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Republican leading new probes quietly retools Oversight Committee as GOP targets IRS and Big Tech

The House Oversight and Accountability Committee is expected to create a new panel targeting cybersecurity and government IT, according to the Federal News Network. The chamber’s central investigative body, chaired by Kentucky Republican Rep. James Comer, aims to create five new subcommittees, according to a draft document obtained by the outlet. 

Hill staffers familiar with the matter said the cybersecurity committee will be one of two subcommittees created by re-dividing the Government Operations Subcommittee, according to a Tuesday report from Fedscoop. The other subcommittee will focus on federal workforce issues. The split rolls back a move by former Oversight chair Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va., who combined the two panels in 2019 under the Government Operations Subcommittee.

The full Oversight Committee will need to vote on the five new panels, and their composition could be changed in the meantime. So far, though, the draft document said the proposed Cybersecurity, IT and Government Innovation Subcommittee will take up “legislative and oversight jurisdiction over issues related to information security, including cybersecurity and privacy; government-wide federal information technology management and innovation; and procurement.”

The panel’s expected reappearance comes during a watershed year for long-overdue federal cybersecurity spending, as agencies rush to modernize outdated and vulnerable IT systems with budget funds approved last year. But the GOP has targeted a number of those agencies in calls for cybersecurity spending oversight. 

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., has pledged to repeal $80 billion in IRS funding — the agency’s share in the $430 billion Inflation Reduction Act package. The funding includes $4.8 billion allocated to bring the agency’s antiquated IT systems up to 21st-century security standards and gives the formerly funding-starved agency the option to dip into $25 billion more for IT programs. 

The Federal Trade Commission, the Department of Homeland Security and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency have all been subject to similar oversight calls from the GOP. Comer has previously shown interest in investigating government involvement in Twitter over the site’s efforts to stymie political and medical misinformation campaigns — a move that far-right critics claim involved the corruption of CISA by the DHS.


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However, Comer was a key figure in the Oversight Committee’s prior bipartisan efforts to modernize federal agencies’ cybersecurity posture, during the panel’s investigations into the SolarWinds hack. Comer called the unprecedented government breach “a wake-up call” during the 2021 hearings, emphasizing that “the governance structure of federal cybersecurity, the maturity of our cyber defenses, and the effectiveness of our oversight tools were no longer up to the task.” 

Comer’s position has been relatively consistent. In 2020, he also signaled support for extended cybersecurity investment in the face of increasing global cyber threats. 

Former Rep. Will Hurd, R-Texas, previously chaired the IT subcommittee but there has been no word on who would replace him. Hurd’s notably bipartisan work with then-ranking member Rep. Robin Kelly, D-Ill., gave early shape to current national cybersecurity and AI task force strategies — particularly the duo’s focus on besting Chinese market competition as a way to drive global AI ethics standards. 

While House chair appointments are trending toward GOP hardliners in the 118th congress, similarly bipartisan leadership on the subcommittee would be a welcome development for White House AI task force officials, who now seek $2.6 billion over six years to create a shared hub for public-private research and development.

Comer, in a lengthy Jan. 19 letter replying to the White House Office of Science and Technology, didn’t necessarily throw cold water on the request — but loudly signaled the potential for investigative oversight with 17 questions on the office’s recently released Blueprint for an AI Bill of Rights

Comer’s office did not immediately respond to Salon’s request for comment. 

Following the expected split of the Government Operations Subcommittee, the GOP also plans to create a new Government Operations and Federal Workforce Subcommittee. The draft document said the panel will oversee “the federal civil service, including compensation, classification and benefits; federal property disposal; public information and records, including the Freedom of Information Act, the National Archives and Records Administration and the Presidential Records Act; government reorganizations and operations, including transparency, performance, grants management, and accounting measures generally; and the relationship between the federal government to the states and municipalities, including unfunded mandates.” 

FNN also reports three other subcommittees will be created.

One subcommittee will be on economic growth, energy policy and regulatory affairs. Its jurisdiction will include “federal paperwork reduction and information collections; population and demographic studies; labor policies; and impediments to economic growth and job creation.”

A health care and financial services subcommittee will oversee “federal health care policy, food and drug safety, federal entitlement programs, monetary policy, banking, infrastructure, tax policy and oversight and legislative jurisdiction over the Office of National Drug Control Policy.”

Finally, a new border security and foreign affairs panel is expected to cover “U.S. borders, national security, homeland security, foreign operations, immigration, emergency management and criminal justice.” 

Biden’s 2024 decision: Will party elites just ignore their most loyal voters?

The White House is in serious damage control mode while a growing number of prominent Democrats distance themselves from Joe Biden. “The emergence of another batch of classified material now has his own party upset at him,” Bloomberg reported as this week began. “Rather than close ranks, Democratic allies responded with exasperation and growing concern to news over the weekend that FBI agents had recovered more secret documents from Biden’s home in Delaware.” On Monday night, in a story quoting three Democratic senators, The Hill informed readers that “Democrats are expressing alarm over President Biden’s classified documents controversy, with some criticizing the president as diminished in stature and his staff as irresponsible.”

Donald Trump’s obstructive refusal to cooperate with the federal investigation into the far more numerous classified documents in his possession stands in sharp contrast with Biden’s apparently full cooperation with the Justice Department. Yet Biden now faces a documents scandal that’s sure to fester for a while — the average length of special counsel investigations has been upwards of 900 days — and the impact on his plans to seek re-election is unclear.

Meanwhile, here’s an assumption so routine that it passes as self-evident among power brokers and corporate media journalists: Democratic voters are presumed to be mere spectators awaiting Biden’s decision on whether to seek a second term. Hidden in plain sight is a logical question that remains virtually off limits in standard political discourse: Why not ask them?

What a concept. Biden could actually seek guidance from the Democratic base — the people who regularly turn out to vote for the party’s candidates, give millions of small-dollar donations and do priceless volunteer work in support of campaigns to defeat Republicans.

Biden’s decision on whether to run again next year must be understood as much more than just a matter of personal prerogative. Rather than treating it as such, Biden could put party and country first by recognizing that the essential Democratic task of defeating the Republican ticket in 2024 will require widespread enthusiasm from grassroots Democrats. Biden would clearly be boosting the chances of beating the GOP by including those Democrats in the decision-making process as he weighs whether to officially declare his candidacy.

But there’s one overarching reason why the Biden White House has no interest in any such idea. The president doesn’t want to ask loyal Democratic voters about his political future because he probably wouldn’t like the answer. His stance is clear: It’s my party and I’ll run if I want to.

A glimmer of that attitude showed through during a news conference shortly after the midterm election. Noting that “two-thirds of Americans in exit polls say that they don’t think you should run for re-election,” a reporter asked: “What is your message to them?” Biden’s reply: “Watch me.” Later, CNN and CNBC polls found that nearly 60 percent of Democrats didn’t want Biden to run again. Yet from all indications, he still intends to do just that.


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Defying the wishes of most of the party’s voters could be spun as leadership, but a more fitting word is hubris. Whatever the characterization, it runs a serious risk of self-defeat. For instance, it’s wishful thinking to believe that the Democratic presidential nominee can win without a strong turnout from those who represent the party’s bedrock base and its future — younger voters.

There’s one overarching reason why Joe Biden doesn’t want to ask loyal Democratic voters whether he should run in 2024: He might not like the answer.

Biden’s “watch me” attitude is especially out of whack when it comes to that critical demographic. A New York Times poll last summer found that a stunning 94 percent of Democratic voters under age 30 said they didn’t want Biden to be the party’s nominee. Such a disconnect spells trouble if Biden does run. Too many young people might respond to the “watch me” attitude by declining to volunteer or even vote for Biden, and watching him go down to defeat.

In normal times, a sitting president’s renomination by his own party has been his for the taking. But in this case, when most of the party’s supporters don’t want the incumbent to run again, wielding raw intra-party leverage to get Biden nominated would indicate a high degree of political narcissism. It’s not a good look, or an auspicious path toward the general election.

If he runs in 2024, Joe Biden would be the foremost symbol of the status quo — not a good position to be in when faux populism will predictably be the name of the Republican game. In a poll last November, only 21 percent of registered voters told Hart Research that the country was “headed in the right direction,” while 72 percent said it was “off on the wrong track.”

For the president, winning the Democratic nomination next year would likely be much easier than winning the White House for a second time. If Biden is content to become the party’s nominee again, while ignoring the majority of Democrats who don’t want him to run, he’ll be boosting the chances that Donald Trump, or some other Republican, will be in the Oval Office two years from now. To prevent that catastrophe, grassroots Democrats will need to directly challenge the party elites who seem willing to whistle past the probable graveyard of Biden’s second-term hopes.

Republican demands “stronger laws” to stop women from leaving state to get abortions

Rep. Jim Banks, R-Ind., is expressing interest in supporting a piece of legislation that would prohibit women from leaving the state to receive abortion treatment.

During a recent appearance on “The Pat Miller Show,” Banks floated desire for stricter federal regulations to further restrict access to abortion care.

At one point during the discussion, Miller offered an example of a scenario where women could circumvent laws in one state by traveling to another state to have the procedure done.

“Our work as a pro-life movement is far from over,” Miller said. “If a young lady can hop in a car in Fort Wayne and in an hour and a half she can be in a place in Michigan or in just under 3 hours, she could cross the line into Illinois and achieve what she was able to do with abortion clinics here in Indiana. The fight is far from over.”

Then, Banks weighed in with his opinion as he expressed support for more laws. According to Banks, the move would be one to “save lives” and “protect babies.”

“That’s exactly right,” Banks said, adding, “And I’m for federal legislation, for stronger laws at the state levels. Whatever we can do to save lives, to protect babies. That’s what this fight is all about.”

5 tips for building a better cheese board, according to an expert

Cheese is a truly marvelous food. No matter if it’s soft or hard in texture, grated over a bowl of fresh pasta or enjoyed as is atop a salad or sandwich, there’s a cheese for everyone. Stinky or fragrant, Italian or French, yellow or off-white.

You might like an ooey, gooey dish with lots and lots of cheese pulls (like this kale and three-cheese pizza), or perhaps you’re more of a fan of a bronzed, crisped cheesy dish (such as this red pepper baked chicken parmigiana pasta).

Picking up some shredded cheese for a lasagna or one of our 10 other cheesiest recipes isn’t a huge effort, but selecting the best options for a cheese board is a little more of an undertaking. The nuances, flavors and complexities of cheese are deepened when this food is savored on its own, without any application of heat or the inclusion of other ingredients to muddy the waters.

I recently spoke with Craig Gile, a famous cheese judge who is also the northwest regional sales manager at Cabot Creamery Co-operative. He took Salon Food readers behind the scenes of the worlds of cheesemaking and competitive cheese.

Gile is a former Cabot cheese grader who tasted up to 200 cheese samples a day. In addition to judging competitions, he presents “sensory presentations” on how to pick the best cheeses to retailers.

If you’ve participated in a wine tasting, the experience may sound somewhat familiar.

“I like to get people thinking about what they are tasting first. The vast majority of the time, we’re not treating eating like a cognitive exercise,” Gile told me. “I get people to look at the cheese, feel the body of the cheese, chew slowly, think about what they are tasting. Just focusing on the basic tastes is a great place to start. How salty do I think this cheese is? How sour or acidic do I think it is?”


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Have you ever shopped for an antipasto or mezze platter or charcuterie or grazing board and wondered how to buy better cheese at the grocery store? If so, you’re in luck: Gile also shared his expert recommendations for putting together a cheese platter, pairing tips included.

First and foremost, Gile stresses one thing. Do not — I repeat do not — be intimidated.

“I have seen way too many people overthink and stress about building cheese platters,” he said. “Have fun.”

Now that you’re ready to have some fun, here are Gile’s five basic tips for building a better cheese board:

01

 

“Try to have one impressive, larger chunk of cheese as a ‘centerpiece’ that you build around.”
02
 
“Embrace variety. You don’t have to worry about cheeses going together unless you’re going for a theme. Go with a variety of ages, textures, appearances, milk types. Give your guests options, and don’t be afraid to think outside of the box with something like Cabot Habanero Cheddar Cheese.”
03
 
“Add-ons: Look at dried meats, nuts, mustards, chutneys, jams, flake salts.”
04
 
“Try to keep the cheese packages and labels. You’ll have guests that discover a new cheese they love. Having the label/packaging handy is helpful to them if they want to purchase the cheese in the future.”
05
 
Cheesemongers don’t bite. Cheesemongers are the most passionate and engaging retail workers around. They live to give advice and cut samples. Even if you have no idea about cheese, they can help.”

Kari Lake’s “bombshell” evidence immediately debunked: “These signatures are from 2020”

Failed Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake posted another allegation this week purporting to demonstrate fraud in the 2022 election that saw her lose to Democratic Secretary of State Katie Hobbs.

“BOMBSHELL TESTIMONY,” Lake tweeted. “Today’s Senate Testimony CONFIRMS nearly 40,000 ballots illegally counted (10% of the signatures reviewed). I think all the ‘Election Deniers’ out there deserve an apology.”

But on Tuesday, ABC15 elections analyst Garrett Archer debunked Lake’s claim, explaining the simple, non-fraudulent reason why these thousands of ballots didn’t match voter signatures on record with the motor vehicle bureau.

“Ms. Lake, These signatures are from 2020,” wrote Archer in reply. “They use recent affidavit envelopes to verify as well. That way if the MVD signature comes across wrong they have in-house to compare to. So this doesn’t confirm anything.”

Lake is one of the only major election conspiracy theorist candidates from 2022 who lost their race and who also refused to concede.

In addition to claiming that America would “turn into a Venezuela” if she wasn’t named governor of Arizona anyway, Lake has also backed former President Donald Trump’s calls to “terminate” the Constitution for the sake of reinstating him as president.

“I will not support this charade”: Kevin McCarthy bleeding GOP support to kick Dems off committees

Some House Republicans on Tuesday pushed back on Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s, R-Calif., decision to refuse to seat certain Democrats on committees.

McCarthy formally blocked Reps. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., from continuing to serve on the House Intelligence Committee, which he can do unilaterally, and is expected to hold a floor vote to boot Rep. Ilham Omar, D-Minn., off the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

“I appreciate the loyalty you have to your Democrat colleagues,” McCarthy wrote in a letter to House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y. “But I cannot put partisan loyalty ahead of national security, and I cannot simply recognize years of service as the sole criteria for membership on this essential committee. Integrity matters more,” he added.

McCarthy has cited a “new standard” from Democrats for why he would remove the Democrats from the committees after the Democratic-led House in 2021 removed Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., from their committees for inflammatory rhetoric about Democrats. Both far-right Republicans have since been appointed to new committees in the GOP-led House. Schiff, meanwhile, was removed for pushing allegations about former President Donald Trump’s ties to Russia and Swalwell was removed over an alleged past relationship with a Chinese spy. Omar was targeted over criticism of U.S. policy on Israel that Republicans called antisemitic.

“it is my assessment that the misuse of this panel during the 116th and 117th Congresses severely undermined its primary national security and oversight missions – ultimately leaving our nation less safe,” McCarthy said in his letter.

Though McCarthy can single-handedly block Schiff and Swalwell from the Intel panel, he needs his party’s support to kick Omar off the foreign affairs panel. Some Republicans condemned McCarthy’s move on Tuesday.

Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., told CNN the plan to remove the Democrats would be “terribly corrosive” to relations in the House.

Rep. Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., said she would not support the removal of the Democrats.

“Two wrongs do not make a right. Speaker Pelosi took unprecedented actions last Congress to remove Reps. Greene and Gosar from their committees without proper due process. Speaker McCarthy is taking unprecedented actions this Congress to deny some committee assignments to the Minority without proper due process again,” she said in a statement. “As I spoke against it on the House floor two years ago, I will not support this charade again. Speaker McCarthy needs to stop “bread and circuses” in Congress and start governing for a change.”

Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., already vowed last month that she is “not going to support it” and Rep. David Valadao, R-Calif., said at the time that removing Omar from the committee would be “inappropriate.”

Rep. David Joyce, R-Ohio, told Axios on Tuesday that Omar “should at least be given the opportunity to defend her prior statements” criticizing U.S. policy towards Israel.

“I haven’t taken a position on it because I haven’t seen a case against her, but I think she’s entitled to due process and she should be able to make her case on why she shouldn’t be [removed],” he told the outlet.

Compounding McCarthy’s problem with dissenting Republicans is the absence of Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., who is expected to be out of commission for several weeks after he broke his pelvis and suffered other injuries in an accident at his home.  


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“I appreciate these Republican members speaking out against what McCarthy is doing,” Schiff told CNN. “I think it does show that there are Republicans who understand this is very ill-considered. It’s just going to damage the institution, it’s not justified. These efforts are not at all bipartisan. Indeed, the opposition to it is bipartisan.”

Schiff, who will continue to sit on the Judiciary Committee, told reporters that the move shows McCarthy is “just catering to the most extreme elements of this conference.”

Swalwell, who will sit on the Judiciary and Homeland Security committees, called the move “political vengeance.”

“It’s too bad because that committee has always been a bipartisan committee, and he’s taking one of the most precious pieces of glassware in the congressional cabinet and smashing it, and the damage is going to be irreparable,” Swalwell told CNN, adding that “if a Democrat advocated for violence against another member of Congress, I would support getting rid of them.”

Omar said earlier this month that McCarthy has no reason to boot her from the panel “outside of me being Muslim.”

A coalition of Jewish groups released a statement last month backing Omar, rejecting the “suggestion that any of her policy positions or statements merit disqualification from her role on the committee.”

“McCarthy’s pledge seems especially exploitative in light of the rampant promotion of antisemitic tropes and conspiracy theories by him and his top deputies amid a surge in dangerous right-wing antisemitism,” the groups added.

The three Democrats targeted by McCarthy released a joint statement on Tuesday saying it was “disappointing by not surprising” that the speaker “capitulated to the right wing of his caucus, undermining the integrity of the Congress, and harming our national security in the process.”

“He struck a corrupt bargain in his desperate, and nearly failed, attempt to win the Speakership, a bargain that required political vengeance against the three of us,” the statement said. “But despite these efforts, McCarthy won’t be successful. We will continue to speak out against extremism and doggedly defend our democracy.”

House Republicans eye massive spending cuts as ultimate way to “own the libs”

After spending the Trump administration cutting taxes for the wealthy and massively raising military spending, congressional Republicans are back to caterwauling about deficits. This was as predictable as the sun coming up in the morning. When Republicans are in power they give away the store and then when the Democrats are called in to clean up their mess, Republicans immediately rant and rave about government spending and the debt. This has been going on for decades and it would have been short-sighted to expect anything different from them this time.

Naturally, they’re putting the safety net programs on the chopping block. The Washington Post reports:

In recent days, a group of GOP lawmakers has called for the creation of special panels that might recommend changes to Social Security and Medicare, which face genuine solvency issues that could result in benefit cuts within the next decade. Others in the party have resurfaced more detailed plans to cut costs, including by raising the Social Security retirement age to 70, targeting younger Americans who have yet to obtain federal benefits.

If that immediately brings to mind the words “Simpson-Bowles” (and makes you break out in a cold sweat) you might be like me and have PTSD from the last time this was introduced back in 2012. It didn’t make it into law but only because the Freedom Caucus refused to take yes for an answer when the Obama team opened the door for some serious reductions in benefits. That wasn’t the first time Democrats offered up cuts to those programs and were rebuffed. Back in 1995 when the House Republicans shut down the government to force spending cuts, Bill Clinton offered cuts to Medicare and speaker Newt Gingrich said it wasn’t enough and walked away. 

Opposition to any and all safety net programs is in the right’s DNA.

Republicans have been trying to do away with these vital programs from the moment they were introduced. When Social Security was passed in 1935, only 2% of Democrats voted against it (ironically because it didn’t go far enough) and 33% of Republicans voted against it. In those days it was out of fealty to corporate America which was appalled at the prospect of “destroying initiative, discouraging thrift and stifling responsibility.” The program became popular and difficult to dislodge but Republicans never gave up. It wasn’t long until the libertarian thinkers on the right were coming up with a new plan to replace the program with private investment accounts. This long-standing dream was finally formally proposed by George W. Bush in 2005 and it went down in flames. When the stock market crashed three years later in the epic financial crisis of 2008, that idea mercifully died a quiet death.

Medicare had the same trajectory. Former president Ronald Reagan helped to make his name as an opponent of Social Security and Medicare back in the early ’60s. In those years before social media, he had a big hit with a spoken word record album entitled “Ronald Reagan Speaks Out Against Socialized Medicine” which came out in 1961, as the program was still in the proposal stage. He said:

One of the traditional methods of imposing statism or socialism on a people has been by way of medicine. It’s very easy to disguise a medical program as a humanitarian project, most people are a little reluctant to oppose anything that suggests medical care for people who possibly can’t afford it… it’s simply an excuse to bring about what they wanted all the time: socialized medicine.


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The GOP’s opposition never ceased.

When he was a congressman, vice president Mike Pence voted against Medicare Part D, the program’s drug benefit, along with dozens of other Republicans. And I don’t think I need to recapitulate the hysterical opposition to Obamacare, which they also claimed was a swift descent into socialist hell.

This new House majority is driven by one thing and one thing only: owning the libs.

Opposition to any and all safety net programs is in the right’s DNA. The problem for them, however, is that these programs are popular so they have been unsuccessful in eliminating them altogether. So instead they’ve managed to protect their wealthy benefactors from having to kick in more money, which they could easily afford, to shore up the finances. If they can slowly starve the programs (and the people who depend upon them) they may just win in the long run.

What’s different with the new Republican majority’s plans is that there is no ideological rationale for doing it anymore.

In the past you had the likes of Reagan and Gingrich, influenced strongly by anti-communism and libertarian, free-market dogma, proposing to end these so-called entitlement programs because they were evidence of creeping socialism. In the words of anti-tax activist Grover Norquist, the federal government must be shrunk to a size so small it could be drowned in the bathtub. “Small government” and “local control” were their watchwords. Today, what we have known as the modern conservative movement barely exists in any recognizable sense. They constantly throw the words “freedom” and “socialism” around, but they have no discernible meaning except as weapons in the culture war. GOP governors like Florida’s Ron DeSantis require businesses to bend to his will or risk state sanction while books and topics that Republicans don’t like are being officially censored by the government in public schools and universities. They are full-blown authoritarians — their supposed “live or let live” libertarian ethos (always pretty weak in my opinion) drowned itself in the bathtub when Donald Trump came down that golden escalator.

This new House majority is driven by one thing and one thing only: owning the libs. Shutting down the government or holding the debt ceiling hostage for the ostensible purpose of lowering the deficit is just a power play to them for the purpose of showing they can do it. If they have to crash the world economy in the process, so be it.

It remains to be seen if this new House majority will use the safety net as leverage in their debt ceiling game of chicken. Donald Trump is adamantly against it because his feral instinct tells him that even attempting to do it is unpopular with older voters, his base. The fact that instead of putting it directly into their negotiations and instead creating some “special panels to look into it” suggests that even the House crazies understand that the risks are high with no chance of reward. (President Joe Biden will never sign a bill cutting these programs in an election year.) But they’ll put on some kind of show for the Fox News crowd anyway. After all, if the whole point is to own the libs, the mere threat is all it takes to give their followers a thrill. 

Tracing the flow of “forever chemicals” into waterways and wildlife

Martha Spiess, a retired veterinarian, began testing streams and ponds in Brunswick, Maine, after hearing that per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFASs, had contaminated farms around the state. “It felt like tragedy was falling all around me,” she said.

Spiess was familiar with the compounds often called “forever chemicals” due to their persistence in the environment. She had first encountered them while growing up in Minnesota where her father, an organic chemist, worked for 3M, a major PFAS manufacturer. In the late 1960s, she recalled, her family received a gift box filled with 3M product samples. As she unpacked the items, her father grabbed the can of Scotchgard and told her, “Don’t you ever use this!”

The company’s popular fabric protector was made with a PFAS compound, the dangers of which were apparent even then, Spiess said; “It was something he knew, the lab knew, and I think the company knew. He was angry that they were marketing that.”

Now Spiess tests waters around the former Brunswick Naval Air Station, looking for evidence of another product made with PFAS chemicals, AFFF (aqueous film-forming foam, or “A-triple-F”) that 3M manufactured from the 1960s until the early 2000s.

For decades, hundreds of military bases and airports, and thousands of fire departments across the country used AFFF in training exercises and to combat fires involving combustible liquids. Fluorinated chemicals entered groundwater and surface waters, contaminating private wells and public water supplies. A growing body of research shows that PFAS compounds may disrupt hormonalimmune, and reproductive systems, and may increase the risk of various cancers.

Increased understanding of medical impacts has led regulators to lower the levels of PFAS compounds deemed safe in drinking water. In 2009, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency set provisional health advisory levels for two of the better known PFAS chemicals — PFOA and PFOS — at concentrations of 400 and 200 parts per trillion respectively. The EPA revised those numbers downward in 2016, recommending that drinking water not exceed concentrations of 70 ppt for both compounds combined. New advisories, released in June 2022, set levels so low that current testing technology cannot detect them.

Just as toxicological research pushes thresholds for safe exposure close to zero, the ubiquity of PFASs in watersheds and coastal waters nationwide is becoming clear.

When the local water district informed customers that a plume of PFAS chemicals had contaminated a well field downhill of the former Brunswick base, Spiess was not surprised. Water sampling that she and other citizen volunteers had done over the preceding 12 months at sites by the former air station already showed upticks compared to previous data gathered by the U.S. Navy at those locations. And preliminary research conducted in nearby coastal ecosystems indicated that contaminants had traveled farther still.


Being highly mobile and more water soluble than traditional pollutants, PFAS compounds “distribute mainly through rivers and groundwater,” said Christoph Aeppli, a senior research scientist with Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences in East Boothbay, a village about 15 miles from Brunswick as the crow flies. He is testing blue mussels for 30 different PFAS compounds, as part of a project to assess how the chemicals move through marine food webs and how long they reside in shellfish. It’s already clear, he said, that many PFASs are “taken up by quite a lot of marine organisms, bottom-dwelling ones and those in the water column.”

Downstream of where Spiess gathers samples, David Page, a retired Bowdoin College biochemistry professor, has tested ribbed mussels for PFASs where a brook that drains the base empties into a tidal cove of Casco Bay. Because mussels remain in one place and filter large volumes of water, they “can be used to understand potential human exposure to contaminants,” Maine Department of Environmental Protection biologists wrote in a 2017 report. Mussels can concentrate chemicals, allowing scientists to find contaminants that might otherwise be below detection limits, the report noted.

In a 2020 mussel sampling, Page found that PFOS, which is associated with AFFF use, was highest in ribbed mussels near the head of the cove closest to the former base, indicating that deposits are continuing to run off and “reach biological communities downstream of the facility,” he wrote. The levels he found were higher than those in blue mussels the state sampled farther out the cove in 2014 and 2016.

A recent analysis done for NOAA’s National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science assessed mussels throughout the Gulf of Maine, which extends from Cape Cod Bay in Massachusetts to the shoreline of Nova Scotia. The study tested for 12 PFASs at 40 sites and found three compounds: PFOA and PFOS, both at less than 3 percent of sample sites, and PFOSA, a less well studied breakdown product, at 40 percent of sites.

Unlike pollutants such as PCBs or DDT, which primarily accumulate within fatty tissue, or mercury, which primarily accumulates in proteins and muscle tissue, PFASs concentrations are highest in the liver, blood, and kidneys, said Dianne Kopec, a fellow at the University of Maine’s Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions. Since wildlife eat most parts of their prey, organisms higher up the aquatic food web can accumulate greater PFAS concentrations than humans, who typically consume only muscle tissue.

PFAS compounds, which number in the thousands, differ markedly in how they’re absorbed and stored within bodies. Those with longer carbon chains, including PFOA and PFOS, tend to concentrate in wildlife through ingestion of prey and can biomagnify in the food web, Kopec noted. Both compounds are still found frequently in ecosystems, a legacy of past manufacturing and of shorter-lived PFAS compounds transforming into the more persistent, often longer-chain compounds. Shorter-chain PFAS compounds can also move directly from the water column into fish through their gills.

“PFAS are toxic enough that low levels can have negative impacts, but some of those effects can be especially hard to track in wildlife,” said Anna Robuck, an environmental chemist whose doctoral research focused on PFASs in marine food webs. (She spoke as an adjunct professor at the University of Rhode Island, not in her current role with the federal government.)

Organisms at the bottom end of the marine food web, like shellfish and plankton, appear to have lower accumulations, but the species that feed on those organisms — such as birds — “are full of PFAS,” Robuck said. “We see a much different pattern. Air-breathing organisms are more vulnerable to bioaccumulation and biomagnification” of the chemicals.

In research spanning seven years, Robuck has looked at PFASs in Gulf of Maine water, sediments, plankton, coastal and offshore seabirds, and humpback whale tissue. “There is no species that did not have PFAS in them,” she said. “There are no clean samples.”

Rachel Rice, a graduate student at College of the Atlantic in Bar Harbor, is analyzing the presence of 43 PFAS compounds in seven marine mammal species, assessing the feeding habits of each species and sampling diverse tissues. Rice’s study will report on PFAS levels in seawater, plankton, fish, and lobster, and will compare current levels in seals to a baseline set 13 years ago.

In 2009, long before the recent public spotlight on PFASs, researchers at the Shaw Institute in Blue Hill studied the accumulation of fluorinated compounds in harbor seals, writing that they found evidence of “diffuse sources of [perfluorochemical] contamination throughout the northwest Atlantic.”

Given the “concerted inputs of PFAS” from waterways entering the Gulf of Maine and the long residence time of its waters, Robuck expects that Rice will find high levels. Seals feed at the upper reaches of the marine food web, she said, which is “at the end of the day, where we’re eating.”


“E very contaminant ends up in water,” Kopec said, and “water always flows downhill. It’s all moving down to the ocean.” Many scientists assumed that oceans would become the ultimate sink for PFASs, with compounds cycling through marine ecosystems and settling into bottom sediments over decades.

But last year, researchers at Stockholm University reported on what they termed a “boomerang effect,” where PFAS chemicals return to land in the form of sea spray, carried through the atmosphere and falling again on soils and waters.

The cycling of PFASs from surface environments into the atmosphere is something Stockholm University scientists have tracked for a decade. In August, they shared new data showing that rainfall around the globe contains PFAS compounds, often at levels that exceed the EPA’s newest drinking water advisory levels for PFOA and PFOS.

Rain water tested around Casco Bay over several months in 2020 found evidence of multiple PFAS compounds. Those droplets, falling on the former naval base in Brunswick, pick up a heavier load on their way downstream, moving inexorably back to the sea.

That poignant realization inspires Martha Spiess to keep sampling local waters, hoping others will start testing as well. On a September morning, she returned to the brook and took a sample that lab analysis later showed had 18 PFAS chemicals with a total concentration of 1,291 ppt. “PFAS are there,” she said. “Why are we waiting?”


A version of this article first appeared in The Maine Monitor, the online publication of the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting. The project was produced with support from the Doris O’Donnell Innovations in Investigative Journalism Fellowship, awarded by the Center for Media Innovation at Point Park University in Pittsburgh.

Marina Schauffler is an environmental journalist in Maine.

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

What the world would lose with the demise of Twitter

What do a cybersecurity researcher building a system to generate alerts for detecting security threats and vulnerabilities, a wildfire watcher who tracks the spread of forest fires, and public health professionals trying to predict enrollment in health insurance exchanges have in common?

They all rely on analyzing data from Twitter.

Twitter is a microblogging service, meaning it’s designed for sharing posts of short segments of text and embedded audio and video clips. The ease with which people can share information among millions of others worldwide on Twitter has made it very popular for real-time conversations. Whether it is people tweeting about their favorite sports teams, or organizations and public figures using Twitter to reach a mass audience, Twitter has been part of the collective record for over a decade.

The Twitter archives allow for instant and complete access to every public tweet, which has positioned Twitter both as a archive of collective human behavior and as a credentialing and fact-checking service on a global scale. As a researcher who studies social media, I believe that these functions are very valuable for academics, policymakers and anyone using aggregate data to obtain insights into human behavior.

The proliferation of scams and brand impersonators, the hemorrhaging of advertisers, and disarray within the company call the future of the platform into question. If Twitter were to go under, the loss would reverberate around the world.

Analyzing human behavior

With its massive trove of tweets, Twitter has provided new ways to quantify public discourse and new tools to map aggregate perceptions, and offers a window into large-scale human behavior. Such digital traces or records of human activity allow researchers in fields ranging from social sciences to healthcare to analyze a variety of phenomena.

From open source intelligence to citizen science, Twitter has not only been a digital public square, but has also allowed researchers to infer attitudes that are difficult to detect through methods from traditional field research. For example, people’s willingness to pay for policies and services that address climate change has traditionally been measured through surveys of subjective well-being. Twitter sentiment data gives researchers and policymakers another tool for assessing these attitudes in order to take more meaningful action on climate change.

Researchers in public health have found an association between tweeting about HIV and incidence of HIV, and have been able to measure sentiment at the neighborhood level to assess the overall health of the people in those neighborhoods.

Place and time

Geotagged data from Twitter helps in a variety of fields such as urban land use and disaster resilience. Being able to identify the locations for a set of tweets allows researchers to correlate information in the tweets with times and places – for example, correlating tweets and ZIP codes to identify hot spots of vaccine hesitancy.

Twitter has been invaluable in the field of open source intelligence (OSINT), particularly for tracking down war crimes. OSINT uses crowdsourcing to identify the locations of photos and videos. In Ukraine, human rights investigators have focused on using Twitter and TikTok to search for evidence of abuses.

Open source intelligence has also been helpful for cutting through the fog of war. For example, OSINT analysts were quick to provide evidence that the missile that exploded in Przewodow, Poland near the Ukrainian border on Nov. 15, 2022 was likely an S-300 antiaircraft missile and unlikely a ballistic or cruise missile fired by Russia.

Credentialing and verification

Although misinformation has been disseminated far and wide on Twitter, the platform also serves a role as a global verification mechanism. First, vast numbers of people use Twitter and other social media platforms. With crowdsourcing writ large, social media assumes the role of an authoritative information provider, reducing some of the uncertainty people face in searching for new information. The platforms perform a credentialing role that some scholars refer to as “public relevance algorithms,” in that they have replaced dedicated business or technical expertise in identifying what people need to know.

Another way has been official credentialing. Prior to Elon Musk’s takeover, Twitter’s verification method provided public figures with a blue check mark on their profiles, which served as a shortcut in establishing whether a source of a tweet was who the person claimed to be.

While problems such as fake news, misinformation and hate speech exist, the credentialing ability coupled with the vast number of people who use the platform in real time made Twitter a provider of credible information and a fact-checker.

The digital public square

Twitter’s dual role in fostering real-time communication and acting as an arbitrator of authoritative information is of crucial interest to academics, journalists and government agencies. During the pandemic, for example, many public health agencies turned to Twitter to promote behavior that mitigates the risk of infection.

During disasters and emergencies, Twitter has been a great venue for crowdsourced eyewitness data. During Hurricane Harvey, for example, researchers found that that users responded and interacted the most with tweets from verified Twitter accounts, and especially from government organizations. Official Twitter accounts helped in the rapid dissemination of information during a water contamination crisis in West Virginia. Twitter data has also helped in hurricane evacuations.

Twitter has also been an important way for people with disabilities to participate in public discourse.

Twitter’s real value has been in enabling people to connect with each other in real time and as an archive of collective behavior. Recognizing this, international organizations, government agencies and local governments have invested significant resources in using Twitter and have come to rely on the platform. Sen. Edward Markey has described Twitter as “essential” to American society. If Twitter were to collapse, there’s no clear replacement in sight.


Anjana Susarla, Professor of Information Systems, Michigan State University

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

Earth’s inner core is slowing down — and the length of a day may change as a result

It may seem fantastical to say there is a planet within Earth, but conceptually it is true. Ever since the 1990s, geophysicists have known that Earth’s inner core— a ball of iron with a radius of 746 miles (more than two-thirds the size of the moon) — spins in the center of our planet at a different pace than the rest of the globe. In a sense, this separation makes the inner core a bit like a planet of its own.

“It’s probably benign, but we don’t want to have things we don’t understand deep in the Earth.”

Now, a recent study published in the scientific journal Nature Geoscience reveals a curious new detail about Earth’s planet-within-a-planet. The inner core apparently started rotating in rough synchrony with the rest of Earth around 2009 and, as of now, it actually rotates at a slower pace than the rest of the planet. Indeed, inner-core rotation may have even “paused,” researchers write. 

Since the inner core is 3,000 miles below the Earth’s surface, the Peking University scientists obviously could not perform any kind of direct visual inspection. Instead they used an indirect approach: They analyzed seismic waves that had occurred on Earth at various points in history and which, importantly, had been detected and measured by sensors on the other side of the planet when they occurred. By comparing the lengths of the seismic waves from when they traversed these same routes at different points in time, researchers were able to deduce the speed of the inner core’s rotation during those relevant periods.

Yet the scientists also urge the public not to be alarmed. This is not, as the hammy 2003 disaster movie “The Core” might suggest, the beginning of an apocalypse. Quite to the contrary, the researchers speculate that the current “pause” in the inner core’s rotation is merely a phase in a roughly seven-decade cycle.

Experts believe that the inner core started speeding up faster than the mantle around the early 1970s before slowing down in the late 2000s. If that is true, then this ongoing process of the inner core slowing and pausing is quite mundane. More notably, it also suggests that there is an elaborate interplay between the inner core and the other layers of the Earth, such as the mantle, with each part moving in cycles.


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Intriguingly, the inner core’s rotation affects life on the surface, according to researchers involved in the study.

“It has effects on the magnetic field and the Earth’s rotation, and perhaps the surface processes and climate,” Xiaodong Song, the leading author on the study and a geoscientist at Peking University responsible for pioneering work in 1996 on the inner core, told Salon by email. “It may have a long-term effect (decades and centuries), but the effect on daily life is likely small.”

As Song explained, the Earth’s inner core has a “dynamic” relationship with two of Earth’s major layers. First, there is an electromagnetic coupling with Earth’s outer core. As the outer core’s fluid motion generates a magnetic field for our planet, that same magnetic field drives the metallic inner core to rotate through electromagnetic force. In addition, the inner core tends to reach a position of gravitational equilibrium because the mantle and inner core have highly variable rock properties, meaning “the gravity between their structures tends to drag the inner core to the position of gravitational equilibrium.”

These same electromagnetic and gravitational forces, according to Song, explain why the inner core’s rotations may occur in roughly 70-year cycles.

“Similar periodicity has already been found in other Earth layers, such as the outer core (from the magnetic field changes), mantle and crust (from the LOD variations), and the surface (from the global mean sea level rise and temperature),” Song wrote to Salon.

Interestingly, not all scientists accept the study’s conclusions. Lianxing Wen, a seismologist at Stony Brook University, told The Washington Post that the study does not prove what its authors claim.

“This study misinterprets the seismic signals that are caused by episodic changes of the Earth’s inner core surface,” Wen told The Post in an email, also writing that the claim that the inner core rotates independently of the surface “provides an inconsistent explanation to the seismic data even if we assume it is true.”

“The main impact is almost certainly that our day gets imperceptibly longer and shorter within the 70-year cycle.” 

John Vidale, a geophysicist at the University of Southern California who was not involved in the study, told The Post that the inner core’s workings are “contentious” because “we can’t figure it out. It’s probably benign, but we don’t want to have things we don’t understand deep in the Earth.”

Vidale elaborated on that comment for Salon.

“If we knew what was happening, I guess I’d know what I meant,” Vidale explained with a laugh. “People argue that maybe the boundary is moving by kilometers, perhaps the core is spinning tens of kilometers, which probably has almost no effect up on the surface. Since we don’t actually know what’s happening, we really don’t know. So I guess I can’t really tell you what it is that we don’t know” as to whether there is anything to be concerned about.

For what it is worth, however, Vidale thinks the “chances [are] small, very small, but we just don’t know because we don’t know what is happening down there for sure.”

So what do scientists know about the implications of the core’s changing rotation rate?

“The main impact is almost certainly that our day gets imperceptibly longer and shorter within the 70-year cycle,” Vidale told Salon. “It may have some influence on the change over time in the magnetic field, which kind of disturbs our navigation a little bit.”

For his part, Song acknowledges that his research “won’t affect our gas prices or winter storms.” Decades into the future, however, humanity may decide this matter deserves attention since it impacts our “geomagnetic field, which shields us from solar winds, and length-of-day, which affects our GPS system.”

Overall, Vidale described the study of the Earth’s inner core in language befitting a mystery novel.

“We’re still trying to figure how the inner core is changing over time,” Vidale explained. “We’ve known it changes for decades and we’ve had various ideas, and so we’re just trying to nail down: Is it oscillating? Is it progressively spinning? Is something else happening? It has some relevance to understanding how the core developed and it’s basically curiosity. There is a lot of action down there, enough to change the seismic waves, and we really would like to understand what is happening.”

Sorry, Twitter, but Florida’s war on books is no joke. Ron DeSantis wants to keep kids from reading

For those who are paying attention, it’s been obvious for some time that Florida’s mega-MAGA governor, Ron DeSantis, is aggressive with book bans because he would just prefer it if kids didn’t read books at all. So while it was infuriating, it was not surprising to read that the investigative journalism team at Popular Info had discovered that teachers in Manatee County, Florida were told that every book on their shelves was banned until otherwise notified. Failure to lock up all their books until they could be “vetted” by censors, teachers were warned, put them at risk of being prosecuted as felons. 

The facts of this situation are straightforward: A Florida law signed by DeSantis requires that every book available to students “must be selected by a school district employee who holds a valid educational media specialist certificate,” in most cases, the school librarian. This may sound reasonable on its surface, but as the situation in Manatee County shows, in reality, it’s about creating a bottleneck preventing books from getting into the hands of students. Even more importantly, it’s about establishing the idea that books are inherently dangerous objects, to the degree that no student can be allowed to handle one without heavy-handed surveillance.


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Moreover, even if the librarians in Florida are not themselves interested in being the reading police, they may feel they have no choice. DeSantis has made it quite clear what kinds of ideas he believes should be banned in the state of Florida. He doesn’t want schools to acknowledge that LGBTQ people exist. He’s banned the teaching of Black history classes on the grounds that lessons on people like Frederick Douglass or Rosa Parks, for instance, “have no educational value.” He has been forcing schools to teach a lie, that racism is not the cause of racial inequality. With that level of pressure, it is no surprise that schools would simply err on the side of having few, if any, books available. If books return to the shelves, they may likely be heavily limited to those that portray the world like it’s a 1950s sitcom, which pretty much guarantees they’ll go unread, as such themes hold little interest to kids in 21st-century America. 

Ron DeSantis is aggressive with book bans because he would just prefer it if kids didn’t read books at all.

When it comes to keeping kids from reading much, if at all, DeSantis’ policy is a smashing success. He’s established the idea that no student should ever be allowed to just grab a book and read on their own. He’s stigmatized basic curiosity. Big Brother must always be watching, a reference kids probably won’t get if “1984” is no longer a book readers can just pick up. 

Popular Info’s head, Judd Legum, saw his tweets on this subject go viral this week. But since Twitter is now owned by a right-wing troll, Elon Musk, it is no surprise that the company decided to attach a “community note” that downplays how extensive the Florida censorship is. But the community note, which read “only unvetted books will be removed,” is misleading to the point of being an outright lie. As Legum noted in his follow-up, since all the books are “unvetted,” all the books were removed.

Teachers in Manatee County have been told to remove all books from their classroom libraries. On Monday, for example, teachers at Bayshore High School in Manatee County received the following message: “Remove or cover all classroom libraries until all materials can be reviewed.” 

As Legum noted in a follow-up, this isn’t limited to this one county. In Duval, a principal warned teachers that allowing students to read books could result in felony prosecution. 


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The language of “vetting” and whatnot is put in place by DeSantis and his allies to create just such a misleading debate about the nature of censorship. As with the draconian “don’t say gay” law, the policies are written in such a vague way that defenders can pretend that they’re limited in scope, while in fact, enforcement is broad. Defenders pretended the “don’t say gay” law merely blocked “instruction,” as if there were teachers giving how-tos on blow jobs. In reality, the word “instruction” is so vague that students and teachers feel they have to err on the side of pretending everyone is straight, lest they get accused of “instructing” kids about queer lives. 

Policies like this have a ripple effect, recasting reading not as a social good but a threat to be strictly regulated. 

A similar game is being played with the “vetting” language. Book ban supporters can claim they’re not banning books because, in theory, books can be “vetted” and restored to the shelves. Of course, this is how all book bans throughout time have worked. They rarely, if ever, cover all the books all the time. But even when books are finally released to potential readers under a “ban first, ask questions later” system, the message is sent: Books are presumed inherently dangerous. Instead of being glad that a child is reading a book, the system treats every child with a book as suspicious. Policies like this have a ripple effect, recasting reading not as a social good but a threat to be strictly regulated. 

Even the surface defenses of book bans are disgusting, of course. Accusations that kids are being “groomed” by reading books with LGBTQ characters imply both that queer identities would disappear if they weren’t acknowledged and also that would be a good thing, two repugnant arguments.

But there’s an even deeper reason that book bans are such a mainstay of authoritarian politics, even as the ideas being suppressed shift from regime to regime. Authoritarians hate reading for the same reason they hate sex, or any private behavior that allows people to experience thoughts and feelings outside of the authoritarian’s control. Learning to sit quietly and read by yourself is, for most people, the first step towards being able to sit with your own thoughts. It’s crucial for learning to think for yourself. There’s a reason most teachers like to have a wide array of books on hand, giving kids the freedom to read on their own. It’s how kids develop other skills, like critical thinking and creativity. 

Of course, all that is exactly what DeSantis is afraid of. He may occasionally make noises about freedom, but his actions speak clearly of his goal, which is to turn Florida students into a bunch of unthinking right-wing robots. This is a man who released an ad where he bragged about teaching his young child to parrot “build the wall,” after all. He’s never hidden his loathing for education and his preference for indoctrination. Books are being banned en masse in Florida schools. That’s not an accident or a side effect, but always very much by DeSantis’s design. 

The vicious cycle of killer news: American democracy is dying — and taking Americans with it

American people are sick and tired of being sick and tired.

More than 1 million Americans died from the Covid pandemic. Most of these deaths were preventable and were caused by Donald Trump’s willful indifference, cruelty, and incompetence. He was booted from office, but there has been no closure, reckoning or catharsis in response to this massive amount of death and suffering. Although the Biden administration has made great progress in slowing down Covid, hundreds of people continue to die each week in the United States from the disease.

America is plagued with gun violence and mass shootings.

Last Saturday, ten people were massacred by a gunman in Monterey Park, California. Two days later, seven people were killed in a series of shootings in Half Moon Bay, California. 

America’s democracy is in crisis.

The Republican fascists and their forces continue to spread the Big Lie and are generally undeterred in their campaign to end multiracial democracy. Trump and other high-level Jan. 6 coup plotters in the Republican Party have not been punished for their crimes against democracy and the rule of law. Moreover, insurrectionists in the Republican Party like Speaker Kevin McCarthy are now in control of the House of Representatives. The Republican fascists and other members of the MAGA movement and the white right are continuing to both incite as well as engage in actual violence against Democrats, liberals, progressives, the LGBTQ community, Black and brown people, Muslims, Jews and other designated “un-American” enemies.

Americans are lonely and American society is atomized. 

The United States is in a new gilded age where the richest individuals and corporations are thriving while the average person is experiencing great dread and struggling to survive the vicissitudes and cruelty of economic precarity and cannibal capitalism. As documented by mental health professionals and other experts, the American people are experiencing a dangerous lack of sleep, high levels of anxiety, engaging in acts of self-harm, using drugs and alcohol to self-medicate, abusing prescription drugs, and experiencing a general sense of malaise and fear that the country (and their personal lives) is going in the wrong direction. Amplified by the internet and other digital technologies, the power of cults/cultism, right-wing religious extremism, conspiracy theories, and other anti-social and anti-human behavior and beliefs is growing in America, most evidently amongst those on the right. American society is experiencing high levels of loneliness and social atomization. The problem is so severe that many American men report not having one close friend.

 

“When it comes to politics, there can be a trade-off between feeling good and doing good.”

In a new essay, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Chris Hedges reflects on these questions of social disconnectedness and what was lost when his favorite local gym closed down:

These ecosystems knit the social bonds that ground us to a community. They give us a sense of place, identity and worth. The economic dislocation of the past few decades, aggravated by the pandemic, have weakened or severed these bonds, leaving us disconnected, atomized, trapped in a debilitating anomie that fosters rage, despair, loneliness and fuels the epidemic of substance abuse, depression and suicidal ideation. Estranged from society, we become estranged from ourselves. This social isolation, exacerbated by social media, is a plague, leaving the vulnerable prey to groups and demagogues that promise a sense of belonging and purpose in return for loyalty to a dogmatic political or religious ideology. “The chief characteristic of the mass man is not brutality and backwardness,” Hannah Arendt writes, “but his isolation and lack of normal social relations.” Social isolation is the lifeblood of totalitarian movements. There are many things I fear about the future, but this unmooring is one of the most ominous.

In total, the Age of Trump and the rise of neofascism and the larger assault on democracy and freedom and human decency has traumatized the American people by making the country’s preexisting crises and other problems much worse.

We “the Americans” are very broken – and are not going to get better anytime soon.

We “the Americans” know that something is very wrong with our individual and collective minds, bodies, spirits and our overall political and societal health.


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New research by Brett Ford, Matthew Feinberg, Bethany Lassetter, Arasteh Gatchpazian and Sabrina Thai, which appears in the prestigious Journal of Personality and Social Psychology provides empirical support for those feelings, intuitions, and lived experiences. A press release by the America Psychological Association (APA) describes this research and findings as detailed in the article “The Political is Personal: The Costs of Daily Politics” in the following way:

Previous research and polling data have found that politics can be a major stressor in people’s lives, according to the researchers. However, most of that research has focused on major political events such as presidential elections. Ford and her colleagues wanted to explore the emotional and mental health effects of everyday political news and how people use different strategies to manage those negative emotions.

“Politics isn’t just something that affects people every four years during election season — it seems to seep into daily life. But we just don’t know much about the day-to-day impact politics might have,” Ford said.

The America Psychological Association continues:

To learn more, she and her colleagues began by asking a politically diverse sample of 198 Americans to answer a series of questions each night for two weeks about the political event they thought about most that day, the emotions they felt in response, how they managed those emotions, their general psychological and physical well-being that day, and how motivated they felt to engage in political action.

Overall, the researchers found that thinking about daily political events evoked negative emotions in participants — even though the survey question had not asked participants to think of negative political events. Participants who experienced more politics-related negative emotions reported worse day-to-day psychological and physical health on average — but they also reported greater motivation to act on political causes by doing things such as volunteering or donating money to political campaigns.

The research involved showing participants clips from two news opinion programs: Rachel Maddow on MSNBC, a liberal, and Fox News’ Tucker Carlson. Participants were also shown a “neutral” non-political news clip. Predictably, the explicitly political news clips caused more negative emotions among participants as compared to the “neutral” clip. Notably, those negative emotions in turn meant that the participants reported being more likely to engage in political actions as compared to those who viewed the neutral clip.

The research also explored various coping strategies for responding to political stress and related negative feelings. Strategies that calmed people down or otherwise caused them to disengage, researchers found, meant that they would be less likely to take political action.

“When it comes to politics, there can be a trade-off between feeling good and doing good,” Ford told the APA. “Protecting oneself from the stress of politics might help promote well-being but it also comes at a cost to staying engaged and active in democracy.”

This story of America’s political sickness is not one of “bothsides” or other false equivalencies.

It is true that the gangster capitalists and the neoliberal regime have too much influence over the Democrats. By comparison, those dark forces have near total control over the Republican Party and the “conservative” movement. The result is that across almost every public policy area the Republican Party supports (and has enacted) policies that will make the American people die sooner, be more sick and more miserable, and in general live less free and happy lives. Today’s “conservatives” are masters of death, cruelty, pain and sadism – and have used those evil skills to expand and maintain their power and control over American life and society.

Beyond a diet fad: Fasting alters your genetic expression, experts say

One of the fastest growing diet trends has less to do with what you eat or how much, but when you eat. Restricting meal times, a practice sometimes called intermittent fasting or time restricted eating, comes in many forms, but it generally involves limiting when you eat to certain windows.

Intriguingly, fasting isn’t merely about weight loss. A great deal of research suggests that this behavior can spur a whole host of health benefits, from improved mental state to more restful sleep. Weight loss, of course, is the benefit often most hyped. The Reddit forum for intermittent fasting, for example, has over 860,000 members, many of which share before and after photos of massive weight loss.

Simply restricting eating to an 8 to 10 hour window can change the way our genes express themselves, which has broad implications for human health.

But while intermittent fasting has been linked to a myriad of health benefits, researchers still have many questions about it — such as how it compares to counting calories, how different populations respond, even some fundamental questions about safety and side effects. One of the biggest questions is how it works. On a molecular level, why does changing the times we eat seem to have such a dramatic effect on our bodies?

Dr. Satchidananda Panda, a biology professor at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, has spent considerable time researching the underlying mechanisms of intermittent fasting. He says simply restricting eating to an 8 to 10 hour window can change the way our genes express themselves, which has broad implications for human health.

In a recent study in the journal Cell Metabolism, Panda and his colleagues gave two groups of young, male mice the same obesogenic diet, meaning it was high in sugar and fat. One group was permitted ad libitum feeding, which is eating whenever they wanted. The other group could only eat during restricted hours, a form of intermittent fasting called time restricted feeding.

The difference between time restricted feeding and intermittent fasting is that people who do intermittent fasting are also counting calories. With time restricted feeding, you can generally eat whatever and as much as you want, just sticking between those 8 to 10 hours. In the experiment, the mice on the ad libitum schedule gained weight and experienced metabolic dysfunction, whereas the mice on time restricted feeding did not. This is remarkable given they were both on the same diet.

Next, Panda and his colleagues analyzed the organs of the mice, looking for genetic changes in 22 different organ and brain regions, screening for more than 21,000 genes from over 1,000 samples. Importantly, they took samples at different periods throughout the day and night. Gene expression can change throughout the day, depending on their function.

“Our genes are not static. So you just can’t look at one time one morning or evening and figure out what’s going on,” Panda told Salon. “To our surprise, we found that almost every organ that we looked at experienced a huge impact from time restricted eating.”


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More than 80 percent of the organs looked at had some level of change in the genes that code for proteins, which means time restricted feeding could alter metabolic efficiency. In simpler terms, constraining the time when you eat could make the entire way your body processes energy more flexible, which translates into other health benefits.

On the surface, this isn’t an entirely surprising result. Intermittent fasting has previously been linked to improved liver function, insulin sensitivity and even hormone regulation. It seems to have a broad effect across many different systems in the body, but some of these organs, especially the brain, have been looked at a lot less than others.

“We are seeing a signature of gene expression changes that are indicating that people who have chronic kidney disease may benefit from this.”

Of course, this research was in mice, and only male mice to boot. This may not translate directly to humans. But the research provides a “transcriptome map” which gives researchers a good idea of where to start looking next when researching intermittent fasting. Potential targets include metabolic disorders, neurodegenerative diseases and cancer.

“I think this is a good blueprint for what diseases can be treated,” Panda said. “This study is giving us clues, for example, in the kidney. We are seeing a signature of gene expression changes that are indicating that people who have chronic kidney disease may benefit from this.”

Panda has studied the effects of intermittent fasting in humans as well, such as an experiment with 15 Australian men with obesity who were kept on a time restricted diet for eight weeks.

“We took their biopsy. A little bit of belly fat was taken out, almost like a mini liposuction,” Panda explained. “What we found were good changes in gene expression in these individuals which now gives us some idea what to expect when people with obesity do time restricted eating.”

“Our adipose tissue or fat is almost like a hormone-producing organ. It produces a lot of different hormones good and bad,” Panda added. “Time restricting actually improves the production of good hormones.”

Studying intermittent fasting could also open the door to new therapies, such as drugs designed to target these gene expressions, maybe no time restricting required. Already, drugs that target certain metabolic pathways and can reduce weight in some individuals are becoming all the rage on social media. Semaglutide, also known by the brand names Wegovy or Ozempic, is a diabetes drug sometimes used for weight loss. It’s become so popular that it’s caused shortages in some areas, encouraging some patients to seek out risky alternatives or attempt brewing it up at home using raw chemicals. It should go without saying you shouldn’t try to make your own weight loss drug.

However, the long-term effects of semaglutide for weight aren’t well known. Many folks seem to gain back lost weight once they stop taking the drug, which can come with its own set of side effects like indigestion and nausea.

New, more effective medications to meet the demand for treating obesity and diabetes are necessary and studying intermittent fasting could help produce them. This is somewhat how metformin, a commonly prescribed drug for diabetes, was discovered. Although initially synthesized in the 1920s, it wasn’t until 1957 that metformin was first used to treat diabetes. The reason for this multi-decade gap is because scientists didn’t fully understand the mechanisms it uses to lower blood sugar levels. Unfortunately, despite metformin’s widespread usage today, it still comes with some side effects that can be serious, even life-threatening. Alternative drugs would certainly be useful for some people.

But there will be no silver bullet for any of this. Medications or intermittent fasting alone can’t form the foundation of a healthy lifestyle, Panda said.

“We have to keep in mind that medication is not going to give us long-term benefits. It will help us to reverse our disease,” Panda said. “But to stay healthy for very long term, we have to adopt at least two out of the three foundations of health: that’s sleep, exercise and nutrition.”

The full extent to which intermittent fasting can help people, or even backfire, is not entirely known. Few things are as complex as how human bodies turn food into energy. More detailed research into how time restricted eating works will help us better understand the ways to make it useful for promoting good health.

Who will speak up for my child, the drag queen?

What makes a good society? Is it a guaranteed right to pursue happiness, as our Declaration of Independence proclaimed? Perhaps, as Gandhi said, it’s providing the poorest and most vulnerable among us with the means to control their own lives. But what happens when it’s the pursuit of happiness that makes someone most vulnerable?

Let me introduce you to my child, my one and only. They — and, no, it wasn’t as hard as I expected to get used to the gender-neutral plural pronoun that they prefer — are brown-skinned, Mexican-American, secular-Jewish, and gay-married. In a country where Donald Trump is still admired by some 40% of the public, don’t imagine for a second that my child, with all those identities, isn’t horrifyingly vulnerable.  

Lately, however, the Trumpian movement (with the full support of the future president’s assumed Republican opponent in 2024, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis) has targeted its most intense hatred on another part of my child’s identity. They are a gender-non-binary (and highly successful) drag queen, bringing happiness not only to themselves but to their cheering audiences. That’s where their right to the pursuit of happiness is most threatened at the moment and what makes them most vulnerable.

My child has been safe from attack — so far. Others haven’t been so fortunate. The murderous shootings at a drag club in my home state of Colorado are just the most notorious in a string of hate crimes directed at drag shows. More than 120 of them reportedly experienced protests, were threatened, or even attacked in 2022. Some transgender folks have come to believe that it’s no longer safe to live in this country. Others are thinking they might be better off taking leave of life itself.

In such a world, what’s a proud, concerned, on-the-edge-of-frightened father to do? For me, a first step is to come out of retirement and try to write some helpful words.

It would be easy to simply denounce the spread of right-wing bigotry as misinformed, misguided, and unjust, but what good would that do? Right-wingers live in a Fox News-mediated world of their own, where their bigotry seems to make perfectly good sense to them, while otherwise reasonable arguments fall on deaf ears.

So I want to write for a different audience. I’m inspired by the words Martin Luther King, Jr., penned while sitting in a Birmingham jail. “The Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom” was not, he said, the out-and-out racist. It was “the white moderate, more devoted to ‘order’ than to justice… Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.”

Of course, there are big differences between the Jim Crow South of his day and the gender-identity-biased world of today. Still, I’ve talked to people who would never countenance discrimination, much less violence, against any minority, yet offer, at best, the most lukewarm acceptance of drag queens, non-binary, or transgender folks. They tell me they aren’t quite sure how they feel about such people. Some admit to just not being comfortable going to a drag show and finding themselves surprisingly unnerved around anyone who claims to be transgender.

Often, their understanding of what’s going on in our world couldn’t be shallower. They may even refer to my child as transgender because they haven’t grasped the difference between that and non-binary. To put it all too briefly: a transgender person has a specific gender identity different from the sex assigned them at birth; a non-binary person doesn’t identify exclusively as male or female, but as both, neither, or some combination of the two. Acquaintances who do know the difference have said to me that it’s still not clear to them what category my beloved drag queen fits into. (In fact, drag queens come with all kinds of gender identities.)

Since many people of good will remain uncertain and confused on issues like these, they don’t raise their voices to protest such discrimination. To my mind, that hesitation holds the key to understanding the problem in a basic way — and also to reducing discrimination and violence, and so moving this society in a more just direction.

Reinforcing the Wall of Gender Separation

Why are many thoughtful, well-educated people so ready to lump drag queens, non-binary, and transgender people in a single rejectable category? I suspect it’s much the same reason that leads to attacks on all three from the bigoted right and the same reason media stories often lump all three together: they all challenge the traditional division of humanity into two simple categories, male and female. They seem to blur that line or even dissolve it. Think of them, then, as gender-blenders. And because of that, they threaten our sense of social order, which, as King pointed out, may be more important than justice, even to many well-meaning people.

In my professional field as an academic, the study of religion, we have often explored how people create order in their lives by translating the world into sets of binary opposites with firm values attached: up is better than down; God is better than the devil; our God is better than their devil; we are better than them. Religion is often remarkably devoted to shoring up the boundary lines that keep those opposites apart. 

These days, scholars are more likely to stress the ways that religion can actually help people blur and cross boundaries, because most of us grasp the danger of maintaining a separation between categories that naturally blur in the real world. Doing so is a first step down the slippery slope to creating ever more extreme hierarchies, which all too often end in injustice, oppression, and violence. The quest for order, in other words, has a way of transforming itself into a license to suppress or even ultimately eliminate “those people” on the other side of the line.

One recent analyst of the right-wing’s hatred of gender-blenders, Nathan Robinson, explains that it comes from “a visceral distaste for that which is different.” And behind that distaste lies “a devotion to traditional hierarchies.” Trumpublicans hope, writes Amanda Marcotte, “that they can return men to some imaginary glory days when the line between the genders was thick and inflexible, and women’s role was unquestionably that of subservience to men… If people start questioning what gender even means, then the whole right-wing system of power allocation begins to crumble.” 

To paraphrase Robert Frost, something there is about a bigot that does love a wall, whether it’s between Mexico and the U.S. or men and women. How appropriate, then, that the legendary beginning of the gay rights movement in this country was a 1969 police raid on a gay bar named the Stonewall Inn. Consider it an irony, then, that there is now a growing acceptance of gays and lesbians, in part because they are seen as maintaining (or even reinforcing) the clear difference between male and female.

Despite the bill Florida Governor DeSantis passed — dubbed by its opponents the “Don’t Say Gay” bill — the reactionary right-wing has largely lost the battle against gay and lesbian rights and is now turning to a more popular target: those who blur, or even dissolve, that gender boundary. And the bigots fight all the more fiercely because they’re not just defending a particular boundary, but the very existence of social demarcation itself.

Today, the appropriate metaphor for it may not be a wall at all, but a dam. Martin Luther King put it aptly so long ago, indicting those “more devoted to ‘order’ than to justice” because order without justice is a “dangerously structured dam that blocks the flow of social progress.” And a New York City politician proved King’s point all too well recently. Condemning schools and libraries that bring in drag queens to read books to children, that Republican (after mouthing the usual, totally unfounded charge of “sexual grooming”) revealed her deepest source of anger — that it’s “a program teaching little children about their gender fluidity.” 

Fluids, of course, may dissolve whatever they touch, whatever kinds of boundaries we create to give us a sense of social order. If so, the satisfaction we get from believing those lines to be immutable will begin to dissolve, too. Hence, the fierce desire to attack “gender fluidity.”

There surely is a big difference between the right-wingers who actively hate gender-blenders and the moderates or liberals who offer lukewarm acceptance and shallow understanding. The latter earn the title “people of good will” because they’re not seized by the urge to maintain boundaries or strengthen hierarchies that give them power and control over others. They won’t, in other words, actively demand unjust laws and policies.

But neither will they take a strong stand for justice, because those binary categories and boundaries still offer them a sense of order in their own lives. Somewhere, somehow, they want our fast-changing world to remain stable, simple, and familiar. As a result, they do share with the bigots, though obviously to a lesser degree, discomfort at seeing that classic boundary between male and female, which used to feel so immutable, disappear before their very eyes.

If we look in the mirror honestly enough, we’re likely to recognize that all of us have some boundary lines that are truly important to us, even if it’s only “us well-meaning liberals against those nasty Trumpsters.” Each of us has our own bottom line, the place where the blurring of lines does indeed become disturbing or even intolerable.

For a lot of people, however unconsciously, the distinction between male and female may be the hardest one of all to surrender. No wonder, then, that even people of good will regularly offer only lukewarm acceptance and shallow understanding to their fellow Americans who are gender-blenders.

Tear Down the Dam, It’s Good for Us All

Make no mistake, though. Those same people of good will may hold the key to freeing the gender-blenders from oppression and violence, if they can be roused to active support.

Every successful movement for social change needs just such a broad base of support. That’s why Dr. King called those lukewarm white moderates the great stumbling block to his own movement’s success. Doug McAdam, a prominent scholar of the civil rights movement, notes that it had to “compel supportive intervention by liberal northern allies… to the point where sympathetic media coverage and broad public support for the movement could be mobilized.” He quotes famed civil rights leader Bob Moses: “When the interest of the country is awakened, the government responds to that issue.”

America’s laws now demand that schools, parks, restaurants, and the like be open to all. Even virulent racists no longer call for those laws to be repealed. That’s because things do indeed become unthinkable once a large enough chunk of the public views them that way. Just as no one talks openly about reinstituting Jim Crow laws anymore, nobody urges that the vote be taken away from women either.

How can we make the right of gender-blenders simply to be who they are an equally unquestionable part of American society? Perhaps the key is to persuade well-meaning but confused and hesitant Americans not merely to tolerate them, or even simply to speak out for their safety or rights, but to appreciate how they actually enrich life for us all.

How we treat the most marginal and vulnerable among us determines the quality of life for the rest of us, too. A good society takes care of the most vulnerable by assuring their safety and the means to sustain their lives, along with their liberty to choose their own unique paths in pursuing happiness. If some find happiness by blending familiar categories, or even erasing the lines between them totally, supporting their choice could make a better society for us all.

The famed poet Walt Whitman suggested that there are “two main constituents for a truly grand nationality: first, a large variety of character, and second, full play for human nature to expand itself in numberless and even conflicting directions.”

Gender-blenders serve us by bringing us closer to that ideal. They are a model for a truly free society where we don’t feel compelled to fit ourselves into narrow binary categories, where everyone can accept themselves and explore who they really are, safely and without shame.

If the gender-blenders are provocative, all the better. Then they’ll provoke us to think and talk more freely about individuality, acceptance, and true community. Why wouldn’t we want them teaching our children? Even a 10-year-old can see that drag performers are “the most encouraging thing ever.” Openly non-binary and transgender people can be similarly encouraging.

Just to speak for myself, I’m so proud of my child, and the many thousands like them, claiming and proclaiming their right to pursue happiness by tearing down the old gender walls. To me, they — and in this case I mean all of them — are heroes because, as Whitman put it, they “walk at their ease through and out of that custom or precedent or authority that suits them not.

I will be equally proud of my country when enough of us stand up strongly for the right to, and value of, gender fluidity — so strongly that this innocent and socially constructive pursuit of happiness will never make anyone vulnerable again.

The tests are vital. But Congress decided that regulation is not

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

A number of tests used by patients to make major health care decisions have once again escaped regulation by the Food and Drug Administration, following intensive lobbying on behalf of test-makers, professional associations and academic medical centers.

For years, experts have warned about the dangers of so-called laboratory-developed tests — including certain cancer screenings and diagnostic tests for everything from Lyme disease to autism — reaching patients without FDA oversight.

ProPublica recently published an investigation about popular prenatal screenings that fall into this category, which one expert described as an unregulated “Wild West.” Upwards of half of all pregnant people now receive one of these prenatal screenings. (We also have put together a guide for expecting parents.)

Congress was on the cusp of finally creating a pathway for the FDA to scrutinize these tests, as it does for many other common commercial tests. For much of 2022, the VALID Act seemed on track for passage — and then, in the final weeks of the year, legislators backed away.

The VALID Act, which had bipartisan support, had been developed after nearly a decade of debate among stakeholders about ways to close a regulatory loophole and clarify the FDA’s role in overseeing the testing industry. The legislation had momentum thanks, in part, to Theranos’ fraudulent blood-testing scandal and the coronavirus pandemic, both of which revealed the possible consequences of unchecked tests reaching patients.

But lawmakers left VALID out of a must-pass end-of-year bill that dealt with a range of spending priorities.

Opponents argued that VALID would have created burdensome regulations for lab-developed tests, or LDTs, stunting essential innovation and flexibility while limiting patient access to health care.

The current approach to lab-developed tests goes back to 1976, when Congress revamped the regulation of medical devices. At the time, the tests were considered low-risk and were not in wide use. Since then, the FDA has effectively exempted this type of lab test from its requirements.

Today, the number and complexity of lab-developed tests has grown. A study by the Pew Charitable Trust said there’s no way of knowing how many are used on patients each year because there are no tracking measures. But Pew estimated that 12,000 labs are likely to use LDTs, many of which process thousands of patient samples each day.

“The needs were getting bigger and bigger, and also the potential risks get bigger and bigger, too,” said Mark McClellan, who served as the head of both the FDA and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services during President George W. Bush’s administration. He had urged Congress to pass the bill.

Several people involved in bill negotiations told ProPublica that concern over how it would affect academic labs is what killed it.

“University laboratories and their representatives in Washington put on a full-court press against this,” said Rep. Larry Bucshon, a Republican from Indiana. A former cardiothoracic surgeon, Bucshon co-sponsored VALID in the House, along with Rep. Diana DeGette, Democrat of Colorado.

Bucshon pointed to the Association of American Medical Colleges and the Association for Molecular Pathology as particularly influential forces that persuaded his colleagues to leave VALID out of the end-of-year bill. According to disclosure forms, AAMC spent at least $300,000 on lobbying activities that included the VALID Act in 2022, while AMP spent at least $189,000. Since 2018, AMP spent at least $957,000 on lobbying activities that included VALID.

AMP had also urged academic lab leaders to reach out to elected officials about this issue. It shared sample letters for them to sign and send, and it organized a “Virtual Advocacy Day,” where AMP scheduled meetings between members and their representatives in Washington, providing them with talking points, background information and best practices.

“Here’s the thing,” Bucshon said. “The academic medical centers, and big medical centers, are in every state.” They employ a lot of people and have significant economic impact in every lawmaker’s turf, he said, “and so that gives them a pretty big voice.”

Heather Pierce, AAMC’s senior director for science policy and regulatory counsel, said that many academic medical centers make and use a number of lab-developed tests, and they typically don’t have the infrastructure or staff to handle the type of FDA oversight set out by VALID. FDA review, she said, would also add time to the process of developing tests for patients with urgent needs.

The makers of prenatal screening tests weighed in on the bill, too. Illumina, for example, spent more than $3 million over two quarters of 2022 on lobbying activities that included provisions of the VALID Act. And since 2019, Invitae paid at least $950,500 on lobbying activities that included VALID.

“While we support efforts to make sure that lab-developed testing is high quality, Invitae believes that the VALID Act would increase the cost of testing, slow innovation, and force consolidation in the industry while imposing many requirements that do little to improve patient care,” said a spokesperson in an email.

While some proponents of the bill still hold out hope for the VALID Act, others said it’s unlikely to get traction again anytime soon. Several of those involved said they anticipate the FDA, which has long claimed jurisdiction over the tests, will try to use its current powers to take direct action, though that will likely take more time and could face litigation from opponents.

“While we stand ready to work with Congress, we are considering all options,” an FDA press officer said in a statement. “One of those options is administrative action, which could include rulemaking.”

Speaking at a trade conference in October, FDA Commissioner Robert Califf said that going it alone is “not something we want to do, because having a clear law passed leads to the best situation.” But, he said, if nothing passes, “we also can’t stand by.”

Current and former FDA officials have expressed befuddlement at how difficult it has been to regulate these tests. “There’s almost a point of, what do I need to do?” Jeff Shuren, director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, said to a trade journal in October. “Do I need a pile of dead bodies before somebody says enough is enough?”

Some opponents of VALID acknowledge that lab testing reform is needed. But they said it should be done without involving the FDA. AMP’s proposed policy, for example, would update the existing oversight system under the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare, which reviews lab operations.

Sen. Rand Paul, a Republican from Kentucky and a former physician, introduced an alternative bill that would do just this, dubbed the VITAL Act. An aide to Paul said the issue came to his attention after AMP approached him about it several years ago. Paul is expected to re-introduce the VITAL Act this year.

While the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare monitor the quality standards in labs, no federal agency checks to make sure lab-developed tests work the way they claim to before they reach patients; similarly, no agency vets the marketing before the tests are sold. Companies aren’t required to publicly report so-called adverse events — incidents that happen when the tests get it wrong. And no federal agency has recall authority.

The VALID Act would have phased in the FDA review process over time, with the agency evaluating only high-risk tests — ones where an inaccurate result could lead to serious harm.

Momentum for VALID began to stall in the summer, with a push for an amendment that would exempt academic medical centers.

“I do think that the fact that we couldn’t get it done in July and August really created this opportunity for people to poke holes in the boat, as it were,” said Cara Tenenbaum, a former FDA policy adviser. “This protracted process allowed people who maybe were not otherwise engaged, or fully engaged, to have an outsized effect that I don’t think was in the interest of patients.”

Pew declined to comment on the proceedings. Tenenbaum lobbied in support of VALID on behalf of Pew.

Bucshon said he understands the concerns of regulatory skeptics. “Include me in that category, if it’s unnecessary and inappropriate regulation that stymies innovation and technology advancements,” Bucshon said. “This isn’t one of those situations, in my opinion.”

Analysis shows Kari Lake lost by 17,000 votes after 33,000 Republicans voted for Democratic opponent

Arizona television personality Kari Lake’s first foray into politics failed in a spectacular manner, in large part because she alienated a substantial segment of voters in her own party who either flipped to her opponent or chose to skip voting for anyone for governor.

That’s according to a post-election analysis released last week that reviewed ballots in pivotal Maricopa County and was compiled for the Arizona Republican Party.

As the report notes, Lake, who lost to opponent Katie Hobbs by 17,000 votes, was damaged by 33,000 Republican-leaning voters in Maricopa County who voted for the Democrat instead.

According to a report from Newsweek, “In comparison, Lake, a Donald Trump-endorsed 2020 election-denier, managed to gain only 5,953 votes from Democrat-leaning voters. Around 6,000 Republican-leaning voters also chose not to vote at all, or wrote in another candidate, rather than support Lake in November.”

One of the authors of the report noted that Lake was dogged by her own rhetoric after she attacked members of her own party as RINO’s (Republicans In Name Only) which alienated some of the very voters she needed.

As report author Benny White put it when interviewed by the Arizona Republic: “She just ran a terrible campaign.”

According to the Newsweek report, Lake was not the only far-right candidate aligned with Donald Trump to see GOP voters flee.

“Elsewhere, the analysis of Arizona voting records also revealed that Mark Finchem, the Trump-endorsed far-right Arizona candidate for secretary of state, also failed to gain support of nearly 74,000 Republican-leaning voters in Maricopa County in November,” the report states. “However, Finchem would still have lost his election to Adrian Fontes, even if he kept the support of these Republicans as the Democrat won by more than 120,000 votes overall.”

You can read more here.

Here are three actors who received both Razzie and Oscar nominations for the same performance

Awards season is officially in full swing as critic groups and Academy members vote for the best of the best in acting, directing, producing and more. Alongside the Golden Globe Awards and the various guild and critics awards is the Academy Awards, which is undoubtedly the most prestigious ceremony and a major honor for those who are nominated.

On the flip side is the Golden Raspberry Awards, better known as the Razzies, an annual parody award show that honors the worst performances in cinema. Co-founded by UCLA film graduates and industry professionals John J.B. Wilson and Mo Murphy, the first Razzie was awarded on March 31, 1981 to Brooke Shields for “The Blue Lagoon” and Neil Diamond for “The Jazz Singer.”

“The Oscars come on at 5 and are over some time around 9, and when you have that many people over, you have to have something to do, so I set up a cardboard podium and invited people to offer up nominees for the worst film of the year,” Wilson told Time about the Razzies’ inception. “I happened to pay 99 cents for a double feature of ‘Can’t Stop the Music’ and Olivia Newton John in ‘Xanadu’ and was refused my money back afterward.” 

Ahead of this year’s Razzies — which is slated to take place on March 11 — the leading nominations include Tom Hanks and Pete Davidson, who are both up for worst actor and worst supporting actor. Other nominees are Bryce Dallas Howard for “Jurassic Park: Dominion,” Jared Leto for “Morbius,” Sylvester Stallone for “Samaritan” and Ryan Kiera Armstrong for “Firestarter.”

Then there are the actors who people whose Oscar nominations were so surprising that it was assumed that there had been some mistake. This year, Ana de Armas was panned for her try-hard embodiment of Marilyn Monroe in the Netflix adaptation of Joyce Carol Oates’ “Blonde,” so her inclusion among the Oscar nominees was a head-scratcher (and had influenced Salon into believing that she had been nominated for a Razzie.)

While the quality of an actor’s performance is subjective, there’s generally a consensus leaning one way or another. Rarely, however, there comes a performance that defies the simple binary, resulting in some actors being nominated for both Oscars acclaim and Razzies ridicule. Either way . . . their performance was a standout. 

Here are the three actors who had the dubious honor of being nominated for both an Oscar and a Razzie. It’s a feat that’s even rarer than an EGOT.

01
Glenn Close in “Hillbilly Elegy”
Glenn Close in “Hillbilly Elegy” (Lacey Terrell/Netflix)

Close’s performance as Bonnie “Mamaw” Vance — the chain-smoking Appalachian grandmother in Ron Howard’s adaptation of J.D. Vance’s memoir of the same name — had critics divided. Similar to her fictional rendition, Mamaw is a big fan of “Terminator 2: Judgement Day” and her signature crude saying, “Kiss my ruby-red a**.” She’s also a certified arsonist who set her husband (Papaw) on fire for coming home drunk.

 

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Close said “she researched Mamaw extensively” in preparation for the role. But despite Close’s dedication, many critics were not a fan of her performance:  

 

“A brief sighting of the real woman in end-credits home video confirms that Close captured Mamaw’s look — but even a lame ‘SNL’ impression gets the haircut right,” wrote EW’s Darren Franich. “Close never seems to blink, and the voice she’s adopting is all wrong, a parody of gumption with no humanity underneath.”

02
Amy Irving in “Yentl”
YentlMandy Patinkin looks lovingly at Amy Irving as she serves Barbra Streisand stands on a ferry boat in a scene in the movie “Yentl” circa 1983. (Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

In Barbara Streisand’s 1983 rendition of Isaac Bashevis Singer’s short story “Yentl the Yeshiva Boy,” Irving plays Hadass Vishkower, a young Jewish woman who gets caught in a love triangle with her fiancé and his fellow classmate Yentl/Anshel Mendel (Streisand).

 

Many critics praised Irving’s acting and musical performances in “Yentl.” So, it came as a surprise when the actor was nominated for both an Oscar and a Razzie. During the 56th Academy Awards, Linda Hunt took home the best supporting actress award for her role in “The Year of Living Dangerously.” The Razzie that year went to Sybil Danning for her performance in “Chained Heat and Hercules.”

03
James Coco in “Only When I Laugh”

The late actor played Jimmy Perrino in the 1981 comedy-drama film based on Neil Simon’s 1970 play “The Gingerbread Lady.” Jimmy is a gay unemployed actor who is also best friends with the main protagonist Georgia Hines, a recovering alcoholic Broadway actress.

 

Despite Coco’s Razzie nomination, one critic claimed the actor’s performance was not that bad, saying it “did not need to be Oscar nominated but it certainly was not at all deserving of its Razzie nomination.”

 

“Coco manages to find the comedy in the part as well as the drama,” they added. “Although I can’t say they are perfectly balanced as I greatly preferred his dramatic moments over his comedic ones, he effectively kept both aspects within a single character.”

[CORRECTION: A previous version of this story erroneously listed Best Actress nominee Ana de Armas as Razzie and Oscar nominee. The story has been updated.]

Oscars still so white: Despite historic representation for Asians, Hollywood remains the same

All year round the entertainment industry sells itself to the broader public as forward thinking, culturally liberal and inclusive. Then, nearly every year, the Oscar nominations dispel this blurry vision by showing Hollywood for what it is and always has been, which is a town run by white guys who love patting themselves on the back.

Sometimes they congratulate themselves for taking a stride in the direction of their version of progress. More often their default is to reward their worldview while sometimes allowing for the elevation of a few folks in any given year who don’t neatly fit within that box.

The nominations for the 95th Academy Awards do not fundamentally change that.

This is not meant to take away from the incredible achievements of the 11 nominations for “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” including its Best Picture nomination and deserving nods for its stars Michelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan and Stephanie Hsu and its directors Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert.

When you add in the nominations for Hong Chau’s performance in “The Whale” and Kazuo Ishiguro best adapted screenplay work for “Living,” along with Domee Shi’s recognition for “Turning Red” and the nod that M.M. Keeravaani and Chandrabose received for best original song for the “RRR” banger “Naatu Naatu,” this is an outstanding year for Asian representation at the Oscars.

This was less the case for every other non-white director and actor, especially women. Among all the major nominations, only two Black actors received nominations, and in supporting categories: Angela Bassett is up for a supporting actress Oscar for her performance, which was the backbone of “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” and the first acting nomination for a Marvel film; and Brian Tyree Henry for “Causeway.”

Aside from Yeoh’s presence among the Best Actress contenders, the rest of that category and the entirety of the Best Actor race is made up of white actors. Kwan is the only Best Director nominee who isn’t white.

Never discount the pull of Hollywood royalty in this selection process.

Also, though the recognition for Black actors this time around is paltry, a two-person showing outstrips the lack of Indigenous representation and the sole Latin American presence in any major acting category thanks to a nomination for Cuban-born Ana de Armas portrayal of Marilyn Monroe in “Blonde.”

But her selection is evocative of entrenched influences that sway Oscars gatekeepers every year, regardless of the voting body’s recent expansion to include more international members. Anyone who participates in Academy Awards prediction pools knows that old habits die harder than John McClane. Here are a few that explain why the Oscars are not as white they used to be but are still reliably white.

Oscar voters love to reward movies about the movie business

BlondeAna de Armas as Marilyn Monroe in “Blonde” (Netflix)

The surest way to gain awards notice is to make a competent feature that celebrates the magic of filmmaking or its history. In that respect it’s shocking that “Babylon,” the bloated extravaganza from “La La Land” director Damien Chazelle, was shut out of entirely. That is, until you consider the ways that Baz Luhrmann’s “Elvis,” a Costco-sized sparkler of a flick, checks that box while also delivering a young compelling lead and a bizarre supporting performance by Tom Hanks.

Never discount the pull of Hollywood royalty in this selection process, a truth that also explains the strong showing for Steven Spielberg and “The Fabelmans,” a fictionalized version of his life story.  Mind you, “The Fabelmans” is the precisely the slice of white Americana about boyhood dreams that one expects to occupy a place in the 10-slot Best Picture category. A similar principle applies to the presence of “Top Gun: Maverick” in that race, along with any unspoken relief some might be feeling at Tom Cruise’s lack of a Best Actor nomination.

But if Oscar voters were interested in spreading the honors around they would have additional consideration to “Women Talking” director Sarah Polley or Gina Prince-Bythewood, whose superb direction made “The Woman King” a stunning and aesthetically precise spectacle.

This unspoken rule also explains Armas’ nomination for “Blonde.” Marilyn Monroe is a Hollywood goddess, and Armas seamlessly slid into her skin, capturing the way Marilyn moved and spoke. Having said that, she was also the best part of a terrible movie. And that adds an extra sting to the Oscars’ snubbing of Danielle Deadwyler’s performance in “Till” and Viola Davis’ muscular work in “The Woman King,” each featured in films that were substantially better than “Blonde.”

Oscars voters love to reward repeats

Cate Blanchett in “Tár” (Focus Features)This notion can refer to subject matter or people. The 1930 version of “All Quiet on the Western Front” received a Best Picture nomination. The 2022 film gives it a second shot at the big prize, only this time it comes to us from Germany.

Mainly, though, this habit points to the voter tendency to give Oscars to those who have already won or nominate past winners over first-time contenders. Surprisingly, the Best Actor race is comprised entirely of first-time nominees although three out of five are familiar to the wider audience. But “Fabelmans” star Michelle Williams’ Best Actress nomination is considered to be something of a surprise until one accounts for her previous Oscar nods; this is her fifth.

Cate Blanchett earned her eighth time at this rodeo with her lead performance in “Tár” and is basically the Meryl Streep of any Oscars race in which Streep is not a contender. This may be the Year of Yeoh, but Blanchett may end up deflating our hopes for the “Everything Everywhere” star. Voters have proven in the past that they’d rather expand someone’s existing statue collection than grant overdue acknowledgement to consistent and consistently overlooked greatness. (Voters, I beg of you: please prove me wrong.)

Voters love Cinderella stories, to a degree

Black Panther: Wakanda ForeverAngela Bassett as Ramonda in “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” (Annette Brown/Marvel Studios)

Voters have proven in the past that they’d rather expand someone’s existing statue collection.

Each year brings the culmination of some previously dimmed star’s comeback. In the Best Actor category, that part goes to Brendan Fraser, whose work in “The Whale” is near universally described as utterly moving although the role itself is problematic.

The good news is that this custom also favors Yeoh and Quan, to whom Hollywood had closed its doors before the Daniels opened them to him again. Many fingers are crossed that it brings Bassett a long-overdue win, too. However, Bassett has another factor on her side too.

The Oscars voting process, like Hollywood itself, is highly political

That’s the simplest observation a person can make, but the average moviegoer requires a reminder of this every year on the morning of Oscar nominations. If Bassett wins it’ll have less to do with some notion of the Academy acknowledging that she should have won 30 years ago for her slam-dunk as Tina Turner in “What’s Love Got to Do With It” than Marvel devoting time and resources to get her name and fiery scenes in front of every voter’s face, along with persuading the white men who would rather give it to Kerry Condon or Jamie Lee Curtis . . . for reasons having less to do with overall merit than people with power being in their feelings.


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Where this really shows is in the nomination for “To Leslie” star Andrea Riseborough for her work in a movie most people have never seen, let alone heard of. The immediate reaction to Riseborough’s nomination was outrage among the people who believed Deadwyler and Davis to be a lock for a Best Actress nomination.

On the other hand, Riseborough is also believed to have benefited from a steady social media campaign involving recommendations by, to name a few heavy hitters, Susan Sarandon, Jennifer Aniston, Mira Sorvino, Helen Hunt, Minnie Driver and Melanie Lynskey. If these and other well-known actors also made it simple for voters to watch the film shortly before the vote occurred, that probably explains why this dark horse made it into the final running.

Whether she triumphs on Oscars night is another matter, but for the time being those who supported her can celebrate their successful campaign to get her there. As for the performers and directors who didn’t receive calls this morning, both they and we might take some comfort in knowing their performances aren’t why they were passed over. Instead look to an industry that may be trying to show they’re changing but has a lot of old conventions to retire.

 The 95th Oscar telecast airs live at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT Sunday, March 12 on ABC.

Trump hires top trial lawyer to “aggressively” go after Manhattan prosecutor

Donald Trump has hired one of America’s top trial attorneys to go after a former Manhattan prosecutor who allegedly defamed him, TMZ reports.

Joe Tacopina sent a letter to Mark Pomerantz, claiming Pomerantz falsely stated in a 2022 resignation letter to Manhattan D.A. Alvin Bragg that Trump was “guilty of numerous felony violations” and that it was a “grave failure of justice not to hold [Trump] accountable by way of criminal prosecution.”

Pomerantz, who had led the New York investigation into Trump’s finances, resigned last year along with Carey Dunne, the other lead prosecutor on the case.

Pomerantz’s letter said that he had quit over the decision by new Manhattan district attorney Alvin Bragg not to move ahead with prosecution of the Republican billionaire.

That decision, he wrote in the letter which the New York Times published in full, was “contrary to the public interest.”

“The team that has been investigating Mr. Trump harbors no doubt about whether he committed crimes — he did,” Pomerantz wrote.

The investigation had probed whether Trump fraudulently overvalued multiple assets to secure loans and then undervalued them to minimize taxes.

It was launched by Bragg’s predecessor Cyrus Vance, with Bragg taking over the case when he took office in January.

Tacopina also expressed concern over an upcoming book published by Pomerantz, saying it could contain more falsehoods about the former president.

“I strongly admonish you to take these next words seriously: If you publish such a book and continue making defamatory statements against my client, my office will aggressively pursue all legal remedies against you and your book publisher, Simon & Schuster,” Tacopina’s letter stated.

“Trust me, I will zealously use every possible legal resource to punish you and your publisher for the incredible financial harm that you have caused my clients to suffer,” he added.

Elon Musk’s Twitter allows white nationalist Nick Fuentes back on the platform

After being banned for almost two years, Twitter has officially reinstated the account of white nationalist leader Nick Fuentes, Rolling Stone reports.

Twitter banned Fuentes for “repeated violations” of the platform’s rules in July 2021, and when he attempted to create another account in October after Musk took over, the platform banned him again.

The reinstatement of his account comes two months after Twitter CEO Elon Musk posted a poll to Twitter, asking users whether the accounts — he, himself, suspended — that “have not broken the law or engaged in egregious spam” should be reinstated. Following the majority “yes” vote from users, the billionaire began restoring accounts of MAGA Republicans, such as MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell and Neo-Nazi Andrew Anglin, who’d been banned from Twitter since 2013. Rolling Stone referred to “the return of extremist figures to Twitter” as a “hallmark of Musk’s early tenure.”

However, Musk is not treating all Twitter users equally. The tech CEO had suspended a select list of journalists, himself, last year from the platform “for, he said, violating the company’s terms of service.” A few weeks later, he asserted that the journalists “were welcome to return to the platform” only if they would “abide by Twitter’s rules.”

Washington Post journalist Paul Farhi reported, “Twitter has privately demanded that the suspended journalists delete the tweets that drew Musk’s ire in the first place — a condition the reporters have refused to accept. The result is a stalemate: The suspended journalists remain in Twitter purgatory, unable to access their accounts.”

Unlike his treatment of the journalists, Musk is granting Fuentes, 24, free rein back on the platform.

The extremist first gained notoriety as a Boston University student attending the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where he and other attendees chanted “Jews will not replace us.” He later founded the “America First Political Action Conference,” which has been attended by far-right MAGA Republican House of Representatives members like Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.

But more recently, the extremist anti-Semite met with former president Donald Trump and rapper Kanye West, now known as “Ye,” — who, at the time, also publicly spewed antisemitic remarks — at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate.

According to Rolling Stone, prior to reinstatement, Fuentes has been able to expand a “cult-like following” called the Groypers, and although the coalition describes itself a “Christian-conservative,” members and followers often “weaponize antisemitic and racist tropes against their targets.”

“Disturbing new evidence” in Brett Kavanaugh documentary sparks call for DOJ probe

The surprise premiere of a documentary revealing “shocking new allegations” of sexual crimes committed decades ago by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh sparked new calls on Monday for Senate and Justice Department investigations.

Doug Liman’s Justice premiered Friday as a last-minute addition to the lineup of the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. According to Free Speech for People, the film “includes important new details about specific allegations of sexual misconduct by Kavanaugh” and “also reveals disturbing new evidence of misconduct by Kavanaugh and his associates” surrounding the right-wing justice’s 2018 Senate confirmation hearings.

This includes “evidence that Kavanaugh may have knowingly perjured himself” and that the justice’s associates engaged in what his friend referred to as “a cover-up.”

Kavanaugh—the second of three right-wing justices appointed to the nation’s highest court by then-President Donald Trump—was accused of sexually assaulting Christine Blasey Ford, who is now a Stanford professor, when they were in high school. Kavanaugh also allegedly exposed himself without consent to Deborah Ramirez, a Yale classmate, during a college party. He has denied both allegations.

Justice producer Amy Herdy said during a post-premiere Q&A in Park City: “I do hope this triggers outrage. I do hope that this triggers action, I do hope that this triggers additional investigation with real subpoena powers.”

To that end, Free Speech for People wrote to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland as well as to Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Ranking Member Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) seeking a probe of Kavanaugh based on details in the film.

“Some of these details were sent to the FBI during its brief, compressed investigation into similar allegations during Kavanaugh’s 2018 confirmation hearings, although the FBI did not follow up or interview the relevant witnesses,” the group said Monday in a letter to the senators.

The letter states:

Most disturbing, however, is new evidence of conduct by Kavanaugh and his associates (perhaps even before his accusers came forward) concerning the 2018 Senate hearing itself. For example, the film shows a 2018 text message discussion amongst mutual acquaintances of Kavanaugh and Deborah Ramirez, regarding Ramirez’s soon-to-be-public allegations that Kavanaugh had exposed himself to her. According to the text messages shown in the documentary, Kavanaugh asked a mutual friend to go on the record to defend him. Another friend referred to it as “a cover-up.” This indicates consciousness of guilt—and therefore evidence that he may have knowingly perjured himself in the confirmation hearings—and a potential conspiracy to obstruct and defraud the Senate by coordinating a false information campaign.

The Washington Post reports that “the FBI’s national press office did not have a comment on the documentary but reiterated that their services in a nomination process are limited to fact-finding and background investigations.”

“The scope of the background investigation is requested by the White House,” an FBI spokesperson told the Post in a statement. “The FBI does not have the independent authority to expand the scope of a supplemental background investigation outside the requesting agency’s parameters.”

Speaking about the women who stepped forward to share their stories in the film, director Liman toldThe Guardian: “This was the kind of movie where people are terrified. The people that chose to participate in the movie are heroes.”

The National Sexual Assault Hotline can be reached 1-800-656-HOPE (4673), or through chat at rainn.org. It offers 24/7, free, and confidential support.

“Carcinogenic propaganda”: GOP called out for “killing its own voters” by hyping Big Tobacco

In Washington, D.C. smoking is banned from office buildings. But that rule doesn’t apply to the U.S. Capitol Building, where House Republicans have lifted a ban on smoking in that branch of Congress.

Fox News’ Tucker Carlson and other far-right pundits have been quick to applaud the move. Sounding a lot like the late radio host Rush Limbaugh, Carlson told viewers, “Nicotine frees your mind, and THC makes you compliant and passive.”

In a scathing article published by The Nation on January 23, journalist Joan Walsh slams House Republicans and their supporters for promoting something as unhealthy as smoking and argues that they are “killing” their “own voters.”

“I honestly thought it was fake news,” Walsh writes. “Just after Kevin McCarthy became House speaker, giving away his power to right-wing antagonists the first week in January, I read about Congress members smoking on the GOP side of the aisle. Just a projection from my liberal allies of Republicans’ intent to erode public health, I assumed. Funny GIF to come. But it was true. Rep. Tom Cole was smoking cigars in his office. Others were reportedly smoking cigarettes in other places.”

Walsh notes that “House lawmakers’ private offices aren’t governed by” either the District of Columbia’s anti-smoking ordinance” or “a Bill Clinton executive order” that “prohibits smoking in federal buildings that are under the authority of the executive branch.”

“Under McCarthy, smoking is allowed not just in members’ offices, but in public areas too,” Walsh explains. “Now comes more carcinogenic propaganda from right-wing losers. Last week, Fox’s Tucker Carlson began preaching a return to smoking as a return to American values. Tobacco is so much more American than increasingly legal and available weed, he told his stoned-on-lies audience.”

On Fox News, Carlson made cigarette smoking a culture war issue, telling viewers that liberals “hate nicotine” but “love THC.”

Walsh comments, “I shouldn’t be surprised at Carlson’s tribute to tobacco…. Republicans have long opposed anti-smoking measures, at least partly out of fealty to Big Tobacco. Former GOP Speaker John Boehner became infamous for handing out checks from tobacco lobbyists on the House floor in 1995. As Indiana governor, Mike Pence railed against tobacco restrictions and insisted ‘smoking doesn’t kill.’ But the recent pro-smoking crusade seems to be inspired more by culture war imperatives than by defending the tobacco industry.”

The journalist points out that Limbaugh spent decades vigorously defending cigarette smoking on his radio show — before dying of lung cancer in 2021.

“Killing your own voters seems like a bad electoral strategy,” Walsh writes. “Salon’s Amanda Marcotte calls it ‘getting lung cancer to own the libs.’ Sadly, Republicans are mostly giving their base voters what they think they want.”

With Oscar nominations, women are forced to take a big step backward

When Kathryn Bigelow won the Oscar for Best Director in 2010, she said in her acceptance speech, "This is, again, the moment of a lifetime." Bigelow was the first woman to win a best director Oscar in the then 82-year history of the Academy Awards. Bigelow won for her film "The Hurt Locker." The award was monumental in Bigelow's life, and as it turns out, the lives of everyone watching as well: Bigelow would be only one of three women to ever win an Oscar for best director. The other two, Chloé Zhao and Jane Campion, received their awards in 2021 and 2022 respectively. 

Yes, two out of the mere three directing Oscars for women in the now 95 years of the Academy Awards were awarded only in the last two years.

In some ways, the 2023 Academy Award nominations were a slate of firsts. The first nominations for beloved Jamie Lee Curtis and for Ke Huy Quan, the former child star who struggled to find acting work for decades and said in his emotional acceptance speech for the 2023 Golden Globe for best supporting actor, "For so many years, I was afraid I had nothing more to offer." Both Curtis and Quan were recognized for their work in the smash "Everything Everywhere All at Once," which leads the award nominations with 11 nods, including for Best Picture and Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert for best director. This year saw the highest number of Asian actors recognized with nominations. That number is four. 

No Black actors were nominated in the lead acting categories. And this year's nominations are also a huge step backward when it comes to the work of women.

In 2020, when presenter Issa Rae announced the Oscar nominations, she said of the all-male field of best director, "Congratulations to those men."

The same can be said of this year when those up for the award, along with the Daniels, are Martin McDonagh for "The Banshees of Inisherin," Steven Spielberg for "The Fabelmans," Todd Field for "Tár" and Ruben Östlund for "Triangle of Sadness." This in a year that saw films both heavy-hitting like the Maria Schrader-directed "She Said" and "Till," directed by Chinonye Chukwu, and box office dynamos like "The Woman King" directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood, which was an instant hit, making $94.3 million worldwide.

But these films are not only directed by women, they're about women. The majority of the best director-nominated films are about men. White men bickering in the countryside, dealing with a sinking luxury yacht, turning into a filmmaker as a middle class boy in the mid 20th century. Several of the best director-snubbed films by women received other noms, which makes the absent recognition of their directors' work even more glaring. 

Perhaps nowhere is this more blatant than in the lack of a nomination for powerhouse Sarah Polley, whose film "Women Talking" is up for best picture and best adapted screenplay (Polley adapted it). 

With their best director nominations, the Academy proved they don't want to listen to women talking or recognize women working, not the Black women of "The Woman King" nor "Till." Not the young woman of Charlotte Wells' "Aftersun," not the survivors of "She Said" or "Women Talking." They want women to be seen but not heard. Still and again.  

Here are the 2023 Academy Arts nominees: 

 
Best picture
"All Quiet on the Western Front"
"Avatar: The Way of Water"
"The Banshees of Inisherin"
"Elvis"
"Everything Everywhere All at Once"
"The Fabelmans"
"Tár"
"Top Gun: Maverick"
"Triangle of Sadness"
"Women Talking"
 
Best director
Martin McDonagh ("The Banshees of Inisherin")
Daniel Scheinert and Daniel Kwan ("Everything Everywhere All at Once")
Steven Spielberg ("The Fabelmans")
Todd Field ("Tár")
Ruben Östlund ("Triangle of Sadness") 
 
Best actress

Ana de Armas ("Blonde")

Cate Blanchett ("Tár")

Andrea Riseborough ("To Leslie")

Michelle Yeoh ("Everything Everywhere All at Once")
Michelle Williams ("The Fabelmans")

 
Best actor
Paul Mescal ("Aftersun")
Colin Farrell ("The Banshees of Inisherin")
Austin Butler ("Elvis")
Bill Nighy ("Living")
Brendan Fraser ("The Whale")
 
Best supporting actress
Kerry Condon ("The Banshees of Inisherin")
Angela Bassett ("Black Panther: Wakanda Forever")
Jamie Lee Curtis ("Everything Everywhere All at Once")
Stephanie Hsu ("Everything Everywhere All at Once")
Hong Chau ("The Whale")
 
Best supporting actor
Brendan Gleeson ("The Banshees of Inisherin")
Barry Keoghan ("The Banshees of Inisherin")
Brian Tyree Henry ("Causeway")
Ke Huy Quan ("Everything Everywhere All at Once")
Judd Hirsch ("The Fabelmans")
 
 
Adapted screenplay
Edward Berger, Lesley Paterson and Ian Stokell ("All Quiet on the Western Front")
Rian Johnson ("Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery")
Kazuo Ishiguro ("Living")
Peter Craig, Ehren Kruger, Justin Marks, Christopher McQuarrie, and Eric Warren ("Top Gun: Maverick")
Sarah Polley ("Women Talking")
 
 
Original screenplay
Martin McDonagh ("The Banshees of Inisherin")
Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert ("Everything Everywhere All at Once")
Steven Spielberg and Tony Kushner ("The Fabelmans")
Todd Field ("Tár")
Ruben Östlund ("Triangle of Sadness")
 
Cinematography
"All Quiet on the Western Front"
"Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths"
"Elvis"
"Empire of Light"
"Tár"
 
Costume design
"Babylon"
"Black Panther: Wakanda Forever"
"Elvis"
"Everything Everywhere All at Once"
"Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris"
 
Film editing
"The Banshees of Inisherin"
"Elvis"
"Everything Everywhere All at Once"
"Tár"
"Top Gun: Maverick"
 
Makeup & hairstyling
"All Quiet on the Western Front"
"The Batman"
"Black Panther: Wakanda Forever"
"Elvis"
"The Whale"
 
Production design
"All Quiet on the Western Front"
"Avatar: The Way of Water"
"Babylon"
"Elvis"
"The Fabelmans"
 
Original score
"All Quiet on the Western Front"
"Babylon"
"The Banshees of Inisherin"
"Everything Everywhere All at Once"
"The Fabelmans"
 
Original song
"Black Panther: Wakanda Forever" ("Lift Me Up")
"RRR" ("Naatu Naatu")
"Tell It Like a Woman" ("Applause")
"Top Gun: Maverick" ("Hold My Hand")
"Everything Everywhere All at Once" ("This Is A Life")
 
Sound
"All Quiet on the Western Front"
"The Batman"
"Avatar: The Way of Water"
"Elvis"
"Top Gun: Maverick"
 
Visual effects
"All Quiet on the Western Front"
"Avatar: The Way of Water"
"The Batman"
"Black Panther: Wakanda Forever"
"Top Gun: Maverick"
 
Animated feature
"Marcel the Shell with Shoes On"
"Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio"
"Puss in Boots: The Last Wish"
"The Sea Beast"
"Turning Red"
 
Documentary feature
"All That Breathes"
"All the Beauty and the Bloodshed"
"Fire of Love"
"A House Made of Splinters"
"Navalny"
 
International feature
"All Quiet on the Western Front"
"Argentina, 1985"
"Close"
"Decision to Leave"
"EO"
"The Quiet Girl"
 
 
Animated short
"The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse"
"The Flying Sailor"
"Ice Merchants"
"My Year of Dicks"
"An Ostrich Told Me the World Is Fake and I Think I Believe It"
 
 
Documentary short
"The Elephant Whisperers"
"Haulout"
"How Do You Measure a Year?"
"The Martha Mitchell Effect"
"Stranger at the Gate"
 

Live action short
"An Irish Goodbye"
"Ivalu"
"Le Pupille"
"Night Ride"
"The Red Suitcase"

The 95th Academy Awards will broadcast live on Sunday, March 12 on ABC.

Classified documents found at Mike Pence’s home after he “repeatedly said he did not have any”

At a time when U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland has appointed special counsels to investigate classified documents found at the homes of President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, classified documents have also been found in the home of another major figure in U.S. politics: former Vice President Mike Pence.

According to CNN reporters Jamie Gangel, Jeremy Herb and Evan Perez, an attorney for Pence “discovered about a dozen documents marked as classified” inside Pence’s Indiana home. The documents have been turned over to the FBI, which is reviewing them.

The CNN journalists report, on January 24, “The discovery comes after Pence has repeatedly said he did not have any classified documents in his possession. It is not yet clear what the documents are related to or their level of sensitivity or classification…. Pence asked his lawyer to conduct the search of his home out of an abundance of caution, and the attorney began going through four boxes stored at Pence’s house last week, finding a small number of documents with classified markings, the sources said.”

You can read the full report at CNN.