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Criminologists, looking to biology for insight, stir a racist past

Nearly 2 million people, most of them Black or Latino men, are locked up in the United States. In October 2021, the National Institute of Justice, the research arm of the U.S. Department of Justice, published a report arguing that correctional officials should examine the biology of imprisoned people — their hormones, their brains, and perhaps even their genes.

The report describes a future in which corrections sounds a bit more like practicing medicine than meting out punishment. Correctional programs would gather information about incarcerated peoples’ cortisol levels, heart rate, genes, and brain chemistry, and more. They would then use that data to tailor interventions to specific individuals (say, offering one person mindfulness training, and another ADHD medication), and to help estimate the risk that someone will reoffend.

To some, such a proposal may sound invasive, even dystopian. The report’s author, Sam Houston State University biopsychosocial criminologist Danielle Boisvert, suggests it offers a chance to streamline a clunky system: By “excluding known biological and genetic factors that affect behavior,” she wrote in the report, “the criminal justice system may be suppressing its ability to fully benefit from its correctional efforts.” (Boisvert did not respond to requests for an interview.)

The DOJ report represents a new frontier in the discipline of biosocial criminology — a decades-long effort to bring biology back to the study of crime. Researchers in the field have scanned the brains of people convicted of murder and scoured the genomes of teenagers who belong to gangs. Biosocial criminology is “really a kind of smorgasbord of a lot of other disciplines, but trying to apply it to human behavior — and specifically antisocial behavior,” said J.C. Barnes, a biosocial criminologist at the University of Cincinnati.

Today, some of the nation’s top-ranked criminology programs are thriving hubs of biosocial research. Biosocial criminologists teach future prosecutors, law enforcement, and correctional officers.

But the rise of biosocial criminology has also sparked alarm among some scholars, who argue that the science is shoddy — and that racist ideas and assumptions animate the field. “The work that they’re doing is really serious, and really dangerous,” said Viviane Saleh-Hanna, a professor of crime and justice studies at UMass-Dartmouth.

Indeed, the use of biology has long divided criminologists. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, criminologists measured the skulls of imprisoned people and analyzed their bone structure. Often, they drew blatantly racist conclusions. Even as biosocial criminology grows more mainstream, it remains an open question whether the discipline can be disentangled from that racist past. A close review of the relevant literature shows that some biosocial criminologists have drawn on discredited ideas that describe Black people as inherently predisposed to crime.

Others, while steering away from writing about race, appear to largely tolerate that work. “There doesn’t seem to be a pushback against the folks who are writing about this in the field,” said Oliver Rollins, a medical sociologist at the University of Washington and the author of “Conviction: The Making and Unmaking of the Violent Brain,” a 2021 book about neuroscience and crime. “No one’s challenging these kind of racist components to the science, or the research.”


Talk with criminologists about biology, and one name comes up again and again: Cesare Lombroso. Born in 1835 in northern Italy, Lombroso trained as a physician. He soon grew fascinated with the physiology of people who had been convicted of crimes.

Lombroso dissected the corpses of people with criminal records, examined the feet of sex workers, and visited prisons to measure the dimensions of people’s heads. In his 1876 book “Criminal Man,” he concluded that some people were born with a predisposition to criminality — especially people he considered, without evidence, to fall lower in the evolutionary hierarchy, including southern Italians and people with African ancestry. A collection of human specimens, including 712 skulls, is now preserved in the Cesare Lombroso Museum of Criminal Anthropology in Turin. (Lombroso also asked that his own corpse, which he deemed as superior, be integrated into the collection; according to the museum’s scientific director Silvano Montaldo, the criminologist’s skeleton is currently on display, while his brain, as well as the soft tissues of his face, are “kept in the warehouses,” in accordance with “the indications of the Italian law regarding exposures of human remains.”)

Lombroso’s work has been widely discredited. But his influence, historians say, was considerable — including among eugenicists in the early 20th century who sought to identify and eliminate strains of what they saw as degeneracy in populations. “Criminologists consider it edifying to believe that a man can be saved by grace, but refuse to admit that he can be damned by germ plasm,” the American eugenicist Earnest Hooton complained in 1932, reporting on the results of a study of 16,000 incarcerated people. His conclusion: Biology mattered. “I am beginning to suspect that Lombroso, like Darwin, was right,” he wrote.

By the late 20th century, that legacy had left many criminologists hesitant to engage with biology. Still, amid advances in genetics and brain imaging, some scholars called for the field to explore a potential connection between biology and crime.

Among them was Anthony Walsh. A former police officer, Walsh entered graduate school in his mid-30s, moonlighting as a probation and parole officer to support his young family. By 1984, he was an assistant professor of criminal justice at Boise State University, preparing students for careers in the criminal justice system. His early research mostly examined sentencing guidelines and the probation process.

Over time, though, Walsh grew frustrated with his colleagues. He thought they spent too much time focusing on the social causes of crime. “Everything and everybody was accountable for the crime, except the guy who committed it,” he told Undark in a 2022 interview. In particular, Walsh wondered if fields like genetics and evolutionary biology could help explain why some people offend, and others do not.

Those kinds of inquiries could face backlash. For example, in 1992, the National Institutes of Health agreed to fund a conference on genetics and crime. The federal science agency later withdrew the funding after an uproar, fueled by revelations that a key organizer had once seemingly compared Black urban neighborhoods to jungles. Critics worried that genetics would become a high-tech tool for racial profiling.

Criminologists like Walsh did little to dispel such fears. In 1997, he and a colleague, Lee Ellis, drew on the speculative theories of a white-supremacist aligned psychologist to suggest that White people had evolved to be less violent than Black people, and that biology could explain why more Black people than White people end up imprisoned.

To most crime researchers, those claims have serious problems. Decades of research — in many disciplines — have documented how generations of racism, disenfranchisement, and uneven policing disproportionately direct Black people, poor people, and other marginalized groups into the criminal justice system.

At the same time, experts in human evolution say, biology is a terrible tool for explaining these kinds of racial disparities. For one thing, racial categories are just rough attempts to describe the biological variation among human beings, rather than fixed, coherent categories of people who have evolved along different trajectories. For another, even if scientists can sometimes identify average genetic differences among socially defined groups, those differences tend to be very slight — and have no obvious link to a complex social phenomenon like violent behavior.

It’s “just kind of fascinating that we would presume that there is something that’s so simplistic about complex behaviors, that it could map on to something like skin color in a fairly straightforward way,” said Deborah Bolnick, an expert in human evolution and genetics at the University of Connecticut.

Despite such concerns, Walsh and his co-author published their theory in the field’s flagship journal, Criminology. And Walsh soon found himself gaining new colleagues who were interested in biology and crime. Starting in the late 1990s, a growing number of criminologists turned to biology, aiming to integrate genetics, neuroscience, and sociology to produce more robust theories of crime. Some feared they would face professional repercussions for doing so. “My mentor, when I told him what I was doing, was like, ‘John, don’t do this,'” said John Paul Wright, a criminologist at the University of Cincinnati and an early proponent of using genetics to study crime. “He was worried about the consequences for my career.”

Wright and others called the emerging discipline biosocial criminology — a rebranding that was complete by 2009, when Walsh and a colleague edited a book, “Biosocial Criminology,” featuring essays from leading scholars in the young field. (Boisvert, the author of the DOJ report, contributed to a chapter.) A preface, written by another Cincinnati criminologist, Francis T. Cullen, acknowledged the discipline’s troubled history. Biosocial criminologists, he wrote, “will have to show how the new paradigm rejects its repressive heritage.”


Not everyone was convinced that biosocial criminology was so different from its predecessors.

Saleh-Hanna, the UMass-Dartmouth professor, began attending the annual American Society of Criminologists conference in the 1990s, as a student. She soon gravitated towards panels on biology and crime.

At these sessions, Saleh-Hanna sat in the back. She took notes. She rarely spoke. Usually, she said, she was the only Black person — in fact, the only person of color — in the room. “I always felt like I had a responsibility to my own communities to go and listen,” Saleh-Hanna told Undark. “I always knew that they were talking about us.”

The basic process described at the conference, Saleh-Hanna said, felt like a throwback to Lombroso: Scientists looked at the bodies of poor, marginalized people, isolated some biological characteristic, and used it to suggest that those people were inferior or dangerous. “They’re still doing that same work,” Saleh-Hanna said, “but they’re using this new scientific language.”

Saleh-Hanna has sometimes brought a Black colleague, Montclair State University criminologist Jason Williams, to the presentations. He said the sessions often involve all-White academic panels commenting on the biology of people who had been accused of crimes. “Here you are sitting up here on this panel, and you’re generalizing largely people of color, but then also poor Whites,” Williams said. “Anybody who’s really powerless, I think, gets the lower end of the stick with those theories, in those studies.”

Indeed, biosocial criminologists have sometimes used new techniques to circle back to an old conclusion: that biology can help explain why the criminal justice system locks up so many people of color. There’s scant scientific evidence to support that claim. Still, in the same 2009 volume in which Cullen urged the field to reject “its repressive heritage,” his University of Cincinnati colleague, Wright, wrote a chapter arguing that biological differences among racial groups explain disparities in crime.

Portions of the field would go on to celebrate those ideas: Despite Walsh’s ongoing writing about race and crime, the Biosocial Criminology Association honored him with its lifetime achievement award in 2014, citing his “invaluable impact on our current understanding of why people commit crime and delinquency.”

In 2015, six criminologists, several teaching at large public universities, published a sweeping “unified crime theory” in Aggression and Violent Behavior, a peer-reviewed criminology journal put out by scientific publisher Elsevier. In the paper, they draw heavily on the work of the late J. Philippe Rushton, a professor of psychology at the University of Western Ontario. Now largely discredited by the scientific community, Rushton spent much of his career arguing that White people have evolved to be smarter, more altruistic, and less violent than Black people. Twisting a theory from ecology, Rushton also argued that some racial groups have evolved to be more fertile — but, in a kind of tradeoff, have also evolved to be more aggressive, less able to exercise self-control, and less intelligent.

Many scientists now describe Rushton’s work as incoherent, riddled with errors, and blatantly racist; his own university eventually disavowed him. The theory is “pulp science fiction” that’s “draped in the lingo of evolutionary theory,” Yale University ecology and evolutionary biology assistant professor C. Brandon Ogbunu wrote in a recent essay for Undark.

Bolnick, the Connecticut researcher, said that Rushton’s theory treats humans as “reproductive machines,” in a way that doesn’t really reflect how people live. “It doesn’t map onto the way any human societies operate, or any families operate,” she said. And Rushton and his acolytes also selectively apply the theory, she said, in ways that mostly just repackage old stereotypes: For example, they spend little time considering the large families of White settlers in the 19th century U.S.

Still, for years, Rushton’s work was cited in the biosocial criminology literature. In the 2015 paper, the researchers drew on Rushton to speculate that this evolutionary path could help explain racial disparities in convictions.

Later that year, the lead author of the paper, Brian Boutwell, took to the right-wing magazine Quillette to complain that biosocial criminologists were being shunned by their colleagues. Around that time, Boutwell and one of his co-authors on the paper, Florida State University criminologist Kevin Beaver, appeared separately on the show of alt-right podcaster Stefan Molyneux to talk about the links between crime, biology, and race. (Wright, one of the Cincinnati professors, appeared on the show too.)

Shunned or not, the authors of the paper maintained active careers. Boutwell is now an associate professor at the University of Mississippi. One of his co-authors, J.C. Barnes, was until recently the chair of the Biopsychosocial Criminology division of the American Society of Criminology. Another co-author, Beaver, now directs the Biosocial Criminology Research & Policy Institute at Florida State University, and he maintains an affiliation with King Abdulaziz University in Saudi Arabia. (Beaver did not respond to requests for an interview.)

Many biosocial criminologists are skeptical of such work on race, and worry it will hamper their efforts to gain broader acceptance for their techniques, according to Julien Larregue, a sociologist at Université Laval in Quebec who has studied the field. But, he noted, that criticism is mostly informal: “If you look at publications, I don’t find a lot of pushback.”


In the broader field of criminology, though, some experts have raised questions about certain methods that biosocial researchers use. In particular, some have questioned efforts to draw a line from specific genes to criminality or antisocial behavior.

One of the most persistent critics has been Callie Burt, an associate professor at Georgia State University. Around 10 years ago, Burt was asked to review a paper examining genetics and crime. Trained in sociology, she quickly realized she didn’t have the tools to follow the argument. Undeterred, Burt dove into the genetics literature. “I’ve learned that we know a lot more about genetics than I realized,” she said. “But the more we learn, the more complicated things are.”

Burt had plenty to catch up on. The first sequencing of the full human genome, completed in 2000, was accompanied by a wave of new research aiming to tie specific genes to specific outcomes. Biosocial criminologists embraced that work. In the 2000s, some gravitated toward a then-trendy method called a candidate gene study, in which researchers look at whether a specific gene may be linked to certain traits. Some focused on a hypothesized link between violent behavior and a gene called MAOA. (“‘Gangsta Gene’ Identified in U.S. Teens” read one 2009 headline from ABC News, reporting on work by Beaver and colleagues.) But subsequent research has cast doubt on most candidate gene studies, including those purporting a connection between MAOA and violence. “That finding’s not in great shape,” said Michael “Doc” Edge, a population geneticist at the University of Southern California.


Recently, some biosocial criminologists, including Boutwell and Barnes, have been joining with behavioral geneticists and other scientists on genome wide association studies, or GWAS (pronounced GEE-wahs). The technique, pioneered in the past two decades, scans vast databases of genetic data, looking for correlations between particular genes and certain outcomes, such as height, IQ, or college graduation.

Burt and others argue that even these high-powered new studies rest on some misguided assumptions. Like many other experts, she’s skeptical that it’s possible to disentangle nature and nurture so neatly — in part because the categories of crime and antisocial behavior are themselves so slippery.

The problem, according to Burt and other experts, is that crime and antisocial behavior aren’t straightforward, easy-to-measure traits. Rather, these behaviors are socially constructed and highly variable. Something that’s a crime in one state — such as smoking pot — may be legal one state over. An aggressive action — such as punching someone repeatedly until they lose consciousness — may be celebrated in one context (a boxing ring) and illegal in another (a bar). And two people can be treated very differently for doing the exact same thing: Research suggests that Black elementary school children, for example, are likelier to receive disciplinary action than White children, independent of their actual behavior. And studies often find that Black adults who use drugs are likelier to be arrested and incarcerated than White adults who use drugs.

“We behave in context,” Burt said. She brought up an example: People who have “biological propensities — and I can agree that we have different ones — that might lead to impulsivity or risk-taking or even selfishness and disregard for other people, sort of predatory activities.” In an affluent environment, Burt said, someone with those traits may end up flourishing: They go to Wall Street, where their predatory behaviors lead to large paychecks. Meanwhile, “someone growing in inner city, with not those opportunities,” she added, “may end up engaging in predatory behaviors that are criminalized.”

Burt and other critics say that biosocial accounts of crime just don’t fully account for this complexity. A study linking, say, high testosterone levels with felonies runs the risk of implying that testosterone levels are immutable — and that felonies are somehow a set natural property, like the height of a person or the length of a day, rather than a contingent and shifting target.


Saleh-Hanna sees that as a fundamental problem in the field, one going all the way back to Lombroso. “He created this impression, that we still struggle with every day in this society, this impression that crime can be objectively scientifically defined external to the human perception,” she said. As a consequence, she added, “these notions of crime and criminality continue to be seen as natural parts of human societies.”

Certain biases, scholars say, also shape which kinds of crimes end up under the scrutiny of biological methods — and which do not. “We don’t have a notion that crimes of finance are explained by biology,” said Troy Duster, an emeritus professor of sociology at UC Berkeley. “‘Let’s take the DNA samples of the people who were involved in the Enron scandal’ — no one suggested that.” It’s only when Black, Brown, and poor White people are involved, Duster and other scholars suggest, that criminologists start to turn to biology to understand what might have gone wrong.

Recently, some genetics researchers have tried to address some of these concerns by broadening their target to “antisocial behavior” — a catchall category that can include criminal conviction, but also things like personality test results and behavior in school, although these, too, come with their own biases.

In 2013 Jorim Tielbeek, at the time a geneticist and crime scholar at VU Medical Center Amsterdam, founded the Broad Antisocial Behavior Consortium, or BroadABC, a global network of scholars who hope to uncover some of the genes associated with antisocial behaviors. (The group’s first paper, published in 2017, briefly cites some of Boutwell and his colleagues’ work involving Rushton.) In late October, the consortium published their most recent study, which draws on genetic data from more than 85,000 people.

How much that kind of research can explain remains disputed. For all the power of new tools like GWAS, some geneticists say, they have only highlighted how incredibly complex the relationship is between genes and their environment.

The process, these experts say, is even harder when studying a complicated social outcome like a criminal conviction. Eric Turkheimer, a behavior geneticist at the University of Virginia known for his skeptical takes, told Undark that he would be surprised if such approaches could account for even 1 percent of the variance among something like criminality, once researchers control for confounding factors. “And if that’s true,” he asked, “what good is it?”


Some biosocial criminologists say those sorts of concerns have pushed them to reconsider elements of their work. Boutwell, the University of Mississippi professor, said he has revised his thinking. “I think our sociological colleagues make a stronger case when they talk about the historical cultural factors that have underpinned the disparities that we see,” he said, adding that he no longer stands behind his previous work on race.

One of his collaborators, Barnes, also described changing his approach. Barnes grew up in South Carolina; his stepfather and two siblings work in law enforcement. As a graduate student, he studied with Kevin Beaver at Florida State; a senior scholar in the field described him, in an email, as “possibly the most articulate leader of the younger generation.” In an interview with Undark, Barnes said reading the work of Turkheimer and the behavioral geneticist Kathryn Paige Harden had pushed him to take a far more cautious approach to making claims about genetics and crime. He pointed to a more recent, measured paper on genetics and crime that he wrote in 2018. That paper calls on biosocial researchers to pay close attention to social and environmental factors, rather than focusing on genes in isolation. Still, the paper suggests that genetics could say something meaningful about why the criminal justice system incarcerates so many people of color. “The amount of time and care I put into that article,” he said, “is where I wanted things to be focused from there forward.”

Barnes said he’s grown more cautious in drawing conclusions about the complicated factors that drive people to crime. “It’s clear our genetic and biological makeup have an impact on our behavior,” Barnes said. “But can we get much more specific than that? I don’t think we can at this point.”


At least some criminologists have found themselves in a kind of gray area — at once skeptical of certain biosocial explanations of crime, but still open to the idea that biology plays some role in understanding violence and transgression.

When the criminologist Michael Rocque was in graduate school, he worked closely with the late Nicole Hahn Rafter, a feminist criminologist who devoted much of her career to studying Lombroso’s grim legacy, including his influence on the American eugenics movement. Working with Rafter, Rocque said in a recent interview, had an unexpected effect: It pushed him to consider how biology could still be used to responsibly to think about crime.

Today, Rocque is an associate professor at Bates College, and he has published studies documenting how bias affects the disciplinary action faced by young Black students. He’s also a co-author, with Barnes and another colleague, of a recent book on biopsychosocial criminology, and he occasionally uses biosocial methods in his work. “I have just read too much empirical research, and seen too much evidence that genes do matter,” he said. “They’re part of the story when it comes to understanding and explaining criminal behavior.”

Still, he cautioned, studies of things like genetics or neuroscience in crime often remain tentative — and not ready for applied use now. And if they ever are ready for applied use, he said, there will have to be protections in place to make sure their use is beneficial. “In my view, we’re not at the stage where any of this stuff can be put into practice in a responsible way,” said Rocque.

That hasn’t stopped some researchers from exploring potential applications. In fall 2021, the National Institute of Justice held an online symposium to announce a new volume on the study of people who desist from crime. “This volume is a significant achievement in the field of criminal justice research,” said Amy Solomon, a senior Department of Justice official appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland, in introductory remarks.


Included in the volume was the 2021 report by Danielle Boisvert, the Sam Houston State criminologist. (Rocque also contributed a chapter.) In a presentation during the session, Boisvert discussed some of the many tools that a biologically-informed correctional system might use. At times, those tools seemed to blur the line between corrections and medical care: For example, Boisvert argued that neuropsychological and physiological testing could help identify developmental issues in incarcerated people, and allow them to receive appropriate care. Such testing could potentially help prisons better evaluate whether or not someone is likely to end up incarcerated again. In some cases, she argued, they may even make a case for keeping a person out of prison altogether.

Afterward, a DOJ staffer posed a question to Boisvert: How could these techniques avoid “condemning people from birth based on their biological characteristics?” Boisvert called for programs that focus on the way the environment manifests in the body — “trauma, abuse, neglect, substance use, traumatic brain injury, lead exposure” — rather than on people’s genes.

“There are other noninvasive low-cost ways that we can incorporate biological factors into assessments,” she said, “that don’t rely on DNA.”

Many experts remain skeptical that such interventions could ever do much to fix a criminal justice system they describe as systemically racist and deeply broken. “If you’re only making that system more efficient, then racism will continue to exist,” said Rollins, the University of Washington sociologist. Things like neurobiological models of crime, he said, aren’t able to address such fundamental problems.

“The only thing that they can really do,” he added, “is reinforce what’s already there.”


This article was originally published on Undark. Read the original article.

Babies feel an innate empathy towards dogs, study says

Raising a dog is a lot like raising a baby: both have a predilection for eating food off of the floor, lack the fine motor coordination to avoid making a mess when they eat, and speak in nonsensical sounds. The two of them also seem to share another bond, too: evidently, some innate tendency to communicate and empathize with dogs exists in human children. The findings have intriguing suggestions for how empathy is hard-wired in human children.

Between 2015 and 2020, researchers at the University of Michigan studied the way toddlers react to unfamiliar dogs when those canine companions communicate distress. Among a group of 97 children (including 51 girls and 46 boys) aged 2 or 3 years — 44 of whom had dogs as pets — scientists found that, half of the time, they would assist a dog if the animal indicated that it wanted a toy or treat which had been placed out of reach. This conclusion is important because it reveals that children are capable of empathy and altruism toward animals outside of their own species. 

“It’s been known for a long time that toddlers will go out of their way to help struggling humans, even strangers,” study co-author Henry Wellman, the Harold W. Stevenson Collegiate Professor Emeritus of Psychology at University of Michigan, said in a statement. “But perhaps such altruism is specially evolved for and targeted toward other humans (who after all might help them back). But no, it applies to other animals too, like dogs they will never see again.”

“It’s been known for a long time that toddlers will go out of their way to help struggling humans, even strangers.”

The study raises provocative questions about children’s capacity for empathy toward other other animals, too, including cats, horses, sheep, ducks and pigs.

“These findings lend support to our hypothesis that children’s early-developing proclivities for goal-reading and prosociality extend beyond humans to other animals,” Michigan alumna Rachna Reddy, the study’s lead author and postdoctoral fellow in evolutionary anthropology at Duke University, added in a statement.


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Regardless of the bond between children and other animals, however, human beings as a species have a special connections to dogs — and this is not the only research to underscore the unique relationship. Human beings have an ancient relationship with dogs, tracing back largely to Eurasia, and as each species has co-evolved they have picked up on intuitive ways of understanding one another. A 2018 study in the scientific journal Learning & Behavior concluded that dogs are capable of understanding human facial expressions. Bunny, a labradoodle who has learned how to “talk” to humans by pushing a series of buttons, seems to communicate that she misses friends of hers when they are no longer around. A study in August even found that dogs shed tears of joy when they are in situations where they feel happy. Human beings feel an instinctive bond with canines that goes back to the prehistoric era, and which has been quantified by scientists in numerous ways.

“We know for a fact that when dogs and their pet parents look into each other’s eyes, it feels good to the canine as their oxytocin levels rise — a hormone that makes us feel good,” Renee Alsarraf, a veterinarian and author of “Sit, Stay, Heal: What Dogs Can Teach Us About Living Well,” told Salon by email at the time about the tears study.

As hip-hop turns 50, Chuck D praises its power as “a worldwide cultural experience and religion”

“You only play that old stuff!” a kid named DJ I had mentored yelled from the passenger side of my car some years back. At the time he was a high schooler and infatuated with the song “Thugz Mansion,” by west coast rappers Mozzy and YG that he had just introduced to me. 

I took a pause and then laughed, thinking about all of the times that I had got into arguments with older dudes who listened to the dated music of my era and never took the opportunity to understand my generation and the sounds we chose. Everything we liked was dumb and watered down in their opinion, even though they never tried to listen. I never wanted to be that grumpy dude who’s so lost in the past that I couldn’t even dream of the future. 

“Look here, young fella,” I said, pulling into an empty parking spot. “I used to have the same arguments and conversations back when I was your age, but I learned to respect the music that came before me, which ultimately helped me to better understand why I was listening to what I was listening to. Everything influences everything.” 

DJ shot me a confused look – before telling me that he was constantly immersed in rap music, but clearly never gave too much thought to the genre’s history. “You know DJ,” I continued, “I love this version of ‘Thugz Mansion.’ It’s mean, but I also loved the version made by Nas in the early 2000s and the version made by Tupac in ’90s.”

DJ’s eyes stretched across his forehead as I pulled out my phone and punched in the earlier versions. We nodded; DJ even played the Tupac original three times in a row and said, “I need to update my playlist!” 

There is an easy fix to the disconnect between our generations, our taste in hip-hop and the silly old versus new exchanges – real conversations. We aren’t talking enough, but when we do­­ – the likenesses, similar political climates, culture, love of the art form and multiple gems dropped from both generations all bring us closer together. In that car ride, old me learned as much about hip-hop from young DJ as he learned from me.

I talked to hip-hop pioneer Chuck D about expanding these kinds of conversations across generations and an appreciation for the history of hip-hop, which is part of his new PBS documentary series “Fight The Power: How Hip Hop Changed The World,” premiering Jan. 31.

In the docuseries, Chuck D, the founder of the legendary revolutionary hip-hop group Public Enemy, Rock n Roll Hall of Fame inductee, and Grammy Award-nominated artist is working to not only trying to bridge the gap between the different generations, but also highlight the power of women in the culture, the music’s political influence and how an art form created by the most vulnerable young people in the Bronx went on to change the world. 

Watch my “Salon Talks” episode with Chuck D here or read a Q&A of our conversation below to hear more about how the genre has grown over 50 years and his Top 5 songs of all time. 

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

Mr. Chuck D, how you doing today?

It’s good to see you, D.

Your song “Fight the Power” is one of the most strongest songs in hip-hop history. Take us to the beginning of your “Fight the Power” docuseries on PBS and what made you want to put it out right now?

Real simple is I’ve always thought that that hip-hop and rap music was always high elevation to me. I grew up in the time – I’m 12 years older than hip-hop and rap, so I never was in all awe of it. I wasn’t born in the middle of it. So when I see it came about, I said, “This is something that could rank and bust ass on the rock that was around us,” even the R&B. We had respect for all that because we, in New York we listened to radio that played everything. And when hip-hop and rap came along, it was a power of technology with the DJs that played the music loud, that we heard bands play. And it was in New York City in a broader metropolitan area. It was infectious man. It was a feeling before it even became records.

It was always on the top of my mind that saying that the curate, caretake and being able to speak for the art form at a higher level, I thought there was always room for that. Fifty years into hip-hop’s existence as an official title of the art form, the biggest question is how do we make importance great or greater than popularity?

“I became a service person—hip-hop was my military. Hip-hop to me is a worldwide cultural experience and religion.”

Because popularity, when that pops in and you have all kinds of mythologies pumping in, and the narrative could skid away from the people who created it.

In “Fight the Power: How Hip-Hop Changed the World,” it’s like the key was the last word “world” because we’ve seen this metastasized over 50 years. And also the key was seeing great people who’d done hip-hop in high scholarship, from a Roxanne Shante to an Eminem, speaking differently to different questions that they wouldn’t necessarily have the answers aired. Because a lot of times people were like, well, I’m not going to ask Grandmaster Caz a question about the socio-political situation. We’re going to talk about something else. You wrote the first rhymes, the Sugarhill Gang, what happened with that? And they kind of stopped right there.

These people have so much detail and so much depth in their breath. I thought that this film could answer that, and also be a seeded, sprouted sequel to what I consider the greatest hip-hop documentary about the craft. And that was Ice T’s “The Art of Rap.” This built on that and took it to another level. This came up with answers.

A big turning point for me was when “The Message” dropped.

Yeah, but at the same time, there are some things that we didn’t cover in the film because we had to truncate. Gary Byrd is a person I grew up with. He was a DJ, and still is a DJ in New York City that plays music on the end of the dial AM station, WWRL. And what I’m saying is that the DJs on those stations that played Black music, they gave you everything. They gave you more. They gave a reflection of where you was living life. 

Later on, Gary Byrd helped institute talk radio on WLIB in the city, which was the premise of when you saw in “Do the Right Thing” in Samuel L. Jackson’s character. And “Fight the Power” comes up out of that. Full cycle, man, it’s like he made a song with Stevie Wonder, a rap song, in 1982, ’83 called “The Crown.” No one ever talks about it. And he’s talking, I mean, I think he’s got like 500 bars in it, and going back to the root of where we come from as a people. You have “The Message” on one hand, but then you have so many undercover hidden gems that have been so beneficial that have been lost in the narration.

There is a disconnect from where the culture is now, when you talk about the history.

There’s a disconnect in our history though. The culture is going to follow pretty much social reasons, ramifications, although the culture has been that license to go further and cut through people quicker, but then let us not ignore the fact that we have some ills in society that can’t be answered quickly and easily, but they got to get dealt with.

It’s one thing to talk about how Takeoff got killed, but then you got to trace that to, well, United States of America have been crazy with the gun and has a serious problem. We just had two mass murders in the last 24 hours. Hip-hop has been the intro point. Is there a sophisticated conversation deeper than that? Is there depth in that breadth?

America has a gun problem across the board. That’s an American problem.

We get a little arrogant by saying, “America.” Yes, it’s an American problem, but it’s a United States of America problem. We are not all of the Americas. There’s the America at the top, north America, they ain’t got a gun problem, bro. That’s still America. But we call ourselves America because we get arrogant with it. It’s like you’re from Maryland. You know when a New Yorker walks in the room. To the point of, “Yo, tone that New York down.” That’s how the world feels when the USA walks in the room. They, “Yo, we from America, what?” And people like, “You know what? There’s a world here.” 

The same thing with hip-hop and globalization. We know it’s spawned from here because the conditions help create something out of nothing. You got to roll the technology with that, the turntables, the microphone. It’s just a different way of doing things and it’s connected to a whole lot of things. But worldwide, hip-hop as a culture underneath a people and a culture has been significant.

“The Message” was a song that was able to voice the struggles of a whole lot of people. Like, it got to us. What I think you do great with the film is just that — the intersection between politics and streets and art form.

Well, I think praise, due, that you got Melle Mel speaking for himself. Nobody’s speaking for Mel. Mel, he’s the original hip-hop guy on the mic. To tell you the difference in the context of time, which we also kind of lose in history, and especially hip-hop and rap history, where there’s a lot of things all over the floor that need to get picked up and shine. Melle Mel was like Wilt Chamberlain. Melle Mel is prowess in 1981, ’82, ’80, ’79, ’83. It’s like Wilt Chamberlain in a gym full of midgets.

It was like Melle Mel [is up here] and the second MC was way down here. Never has there been a time where it was a gap between the best and the second best with Melle. That’s why you call Melle Mel, probably the GOAT of GOATS because cats that later on would probably get a higher position, I think Billboard charted Melle Mel, 48. But how could you compare somebody? You got to bring the context of time. In Melle Mel’s time he dominated like nobody else ever dominated. You can’t rank somebody who was born 20 years later because they wasn’t there 20 years before. They couldn’t talk. They wasn’t there, couldn’t crawl. Melle Mel was the dominant of his particular time like few others.

When I’m talking to younger people and we are talking about hip-hop, culture and different things that happened in regards to dealing with our communities, something that blows their minds is how terrible Ronald Reagan was. I don’t know how, if it was because of Bush and Iraq or this Trump s**t, I don’t know what happened in their lifetime that this person just slips out of the conversation. And I’m like, “Duh.”

My first year I was eligible to vote for a president was 1980. And I used my vote for Angela Davis. But then I started to understand there was a trick bag in that. I should have voted for Jimmy Carter because every vote for anybody else other than Jimmy Carter, that was a vote for Reagan. Then we got what we call 12 years of R&B, Reagan and Bush.

It completely devastated and wiped out Black communities, east to west, south to north. I seen it in front of my own eyes and life. So out this became a reason that “The Message” spoke for what it seemed in New York City at the time, and what Public Enemy was able to see across the map of the USA when we were privileged to be able to travel to these places because of Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, Kool Moe Dee, Treacherous Three, the Sequence, Funky Four Plus One More, Run D.M.C., Whodini, Doug E. Fresh and the Get Fresh Crew. That’s where we came from.

During that time could you envision hip-hop being what it is now?

Of course because I wasn’t a kid. As a kid you’re fascinated because you feel that you really can’t reach these things. But I was a grown man in the ’80s, so I would turn around and see rock hair bands and I’m like, “Wow. They play in arenas and stadium, but so is Run. So I’m pulling for Run.” And they play the same place, let’s say Baltimore Civic Center. They’ll have White Snake and Bon Jovi in there. But the next night Run D.M.C. and Whodini. That’s when I said, “This thing is going head-to-head for real.” I became a service person, hip-hop was my military. Today, hip-hop to me is a worldwide cultural experience and religion.

Obama was the first hip-hop president.

Him and the First Lady, Michelle Obama, their first date, they went to see, “Do the Right Thing.” So when somebody says, “Yo, does President Obama, listen to Public Enemy?” I’m like, “He ain’t supposed to say that.” Because a lot of times during the Obama Administration, I should say it properly, the President Obama Administration, people were like, “Yo man, yo Obama’s not even putting P in this list.” I’m like, “Yo, he’s not supposed to because we know a lot of our stuff. We question and challenge the government. He’s at the top of the government, but he’s throwing behind-the-back no-look passes. You got to catch it when it’s like he’s like . . .” 

Everybody all of a sudden want to be a one-week conspiracy theory person, like, “Oh yeah, he’s colored balls, he’s in with them.” It’s like, “Dude, he’s president of the United States of America. He’s not going to make transmitted passes to you like that. He is no longer representing the Black community in the world. What we have to do is take advantage.” I thought we could take advantage of the time while he’s in there because if we take advantage of the time when he’s out of there, we know we will have something stockpiled as far as our mentality, our standing. What we need to do is independent. 

There was a lot of opportunities during the Obama Administration, but you had to see it with the third eye. The third eye, feels it out, and then you’re able to find these situations. It’s not going to be like, “Here, Black opportunity.” Never going to be like that.

But he did. Obama did a lot. One of the biggest knocks on his administration is there was a storytelling problem because the other guy that came after him would write his name on the paper and he would wave it around like this, like “Oh look, I wrote my name.” Not even know what he just signed. But Obama, they wouldn’t talk about it.

That’s the privilege that white male presidents have. How many white male presidents have we had? Every single other one of them. So they got their own thing. Obama had to come in and kind of figure out, “Damn, how do I freestyle some rules up in here? They already throwing a defense.” And I’m not a President Obama apologist, but you understand the Public Enemy’s first records said, “The governments responsible,” governments plural. You got to understand government. 

I’ve been to places [to perform], and they say, “Do your songs, don’t talk to the people.” Most United States of Americans are limited with their knowledge of the world. You’re told what you are to know and you’re fed what you are to believe, and don’t question anything else. Our only saving grace for Black folks in America is the diaspora. If we don’t connect to the diaspora for, forever being a 2,000 by 3,000-mile lower 48 state box. You’ve got to reach to your numbers instead of saying, “Well, we going to do it by ourselves.” Outnumbered. That’s the most ridiculous theory anywhere. If you in a room you trying to get out, you want specialized focus to get out of that room. You don’t want to just be fighting with your population.

“Music and culture took a higher order to communicate to the rest of the planet about what we saw and what we felt and how we just wanted to be accepted, too.”

We were in such a place when Obama was elected. He served for eight years and he was out. Huge segments of the community just moved away from the conversation.

You got to take advantage of the time that you got. You know that “Third World,” a song written by Gamble and Huff? Later on, done by my good friend, Heavy D. “Now that you found love, what you going to do with it?” This is the beautiful thing about the documentary “Fight the Power: How Hip-Hop Changed the World.” It’s like, you know what? You ain’t got to love hip-hop. You ain’t got to like it. I know people that don’t like sports, they be like, “Yo man, I don’t even follow sports.” And you got to kind of divert the conversation somewhere else. Well, be honest and say, “Yeah, hip-hop, I don’t really dig hip-hop.” Then you could be wherever you want with it.

The thing is, when you say you love it, then, “OK, what do you love about it?” A lot of times when people say they love hip-hop, I say, “Well, do you love Black people?” They’re like, “What’s that got to do with it?” It has a lot to do with it because our expression has come out of the fact that we weren’t able to express ourselves, so therefore music and culture took a higher order to communicate to the rest of the planet about what we saw and what we felt and how we just wanted to be accepted too. Sometimes by asking, other times by demanding.

The Miss C. Delores Tucker segment in the series was done so well. While so many people understood what she was trying to say, it was the other side of, “What do you love about the culture?” And then let’s have a whole conversation to bring both generations together for people. Like, let’s have a real conversation instead of starting off from a place of, “This music has no place.”

Well, aunties do what aunties do. I remember when she was going on attack, and also recently deceased, rest in peace, Reverend Calvin Butts, they were going in on the record companies here in New York, so they was making a corporate attack. And most people don’t know that there’s battles that are higher up over your heads that are done every second. It’s like, it’s not what you see. It’s not what you hear all the time. It’s really sometimes on what you feel based on your research and documentation of it. 

If we would’ve did this [interview] 10 years ago, it would’ve been on the phone and then it would’ve been text and read. I think that the advantage is that with the “Fight the Power” documentary, we took a higher order of comprehension in the PBS and also BBC, not just having a podcast or whatever. No knock on, no shade on, none of that. But today people listen with their eyes, and that’s a problem. People like, “Oh yeah, it is a good look.” But is it a good read? Is it a good listen? Is it a good talk? Is it a good conversation? Is it a good learn? And we forgetting those other goods as we got a good look. 

We have four parts in this documentary series that we felt that it is very clear that this music could be a spectacle, but always it’s entertainment, it’s art and music. It could be whoop whoop, bells, whistles, ha ha, whatever. But one thing about the musics, there are other musics have proven to be, they got to also be spectacular. And spectacular keeps you in the room and also brings you back for a second and third time.

A lot of time with hip-hop and rap, they throw it, and even the promoters that done this for years, it’s like, “I’m just worrying about who gets in the room. I’m going to get their money. And whatever happens afterwards is whatever happens afterwards.”

You think we’re of a space right now with music where there’s too much focus on capitalism?

It was born in capitalism, but that has nothing to do with the art. Art’s in everybody. The key is like, “Can you get the art out on you?” And then the art could be to yourself. If you want to engage and try to make you put pressure on it and say like, “You know what? I want to live off my art.” That’s a whole nother category. That’s a whole nother pressure. We like to play sports, we like to play ball. “I want to live off of my ball game.” Now you inviting yourself into industry. That’s the system. 

You could go to different parts of the world where the arts and entertainment is sanctioned by the government, that’s your choice. But we should at least know the choices. So is it overwrought by too much capitalism? That’s the frame of mind that likes to look at the art form as just being eyeballs. And I think that with art sometimes the taste got to go beyond the base, but also I just think we got to judge things by the quality instead of always the quantity.

Really, you could have 10,000 numbers of people that don’t mean nothing, as opposed to 500 focused people. So that’s where the dynamics of things online and portal, I mean, podcasts and followers and YouTube numbers and all that – that’s where it gets crazy. A young kid could do some crazy s**t in the bathtub and get a million followers. That doesn’t mean you compare it to 10,000 people watching some serious study on Dr. John Hendrick Clark who studied scholarship till he was blind. There’s no comparison in the numbers.

“We got to judge things by the quality instead of always the quantity.”

Also, this is why the comprehensive nature of the documentary on the higher forms of television was important because once you get down into the middle ranks of transmission, you start to compare things where you might have a 45-year-old and a 15-year-old in the same digital space. And that’s just not real. Seriously, if you doing your grown thing, you don’t want a bunch of 15-year-olds around this, unless you’re teaching them and schooling them. And after you teach them and schooling, then you like, “Yo, I got to get onto my regular 45-year-old life.”

I would like to see that universal space where we can share these stories and share language.

But you ain’t living, sleeping, drinking in that space every minute. Matter of fact, in real life, those are concerns. You look at Black Urban Radio, when they went from Black Radio, they took the responsibility and accountability away and they turn it urban. What does urban mean? Then they play songs on there. So you have a 30-year-old singing the song, but a 13-year-old loving it, so you already got digital pedophilia going on. So you need some kind of like navigation, curation, presenting, and it’s time and place, man. There’s a time and place for everything, but not for everybody at the same time.

What’s Chuck D’s favorite three songs of all time, if you had to pick three?

Well, that changed with the iPod. I have Rap Station. Everybody can go to rapstation.com. It’s a 10-station channel network and we do the best charts in the world. It’s 24-hour stations. We’ve been doing it 15 years. And I’m getting ready to create an app that’s going to change the world because it’s cultural media, which is greater than social media. 

The top songs, I always got songs swimming in my head from all different genres. I could keep it to hip-hop and rap to this conversation. And I could say, “Ladies First” by [Queen] Latifah and Monie Love and Crew. You said “The Message.” I would say off cuts like, “Hey, DJ” by the World’s Famous Supreme Team. Sky Zoo and Terminology just came up with a dope cut. Amy True from the UK got a cut called “Blam.” Sampa the Great and Angelique Kidjo on Planet Earth Planet Rap, one of our stations got a cut called “Let Me Be Great.” She’s from Zambia and Angelique Kidjo is from Benin, which means that women in hip-hop are 25 to 30 percent of hip-hop anywhere. They’re in production, they got crews, DJs, they got collective dance squads. But this country is limited. It’s big. I think it’s a difference between being big and swollen. It’s a little swollen. There’s a lot of inflammation up there.

We’re going to call you walking encyclopedia.

Nah, nah, nah. [Hip-hop is] the area where I might say that I like to be a little encyclopedic about because it’s what I do, what I’ve been a part of over the last 40 years. I’m blessed to be part of it. And like I said, I’m older than hip-hop, but I am also praising its 50-year existence as somebody who’s looked at it travel on a tricycle and making sure it don’t drive into a ditch.

“Fight the Power: How Hip-Hop Changed the World” premieres Jan. 31 at 9 p.m. on PBS. 

 

Core rules for cocktails: Night Owl Hospitality owner Diana Pittet explains mixology basics

“We are living in a golden age of drinking right now — it’s truly an extraordinary time,” says Diana Pittet, the owner of Night Owl Hospitality, a cocktail catering company in Asbury Park, N.J. According to Ms. Pittet, it’s important to be familiar with spirits and mixology in the restaurant and hospitality industry.

“A great amount of profit in your restaurant will be made off of alcohol,” she shares. “But also, the history of the cocktail, the story of it, is still being written, and you can be a part of it.”

To make your mark, Ms. Pittet suggests following a few core principles. The first being, knowing when to shake or stir a cocktail. To determine the answer to that (basic) bartending question, Ms. Pittet advises examining the ingredients. “If a cocktail has juice of any kind, dairy (cream or milk) of any kind, or eggs (whole or yolk) — if it has any of those three things, you’re going to shake it,” she explains, because those ingredients are heavy. “When you shake [a cocktail], you’re aerating it, getting everything together and diluting.” The opposite technique is employed if a drink does not call for those ingredients — you stir to avoid aerating.

Though at times bartenders may stray from this general guideline, it is considered a best practice. “It’s not wrong to shake, but it will compromise the texture,” she says. For example, if a martini is shaken instead of stirred, it becomes cloudy. “And the beauty of a martini is that crystal clear look to it.”

When mixing your cocktail, Ms. Pittet warns to always begin with the cheapest ingredients first. “If you mess up your drink at some point, you are only ruining the cheaper ingredients.”

Bartenders often put their hand at the bottom of the glass while they stir so they can tell if a drink has reached the peak temperature. “You are stirring the cocktail to both chill and dilute it, so a bartender can kind of tell by the look for the right dilution and by the feel if it is chilled enough,” she explains.

“We are living in a golden age of drinking right now — it’s truly an extraordinary time.”

Ms. Pittet recommends following the formula of classic cocktail recipes, most of which have been around for more than a century. “Cocktails are all about balancing strong spirits with the bitter or sour and sweet,” Diana says. “You need to keep those ratios all in good measure.” The easiest way to do that is to follow what she calls “tried and true formulas.”

Diana advises investing in proper equipment and good quality ingredients — preferably from scratch whenever possible. “Use fresh ingredients, nothing out of a soda gun. Make your own sour mix and use fresh syrups,” she says. “You need good ice. It should be clean ice so it’s not imparting any off-flavors. Beautiful, clear ice for the aesthetic and the proper ice so it’s not going to dilute the drink too quickly or under-dilute it.”

Even the garnish should be intentional. “Don’t just plunk a lemon or lime into a drink,” she says. “When I express a lemon into an old fashioned, it really binds the drink together. It is not an afterthought.”

Of course, the experience goes beyond the science of the cocktail. “When the bartenders of this new wave of cocktails began, they were very geeky and serious about cocktails, and they forgot, sometimes, about the hospitality.” Diana reminds us that people go to bars for the camaraderie as much as the service. “Now more than ever that is key.”

By Kiri Tannenbaum, Institute of Culinary Education

Here’s how we fell in (and out of) love with bacon

It’s no secret that bacon — America’s must-have breakfast staple — continues to dominate both our cravings and wildest food dreams. Take it from television host and celebrity food expert Padma Lakshmi, who shared online that the smell of cooked bacon was enough to send her “whole household into a frenzy.”  

“My dog has a look in her eyes I don’t think I’ve ever seen before,” she added. “I think we were all bacon deprived and didn’t know it??”

Indeed we were, especially as bacon made its resurgence in the culinary scene in recent years. People simply couldn’t resist the umami and, at times, sweet flavor of salt-cured pork. And they surely couldn’t resist incorporating bacon in every meal possible, whether that’s simple eggs and toast for breakfast, a BLT sandwich for lunch or maple-bacon crunch ice cream for dessert.

There’s also leftover bacon fat, better known as “liquid gold.” When handled properly, the liquid can be used to coat roasted potatoes or incorporated as a base in salmon chowder, as Salon’s Michael La Corte wrote.

Simply put, bacon is a go-to meal, a hearty on-the-go snack, an excellent savory topping and a major money maker in food service. These traits, alongside bacon’s delicious taste, ultimately fueled the “bacon mania” of the 2010s, when bacon ceased to exist as a stand-alone ingredient on the plate.

“While most food trends tend to trickle down from the gourmet market into the mouths of mass consumers, that wasn’t the case with bacon,” wrote Bloomberg Business Week’s David Sax. “‘Bacon mania’ was sparked not in the kitchens of fancy restaurants in New York or Chicago, but in the pork industry’s humble marketing offices in Iowa.”

Amid the 1980s and early 1990s, consumers refrained from eating bacon or other processed pork products due to anti-fat and anti-nitrate scares. In response, the industry launched the “Pork: The Other White Meat” campaign in hopes that consumers would purchase more pork products and abandon the misconception that pork was just a “fatty protein.” They also pushed for more lean cuts of meat, specifically chops and tenderloins, which, in turn, caused the price of fattier cuts to drop significantly.

This fueled the “Bacon Makes It Better” campaign that specifically targeted restaurateurs to add more bacon into their menus. The initiative was a big hit amongst chefs and cooks nationwide, mainly because bacon flaunted a lengthy shelf life. Consumers also expressed a newfound love for bacon and by 2006, the trend began to grow in popularity via recipes, Internet memes and pork-themed paraphernalia. Cue the beginning of “I Love Bacon” T-shirts, bacon scented lip balms and “Epic Bacon” humor, which is now a cringey slang associated with peak millennial meme culture.

Like most trends, however, the bacon trend soon lost its “cool” factor and became a thing of mockery, scorn and embarrassment. As Bon Appétit’s Ali Francis explained, “By the late 2010s, ordering any novelty bacon dish felt kind of embarrassing—like accidentally wearing your Teenage Dirtbag tee on a coffee run or unironically writing ‘loves a Cronut’ in your Hinge profile.”

“Did people still eat bacon post-mania? Of course. But did they want to be seen scarfing a maple bacon sundae from Denny’s? Probably not,” Francis continued. “That’s in part because, when big brands jump on any trend, it can begin to feel icky and lose its ‘cool’ status. Meat evangelism was also becoming culturally taboo, juxtaposed with increasingly urgent climate change.”

Both veganism and vegetarianism became increasingly mainstream in the mid-to-late 2010s as more people grew conscious of the effects a meat-heavy diet had (and continues to have) on the environment. Per a 2010 report from United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP), “A substantial reduction of impacts would only be possible with a substantial worldwide diet change, away from animal products.” Bacon consumption soon dipped in the following years, according to findings from market and consumer data company Statista — 63.33 million Americans consumed one pound of bacon in 2011 compared to 63.54 million in 2012, 61.99 million in 2013 and 61.85 million in 2014.


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Those numbers rose in 2018, when 65.02 million Americans consumed one pound of bacon and 66.31 million consumed two pounds of bacon. Today, there’s still an upward trend of bacon consumption as a whopping 67.49 million Americans consumed one pound of bacon in 2020. 

Bacon mania may be considered “cheugy” or cringey now, but enjoying bacon is quite the opposite. Restaurants are still serving up an assortment of bacon dishes for consumers to enjoy. Take for example the Las Vegas-based bacon-themed joint Bacon Nation, which offers bacon breakfast platters, Bacon Poutine, Apple Bacon Coffee Cake and more, or the lauded North Carolina doughnut shop Duck Donuts, where their Bacon in the Sun and Maple Bacon doughnuts are fan favorites.

“The new era of bacon is far more low-key. It’s a satisfying salad topper and a luxe side dish at brunch,” wrote Francis. “It might be unfashionable to be outwardly hyped on bacon these days, but diners are still ordering it en masse.”

“Bacon isn’t a personality anymore. It’s just… bacon.”

Prosecutor busts Trump’s lawyers falsely denying facts that they “admitted in other proceedings”

Law and Crime News reports that New York Attorney General Letitia James is seeking more sanctions against former President Donald Trump over his attorneys’ response to her civil fraud lawsuit against the Trump Organization.

In a new court filing, New York AG senior enforcement counsel Kevin Wallace writes that Trump’s response to James’ civil complaint is “deficient in a host of ways” and he asserts that the defendants “falsely deny facts they have admitted in other proceedings, they deny knowledge sufficient to respond to factual allegations that are plainly within their knowledge, and they propound affirmative defenses that have been repeatedly rejected by this Court as frivolous and without merit.”

As one example, Wallace says that Trump’s lawyers deny that he was essentially the “inactive” president of the Trump Organization during his tenure in the Oval Office, even though Trump used exactly those words to describe himself while under oath in a separate deposition.

Wallace then requests a hearing with Judge Arthur Engoron to discuss sanctions being leveled against Trump and his lawyers for these false statements.

If Engoron grants the New York AG’s request, it would be the second time this year that Trump and his lawyers have faced sanctions, as earlier this month Federal District Court Judge Donald Middlebrooks hit them with nearly $1 million in sanctions for what he described as “misuse of the courts” in his lawsuit filed against former Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

“Very unfair”: Video shows Trump whine and repeatedly plead the 5th in Trump Org investigation

Former President Donald Trump asserted his Fifth Amendment constitutional right against self-incrimination during a deposition with New York Attorney General Letitia James, according to a video of the testimony obtained on Tuesday exclusively by CBS News reporter Graham Kates.

Trump spoke to James’ team last August amid the ongoing fraud investigation into the Trump Organization and members of the Trump family that run the business, all of whom James is suing for $250 million in civil damages. A trial is expected to commence in October.

“It began with some back-and-forth, but once the questions turned to Mr. Trump’s finances, the former president invoked the Fifth Amendment which he continues to do for nearly four hours” and around four hundred times, CBS News reported.

In the first chunk of footage, Trump complains that James “knows nothing about us. She knows absolutely nothing about us. It was very unfair. This whole thing is very unfair.”

In the second clip, Trump recalls asking, “if you’re innocent, why are you taking the Fifth Amendment? I was asking that question. Now I know the answer to that question. When your family, your company, and all the people in your orbit have become the targets of an unfounded, politically-motivated witch hunt – supported by lawyers, prosecutors, and even the fake news media – you really have no choice. Anyone in my position not taking the Fifth Amendment would be a fool, an absolute fool.”

Watch below via CBS News or at this link.

Trump’s 2024 fail: Struggling campaign raised less after presidential announcement than before

Former President Donald Trump’s 2024 campaign has gotten off to a rocky start, and new fundraising documents obtained by NBC News underline his struggles to raise cash as he attempts a third White House bid.

According to the report, Trump’s 2024 campaign raised just $9.5 million over the final six weeks of 2022, which was actually less money than he raised over the six weeks prior to announcing his candidacy.

GOP operatives who spoke with NBC News said that there were many factors involved in the lackluster numbers, including “Trump’s decision to launch in the shadow of a tough midterm election for the GOP, donor fatigue and his soon-to-end absence from the social media giant Facebook.”

GOP consultant Eric Wilson said that the former president’s decision to beg for cash right after an election where his hand-picked candidates crashed and burned was a particularly ill-advised decision.

“If you want a big fundraising pop when you announce your campaign, you don’t do it right after an election where all your donors are burned out from being bombarded by fundraising asks and you don’t have a great track record to show for it,” he said.

Trump isn’t sitting still, however, as his campaign has recently hired the firm Campaign Inbox in a bid to boost small-dollar donations, and NBC News notes that he hasn’t yet launched a time-tested mail fundraising operation that has hauled in big money for him in the past.

Arizona secretary of state hits Kari Lake with criminal referral to state attorney general

Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes on Monday asked Attorney General Kris Mayes to investigate failed Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake for posting photos of voters’ signatures on Twitter.

Fontes said in a letter that posting unauthorized photos of voters’ signatures could be in violation of state law that prohibits “records containing a voter’s signature” from being “accessible or reproduced by any person other than the voter.”

He claimed that Lake broke the law by posting pictures of 16 voter signatures on her Twitter and could face a felony charge.

Lake tweeted side-by-side photos comparing signatures, alleging that nearly 40,000 ballots were counted with signatures that didn’t match up. 

“I think all the ‘Election Deniers’ out there deserve an apology,” her tweet said.

Since losing her candidacy to Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs by over 17,000 votes, Lake and her allies have repeatedly echoed unproven claims of voter fraud. 

She even filed a civil case last month against Hobbs and Maricopa County election officials in the county’s superior court. Her lawsuit, which was dismissed in court last month, claimed that she lost due to printing issues with voting machines in Maricopa County, which disenfranchised voters

But Judge Peter Thompson, who oversaw the case, ruled that Lake’s legal team did not provide clear evidence of election workers intentionally interrupting the vote. Lake was ordered by the judge to pay $33,040 to Hobbs for witness fees.

As the lawsuit awaits a ruling from the Arizona Court of Appeals, Lake has continued to double down on her claims of widespread voter fraud and even asked the Republican National Committee to pay for some of her legal bills as she fights the results of her election loss.


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Lake and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell sat down with Steve Bannon on his War Room podcast on Friday expressing disappointment in Ronna McDaniel’s reelection as RNC chair and discussed their ideas regarding election integrity.

“I heard that they [RNC] raised a couple hundred million for election integrity,” Lake said. “We are asking the RNC to help us pay for some of our legal bills. We haven’t had them do that yet. They’ve said they would help a little bit. We are hoping that they actually do that. The people are interested in election integrity, they know that our country is gone. It’s over, it’s caput if we don’t have honest elections.”

The former gubernatorial candidate has yet to concede her election loss. 

While Lake did not directly address Fontes’ letter to Mayes on her personal Twitter account, her campaign, Kari Lake War Room, tweeted Monday night, “Adrian Fontes wants Kris Mayes to investigate & potentially imprison @KariLake for the ‘crime’ of … sharing signature verification evidence that was presented before the @AZSenateGOP & is currently in her lawsuit.”

Fontes has faced his own election-challenging lawsuit from former GOP opponent Mark Finchem, which was dismissed in December after Maricopa County Judge Melissa Julian ruled that nothing Finchem presented “constitutes ‘misconduct’ sufficient to survive dismissal.'”

Arizona Republicans lost nearly every major statewide midterm race after campaigning for months on false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from former President Donald Trump.

With “almond moms,” TikTok coins an epithet for a diet culture–obsessed parent

Once upon a time, peanuts were the most consumed nut in the United States — until the 2010s ushered in the almond craze.

In 2014, The Atlantic reported that Americans were suddenly consuming more than 10 times as many almonds as they were in 1965. What changed? Apparently, press coverage of the health benefits of almonds. Studies kept popping up claiming that almonds had all kinds of health benefits: lower blood sugar, reduced blood pressure and lower cholesterol levels.

“We came out of the period of low-fat eating, and then the Atkins diet got really popular,” said dietician Rachael Hartley, and author of Gentle Nutrition. “I really associate almonds with the Atkins diet becoming popular, it was kind of this thing that was supposedly the low-carb, healthy snack that you could bring with you on the go.”

Perhaps that’s why people like Yolanda Hadid from “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” were spotted promoting almonds on television in 2014. Last fall, a video clip from her former “Housewives” days resurfaced in which she encourages her then-18-year-old daughter Gigi to “have a couple of almonds” and “chew on them really well,” after Gigi revealed she was feeling “weak.” The clip went viral on TikTok, and led to a neologism — “almond mom” — used in confessional videos about diet culture-obsessed parents.

“The idea of an almond mom is essentially a parent who is projecting diet culture onto their child through the ways that they talk about food.”

For her part, Yolanda Hadid says her almond quote was taken out of context. Still, that hasn’t stopped users from leaping to share their own examples of how their own mothers compelled them to obsess over their diets. 

“I grew up in a household that did not have dessert,” user KimfromNC shared on TikTok. When she asked “What’s for dessert?,” KimfromNC says her mom would respond “There’s fruit in the fridge.”

A quick search for the hashtag #almondmom on TikTok reveals hundreds of videos with titles like “POV [point of view] you grew up with an almond mom” and “When your half an almond a day mom wants a pizza.” The hashtag has over 189.2 million views as of publication of this story. Lest you think the meme might have sexist undertones, it has a gender-flipped parallel in “almond dads” and “grape dad” memes, too. 

“Certainly moms get a lot more pressure around diet culture,” Hartley said. “But dads can cause a lot more harm in many ways, because there’s messaging about the value of other women’s bodies.” 


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Author and dietician Christy Harrison defines diet culture as a “systems of beliefs,” including demonizing “certain ways of eating while elevating others,” which “means you’re forced to be hyper-vigilant about your eating, ashamed of making certain food choices, and distracted from your pleasure, your purpose, and your power.”

“Diet culture doesn’t just mean ‘being on a diet,’ because you don’t have to follow any sort of official diet to be caught up in the culture of dieting,” Harrison wrote. As Beth Ann Mayer wrote for Parents, “almond parenting,” is when parents “dole out unhealthy but unfortunately common eating advice that really needs to go back to the 20th century.”

“I think it’s been very cathartic for people to watch who have dealt with something similar.”

“The idea of an almond mom is essentially a parent who is projecting diet culture onto their child through the ways that they talk about food,” Hartley said. “It may not be that the parent feels like they are actively pushing their child to be on a diet or manage their weight; oftentimes [it] has more to do with their entire worldview around food which is wrapped up in this good-bad diet culture mentality.”

For example, considering almonds to be a “good” snack as opposed to a bad one.

TikTok content creator Tylerr Bender has made a handful of “almond mom” videos, spinning comedy out of what it’s like when an “almond child” goes to a friend’s house who doesn’t have almond parents. “I’ll have Gatorade,” Bender says, excitedly. “We can only drink water at home, our mom doesn’t like us to drink our sugar.” Bender was one of the first people on TikTok to make an “almond mom” video, and told Salon she was “shocked” by the response and how many people could relate.

“I think it’s been very cathartic for people to watch who have dealt with something similar,” Bender told Salon. “And I think it’s been really helpful for people to see the community around it, you can see people making friends in the comments.” In one of Bender’s videos, a commenter identifies as a fellow “almond child,” and says “that’s why when I was a teenager I had a stash of junk snacks in my wardrobe.” Another confesses: “HS [high school] friend would binge a whole loaf of wonder bread every time she came over, because she wasn’t allowed white bread at home.” 

Common threads emerge from the shared experience of the almond parents’ children. As articulated in this nascent meme, the perceived effect of being a so-called almond child is having an unhealthy relationship with food.  A 2018 study published in Pediatrics found that weight shaming or an emphasis on a diet over healthy eating can lead to poor self-esteem and disordered eating. The study also found that parents who were told to diet as teens or kids were more likely to encourage their own children to diet. The negative effects can “compound over time, not only impacting the person directly receiving the messages, but also potentially hurting generations to come,” the researchers stated. In other words, almond moms likely had almond moms, too, echoing the same diet culture rhetoric. But as researchers explained in Paediatrics & Child Health, it’s not always crystal clear what the effects are when so-called unhealthy eating behavior is masked as “healthy eating.”

And this is precisely the problem with almond parents, Hartley explained. 

“Because we live in this world where the view on food and fitness is the end-all-be-all of health, there’s this undue amount of pressure that gets put on eating the ‘right’ foods,” Hartley said. “And it takes a very normal concern for their child’s health and gets wrapped up in this very rigid view of what healthy eating looks like — and unfortunately, that really isn’t all that healthy.”

Hartley cautioned that it’s important not to jump to the conclusion that “almond parents” are causing disordered eating, despite a rise in eating disorders worldwide.

“On one hand, it’s so important to have these conversations because absolutely these kinds of messages around food can put someone more at risk for an eating disorder; and at the same time, eating disorders are biopsychosocial, so there are underlying genetics that put someone at risk,” Hartley said. “And it’s not just like messages coming from a parent — often times these messages are being reinforced by our entire culture.”

So, what can parents do today to avoid becoming an almond parent? 

“I think it first really starts with examining what their relationship or their definition of healthy eating is,” Hartley said. “So if a parent is defining healthy eating as managing weight, or eating in a very rigid way, or not eating ‘bad foods,’ and eating mostly ‘good foods,’ that’s not necessarily healthy eating and it’s not something that we want to project on to our children.”

Florida GOP “fashion police” called out for imposing dress code on women employees: “Is this 2023?”

During the mid-2000s, some far-right culture warriors were raging against the ankle-length peasant skirts or gypsy skirts that were popular at the time. But in 2023, Republicans in the Florida House of Representatives are worried about skirts they think are too short rather than too long. And the Miami Herald’s editorial board, in a blistering editorial published on January 27, slams those Republicans for playing “fashion police” with female employees, wondering, “Is this 2023?”

“The Florida House, not content with creating an election police force, banning books in schools or regulating women’s bodies when it comes to pregnancy, has apparently taken on yet another enforcement role: fashion police,” the Miami Herald editorial board argues. “Women, say goodbye to your sleeveless tops ‘when members are in the building.’ The sight of your upper arms is too much for the hallowed halls of the (Florida State) Legislature to bear, it seems. And short skirts? We can’t believe you even asked.”

The Miami Herald board adds, “A flyer circulating in the Capitol shows, complete with helpful photographs, what a person can and cannot wear. Some items are labeled as ‘NEVER work appropriate.’ No ‘dress or skirt more than one inch above the knee.’ No ‘low cut blouses or dresses.’ No shoes without socks — that one, refreshingly, is aimed at men.”

Members of the Miami Herald editorial board note that Republicans in the Missouri State Legislature have also been playing “fashion police” with female employees.

“Enforcement of the rules here in Florida could prove problematic,” according to the Miami Herald editorial board. “How low is ‘low cut?’ Who will measure the inch above the knee? Who will decide if you’re wearing leggings or just tight pants or, God forbid, jeggings? Perhaps there will be volunteers from the House to figure it out.”

Read the Miami Herald’s full editorial at this link.

George Santos says he’s stepping down from committees after GOP leaders refused to do anything

George Santos told the Republican Caucus Tuesday that he was willing to step down from committee assignments, Punchbowl News’ Jake Sherman reported.

Political polls are coming in showing that 78 percent of the voters in Santos’ district believe that he should step down, the Siena College results explain.

Sherman found it odd that only after so many headaches would Santos voluntarily step down from the committees when the caucus could have asked him to stand down earlier. Instead, Republicans refused to make any moves, Sherman said.

Santos has faced criticism as information was revealed showing that he lied about his identity, his religion, his family history, his mother, his experience, a possible fundraising scheme, his time wearing drag makeup and a sequined mini-dress, his incomeemployers, and other financial information. Meanwhile, he’s being investigated for a possible crime in Brazil.

See the full report from MSNBC below or at the video here:

Trump sues Bob Woodward for $50 million in damages for releasing audio of his interviews

Former President Donald Trump has found a new foe in court — the same journalist that broke the Richard Nixon Watergate scandal and who Trump talked to nearly two dozen times over eight months.

Trump is suing Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Bob Woodward, who he collaborated on a book with, stating that he allowed Woodward to record their conversations for the sole purpose of being used only for the book, “Rage.”

The lawsuit alleges that Woodward along with publishing company Simon & Schuster and parent company Paramount Global did not have the legal rights to use recordings from the interview for an audiobook, “The Trump Tapes,” that was released in October 2022.

Trump’s lawsuit states that Simon & Schuster and Paramount Global illegally profited from the tapes, and he is seeking nearly $50 million in damages. The figure comes from a future sales projection of 2 million audiobook copies being sold at $24.99.

According to Bloomberg, Trump’s interviews with Woodward began in 2016 when he was still a candidate for president. The two spoke in 19 designated interviews between December 2019 and August 2020. Trump claims that he never gave a verbal or written agreement to any of the recordings being shared with the public in any format or platform.

In the legal filings Trump’s attorneys stated, “This case centers on Mr. Woodward’s systematic usurpation, manipulation and exploitation of audio of President Trump.”

Paramount Global or Simon & Schuster have not supplied public comment on the case.

“Going for the kill”: Legal experts say Trump could face 4 years in prison amid new grand jury probe

The Manhattan district attorney’s office on Monday began presenting evidence to a new grand jury about former President Donald Trump’s role in hush money payments to adult film actress Stormy Daniels during the 2016 campaign, according to The New York Times.

The grand jury was recently impaneled and District Attorney Alvin Bragg appears to be “laying the groundwork for potential criminal charges against the former president in the coming months,” sources told the outlet.

David Pecker, the former publisher of the National Enquirer who helped broker the deal with Daniels, was seen entering the building where the grand jury is sitting on Monday.

Former Trump attorney and fixer Michael Cohen, who pleaded guilty to federal charges related to the hush money payment “in coordination with, and at the direction of” Trump in 2018, has said he has repeatedly spoken with prosecutors.

Prosecutors also intend to interview former National Enquirer editor Dylan Howard and Trump Organization employees Jeffrey McConney and Deborah Tarasoff — who helped arrange for Cohen to be reimbursed the $130,000 he paid to Daniels, according to the report. Prosecutors are also expected to meet with former Daniels attorney Keith Davidson. Prosecutors have also contacted former 2016 Trump campaign officials and subpoenaed phone records and other documents in a sign prosecutors are seeking to corroborate witness accounts.

Bragg empaneled the new grand jury after facing criticism for seemingly backing off Trump after replacing former D.A. Cy Vance, who first opened the probe. Bragg initially abandoned plans to present evidence against Trump himself, prompting two top prosecutors on the team to resign in protest. But after securing a tax fraud conviction against the Trump Organization last year, Bragg renewed his scrutiny of the hush money payment to Daniels, which first triggered the original probe. The renewed probe is focused on whether Trump’s company falsely classified the reimbursement to Cohen as a legal expense. To charge Trump with a felony, prosecutors would need to show that Trump falsified the records to help commit to conceal a second crime — a violation of New York state election law — though the theory is largely untested in court.

Trump lashed out over the report, calling the case “old news” and insisting he “NEVER HAD AN AFFAIR.”

“With murders and violent crime surging like never before in New York City, the Radical Left Manhattan D.A., Alvin Bragg, just leaked to the Fake News Media that they are still going after the Stormy ‘Horseface’ Daniels Bull….!” Trump wrote on Truth Social, claiming that Bragg was “working with the Weaponized Justice Department” in a “continuation of the Greatest With Hunt of time.”

But legal experts say the move shows that Bragg likely has a good reason why he shifted course in the probe.


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“Bragg initially made a decision not to pursue charges against Trump, and it appears to he now has reversed course,” tweeted former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti. “I suspect there is more to this story and we’ll learn about that in the months to come.”

Former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, who served on special counsel Bob Mueller’s team, called the investigation the “sleeper case to watch” as Trump also faces potential legal trouble in a Fulton County DA probe looking at his post-election efforts to overturn his loss and a DOJ investigation into classified documents he refused to turn over in response to a grand jury subpoena.

“It may be that they have been able to uncover objective evidence that corroborates it… that makes him feel this is a stronger case than they did back when Alvin Bragg first came to office,” former U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade predicted during an appearance on MSNBC.

Former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman told the network that the decision to impanel a new grand jury shows that Bragg is “going for the kill.”

Trump could face up to four years in prison if he is convicted of first-degree falsifying business records, former district attorneys told Insider, though securing a conviction could be complicated.

“You’re falsifying your records to show that it is a business expense, as if you’re paying a lawyer to do legal work, and this wasn’t that at all,” Josh Moscow, a former senior financial crimes prosecutor at the Manhattan DA’s office, told the outlet. “This was a conduit payment.”

Prosecutors would have to link Trump himself to the payment but a recording Cohen made of Trump discussing a hush-money payment to another woman, Karen McDougal, could be “pretty incriminating,” Daniel Alonso, a former chief assistant district attorney at the Manhattan DA’s office, told the outlet.

“It always struck me as incredibly unfair that Michael Cohen is the only person that was charged in this crime,” he added. “The idea that the bag man is the only one that goes down and the principal gets away scot-free just doesn’t really square with justice.”

Trump, Pence and Biden won’t be punished — but Chelsea Manning and Reality Winner went to prison

We can now add Vice President Mike Pence to the list of former presidents and vice presidents who have had classified information found in their homes. While there are marked differences between Donald Trump intentionally keeping classified documents at Mar-a-Lago, and refusing to cooperate with authorities, and Pence and Joe Biden’s apparent discovery of classified documents that inadvertently ended up in their homes — and were returned voluntarily and promptly — the commonality between these cases and others involving high-level officials is the lack of serious punishment. 

As attorneys who have represented dozens of whistleblowers and media sources who have been criminally investigated, prosecuted and imprisoned for allegedly retaining or leaking classified information, we know there is a two-tiered system of justice when it comes to mishandling classified information: one for high-level and well-connected government officials, and another for whistleblowers and media sources. Powerful officials get a slap on the wrist, usually in the form of administrative punishments or no punishment at all. Whistleblowers and media sources at best have their careers ruined, and at worst must serve prison time, like our client Daniel Hale, an Air Force intelligence analyst who served in Afghanistan.

The government publicly billed drone strikes as “precision, targeted killing.” Hale disclosed that during one five-month period, more than 90 percent of those killed by airstrikes were not the intended targets. He is currently serving a 45-month prison sentence. Similarly, decorated military veteran and government intelligence contractor Reality Winner served a 63-month sentence for giving the press a single, accurate document about Russian hacking attempts. That is the longest civilian sentence ever imposed for a source who disclosed truthful information to the press. Winner’s sentence was imposed even though special counsel Robert Mueller publicly disclosed nearly identical information in a different indictment a month before her sentencing. 

It may be tempting to draw a line between retaining classified information and leaking it to the press, but the draconian law most often used to prosecute these cases (the World War I-era Espionage Act) makes no such distinction. Nor does it matter if a leaker disclosed information about illegal or unconstitutional government conduct, such as the U.S. torture program, secret mass domestic surveillance or war crimes. There is no public-interest defense. Whistleblowers and sources are professionally ruined, criminally prosecuted or imprisoned even in cases that involve no classified information, and even when the government agrees there has been no harm to national security. 

Whistleblowers and sources can be professionally ruined, criminally prosecuted or imprisoned even in cases that involve no classified information, and when there has been no harm to national security. 

The government threatened our client, NSA whistleblower Thomas Drake, with spending the rest of his natural life in prison for allegedly retaining classified information in his home. When it turned out none of the information found in Drake’s home was actually classified, it took judgments in both the courtroom and the court of public opinion to keep him out of prison — not the Justice Department’s concession of its gross overreach. CIA whistleblower Jeffrey Sterling was convicted of alleged disclosure of secrets based not on the substance of the classified information disclosed, but based on thin metadata documenting conversations between himself and a journalist. Sterling served a 42-month prison sentence. CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou, another client of ours, served a 30-month prison sentence because he was the first CIA agent to call waterboarding a form of “torture.”

In the most famous such recent case, NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden has been forced into a life of exile because he cannot get a fair trial here in the United States. Snowden cannot argue at trial that his disclosures were in the public interest, even though former Attorney General Eric Holder agreed that Snowden had performed a “public service” when he disclosed the NSA’s widespread and illegal mass surveillance to journalists. In Army whistleblower Chelsea Manning’s case, the government’s own damage assessment found that her disclosures did no significant harm to national security. Nonetheless, she was accused of “aiding the enemy” and her sentence was so extreme (35 years), that Barack Obama commuted it


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Meanwhile, high-level officials who intentionally leak classified information for personal or political gain receive little or no punishment. While Hale, Winner, Drake, Sterling, Kiriakou and Manning all faced charges under the Espionage Act, former CIA Director David Petraeus received a sweetheart plea deal under a less serious misdemeanor law for leaking classified information to his biographer, with whom he was having an affair. Unlike the hard prison time served by whistleblowers, Petraeus was on probation for two years and paid a fine. Another former CIA director, Leon Panetta, has never been punished for leaking secrets to the filmmakers of “Zero Dark Thirty.”

What this stark disparity in punishment should make clear is that the national security establishment is secretive, powerful and far too unaccountable, no matter which political party is in the White House. Nonetheless, surely the fact that the FBI needed to search both a former president’s house and the current president’s house for mishandled classified documents should prompt a close examination of the bloated and byzantine secrecy bureaucracy, an examination that has long been necessary for a system plagued by over-classification and a lack of oversight, as we have previously written

Moreover, the Biden Justice Department’s attempt to hold Trump accountable using this hopelessly broken classification system has led us down a destructive path of endless partisan fighting and both-sides-ism. Because the classification system and Espionage Act have been misused to punish media sources and chill investigative journalism by presidents from both political parties, the differences between Trump’s actions and everyone else’s will never resonate the way the Justice Department hopes. 

What does already resonate with us, as free press and whistleblower advocates — and should alarm the public as well — is the way that senior officials and top brass can escape severe punishment, compared with the prison time served by whistleblowers and media sources whose only “crime” was to reveal information that exposed government ineptitude or wrongdoing, about which the public had a right to know. Unequal treatment under the law is not justice. 

Pelosi’s attacker is proud of himself. The GOP emboldened him

David DePape seems proud of himself. On Friday, a judge ordered the release of video footage that appears to show DePape beating Paul Pelosi, the husband of then-Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, with a hammer after refusing to listen to police orders to drop the weapon. The video is hard to watch, showing the suspect tackling Pelosi to the ground and viciously pounding him with a hammer while the police attempt to pull him off the 82-year-old man. Bizarrely, however, in a phone call to a San Francisco reporter made the same day, DePape’s only regret was that the violence wasn’t worse. 

“Now that you all have seen the body cam footage, I have an important message for everyone in America,” DePape told KTVU’s Amber Lee of. “You’re welcome.”

He then apologized that he “didn’t get more of them.”


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Like many of the January 6 insurrectionists who have been arrested, DePape appears to have no interest in backing down from the Donald Trump-fueled conspiracy theories that led to his violence. Instead, the chilling audio hints at a man who feels confident in his false accusations and supported in his belief that the Trumpist agenda must be forced upon America through violence. 

DePape appears delusional in many regards, but he is, sadly, right about one thing: His pro-violence views have a lot of support from Republicans, both politicians and voters. While he took it to the next level, DePape was only acting on a correct interpretation of Trump’s implicit message: Since Democrats can’t be beaten at the ballot box, power must be seized through violence. It’s a view that, while they often avoid saying out loud, is widely backed by the rest of the GOP. The party, after all, has gone out of its way to reaffirm support for Trump in the wake of the deadly riot he unleashed on the Capitol two years ago. 

DePage is getting support from Republicans in both fairly direct ways and in ways that are larger and more diffuse. The more direct approval comes in the form of “jokes” and conspiracy theories about the attack on Pelosi. Former Republican congressman Adam Kinzinger tweeted a reminder of how many powerful Republicans engaged in this in the immediate aftermath of the attack. (He mistakenly attributes the Seattle Times, but it was in fact the New York Times that compiled this list.) 

DePape was only acting on a correct interpretation of Trump’s implicit message: Since Democrats can’t be beaten at the ballot box, power must be seized through violence.

A lot of people on Twitter, desperate to muddy the waters around this, quibbled with the phrase “made fun,” arguing that many of these people, uh, merely “asked questions” about the attack. This, of course, is nonsense. The “questions” were actually conspiracy theories, most of which were grossly homophobic, suggesting that the attack was something other than right-wing political violence. Nor is there a thick line between “making fun” and conspiracy theories, and not just because the latter often is accompanied by tasteless jokes. Both conspiracy theories and jokes are about minimizing violence for the purpose of sending the same implicit message of winking support — a message that DePage clearly picked up on. 


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Even after the disturbing footage of the attack was released, right-wing media figures continued to push asinine conspiracy theories implying that Pelosi somehow faked this or was complicit in his own attempted murder. It’s unlikely that many if any, people actually believe this nonsense. The purpose of such conspiracy theories is to continue justifying a refusal to condemn this attack, i.e. just another way to signal support for DePage’s alleged crime. 

As gross as all of this is, it is sadly not surprising. This isn’t just about a couple of dozen prominent Republicans finding ways to downplay Pelosi’s suffering, either. In the two years since the January 6 insurrection, Republicans have made it clear that they have fully embraced political violence. Sure, they’ll whine and fuss if anyone dares say so out loud because gaslighting the public is part of the abusive stance they’ve taken toward our democracy. But they’re still the party of Trump, and after January 6, that means being the party of domestic terrorism. 

That Trump is still the leader of the GOP should not be in doubt, no matter how much wishcasting is done on MSNBC about his “low energy” campaign events. Under Speaker Kevin McCarthy, the Republicans who control the House are gearing up to run a massive revenge campaign on anyone who took a stand against Trump’s efforts to overthrow democracy. McCarthy has already removed two California Democrats, Reps. Adam Schiff and Eric Swalwell, from the Intelligence Committee, for the obvious purpose of punishing them for speaking out against Trump. All this sends a strong, unmistakable signal: McCarthy and House Republicans aren’t just fine with what happened on January 6, but they will do everything in their power to shield him from consequences. 

Despite wistful talk among some GOP elite about someone beating Trump in the 2024 primary, most signs suggest the party is still in Trump’s thrall. Trump loyalist Ronna McDaniel won her race to continue being the head of the Republican National Committee. She did face some challengers, but by and large, they were people who didn’t think she was Trumpy enough, a belief that runs up against the reality of her unswerving devotion to Trump.

It is true that Trump has some potential primary opponents in 2024, but notably, they tend to avoid criticizing him for the attempted coup. His biggest competitor right now, Florida’s Gov. Ron DeSantis, is focused on complaining that Trump isn’t enough of a far-right authoritarian. They all know that a “political violence is bad” campaign platform is DOA with the Republican base. Acceptable opinions for Republican leaders can only fall in a narrow range between “I’m fine with right-wing domestic terrorism” and “I’m a big fan of murdering your political opponents.” 

Listening to the DePape tape, what’s remarkable is how much he sounds like Trump. The only real difference is that DePape is more concise and coherent. Trump could never keep his remarks to a lean two minutes, preferring instead hour-plus stemwinders when he’s whining, lying, and inciting violence. DePape’s suggestions of a Democratic conspiracy against America are just Trump’s Big Lie. DePape’s complaints that he didn’t go far enough echo Trump’s post-January 6 rhetoric painting the insurrectionists as heroes, complete with false promises of money and pardons for those who have committed violence on his behalf. 

As Heather “Digby” Parton noted at Salon on Monday, most of the coverage of Trump’s newly invigorated 2024 run for president is delicately sidestepping reminders that he incited a violent insurrection. It continues to be difficult for the mainstream media to accept that the GOP has embraced violent fascism. The old Beltway framework around politics, which treats the two parties as roughly equivalent, has been false for a long time, but it’s grotesquely so in the Trump era. Democrats are a normal center-left political party. Republicans have turned away from democracy and towards political violence. It certainly would be better for everyone if this were’t true, but it is. DePape isn’t some fringe character, but a reflection of who the Republicans have become in their MAGA iteration. 

Let Tyre Nichols be the last: Police killings and the public consumption of Black pain

When I experience anxiety and stress, I chew on pens and grind my teeth.

Several weeks ago, the Memphis Police Department announced that they would release the body camera footage of an encounter that led to their officers savagely beating Tyre Nichols earlier this month. He would succumb to his injuries on Jan. 10, several days after the fatal encounter.

Police tried to prepare the public for what, by their own admission, is “disturbing” footage, a forbidding signal that what the public was to see is truly unconscionable. On Friday, like so many others, I waited with dread for that video to “premiere” – and premiere is indeed the correct word. Something can premiere and still be horrible; such language signals anticipation and bursting out onto the world without consideration of the goodness or horribleness of the thing in question. Ben Crump, the Nichols family attorney, said that the five Memphis officers beat Tyre like a “human piñata.” It is true that we have the visual lexicon and vocabulary for such horror from Rodney King and so many other such incidents of police savagery against Black bodies, but what does it look like this time?

My jaw hurts and there are at least four or five pens gnawed down and sitting on top of my desk.

I can only consume these videos indirectly by reading the summaries and descriptions made by people who I respect.

This is not healthy. 

Such stress and anxiety are experienced both individually and collectively by Black people in America (and across the Black Atlantic) as we await the next video of another Black person brutalized by the police and other agents of the law. It is a perpetual feedback loop of trauma. The immediate trauma comes from witnessing the routine violence that is committed by America’s police and law enforcement against Black and brown bodies. The (re)traumatization results from how each incident is a reminder that it will happen again because anti-Black violence is systemic in American society. Living in a racist society is trauma. It is what psychologists and other mental health professionals have termed “racial battle fatigue.”

Beyond the clinical language, racial battle fatigue causes Black and brown people in America to live shorter lives than white people and to die at higher rates from heart disease, strokes, cancer, high blood pressure, and other maladies. Like other Black people in America and across the world, I know that racial battle fatigue is killing me, both slowly and quickly. I am not alone in this experience.

Racial battle fatigue is why I decided some years ago to not watch any videos where police abuse Black and brown people. I can bear witness to the injustice and fight against it without exposing myself to new-age lynching videos or other such horrible things. On this, I am in agreement with actor LeVar Burton, who explained his decision to not watch the footage on Twitter. “I have not seen the video. Those who love me most have urged me not to. One of the truths playing Kunta Kinte taught me is that the dehumanization of Black people was necessary to the success of our enslavement.”

There is a whole media machine that profits off Black people and our suffering and pain — but allows little time for those same voices to discuss topics that are not “race-related.”

Bernice King, daughter of the civil rights leader and hope warrior Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., also took to Twitter to encourage people to attend to their mental health and well-being upon the release of yet another taped killing of a Black man:

You don’t have to watch the video of #TyreNichols being beaten by police.

You don’t have to subject yourself to that trauma.

It should not require another video of a Black human being dehumanized for anyone to understand that police brutality is an urgent, devastating issue.

I understand and respect why other Black people and people of conscience have made a different choice. But I can only consume these videos indirectly by reading the summaries and descriptions made by people who I respect. I tell myself that I am playing peekaboo with a monster. I know what the monster looks like, but we pretend to not see each other and then pretend to be surprised when we do.

On Twitter, journalist Robert Evans annotated the video of Nichols being beaten by Memphis officers this way:

the start of the Tyre Nichols video shows a group of police, for no discernable reason, immediately escalating to violence, threatening and hitting a young man while shouting contradictory orders at him they threaten to tase him if he does not lie down, while he is lying down

he escapes. the police attempt to tase him. then they stand around panting and drinking water. they are all absolutely gassed from beating a skinny young man five to one.

Video two shows footage from a light pole camera. We see a fairly calm suburban street. The camera pivots to show four cops and Tyre on the ground. One cop grabs his upper body and repeatedly shoves him into the ground. A second cop joins. A third kicks Tyre in the head.

From the start of this footage Tyre seems badly injured. He is not resisting so much as thrashing while being beaten. The cops stand him up. One starts to punch him, throwing haymakers at Tyre’s face while the others hold him still.

Video three is body camera footage of an officer helping to chase down Tyre. When he arrives Tyre is down, two officers are on him. He is howling, in clear pain. The officer says “Shut the fuck up” and “you want to get sprayed again?” Both cops get off him. He is howling.

After they spray him Tyre sits up. He does not seem fully in control of his body. Nothing he does could be described as resistance. He is reacting to being beaten and maced. When he sits up they throw him back to the ground, slamming his head into the pavement.

He is howling for his mother.

They wrestle him to the ground, mace him again. They mace themselves too. They keep yelling at him to give them his hands. Three officers are on him. He does not seem fully conscious. The maced cop recovers, takes out a baton and says “I’m going to baton the fuck out of you.”

Tyre is standing. Three officers are holding him. He staggers, almost blindly. One officer punches him in the head. They take him to the ground again.

They take him down again. More cops arrive on-scene. One officer complains that Tyre made him mace himself.

Video 4 is yet another officer’s body cam. I should not for clarity videos 2, 3 and 4 are all of the same event (the takedown in Tyre’s neighborhood) from different cameras. It’s quiet for the first minute. We see a cop driving, get out of his car and start running.

We see the takedown. A tackle. His head hits the ground. It is kinda unclear what happens beyond the violence. The camera is obscured for much of what happens.

Eventually he gets up, the camera clears. The cops talk and laugh about chasing him down. One complains about hurting his knee in the tackle. We see Tyre lying half against the car, twitching, barely conscious. One cop accuses him of being high.

MSNBC host Chris Hayes said this on Twitter:

A particularly insidious aspect of the sound in the video is the cops constantly shouting as if Nichols is not complying when in fact he is very obviously complying and they are beating him.

Also on Twitter, Michael Harriot, who is a journalist and a poet, highlighted how:

If they say “get on the ground” and you get on the ground, say “I’m on the ground” and you STILL get tased and pepper sprayed.

What else are you supposed to do but run?

So much for that whole “if he only he had complied” narrative.


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NBC News’ Antonia Hylton focused on how Nichols was doomed by police who left him no means of escape or compliance:

God. Part of the horror of the Tyre Nichols video – which I’m not sharing – is how what we hear officers say is the opposite of what we see. For ex – the demand to see his hands when they are holding his arms & kicking him. It appears they’re manufacturing a pretext for the stop.

Police detective turned whistleblower Francesco Serpico put this exclamation mark on the video of Nichols being brutalized and the system that encourages and protects such behavior, tweeting:

There’s a lot of talk in the news today about these “bad cops” “infiltrating the police” As God is my witness, it is exactly as I felt in 60-70s. The reverence I had unwittingly infiltrated a culture of rogues & thieves posing as police. That system still holds me in contempt today.

Robert Evans’ first paragraph about Nichols being stopped and then beaten is all one really needs to understand what the Memphis police did to him that night. Everything that happens after that moment are but details on top of a basic fact: Tyre did not have to die, and he would still be alive if he never encountered those cops who were operating like they were members of a paramilitary group that sees certain people like they are targets in a warzone.

As has become ritual, many Black people will be asked (or have been) by well-intentioned white people about how they are feeling in the aftermath of the Nichols video (as was the case after the videotaped deaths of George Floyd, Eric Garner, et al.)

Are you OK?

Do you want to talk about it

If one chooses to answer such questions — I generally do not —  I would suggest turning the question around and asking their white friends and colleagues, “How do you feel when you see another human being so severely abused that they will later die from their injuries?” Our shared humanity should transcend the color line. In reality, of course, it does not; whiteness and the concept of race itself are predicated on preventing such an outcome.

Black people who think and write publicly about politics and society will inevitably be asked to offer a comment or opinion on the police killing of Nichols or the next Black person who suffers such a fate. This is part of a national ritual where the mainstream news media features “Black voices” who work “the racism beat” when bad things happen to Black and brown people. Although it may hurt them financially, they too should feel free to say, “no comment” or “not this time.” There is a whole media machine that profits off of Black people and our suffering and pain but allows little if any time for those same voices to discuss topics that are not “race-related.”

Some years ago, a Black artist of some renown was asked in an interview why she didn’t emphasize themes of slavery and racism in her work. She said that she preferred that her art and energy be directed towards imagining trees and flowers and other pretty things from nature.

Like other Black people in America and across the world, I feel that racial battle fatigue is killing me.

There is much wisdom there for Black and brown folks who have a public platform. In that vein, philosopher Nathalie Etoke made the following intervention during a conversation with philosopher Lewis Gordon at the Boston Review about existentialism and Black people’s humanity:

But I was also grappling with this issue of the human relation with regards to people of African descent, whether they’re from the diaspora or the continent. Because I think the ways we engage the question of freedom goes beyond what I call the legality of freedom or the issue of rights. There’s something about the legacy of sub-humanity that we constantly have to resurrect, but then, at the same time, we have to decenter the white gaze. We have to decenter aspects of violence and center on ourselves….

I was just trying to problematize the way that, if we look at Black life through the lens of white supremacy or social death, in many ways we are erasing and silencing the ways Blackness has to do with this affirmation of life in the context of oppression for the sake of freedom, and the fact that maybe Black freedom is not something that is given. It is fought for. Yes, from this perspective of human rights, but also from this existential perspective in terms of your humanity. How do you define yourself in your own terms? And how do you practice existence in the context of oppression?

In the end, I do not (yet) have an ex-patriot’s heart. I am a proud Black working-class American and have no plans to go anywhere else. But I am finding myself more and more sympathetic and understanding towards those black Americans who do.

In the case of Tyre Nichols, those feelings are amplified by how American society is so deeply sick with white supremacy and racism that a group of police officers who happen to be black were the ones responsible for killing him.

Anti-black animus and hatred afflict people on both sides of the color line. It is that seductive, toxic and virulent. And it is a feature of American society that is not ever going away because that would mean that the borders and boundaries which cohere and support this order of things would collapse. White supremacy and racism are the cement, that in many ways, holds the whole system together.

Don’t believe the hype: Ukraine is rapidly becoming another war gone wrong

Empires in terminal decline leap from one military fiasco to the next. The war in Ukraine, another bungled attempt to reassert U.S. global hegemony, fits this pattern. The danger is that the more dire things look, the more the U.S. will escalate the conflict, potentially provoking open confrontation with Russia. If Russia carries out retaliatory attacks on supply and training bases in neighboring NATO countries, or uses tactical nuclear weapons, NATO will almost certainly respond by attacking Russian forces. We will have ignited World War III, which could result in a nuclear holocaust.

U.S. military support for Ukraine began with the basics — ammunition and assault weapons. The Biden administration, however, soon crossed several self-imposed red lines to provide a tidal wave of lethal war machinery: Stinger anti-aircraft systems; Javelin anti-armor systems; M777 towed Howitzers; 122mm GRAD rockets; M142 multiple rocket launchers, or HIMARS; Tube-Launched, Optically-Tracked, Wire-Guided (TOW) missiles; Patriot air defense batteries; National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile Systems (NASAMS); M113 Armored Personnel Carriers; and now 31 M1 Abrams, as part of a new $400 million package. These tanks will be supplemented by 14 German Leopard 2A6 tanks, 14 British Challenger 2 tanks and tanks from other NATO members, including Poland. Next on the list are armor-piercing depleted uranium (DU) ammunition and F-15 and F-16 fighter jets.

Since Russia invaded on Feb. 24, 2022, Congress has approved more than $113 billion in aid to Ukraine and allied nations supporting the war in Ukraine. Three-fifths of this aid, $67 billion, has been allocated for military expenditures. There are 28 countries transferring weapons to Ukraine. All of them, with the exception of Australia, Canada and the U.S., are in Europe. 

The rapid upgrade of sophisticated military hardware and aid provided to Ukraine is not a good sign for the NATO alliance. It takes many months, if not years, of training to operate and coordinate these weapons systems. Tank battles — I was in the last major tank battle outside Kuwait City during the first Gulf war as a reporter — are highly choreographed and complex operations. Armor must work in close concert with air power, warships, infantry and artillery batteries. It will be many months, if not years, before Ukrainian forces receive adequate training to operate this equipment and coordinate the diverse components of a modern battlefield. Indeed, the U.S. never succeeded in training the Iraqi and Afghan armies in combined arms maneuver warfare, despite two decades of occupation.

I was with Marine Corps units in February 1991 that pushed Iraqi forces out of the Saudi Arabian town of Khafji. Supplied with superior military equipment, the Saudi soldiers that held Khafji offered ineffectual resistance. As we entered the city, we saw Saudi troops in commandeered fire trucks, hightailing it south to escape the fighting. All the fancy military hardware, which the Saudis had purchased from the U.S., proved worthless because they did not know how to use it.

NATO military commanders understand that the infusion of these weapons systems into the war will not alter what is, at best, a stalemate, defined largely by artillery duels over hundreds of miles of front lines. The purchase of these weapons systems — one M1 Abrams tank costs $10 million when training and sustainment are included — increases the profits of the arms manufacturers. The use of these weapons in Ukraine allows them to be tested in battlefield conditions, making the war a laboratory for weapons manufacturers such as Lockheed Martin. All this is useful to NATO and to the arms industry. But it is not very useful to Ukraine.

NATO commanders understand perfectly well that the infusion of all these weapons systems in Ukraine will not alter what is, at best, a stalemate, defined largely by artillery duels over hundreds of miles of front lines.

The other problem with advanced weapons systems such as the M1 Abrams, which have 1,500-horsepower turbine engines that run on jet fuel, is that they are temperamental and require highly skilled and near constant maintenance. They are not forgiving to those operating them who make mistakes; indeed, mistakes can be lethal. The most optimistic scenario for deploying M1 Abrams tanks in Ukraine is six to eight months, more likely longer. If Russia launches a major offensive in the spring, as expected, the M1 Abrams will not be part of the Ukrainian arsenal. Even when they do arrive, they will not significantly alter the balance of power, especially if the Russians are able to turn the tanks, manned by inexperienced crews, into charred hulks.

So why all this infusion of high-tech weaponry? We can sum it up in one word: panic.

Having declared a de facto war on Russia and openly calling for the removal of Vladimir Putin, the neoconservative pimps of war watch with dread as Ukraine is being pummeled by a relentless Russian war of attrition. Ukraine has suffered nearly 18,000 civilian casualties (6,919 killed and 11,075 injured). It has also seen  around 8 percent of its total housing destroyed or damaged and 50 percent of its energy infrastructure directly impacted with frequent power cuts. Ukraine requires at least $3 billion a month in outside support to keep its economy afloat, the International Monetary Fund’s managing director recently said. Nearly 14 million Ukrainians have been displaced — 8 million in Europe and 6 million internally — and up to 18 million people, or 40 percent of Ukraine’s population, will soon require humanitarian assistance. Ukraine’s economy contracted by 35 percent in 2022, and 60 percent of Ukrainians are now poised to live on less than $5.5 a day, according to World Bank estimates. Nine million Ukrainians are without electricity and water in subzero temperatures, the Ukrainian president says. According to estimates from the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, at least 100,000 Ukrainian and 100,000 Russian soldiers have been killed or injured in the war as of last November.  

“My feeling is we are at a crucial moment in the conflict when the momentum could shift in favor of Russia if we don’t act decisively and quickly,” former Sen. Rob Portman was quoted as saying at the World Economic Forum in a post by The Atlantic Council. “A surge is needed.”

Turning logic on its head, the shills for war argue that “the greatest nuclear threat we face is a Russian victory.” The cavalier attitude to a potential nuclear confrontation with Russia by the cheerleaders for the war in Ukraine is very, very frightening, especially given the fiascos they oversaw for 20 years in the Middle East.


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The near-hysterical calls to support Ukraine as a bulwark of liberty and democracy by the mandarins in Washington are a response to the palpable rot and decline of the U.S. empire. America’s global authority has been decimated by well-publicized war crimes, torture, economic decline, social disintegration — including the assault on the capital on Jan. 6, 2021, the botched response to the pandemic, declining life expectancies and the plague of mass shootings — and a series of military debacles from Vietnam to Afghanistan. The coups, political assassinations, election fraud, black propaganda, blackmail, kidnapping, brutal counter-insurgency campaigns, U.S. sanctioned massacres, torture in global black sites, proxy wars and military interventions carried out by the United States around the globe since the end of World War II have never resulted in the establishment of a democratic government. Instead, these interventions have led to over 20 million killed and spawned a global revulsion for U.S. imperialism. 

In desperation, the empire pumps ever greater sums into its war machine. The most recent $1.7 trillion spending bill included $847 billion for the military; the total is boosted to $858 billion when factoring in accounts that don’t fall under the Armed Services committees’ jurisdiction, such as the Department of Energy, which oversees nuclear weapons maintenance and the infrastructure that develops them. In 2021, when the U.S. had a military budget of $801 billion, it constituted nearly 40 percent of all global military expenditures, more than the next nine countries, including Russia and China, spent on their militaries combined.

As Edward Gibbon observed about the Roman Empire’s own fatal lust for endless war: “[T]he decline of Rome was the natural and inevitable effect of immoderate greatness. Prosperity ripened the principle of decay; the cause of the destruction multiplied with the extent of conquest; and, as soon as time or accident had removed the artificial supports, the stupendous fabric yielded to the pressure of its own weight. The story of the ruin is simple and obvious; and instead of inquiring why the Roman Empire was destroyed, we should rather be surprised that it had subsisted for so long.”

A state of permanent war creates complex bureaucracies, sustained by compliant politicians, journalists, scientists, technocrats and academics, who obsequiously serve the war machine. This militarism needs mortal enemies — the latest are Russia and China — even when those demonized have no intention or capability, as was the case with Iraq, of harming the U.S. We are hostage to these incestuous institutional structures. 

America’s ruling parties depend on campaign funds from the war industry and are pressured by weapons manufacturers in their states or districts, who employ constituents, to pass gargantuan military budgets.

Earlier this month, the House and Senate Armed Services Committees, for example, appointed eight commissioners to review Biden’s National Defense Strategy (NDS) to “examine the assumptions, objectives, defense investments, force posture and structure, operational concepts, and military risks of the NDS.” The commission, as Eli Clifton writes at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, is “largely comprised of individuals with financial ties to the weapons industry and U.S. government contractors, raising questions about whether the commission will take a critical eye to contractors who receive $400 billion of the $858 billion FY2023 defense budget.” The chair of the commission, Clifton notes, is former California congresswoman Jane Harman, who “sits on the board of Iridium Communications, a satellite communications firm that was awarded a seven-year $738.5 million contract with the Department of Defense in 2019.”

Reports about Russian interference in the elections and Russia bots manipulating public opinion — which Matt Taibbi’s recent reporting on the “Twitter Files” exposes as an elaborate piece of black propaganda — was uncritically amplified by the press. It seduced Democrats and their liberal supporters into seeing Russia as a mortal enemy. The near-universal support for a prolonged war with Ukraine would not be possible without this con.

America’s two ruling parties depend on campaign funds from the war industry and are pressured by weapons manufacturers in their states or districts, who employ constituents, to pass gargantuan military budgets. Politicians are acutely aware that to challenge the permanent war economy is to be attacked as unpatriotic and is usually an act of political suicide. 

“The soul that is enslaved to war cries out for deliverance,” writes Simone Weil in her essay “The Iliad or the Poem of Force,” “but deliverance itself appears to it an extreme and tragic aspect, the aspect of destruction.”

Historians refer to the quixotic attempt by empires in decline to regain a lost hegemony through military adventurism as “micro-militarism.” During the Peloponnesian War (431–404 B.C.) the Athenians invaded Sicily, losing 200 ships and thousands of soldiers. The defeat ignited a series of successful revolts throughout the Athenian empire. The Roman Empire, which at its height lasted for two centuries, became captive to its army that, similar to the U.S. war industry, was a state within a state. Rome’s once-mighty legions in the late stage of empire suffered defeat after defeat while extracting ever more resources from a crumbling and impoverished state. In the end, the elite Praetorian Guard auctioned off the emperorship to the highest bidder. The British Empire, already decimated by the suicidal military folly of World War I, breathed its last gasp in 1956 when it attacked Egypt in a dispute over the nationalization of the Suez Canal. Britain withdrew in humiliation and became an appendage of the United States. A decade-long war in Afghanistan sealed the fate of a decrepit Soviet Union.

“While rising empires are often judicious, even rational in their application of armed force for conquest and control of overseas dominions, fading empires are inclined to ill-considered displays of power, dreaming of bold military masterstrokes that would somehow recoup lost prestige and power,” historian Alfred W. McCoy writes in his book “In the Shadows of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power.” “Often irrational even from an imperial point of view, these micro-military operations can yield hemorrhaging expenditures or humiliating defeats that only accelerate the process already under way.” 

The plan to reshape Europe and the global balance of power by degrading Russia is turning out to resemble the failed plan to reshape the Middle East. It is fueling a global food crisis and devastating Europe with near double-digit inflation. It is exposing the impotency, once again, of the United States, and the bankruptcy of its ruling oligarchs. As a counterweight to the U.S., nations such as China, Russia, India, Brazil and Iran are severing themselves from the tyranny of the dollar as the world’s reserve currency, a move that will trigger economic and social catastrophe in the United States. Washington is giving Ukraine ever more sophisticated weapons systems and billions upon billions in aid in a futile bid to save Ukraine but, more importantly, to save itself. 

“The definition of war profiteering”: Chevron posts record $35.5 billion in profit for 2022

Chevron announced Friday that it brought in a record-shattering $35.5 billion in profits in 2022, a sum that campaigners said highlights just how much the company benefited from global energy market chaos spurred by Russia’s war on Ukraine.

“What Big Oil has done over the last year is the definition of war profiteering,” said Jamie Henn, a spokesperson for the Stop The Oil Profiteering (STOP) campaign. “After working with Russia for decades, companies like Chevron have used the war in Ukraine as cover to jack up prices and suck billions directly out of the pocket of American families.”

“Big Oil is rolling in cash while families are struggling to heat their homes or fill their gas tanks,” Henn added. “Congress could provide people with immediate relief by returning some of the money Big Oil has pulled from our pockets over the last year. If Chevron has $75 billion to lavish on its wealthy shareholders and CEO, then it can certainly afford a windfall profits tax to provide much-needed relief to hard-working Americans.”

Henn was referring to the massive stock buyback program that Chevron announced earlier this week, making clear the company’s plan to reward shareholders with its 2022 windfall—which Chevron CEO Mike Wirth has defended as a “modest return.”

Chevron, which reported $6.4 billion in profits for the fourth quarter of 2022, also raised its quarterly dividend by around 6%.

“That Chevron feels free to spend $75 billion of its windfall profits on stock buybacks signals its belief that it is immune from accountability,” Robert Weissman, president of the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen, said in a statement Friday. “It has price gouged consumers in plain sight and it’s going to get away with it.”

“Once oil prices spiked after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a government not compromised and captured by Big Oil would have done the commonsense thing of taxing Big Oil’s windfall profits and returning the proceeds to consumers,” said Weissman. “The failure to impose a windfall profits tax reflects Big Oil’s raw political power, not any principled policy dispute.”

Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, called Chevron’s buyback program “corporate greed at its worst.”

“Chevron spent the last year raking in cash by price gouging consumers,” Jayapal wrote on Twitter. “And now they’re announcing $75 billion in stock buybacks as poor and working families continue to struggle.”

Democratic lawmakers in the House and Senate introduced windfall profits tax legislation last year and President Joe Biden belatedly floated his support for the idea, but the proposal never moved in either chamber—which were both narrowly controlled by Democrats at the time.

Currently, the prospects of a windfall profits tax passing Congress are zero with the House controlled by Republicans, who have wasted no time placing oil and gas industry allies on key committees. The progressive watchdog group Accountable.US noted Friday that the chief of staff for Rep. Bruce Westerman, R-Ark., the new chair of the House Natural Resources Committee, “is a longtime oil lobbyist.”

“She’ll be joining eight other former oil industry lobbyists in high-ranking staff positions on the Natural Resources Committee and in conference leadership,” the group said in a new report.

Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash., chair of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, received more oil and gas PAC money in the most recent election cycle than any other House Republican, Sludge reported last month.

Even after floods hit state, California plans cuts to climate investments

In January, deadly storms submerged California communities and caused as much as $1 billion in estimated damage. The recent rainfall carried by nine atmospheric rivers — bands of moisture blowing in from the Pacific — killed almost two dozen and induced mudslides on land parched by drought and denuded by wildfire. New vegetation from the rain will eventually form fresh fire tinder.

While scientists need more time to determine whether features of the storms were linked to global warming, past research found that heavy rain from atmospheric rivers in 2017 that damaged the Oroville Dam was more intense because of climate change. The dangers of “wet-to-dry whiplash” were described just a few months ago in a state report analyzing the impacts of the climate crisis on California.

Yet the state is struggling to deal with the origins of the crisis: Due to a projected budget deficit of $22.5 billion amid inflation and high interest rates, Gov. Newsom is proposing to slash his much-heralded $54 billion climate package by $6 billion, cutting funding for a wide range of initiatives, with social equity programs hit particularly hard.

California is legally obliged to reduce planet-warming pollution by 2030, but it lacks a clear plan for how to do it, according to one analysis. Although lowering emissions here won’t necessarily protect the state from extreme weather, California’s failure to achieve its climate goals would be a bad omen for the rest of the world, policy experts warn. State lawmakers will have to act with urgency, amid a constrained fiscal environment and pushback from the powerful oil and gas industry.

The state’s top oil and gas producers and refiners have continued buying influence among lawmakers and regulators — the Western States Petroleum Association spent at least $5.6 million on lobbying last year, an increase of more than $1 million from the previous year even without including the last quarter of 2022, data for which isn’t yet posted online.

Legislators with fossil fuel support — Shannon Grove (R-Bakersfield), Brian Dahle (R-Bieber), Angelique Ashby (D-Sacramento) — are taking the reins of powerful legislative committees, amid industry pressure to maintain production and refining. Yet other lawmakers have already reintroduced bills to accelerate emissions cuts that failed last year, signaling contentious climate fights on the horizon.

Historic Investment Followed by Deep Cuts

The governor’s slashed climate budget includes billions cut or delayed for zero-emissions vehicle infrastructure, community-based transportation equity projects in low income communities, the Transit and Intercity Rail Capital Program, and even infrastructure and repairs for safety crosswalks to encourage more biking and walking. 

Smaller reductions or delays are expected for incentive programs for cleaner energy, such as rooftop solar, long-duration energy storage to bank solar and wind power, carbon removal, equitable building decarbonization and transmission lines to transport electricity. 

There are comparatively fewer cuts to investments to reduce the catastrophic effects of wildfires, flooding and drought. The governor’s budget even included new investments to shore up the state’s anti-flood infrastructure, which isn’t set up to handle successive heavy storms. 

At a press conference, Newsom expressed hope some climate investments would be replenished by federal funds through the Inflation Reduction Act. The budget plan restores funding for some climate measures if more revenues than expected materialize later this year. That may be unlikely, according to a report from the Legislative Analyst’s Office, which found the governor’s revenue forecasts are overly optimistic. 

While specifics aren’t yet clear, low income Californians may suffer the most. The state proposes clawing back millions from initiatives to monitor air pollution, add more urban green spaces and protect people from extreme heat. A grant program for local health jurisdictions to “develop regional Climate and Health Resilience Plans” was nixed. 

California Environmental Voters, a group that advocates for progressive environmental policy, praised a watershed moment for climate funding over the last two years that went way beyond previous commitments, while warning that the breadth and scale of the crisis demands that more be done.

“Instead of radically transitioning from fossil fuels years ago — the source of this climate crisis — we are still in the throes of funding and implementing the transition to clean energy our future depends on,” the group said in a statement.

Last year, legislators introduced but then tabled a bill to create a $6.7 billion bond measure to finance projects for heat, wildfire, drought, flood and drinking water protections while investing in climate-focused workforce development.  

“Revenues were performing exceptionally well for the state [and] we were able to do a lot of one-time climate investments through last year’s budget,” Assemblymember Chris Ward (D-San Diego), one of the bill’s authors, told Capital & Main. “So to scale those back immediately — it’s concerning.”

Dwindling Timeline to Cut Emissions

The governor’s proposed budget was released less than a month after the California Air Resources Board approved a plan to radically reduce the state’s emissions to zero by 2045 while lowering them to 48% below 1990 levels over the next seven years.

California is proposing to clean up the state’s atmosphere with a plan “that would transform how Californians commute, live and consume energy,” as Capital & Main reported. But it could place the burden of transition heavily on lower income households, and the state government is lacking in specific policy guidance.

The latter was among criticisms leveled at the plan by the Legislative Analyst’s Office, which found it didn’t specify how the state would rely on carrots or sticks to meet goals. And it also neglected to address long-standing issues with California’s cap and trade program, according to Ross Brown, author of the report.

“Not having that type of analysis puts the Legislature more in a difficult situation of not being able to evaluate which policies best achieve those goals,” Ross told Capital & Main. 

That could result in delayed action and a more costly and abrupt transition later. As it stands, California will have to cut emissions each year from now until 2030 by a record 4% annually compared with 1% annually the previous decade. 

Legislators will have to come up with policy specifics, but as the session convenes, old political dynamics are on display and are likely to have an impact. Several pro-fossil fuel state senators were assigned to 10 or more committees, where climate legislation is often strangled by special interests.

Sen. Catherine Blakespear (D-Encinitas), a freshman senator who overcame heavy oil and gas industry opposition to win her seat, told Capital & Main she’s focused on boosting public transit oversight and investments to reduce Californians’ vehicle dependence, especially long-delayed construction for the San Diego – Los Angeles – San Luis Obispo rail corridor in her district. 

“We need to separate ourselves from the oil and gas industry,” Blakespear said, likening fossil fuel campaign contributions to tobacco industry money.

Blakespear was one of several lawmakers who signed a letter to statehouse leaders seeking a restoration of funding for transit agencies, which were already facing “major funding shortfalls” from inflation and pandemic-related drops in ridership and federal aid.

“The service cuts … would lead to fewer mobility options for Californians, increased driving, congestion, and greenhouse gas emissions,” the legislators wrote, with “devastating” impacts on climate goals. 

Fossil fuel vehicles are the state’s largest source of emissions. Five refinery owners — Chevron, Marathon, PBF, Valero and Phillips 66 — control the market for gasoline and made record profits last year, posting far higher margins in California than in the rest of the country. 

The Legislature has until early March to impose a financial penalty for companies’ “price gouging” at the pump last year. Meanwhile, the Western States Petroleum Association, which represents the companies, ended the year on a defiant note.

“Even when our opponents seem set on denying us a meaningful voice in these discussions, rest assured that the voices of the women and men of this industry will be heard,” wrote Catherine Reheis-Boyd, president and CEO of WSPA.

GOP Utah governor signs ban on “lifesaving medical care” for trans youth

Defying the guidance of the nation’s leading medical organizations, Republican Utah Gov. Spencer Cox on Saturday signed into law a bill banning gender-affirming care for minors in the state.

Passed by the Utah House of Representatives on Thursday and the state Senate on Friday, S.B. 16 prohibits gender-affirming surgeries for trans youth and bars hormonal treatment for new patients who were not diagnosed with gender dysphoria before the bill’s effective date, May 3.

“This bill effectively bans access to lifesaving medical care for transgender youth in Utah,” said Brittney Nystrom, executive director of the ACLU of Utah, after the Senate vote Friday. “It undermines the health and well-being of adolescents, limits the options of doctors, patients, and parents, and violates the constitutional rights of these families.”

Nystrom also sent Cox a letter urging him to veto the bill. She wrote that “the ACLU of Utah is deeply concerned about the damaging and potentially catastrophic effects this law will have on people’s lives and medical care, and the grave violations of people’s constitutional rights it will cause.”

Cathryn Oakley, Human Rights Campaign’s state legislative director and senior counsel, had also pressured Cox to veto the bill, arguing Friday that “Utah legislators capitulated to extremism and fear-mongering, and by doing so, shamelessly put the lives and well-being of young Utahans at risk—young transgender folks who are simply trying to navigate life as their authentic selves.”

“Every parent wants and deserves access to the highest quality healthcare for our kids,” Oakley said. “This discriminatory legislation bans care that is age-appropriate and supported by every major medical association, representing more than 1.3 million doctors. Medical decisions are best left to medical experts and parents or guardians, not politicians without an ounce of medical training acting as if they know how to raise and support our children better than we do.”

Dr. Jack Turban, an assistant professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco who researches the mental health of transgender and gender diverse youth, also pointed out that the new Utah law contradicts the positions of various medical organizations.

Some LGBTQ+ advocates had hoped Cox would be compelled to block the bill because last March, citing trans youth suicide rates, he vetoed H.B. 11, which banned transgender girls from playing on school sports teams that align with their gender identity. Utah lawmakers swiftly overrode his veto but a state judge in August issued a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the law.

Republican lawmakers in various states have ramped up efforts to enact anti-trans laws—particularly those targeting youth—over the past few years. As The New York Times reported Wednesday:

But even by those standards, the start of the 2023 legislative season stands out for the aggressiveness with which lawmakers are pushing into new territory.

The bills they have proposed—more than 150 in at least 25 states—include bans on transition care into young adulthood; restrictions on drag shows using definitions that could broadly encompass performances by transgender people; measures that would prevent teachers in many cases from using names or pronouns matching students’ gender identities; and requirements that schools out transgender students to their parents.

Legislative researcher Erin Reed, who is transgender, told the Times that the more aggressive proposals could make others seem like compromises.

“I really hope that people don’t allow that to happen,” Reed said. “Because these bills still target trans people who will then have to suffer the consequences.”

In a tweet about Cox’s decision Saturday, Reed said that “my heart breaks for Utah trans kids.”

After the Utah House passed the measure Thursday, the chamber’s Democrats expressed their disappointment with what they called “a misguided step by our Legislature and a violation of parents’ rights,” and said that “we recognize that gender-affirming healthcare is lifesaving, patient-center healthcare.”

“With no pathway forward for children in need of care, this legislation will inevitably lead to litigation and a likely injunction,” they added. “This is a tremendous waste of taxpayer money, and worse, a terrible message for our Legislature to send to transgender Utahns, their family, and their friends.”

After the governor signed the bill, the ACLU of Utah tweeted Saturday that “trans kids are kids—they deserve to grow up without constant political attacks on their lives and healthcare; we will defend that right. We see you. We support you.”

It’s been a “Long, Long Time” for Linda Ronstadt, whose hit song transforms “The Last of Us”

“The Last of Us” may have had its “Stranger Things” moment early, in the third episode of its initial season. The bump that the Netflix show gave to a song, Kate Bush’s classic “Running Up That Hill (Deal with God),” which played for quite a long time during a pivotal moment for the characters, was echoed by HBO’s new zombie series. The song in “The Last of Us” was Linda Ronstadt’s 1970 hit “Long, Long Time” and it was less of a moment and more a whole episode keyed around the ballad. Titled after the song, the bottle episode introduces the characters of Bill (Nick Offerman) and Frank (Murray Bartlett), their love story, its beginning and its end.

It remains to be seen whether the emotional episode will do for Ronstadt what “Stranger Things” did for Bush (and to a lesser extent, Metallica, whose banger “Master of Puppets” also played during a climactic moment), but searches for Ronstadt skyrocketed after the episode aired. Her name trended on Twitter, and U.S. streams of the song increased by a stunning 4,900% in one hour alone, according to Spotify.

What’s the song, why was this one chosen for the show and what happened to Ronstadt, often called the “First Lady of Rock”?

Born into an Arizona ranching family, Ronstadt became the lead singer of a folk-rock group, the Stone Poneys, in the 1960s. Her first album as a solo artist, 1969’s “Hand Sewn . . .  Hand Grown” is commonly referred to as the first alt-country release by a woman artist. She released her second album only a year later. That album, “Silk Purse” contains the track used by “The Last of Us.” 

“Long, Long Time” was a song Ronstadt allegedly had to persuade her record company to include.

“Long, Long Time” is the first song on the album’s B-side. Written by Gary White, a Texas artist whom Ronstadt duets with on another song on the album, “Louise,” “Long, Long Time” was a song Ronstadt allegedly had to persuade her record company to include. It would end up being the first charting hit for her solo career.

Linda RonstadtLinda Ronstadt performs at the Greek Theater on September 17, 1977 in Berkeley, California. (Ed Perlstein/Redferns/Getty Images)The lyrics of “Long, Long Time” paint the picture of a love that didn’t work out but will forever burn in the singer’s heart: “And I think I’m gonna love you for a long, long time.” In the context of the episode, in which two older men find love near the end of their lives — a story, rare on television, that deserves to be told – lyrics like “Wait for the day / You’ll go away / Knowing that you warned me of the price I’d have to pay,” take on even deeper resonance. 

The single of “Long, Long Time” stayed on the Billboard’s Hot 100 chart for 12 weeks, though it never reached the top spot. It was also responsible for Ronstadt’s first Grammy nomination; in 1971 she was nominated for Best Contemporary Female Vocal Performance for “Long, Long Time.” (Her first Grammy win would come five years later.)

Bill stops him — “not that song” — takes over the piano and plays it soulfully, with obvious deep love and experience.

“The Last of Us” co-creator Craig Mazin told IndieWire he knew there would be a song in the episode that two characters would play: one badly and one surprisingly well and true. The song needed “to be this incredibly sad song about yearning for love, and never getting love, and just making your peace with the fact that you will always be alone.” Mazin sought the help of a friend, Sirius XM host Seth Rudetsky, whose first and only suggestion was “Long, Long Time.” Mazin said, “The whole idea was to hit the highlights of moments in your life where love means something different.”

In “The Last of Us,” the song first plays in an amateur version. In flashbacks, we see the beginning of the outbreak that will devastate and alter the world of the show. Bill, who describes himself as a survivalist, is holed up in his fortified house and escapes detection by soldiers. Frank falls into one of Bill’s booby-traps after years of Bill living a safe — and totally solitary — life. When Bill reluctantly feeds the stranger, and feeds him well, Frank attempts to repay the hospitality by playing a song on Bill’s baby grand piano. He chooses a songbook by Ronstadt from the piano bench storage, correctly assuming the book is Bill’s. Frank tries an awkward and off-key version of “Long, Long Time.”

Bill stops him — “not that song” — takes over the piano and plays it soulfully, with obvious deep love and experience of the heartache the song describes so well. The song doesn’t play again, its real, recorded version until the very end of the episode, when main characters Joel and Ellie drive off into the sunset, literally. Ellie, while not understanding airplanes, cars or seat belts, somehow figures out a cassette tape deck and pushes play. Ronstadt’s resonant voice fills the car, the deserted road. Curtains from the house’s open window move in the breeze to its bittersweet lyrics.


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Like Bush (for whom “Running Up That Hill” was unbelievably her only No. 1 hit song), Ronstadt went on to a long and stellar career. After a dozens of Grammys and albums that sold over 100 million copies, she announced her retirement in 2011 for health reasons. 

Ronstadt was first diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease but that diagnosis was later changed to progressive supranuclear palsy, a Parkinson’s-like disorder caused by the deterioration of brain cells controlling thinking, movement and coordination. It’s a rare condition and one which impacts her ability to sing out loud. She told USA Today in 2022, “I can sing in my brain.” 

Meanwhile the world, and perhaps new listeners drawn by the show, will love her voice for a long, long time.

 

Want your child to eat more veggies? Talk to them about “eating the rainbow”

Parents of young children today were raised during some of the most damaging periods of diet culture. From diet and “lite” foods and drinks to expensive “superfoods,” one constant across these changing trends has been the moralization of food as “good” or “bad.”

These diet movements have led to many of us having difficult relationships with food, eating and dieting. If this sounds familiar, you might be wondering how to use the fun features of healthy foods to encourage kids to eat more of them.

“Eating the rainbow” means regularly eating a variety of different colored fruits and vegetables. Encouraging your child to eat a rainbow is backed by the evidence and can start more well-rounded and positive conversations with them about foods.

Encouraging variety

All fruits and vegetables are good for us. Depending on the age and sex of your child, Australia’s dietary guidelines recommend they eat 2 to 5.5 servings of vegetables and 0.5 to 2 servings of fruit each day.

Each fruit and vegetable has it’s own unique profile of nutrients, so the wider variety of fruit and vegetables you eat in those servings, the better.

Eating a variety of fruits and vegetables each day has more benefits than just eating one type on repeat, so striving for the rainbow can help encourage variety.

Serving variety and colorful meals can also encourage us to eat more. So if you or your kids are struggling to eat enough fruit and vegetables, you can use the rainbow to help get all those servings in.

Sparking adventurousness

Chasing the rainbow can also help kids break out of their comfort zones and can be an early way to encourage adventurousness for new foods.

While kids can benefit from routine, there are links between how adventurous we are with trying new foods and other healthy traits and habits. Those who love trying new things tend to have a higher quality diet than those who hate trying new things.

Starting early conversations about the complexities of food

Most parents of today’s kids were raised during the “reductionist” era of nutrition. The focus wasn’t on whole, complex foods, but on the key macro- and micronutrients they contain. So, bread becomes all about carbs, and citrus becomes all about vitamin C.

When we think along these lines, it’s easy to think bread is “bad,” and citrus fruits are only a good source of vitamin C.

But foods are much more complex than this. Nutrients are rarely found in just one food, and each food is seldom made of just one nutrient. And even more importantly, food isn’t just nutrients — it also contains “bioactive compounds.”

These bioactives, which you might also see called phytonutrients or phytochemicals (phyto means from plants), occur naturally in plant foods. They’re not essential for our survival like nutrients are, but they can have healthy benefits.

Often these bioactives are linked to colors, so foods of different colors not only have different nutritional profiles, but they have different bioactive profiles, too.

In fact, the pigments that give fruits and vegetables their colors are often bioactives. For example, reds can be lycopenes, linked to heart and blood vessel health, and purples can be anothcyanins, linked to improved inflammation.

Kids don’t need to know which bioactive goes with which color, or what they all do. But you can start conversations about the complexity of our biology and the food that nourishes it.

Where does fresh food come from?

Survey data regularly shows many kids don’t know where their food comes from, or don’t know which fruits and vegetables are which.

Fruits and vegetables often change colors when they ripen, and different parts of the plants they come from are different colors. So talking about the rainbow can open up conversations about:

  • where food comes from,
  • how it grows,
  • which parts of each plant are safe to eat,
  • which parts of the plants are tasty.

Rainbows go with everything

As children get older, you can start talking about what happens to the colors of foods when you cook or mix them. Some foods that aren’t very tasty alone might be more palatable when you mix them with some other colors. For example, bitter green leafy vegetables can be tastier if we combine them with sour from citrus or sweetness from berries.

Cooking might make foods brighter or duller, and can release or change nutrients and bioactives.

Colors can be used in kitchen science experiments — like cabbage or blueberries acting as natural indicators of acidity.

Kids don’t need to know all the details to benefit from eating the rainbow, but talking about colors can spark curiosity. The rainbow is diverse, so it reduces the focus on individual foods, making healthy eating easier and more fun.

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. Read the original article.

“Constitutional sheriffs” refuse to enforce new gun control law — but have no legal justification

A gun control law signed by Gov. J.B. Pritzker of Illinois in January 2023 immediately faced opposition from a group key to the law’s enforcement: sheriffs. They are county-level, locally elected public officials who run jails, provide courthouse security, and, in many counties, are the primary providers of law enforcement services.

In Illinois, and around the nation, some sheriffs also view themselves as the ultimate defenders of the U.S. Constitution and its rights – even though there’s no law and no history giving them that position.

In Illinois, approximately 80 of the state’s 102 sheriffs oppose the Protect Illinois Communities Act, a law that banned the sale and distribution of assault weapons, high-capacity magazines and switches that convert firearms to assault weapons. Anyone who owned those items before the law passed in January 2023 must register them with the state. Most of the sheriffs who opposed it issued statements saying they believe the law violates the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and therefore they will not be enforcing it.

Sheriff Justin Oliver of Brown County, for example, posted a public statement on the office’s Facebook page, on letterhead. The statement says he swore to protect the rights provided in the Constitution and he believes that the act violates the Second Amendment, so “as chief law enforcement officer for Brown County … neither myself nor my officers will be checking to ensure that lawful gun owners register their weapons with the State, nor will we be arresting or housing law abiding individuals.”

In our research surveying sheriffs, in 2012 and again in 2021, we have found that sheriffs are far more likely to support looser gun laws than the public at large. And we have also found that that perspective is linked to some sheriffs’ views that they are the highest level of defenders of the U.S. Constitution and Americans’ constitutional rights.

A last line of defense?

We traced sheriffs’ views of themselves as ultimate protectors of the Constitution to the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association, a political organization founded in 2009 by Richard Mack, a former sheriff of Graham County, Arizona.

Mack first gained notoriety in right-wing circles as a plaintiff in Printz v. United States, decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1996. In its ruling, the court declared a portion of the 1993 Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act unconstitutional. The ruling said the law’s requirement for state and local officials to perform background checks on prospective gun buyers violated the 10th Amendment, which limits how much influence the federal government can have on state and local governments.

The association, which Mack founded after former President Barack Obama’s election, calls itself a network of (self-described) “constitutional sheriffs” that encourages sheriffs to refuse to enforce laws they believe to be unconstitutional and to resist overreach by the federal government.

Its key idea dates back further, though, to Posse Comitatus. That was a white supremacist, antisemitic right-wing movement in the 1970s that believed as part of its conspiratorial ideology that the county sheriff held the ultimate government authority in the United States. This view is not historically accurate, nor is it found in the U.S. Constitution.

Nevertheless, Mack and his organization have spent more than a decade actively recruiting and training sheriffs to believe that their office is more powerful than the president, and that they can reject laws they believe to be unconstitutional. Mack told NPR in 2019 that sheriffs “have the responsibility to interpose – it’s the ‘doctrine of interposition’ – whenever anybody is trying to diminish or violate the individual rights of our counties.”

Their own views

This movement of so-called “constitutional sheriffs” has been particularly successful at recruiting more sheriffs into its ideology around issues of guns, immigration and COVID-related policies.

The resistance in Illinois is not the first effort of sheriffs to resist gun control. When Obama pushed for national gun control legislation after the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, Mack’s group recruited more than 450 sheriffs and 19 state sheriff associations to oppose federal gun control efforts.

Similarly, when the state of Washington passed a gun safety measure in 2018, sheriffs statewide opposed the measure and threatened not to enforce it because they said it violated people’s constitutional rights.

And in Illinois, its followers continue to stand in the way of the law, even though they lack any legal justification for doing so. State and federal officials have called on Illinois sheriffs to enforce the law, as their oaths of office require. But many sheriffs continue to say they get to determine which laws to enforce, even if their constituents disagree.

 

Mirya Holman, Associate Professor of Political Science, Tulane University and Emily Farris, Associate Professor of Political Science, Texas Christian University

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