceive and interpret melodies,” Mader clarified. “Recordings of dogs ‘singing’ with their owners or to instruments clearly demonstrate that they can change their vocals. Whether or not this is deliberate or just random is not known.”


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Indeed, there is much that is not known about why dogs vocalize in the ways that they do. The challenge for every animal cognition scientist is that they cannot literally ask their subjects to explain why they make a certain sound in specific contexts. Yet scientists can conduct research which proves more narrow things. For example, a 2021 article in Current Zoology reports that dogs will whine in ways which companions find annoying because their owners unintentionally condition them by providing rewards after hearing those unpleasant sounds.

Moving from domestic contexts to the outdoors, a 2016 study by researchers from four countries and published in the scientific journal Behavioural Processes revealed that different wild canine species like coyotes, jackals and red wolves will modulate their howling in deliberate ways. This further suggests that canine species in general are able to use specific types of vocalizations based on what types of animals they are around, indicating that they have an inner self which might in other contexts be vocalized in a manner construable as “singing.”

“Howling is a form of canine communication… Singing” by contrast, requires the qualities inherent to music like harmony, pitch, melody and tempo.

Dogs may also have more surreptitious uses for their vocalizations. Researchers publishing in 2021 in the scientific journal Current Zoology found that dogs may utilize ultra-high frequency vocalizations in order avoid the ears of potentially prying outsiders. These seem to be specific for intended “tete-a-tete” conversations with their preferred pack members. This again suggests that, both with other dogs and with humans, dogs will intentionally adjust how they use their vocal organs — in other words, dogs are code-switching. While this does not prove that dogs intentionally sing along with people, it at least demonstrates both that dog vocalizations are sophisticated and that dogs are able to exercise agency in how they use their voices.

Nowhere is this more evident than in how dogs bark. A 2009 study published in The Veterinary Journal says dogs seem to bark not for each other, but for human benefit. Different varieties of barking have emerged so that dogs can directly and acoustically communicate their needs to humans across short distances. While a noisier animal might be less effective at surviving if it had to catch its own prey, certain dogs’ that live with humans would not need to worry as much about staying quiet. Instead they would evolve to intuitively figure out how to vocalize their needs to humans with three basic types of barks (aggressive, playful and fearful). Children as young as five years old have shown some instinctive ability to differentiate between the three and associate them with the dogs’ inner states. By the age of eight, children are on par with adults in understanding basic barking signals.

Similarly, as the authors of the study pointed out, any casual observer can notice distinct differences between how different breeds tend to bark. “We know that some breeds do not (or only rarely) show any propensity to bark (for example, the Basenji, Chow–chow, Shar-pei), whereas others bark excessively,” the authors write.

“There are reports of them howling — aka singing — in the forests and highlands. These vocalizations are likely similar to those of the wolf, for long-distance communication and for social revelry.”

In the case of a very special type of wild dog, however, there is no question that their vocalizations are more than mere barking or howling: New Guinea singing dogs, which until 2020 had been believed to have been extinct in the wild for the previous half-century. They are ancient domestic dogs indigenous to Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, and which live in free-roaming communities.

“There are reports of them howling — aka singing — in the forests and highlands,” Molly H. Sumridge of Kindred Companions LLC, a former assistant professor of anthrozoology at Carroll College, told Salon by email. “These vocalizations are likely similar to those of the wolf, for long-distance communication and for social revelry.” Sumridge also described how owners of New Guinea singing dogs report their animals “harmoniz[ing] with songs sung or played on the radio or TV. They also sing when someone leaves or arrives, and sometimes just to state an opinion. When multiple singing dogs are together they will harmonize with each other. Other dogs tend to join in too. These moments are quite moving and leave most owners to pause and enjoy.”

She added that, in her own research, “something beautiful I frequently witness is the closeness of these dogs and their owners.”

If you want that kind of relationship with your own pooch, you might listen to Dr. Mader who referred Salon to a Scottish SPCA study which found that all forms of music are soothing to animals — but that, if one is to pay attention to trends, reggae and soft rock tend to be particular favorites.

2 GOPers caught trashing “stupidest vote in the world” — then beg reporters not to tell leadership

Two House Republicans on Thursday were overheard trashing the GOP’s vote to remove Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., from the Foreign Relations Committee.

The House voted 218-211 down party lines to remove Omar from the panel, ostensibly over her 2019 comments about the influence of wealthy Jewish Americans on U.S. politics that drew allegations of antisemitism. Democrats denounced the vote as “political revenge” after Democrats previously booted Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., from committees for appearing to endorse violence against Democratic lawmakers.

Despite joining their party in voting to remove Omar, two Republicans were overheard trashing the stunt afterward.

Rep. Ken Buck, R-Colo., who sits on the Foreign Affairs panel, was overheard by reporters on an elevator calling it the “stupidest vote in the world,” according to Roll Call.

Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, agreed and said that all it did was make Omar a “martyr,” according to the report.

“They both also agreed that it was simply a retaliatory vote in response to Democrats removing certain Republicans from committees in the 117th Congress,” Roll Call’s Rachel Oswald reported, adding that the two Republicans then asked their fellow passengers in the elevator to “not let leadership know their thoughts.”

Buck and other Republican holdouts that had groused about the move ultimately voted with their party. He previously said that he “opposed” removing Omar, arguing the party “should not engage in this tit for tat.”

Reps. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., and Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., also opposed the vote but both flipped on the issue and voted to oust Omar after McCarthy apparently assuaged their concerns about due process, according to the Washington Examiner.

Republicans that voted to oust Omar also faced accusations of hypocrisy. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., called out Republicans for booting Omar while elevating Greene, who has espoused conspiracy theories about Jewish people controlling the weather.

“Don’t tell me that this is about a condemnation of anti-Semitic remarks when you have a member of the Republican caucus who has talked about Jewish space lasers and also elevated her to some of the highest committee assignments in this body,” Ocasio-Cortez said on the House floor. “This is about targeting women of color in the United States of America.”

Ocasio-Cortez added that she “didn’t get a single apology” after her “life was threatened,” referring to an animated video posted by Gosar showing her being killed with a sword.

Gosar and Greene also both attended the America First Political Action Conference hosted by far-right white nationalist Nick Fuentes, who has repeatedly praised Hitler.

“Today’s vote is not a reflection of Representative Omar, but on the rank hypocrisy of Republican leadership, which has used its power to exact revenge on their political opponents and, in the case of Omar, punish a Member to satisfy the extreme MAGA wing of their party,” Rep. Gregory Meeks, D-Fla., the top Democrat on the Foreign Affairs Committee, said in a statement.


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Meeks said that if the vote is to punish a member for antisemitism, it “should be condemning Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene – of ‘Jewish space lasers’ fame – for spreading conspiracies that ‘Zionist supremacists” are flooding Europe with migrants to replace white populations. It should be condemning Rep. Miller for quoting Adolf Hitler in Congressional remarks, or Rep. Gosar for inviting a Holocaust denier to the State of the Union. This resolution should be condemning Speaker McCarthy himself for his November 6th tweet accusing three Jewish men of buying the election, an antisemitic dog whistle about Jewish money buying elections.”

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., also questioned why Republican leaders haven’t “denounced any of the things that have been said by their members.”

“Marjorie Taylor Greene has been rewarded with a seat on the Homeland Security Committee. You can’t make this up,” he added. “This type of poisonous, toxic double standard is going to complicate the relationship moving forward between House Democrats and Republicans.”

A coalition of liberal Jewish groups also accused McCarthy of hypocrisy while opposing the vote in December.

“McCarthy’s pledge seems especially exploitative in light of the rampant promotion of antisemitic tropes and conspiracy theories by him and his top deputies amid a surge in dangerous right-wing antisemitism,” the statement said “He posted (and later deleted) a tweet charging that George Soros and two other billionaires of Jewish descent were seeking to ‘buy’ an election. His newly elected Whip Tom Emmer said the same people ‘essentially bought control of Congress.’ Meanwhile, Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik has promoted the deadly antisemitic ‘Great Replacement’ conspiracy theory.”

Omar on Thursday argued that she was singled out by the GOP because of racism.

“I am Muslim, I am an immigrant, and interestingly, from Africa,” Omar said. “Is anyone surprised that I am being targeted? Is anyone surprised that I am somehow deemed unworthy to speak about American foreign policy, or that they see me as a powerful voice that needs to be silenced?”

Tyre Nichols and American traditions: How do we give kids “The Talk” about police now?

Violence against Black people is an American tradition. If we don’t fully acknowledge this terrible part of our past and present, then we will continue to pass that same violence and hate down to our children. 

What parents would be OK with passing violence and hate down to their children? The answer is in the millions, apparently, as we keep hearing stories about innocent Black people being killed by cops and yet still refuse to take meaningful action as a society to prevent it.

Tyre Nichols, a young Black man, a photographer and a FedEx employee, was beaten by five Black cops during a traffic stop in Memphis on January 7 and died days later from his injuries. While we are outraged — as we are always outraged by state-sanctioned violence — we must acknowledge that the killing of Mr. Nichols by the police is as American as football or apple pie.

It’s a tradition, as I will explain to my child. I will be teaching my daughter to stay as far away from police officers as possible. Don’t call them, don’t rely on them, don’t acknowledge them. The people in our household do not negotiate with terrorists. That’s my version of The Talk. 

The Talk is a set of instructions for dealing with the police that Black parents give to their Black children, like “always comply” and “keep your hands in sight.” And no matter what, always — always — be respectful. Even if they disrespect you at the highest level, you have to be on your best behavior. Turn the other cheek. Be Dr. King.

I never really got The Talk, thank God. Instead, my dad would make jokes like, “When the cops looking for me I go play hide and seek! Come catch me, bastard!” He believed that it was better to die on your feet than to live on your knees. Dad never told me to comply or negotiate with uniformed terrorists. He told me cops were clowns for the most part, with fragile egos. “No one is more dangerous than a man with a fragile ego,” he’d say.  

I’m going to attempt to explain those egos and how they fit into this system to my daughter every year as she grows older and gains more understanding. But sometimes I wonder if it really matters. Do the lessons work? The Talk feels like such a crapshoot when the culture of violence we have upheld historically allows police officers to do what they want to Black people. 

Dad never told me to comply or negotiate with uniformed terrorists.

Tyre was also a father and the actions of those cops will forever have a negative impact on his child’s life. He could have received all of The Talks in the world, and he is still not here. His death, captured on video, proves it doesn’t really matter if you always comply or if you keep your hands in sight.

For those who may not be outraged by that — because a police officer never hurt you, or because you are a cop (one of the “good ones”) or because you think this only happens to street thugs who don’t comply, who deserve it — I encourage you to read the personal statement on Mr. Nichols’ photography website. “I mostly do this stuff for fun but i enjoy it very much,” he wrote. “Photography helps me look at the world in a more creative way. It expresses me in ways i cannot write down for people. … My vision is to bring my viewers deep into what i am seeing through my eye and out through my lens.” The people we turn into hashtags after they are killed are still people with dreams and goals and ambitions and people who loved them. Tyre was surrounded by love.

Nichols was 6-feet, 3 inches tall but weighed only about 150 pounds, due to his Crohn’s disease. This paper-thin man was tasered, pepper sprayed, handcuffed, and beaten so badly by police officers that he died of his injuries, after being stopped for allegedly reckless driving. That was his death sentence. He wasn’t a drug kingpin waving an automatic weapon at a crowd of people, or out snatching purses from elderly women. He was just driving. The video of his horrific lynching was recently released by Memphis authorities. It’s all over the Internet, but I highly recommend that you not watch it. Watching the video will not bring Mr. Nichols back, but it will create new trauma, recycling the violence that poisoned those officers enough to make them think beating a handcuffed person — or any person — is justifiable. 

While I believe the indicted cops — Tadarrius Bean, Demetrius Haley, Emmitt Martin III, Desmond Mills Jr. and Justin Smith — are equally disgusting as individuals, the culture that keeps creating officers like them is much worse. It’s a culture that prides itself on beating, destroying and even killing Black lives. I want to be extremely clear: I am not making excuses for the officers. But even if they ended up serving 750 years under a jail, it wouldn’t bring Mr. Nichols back. And it would not stop us from passing down the culture of accepted police violence toward Black people to our children.

The five cops who have been arrested for killing Mr. Nichols were a part of Memphis PD’s special SCORPION unit, which was created to combat violent crime. (I’m sure targeting an artist who doubled as a FedEx employee needed to be a top priority.) The unit has since been dismantled, which is normal after viral killings that receive national attention. Memphis Police Chief Cerelyn “CJ” Davis condemned the actions of the officers quickly and fired them. They face second-degree murder charges, among others. Indictments for cops are rare in these incidents, so rare we have to acknowledge it when we talk to our kids about how the system functions. It normally doesn’t work toward justice, but this time it’s moving efficiently. Are we experiencing change? 

At the same time, the question of whether these particular cops were fired so quickly because they are Black is spreading. It’s an understandable complaint. But in this case, we need to focus on how quickly the officers were charged, and also wait to see if they will be convicted. We saw Baltimore officers quickly charged in the death of Freddie Gray, after all, and three of those six officers were Black. Those cops are all free now. They were never really held accountable. So there’s that. Police culture, including our inability to hold police officers accountable, is killing us. Black people like me who grew up in neighborhoods policed by Black officers understand they are often as just terrible as the white cops. So while we do want all crooked cops to be brought to justice, the focus needs to be on the crooked system that too often demonizes people who look like Mr. Nichols. 

How many more hashtags will it take before we nix the “bad apple” narrative? Before we stop saying stupid things like “cops need better training” and really do something to honor victims like Mr. Nichols — and Breonna Taylor, Michael Brown, Alton Sterling, Freddie Gray, Eric Garner, George Floyd, Rekia Boyd, and the long list of Black names who died because of reckless law enforcement violence? 

How long before our governments, before these police departments all over the country, before those dirty police unions, and all of the perpetrators involved admit to the structural racism in their organizations? To their own racism and self-hate? Before they acknowledge the way they terrorize Black communities, and then beg to make amends for the harm that they have done, and will continue to do? Only then will we be able to begin the work to stop violence against innocent Black people and from that poison being passed down to our children. 

Nope, coffee won’t give you extra energy. It’ll just borrow a bit that you’ll pay for later

Many of us want (or should I say need?) our morning coffee to give us our “get up and go.” Altogether, the people of the world drink more than 2 billion cups of coffee each day.

You might think coffee gives you the energy to get through the morning or the day — but coffee might not be giving you as much as you think.

The main stimulant in coffee is caffeine, and the main way caffeine works is by changing the way the cells in our brain interact with a compound called adenosine.

Getting busy, getting tired

Adenosine is part of the system that regulates our sleep and wake cycle, and part of why high levels of activity lead to tiredness. As we go about our days and do things, levels of adenosine rise because it is released as a byproduct as energy is used in our cells.

Eventually, adenosine binds to its receptor (parts of cells that receive signals), which tells the cells to slow down, making us feel drowsy and sleepy. This is why you feel tired after a big day of activity. While we are sleeping, energy use drops, lowering adenosine levels as it gets shuffled back into other forms. You wake up in the morning feeling refreshed. Well, if you get enough sleep that is.

If you are still feeling drowsy when you wake up caffeine can help — for a while. It works by binding to the adenosine receptor, which it can do because it is a similar shape. But it is not so similar that it triggers the drowsy slowdown signal like adenosine does. Instead, it just fills the spots and stops the adenosine from binding there. This is what staves off the drowsy feeling.

No free ride

But there is a catch: While it feels energizing, this little caffeine intervention is more a loan of the awake feeling rather than a creation of any new energy.

This is because the caffeine won’t bind forever, and the adenosine that it blocks doesn’t go away. So, eventually, the caffeine breaks down, lets go of the receptors and all that adenosine that has been waiting and building up latches on and the drowsy feeling comes back — sometimes all at once.

So, the debt you owe the caffeine always eventually needs to be repaid, and the only real way to repay it is to sleep.

Timing is everything

How much free adenosine is in your system that hasn’t attached to receptors yet — and how drowsy you are as a consequence — will impact how much the caffeine you drink wakes you up. So, the coffee you drink later in the day, when you have more drowsy signals, your system may feel more powerful.

If it’s too late in the day, caffeine can make it hard to fall asleep at bedtime. The “half-life” of caffeine (how long it takes to break down half of it) is about five hours. That said, we all metabolize caffeine differently, so for some of us, the effects wear off more quickly. Regular coffee drinkers might feel less of a caffeine “punch,” with tolerance to the stimulant building up over time.

Caffeine can also raise levels of cortisol, a stress hormone that can make you feel more alert. This might mean caffeine feels more effective later in the morning because you already have a natural rise in cortisol when you wake up. The impact of a coffee right out of bed might not seem as powerful for this reason.

If your caffeinated beverage of choice is also a sugary one, this can exacerbate the peak and crash feeling. Because while sugar does create actual energy in the body, the free sugars in your drink can cause a spike in blood sugar, which can then make you feel tired when the dip comes afterward.

While there is no proven harm of drinking coffee on an empty stomach, coffee with or after a meal might hit you more slowly. This is because the food might slow down the rate at which the caffeine is absorbed.

What about a strong tea or fizzy cola?

Coffee, of course, isn’t the only caffeinated beverage that can loan you some energy.

The caffeine in tea, energy drinks and other beverages still impacts the body in the same way. But, since the ingredients mostly come from plants, each caffeinated beverage has its own profile of additional compounds, which can have their own stimulant effect or interact with caffeine to change its impact.

Caffeine can be useful, but it isn’t magic. To create energy and reenergize our bodies we need enough food, water and sleep.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CnnSc1lvLgC/

Emma Beckett, Senior Lecturer (Food Science and Human Nutrition), School of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle

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

Sorry, Joe Biden, Kevin McCarthy is not a “decent man”: Today’s GOP are fascists, not your friends

President Joe Biden is a fundamentally good man. He is also far from perfect and appears comfortable with that fact. He is not a messiah; he is a man who can admit when he is wrong. I admire that trait and take it as a sign of maturity and hard-won character.

Biden has suffered great tragedy in his life but maintains a positive view of our humanity and capacity for good. He has committed most of his adult life to public service. He is a patient and loving father. He loves his animal family members. Biden stands by his troubled son and is not afraid to show compassion and love for him even as cruel critics mock him for doing so. He is a loving husband. He struggles with severe stuttering and is a role model for children and adults who have that challenge.

Unlike many politicians – especially his immediate predecessor — I have no doubt that Biden possesses a sincere love for the nation. I disagree with Biden about some of his policies and political positions, both past and present. But I do believe that, at his core, he is guided by what he believes is best for the country.

But Biden has a huge blind spot, a willful one at this point, that is very vexing and frustrating for me and likely many of his other supporters. He is possessed by a nostalgia for a Washington D.C. that no longer exists.

Biden is obsessed with delusions of yesteryear where bipartisanship, comity, decency and respect for the institutions ruled both sides of the aisle in Congress. In this halcyon dream, Republicans and Democrats may have had their differences, but they were united during the Cold War against the Red Menace. 

Biden’s nostalgia for this past Washington D.C. colors his perceptions of current events. In reality,  that version of Washington is dead. The Republican Party, “movement conservatism”, Trumpism, Fox News, and the larger right-wing movement killed it. The technical language beloved by pundits, academics and other experts about “polarization” and “negative partisanship” is just a way of prettying up that basic ugly reality. Ultimately, today’s Republican Party does not believe in democracy. It is a criminal insurrectionist neofascist white supremacist “Christian” theocratic authoritarian political cult organization. As seen on Jan. 6 and the country’s ongoing democracy crisis, today’s Republican fascists and the larger white right and “conservative” movement are holding a (literal) dagger at the heart of American democracy – and Biden’s presidency as well.

Biden is a good man, a political pragmatist who desperately wants to find opportunities for alliances and “unity” with the Republican fascists with the goal of working together to make the country better.

Here is some real talk: There are very few “good” people left in today’s Republican Party. That is true of both the leadership and rank and file. Biden is a good man, a political pragmatist who desperately wants to find opportunities for alliances and “unity” with the Republican fascists with the goal of working together to make the country better. To save democracy, however, there can be no alliance or working together with fascists because to do so strengthens their evil cause.

Moreover, Biden appears to truly believe that today’s Republican Party and “conservative” movement are an aberration that can be fixed or otherwise rehabilitated. But as Rick Wilson, Joe Walsh, and other Never-Trumpers have repeatedly explained today’s Republican Party needs to be burned to the ground. Biden for whatever reason, appears unwilling to accept that reality.

On Tuesday, the president delivered a speech to a Democratic National Committee (DNC) fundraiser where he again surrendered to his dangerous nostalgia-driven blind spot. In the context of discussing Trump and the Republican Party’s failures abroad, Biden said:

And you think that what would happen is that there would be a little bit of, as we Catholics say, an epiphany in the Republican Party.  Well, instead it’s been the exact opposite.  They’ve just doubled down.

 Look at what the present leader of the Republican Party — a decent man, I think — McCarthy — look — look what he had to do.  He had to make commitments that are just absolutely off the wall for a Speaker of the House to make in terms of being able to become the Leader.

Biden then said this about the Republican Party:

So I don’t know what’s gone haywire here with this Republican Party.  But there’s two things that I think we have to run on: what we stand for, what we did, and what we need to do more of, and what we’re unwilling to do under any circumstances.

And part of that is to make clear to the Republican — to the country that we are not going to tolerate or put up with these MAGA Republicans, these Republicans in — you know, more than just — the Trump Republican Party.  Thirty percent of that — 30, 35 percent of that party is Trump’s party.  And he has a very different view. …

And there’s enough Republicans in the House of Representatives now who, on very critical things, will vote with Democrats when they start talking about the really crazy stuff.  But we can’t take our eye off the ball.  We can’t take our eye off the ball.

Who is this “decent man” Kevin McCarthy? What of this Republican Party that Biden believes is somehow distinct from Donald Trump and the MAGA movement?

The truth is Kevin McCarthy is an insurrectionist who supported Trump’s coup attempt on Jan. 6. McCarthy has given the “Freedom Caucus” de facto control over the House of Representatives by appointing conspiracists, white supremacists, fascists, and other political evildoers to key positions. McCarthy and the Republicans in Congress have promised to impeach Biden although he has committed no “high crimes” worthy of that or any other such punishment, and to conduct kangaroo court investigations into Nancy Pelosi, and other leading Democrats for their “crimes” and “treason,” i.e. daring to support democracy by opposing the Republican fascists and their movement.

Meanwhile, McCarthy and Republicans will continue to do whatever they can to protect their Dear Leader Donald Trump and themselves from being investigated or held criminally responsible for their role in the Jan. 6 coup attempt and attack on the Capitol. They are also escalating their war on American democracy by amplifying the Big Lie and supporting right-wing terrorism. They do not believe in science, rationality, empirical reality and have a gross disdain for learned expertise and intellectuals.

Across the country, the Republican Party is suppressing free speech and free thought by enacting thought crime laws. As part of that anti-democracy campaign, the Republicans and the larger white right are feverishly working to enact a new American apartheid that limits the voting and other civil rights of Black and brown people. McCarthy and the other Republicans in Congress support legislation that will further take away women’s reproductive rights and freedoms and turn them into the chattel and property of their husbands and other men. The Republican Party is in thrall to Christofascists and other White right-wing Christian extremists who want superior “rights” for people like them as they take away the human rights of LGBTQ people and other targeted groups.

McCarthy and the Republicans in Congress are holding the country’s financial well-being hostage by refusing to raise the debt ceiling as part of a plan to further gut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, and the social safety net more generally. If enacted these policies will kill millions of Americans. Yet they want to give more money to the plutocrats and other gangster capitalists by imposing a national sales tax that will disproportionately impact poor and working class people.


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Biden’s speech was crafted to fit his audience. They largely agree with Biden’s nostalgic vision for an America and a return to “normal” where the Republicans are “responsible” partners in governance. These beliefs and sentiments reflect the deeper systemic problems and legitimacy crisis that spawned Trumpism and the Republican fascist movement. The DNC and the other corporate-controlled “centrists” in both parties (and the American news media and political elite class more broadly) will not acknowledge that “normal” was not that great for most Americans.

There is also a convergence of interests among the Democratic Party and Republican Party donor class and other funders. Yes, they may be ideologically opposed to one another on many issues. But in the end, they are more alike than they are different.

The American people know that something is very wrong with the country’s politics and society – and leadership class. But the DNC and other elites are too often unresponsive to those concerns and demands. President Biden is a good man who could be a transformational leader. But if he continues to worship at the mantle of an America and D.C. politics that no longer exist then he risks becoming just a footnote, little more than a trivia answer about who the president was between Trump’s first term and his neofascist successors.

Call the “woke busters”: Ron DeSantis sends volunteer army to snatch books from students’ hands

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis may not want a reputation as a book banner, but that’s not slowing down the Republican’s efforts to knock as many books out of the hands of students, both college-age and younger. In fact, Florida Republicans’ war on reading is only escalating, with the GOP engaged in a full-scale gaslighting project to deny what is clearly a campaign of threats and intimidation to keep teachers from letting kids read. 

Last week, the investigative journalism team at Popular Info published a report showing that teachers in Florida are being told to lock up their classroom libraries or risk felony prosecution. Images of bookshelves being put behind barriers and stories of children crying quickly went viral. That’s when the gaslighting began.

The books that offend the “woke busters” are mostly written by women of color. 

DeSantis’ lieutenant and Florida Commissioner of Education, Manny Diaz Jr., called the story “fake news” and accused the teachers of overreacting. But, as Judd Legum of Popular Info confirmed in a follow-up report, “Diaz’s recommendations to teachers directly contradicts the training produced by his own agency,” which requires all books to be prescreened and warns that the censors must “err on the side of caution” when  deciding if a book fits the very right-wing definition of “harmful to minors.” As Legum points out, one author that has been frequently targeted by Republican censors is Pulitzer Prize winner Toni Morrison, making it clear that it’s not “pornography” that is in dispute here — which no one actually thinks teachers were providing — but internationally renowned literature. That explains why books about the Holocaust and Martin Luther King Jr. have also been frequently targeted by Republicans for bans. 

Meanwhile, as Republican politicians play “don’t believe your lying eyes” games, they are also amassing a volunteer army of wannabe censors who are ready to descend on schools to make sure no errant books slip past their anti-reading dragnet.

The Manatee Patriots, a right-wing group in Florida’s Manatee County, recently put out a recruitment call for “woke busters” to be the “eyes and ears and boots on the ground in the schools” to stop educators from “filling the libraries with these books.” It did not take much digging to discover that the “woke busters” have extremely broad ideas about what constitutes “inappropriate” reading material. Their parent group, Manatee Patriots, recently celebrated what they claim was a successful effort to force a public library to take down a display celebrating LGBTQ history. They objected to the library’s alliance with a local youth group that serves LGBTQ teens, claiming it’s “the first stage of Grooming” and “Porn” for the group to offer information to kids about safer sex.  


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“More things found in the Library,” their site breathlessly reads. The offensive materials they flagged? Michelle Obama’s memoir and a history of Barack Obama’s presidency.

Books flagged for banning include The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, The Prince and the Dressmaker by Jen Wang, and Monday’s Not Coming by Tiffany Jackson. 

Yep, they not only want to erase sex education but documented evidence that the U.S. once had a Black president. These are the folks who are worming their way into Florida schools, based on DeSantis’ censorship orders, to decide what students should be allowed to read.

 

The Manatee Patriots’ website has pages dedicated to stirring up outrage over what they deem “filth” students are reading. And digging through the social media presence of the “woke-busting” Patriots only piles on the worry that these are people who are so censorious that the Little Golden Book about “The Poky Little Puppy” would offend them. (Surely, a book about a dog who digs under fences to access the neighbor’s property is a covert Marxist!) A Patriots leader who advertised the “Vetting Inappropriate Books Workshop,” for instance, also posts conspiracy theories accusing Bill Gates of driving up egg prices so he can force “artificial” eggs on Americans.

Despite the tendency of Republicans to invoke elementary school kids when talking about the need for book banning, the classrooms being targeted are in high schools and middle schools. Books flagged for banning include The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, The Prince and the Dressmaker by Jen Wang, and Monday’s Not Coming by Tiffany Jackson. Digging into the complaints, it becomes clear that, despite lots of hysteria about “depictions of sexual activity” in books meant for nearly adult readers, the real objections are centered around the acknowledgment that racism is real or that LGBTQ people exist. Unsurprisingly, few, if any, of the targeted authors are white men. The books that offend the “woke busters” are mostly written by women of color. 

Despite claiming to speak for “parents,” it wasn’t at all clear that the Manatee Patriots have many members with kids in school, and photos of their events suggest most of them have long aged out of the range where that’s even remotely likely. The likelier explanation for what’s going on here is that the “woke busters” are angry old white people who are taking out their resentments about social change on school-aged kids who are an easy target because they have very little social power and can’t vote yet. Why should the Manatee Patriots care if their “activism” deprives kids of the basic educational resources they need to grow into healthy, productive adults? All that authoritarians care about is power and using that power to punish anyone who reminds them that they are a bunch of bigots. 

Unfortunately, Republican leaders in Florida have decided it’s quite profitable to cater to a bunch of anti-reading fanatics who cannot stand the idea that kids and grandkids grow up to have minds of their own. On Thursday, Sen. Marco Rubio posted a screed attempting to recast book banning as “freedom,” arguing that the real freedom is in being “protected” from “woke ideology.”

The GOP’s message is clear: If you can’t read the book you want, don’t worry about it. There is no greater freedom than the freedom from having to think for yourself. 

Man threatens to crack Marjorie Taylor Greene’s skull with a baseball bat

A man who told Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) he’d pay somebody $500 to “take a baseball bat and crack your skull” has pleaded guilty to making threatening phone calls.

Joseph Morelli, 51, from upstate New York, admitted making several calls to Greene’s Washington, D.C., office in March 2022, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of New York said in a statement.

In one voicemail, Morelli said, “I’m gonna hurt you. Physically, I’m gonna harm you.” In another, he said that he would “make sure that, even if they lock me up, someone’s gonna get you ’cause I’ll pay them to,” prosecutors said.

He was charged with transmitting interstate threatening communications and faces up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $250,000. He is due to be sentenced on June 1.

Greene has been a controversial figure since being elected to Congress in 2020. She’s known for espousing right-wing views and sharing conspiracy theories.

Alex Jones’ text messages point to depressing home life

The private text messages of Alex Jones’ have been published to the general public from the Southern Poverty Law Center, stemming from his attorney accidentally sending the complete contents of his phone in the summer of 2021 to the opposing attorney representing families of the Sandy Hook shooting.

Thousands of text messages have been published, and Jones’ reputation as a conservative, family man has been challenged by his own words. His contentious relationship with his wife is definitely a recurring theme of the text messages, including having her followed by private investigators. Jones also had his ex-wife followed by investigators.

Ironically enough, while Jones was having his wife followed by private investigators, he was having an affair with a married woman. The released text messages also detail sexual requests from Jones to his married mistress.

In the text messages, Jones is very transparent about his depressing home life, and the Jan. 6 insurrection did not fix that situation. During that time, he texted his father and said that he lives in a “black hole.”

Jones has been found financially liable for broadcasting lies and conspiracy theories for the Sandy Hook shootings.

Voice of the “ordinary,” Sarah Huckabee Sanders, to give GOP response to Biden’s State of the Union

President Joe Biden is scheduled to deliver his State of the Union address on Tuesday, marking his first speaking engagement in front of a Republican led House. Following that appearance, newly elected Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders will lead the GOP’s response via a broadcast from Little Rock, during which she’ll be offering counterpoints as to “what America needs.”

“I’m honored to have the opportunity to address the nation after the State of the Union on Tuesday,” Sanders said in a tweet on Thursday. “What America needs – and what Republicans are offering – is a return to common sense and a commitment to the ideals that made America the land of the free and home of the brave.”

In the announcement of Sanders’ “Republican Address to the Nation,” House Speaker Kevin McCarthy referred to the Arkansas governor as someone who is “fighting on behalf of parents, small businesses and ordinary taxpayers,” urging viewers, and Biden himself, to listen to her carefully.

“She is bringing new ideas for a changing future, while also applying the wisdom of the past, including from the leadership of her father,” McCarthy furthered in his announcement. “She is a servant-leader of true determination and conviction. I’m thrilled Sarah will share her extraordinary story and bold vision for a better America on Tuesday.”


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Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell also offered his own alley-oop to Sanders, mixing in a jab at Biden in the process.

“While President Biden keeps repeating old mistakes and failing Americans, a rising generation of Republican Governors are fighting for families, advancing new solutions, and winning,” McConnell said

As the youngest governor in America, Sanders is being championed by the GOP as a totem for a new generation of Republicans, but Democrats are less enthusiastic about her upcoming appearance.

“We watched her lie to us every day for years. Hard pass,” tweeted journalist Aaron Rupar in response to McCarthy‘s announcement.

In a tweet from liberal Pitt Griffin, he points out how Sanders’ version of progress differs from that of her opposition.

Jamie Oliver’s genius one-pan cheesecake will change how you do dessert

It’s not the act of cooking and baking that gets me down — it’s the cleaning. It’s the specter of a sink full of dirty pans piling up in my tiny, dishwasher-free kitchen that sometimes makes me want to just unwrap a Nutty Buddy and call it a night. When I see cooking shows with little mise en place setups of individual bowls of ingredients and a hundred tasting spoons, I feel cranky on behalf of the unseen individuals who have to wash them all. 

I know I’m not unique in this feeling. It’s why so many of us love a one-bowl dessert recipe, sheet pan dinner or fix-it and forget-it slow cooker situation. And it’s why Jamie Oliver’s latest cookbook is called “One: Simple One-Pan Wonders.” Like his “5 Ingredients” and “15-Minute Meals,” it contains a practical, budget-friendly collection of approachable recipes for real-world cooks, with a particular eye for those of us who don’t want to spend the rest of the evening back in the kitchen following a memorable meal.

I was excited to work my way through a lot of the recipes in this book, including Oliver’s skillet pasta dishes and comforting soups. But it was the lemony cheesecake, assembled and baked in a frying pan, that I couldn’t wait to tackle first.

I spent most of my baking life avoiding cheesecakes, intimidated by springform pans and water baths. Then I discovered the internet-famous Basque cheesecake, and after realizing that a rich, luxurious cheesecake doesn’t have to be fussy, I never looked back.

Oliver’s heavenly interpretation relies on a Biscoff crust, a generous shot of lemon juice and lots of tart raspberries. It also bakes in about half the time of a traditional cheesecake, which means you don’t need to clear your schedule to make one. I made my version with thawed frozen strawberries and swapped Oliver’s vanilla paste for the easier-to-find vanilla extract. You, too, should feel free to make it your own.

This is a cheesecake that doesn’t demand you worry about a perfect springform release or the top cracking. It’s crumbly and a little messy. Plus, it isn’t super smooth, as the fruit splats around haphazardly.


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Above all, this cheesecake is absolutely, intensely delicious. It’s a dessert you make for people you love and feel comfortable around, perhaps to cap off a hearty chili or some slider sloppy joes. And when they ask if you need any help with the dishes, you can send them off to the kitchen guilt-free.

* * *

Inspired by “One: Simple One-Pan Wonders” by Jamie Oliver

Jamie Oliver’s Frying Pan Cheesecake
Yields
 8-12 servings
Prep Time
 10 minutes 
Cook Time
 30 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup (1 stick) butter
  • 8 ounces Biscoff or gingersnap cookies (See Cook’s Notes)
  • 4 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/2 cup confectioners’ sugar, plus more for dusting
  • 1 1/2 pounds (3 packages) cream cheese, room temperature
  • 1 halved and juiced lemon
  • 10 ounces strawberries, raspberries or blueberries

 

Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees.
  2. Melt the butter over low heat in an 11-inch ovenproof frying pan. Meanwhile, crush the cookies into crumbs using a food processor or reusable food storage bag and rolling pin.
  3. Remove the pan from the heat and stir the crumbs into the butter. Using the bottom of a measuring cup or similar device, pat the crumbs down to make an even layer, letting them go up the sides of the pan a bit. Bake for 5 minutes.
  4. While the crust bakes, mix the eggs, vanilla and most of the confectioners’ sugar (reserving a few teaspoons) in the food processor for about 2 minutes. You may use a hand or stand mixer, as well.
  5. Mix in the cream cheese and the juice of the lemon. Once everything is blended, pour over the crust.
  6. In a small bowl, with a fork, smash half the fruit with the remaining confectioners’ sugar, then pour it into the cheesecake base and stir until just combined. Bake for 15 minutes.
  7. Remove the cheesecake from the oven and scatter the remaining fruit on top with a little extra confectioners’ sugar. Bake for an additional 10 minutes.
  8. Turn on the broiler and brown the cheesecake for 2 or 3 minutes, until a little puffed and golden.
  9. Remove from oven, let cool completely, then transfer to fridge and chill for at least 2 hours. Serve the cake in slices, or spoon into shallow bowls straight out of the pan.

Cook’s Notes

 You may, of course, use different cookies for the crust. Graham crackers, for instance, are a classic.

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Sleep deprivation and Taylor Swift: What the demands of modern fandom say about us

In the Instagram story, the blond woman in the coat lifts the receiver on an old-fashioned phone and says mysteriously to the camera, “Meet me at midnight.” At the appointed hour, a new music video would be released. The blond, of course, is Taylor Swift and this teaser for the video of “Lavender Haze” was only the latest in her promotional campaign for her most recent album “Midnights.” By all accounts, it’s been a smashing success. 

Stay up or jump up: Swift keeps fans on their toes. 

The rollout of that album has been, as Vulture describes it, more traditional than other fare from the star lately. For “Midnights,” there was a long lead-up, a social media tease of track names. “The plan would be to unveil one per night pulled from a bingo-ball cage,” Vulture writes. Compare that luxurious rollout to how Swift unveiled her previous two albums, which was . . . not really at all. They were just there, “folklore” and “evermore,” announced by Swift less than 24 hours before their respective releases, with barely enough time for the youngest fans to save up enough babysitting money. Stay up or jump up: Swift keeps fans on their toes. 

Both the sudden announcement of her previous albums as well as the slower, late-night reveals of “Midnights,” are part of the same pattern: the extremes we now demand of fans. A real fan doesn’t need sleep. A real fan is ready to drop money at a moment’s notice, be it for new tunes or concert tickets. In a world of easy access to videos, streaming music, even once-obscure articles about musicians available now online, anyone can be an expert. To be a fan, you must be hardcore and take things to the extreme. Who needs sleep when there is Swift, or a healthy bank account when there is Beyoncé?  

As Swift teased out song titles like a siren bingo hall caller, fans expressed wonderment, bordering on exasperation, about the late-night reveals of “Midnights.” “Can someone tell @taylorswift13 to please get a normal sleep schedule. I’m 32. How am I supposed to stay up till midnight on a work night?” one wrote on Twitter. “Taylor never wants us to sleep again” is the title of a YouTube video where the fan starts by yawning. “Taylor Swift had me up all night last night,” she says, speaking to the camera in her bathrobe. 

Yes, Swift chose to burn the midnight oil to spill her album’s secrets, night after night, in keeping with its theme — but fans didn’t have to choose to stay up. They could have learned the information the next morning, when it was everywhere on the internet. But that’s not what a fan does anymore. A fan knows the info right away. A fan is there to hear it live, to witness it.  

Now you’re stuck in the dreaded Ticketmaster waiting room, number 2,000, mere hours after learning a performance was even scheduled.

Although her fandom is considered extreme, Swift certainly isn’t the only artist who commands instant allegiance. To land concert tickets these days, you need to be terminally online or you’ll miss them. As I write this, I’ll still adrenalized from scoring Tori Amos tickets to a performance announced less than 24 hours ago. Gone are the days of seeing an announcement for a show, marking your calendar, and carefully waiting at the appointed time outside a box office. Now you’re stuck in the dreaded Ticketmaster waiting room, number 2,000, mere hours after learning a performance was even scheduled. No time to coordinate with friends, barely time to check your bank account balance. The frenzied nature of modern fandom can lead to panicked, impulse buys. NBCNews, in an article about the “chaos surrounding ticket sales,” describes current concert ticket buying as “competitive and expensive” while the Wall Street Journal says, “Buying concert tickets increasingly feels like a losing game.”

After years of backing away from performances due to COVID, live shows have returned in a big way, for better or worse. And one of the ways is presales, a special early sale of tickets. Getting these coveted presale codes isn’t always easy or fair (witness: Swift’s Ticketmaster debacle). The social media announcement of Amos’s upcoming tour made no mention of the presale codes; those had to be uncovered through internet sleuthing (a noble reddit thread also came to the rescue). Minutes after Beyoncé’s next tour was announced, article after article was published trying to explain how on Earth to get tickets. Are you a big enough fan to figure it out?

Like Swift, Beyoncé will be using a presale program called Verified Fan. Verified Fan is rather a meaningless term, one you register for and hope for the best. It’s designed more to prove ticket-seeking people are actually people and not bots. But even after being proven human, fans are usually chosen at random for the opportunity to buy tickets. Case in point: I was approved as a Verified Fan for Swift’s presale and while I’m not a hater, I’m not the most devoted, either. Meanwhile, a friend of mine who knows every lyric by heart was not approved, shut out of tickets.

To keep fans guessing is to keep them. 

Programs like Verified Fan only whip up the frenzy even more. Other presales are available only to holders of certain credit cards. Must you be a particular credit card user to be a fan? Where are all these stipulations coming from? 

Limited supply of course increases demand — but Swift in particular is also an expert in what AdNews calls her “little-known secret weapon: The brand refresh.” From “Fearless” to “reputation,” “folklore” to “Midnights,” Swift is a magician when it comes to changing shape. Her image, aesthetics, even musical style vary from project to project, often wildly. And importantly, she does this, as AdNews says, proactively. Before things get stale, she’s already moved on to something else — have you followed? To keep fans guessing is to keep them. 


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No one wants to be the last to know, about a concert, new album, new band — or a beloved musician’s fresh era. We want to know and to know first, to be there when it happens, even if it’s well after bedtime. And exclusion makes things even more attractive. As Swift herself sings, “I’m yours to keep. And I’m yours to lose.” 

 

Details about Netflix’s clunky, looming password-sharing crackdown

Are you one of the many people using a profile on a friend’s Netflix account? Your free access to shows like “Stranger Things,” “The Crown” and “That ’90s Show” may be numbered.

For months, Netflix users have been warned that the streaming giant was going to be making some changes. Specifically, Netflix has been making noise about password sharing, an extremely common — and according to the service, unprofitable for them — phenomenon where multiple users in different households utilize the same password in order to watch streaming programs. Netflix updated its help center for Chile, Costa Rica and Peru recently and revealed some clues as to how their password crackdown may work in the United States. It’s coming for us and soon.

As Yahoo! Finance and others have reported, using the countries where the program has already been implemented as a model, “Netflix accounts will remain shareable but only within one household.” Netflix will require users to claim a “primary location” for all accounts. Any device signed into the service will be verified by Netflix as in its primary location (or not) through the use of IP addresses, account activity and device IDs. 

At present, Netflix is priced based on the number of screens an account allows to use the service at once: between one, two or four screens. With the change, all screens must be logged at the same location.

To make sure their device is not blocked by the service, users will need to use their primary location’s Wifi, sign in to Netflix at least once every 31 days and watch something. It’s not yet clear how long a user must watch a program in order for it to count. As Forbes put it, “The methodology for checking appears to be . . . somewhat cumbersome.”

This impending rule brings up a host of issues, including what if a user is traveling, hospitalized, moving short-term, living in a separate household from family or spouses, or simply unable or unwilling to watch Netflix every 31 days? For a college student watching Netflix at school with a family password, for example, Forbes writes, “You would have travel home once a month, bring your laptop or tablet, ‘check in’ on the Wifi and watch something on Netflix. If instead you’re using Netflix on a TV you can’t bring with you well, you’re out of luck.”

If an account is accessed from a location not identified as the primary one, to avoid Netflix being blocked or suspended, account holders can verify the device through a temporary code, which will apparently allow a user to watch Netflix for seven consecutive days. What if you’re traveling or not at your primary location for longer than seven days? Yahoo! Finance writes, “It’s unclear if you can request multiple temporary codes following the seven-day period.”


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TIME reported Netflix announced in a letter to shareholders, sent in January, that the crackdown will go into effect across the globe at the end of March. According to TIME, Netflix believes “over 100 million households worldwide are using shared accounts and that cracking down on password sharing would be a ‘big opportunity’ for revenue growth.”

The science and spectacle of microwaving Peeps

By 1999, Emory University researchers Gary Falcon and James Zimring had been “studying” the solubility of Peeps for two years. During that time, they had exposed the neon sugar-coated marshmallow candies to a number of challenging conditions, initially soaking them in tap water, then moving on to increasingly intense substances like boiling water, acetone, sulfuric acid and sodium hydroxide.

Left dumbfounded by Peeps’ shocking resiliency, they finally reached for Phenol, a protein-dissolving solvent that is lethal to humans in very small amounts, and soaked a single marshmallow chick in the sickeningly tarry-smelling liquid.

According to a now-archived blog post by the university, after an hour, “all that remained in the beaker was a pair of brown carnauba wax eyes floating in a purple Phenol soup.”

In the corresponding interview, Falcon and Zimring apparently joked that they hoped to “[take] a cue from NASA and John Glenn” and study Peep aging and space travel. However, their academic fascination with the candy started somewhere much closer to home. In 1997, the two men and their wives had met for dinner and gorged on Peeps for dessert. That was when they hatched the experiment that started it all.

“We went straight to the microwave oven,” Falcon said.

Falcon and Zimring weren’t the first to microwave a Peep. And 70 years after the confection was first brought to market, they were far from the last, a fact that was seemingly embraced — or at least tolerated — by their creator, Bob “Father of Peeps” Born, who died on Tuesday at the age of 98.

Born’s father, Sam, was a Russian immigrant who started Just Born, a candy company, shortly before Bob’s birth. The family later moved from New York to Bethlehem, Penn., where the company is still based. After receiving a degree in engineering physics and a distinguished career in the Navy, Born returned home to Bethlehem to pursue medical school.

Falcon and Zimring weren’t the first to microwave a Peep. And 70 years after the confection was first brought to market, they were far from the last, a fact that was seemingly embraced — or at least tolerated — by their creator.

While waiting for classes to begin, he went to work at Just Born and decided to stay, going on to revolutionize the candy business. As the Associated Press reported, Just Born had recently acquired Rodda Candy Co., “a jelly bean maker that had a side business producing shaped marshmallow candies by hand. At the time, it took about 27 hours to make the marshmallows.”

“Bob Born saw the candies’ potential, so he and an engineer at the company designed and built a machine to make them in less than six minutes,” the outlet wrote. “The company’s current machines, which are still based on Bob Born’s design, now pump out 5.5 million Peeps per day.”

Much like candy corn, Peeps are a somewhat controversial candy. According to a 2016 FinanceBuzz survey of 1,000 U.S. adults, 25% of respondents said they loved Peeps, while 16% said they hated them. The rest were noncommittal, neutral or didn’t recall ever eating one.

A more interesting statistic, though, is found in one of the subsections of the survey.

“While Peeps are obviously meant for eating, their role as a festive treat is not the only reason people love them,” wrote Becca Borawski Jenkins, FinanceBuzz’s director of editorial strategy. “The marshmallows have carved out a niche as a source of experimentation for the young and the young at heart.”

“Our survey found that nearly 1/3 of people — 32% — have microwaved a Peep to see what happens.”

She continued, “One of the most popular Peeps experiments is also one of the simplest. Our survey found that nearly 1/3 of people — 32% — have microwaved a Peep to see what happens.”

What, exactly, happens when a Peep is microwaved? There are approximately 379,000 YouTube videos tackling this question. Most of them are pretty similar: A Peep rotates slowly behind the microwave door, spotlighted by the orange-yellow bulb above. Within 20 seconds, it begins to expand, though not all at once. Instead, random bits of the Peep chick — its flat base, the curved neck, the tail — distend until they look like bubbles about to burst.

Some of the videos cut just as the Peeps have smoothly ballooned to about four times their original size; others allow the microwave to run just a few seconds longer, capturing the moment they burst and deflate like a supermarket marshmallow roasted over the fire. It’s an inexpensive spectacle that has become part of elementary school science curricula alongside other food-based experiments like dropping Mentos in Coca-Cola or wiring up a potato battery.

In the Exploratorium’s Science of Cooking section, the public learning laboratory explains the science behind the Peeps Experiment in this kid-friendly language:

When you warm air in a closed container, the gas molecules move around faster and push harder against the walls of the container. As the air in the bubbles warms up, the air molecules bounce around faster and faster and push harder against the bubble walls. Since the sugar walls are warm and soft, the bubbles expand, and the marshmallow puffs up. If it puffs up too much, some air bubbles burst, and the marshmallow deflates like a popped balloon.

When you take the marshmallow out of the microwave and it cools off, the bubbles shrink and the sugar hardens again. When the microwave marshmallow cools, it’s dry and crunchy. We think that’s because some of the water in the marshmallow evaporates when the marshmallow is hot.

There are a number of riffs on the original microwaved Peeps experiment, the most popular probably being “Peeps Jousting.” In 2010, Smithsonian Magazine explained that the game begins with two Peeps, each of which has been speared with a toothpick “sticking out of the front of it like a lance.”

“Two Peeps, so armed, are placed in a microwave facing each other,” the outlet wrote. “As they are heated, they expand, until one Peep’s toothpick makes contact with the other.” Whichever Peep pricks its opponent first is the winner.

While “Father of Peeps” Bob Born never publicly commented on how it felt to watch people’s attempts to burst the candies in the microwave, he was no stranger to the experiments.


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On Feb. 15, 2019, Bethlehem mayor Robert Donchez declared it “Bob Born Day” after a special ceremony honoring Born held at the Just Born Headquarters. There — according to The Morning Call newspaper — those gathered watched a presentation featuring archival videos about the company, which included a few taped Peeps Jousting matches.

Afterward, Matt Pye, the company’s senior vice president of sales and marketing, broke into song to the tune of “Here Comes Peter Cottontail.”

“He invented the chick machine,” Pye sang. “Yellow, pink, blue, lavender and green, clipped the wings so the chicks won’t fly away. What once took 27 hours only takes six minutes today, and the bunnies are just as popular.”

He took a breath before delivering the final line: “Especially in the microwave.”

Internal email reveals The Family still involved in “new” National Prayer Breakfast

The new organization running the National Prayer Breakfast has deep ties to the controversial group that used to run it, according to documents including an email that a former Republican member of Congress sent to TYT apparently inadvertently.

As TYT first reported last week, the Fellowship Foundation, the legal entity of the secretive Christian group known as The Family, is no longer running the National Prayer Breakfast. Starting Thursday, the breakfast will be split into two events.

On Capitol Hill, Pres. Joe Biden, administration officials and members of Congress will convene with very tight “plus one” restrictions. Former Sen. Mark Pryor (D-AL), board president of the newly formed organization running the event, predicted about 250 people attending.

Simultaneously, at the Washington Hilton, more than 1000 Family insiders and their guests will gather as they have every year except 2021 and 2022 – but without the access they used to have to powerful politicians.

“Concerns over prayer breakfast lead Congress to take it over,” the Associated Press reported. But Family documents show otherwise.

And an email from former Rep. Zach Wamp (R-TN) confirms that, althrough there are schisms between those running their respective events, the secret connections are real and his goal as one of The Family members running the Capitol Hill event is to preserve them.

That said, Wamp also alludes to a potential schism between the two factions. Family insiders, Wamp writes, accuse leaders of the new event of “throwing us under the bus” and are “upset” about public remarks made about the split by Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE), one of The Family’s few Democratic defenders.

Wamp is one member of the new National Prayer Breakfast Foundation board that Pryor is leading. The email Wamp sent to TYT appears to have been intended for Pryor, after TYT wrote to Pryor – copying Wamp and other board members – requesting comment for this story. Wamp did not immediately respond when TYT wrote to him Tuesday night to ask whether he stands by the remarks in his email.

In that message, Wamp confirms that the two groups are linked, seeks to protect that link, and urges Pryor to embrace the same lack of transparency that has made The Family both controversial and a repeated target for journalists.

Wamp also denigrates TYT’s reporting, without specifying any errors in it.

Last week, after TYT revealed that the prayer breakfast was being split in two, Pryor spoke with TYT for about an hour about the new event and its new foundation. Wamp’s email suggests that he pressed Pryor not to speak with TYT.

“I made it very clear you would be wise to not speak to this group,” Wamp writes. “You have zero obligation to get in the weeds with these snakes. They aren’t honorable so it’s very unfair to you and us.”

In that interview, Pryor revealed that the board had decided the new event would not accept donations from controversial individuals on the right or the left. When asked about two past Family backers in specific, Pryor confirmed that anti-LGBTQ evangelist Franklin Graham and GOP megadonor Ronnie Cameron were not supporting the new event.

Making a case for Pryor not to respond to TYT’s followup inquiries, Wamp referred to other media coverage of Coons.

Wamp didn’t specify which remarks by Coons had raised hackles, but Coons told the Associated Press, “Some questions had been raised about our ability as members of Congress to say that we knew exactly how it was being organized, who was being invited, how it was being funded. Many of us who’d been in leadership roles really couldn’t answer those questions.”

In his email to Pryor, Wamp suggested that Coons’s comments to the media were dishonoring the late Doug Coe, The Family’s longtime leader. “The ‘Fellowship’ members are already upset about Sen Coons [sic] comments and what they see as defaming of the Coe legacy,” Wamp wrote.

Pryor previously told TYT he thought that Coe “wanted to see this happen.” (Coe’s son David, according to a source close to The Family, “refers to Chris Coons as a socialist, but like his friend.”)

Apparently confirming that The Family and the new board are in communication, Wamp added, “Heard today ‘the new group is just throwing us under the bus’.”

One reason to maintain secrecy and not respond, Wamp suggested, was that the board leading the new prayer breakfast wants to preserve unity with The Family. Wamp says that, “More stories and more slander will only lead to more division.”

Wamp also suggested that TYT’s request for comment by a deadline of any time Tuesday night was disingenuous. “There is no ‘deadline’,” Wamp wrote. “Don’t be bullied by the far right or the far left please.”

Pryor had not responded as of Wednesday morning. Although he said in last week’s interview that he would provide additional information, he has yet to answer subsequent emails following up.

In the interview last week, when asked about the new board’s ties to The Family, Pryor said it’s “just not the case” that the new board is solely people associated with The Family operating as a new legal entity. “I’m trying to think of who all you’d be referring to there.”

Meet the New Board…

Some of the new board members are open about their connections to The Family. The new foundation even has a website listing board members and biographical information, a step The Family has yet to take (although it does comply with federal disclosure requirements regarding its tax filings).

Three of the ten board members explicitly cite their ties to The Family or the National Prayer Breakfast: Caroline Aderholt, wife of longtime Family insider Rep. Robert Aderholt (R-AL); Max Finberg, a former aide to longtime Family insider former Rep. Tony Hall (D-OH); and Grace Nelson, wife of NASA Administrator and former Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL).

Board member Stan Holmes says in his bio that “He has been connected to the US Senate and House Prayer Breakfast Groups since 1981.” Those groups were started by The Family, but Holmes has also been intimately involved with the National Prayer Breakfast and with some of its international spinoffs.

Although his bio identifies him as president and CEO of a nonprofit called the Core Fellowship Foundation, an internal Family spreadsheet obtained by TYT lists Holmes as a Family “associate,” meaning that The Family served as an administrative clearinghouse, overseeing Holmes’s ministry and managing some financial matters.

In fact, Holmes’s status as a Family associate was in the public record as early as 2009. The Chattanooga Times Free-Press reported that year that Holmes and Wamp worked together on the National Prayer Breakfast.

In 2021, the source close to The Family told TYT that Holmes “used to be the Zach Wamp of the prayer breakfast for a while, one of the little team that was doing the day-to-day” work.

The same spreadsheets show that, over the years, Holmes has submitted dozens of guests for invitation to the National Prayer Breakfast, including anti-LGBTQ leaders.

In 2016, for instance, Holmes is listed as having invited four separate leaders and staff from Focus on the Family, including Vice Presidents Kurt Leander and Tim Goeglein (a former George W. Bush aide), and President Jim Daly, who was submitted for an invitation by Holmes along with former Gov. David Beasley (R-SC), a longtime Family leader who was appointed by then-Pres. Donald Trump to run the UN’s World Food Programme.

Holmes has also figured into some of TYT’s previous reporting on The Family. He and Beasley were two of The Family’s four point people for Russia in 2016, notoriously attended by Russian operatives Maria Butina and her handler, Alexander Torshin, whose ties to The Family go back to at least 2006.

Holmes was also close to former Rep. Jeff Fortenberry (R-NE), who was convicted last year of lying about campaign donations and also made misleading public statements downplaying The Family’s ties to a Christian charity, In Defense of Christianity (IDC), involved those illegal donations. Holmes was an emeritus board member of the IDC.

In 2021, a source close to The Family told TYT that Fortenberry’s chief of staff had been “Fully brought into the NPB by Stan,” and only got his position with Fortenberry due to his connection to Holmes.

And Holmes is not the only member of the new prayer breakfast board tied to the IDC. Former Rep. Randy Hultgren (R-IL) sits on the new breakfast board and, along with two other Family insiders, served on IDC’s Congressional Advisory Board.

Hultgren’s Family activities, too, have been documented by TYT and others. Both Hultgren and Rep. Aderholt were instrumental in early Family efforts to help out a Guatemalan ally who ultimately became ambassador to the U.S. As TYT revealed, that ambassador, Manuel Espina, worked with Family allies in Congress to destroy a UN anti-corruption task force before it could prosecute then-Pres. Jimmy Morales for alleged campaign-finance violations.

The Family has also paid for Hultgren, an opponent of LGBTQ rights, to travel overseas. One trip included a stay at a hotel owned by Dagfinn Høybråten, a member of Norway’s parliament whose party opposes same-sex adoption and marriage.

But the new prayer breakfast board isn’t all Republicans. Federal Election Commission records and other documents back up Pryor’s claim that the board was intended to reflect partisan symmetry, even if none of the Democrats are as progressive as the Republicans are conservative. (Pryor says the board was picked by about 20 members of Congress, but wouldn’t say whether The Family submitted their names or disclosed their ties to The Family.)

Two of the Democratic members of the new board account for a significant proportion of past National Prayer Breakfast invitations, including a number that broke from the guest list’s prevailing ideological and demographic patterns.

Both Grace Nelson and Dr. Barbara Williams-Skinner have invited dozens of guests to the National Prayer Breakfast in past years. Nelson has had a particular emphasis on inviting women leaders. Some of their guests are supporters of LGBTQ+ rights, according to various news reports.

Williams-Skinner’s invitations have gone to leaders of a non-denominational church and, at least one year, former NAACP President Ben Jealous.

Even the few Family Democrats, however, have also invited guests who may help The Family expand its connections. The 2016 invitation list identifies Prince Charles-Louis de Merode, one of Grace Nelson’s guests, as “working to initiate Belgian parliamentary prayer group.”

And despite their Democratic bona fides, some of their guests don’t always reflect a commitment to democratic values.

Nelson’s guests included Paul Kagame, now entering his 23rd year as Rwanda’s autocratic president. She also invited Andre Apaid, a Haitian businessman who was active in the coup that overthrew Pres. Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

And in contrast to their Republican Family counterparts filling the breakfast tables with opponents of LGBTQ+ rights (or defenders of the “religious freedom” to deny those rights), the Family Democrats now on the board of the new breakfast seldom brought in LGBTQ+ advocates, even religious ones, to the breakfasts of years past.

Williams-Skinner, for instance, teamed up with Coe in 2016 to invite the Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, one of Donald Trump’s faith advisors. Williams-Skinner’s own website identifies her past work in conjunction with the National Prayer Breakfast and names her as co-founder of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Prayer Breakfast.

Williams-Skinner is one of two Black members of the new prayer breakfast board. The other, Carlos Austin, does not appear to have been an especially active or high-profile figure within The Family.

Internal Family spreadsheets indicate that Austin was invited at least twice to the National Prayer Breakfast. Both times his name was submitted to the guest list by Mark Powers, longtime aide to former Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-OK), a Family insider.

Former Sen. Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND) is also on the new National Prayer Breakfast Foundation board. She reportedly served on the breakfast’s “honorary” congressional host committee in 2015.

Heitkamp’s name, along with others on the invitation, helped make it appear as though Manny Pacquiao, the anti-LGBTQ+ former boxer and now-politician, was being invited by members of Congress, rather than by The Family. At that breakfast, Heitkamp was seated at a table with a North Dakota pastor, three guests from Africa, Family insider Mounzer Fatfat, and Hultgren’s Norwegian host, Høybråten.

Even before Wamp’s email, TYT’s reporting had raised concerns that the breakfast split might be geographical only – leaving the possibility that Family insiders at both events could still use the occasion to continue their past work of facilitating controversial connections and pursuing The Family’s goals.

As TYT has reported, for instance, the breakfast was a key component in the radicalization of MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell.

Responding to TYT’s previous report about the new foundation’s ties to The Family, author Jeff Sharlet, the definitive chronicler of the group’s history, told the Religion News Service (RNS), “the change appears largely cosmetic.”

Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, which has lobbied against the breakfast, told RNS “it does look as though the creation of a new entity to sponsor the prayer breakfast is essentially a subterfuge, because the folks running the NPB Foundation are all connected with the Fellowship.”

Judging by general-interest coverage of the split, however, The Family’s subterfuge appears to be largely successful so far. Ironically, the same news outlets now reporting that Congress runs the breakfast have for decades covered the event as if it were already being run by Congress.

And Aderholt, among others, is said to have been one of those invested in fostering the false impression in the past that Congress was running the show. It was Aderholt, as TYT reported previously, who got “pissed” when Coons and Sen. Jim Lankford (R-OK) got a recommendation from the Ethics Committee (which they run) to remove the Great Seal of the United States from breakfast communications.

Coons’s public remarks about struggling to get answers from The Family about the breakfast suggest that Congress has not, in fact, been running the event. And if politicians are truly running the new event, there’s nothing to prevent them from joining the board themselves.

According to Brendan Fischer, previously with the Campaign Legal Center and now deputy executive director of the watchdog group Documented, members of Congress are free to join nonprofit boards as long as they refrain from activities in conflict with their congressional work and disclose their position along with any compensation. But no members are on the new breakfast board, and Pryor has declined to identify any current members involved in it.

Wamp himself, a former resident of The Family’s C Street facility, has publicly defended the secrecy that Coe instilled as part of The Family’s ethos. In 2021, the source close to The Family told TYT about how Wamp came to be tapped for his breakfast work by Coe’s two sons, David and Tim, and their colleague, Marty Sherman.

“Zach was Tim, David, and Marty’s longest-tenured and closest disciple, if you will, over their career of working with members,” the source said. So when it came time to consider who should replace Coe overseeing the breakfast, they wanted Wamp, rather than Beasley, the former governor.

“Beasley had too much standing for them to be able to direct him,” the source said. “They knew Zach maybe a little better, but they also knew that they could guide Zach if they chose to… Zach is going to constantly look for guidance to those guys. And he did.”

The votes that weren’t cast: The nightmare of Republican voter suppression

The fundamental right to vote has been a core value of Black politics since the colonial era — and so has the effort to suppress that vote right up to the present moment. In fact, the history of the suppression of Black voters is a first-rate horror story that as yet shows no sign of ending.

While Democrats and progressives justifiably celebrated the humbling defeat of some of the most notorious election-denying Republican candidates in the 2022 midterms, the GOP campaign to quell and marginalize Black voters has only continued with an all-too-striking vigor. In 2023, attacks on voting rights are melding with the increasingly authoritarian thrust of a Republican Party ever more aligned with far-right extremists and outright white supremacists.

It shouldn’t be forgotten that the insurrection of January 6, 2021, at the Capitol in Washington was also an assault on minority voters. In the post-election weeks of 2020, insurrection-loving and disgraced President Donald Trump and his allies sought to discard votes in swing-state cities like Atlanta, Detroit, Las Vegas, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, and Phoenix. Those were all places with large Black, Latino, or Native American populations. It was no accident then that the overwhelmingly white mob at the Capitol didn’t hesitate to hurl racist language, including the “N” word, at Black police officers as that mob invaded the building.  

For years, Republican lawmakers at the state level had proposed — and where possible implemented — voter suppression laws and policies whose impacts were sharply felt in communities of color nationwide. According to the Brennan Center for Justice, “At least 19 states passed 34 laws restricting access to voting,” laws invariably generated by Republican legislators. These included bills to limit early voting, restrict voting by mail, and even deny the provision of water to voters waiting for hours in long lines, something almost universally experienced in Black and poor communities.

While normally pretending that such laws were not raced-based but focused on — the phrases sound so positive and sensible — “voter integrity” or “election security,” on occasion GOP leaders and officials have revealed their real purpose. A recent example was Republican Wisconsin Elections Commissioner Robert Spindell, one of three GOP appointees on the six-person commission that oversees that state’s elections. He openly bragged that the “well thought out multi-faceted plan” of the Republicans had resulted in a dramatic drop in Black voters in the 2022 midterm elections, including in Milwaukee, the state’s largest city, which is about 40% African American. He wrote: “We can be especially proud of the City of Milwaukee (80.2% Dem Vote) casting 37,000 less votes than cast in the 2018 election with the major reduction happening in the overwhelming Black and Hispanic areas.”

How far might voter suppression go?

You undoubtedly won’t be surprised to learn that, rather than develop policies attractive to voters of color, the GOP and conservatives generally have chosen the path of voter suppression, intimidation, and gaming the system. And if anything, those attempts are still on the rise. In 2023, less than a month into the new year, according to the Guardian, Republicans across the country have proposed dozens of voter-suppression and election-administration-interference bills in multiple states.

Republican state legislators in Texas alone filed 14 bills on January 10th, including ones that would raise penalties for “illegal” voting, whether committed knowingly or not. More ominously, one Texas proposal would fund the creation of an election police force exclusively dedicated to catching those who violate voting or election laws. That unit would be similar to the draconian election-police unit created in Governor Ron DeSantis’s Florida as part of what is functionally becoming a regime dedicated to a version of right-wing terror. Symbolically enough, for instance, Black ex-felons were disproportionately targeted by DeSantis. Although the campaign was launched with great fanfare, only a few generally confused ex-felons were arrested and most of them had been given misinformation by state officials about their eligibility to vote and were convinced that they had the right to do so.

But DeSantis never really wanted to stop the virtually nonexistent crime of voter impersonation or fraud. His goal, and that of the GOP nationally, has been to strike fear into the hearts of potential non-Republican voters to ensure election victories for his party. 

In states like Alabama, Mississippi, and 20 others where the GOP controls both chambers of the state legislature and the governor’s mansion, intimidating voter-tracking police squads could be the next play in an ongoing effort to undemocratically control elections. Such policing efforts would without question disproportionately target communities of color.

While the expected midterm “red wave” of Republican victories didn’t occur nationally in 2022, the same can’t be said for the South. As documented by the Institute for Southern Studies’ Facing South, the GOP actually outperformed expectations, expanding its hold on multiple state legislatures in the region. Prior to the election, analysts had predicted that the Republicans might gain 40 seats across the South; in fact, they gained at least 55. Not only did they take control of at least 25 state legislative chambers — the lone exception, Virginia’s state senate where Democrats retained a two-seat majority — but they also built or maintained supermajorities in legislative chambers in Florida, Kentucky, North Carolina, South Carolina, and West Virginia. This means that even if a Democratic governor is in office, Republican legislators can pass extremist bills into law despite a gubernatorial veto.

None of this is spontaneous, nor is it random. Tens of millions of dollars or more from super-rich conservative donors and right-wing foundations have poured into voter-suppression and election-manipulation efforts. Heritage Action for America, a conservative legislative-writing group linked to the Heritage Foundation, spent upwards of $24 million in 2021 and 2022 in key swing states to help Republicans write bills that would restrict voting, targeting Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, and Texas. Consider it anything but a coincidence that the language in voter-suppression bills in those states and elsewhere sounded eerily familiar. As the Guardian reported, at least 11 voter suppression bills in at least eight states were due, in part or whole, to advocacy and organizing by Heritage Action. A New York Times investigation found that in Georgia, “Of the 68 bills pertaining to voting, at least 23 had similar language or were firmly rooted in the principles laid out in the Heritage group’s letter” that offered outlines and details for how to limit voting access.

Contemporary voter suppression efforts, however, go significantly beyond just trying to prevent people from voting or making it harder for them to do so. Credit that, at least in part, to the determination of so many Blacks, Latinos, and Native Americans to vote despite restrictions imposed by the states. Consequently, Republican legislators now seek to control — that is, manipulate — election administration, too. Their tactics include the harassment of election workers, far-right activists seeking positions as election officials, and various other potentially far-reaching legal maneuvers.

In fact, in recent voting, attacks on election workers, officials, and volunteers have become so prevalent that a new national organization, the Election Officials Legal Defense Network (EOLDN), was formed to protect them. EOLDN provides attorneys and other kinds of assistance to such officials when they find themselves under attack.

Meanwhile, a flood of far-right activists has applied for positions or volunteered to work on elections. Neo-fascist Steven Bannon and other extremist influencers have typically called for such activists to take over local election boards with the express purpose of helping Republicans and conservatives win power.

Finally, GOP leaders in multiple states have been pushing an “independent state legislature” doctrine that argues such bodies have the ultimate power to determine election outcomes. They contend that governors, state supreme courts, and even the U.S. Supreme Court have no jurisdiction over non-federal elections. Their fanciful and erroneous reading of Article 1, Section 4 and Article 2, Section 1 of the Constitution suggests that state legislatures can not only overturn the will of voters in a given election but select electors of their choice in a presidential contest, no matter the will of the voters.

In past decisions, Supreme Court Justices Clarence Thomas and the late Antonin Scalia indicated that they were at least open to such a reading. A firm decision on this matter may occur in that court’s current session in the case of Moore v. Harper. Court watchers are split on whether the court’s conservative majority might indeed embrace that “doctrine” in full, in part, or at all in ruling on that case later this year.

Missed chances

Much of this dynamic of voter suppression is the result of the failure of congressional Democrats to carry two voting rights bills across the finish line. Black activists are all too aware that the Democrats blew the opportunity to pass such legislation during the last two years when they controlled both chambers of Congress, even if by the slimmest of margins in the Senate. The John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act (JLVRAA) and the For the People Act (FtPA) were each game-changing bills that would, in many ways, have blunted the massive efforts of Republicans at the state level to institute voter restrictions and other policies that result in the disproportionate disenfranchisement of African Americans, Latinos, young people, and working-class voters generally, all of whom tend to vote Democratic.

The JLVRAA would have restored the power of the Voting Rights Act to prevent the very passage of voter suppression laws taken away by the Supreme Court in 2013 in the case of Shelby County v. Holder. The FtPA would have banned partisan gerrymandering, expanded voting rights, and even supported statehood for Washington, D.C. Those bills were aimed specifically at countering the hundreds of voter-suppression proposals in Republican-controlled state legislatures.

In its final report, the January 6th committee actually blew a chance to highlight the attacks on Black voting rights. That report’s full-scale focus on the role of Donald Trump, who certainly was the key instigator of the insurrectionary events at the Capitol and its chief potential beneficiary, ended up obscuring the role of racism and white nationalism in the stop-the-steal movement that accompanied it and was so crucial to Republican election deniers. It should be remembered, though, that Trump’s central argument and the biggest lie of all was that Black, Latino, and Native American votes should be thrown out in Atlanta, Detroit, Philadelphia, and other urban areas in states like Arizona and Nevada where he was rejected by overwhelming numbers. 

Unfortunately, the January 6th report didn’t sufficiently identify white supremacy as a driver of the “stop the steal” movement. Despite the prominence of certain Black faces among the Trump camp, including conservative organizer Ali Alexander, Trump campaign aid Katrina Pierson, and former Georgia legislator Vernon Jones, January 6th, in fact, represented the culmination of months of attacks on Black campaign workers, especially in Atlanta and Detroit. President Trump explicitly fired up white nationalists by name-checking and endangering individual African American election workers as spoilers of his alleged victory.

The movement in some democratic states to follow Trump’s autocratic playbook is now also metastasizing globally. In Brazil, on January 8th, thousands of followers of the defeated far-right former president Jair Bolsonaro attacked government buildings in Brasilia. Newly elected President Luiz Inácio “Lula” da Silva has had to confront a surging wave of election deniers in the early days of his administration. And it’s important to note that Lula’s voters were disproportionately from the north and northeastern regions of Brazil, areas with deep concentrations of Black and indigenous communities.

In the United Kingdom, in 2022, the Conservative Party pushed through legislation that requires photo identification to vote in future elections beginning in May 2023. As with Republican legislation in Texas, student IDs will not suffice, creating a new obstacle for a constituency that tends to vote for the Labour Party. In a country where many working-class people don’t have drivers’ licenses and the state does not easily provide acceptable IDs, voter suppression is operative.

A democracy agenda that recognizes the racial elements of voter suppression and election denial is sorely needed. At the federal level, President Biden and Congressional Democrats should prioritize keeping the issue alive, while forcing Republicans to divulge their undemocratic hand, until the Democrats (hopefully) fully take back Congress in 2024.

At the state level, Democrats who have momentum from their victories in 2022 need to consolidate and strengthen voting-access laws and policies. In Michigan, for example, where the GOP had for years used its control of the state legislature to pass outlandish, racist laws that generated significant harm for Black communities, the recent Democratic sweep should mean a new voting day.

Former President Trump and the rest of his crew, as well as state versions of the same, are sadly enough in a significant, if grim, American tradition. Isn’t it time to focus more energy on how to stop their urge to suppress the Black vote?

Where’s the love, “You People”? The frustration of Kenya Barris and Jonah Hill’s interracial rom-com

Watching Netflix’s “You People” exhumed a mostly forgotten memory of a conversation inflicted on me before I got married, courtesy of a girlfriend of mine. My engagement status is pertinent here because it inspired her to ask me, out of nowhere, if I was sure that I should marry my fiancé.

This person’s concern had nothing to do with any of the reasons I said yes to my eventual spouse such as his loyalty, his kindness, his sense of humor, his intellect, and his usefulness – never underappreciate a partner who can wield a hammer! No, it was solely about his whiteness.

“Do you really believe you have enough in common?” she asked me, but her tone betrayed a different meaning. She wasn’t questioning my belief as much as voicing her doubt that a marriage between a white man and a Black woman could work, let alone be happy. My ultimate answer is the nearly three decades of partnership we’re still enjoying, which she’s long since accepted.

But that night, she was not convinced. Looking back, I get it: her exposure to interracial couples came by way of TV shows and movies portraying them as taboo, destructive, or doomed, and the people who dare such romances as naïve and unable to consider the broader consequences.

This conversation long pre-dated the interracial family in those Cheerios commercials and all the other culturally blended spokes-couples that followed. Way back then, when popular culture explored Black people and white people falling in love, it was through stories where such pairings ripped families and communities asunder.

Here are the stories that likely played some part in informing my friend’s concern: In Spike Lee’s 1991 movie “Jungle Fever,” Wesley Snipes’ lawyer’s affair with his secretary, played by Annabella Sciorra, ruined their relationships with both their families. Or there was 1992’s “Zebrahead,” where Michael Rapaport’s daring to fall in love with a young woman played by N’Bushe Wright tangentially led to one of her friends being shot dead.

The common thread in all of these plots is the usage of interracial couples as tools to explore America’s fears surrounding race, not as distinct people or unique romances.

A few years later, “ER” star Eriq LaSalle would demand that his surgeon Peter Benton end his budding romance with Alex Kingston’s Dr. Elizabeth Corday, voicing his discomfort with the writers depicting it as stable after showing Benton’s previous relationships with Black women as having failed.

Given the circumstances, LaSalle’s request was understandable. He was one of few Black actors featured in a leading role on a primetime drama written with extensive interiority, and his character’s love life had been tumultuous.

“In real life, we romance and get on each other’s nerves and laugh and do all the things that any other race of people do,” he told Hello! Magazine in 1999, when the storyline was scrapped. “So if the only time you show a balanced relationship is in an interracial relationship, whether it’s conscious or subconscious, it sends a message I’m not comfortable with.”

The common thread in all of these plots is the usage of interracial couples as tools to explore America’s bugaboos surrounding race, not as distinct people or unique unions. When such onscreen couples were rare and few people of color were in positions to provide input in their creation, forgiving those predominantly white writing rooms for cooking up hackneyed plots to goose ratings or endeavor to explore race relations was easier.  

Jonah Hill as Ezra and Lauren London as Amira in “You People” (Parrish Lewis/Netflix)

That was then. Now, there are enough thoughtful screen examinations of racial politics along with normalized visions of inclusive casting to make “You People” stand out as a gormless throwback. Also, people like Kenya Barris, who landed a $100 million deal at Netflix in 2018 only to walk away from it in 2021, have the power and should have enough awareness to do better.

Stanley Kramer’s 1967 classic “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” is a significant influence in this movie’s plot, apparent in the central importance that Barris and his “You People” co-writer and star Jonah Hill assign to a disastrous gathering of the core couple’s parents.

By that point, Hill’s Ezra Cohen has introduced his fiancée Amira Mohammed (Lauren London) to his Jewish parents Shelley (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) and Arnold (David Duchovny), who almost immediately turn their getting-to-know-you hang into a conversational La Brea tarpit.  

“OK, I’m just going to put this out to the group and see how it lands,” Shelley blurts out, apropos of nothing. “I think the police are, and always have been, by the way, f**ked up towards Black people, and I for one hate it!” Ezra calls her off, only for Arnold to share his heretofore unmentioned love and respect for hip-hop star Xzibit.

Ezra follows that disaster feature by meeting Amira’s parents Akbar (Eddie Murphy) and Fatima (Nia Long) at a Roscoe’s Chicken and Waffles spot near their Baldwin Hills home. There, he flubs his way through asking them for Amira’s hand by pointing out that both Jesus and Malcolm X were biracial. Thus we are not surprised when the first gathering around the couple’s table ends with a Jewish mother and son accidentally setting his Muslim prospective father-in-law’s kufi on fire.

Eddie Murphy as Akbar and Jonah Hill as Ezra in “You People” (Parrish Lewis/Netflix)

The lead-up to this features Fatima and Akbar engaging Shelley and Arnold in an oppression Olympics matchup pitting slavery against the Holocaust, and Amira’s parents antagonizing Ezra’s by bringing up their high esteem for the Nation of Islam leader and renowned antisemite Louis Farrakhan. You know, just to make conversation.

Maybe the problem is that “You People” is working off a terrible model. “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” – which also inspired 2005’s lazy “Guess Who?” starring Zoe Saldana and Ashton Kutcher –  is mainly viewed as a classic because it starred Sidney Poitier, Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, and because the subject was considered groundbreaking. In 1967.

By then Poitier had been anointed as Hollywood’s Ideal Black man (props to “Something New” for that one) by becoming the first Black actor to win an Oscar for Best Actor in 1964.

Maybe the problem is that “You People” is working off a terrible model.

Six months before its theatrical release, interracial marriage was still illegal in 17 states. Yet here was the story of an impeccably credentialed, world-renowned, honorable Black doctor asking for the hand of a white woman more than a decade younger than him.

Both Poitier and his character are men to whom no reasonable white parent could object for any reason other than their Blackness – certainly not Tracy’s “lifelong fighting liberal who loathes race prejudice and has spent his whole life fighting against discrimination,” as his character’s daughter describes him. Blackness is that movie’s uncredited star, centered to the point that Poitier’s utter lack of chemistry with his co-star Katharine Houghton didn’t matter.


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That also makes Kramer’s classic terminally maudlin, which is what happens when a movie revolves around a message as opposed to making us believe in human relationships and emotions.

“You People” somewhat flips that script by placing Ezra’s status as a tourist of Black culture at the core of his inability to win over Amira’s parents and, eventually, to make his relationship with her work. So if asking “You People” to do the bare minimum by giving Amira and Ezra a reason to exist other than being a locus of conflict, consider what that says about our increasingly multicultural society.

Jonah Hill as Ezra and Julia Louis-Dreyfus as Shelley in “You People” (arrish Lewis/Netflix)

Its boosters may point to the way it shows love winning in the end, but it’s a hollow and hurried victory partly achieved by Ezra admitting on his suddenly popular podcast that Black people and white people can never get along. Akbar and Shelley hear this separately and see the error in their ways, mending their children’s relationship with all the delicacy of closing an open heart surgery incision with an industrial stapler. Ezra and Amira may get married, but this movie spends a lot of time letting us know they shouldn’t work.

If “You People” attempted to live up to the romance half of its rom-com billing, that outcome may have been halfway palatable. But Hill and Barris barely bother to develop Amira and Ezra’s relationship or explore Amira’s personality at all. There’s no need, since their coupledom is simply a detonator for the bombs Hill and Barris designed to go off in their families.

Our society’s fraught relationship with other cultures and non-white people requires folks in interracial relationships to contend with irritations and trials other couples don’t. That much is true. But generally speaking, we’re as boring as everyone else, cemented together by passions that have nothing to do with how other people feel. It would be wonderful to have a romantic comedy that affirms that in an emotionally intelligent, universally appealing way. Unfortunately, “You People” isn’t it.

“We’re still gonna say no”: UnitedHealthcare’s effort to deny coverage to chronically ill patient

In May 2021, a nurse at UnitedHealthcare called a colleague to share some welcome news about a problem the two had been grappling with for weeks.

United provided the health insurance plan for students at Penn State University. It was a large and potentially lucrative account: lots of young, healthy students paying premiums in, not too many huge medical reimbursements going out.

But one student was costing United a lot of money. Christopher McNaughton suffered from a crippling case of ulcerative colitis — an ailment that caused him to develop severe arthritis, debilitating diarrhea, numbing fatigue and life-threatening blood clots. His medical bills were running nearly $2 million a year.

United had flagged McNaughton’s case as a “high dollar account,” and the company was reviewing whether it needed to keep paying for the expensive cocktail of drugs crafted by a Mayo Clinic specialist that had brought McNaughton’s disease under control after he’d been through years of misery.

On the 2021 phone call, which was recorded by the company, nurse Victoria Kavanaugh told her colleague that a doctor contracted by United to review the case had concluded that McNaughton’s treatment was “not medically necessary.” Her colleague, Dave Opperman, reacted to the news with a long laugh.

“I knew that was coming,” said Opperman, who heads up a United subsidiary that brokered the health insurance contract between United and Penn State. “I did too,” Kavanaugh replied.

Opperman then complained about McNaughton’s mother, whom he referred to as “this woman,” for “screaming and yelling” and “throwing tantrums” during calls with United.

The pair agreed that any appeal of the United doctor’s denial of the treatment would be a waste of the family’s time and money.

“We’re still gonna say no,” Opperman said.

More than 200 million Americans are covered by private health insurance. But data from state and federal regulators shows that insurers reject about 1 in 7 claims for treatment. Many people, faced with fighting insurance companies, simply give up: One study found that Americans file formal appeals on only 0.1% of claims denied by insurers under the Affordable Care Act.

Insurers have wide discretion in crafting what is covered by their policies, beyond some basic services mandated by federal and state law. They often deny claims for services that they deem not “medically necessary.”

When United refused to pay for McNaughton’s treatment for that reason, his family did something unusual. They fought back with a lawsuit, which uncovered a trove of materials, including internal emails and tape-recorded exchanges among company employees. Those records offer an extraordinary behind-the-scenes look at how one of America’s leading health care insurers relentlessly fought to reduce spending on care, even as its profits rose to record levels.

As United reviewed McNaughton’s treatment, he and his family were often in the dark about what was happening or their rights. Meanwhile, United employees misrepresented critical findings and ignored warnings from doctors about the risks of altering McNaughton’s drug plan.

At one point, court records show, United inaccurately reported to Penn State and the family that McNaughton’s doctor had agreed to lower the doses of his medication. Another time, a doctor paid by United concluded that denying payments for McNaughton’s treatment could put his health at risk, but the company buried his report and did not consider its findings. The insurer did, however, consider a report submitted by a company doctor who rubber-stamped the recommendation of a United nurse to reject paying for the treatment.

United declined to answer specific questions about the case, even after McNaughton signed a release provided by the insurer to allow it to discuss details of his interactions with the company. United noted that it ultimately paid for all of McNaughton’s treatments. In a written response, United spokesperson Maria Gordon Shydlo wrote that the company’s guiding concern was McNaughton’s well-being.

“Mr. McNaughton’s treatment involves medication dosages that far exceed FDA guidelines,” the statement said. “In cases like this, we review treatment plans based on current clinical guidelines to help ensure patient safety.”

But the records reviewed by ProPublica show that United had another, equally urgent goal in dealing with McNaughton. In emails, officials calculated what McNaughton was costing them to keep his crippling disease at bay and how much they would save if they forced him to undergo a cheaper treatment that had already failed him. As the family pressed the company to back down, first through Penn State and then through a lawsuit, the United officials handling the case bristled.

“This is just unbelievable,” Kavanaugh said of McNaughton’s family in one call to discuss his case. “They’re just really pushing the envelope, and I’m surprised, like I don’t even know what to say.”

The same meal every day

Now 31, McNaughton grew up in State College, Pennsylvania, just blocks from the Penn State campus. Both of his parents are faculty members at the university.

In the winter of 2014, McNaughton was halfway through his junior year at Bard College in New York. At 6 feet, 4 inches tall, he was a guard on the basketball team and had started most of the team’s games since the start of his sophomore year. He was majoring in psychology.

When McNaughton returned to school after the winter holiday break, he started to experience frequent bouts of bloody diarrhea. After just a few days on campus, he went home to State College, where doctors diagnosed him with a severe case of ulcerative colitis.

A chronic inflammatory bowel disease that causes swelling and ulcers in the digestive tract, ulcerative colitis has no cure, and ongoing treatment is needed to alleviate symptoms and prevent serious health complications. The majority of cases produce mild to moderate symptoms. McNaughton’s case was severe.

Treatments for ulcerative colitis include steroids and special drugs known as biologics that work to reduce inflammation in the large intestine.

McNaughton, however, failed to get meaningful relief from the drugs his doctors initially prescribed. He was experiencing bloody diarrhea up to 20 times a day, with such severe stomach pain that he spent much of his day curled up on a couch. He had little appetite and lost 50 pounds. Severe anemia left him fatigued. He suffered from other conditions related to his colitis, including crippling arthritis. He was hospitalized several times to treat dangerous blood clots.

For two years, in an effort to help alleviate his symptoms, he ate the same meals every day: Rice Chex cereal and scrambled eggs for breakfast, a cup of white rice with plain chicken breast for lunch and a similar meal for dinner, occasionally swapping in tilapia.

His hometown doctors referred him to a specialist at the University of Pittsburgh, who tried unsuccessfully to bring his disease under control. That doctor ended up referring McNaughton to Dr. Edward Loftus Jr. at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, which has been ranked as the best gastroenterology hospital in the country every year since 1990 by U.S. News & World Report.

For his first visit with Loftus in May 2015, McNaughton and his mother, Janice Light, charted hospitals along the 900-mile drive from Pennsylvania to Minnesota in case they needed medical help along the way.

Mornings were the hardest. McNaughton often spent several hours in the bathroom at the start of the day. To prepare for his meeting with Loftus, he set his alarm for 3:30 a.m. so he could be ready for the 7:30 a.m. appointment. Even with that preparation, he had to stop twice to use a bathroom on the five-minute walk from the hotel to the clinic. When they met, Loftus looked at McNaughton and told him that he appeared incapacitated. It was, he told the student, as if McNaughton were chained to the bathroom, with no outside life. He had not been able to return to school and spent most days indoors, managing his symptoms as best he could.

McNaughton had tried a number of medications by this point, none of which worked. This pattern would repeat itself during the first couple of years that Loftus treated him.

In addition to trying to find a treatment that would bring McNaughton’s colitis into remission, Loftus wanted to wean him off the steroid prednisone, which he had been taking since his initial diagnosis in 2014. The drug is commonly prescribed to colitis patients to control inflammation, but prolonged use can lead to severe side effects including cataracts, osteoporosis, increased risk of infection and fatigue. McNaughton also experienced “moon face,” a side effect caused by the shifting of fat deposits that results in the face becoming puffy and rounder.

In 2018, Loftus and McNaughton decided to try an unusual regimen. Many patients with inflammatory bowel diseases like colitis take a single biologic drug as treatment. Whereas traditional drugs are chemically synthesized, biologics are manufactured in living systems, such as plant or animal cells. A year’s supply of an individual biologic drug can cost up to $500,000. They are often given through infusions in a medical facility, which adds to the cost.

McNaughton had tried individual biologics, and then two in combination, without much success. He and Loftus then agreed to try two biologic drugs together at doses well above those recommended by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Prescribing drugs for purposes other than what they are approved for or at higher doses than those approved by the FDA is a common practice in medicine referred to as off-label prescribing. The federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality estimates 1 in 5 prescriptions written today are for off-label uses.

There are drawbacks to the practice. Since some uses and doses of particular drugs have not been extensively studied, the risks and efficacy of using them off-label are not well known. Also, some drug manufacturers have improperly pushed off-label usage of their products to boost sales despite little or no evidence to support their use in those situations. Like many leading experts and researchers in his field, Loftus has been paid to do consulting related to the biologic drugs taken by McNaughton. The payments related to those drugs have ranged from a total of $1,440 in 2020 to $51,235 in 2018. Loftus said much of his work with pharmaceutical companies was related to conducting clinical trials on new drugs.

In cases of off-label prescribing, patients are depending upon their doctor’s expertise and experience with the drug.”In this case, I was comfortable that the potential benefits to Chris outweighed the risks,” Loftus said.

There was evidence that the treatment plan for McNaughton might work, including studies that had found dual biologic therapy to be efficacious and safe. The two drugs he takes, Entyvio and Remicade, have the same purpose — to reduce inflammation in the large intestine — but each works differently in the body. Remicade, marketed by Janssen Biotech, targets a protein that causes inflammation. Entyvio, made by Takeda Pharmaceuticals, works by preventing an excess of white blood cells from entering into the gastrointestinal tract.

As for any suggestion by United doctors that his treatment plan for McNaughton was out of bounds or dangerous, Loftus said “my treatment of Chris was not clinically inappropriate — as was shown by Chris’ positive outcome.”

The unusual high-dose combination of two biologic drugs produced a remarkable change in McNaughton. He no longer had blood in his stool, and his trips to the bathroom were cut from 20 times a day to three or four. He was able to eat different foods and put on weight. He had more energy. He tapered off prednisone.

“If you told me in 2015 that I would be living like this, I would have asked where do I sign up,” McNaughton said of the change he experienced with the new drug regimen.

When he first started the new treatment, McNaughton was covered under his family’s plan, and all his bills were paid. McNaughton enrolled at the university in 2020. Before switching to United’s plan for students, McNaughton and his parents consulted with a health advocacy service offered to faculty members. A benefits specialist assured them the drugs taken by McNaughton would be covered by United.

McNaughton joined the student plan in July 2020, and his infusions that month and the following month were paid for by United. In September, the insurer indicated payment on his claims was “pending,” something it did for his other claims that came in during the rest of the year.

McNaughton and his family were worried. They called United to make sure there wasn’t a problem; the insurer told them, they said, that it only needed to check his medical records. When the family called again, United told them it had the documentation needed, they said. United, in a court filing last year, said it received two calls from the family and each time indicated that all of the necessary medical records had not yet been received.

In January 2021, McNaughton received a new explanation of benefits for the prior months. All of the claims for his care, beginning in September, were no longer “pending.” They were stamped “DENIED.” The total outstanding bill for his treatment was $807,086.

When McNaughton’s mother reached a United customer service representative the next day to ask why bills that had been paid in the summer were being denied for the fall, the representative told her the account was being reviewed because of “a high dollar amount on the claims,” according to a recording of the call.

Misrepresentations

With United refusing to pay, the family was terrified of being stuck with medical bills that would bankrupt them and deprive McNaugton of treatment that they considered miraculous.

They turned to Penn State for help. Light and McNaughton’s father, David, hoped their position as faculty members would make the school more willing to intervene on their behalf.

“After more than 30 years on faculty, my husband and I know that this is not how Penn State would want its students to be treated,” Light wrote to a school official in February 2021.

In response to questions from ProPublica, Penn State spokesperson Lisa Powers wrote that “supporting the health and well-being of our students is always of primary importance” and that “our hearts go out to any student and family impacted by a serious medical condition.” The university, she wrote, does “not comment on students’ individual circumstances or disclose information from their records.” McNaughton offered to grant Penn State whatever permissions it needed to speak about his case with ProPublica. The school, however, wrote that it would not comment “even if confidentiality has been waived.”

The family appealed to school administrators. Because the effectiveness of biologics wanes in some patients if doses are skipped, McNaughton and his parents were worried about even a delay in treatment. His doctor wrote that if he missed scheduled infusions of the drugs, there was “a high likelihood they would no longer be effective.”

During a conference call arranged by Penn State officials on March 5, 2021, United agreed to pay for McNaughton’s care through the end of the plan year that August. Penn State immediately notified the family of the “wonderful news” while also apologizing for “the stress this has caused Chris and your family.”

Behind the scenes, McNaughton’s review had “gone all the way to the top” at United’s student health plan division, Kavanaugh, the nurse, said in a recorded conversation.

The family’s relief was short-lived. A month later, United started another review of McNaughton’s care, overseen by Kavanaugh, to determine if it would pay for the treatment in the upcoming plan year.

The nurse sent the McNaughton case to a company called Medical Review Institute of America. Insurers often turn to companies like MRIoA to review coverage decisions involving expensive treatments or specialized care.

Kavanaugh, who was assigned to a special investigations unit at United, let her feelings about the matter be known in a recorded telephone call with a representative of MRIoA.

“This school apparently is a big client of ours,” she said. She then shared her opinion of McNaughton’s treatment. “Really this is a case of a kid who’s getting a drug way too much, like too much of a dose,” Kavanaugh said. She said it was “insane that they would even think that this is reasonable” and “to be honest with you, they’re awfully pushy considering that we are paying through the end of this school year.”

MRIoA sent the case to Dr. Vikas Pabby, a gastroenterologist at UCLA Health and a professor at the university’s medical school. His May 2021 review of McNaughton’s case was just one of more than 300 Pabby did for MRIoA that month, for which he was paid $23,000 in total, according to a log of his work produced in the lawsuit.

In a May 4, 2021 report, Pabby concluded McNaughton’s treatment was not medically necessary, because United’s policies for the two drugs taken by McNaughton did not support using them in combination.

Insurers spell out what services they cover in plan policies, lengthy documents that can be confusing and difficult to understand. Many policies, such as McNaughton’s, contain a provision that treatments and procedures must be “medically necessary” in order to be covered. The definition of medically necessary differs by plan. Some don’t even define the term. McNaughton’s policy contains a five-part definition, including that the treatment must be “in accordance with the standards of good medical policy” and “the most appropriate supply or level of service which can be safely provided.”

Behind the scenes at United, Opperman and Kavanaugh agreed that if McNaughton were to appeal Pabby’s decision, the insurer would simply rule against him. “I just think it’s a waste of money and time to appeal and send it to another one when we know we’re gonna get the same answer,” Opperman said, according to a recording in court files. At Opperman’s urging, United decided to skip the usual appeals process and arrange for Pabby to have a so-called “peer-to-peer” discussion with Loftus, the Mayo physician treating McNaughton. Such a conversation, in which a patient’s doctor talks with an insurance company’s doctor to advocate for the prescribed treatment, usually only occurs after a customer has appealed a denial and the appeal has been rejected.

When Kavanaugh called Loftus’ office to set up a conversation with Pabby, she explained it was an urgent matter and had been requested by McNaughton. “You know I’ve just gotten to know Christopher,” she explained, although she had never spoken with him. “We’re trying to advocate and help and get this peer-to-peer set up.”

McNaughton, meanwhile, had no idea at the time that a United doctor had decided his treatment was unnecessary and that the insurer was trying to set up a phone call with his physician.

In the peer-to-peer conversation, Loftus told Pabby that McNaughton had “a very complicated case” and that lower doses had not worked for him, according to an internal MRIoA memo.

Following his conversation with Loftus, Pabby created a second report for United. He recommended the insurer pay for both drugs, but at reduced doses. He added new language saying that the safety of using both drugs at the higher levels “is not established.”

When Kavanaugh shared the May 12 decision from Pabby with others at United, her boss responded with an email calling it “great news.”

Then Opperman sent an email that puzzled the McNaughtons.

In it, Opperman claimed that Loftus and Pabby had agreed that McNaughton should be on significantly lower doses of both drugs. He said Loftus “will work with the patient to start titrating them down” — or reducing the dosage — “to a normal dose range.” Opperman wrote that United would cover McNaughton’s treatment in the coming year, but only at the reduced doses. Opperman did not respond to emails and phone messages seeking comment.

McNaughton didn’t believe a word of it. He had already tried and failed treatment with those drugs at lower doses, and it was Loftus who had upped the doses, leading to his remission from severe colitis.

The only thing that made sense to McNaughton was that the treatment United said it would now pay for was dramatically cheaper — saving the company at least hundreds of thousands of dollars a year — than his prescribed treatment because it sliced the size of the doses by more than half.

When the family contacted Loftus for an explanation, they were outraged by what they heard. Loftus told them that he had never recommended lowering the dosage. In a letter, Loftus wrote that changing McNaughton’s treatment “would have serious detrimental effects on both his short term and long term health and could potentially involve life threatening complications. This would ultimately incur far greater medical costs. Chris was on the doses suggested by United Healthcare before, and they were not at all effective.”

It would not be until the lawsuit that it would become clear how Loftus’ conversations had been so seriously misrepresented.

Under questioning by McNaughton’s lawyers, Kavanaugh acknowledged that she was the source of the incorrect claim that McNaughton’s doctor had agreed to a change in treatment.

“I incorrectly made an assumption that they had come to some sort of agreement,” she said in a deposition last August. “It was my first peer-to-peer. I did not realize that that simply does not occur.”

Kavanaugh did not respond to emails and telephone messages seeking comment.

When the McNaughtons first learned of Opperman’s inaccurate report of the phone call with Loftus, it unnerved them. They started to question if their case would be fairly reviewed.

“When we got the denial and they lied about what Dr. Loftus said, it just hit me that none of this matters,” McNaughton said. “They will just say or do anything to get rid of me. It delegitimized the entire review process. When I got that denial, I was crushed.”

A buried report

While the family tried to sort out the inaccurate report, United continued putting the McNaughton case in front of more company doctors.

On May 21, 2021, United sent the case to one of its own doctors, Dr. Nady Cates, for an additional review. The review was marked “escalated issue.” Cates is a United medical director, a title used by many insurers for physicians who review cases. It is work he has been doing as an employee of health insurers since 1989 and at United since 2010. He has not practiced medicine since the early 1990s.

Cates, in a deposition, said he stopped seeing patients because of the long hours involved and because “AIDS was coming around then. I was seeing a lot of military folks who had venereal diseases, and I guess I was concerned about being exposed.” He transitioned to reviewing paperwork for the insurance industry, he said, because “I guess I was a chicken.”

When he had practiced, Cates said, he hadn’t treated patients with ulcerative colitis and had referred those cases to a gastroenterologist.

He said his review of McNaughton’s case primarily involved reading a United nurse’s recommendation to deny his care and making sure “that there wasn’t a decimal place that was out of line.” He said he copied and pasted the nurse’s recommendation and typed “agree” on his review of McNaughton’s case.

Cates said that he does about a hundred reviews a week. He said that in his reviews he typically checks to see if any medications are prescribed in accordance with the insurer’s guidelines, and if not, he denies it. United’s policies, he said, prevented him from considering that McNaughton had failed other treatments or that Loftus was a leading expert in his field.

“You are giving zero weight to the treating doctor’s opinion on the necessity of the treatment regimen?” a lawyer asked Cates in his deposition. He responded, “Yeah.”

Attempts to contact Cates for comment were unsuccessful.

At the same time Cates was looking at McNaughton’s case, yet another review was underway at MRIoA. United said it sent the case back to MRIoA after the insurer received the letter from Loftus warning of the life-threatening complications that might occur if the dosages were reduced.

On May 24, 2021, the new report requested by MRIoA arrived. It came to a completely different conclusion than all of the previous reviews.

Dr. Nitin Kumar, a gastroenterologist in Illinois, concluded that McNaughton’s established treatment plan was not only medically necessary and appropriate but that lowering his doses “can result in a lack of effective therapy of Ulcerative Colitis, with complications of uncontrolled disease (including dysplasia leading to colorectal cancer), flare, hospitalization, need for surgery, and toxic megacolon.”

Unlike other doctors who produced reports for United, Kumar discussed the harm that McNaughton might suffer if United required him to change his treatment. “His disease is significantly severe, with diagnosis at a young age,” Kumar wrote. “He has failed every biologic medication class recommended by guidelines. Therefore, guidelines can no longer be applied in this case.” He cited six studies of patients using two biologic drugs together and wrote that they revealed no significant safety issues and found the therapy to be “broadly successful.”

When Kavanaugh learned of Kumar’s report, she quickly moved to quash it and get the case returned to Pabby, according to her deposition.

In a recorded telephone call, Kavanaugh told an MRIoA representative that “I had asked that this go back through Dr. Pabby, and it went through a different doctor and they had a much different result.” After further discussion, the MRIoA representative agreed to send the case back to Pabby. “I appreciate that,” Kavanaugh replied. “I just want to make sure, because, I mean, it’s obviously a very different result than what we’ve been getting on this case.”

MRIoA case notes show that at 7:04 a.m. on May 25, 2021, Pabby was assigned to take a look at the case for the third time. At 7:27 a.m., the notes indicate, Pabby again rejected McNaughton’s treatment plan. While noting it was “difficult to control” McNaughton’s ulcerative colitis, Pabby added that his doses “far exceed what is approved by literature” and that the “safety of the requested doses is not supported by literature.”

In a deposition, Kavanaugh said that after she opened the Kumar report and read that he was supporting McNaughton’s current treatment plan, she immediately spoke to her supervisor, who told her to call MRIoA and have the case sent back to Pabby for review.

Kavanaugh said she didn’t save a copy of the Kumar report, nor did she forward it to anyone at United or to officials at Penn State who had been inquiring about the McNaughton case. “I didn’t because it shouldn’t have existed,” she said. “It should have gone back to Dr. Pabby.”

When asked if the Kumar report caused her any concerns given his warning that McNaughton risked cancer or hospitalization if his regimen were changed, Kavanaugh said she didn’t read his full report. “I saw that it was not the correct doctor, I saw the initial outcome and I was asked to send it back,” she said. Kavanaugh added, “I have a lot of empathy for this member, but it needed to go back to the peer-to-peer reviewer.”

In a court filing, United said Kavanaugh was correct in insisting that Pabby conduct the review and that MRIoA confirmed that Pabby should have been the one doing the review.

The Kumar report was not provided to McNaughton when his lawyer, Jonathan Gesk, first asked United and MRIoA for any reviews of the case. Gesk discovered it by accident when he was listening to a recorded telephone call produced by United in which Kavanaugh mentioned a report number Gesk had not heard before. He then called MRIoA, which confirmed the report existed and eventually provided it to him.

Pabby asked ProPublica to direct any questions about his involvement in the matter to MRIoA. The company did not respond to questions from ProPublica about the case.

A sense of hopelessness

When McNaughton enrolled at Penn State in 2020, it brought a sense of normalcy that he had lost when he was first diagnosed with colitis. He still needed monthly hours-long infusions and suffered occasional flare-ups and symptoms, but he was attending classes in person and living a life similar to the one he had before his diagnosis.

It was a striking contrast to the previous six years, which he had spent largely confined to his parents’ house in State College. The frequent bouts of diarrhea made it difficult to go out. He didn’t talk much to friends and spent as much time as he could studying potential treatments and reviewing ongoing clinical trials. He tried to keep up with the occasional online course, but his disease made it difficult to make any real progress toward a degree.

United, in correspondence with McNaughton, noted that its review of his care was “not a treatment decision. Treatment decisions are made between you and your physician.” But by threatening not to pay for his medications, or only to pay for a different regimen, McNaughton said, United was in fact attempting to dictate his treatment. From his perspective, the insurer was playing doctor, making decisions without ever examining him or even speaking to him.

The idea of changing his treatment or stopping it altogether caused constant worry for McNaughton, exacerbating his colitis and triggering physical symptoms, according to his doctors. Those included a large ulcer on his leg and welts under his skin on his thighs and shin that made his leg muscles stiff and painful to the point where he couldn’t bend his leg or walk properly. There were daily migraines and severe stomach pain. “I was consumed with this situation,” McNaughton said. “My path was unconventional, but I was proud of myself for fighting back and finishing school and getting my life back on track. I thought they were singling me out. My biggest fear was going back to the hell.”

McNaughton said he contemplated suicide on several occasions, dreading a return to a life where he was housebound or hospitalized.

McNaughton and his parents talked about him possibly moving to Canada where his grandmother lived and seeking treatment there under the nation’s government health plan.

Loftus connected McNaughton with a psychologist who specializes in helping patients with chronic digestive diseases.

The psychologist, Tiffany Taft, said McNaughton was not an unusual case. About 1 in 3 patients with diseases like colitis suffer from medical trauma or PTSD related to it, she said, often the result of issues related to getting appropriate treatment approved by insurers.

“You get into hopelessness,” she said of the depression that accompanies fighting with insurance companies over care. “They feel like ‘I can’t fix that. I am screwed.’ When you can’t control things with what an insurance company is doing, anxiety, PTSD and depression get mixed together.”

In the case of McNaughton, Taft said, he was being treated by one of the best gastroenterologists in the world, was doing well with his treatment and then was suddenly notified he might be on the hook for nearly a million dollars in medical charges without access to his medications. “It sends you immediately into panic about all these horrific things that could happen,” Taft said. The physical and mental symptoms McNaughton suffered after his care was threatened were “triggered” by the stress he experienced, she said.

In early June 2021, United informed McNaughton in a letter that it would not cover the cost of his treatment regimen in the next academic year, starting in August. The insurer said it would only pay for a treatment plan that called for a significant reduction in the doses of the drugs he took.

United wrote that the decision came after his “records have been reviewed three times and the medical reviewers have concluded that the medication as prescribed does not meet the Medical Necessity requirement of the plan.”

In August 2021, McNaughton filed a federal lawsuit accusing United of acting in bad faith and unreasonably making treatment decisions based on financial concerns and not what was the best and most effective treatment. It claims United had a duty to find information that supported McNaughton’s claim for treatment rather than looking for ways to deny coverage.

United, in a court filing, said it did not breach any duty it owed to McNaughton and acted in good faith. On Sept. 20, 2021, a month after filing the lawsuit, and with United again balking at paying for his treatment, McNaughton asked a judge to grant a temporary restraining order requiring United to pay for his care. With the looming threat of a court hearing on the motion, United quickly agreed to cover the cost of McNaughton’s treatment through the end of the 2021-2022 academic year. It also dropped a demand requiring McNaughton to settle the matter as a condition of the insurer paying for his treatment as prescribed by Loftus, according to an email sent by United’s lawyer.

The cost of treatment

It is not surprising that insurers are carefully scrutinizing the care of patients treated with biologics, which are among the most expensive medications on the market. Biologics are considered specialty drugs, a class that includes the best-selling Humira, used to treat arthritis. Specialty drug spending in the U.S. is expected to reach $505 billion in 2023, according to an estimate from Optum, United’s health services division. The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, a nonprofit that analyzes the value of drugs, found in 2020 that the biologic drugs used to treat patients like McNaughton are often effective but overpriced for their therapeutic benefit. To be judged cost-effective by ICER, the biologics should sell at a steep discount to their current market price, the panel found.

A panel convened by ICER to review its analysis cautioned that insurance coverage “should be structured to prevent situations in which patients are forced to choose a treatment approach on the basis of cost.” ICER also found examples where insurance company policies failed to keep pace with updates to clinical practice guidelines based on emerging research.

United officials did not make the cost of treatment an issue when discussing McNaughton’s care with Penn State administrators or the family.

Bill Truxal, the president of UnitedHealthcare StudentResources, the company’s student health plan division, told a Penn State official that the insurer wanted the “best for the student” and it had “nothing to do with cost,” according to notes the official took of the conversation.

Behind the scenes, however, the price of McNaughton’s care was front and center at United.

In one email, Opperman asked about the cost difference if the insurer insisted on only paying for greatly reduced doses of the biologic drugs. Kavanaugh responded that the insurer had paid $1.1 million in claims for McNaughton’s care as of the middle of May 2021. If the reduced doses had been in place, the amount would have been cut to $260,218, she wrote.

United was keeping close tabs on McNaughton at the highest levels of the company. On Aug. 2, 2021, Opperman notified Truxal and a United lawyer that McNaughton “has just purchased the plan again for the 21-22 school year.”

A month later, Kavanaugh shared another calculation with United executives showing that the insurer spent over $1.7 million on McNaughton in the prior plan year.

United officials strategized about how to best explain why it was reviewing McNaughton’s drug regimen, according to an internal email. They pointed to a justification often used by health insurers when denying claims. “As the cost of healthcare continues to climb to soaring heights, it has been determined that a judicious review of these drugs should be included” in order to “make healthcare more affordable for our members,” Kavanaugh offered as a potential talking point in an April 23, 2021, email.

Three days later, UnitedHealth Group filed an annual statement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission disclosing its pay for top executives in the prior year. Then-CEO David Wichmann was paid $17.9 million in salary and other compensation in 2020. Wichmann retired early the following year, and his total compensation that year exceeded $140 million, according to calculations in a compensation database maintained by the Star Tribune in Minneapolis. The newspaper said the amount was the most paid to an executive in the state since it started tracking pay more than two decades ago. About $110 million of that total came from Wichmann exercising stock options accumulated during his stewardship.

The McNaughtons were well aware of the financial situation at United. They looked at publicly available financial results and annual reports. Last year, United reported a profit of $20.1 billion on revenues of $324.2 billion.

When discussing the case with Penn State, Light said, she told university administrators that United could pay for a year of her son’s treatment using just minutes’ worth of profit.

“Betrayed”

McNaughton has been able to continue receiving his infusions for now, anyway. In October, United notified him it was once again reviewing his care, although the insurer quickly reversed course when his lawyer intervened. United, in a court filing, said the review was a mistake and that it had erred in putting McNaughton’s claims into pending status.

McNaughton said he is fortunate his parents were employed at the same school he was attending, which was critical in getting the attention of administrators there. But that help had its limits.

In June 2021, just a week after United told McNaughton it would not cover his treatment plan in the upcoming plan year, Penn State essentially walked away from the matter.

In an email to the McNaughtons and United, Penn State Associate Vice President for Student Affairs Andrea Dowhower wrote that administrators “have observed an unfortunate breakdown in communication” between McNaughton and his family and the university health insurance plan, “which appears from our perspective to have resulted in a standstill between the two parties.” While she proposed some potential steps to help settle the matter, she wrote that “Penn State’s role in this process is as a resource for students like Chris who, for whatever reason, have experienced difficulty navigating the complex world of health insurance.” The university’s role “is limited,” she wrote, and the school “simply must leave” the issue of the best treatment for McNaughton to “the appropriate health care professionals.”

In a statement, a Penn State spokesperson wrote that “as a third party in this arrangement, the University’s role is limited and Penn State officials can only help a student manage an issue based on information that a student/family, medical personnel, and/or insurance provider give — with the hope that all information is accurate and that the lines of communication remain open between the insured and the insurer.”

Penn State declined to provide financial information about the plan. However, the university and United share at least one tie that they have not publicly disclosed.

When the McNaughtons first reached out to the university for help, they were referred to the school’s student health insurance coordinator. The official, Heather Klinger, wrote in an email to the family in February 2021 that “I appreciate your trusting me to resolve this for you.”

In April 2022, United began paying Klinger’s salary, an arrangement which is not noted on the university website. Klinger appears in the online staff directory on the Penn State University Health Services webpage, and has a university phone number, a university address and a Penn State email listed as her contact. The school said she has maintained a part-time status with the university to allow her to access relevant data systems at both the university and United.

The university said students “benefit” from having a United employee to handle questions about insurance coverage and that the arrangement is “not uncommon” for student health plans.

The family was dismayed to learn that Klinger was now a full-time employee of United.

“We did feel betrayed,” Light said. Klinger did not respond to an email seeking comment.

McNaughton’s fight to maintain his treatment regimen has come at a cost of time, debilitating stress and depression. “My biggest fear is realizing I might have to do this every year of my life,” he said.

McNaughton said one motivation for his lawsuit was to expose how insurers like United make decisions about what care they will pay for and what they will not. The case remains pending, a court docket shows.

He has been accepted to Penn State’s law school. He hopes to become a health care lawyer working for patients who find themselves in situations similar to his.

He plans to reenroll in the United health care plan when he starts school next fall.

20 Republican AGs threaten to go after CVS and Walgreens if they sell abortion pills

A coalition of 20 Republican attorneys general warned CVS and Walgreens that they could face legal consequences if they sell abortion pills. 

While retail pharmacies are allowed to offer abortion pills under Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations, the attorneys general told the bigger chains in a letter that selling the drug mifepristone, which is used for medical abortions, is “unsafe and illegal.”

“As Attorney General, it is my responsibility to enforce the laws as written, and that includes enforcing the very laws that protect Missouri’s women and unborn children,” Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey said in a statement

“My Office is doing everything in its power to inform these companies of the law, with the promise that we will use every tool at our disposal to uphold the law if broken,” he added. 

The statement also makes the unfounded claims that “abortion pills impose far higher risks of complications compared to surgical abortions” and that “abortion pills, especially when distributed by mail, make coerced abortions much easier.” 

The FDA approved mifepristone more than 20 years ago as a safe and effective way to terminate early pregnancy. The FDA also confirmed that the pill is safer than surgical abortion and childbirth through scientific and real-world evidence. It is now the most widely used form of abortion in the U.S.

The letters to CVS and Walgreens quote federal law and state that “the text could not be clearer: ‘every article or thing designed, adapted, or intended for producing abortion … shall not be conveyed in the mails.’ And anyone who ‘knowingly takes any such thing from the mails for the purpose of circulating’ is guilty of a federal crime.”

Walgreens spokesperson Fraser Engerman confirmed that their stores “are not dispensing mifepristone at this time” in a statement to Axios.

“We intend to become a certified pharmacy under the [FDA] program, however we fully understand that we may not be able to dispense mifepristone in all locations if we are certified under the program,” Engerman added.

CVS has not yet commented on the matter, but both chains have said that they are applying to become certified with the FDA to dispense the prescription pill in states where it is legally possible to do so.

The warning letter from the attorneys general cites the Comstock Act, an 1873 law that made it illegal to send what was deemed to be pornographic publications through the mail. The law also included language that prohibits the mailing of “any article or thing designed or intended for the prevention of conception or procuring of an abortion.”

However, the Department of Justice in January wrote that the Comstock Act does not prohibit the mailing of abortion pills “where the sender lacks the intent that the recipient of the drugs will use them unlawfully.”

The attorneys general argued against what they called the DOJ’s “bizarre” interpretation in the letter, writing that “the text, not the Biden administration’s view, is what governs,” and that the “consequences for accepting the Biden administration’s reading could come far sooner,” threatening civil litigation.


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The letters to CVS and Walgreens were signed by the attorneys general of Missouri, Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah and West Virginia.

At least 19 states have severely restricted or outright banned the use of telemedicine to obtain abortion pills, instead requiring that patients come to a medical facility in person. 

There are currently two open lawsuits in North Carolina and West Virginia arguing that states cannot regulate or restrict FDA-approved drugs. GenBioPro, one of the pill’s manufacturers, has sued to overturn West Virginia’s abortion ban, potentially setting a precedent that FDA policy preempts state law.

However, anti-abortion physicians have also filed a lawsuit against the FDA in Texas federal court, in order to completely pull mifepristone from the market. They cast doubt on the agency’s approval process in 2000 for the pill, and questioned the rule changes that have been made since. They cite a recent FDA regulation that allows the drug to be mailed or dispensed by retail pharmacies and say there used to be greater layers of restrictions. 

“They’ve loosened the requirements again, and again, and again,” Denise Harle, senior counsel with Alliance Defending Freedom, the group suing the FDA, told NPR. “So now, mifepristone is being given to women who have never even seen a physician in person.”

In response, the FDA said that the lawsuit is “extraordinary and unprecedented” and would harm the agency’s power in the future. They noted in their defense that it would be highly unusual for the FDA to pull a drug from the market after more than two decades of widespread safe and effective use.

Jenny Ma, senior counsel with the Center for Reproductive Rights, told NPR that the outcome of the suit could cause a “nationwide ban on medication abortion” with an even greater impact than the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision last year, which overturned decades of abortion rights precedent.

“That decision left the decision about abortion up to the states,” Ma explained, “but this would be one court in Texas deciding whether or not medication abortion could be allowed across this country, even in states that have protected abortion since the Dobbs decision.”

The anti-abortion group is raising questions about the FDA’s approval process in 2000 and some of the rule changes that have been made since then. They note that under President Biden, the FDA now allows mifepristone to be mailed or dispensed by retail pharmacies, while it used to be subject to more layers of restriction.

The decision is left to a Trump-appointed federal judge in Texas, Matthew Kacsmaryk, who has a longstanding relationship with religious right-wing groups, including working as an attorney with a conservative Texan Christian legal group.

“It’s no accident that the complaint was filed in Amarillo,” Elizabeth Sepper, a University of Texas at Austin law professor told NPR. “The way the district courts in Texas dole out cases makes it so that there are a few places where you pretty much know which judge you’re going to get. So they know they have a very sympathetic ear.”

If appeals are made for the case, it would go to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, a conservative jurisdiction, and then potentially to the U.S. Supreme Court. And it’s not just red states at risk for losing access to abortion, says Ma. If Kacsmaryk sides with the anti-abortion group, mifepristone would be completely pulled from the market nationwide, at least temporarily. The FDA could start another approval process, but that could take years. 

“After Dobbs, it almost seemed like there were two Americas – where abortion access was allowed in some states and not in others,” Ma told the outlet. “This would amount to a nationwide ban on medication abortion, and patients who seek this care would not be able to get this care from any pharmacy, or any prescriber or any provider.”

“Is anyone surprised I’m being targeted?”: House GOP boots Ilhan Omar from Foreign Affairs Committee

House Republicans on Thursday voted to remove Rep. Ilhan Omar from the chamber’s foreign affairs committee, a step that prompted fury from Democratic lawmakers who called the GOP’s resolution an act of “unbelievable bigotry.”

Speaking for herself in floor remarks ahead of the vote, Omar, D-Minn., —a vocal defender of global human rights and trenchant critic of U.S. foreign policy—said that “this debate today is about who gets to be an American.”

“What opinions do you have to have to be counted as American? This is what this debate is about,” Omar continued. “There is this idea that you are suspect if you are an immigrant, or if you are from certain parts of the world, of a certain skin tone, or a Muslim.”

“Is anyone surprised I’m being targeted?” Omar asked. “Is anyone surprised that I am somehow deemed unworthy to speak about American foreign policy? Frankly, it is expected, because when you push power, power pushes back.”

The congresswoman ended her speech on a defiant note, declaring, “I didn’t come to Congress to be silent… My leadership and voice will not diminish if I am not on this committee for one term.”

Thursday’s vote came after the handful of Republicans who had previously expressed opposition to removing Omar from the House Foreign Affairs Committee flipped their votes to yes. One Republican, Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., voted present.

Every House Democrat who voted opposed the GOP measure.

In the debate that preceded passage of the resolution, Democratic lawmakers rallied to Omar’s defense, spotlighting the GOP’s association with and embrace of neo-Nazis and condemning the resolution as a racist stunt veiled as a rebuke of antisemitism.

“Republicans are waging a blatantly Islamophobic and racist attack on Congresswoman Omar,” said Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo. “This is despicable.”

Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., who is Jewish, said in her impassioned remarks that she doesn’t “need any of you to defend me from antisemitism,” referring to the Republican side of the aisle.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., a top ally of Omar’s, dismissed the GOP’s rationale for the resolution and characterized the vote as another act of “racism and incitement of violence against women of color in this body.”

“Don’t tell me that this is about a condemnation of antisemitic remarks when you have a member of the Republican caucus who has talked about Jewish space lasers,” Ocasio-Cortez said, a reference to Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.

Congressional Progressive Caucus Chair Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., for her part, cast the vote as an attempt to “distract the American people” from the GOP’s lack of a serious legislative agenda.

“It looks to me like that’s a felony”: Election expert says Kari Lake could face jail over tweet

Failed Republican Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake landed herself in hot water last week after tweeting an image of 16 voter signatures.

Arizona’s Democratic Secretary of State Adrian Fontes on Monday asked Attorney General Kris Mayes to investigate whether Lake broke the law by publicly sharing voter signatures in another effort to deny the validity of the midterm election, which she lost to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs.

“Arizona statute is very clear about when and where a voter signature can be shared or replicated or reproduced, or put online or used in social media,” Tammy Patrick, chief executive for programs at the National Association of Election Administrators, told KPNX.

“The answer to all of those things basically is, ‘Never’ and ‘Not’ and  ‘It can’t be,’ with very few exceptions,” explained Patrick, who formerly served as a Maricopa County elections official.

“When I read the law, it looks to me like that’s a felony,” she said.

Lake may have violated a Class 6 felony that could carry jail time. According to Arizona law, “The records containing a voter’s signature…shall not be accessible or reproduced by any person other than the voter.”

“It is my responsibility to protect Arizona voters,” Fontes said in a statement. “In keeping with my duties, I have referred this matter to the attorney general.” Mayes has not yet commented on the situation.


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However, Lake’s attorney Tim La Sota says she had a First Amendment right to post the signatures.

“Adrian Fontes selectively quotes the statute in an attempt to distort the law and smear Kari Lake in the process,” La Sota said.  

“Kris Mayes should immediately say that she will have no part in this shameful, disgusting effort,” he added.

Lake’s Jan. 23 tweet included an image with 16 signatures on early ballot envelope affidavits and voter registrations from eight voters. She captioned the photo with “BOMBSHELL DISCOVERY,” and alleged that “40,000 ballots [were] illegally counted.”

But according to KPNX, Lake’s claims are not substantiated, as eight of the signatures were actually from early-ballot affidavits in the 2020 presidential election and the other eight were from voter registration records. 

Patrick warned of the potential dangers of Lake’s tweets to the overall election process.

“Having signatures being promoted and presented online and other places actually does great harm to the potential integrity of the outcome of an election,” Patrick told the outlet. “That’s why these laws are in place — to protect voters and protect the integrity of the system.”

New studies find that ultraprocessed foods can cause cancer and cancer-related deaths

As the fears regarding the hidden ingredients and potentially nefarious inclusions in our everyday food accumulate — from dark chocolate to spices and even baby food — many new studies have validated concerns involving our daily food and beverage consumption.

A study conducted in the UK and published in Lancet's eClinicalMedicine journal earlier this week has shown that a connection exists between eating ultraprocessed foods and cancer risks, especially in regards to both ovarian and brain cancers. 

Adela Suliman at The Washington Post writes that "of the 197,426 individuals [in the study], some 15,921 people developed cancer and 4,009 cancer-related deaths occurred."

The study "looked at the association between eating ultraprocessed foods and 43 different types of cancer over a 10-year period." According to a statement by Imperial College London, "each 10% increase in ultraprocessed food consumption was associated with a 2% increase in developing any cancer, and a 19% increased risk for being diagnosed with ovarian cancer."

Perhaps the most staggering statistic in the study, though, reflects that the risk of dying from ovarian cancer rose by 30%:

"Every 10% increment in [ultraprocessed] food consumption was associated with increased mortality of overall cancer by 6%, breast cancer by 16%, and ovarian cancer by 30%," said the statement. 

Simon Steenson, a nutrition scientist at the British Nutrition Foundation, said that outside of cancer risks, there's also a higher risk of "obesity, heat attacks, stoke, and type 2 diabetes" correlated with ultraprocessed food consumption.


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The study reported that "participants with highest compared with lowest [ultraprocessed food] consumption … were younger and less likely to have a family history of cancer."

According to The Print, Dr. Eszter Vamos, the lead senior author of the study, said that "Although our study cannot prove causation, other available evidence shows that reducing ultra-processed foods in our diet could provide important health benefits. Further research is needed to confirm these findings and understand the best public health strategies to reduce the widespread presence and harms of ultra-processed foods in our diet." 

So what can be done?

"We need clear front-of-pack warning labels for ultraprocessed foods to aid consumer choices," Dr. Kiara Chang, the first author for the study, told The Print. "Lower income households are particularly vulnerable to these cheap and unhealthy ultra-processed foods. Minimally processed and freshly prepared meals should be subsidised to ensure everyone has access to healthy, nutritious and affordable options."

While Suliman reports that "Brazil has banned the marketing of ultraprocessed foods in schools, while France and Canada have pushed to limit such foods in their national dietary guidelines," it remains to be seen what laws or regulations the United Kingdom, the United States or other countries might enact in order to curb the potentially harmful effects of ultraprocessed foods. 

Tucker Carlson makes racist “joke” about George Floyd while covering Tyre Nichols killing

Fox News’ Tucker Carlson managed to incorporate a racist “joke” into a recent segment of his show covering the murder of Tyre Nichols, Huffpost reports.

The host began his rant by targeting President Joe Biden’s recent decision to end the COVID-19 emergency, and claimed the White House’s decision means he’s forced to turn his attention to 29-year-old Nichols’ murder last month.

Carlson then proceeded to take aim at Democrats, complaining that the party “needed an emergency, so they found one,” and that’s “white racism.”

“White racism is getting harder to find,” Carlson lamented. “Very few unarmed Black men are killed by white cops these days. Where’s George Floyd when you need him?”

Contrary to Carlson’s statement, Rolling Stone found that in 2023, police have already killed at least seven unarmed black people.

Watch the segment below or at this link.