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Debunked conspiracy film “2000 Mules” may be Texas GOP’s pretext to impose new voting restrictions

Top Texas Republicans have been key promoters of “2000 Mules,” a debunked film by GOP political operative Dinesh D’Souza that falsely claims there was significant voter fraud during the 2020 presidential election.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton‘s office, which oversees investigations into voter fraud, screened the movie this summer, according to a recent Associated Press story that detailed ongoing dysfunction and politicization in Paxton’s office.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and three other Houston-area legislators sponsored a watch party at a local church in June, according to the church’s website.

And Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller, who has a history of spreading political falsehoods on social media, recently cited the film as part of the reason he continues to believe the 2020 election was stolen from former President Donald Trump.

In June — at the same time that millions of Americans were tuning into the first Congressional hearing on the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol — Miller was scheduled as a special guest speaker at a screening of “2000 Mules” by the Dallas Jewish Conservatives, according to the group’s website.

Also featured at the event was Sidney Powell, a Dallas lawyer and Trump ally who currently faces a $1.3 billion defamation lawsuit by a voting machine company that she and other conspiracists have targeted. The State Bar of Texas has also pursued disciplinary action against Powell for filing a lawsuit speculating that fraud was committed.

The State Bar pursued similar action against Paxton.

Twelve days after that event with Miller and Powell, the Republican Party of Texas screened “2000 Mules” three times during its annual convention, at which Patrick vowed to significantly increase criminal penalties for illegal voting and delegates codified their denial of the 2020 election results into the party’s official platform.

The film’s claims are directly contradicted by rulings in at least 50 lawsuits brought by Trump and his allies challenging the outcome of the election. Republican-appointed judges presided over nearly half of those lawsuit dismissals, according to one analysis. And Trump’s closest confidantes — including his daughter Ivanka and former U.S. Attorney General William Barr, who Trump appointed — have repeatedly thrown cold water on his unsubstantiated claims and conspiracies of widespread voter fraud.

Neither Patrick, Paxton nor Miller could be reached for comment this week, and their campaigns did not respond to emailed questions. Miller’s Democratic challenger in the race for agriculture commissioner, Susan Hays, said the film was one of many ongoing “attacks on our democracy” and called Miller “unethical and un-American” for promoting it.

The GOP’s continued embrace of the film has concerned election experts such as Paul Gronke, director of the Elections and Voting Information Center at Reed College. Gronke noted that the film’s findings have been routinely debunked — including by Barr, who mocked the film as “indefensible” and laughed at it earlier this year.

“It is a sad situation when political leaders, rather than competing for the votes of citizens with good policies, instead promote misinformation and false claims about the elections as part of a crass political strategy because they think that making voting harder and more complicated will lower turnout and help their side,” Gronke said. “And the deepest irony of all of this is that historically, voters who use absentee voting and voting by mail have leaned Republican.”

Voting rights groups similarly say they fear the film will fuel chaos in the upcoming midterm elections and could be a pretext for more restrictive voting laws in the future.

Anthony Gutierrez, executive director of the Texas chapter of the watchdog group Common Cause, said the showing of the film by Paxton’s office is particularly concerning because of Paxton’s longstanding embrace of unfounded voter fraud conspiracies — and his role in prosecuting electoral crimes, which are exceedingly rare. (Since 2005, the Texas Attorney General’s website says the office has prosecuted 155 people for 534 election fraud offenses — good for about 0.0048% of the 11.1 million Texas votes cast in the 2020 presidential contest alone, and not even a rounding error’s worth of all votes cast in the state over the last 17 years.)

“Paxton hosting a watch party for this completely debunked work of fiction is next-level disinformation,” Gutierrez said. “It’s not like (Paxton) is a person who has no impact on elections — he is constantly doing things to impact elections. … It’s all kinds of alarming and sets off all the red flags.”

D’Souza, who pleaded guilty in 2014 to campaign finance fraud and was later pardoned by Trump, gets top billing on the film. But activists from True the Vote, a Houston-based vote-monitoring organization that has pushed election conspiracies, are listed as executive producers on the film, which borrows heavily from their discredited research.

True the Vote has previously been accused of swindling donors and has close ties to Paxton — who reportedly declined to release records about the group or say if he investigated complaints against it when journalists inquired earlier this year.

Paxton, who is being sued by whistleblowers in his office and is currently under investigation for felony securities fraud, also advocated for True the Vote’s founder in 2016 when the Texas Supreme Court looked into claims that her previous nonprofit was acting overtly political, Reveal News reported.

The film has other ties to the Lone Star State: Irving-based Salem Media Group also has producer credits and is its main distributor. Salem, a massive Christian broadcaster that has for decades had deep ties to fundamentalist Christian groups and conservative politicians, in May bragged that “2000 Mules” was “the most successful political documentary in a decade.” Salem said the film was seen by more than 1 million people and grossed more than $10 million in revenue in its first two months.

Last month, Salem lowered its third-quarter revenue expectations after D’Souza’s book of the same name was recalled. “Somehow a significant error got missed by the publisher,” D’Souza explained on Twitter.

In June, “2000 Mules” was reportedly shown at Cottonwood Creek Church in Allen, where outgoing Republican state Rep. Scott Sanford is the executive pastor. The Bryan/College Station Tea Party also screened the film at the headquarters of the Bryan County Republican Party, according to the group’s website.

In May, the Coastal Bend Republican Coalition in Corpus Christi hosted a watch party, citing a glowing review of the film from the Epoch Times, a website with ties to a far-right Chinese spiritual movement that has promoted apocalyptic, QAnon and anti-vaccine conspiracies. D’Souza has written more than 50 articles for the Epoch Times.

 

Disclosure: Common Cause and State Bar of Texas have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2022/10/07/texas-ken-paxton-2000-mules-sid-miller/.

The Texas Tribune is a member-supported, nonpartisan newsroom informing and engaging Texans on state politics and policy. Learn more at texastribune.org.

Loretta Lynn’s music: That’s how the Republican women I grew up with talked (behind men’s backs)

As a longtime fan of her music, I was bummed at the news of Loretta Lynn’s death earlier this week. Not because her death was especially tragic — far from it. Her life started hard, but she died rich and successful, at age 90. She lived long enough to see music critics finally value her and other female country artists like Dolly Parton the way they long did male figures like Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson. She even got to record with Jack White, which seems like a great experience for any musician not named Meg White. May we all have a chance to go out like she did. 

No, I was dreading The Discourse. I did not look forward to people calling her a “feminist,” simply because she had a brash sound and tough-girl lyrics — or even because her songs are often about how much men suck. I did not look forward to aesthetic Stalinists shaming anyone for enjoying her music on the grounds that she was a Donald Trump supporter. I didn’t want to hear the pseudo-intellectual assertion that you must “separate the art from the artist” in response, a claim rooted in half-remembered English lit classes. It makes even less sense when you look at someone like Lynn, who wove her personal life — with many warts on display — into her music, both as legitimate artistic expression and as a marketing ploy. 

I like Loretta Lynn. I like country music. These are positions that are pretty easy to hold if you grew up a liberal in a coastal city and everyone knows you’re appreciating the music from afar. I spent much of my childhood, however, in rural Texas. It leaves one with a fear that people think you’re a dumb hick, a paranoia that is occasionally justified when people throw me a puzzled look if, say, a Reba McEntire song comes up on shuffle. 

The narrative around Lynn has long been that she’s “conflicted.” There’s a longing to see a kind of veiled feminism in her music. Allison Hussey of Pitchfork writes, “Lynn’s most enduring songs are frank and ferocious, where she excoriates double standards and sexist assumptions with a smile.” Tom Roland at Billboard writes about “the progressivism at the heart of her songs” that he argues portray women as “strong, self-directed adults willing and able to stand up for themselves at a time when the culture generally discouraged it.” Maybe so, but let’s get real: She was a Trump supporter who stuck by her crappy husband from the time she married him at age 15 until his death in the 1990s. Those are just facts. 

As someone who is not a tourist in the country music world, however, I don’t see Lynn as a contradiction in any way. I personally got out of the red-state lifestyle as soon as I was able, but she reminds me how the Republican women I knew growing up talked about their lives and about men, especially when men weren’t around to whine about it. It’s not that those women don’t think sexism is real. They hate it that men look down at them and treat them like unpaid servants and emotional snot rags. They’re just resigned to it, and profoundly skeptical of feminist claims that change is possible. 

Lynn wasn’t like Dolly Parton, who also demurs when asked whether she’s a feminist — to avoid alienating conservative fans — but quietly gives money and support to progressive causes. (For all those who sneer at that, know that women in rock and R&B have had to play the same game as well.) But Loretta Lynn wasn’t conflicted; she was a straight-up conservative, who openly and proudly voted for Trump. 


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For outsiders, that seems hard to square with a song like the 1975 classic “The Pill,” which, as the title suggests, celebratesthe liberating breakthrough of birth control medication. Or “Don’t Come Home A-Drinkin’,” in which the narrator protests being used for sex by her drunken husband who otherwise ignores her. Some critics have even projected feminism onto “Fist City,” a song about beating up another woman who’s trying to steal your man. 

But none of that is feminism. Feminism is the belief that women are equal to men and that we should remake society to reflect that fact. Lynn’s music is the music of resignation. Yes, she said in 2016, “I didn’t write for the men; I wrote for us women.” But she wasn’t writing feminist anthems. Hers are songs of coping — through humor, through violence, or just through emotional venting. The theme that runs through her catalog is: “Yeah, sexism sucks, but nothing can be done about it.” 

At best, her songs are how-tos on surviving in a patriarchal system. From a distance, it’s hilarious that “The Pill” was widely censored on country radio, because it’s hardly a liberation anthem. Instead, the narrator celebrates the fact that now she can go out with her husband instead of staying at home with a baby, making it easier to block him from having sex with other women. Her famous songs about staving off romantic rivals, like “Fist City” and “You Ain’t Woman Enough,” are fun tough-talking tunes. But they also assume that a woman’s lot in life depends on securing and keeping a man, even at the cost of throwing down with other women while he gloats in the corner. As much fun as those songs are, I like “Jolene” by Dolly Parton better. Not only does it have the greatest guitar riff in history, it’s soul-rippingly honest about the stakes for a woman in this world of losing her man.

As Slate critic Carl Wilson astutely notes, the song “One’s on the Way” captures this dynamic in Lynn’s music well. The lyrics describe “girls in New York City, they all march for women’s lib,” but notes that “here in Topeka” the “floor needs a-scrubbin'” and children need to be cared for. It’s not opposed to feminism, exactly. It just views the ideals of feminism as a pipe dream.

That’s exactly how the women I grew up around see things. They don’t love that their social status and safety runs through men, and that maintaining both of those things means placating men’s often imperious demands. Get some wine into those women, and you’ll often find that they share many feminist complaints about overbearing husbands and overwhelming housework. They don’t want to fear rape. They hate seeing loved ones suffer domestic violence. 

But at the end of the day, they also don’t want to be called “man-haters,” which is absolutely what’s coming at you if you speak up for feminist values too forcefully. Life is hard enough for women if men like you. The idea of actively courting male disapproval, or male hatred, is frankly terrifying. So those thoughts get pushed aside. A “strong” woman is a woman like the one Loretta Lynn portrays in her music: She accepts male dominance and is proud of herself for surviving it. 

You saw this mentality clearly in the days after the release of Donald Trump’s infamous “Access Hollywood” tape, in which he can be heard bragging about sexually assaulting women. Republican women weren’t happy about it, but they voted for him anyway, often making familiar excuses: “Well, that’s just how men are.” To them, male chauvinism is like the weather; it can’t be changed and it does no good to challenge it. 


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Of course, as an actual feminist, I disagree with all that. I think women can fight back. If we do it together — instead of having a “Fist City” with each other — we can force men to acquiesce. Men aren’t the only ones who can give or withhold their approval. Men need us, and women can get concessions that bring us closer to real equality. I know this to be true: I moved to blue America (first to Austin, then to the East Coast) and found that there’s a better quality of man available than the shameless sexists I grew up with. 

So why do I like Loretta Lynn’s music, to this day? For one thing, you’re leading a mean and blinkered existence if you only engage with art that reflects your exact values back to you. Part of the joy of experiencing art and culture is the chance to see the world from someone else’s viewpoint, broadening your horizons and gaining empathy for others, even if you disagree with them. For another, she’s a straight-up great musician and singer. Her music is pleasing on the simple, visceral level. 

But truth be told, there’s still a lot I relate to in her music. Even the most strident feminists among us have to make our compromises and pick our battles, no matter how blue our environment. I’ve grinned and borne many a mansplainer. I spend more time on my appearance than men, even when I don’t want to, because it’s necessary to be taken seriously. I often find I have to flatter and placate men, because they take it as “aggressive” if you treat them like an equal, and I don’t have time for every conflict over that. Lynn’s music speaks to those moments in every woman’s life when she has to play along. Instead of making you feel bad for it, she celebrates you for surviving. Don’t mistake Lynn for a feminist — but her music was definitely for the women. 

“The weakness is off the charts”: Ex-prosecutors sound alarm on team Garland assigned to Trump case

Attorney General Merrick Garland drew criticism from former federal prosecutors on Thursday over his handling of the Justice Department’s investigation into classified records seized from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence.

A top Justice Department official told Trump’s lawyers weeks ago that the department believes the former president may still be withholding documents he took from the White House despite the FBI raid of his Florida residence.

DOJ counterintelligence chief Jay Bratt reached out to Trump’s attorneys, informing them that the department believes he “has not returned all the documents” and investigators “remain skeptical” if Trump has been fully cooperative with the effort to recover documents he was supposed to hand over to the National Archives, according to The New York Times

After the August search of Mar-A-Lago, which recovered more than 300 classified documents with some containing sensitive information, federal investigators also found dozens of empty folders marked as containing classified information. The disclosure raised more doubts that Trump returned everything he had in his possession. 

Some legal experts called out Garland for slow-walking the probe.

Former federal prosecutor Richard Signorelli argued that Garland and Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco’s “weakness” and “ineptitude” is off the charts. 

“They are very reluctant to indict a former POTUS which literally jeopardize[s] our security & is violative of the rule of law,” Signorelli wrote on Twitter

Former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, who served on special counsel Bob Mueller’s team, shared similar concerns. 

“The problem with the DOJ staffing on the MAL case (at least what is visible) is the lead attorney is trained to think of DOJ’s role as negotiating compliance with the law after the person is discovered to be in violation vs indicting the person to promote compliance with the law,” Weissmann tweeted.

Weissman, who led the prosecution of former Trump campaign chief Paul Manafort, added that the same group did not conduct a criminal investigation into Manafort’s Foreign Agents Registration Act violations for eight months, but negotiated with his counsel for eight months to have Manafort file FARA disclosure forms after years of violating that law.

“So that’s why I’m super concerned about the staffing here. Worried it’s too much of a regulator’s mindset. Not what is needed,” Weissmann wrote. 


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The DOJ is also the target of intense scrutiny as federal prosecutors are likely to wait until after the midterm elections to announce any potential charges against Trump, sources familiar with the matter told Bloomberg

The news alarmed Democratic leaders, who worry that Trump might be running for president again by the time Garland decides whether to prosecute him and others who played a part in the January 6 insurrection. 

Two dozen leading Democrats told CNN that Garland may have “missed his moment” to bring criminal charges against top Trump administration officials before getting caught up in the 2024 presidential campaign, which would begin after the midterm elections. 

Garland has pushed back on criticism that the DOJ has received for not being aggressive enough in its investigation of Trump and his allies who broke the law. He vowed to charge “everybody who was criminally responsible for interfering with the peaceful transfer of power” during an interview with NBC News

“It is inevitable in this kind of investigation that there’ll be speculation about what we are doing, who we are investigating, what our theories are,” Garland said. “The reason there is this speculation and uncertainty is that it’s a fundamental tenet of what we do as prosecutors and investigators is to do it outside of the public eye.”

A judge also warned recently that Trump is building a legal shield that could block him from being held accountable for inciting the insurrection with the DOJ’s help, according to the Daily Beast.

The DOJ sided with him last year when Elle magazine advice columnist E. Jean Carroll brought a defamation case against Trump. The DOJ continues to treat Trump as a federal employee, allowing him to lean into the executive power he once had as president. Trump can use the same strategy to defend himself against the civil lawsuits that try to hold him accountable for sending rioters to attack the Capitol.

“This is a game-changer for prosecutors”: Proud Boy pleads guilty — flips on leaders tied to Trump

Reacting to a guilty plea from a senior Proud Boy leader Jeremy Bertino, 43, of Belmont, N.C. on Thursday on charges of seditious conspiracy in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, CNN legal analyst Joh Miller agreed with a CNN host that the arrest of the leadership should be very nervous about their own upcoming trials.

As the Washington Post reported, Bertino has “agreed to cooperate with the Justice Department against [Enrique] Tarrio and four other Proud Boys leaders with ties to influential Donald Trump supporters Roger Stone and Alex Jones,” whose trials are scheduled for December.

According to CNN’s Miller, this a massive problem for the other indicted Proud Boys and the lawyers.

Asked how the guilty plea and how “it might impact the investigation,” by “New Day” host Brianna Keilar, Miller explained, “In a big way.”

“You have a trial coming up where he is one of the defendants but you also have the leader of the Proud Boys and others on trial,” he continued. “This is a game changer for prosecutors. They have tapes, they have videos, they have social media communications. But the defense is going to be, it doesn’t sound like what it means, it doesn’t mean what it sounds like.”

“When you have an insider, particularly one in leadership who says let me tell what you that conversation was about and let me tell you what happened in conversations that weren’t captured, it really puts a dent in the defense’s ability to try to reinterpret those,” he elaborated.

‘If you’re the other Proud Boys or people on this, are you more nervous than yesterday?” co-host John Berman pressed.

“Yes, you are,” Miller stated. “And it just creates a different challenge for the defense. Now the defense has to make a liar out of Bortino if they’re going to dent his credibility.”

Watch below or at this link.

Ex-Oath Keeper testifies that leader Stewart Rhodes said he was in contact with Trump Secret Service

A former Oath Keepers member testified Thursday that he believed group founder Stewart Rhodes was in contact with a Secret Service agent.

John Zimmerman told jurors that Rhodes, who’s on trial for seditious conspiracy, claimed at a September 2020 rally to have the phone number of someone with the Secret Service who was in contact with former president Donald Trump.

Zimmerman testified that he didn’t know whether Rhodes had a connection to Trump, whom he tried to speak with directly by phone the night of the Jan. 6 insurrection, according to another Oath Keeper militant who pleaded guilty seditious conspiracy in May.

William Todd Wilson told a federal court earlier this year that he joined Rhodes at a hotel near the U.S. Capitol shortly after the deadly attack and listened as the militia group’s leader called a Trump intermediary on speakerphone but was denied.

“[Rhodes] repeatedly implore the individual to tell President Trump to call upon groups like the Oath Keepers to forcibly oppose a transfer of power,” Wilson said in his guilty plea.

Zimmerman testified Thursday that Rhodes believed in November 2020 that the former president would invoke the Insurrection Act to handle a “rogue government.”

“Kind of like what we’re going through now,” Zimmerman testified, “with Congress just seeming to do whatever they want.”

Rhodes called the person Zimmerman believed to be his Secret Service contact during a Trump rally in Fayetteville, North Carolina, in September 2020 to ask what “parameters we could operate under,” the former Oath Keepers member testified.

Herschel Walker, Donald Trump, and the Christian right’s long, slow self-destruction

I almost feel sorry for Herschel Walker. He is so clearly unfit for the job of United States senator that it’s uncomfortable to watch him flounder about, unable to coherently answer even the simplest questions or offer any reasons why he should be one of the most powerful people in government. He was a star athlete, forever to be revered by college football fans, and now he’s just a pathetic tool of cynical politicians, particularly, of course, Donald Trump. Still, Walker willingly allowed himself to be used and that’s on him.

Once again we see the shamelessness of the Republican Party and the rank hypocrisy of the conservative evangelical Christians who form its strongest base. They’re sticking with Walker no matter what, with ludicrous excuses that wouldn’t pass theological muster in a fourth-grade Sunday school class.

There was a time when conservative Christian morality was considered the backbone of American society and everyone in politics was obliged to genuflect to their leadership, regardless of party. This week, as the latest Walker scandal unfolded, I was reminded of the hysteria that engulfed American politics in the 1990s when right-wing Christians spent eight long years in a frenzy over the immoral, draft-dodging, womanizing, lying baby-boomer president, Bill Clinton. (They didn’t much care for his feminazi wife either.) From the Christian right’s point of view Bill and Hillary Clinton personified the sexual revolution, which they claimed was sending the country straight to hell.

Right-wing Christians spent eight years in a frenzy over the immoral, draft-dodging, womanizing, lying president. But not the one who immediately comes to mind.

Over and over again they bellowed that “character matters” and when the Monica Lewinsky scandal hit, offering proof of Clinton’s perfidy, they went into overdrive. Televangelist Pat Robertson told 3,000 cheering members of the Christian Coalition, that Clinton had turned the White House into a “playpen for the sexual freedom of the poster child of the 1960s” and solemnly declared that “our national trust has been deeply wounded.” Focus on the Family’s James Dobson sent a letter to 2.4 million conservative Christians insisting that Clinton should be impeached because his behavior was setting a bad example for “the children” and bemoaning the lack of moral among the millions of Americans who saw through the right’s hypocritical crusade. 

Clinton, as we know, survived that impeachment but the power of the Christian right was actually strengthened. The conventional wisdom after George W. Bush’s dubious Electoral College win in 2000 was that the Democrats had lost because Americans were disgusted by their general immorality. Abortion once again became the issue that illustrated that most clearly with middle-path Democrats dominating the conversation and wringing their hands over the supposed need to “reach out” to “pro-life” voters or face permanent political exile. Op-eds with headlines like “Why Pro-Choice Is a Bad Choice for Democrats” proliferated and voters had to endure endless discussions of the “God gap.”

Cowed by this criticism, many Democrats labored to avoid any kind of confrontation over the issue. It came to a head during negotiations over the Affordable Care Act when “pro-life” Democrats, with the help of the same pearl-clutching pundits, carried the day. Abortion coverage was not required and the odious Hyde Amendment, banning abortion coverage under Medicaid, was not repealed. The conservative Christians still hated Obamacare, of course, but they had proved they still had clout.


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Then along came Donald Trump, the very personification of everything the Christian right had railed against for years. He was an inveterate philanderer who’d been married three times with one of his children even born out of wedlock. He bragged incessantly about his sexual exploits, lied compulsively about everything and literally ran gambling houses (including the nation’s first casino strip club.) He cavorted with the likes of Hugh Hefner and appeared in a softcore porn movie. As we know, he has been credibly accused of sexually assaulting dozens of women and was caught on tape bragging about impulsively grabbing women’s crotches and getting away with it.

And the Christian right couldn’t possibly have loved him more. In fact, they were his most ardent supporters in 2016, and remain so today. All that talk about how leaders must exhibit personal morality was forgotten in favor of a ruthless pragmatism they make no effort to conceal. They just want to win by any means necessary and worship power for power’s sake. 

Herschel Walker’s case illustrates this even better than Trump. In the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade, which hit this midterm campaign like an 8.0 earthquake, Walker has been accused of paying for a woman’s abortion while professing to support a ban on abortion with no exceptions. Politico reported that Walker’s Christian supporters couldn’t care less, quoting one pastor saying, “The dilemma is, do you wait for a candidate who is perfect? Or do you take what’s given to you and make the choice between the options?” 

I think we can safely say that Democrats no longer need to listen to the religious right’s pompous braying about “character,” or to lend them any credence on moral issues.

That’s very pragmatic, which is fair enough. But I think we can safely say that Democrats no longer need to listen to the religious right’s pompous braying about “character” and have absolutely no obligation to give them any credence when it comes to morals and values. They are political actors, doing what political actors do. And we know they’re religious phonies too: Look  at what happens to those who refuse to go along, like theologian Russell Moore, a former leading figure in the Southern Baptist Convention who quit rather than continue to support the moral rot at the heart of his organization, which includes a cult-like devotion to Donald Trump. The contrast couldn’t be more obvious.

A new report from the Pew Research Center shows that the Christian majority in America is rapidly fading and may become a clear minority, perhaps as little as a third of the population, over the next 50 years or so. One big reason why that’s happening is because many young people are leaving Christian denominations in large numbers in favor of no religion at all, with no guarantee that they’ll switch back as they get older. It’s impossible not to conclude that the rank hypocrisy of the Christian right, which has been granted such a prominent role in religious and moral leadership for the past 40 years, is repulsive to people who actually have principles and ideals. If that collapse comes to pass, it’s almost certainly a good thing for America — and the Christian right only has itself to blame for sowing the seeds of its own demise. 

Experts say DOJ claim that Trump still hoarding classified docs is a “major step toward indictment”

The Justice Department believes that former President Donald Trump may still be withholding documents he took from the White House even after the FBI raided his Mar-a-Lago residence in August, according to multiple reports.

DOJ counterintelligence chief Jay Bratt in recent weeks told Trump’s lawyers that the department believes he “has not returned all the documents,” according to The New York Times, which added that investigators “remain skeptical” that Trump has been fully cooperative with their efforts to recover documents that are legally required to be turned over to the National Archives.

Bratt and other officials have “demanded” that Trump specifically return any outstanding documents marked classified, according to CNN.

Prosecutors have already suggested in court documents that additional documents may be missing. The DOJ last month raised questions about what happened to the contents of 43 empty classified document folders the FBI seized from Mar-a-Lago.

After Trump-appointed Judge Aileen Cannon appointed a special master to review the documents and halted the criminal investigation into the handling of the materials, the DOJ warned that the order would “impede efforts to identify the existence of any additional classified records that are not being properly stored – which itself presents the potential for ongoing risk to national security.”

Prosecutors appealed the decision, telling an appeals court that the order prevented the FBI from taking steps that “could lead to identification of other records still missing.”

The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta ultimately overturned Cannon’s order barring the DOJ from using about 100 seized documents marked classified in their probe, agreeing with the DOJ that Cannon has “abused” her authority. The court is also expected to rule on the DOJ’s appeal that could grant them access to all of the documents tied up in the special master review. Trump, meanwhile, has appealed to the Supreme Court to allow the special master to review the 100 documents marked classified first.


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The pressure from the DOJ has caused a “rift” among Trump’s legal team, according to the Times. Some members, including attorney Chris Kise, have advocated a “cooperative approach,” according to the report, urging the former president to bring in a third-party firm to search for additional documents. Trump initially agreed to go along with Kise’s advice to bring in a forensic firm to conduct a search. But other members, who urged a more “combative” approach, “won out,” according to the Times. Kise, who was paid a $3 million retainer, has since been sidelined just weeks after joining Trump’s team.

It’s unclear which of Trump’s properties the DOJ believes the former president may still be hoarding documents and it’s unknown whether the department plans to take steps to find them. The DOJ could try to obtain a subpoena or another search warrant, or push for Trump to affirm under oath that he returned all of the documents, according to the Times.

“They could say to the court that in lieu of seeking a search warrant we’re bringing this to the court,” national security attorney Bob Litt told the outlet. “The goal is to get Trump to go on the record because he has a history of saying things out of court that he won’t go on the record for.”

Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti tweeted that a “smart lawyer” would try to negotiate a deal to “avoid charges.”

“Holding onto additional classified materials is exactly the opposite of what someone under federal criminal investigation should be doing,” he wrote. “Trump is daring the DOJ to charge him.”

Ryan Goodman, a New York University law professor, agreed that “this may help force the Justice Department’s hand toward an indictment.”

Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe told CNN that the report suggests that the DOJ is “closing in on indicting Donald Trump” under the Espionage Act and for obstruction of justice in both a national security inquiry and a criminal investigation. Tribe also raised concerns that the DOJ has said that some of the secret documents at Mar-a-Lago could put human sources at risk.

“There are people whose lives are at stake if their identity has been revealed in some of these top-secret documents, which clearly were marked ‘human source.’ They were marked to indicate that they would reveal the identity or location of, basically, American spies abroad,” Tribe said. “They were marked signals intelligence. So this is very serious. And what I take these recent revelations to mean is that shortly after the midterm elections, indictments are likely to start flying.”

A disability program promised to lift people from poverty. Instead, it left many homeless

After two months of sleeping in the Salvation Army Center of Hope homeless shelter, Margaret Davis has had no luck finding an apartment she can afford.

The 55-year-old grandmother receives about $750 a month from the federal government. She’s trying to live on just $50 cash and $150 in food stamps each month so she can save enough for a place to call home.

Davis is homeless even though she receives funds from the Supplemental Security Income program, a hard-to-get federal benefit that was created nearly 50 years ago to lift out of poverty Americans who are older, blind, or disabled.

Davis’ job options are limited because she gets dialysis treatment three times a week for kidney failure. As she prepared to spend another night in the crowded shelter, she checked her phone to see whether a doctor wanted her to have her left leg amputated.

“My therapist is trying to help me stay positive but sometimes I just want to end this life and start over,” Davis said.

Falling into homelessness is not a new issue for people who receive supplemental income from the Social Security Administration. But moving recipients out of shelters, crime-ridden motels, and tent encampments and into stable housing has been getting harder, according to nonprofit attorneys, advocates for people with disabilities, and academic researchers.

Rapidly rising rents and inflation deserve a share of the blame.

But SSI recipients, activists, and others said the issue underscores for them how the program itself locks millions of people into housing instability and deep poverty even as President Joe Biden promises to fix it.

“We are trapping people in a place where dignity is out of reach,” said Rebecca Vallas, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, a progressive think tank that conducts research on economic equity. “The program started with good intentions,” she said. “It is hard for me to see this as anything but willful neglect.”

In a country where roughly 1 in 4 residents live with some type of disability, supplemental income is meant to ensure that the most vulnerable can get housing and other basic needs. Most SSI recipients automatically qualify for Medicaid, a joint federal and state program that covers medical costs for people with low incomes.

In addition to people who are blind or who are 65 or older, those who prove they have a medical condition that prevents them from working for at least one year are eligible for a monthly payment from SSI, which maxes out at $841. But there’s a catch that makes seeing a better financial future difficult for people like Davis. The monetary benefit decreases if the person earns more than $85 a month in additional income. And both the income and Medicaid benefits are revoked if the person saves more than $2,000, which critics say discourages people from saving.

The amount that recipients receive has not kept pace with rising rent prices, advocacy groups say.

The amount of money Davis said she gets each month from the program is about $60 more than the maximum amount offered 10 years ago, when she first started receiving the benefit. Yet the average apartment in Charlotte, where Davis lives, now rents for $1,500 a month, about 70% more than it did nearly a decade ago, according to Zumper, which has been tracking rental prices since 2014.

There’s no chance she can afford her dream: an apartment or house in a safe neighborhood where she can spend afternoons crocheting. “I don’t like to talk like this, but I am not sure what’s going to happen to me,” Davis said.

When Congress created SSI in 1972, the legislation promised that recipients “would no longer have to subsist on below-poverty-level incomes.”

Today, nearly 8 million people rely on the federal program for income.

Over the past five decades, Congress under both Republican and Democratic leadership has declined to make major changes to the program. The $85 outside income limit, for instance, has never been adjusted to account for inflation.

The Social Security Administration, which oversees the program, did not respond to multiple requests for comment about how the rates are set.

Biden committed to reforming SSI during his 2020 presidential campaign, saying that he would “protect and strengthen economic security for people with disabilities.”

But for seven months, Delisa Williams has been stuck in the same homeless shelter as Davis. Diabetes, hypertension, and osteoporosis have left her body weakened, and the stress of living in the Salvation Army Center of Hope is taking a toll on her mental health.

Williams’ only real chance to get out had been the combined $881 she got each month from SSI and the Social Security Disability Insurance program, which has similar limits and requirements. She quickly realized that would not be enough to afford the rent for most places.

“God will see me through,” she said. “He didn’t bring me this far for nothing.”

Among developed nations, the United States is one of the hardest places for people to meet the criteria for disability payments, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, a global intergovernmental group the U.S. helped create to advance social well-being.

If a person applies for disability income, they can wait months or even years to get benefits. Thousands go broke or die while waiting for help. A data analysis by the U.S. Government Accountability Office found that from 2014 to 2019, about 48,000 people filed for bankruptcy while trying to get a final decision on a disability appeal. The same report said that from 2008 to 2019 more than 100,000 people died waiting.

The situation was made worse during the covid-19 pandemic because the Social Security Administration closed more than 1,200 field offices across the nation and kept them shuttered for roughly two years.

That decision left hundreds of thousands of needy people unable to seek benefits, since phone lines were jammed with calls and the agency provides no way to submit applications online, said David Weaver, a former associate commissioner for research, demonstration, and employment support at the Social Security Administration.

“The number of SSI awards just collapsed,” Weaver said.

Homeless shelters and other nonprofits often help clients apply for the supplemental income in hopes that the money will help get them a place to live. Rachael Mason, a social worker at the Triune Mercy Center in Greenville, South Carolina, has learned to temper people’s expectations.

“Any time someone shows up and says I want to pursue housing, my heart drops a little bit,” Mason said. “I have to be honest and tell them it could be a year to three years. Even if someone wants to just rent a room in a house, it could take up their entire check.”

As the 50th anniversary of SSI approaches this fall, Congress is deciding whether to make changes to the program.

In an April 2021 letter to Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, more than 40 lawmakers lobbied them to raise cash benefits above the poverty level, increase the amount of money recipients can save, and eliminate reductions for taking help from loved ones, among other changes. “People with disabilities and older adults receiving SSI represent some of the most marginalized members of our society,” the letter said. “History will not forgive us if we fail to address their needs in the recovery effort.”

A group of Republican and Democratic legislators have now proposed the SSI Savings Penalty Elimination Act, which would raise the asset limit for recipients from $2,000 to $10,000 for individuals and from $3,000 to $20,000 for couples.

Davis, the woman whose leg might be amputated, is trying to remain hopeful. She started seeing a therapist to cope with depression. She stopped smoking to save money for an apartment.

Asked when she might be able to move out of the shelter, she said, “I don’t know.”


KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

Political warlord Trump now targets his enemies — and Mitch is first on the list

Donald Trump aspires to be a warlord. He publicly admires despots, tyrants and other authoritarian leaders who kill their enemies and take away the rights of anyone who oppose them. Mental health professionals have repeatedly warned that Donald Trump is likely a sociopath with an erotic attraction to violence and mayhem.

He has repeatedly shown that he has no regard for the rule of law, democracy, human rights or other restrictions on his behavior. He encourages his followers and allies to engage in acts of terrorism and other violence on his behalf. The most notable example came, of course, on Jan. 6, 2021. To this point, Trump has been limited by his cowardice. He prefers to have others engage in violence on his behalf instead of directly ordering such acts or participating in them himself.

Matters are now in flux. Trump is under investigation by the Department of Justice and other law enforcement agencies, and may face serious consequences for his lawbreaking for the first time. As George Conway described in a recent conversation with Salon, Trump is ready to lash out:

Trump is basically a cornered animal. He’s got all these legal proceedings bearing down on him. In addition, he is losing his touch and his connection to his public, because his act has become very tiresome. That explains why Trump is embracing the QAnon conspiracy. He’s doing that because of his narcissism: He’s feeling attacked, and for the first time in his life, he is facing real consequences for his actions. The DOJ and other investigations have caused Trump to suffer a narcissistic injury. …

Trump is in a downward psychological, emotional and physical spiral. His embrace of QAnon shows how extreme his deterioration is. But here is the problem for the rest of us: Donald Trump is not going to go away immediately. He is going to try to use the electoral process, and threats of violence, to regain power and influence. Then Trump will say that he can’t control what people do because they are so angry at how he is being treated by Joe Biden, Merrick Garland, the DOJ, the various prosecutors and judges, the news media and so on. Trump is going to make things much worse in this country before things finally get better.

Ultimately, as Donald Trump becomes more desperate, he will reveal more of his true self: a violent predator who will almost always attack instead of retreating or otherwise surrendering. Last Saturday, Donald Trump took one more step on this journey when he threatened the life of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. On his social media platform Truth Social, Trump accused McConnell of having a “death wish” because he has (on a few specific occasions) supported legislation sponsored by Democrats. Trump also used a racial slur to describe McConnell’s wife, former Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, calling her “his China loving wife, Coco Chow!”

Political scientist Brian Klaas, author of “The Despot’s Apprentice: Donald Trump’s Attack on Democracy,” wrote on Twitter that Trump’s threats were “[t]otally detached from reality, inciting political violence — putting a target on a senior member of the U.S. Senate — and a new racist nickname. We can’t just pretend this isn’t happening, because these posts are radicalizing more and more extremists every day.”

In a recent interview with MSNBC, Mary Trump, who is a clinical psychologist as well as Donald Trump’s niece, and author of the family memoir “Too Much and Never Enough,” offered this ominous and direct warning: “Everything Donald has done is a prelude to worse things to come.”

As usual, the mainstream media largely avoids covering Trump’s threats with the seriousness they demand. Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin observed that neither McConnell himself nor other senior Republicans have even condemned Trump’s statement:

That’s the state of today’s MAGA movement, where decency toward fellow Americans, loyalty to one’s spouse and support for democratic values all take a back seat to cult worship and the unquenchable thirst for power. And once again, the mainstream media is failing to rise to the moment.

One might expect the media to stop treating Republicans like normal politicians after their “big lie” about a stolen election, their ongoing whitewashing of the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol, their attacks on the FBI and their indifference — if not assent — to racism. Alas, there is little sign that mainstream outlets have dropped their addiction to false equivalence and willful, moral blindness….

These and countless other interviews illustrate the urgent need to reimagine coverage of the GOP. Refusing to confront and expose MAGA Republicans’ betrayal of democratic values doesn’t make members of the media “balanced.” It makes them enablers.

Donald Trump’s aspiration to warlord status is guided by his malicious gifts as an entrepreneur of violence. In an interview with Salon in March, political scientist Barbara Walter, who is the author of the book “How Civil Wars Start: And How to Stop Them,” explained this concept:

One of the challenges that violent extremists have is how to expand their base of support. If they don’t expand their support base, they just remain fringe movements forever. One way is to provoke a harsh government response. Let’s say that there are peaceful protests, but then there are provocateurs there who try to get the police to open fire or to bash a few heads. Violence entrepreneurs will use those actions as evidence that the police or the government or the opposition are evil and intent on crushing them.

That tactic is often successful in radicalizing at least some portion of average citizens. It pushes them towards the extremists. Donald Trump is what I would describe as an “ethnic entrepreneur.” He and his loyalists want to regain power. He is an autocrat. Trump has no interest in ruling democratically. But Trump is not going to get that power back without the support of the average white American. This means that Donald Trump has to convince them somehow that his is a worthy cause to defend.

Understanding Trump and the Republican-fascist movement requires a broader sense of their social and political context, which in turn renders their behavior both predictable and readily understandable rather than something “shocking” or “surprising” and therefore unknowable. For the most part, the mainstream news media has refused to use such a framework, which would require some candid discussion of the fact that the Republican Party and its supporters no longer support democracy.  For most of the media, that’s an existential challenge they are not willing to consider.

Beginning with his 2015 campaign and then throughout his presidency and beyond, Trump has used the technique known as stochastic terrorism to incite violence against his designated enemies. At his rallies and other events Trump has urged his followers to attack protesters. He wanted the U.S. military to crush the civic dissent that took place across the country in response to the police murder of George Floyd in 2020. His regime created a concentration camp system where nonwhite migrants and refugees were imprisoned in violation of their civil and human rights.

Borrowing from language used by the Nazis and other fascist regimes, Trump attacks the free press as “enemies of the people” in an attempt to intimidate journalists into silence.


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Trump has repeatedly threatened Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden and other prominent Democrats with prison or worse. Republicans he deems disloyal (such as Rep. Liz Cheney or former Vice President Mike Pence) have also been subjected to his violent threats and wanton disregard for their safety.

As president, Trump praised right-wing paramilitaries, white supremacists and other street thugs as “very fine people.” His administration maintained an arm’s-length friendship with right-wing paramilitaries and other violent extremists. During the 2020 campaign, Trump refused to condemn those groups — and after that election they played an integral role in his coup attempt and the Capitol attack.

Trump has suggested several times that his followers will descend upon majority Black and brown “Democrat-controlled” cities if he is indicted for his many apparent crimes. He has made barely-veiled threats against Attorney General Merrick Garland and the FBI, implying that he only can save the country from the violence and mayhem that will occur if he is prosecuted.

Trump’s acolytes are often even more explicit with their threats of violence then he is.

During Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene‘s speech at Trump’s rally last Saturday, she claimed that “Democrats want Republicans dead, and they have already started the killings.” President Biden, she said, “has declared every freedom-loving American an enemy of the state…. We will take back our country from the communists who have stolen it and want us to disappear.”

These are of course inflammatory lies, based in projection and inversion. As the House Jan. 6 hearings have revealed, Trump envisioned a crescendo to the Jan. 6 uprising, perhaps with him personally arriving at the Capitol amid the mayhem and destruction to declare himself an American Caesar.

Trump has continued to embrace the antisemitic QAnon conspiracy cult, with its threats of revolutionary violence and destruction. QAnon believers claim that the “Storm” will return Trump to power, and along the way there will be mass executions of “global elites” and their agents, a laundry list of villains that includes all leading Democrats, numerous Hollywood celebrities, liberal donors and the supposedly sinister forces of antifa, Black Lives Matter, and the gay and lesbian rights movement.  

Trump’s escalating threats of violence fit disturbingly well with the model of eliminationism and genocide seen before in Nazi Germany, Yugoslavia and Rwanda.

Most concerning is how Trump’s threats of political violence also fit the model of eliminationism and genocide seen in such countries as Rwanda, Yugoslavia and Nazi Germany. The human rights organization Genocide Watch warns that genocide “develops in 10 stages that are predictable but not inexorable. At each stage, preventive measures can stop it. The process is not linear. Stages occur simultaneously. Each stage is itself a process…. As societies develop more and more genocidal processes, they get nearer to genocide. But all stages continue to operate throughout the process”:

  • Classification — The differences between people are not respected. There’s a division of ‘us’ and ‘them’ which can be carried out using stereotypes, or excluding people who are perceived to be different.
  • Symbolization — This is a visual manifestation of hatred. Jews in Nazi Europe were forced to wear yellow stars to show that they were “different.”
  • Discrimination  The dominant group denies civil rights or even citizenship to identified groups. The 1935 Nuremberg Laws stripped Jews of their German citizenship, made it illegal for them to do many jobs or to marry German non-Jews.
  • Dehumanization — Those perceived as “different” are treated with no form of human rights or personal dignity. During the Genocide in Rwanda, Tutsis were referred to as “cockroaches”; the Nazis referred to Jews as “vermin.”
  • Organization — Genocides are always planned. Regimes of hatred often train those who go on to carry out the destruction of a people.
  • Polarization – Propaganda begins to be spread by hate groups. The Nazis used the newspaper Der Stürmer to spread and incite messages of hate about Jewish people.
  • Preparation — Perpetrators plan the genocide. They often use euphemisms such as the Nazis’ phrase “the Final Solution” to cloak their intentions. They create fear of the victim group, building up armies and weapons.
  • Persecution — Victims are identified because of their ethnicity or religion and death lists are drawn up. People are sometimes segregated into ghettos, deported or starved and property is often expropriated. Genocidal massacres begin.
  • Extermination — The hate group murders their identified victims in a deliberate and systematic campaign of violence. Millions of lives have been destroyed or changed beyond recognition through genocide.
  • Denial — The perpetrators or later generations deny the existence of any crime.

America is further along that path than most of us are willing to admit. In the same interview quoted above, Barbara Walter warned that Donald Trump and retired Gen. Michael Flynn “are preaching violence,” not through code words but direct statements: 

You can quote them on it. If you read what they are saying, it is shocking. Yet few people seem to know about it. If I were to show what Trump and Flynn are saying, their actual words, to the average American, they would say, “You’re making that up, it can’t be true.” Thus we have a situation where these things are happening, but the information is not being shared with the general public, or if they are hearing what is happening then it is being distorted or not fully represented in a way that leaves most Americans ignorant of what is really going on.

Historically, the side that wants to do these horrible things and put themselves in a position of power, to lead a dictatorship or start a “race war” or commit acts of genocide — for example, to kill all the Jews in Europe — will spend a lot of time investing in propaganda because they understand that if they can control the narrative they can control the average citizen. That is exactly what is happening now in the United States. 

Aspiring warlord Donald Trump has told America and the world exactly what he and his movement intend to do. Unfortunately, the mainstream news media and other hope-peddlers have deluded themselves into thinking that it’s all a misunderstanding or harmless hyperbole. We should take Trump at his word. On these issues, he does not prevaricate or tell lies. It will do no good to protest that you couldn’t possibly have known. We all knew this was coming, and now it’s here.

Glenn Greenwald’s bromance with Alex Jones: New low for a onetime Pulitzer winner

Conspiratorial radio host Alex Jones faces potentially significant financial damages for his defamation of Sandy Hook parents, creating a rare moment of mostly bipartisan comity as commentators on the right and the left have joined together in celebrating the verdict. 

Jones spent nearly a decade attacking some parents of the 20 children, aged of six and seven, who were murdered in the massacre on Dec. 14, 2012, calling them “crisis actors” and alleging that the shooting was staged. He only recanted after the parents brought lawsuits, a sequence of events similar to his eventual apology to Chobani after the yogurt manufacturer filed suit over wild conspiracy theories he spread about it. Dealing with a huge toll of psychological abuse, the Sandy Hook parents took Jones to court to stop him from defaming them and their children and in hopes of levying a financial burden on him so great that he would stop such behavior altogether. 

It seemed everyone had a comment to make on the $45.2 million in damages Jones was ordered to pay in August. “Alex Jones is fucked,” tweeted liberal commentator Jon Cooper. Media mogul Joshua Tolopsky said it was “small consolation to already devastated parents who’ve been tortured by this maniac and his stupid followers for years but a good start. Alex Jones is the textbook definition of a cancer on society.” The result was “cathartic,” declared conservative writer Charlie Sykes. And Salon’s Amanda Marcotte reminded people that “Alex Jones is in trouble because he defamed the parents of murdered children. People whose only ”crime’ was enduring a horror that most of us cannot even begin to imagine.” 

One voice, notably, was absent — that of the usually talkative right-wing commentator Glenn Greenwald (a former Salon columnist), who in earlier days had been highly critical of Jones and his Infowars network. But times have changed. 

*  *  *

The verdict put Greenwald in a difficult position. Only a few weeks earlier, he had conducted a softball interview with Jones on stage at the Austin, Texas, world premiere of a new documentary about the provocative conspiracy theorist, “Alex’s War.” 

Greenwald described Alex Jones as “disturbingly handsome in a very mainstream, normal way,” suggesting he could have been an “Anderson Cooper type” but chose “the path of misfits and outcasts.” 

Greenwald opened the event by asking Jones about his decision to take the path of conspiracy theory rather than traditional media, in almost effusive terms. Greenwald asking Jones how, as someone who was “disturbingly handsome in a very mainstream, normal way” with “natural charisma,” he chose the noble path of independence from mainstream media narratives. 

“I think you clearly, had you been someone who was willing to affirm rather than question establishment pieties, could have ended up as like a meteorologist on ‘Good Morning America,’ or some Anderson Cooper type,” Greenwald gushed. “I’m wondering if you were aware of that potential, and purposefully chose to reject it for a different path — the path of misfits and outcasts that we’re surrounded by, delightfully — or whether it was so natural to your personality that you never even considered trying to pursue that kind of mainstream acceptability.”

Later, Greenwald asked about Jones’ treatment of the Sandy Hook parents. As a parent himself — something he brings up regularly during political arguments — Greenwald might have been expected to take a hard line against Jones’s years-long harassment campaign aimed at grieving parents. But Greenwald rejected this approach, declaring, “I’m not going to jump through hoops in order to appease people angry that I’m here.” Rather, Greenwald wanted to know how Jones came to the realization he was wrong about the massacre. 

“We watched you in the film come very clean about the fact that you made statements that turned out to be untrue,” Greenwald said. “You’ve obviously spent a lot of reflective time. It’s like the soulful Alex Jones we got to see in the last part of the film. What is it that you think caused you to do that?”

Given the lawsuits and potential for financial catastrophe, Jones’ motivations for apologizing were not likely “reflective” or evidence of a more “soulful” side of his personality, but based in pure self-interest. Greenwald’s doe-eyed stance of gullibility strains credulity. And in his current incarnation, it’s highly unlikely that Greenwald would display the same overly charitable reaction to someone on the left making such a calculated move.  

*  *  *

The disconnect between Greenwald’s prior comments and positions and what he asserts today is at its most evident with respect to Jones and Infowars. On numerous occasions in the past, Greenwald has used the conspiracy theorist and his website as examples of taking anti-establishment thinking too far. Infowars was, for a long time, a catchall in Greenwald’s lexicon for preposterous conspiracy theories. 

In 2018, Greenwald agreed with Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., that Jones was “crazy” in a tweet, while suggesting, not without merit, that Rubio was as well. Greenwald in 2019 noted: “The idea that Putin controls Trump and the U.S. Government through hidden blackmail power is as deranged, mindless, stupid, and unhinged as anything Alex Jones has ever advocated.” On multiple occasions, Greenwald suggested that Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe, who reacted to Trump by occasionally diving into liberal conspiracy theories, should get a job with Infowars, meaning that evidence of how far Tribe had gone down the rabbit hole. Susan Rice’s claim that Russia was behind the Black Lives Matter movement was “fucking lunacy — conspiratorial madness of the worst kind,” Greenwald tweeted in 2020, adding that it was “Infowars-level junk.”


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Greenwald also used Infowars as a counter to claims that his decision to appear on Fox News was a major mistake, telling journalist Sam Sacks in 2019 that “I don’t see Alex Jones and Fox as being the same, nor, more importantly, do I see the Alex Jones audience as the same as the Fox audience in terms of receptiveness to ideas.”

But in 2021, after social media companies united to ban Jones from their platforms, Greenwald began hailing the conspiracist as something of a hero who had been unfairly smeared. He claimed that Jones and Milo Yiannopoulos, a notorious troll and bigot, had been “de-personed” by their bans, implying that some great anti-free-speech crime had been committed against them. 

*  *  *

Toadying to the far right is no longer new for Greenwald. He’s been genuflecting at the altar of Fox News for nearly two years, hyping up the conservative channel and its ratings leader Tucker Carlson, on whom Greenwald relies to get on prime-time TV. Greenwald’s comments about Fox have changed over time, becoming more positive in direct correlation to his appearances on the network. At this point, Greenwald regularly acts as a cheerleader for the network, boasting about its ratings and often galloping in to defend Carlson from critics on the left. 

This year, Greenwald has leaned even further to the right. In July, at starboard libertarian conference FreedomFest, Greenwald appeared on a panel alongside social conservative Erick Erickson, a virulent anti-LGBT bigot who was not criticized by Greenwald, who is gay. Nor did Greenwald bring up Erickson’s long history of racist remarks; if he had, he might have quoted what a Salon columnist named Glenn Greenwald wrote in 2010, noting that Erickson had “sent around the most rancid and arguably racist tweets, only to thereafter be hired as a CNN contributor.” All seemed forgiven once they were onstage together. 

For a while, it appeared that Greenwald would continue to provoke liberals while slowly pushing his own Overton window slowly to the right, one Fox News appearance at a time. But lately, the momentum has been accelerating. Increasingly, Greenwald appears to be  living mostly in a bubble where his main interaction with critics comes on Twitter. It’s little wonder that this eventually landed him next to Alex Jones, giving the notorious conspiracy theorist an obsequious softball interview. It’s the newest low in a career increasingly defined by new lows. 

Ted Cruz ripped for continuing to support Herschel Walker

On Thursday’s edition of MSNBC’s “The Beat,” anchor Ari Melber tore into Senate Republicans for standing by scandal-plagued NFL veteran and Georgia Senate candidate Herschel Walker — and focused in particular on Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), who couldn’t even confront reporters’ question directly about whether he believed Walker was innocent of the allegations.

Walker, who is running against Democratic Sen. Rev. Raphael Warnock, allegedly paid for an abortion for a woman he impregnated, and had a separate child with. And the revelation was immediately followed up by his son, right-wing social media activist Christian Walker, calling his father a liar and accusing him of neglecting, abusing, and threatening deadly violence against his family.

“It would appear Republicans are worried that the facts show that Mr. Walker did pay for this abortion, which, as mentioned, contradicts their entire set of rules they want to install in America for everyone else,” said Melber. “So here’s how they’re dealing with it.” He played several clips of Republicans defending Walker — the last one being of Cruz.

“This is an effort by Democrats to hold onto power,” Cruz said. “Do you stand by Herschel Walker?” a reporter asked Cruz. To which he replied, “I believe Herschel Walker is going to be the next senator, I’m proud to support Herschel Walker.”

“You heard Senator Cruz: when asked if he believed, he said, I believe he’ll be the next senator, which is not even claiming to weigh in on this moral issue, which is this individual has evidence — as several sources show whether he did pay for this abortion,” said Melber. “So, we are just weeks away from the midterms. You have Republicans struggling to deal with what they have called a moral issue. Or just claiming that it’s all a lie.”

“We’ve shown you the facts,” said Melber. “People will decide for themselves how to weigh this evidence. And they’re also — this is interesting. Goes well beyond the Georgia scandal or the Georgia hypocrisy. They’re dodging the question, more broadly of what they’re running on, which is banning abortion for everyone.

Watch below or at this link.

Liz Cheney is worried about Arizona’s GOP candidates

Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.) is expressing concern about the Republican candidates running for governor and secretary of state in Arizona as she believes they are a major risk to democracy.

Speaking at an event organized by the McCain Institute at Arizona State University, Cheney weighed in on Arizona candidates Kari Lake and Mark Finchem. According to Cheney, they are leading the pack of Republican candidates that may not accept unfavorable election results.

“In Arizona today you have a candidate for governor in Kari Lake, you have a candidate for Secretary of State in Mark Finchem, both of whom have said — this isn’t a surprise, it’s not a secret — they both said that they will only honor the results of an election if they agree with it,” Cheney told the audience of college students.

Cheney noted that both candidates witnessed what transpired following the 2020 presidential election where Trump lost in the state of Arizona. Although the election results were legitimate, that didn’t stop the fight to overturn the outcome.

“They’ve looked at all of that, the law, the facts and the rulings, the courts, and they’ve said it doesn’t matter to them,” Cheney said. “And if you care about democracy, and you care about the survival of our republic, then you need to understand, we all have to understand, that we cannot give people power who have told us that they will not honor elections.”

The Wyoming lawmaker went on to emphasize why this time period is so critical in America. Although there have been other bouts throughout United States history, democracy has never been under attack like this.

“The first thing that we have to understand is that we’ve never been where we are,” Cheney said. “We’ve never been in a phase, a place where we’re facing this kind of a threat. And that’s because we’re facing a threat from a former president who is attempting to unravel the Republic.”

According to Cheney, the fragility of America’s democracy should be taken seriously. “And I think I knew on some level that even in the United States this was fragile,” she said. “But I certainly didn’t understand just how fragile. I think that’s such an important lesson that we need to take from history.”

She explained the sacrifice required to effectively protect America’s democracy. “And that means that you put your love of country above politics, you put it above your political career,” she said.

Hunter Biden might be charged with some stuff — but not enough stuff to satiate Republicans

President Biden‘s Thursday announcement that he plans to pardon all prior federal offenses of simple marijuana possession was not enough to distract those looking to bring down his son.

While Biden’s step towards decriminalizing marijuana will positively impact thousands who have lost more than could ever be returned for possession of a substance already legal in many states, Hunter Biden’s battles are still in the process of being fought.

According to The Washington Post, federal agents have what they believe to be sufficient evidence to charge Hunter with “tax crimes and a false statement related to a gun purchase,” but will it be enough to satisfy those in opposition of the Biden administration who have been calling for young Biden’s head on a stake for years.

“There is sufficient evidence to charge Hunter Biden with a crime related to his taxes. I’m sure that’s only the tip of the iceberg with Mr. Parmesan,” tweets Lauren Boebert. “He absolutely needs be held accountable.”

“Hunter Biden isn’t getting charged with any crimes. Be serious with that. Have any of you been paying attention to what we’ve become,” says Jesse Kelly, host of ‘I’m Right’ on The First.

“Joe Biden lied about Hunter Biden’s crimes and his involvement — a new Republican controlled Congress must move to impeach him in 2025,” tweets Brigitte Gabriel, Founder & Chairman of ACT For America. 


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The investigation into Hunter Biden first began in 2018 and was used as a sharp tool by Trump and his supporters in his failed run against Joe Biden, and well after his salty loss. Between then and now, Republicans have accused Hunter — and President Biden along with him — of everything short of stealing the moon.

“So the DOJ is going after Hunter Biden for unpaid taxes on Biden Crime Family graft, but they are not going to consider the actual graft itself,” says a Trump supporter on Twitter. “This is like going after Ghislaine Maxwell but giving a pass to the pedophiles!”

“Shame you don’t care about the photos of pedophilia on Hunter laptop or the news that Biden made millions directly from Burisma from Ukraine leaders that you support,” tweets another Trumper

According to The Washington Post’s report on the possible charges, the agents involved in the Hunter investigation knew months ago that they likely had enough evidence to pursue charges. There’s a general feeling that the timing of this information being “leaked” just before November’s midterm elections is curious.

“It is a federal felony for a federal agent to leak information about a Grand Jury investigation such as this one,” Chris Clark, a lawyer for Hunter Biden said in a written statement. “. . .We expect the Department of Justice will diligently investigate and prosecute such bad actors. As is proper and legally required, we believe the prosecutors in this case are diligently and thoroughly weighing not just evidence provided by agents, but also all the other witnesses in this case, including witnesses for the defense. That is the job of the prosecutors. They should not be pressured, rushed, or criticized for doing their job.”

“More often than not, it’s the defense camp leaking info on a criminal investigation,” says LATimes Legal Affairs Columnist Harry Litman. “Not here w/ Hunter Biden though. FBI would never have told them they have enough evidence to indict and it’s been on the US Attorney’s desk “for months.” Leak has to have originated w/ FBI. & timing also stinks.”

Why some evangelical Christians trust their pastors more than their doctors on vaccines

In 2019, a mere three years ago, public health researchers described the “face” of vaccine hesitancy as middle- and upper-class women of a very specific cultural milieu.

“The rebel forces in America’s latest culture war — the so-called anti-vaxxers — are often described as middle- and upper-class women who breast-feed their children, shop at Whole Foods, endlessly scour the web for vaccine-related conversation, and believe that their thinking supersedes that of their doctors,” wrote Alfred Lubrano in the Philadelphia Inquirer, reporting on then-recent studies from government public health agencies. 

How things have changed. Nowadays, the face of vaccine hesitancy is most apt to be a Christian, according to more recent research and polling. The COVID-19 pandemic appears to have shifted cultural opinions on vaccines.

In April 2021, researchers surveyed 2,135 vaccinated registered voters in South Dakota, presenting them with identical messages about COVID guidelines from either a political, religious, or medical leader. Messaging from a religious leader was more effective than the other two, leading the authors to suggest public health professionals “might find it beneficial to coordinate their efforts with leaders in faith communities.”

This is in line with data from Pew Research Center that has found “a relatively high degree of trust in clergy to give advice on the coronavirus vaccines: Fully six-in-ten U.S. congregants (61%) say they have at least ‘a fair amount’ of confidence in their religious leaders to provide reliable guidance about getting a vaccine.” That guidance can swing either positive or negative — some church leaders encourage their flock to get the shots, while others don’t.

Certainly fears that vaccines may be unsafe or developed too quickly are common — but they’re not based on evidence. The bulk of available evidence demonstrates that the COVID-19 vaccines are safe. But where you hear that message matters. For some evangelical Christians, vaccine recommendations from their pastor matter more than their doctor or politicians.

Dr. Jeanine Guidry, a social and behavioral scientist and an associate professor at Virginia Commonwealth University, has focused her research primarily on communication related to vaccines and infectious diseases. “Of course, the past few years, a lot of that has meant COVID-19,” she told Salon in a call.

Some research has found Christian nationalism to be one of the strongest predictors of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy.

“I think this idea of the trusted messenger is a really powerful one,” Guidry says. “Pastors need to be aware that they’re not just having influence on their parishioners’ spiritual life, but also on their physical health.”

Guidry and her colleagues recently published a survey in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health of 531 self-identified evangelical Christians in the U.S. By focusing solely on evangelicals, an identity around 29 percent of Americans associate with, the research aimed to better understand why this group is so vaccine hesitant. Some research has found Christian nationalism to be one of the strongest predictors of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy, compared to, say, Catholics, other religions or atheists.

“If their health care provider had talked to them about getting the vaccine, they were significantly more likely to have gotten the vaccine,” Guidry says of her study. “And the not-so-hopeful thing was that if they talk to their spiritual leader, their faith leader, their congregation leader, they were less likely.”

The survey relied on the Health Belief Model, a widely used tool for understanding the motivation behind health decisions. The results suggests that younger Evangelicals in rural areas with children are in most need of positive vaccine messaging.

“We cannot say that this is representative of all evangelicals,” Guidry explains. “What we can say, though, is that it gives us an indication of what might be the case among evangelicals as a larger group.”

“Communication with them should focus on health beliefs that bolster the perceived benefits of the vaccine, while simultaneously adequately addressing perceived barriers to vaccination,” Guidry and her coauthors wrote, adding that “addressing these health beliefs might be best accomplished through a careful collaboration between public health officials, healthcare providers, and religious leaders.”

However, Guidry emphasizes that this is not a representative sample because it wasn’t random — people chose to respond to the survey, for example. But the data wasn’t meant to be totally characteristic of evangelicals, and instead can be used as a tool to further examine questions about these groups.


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“We cannot say that this is representative of all evangelicals,” Guidry explains. “What we can say, though, is that it gives us an indication of what might be the case among evangelicals as a larger group.”

Meanwhile, public health workers can try to bridge these gaps, and many are already doing this work. Guidry pointed to Facts and Faith Fridays, a partnership between VCU Massey Cancer Center and the African American faith-based community as an example. But changes won’t happen overnight, Guidry cautioned.

“This is not going to happen quickly,” Guidry says. “There needs to be a relationship and that doesn’t form quickly. Relationships take time.”

“Child’s Play” reflects the gendered panic of boys ‘n dolls

One Christmas I lucked out. It was at the height of the Cabbage Patch craze and my parents had warned me that Santa Claus couldn’t deliver everything, like an unprecedented, coveted doll. But Santa was no match for my uncle, who worked at Kmart and hid the last doll in the store (I believe in the gun section, where he worked), which is how I found a red-headed doll in a gingham dress waiting for me one winter morning, soon to be so beloved her cloth limbs grew soft with dirt. I never let my mother wash her for fear she would drown.

Horror films love to dwell on the doll, from “Poltergeist” to Slappy of R. L. Stine’s “Goosebumps.” But many dolls of horror belong to girls. Talky Tina says way too much to a little girl in “The Twilight Zone.” Annabelle first terrorizes orphan girls in “Annabelle: Creation” and later is an unknowing man’s gift to his pregnant wife.

The gold standard of dolls belonging to boys is Chucky. He’s crass. He talks back. He’s got the soul of a dead serial killer, and he crashes with his tiny hammer right into anxieties of the 1980s, especially about gender roles. He’s a doll but he’s also a man, and he’s not going to change anything, especially himself. 

Chucky first blinked out of a cardboard box in 1988’s “Child’s Play.” The hot toy that year in fictionalized Chicago is the Good Guy doll, a large doll with a cloth body, big round plastic face, and shocking red hair. Single mom Karen (the great Catherine Hicks) can’t afford one for her son. That is, until her friend happens upon a “peddler” selling a discounted one from a shopping cart in the alley. The doll for sale looks legitimate, though slightly worse for wear. She makes her son Andy’s (Alex Vincent) birthday by giving it to him. 

But the peddler scavanged the doll from a burned-out toy store where murderer Charles Lee Ray (the legendary Brad Dourif) died, shortly after performing a voodoo spell (stay with me!) to transfer his soul into the doll. You just can’t buy your toys from back alleys anymore.

At first glance, Chucky looks familiar. That giant body (he’s nearly as big as Andy and the scenes of the small boy carrying him are kind of hilarious), those blue overalls and striped shirt — was Chucky based on My Buddy?

No dads protest a boy playing with dolls in “Child’s Play,” in large part because there are no dads around.

Hasbro’s 1985 doll was created specifically to appeal to boys, that untapped doll market, and to teach boys the importance of friends. As The New York Times reported that year, “Hasbro created My Buddy . . . because ‘little boys have a soft side just like little girls,’ said Stephen Schwartz, senior vice president of marketing. But before going into full production on the toy, the company interviewed parents —particularly fathers — to insure that they did not reject the idea of boys playing with dolls.”

Yes, a friendship-focused doll can be controversial so better ask Dad. Yet My Buddy proved so successful, a companion doll was introduced, marketed to that old standby: girls. My sister and I both longed for but did not receive Kid Sister (my sister did have a terrifying Cabbage Patch that chewed, and more than a few kids lost hair that way). Note the pigtails of Kid Sister, the overalls changed to pastel and the theme song pitched higher.

But when I was a kid, hopeful for that clear plastic-fronted box on Christmas morning, “Child’s Play” writer Don Mancini was a film student, inspired allegedly not as much by My Buddy as by our plastic overlords themselves, Cabbage Patches. “I wanted to write a dark satire about how marketing affected children,” Mancini said in an interview with Mental Floss. “Cabbage Patch was really popular.” Lending fuel to the My Buddy fire, however? Not only does child actor Vincent remarkably resemble one, the first title of “Child’s Play” was “Blood Buddy.” 

ChuckyCarina Battrick as Caroline Cross and Chucky in “Chucky” (SYFY)No dads protest a boy playing with dolls in “Child’s Play,” in large part because there are no dads around. Single mom Karen runs the show solo as best she can, working at the department store with an unsympathetic boss and saving desperately for her son. The film taps into a lot of anxieties about the time, including crime (all the parts of the city you don’t want to go to at “this time of night”), people experiencing homelessness and single motherhood.

Never fear, however, Karen is the good kind of single mother: a widow. The movie makes that explicitly clear when Andy talks about his Daddy in heaven.

Chucky is a man’s doll. His accessories are working tools.

Chucky is a man’s doll. His accessories are working tools. He wears a little hard hat. Good Guys are active, jumping off a rope ladder to rescue their friends in the animated tie-in TV show that Andy watches. And once Chucky is possessed by a murderer, he wants to do guy things like watch the 9 o’clock news and insult women. He settles a score, because that’s what men do. 

Despite being three feet high, Chucky is hyper-masculine with a growly, deep voice. He has big incel energy, calling Karen’s murdered friend “a real bitch” who “got what she deserved,” and passing that toxic gospel on to Andy, his protégé. Chucky also calls Karen a “bitch” and a “slut,” despite the fact, or maybe because, we’ve never seen any evidence that she’s dated anyone. Who has time between solo parenting, department store working and stalking the wrong side of town, trying to track down that peddler?

ChuckyDevon Sawa as Lucas Wheeler, Chucky and Teo Briones as Junior Wheeler in “Chucky” (SYFY/USA Network)How to make a doll palatable to boys and their fathers? Make it misogynistic. If you watched “Child’s Play” as an actual child, as I did, you may have forgotten it’s near-rape scene. Apologies for reminding you. You may have also tuned out the murals, seemingly self-painted, on the walls of Charles Lee Ray’s apartment: a lot of naked people, mostly men, with exaggerated genitals, the film dabbling in that distasteful trope: the queer monster. Chucky says he’s “got a date with a 6-year-old boy” when he learns his soul must be transferred into Andy.

The sequel, which some argue is the better film, shows how much we believe women. Not much. In “Child’s Play 2,” Karen has been committed to a mental hospital and Andy is in foster care. A series of sequels, some direct, some remakes, continue to comment on gender roles and expectations, from Andy forced to enroll in military school in “Child’s Play 3” to Jennifer Tilly entering the story as a wedding dress-wearing female doll in “Bride of Chucky” (whose tagline is “Chuck gets lucky”).

ChuckyThe Creepy Doll from “Chucky” (SYFY/USA Network)In “Chucky,” Syfy’s version of the story in series form, now entering its second season, the boy, Zackary Arthur as Jake, is older, a teenager. He picks up Chucky at a garage sale not to play with but to turn into art. “Chucky” provides a welcome update to the killer doll story: Jake is openly queer (and has his first kiss with a boy). “Child’s Play” creator Mancini, who also created the Syfy show, is gay and told GayTimes the series “gave me an opportunity to really be more personal, and even autobiographical than I’ve ever been before.”

The new season tackles religion, like “Fleabag” (sort of) in its sophomore year, and takes Jake and others to the Catholic School of the Incarnate Lord. Save the world from Chucky and his ilk and hold on to yourself in the face of adults trying to deny you personhood? OK, friend to the end!


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Kids grow and change but some things sadly stay the same, like dads stuck in the past. In “Chucky,” Jake’s dad, who wishes he would just ask a girl out or play sports, scoffs: “Another freaking doll?” Nope. Just the same old murdering one, this time in a story that comments on and rejects the toxic past in favor of a much brighter future. 

“Chucky” airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on Syfy. Watch the trailer via YouTube below

Biden to pardon all federal simple marijuana possession offenses

President Biden announced on Thursday that he intends to pardon all prior federal offenses of simple marijuana possession. This major step towards decriminalizing marijuana will coincide with Biden urging Attorney General Merrick Garland to “review how marijuana is scheduled under federal law,” according to CNN

“No one should be in jail just for using or possessing marijuana,” Biden said in a video statement. “It’s legal in many states, and criminal records for marijuana possession have led to needless barriers to employment, housing, and educational opportunities. And that’s before you address the racial disparities around who suffers the consequences. While white and Black and brown people use marijuana at similar rates, Black and brown people are arrested, prosecuted, and convicted at disproportionate rates . . . Too many lives have been upended because of our failed approach to marijuana. It’s time that we right these wrongs”

In 2019, Biden devoted a good portion of his presidential campaign to the promise of one day decriminalizing marijuana and with this latest announcement, he’s made good on advancing further towards the fulfillment of that promise.

“[Biden] supports decriminalizing marijuana and automatically expunging prior criminal records for marijuana possession, so those affected don’t have to figure out how to petition for it or pay for a lawyer,” Biden campaign spokesman Andrew Bates said in a statement to CNN from the 2019 campaign trail. 


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In full transparency of his plan to, as he puts it, “end our failed approach” to marijuana related charges, Biden breaks down the full scope of his intent as such:

First: I’m pardoning all prior federal offenses of simple marijuana possession. There are thousands of people who were previously convicted of simple possession who may be denied employment, housing, or educational opportunities as a result. My pardon will remove this burden.

Second: I’m calling on governors to pardon simple state marijuana possession offenses. Just as no one should be in a federal prison solely for possessing marijuana, no one should be in a local jail or state prison for that reason, either.

Third: We classify marijuana at the same level as heroin – and more serious than fentanyl. It makes no sense. I’m asking @SecBecerra and the Attorney General to initiate the process of reviewing how marijuana is scheduled under federal law.

According to a White House official sourced by CNBC, “more than 6,500 individuals with prior convictions for simple marijuana possession were impacted by the pardons, and thousands more through pardons under D.C. law. The pardons will not be extended to those who weren’t U.S. citizens and were illegally in the country at the time of their arrest.”

What you don’t have and why: The crushing of American socialism and the left

Donald Trump has had the urge to crush many things, including the last election. So I must admit I found it eerily amusing that, when the FBI entered his estate at Mar-a-Lago recently, they did so under a warrant authorized by the Espionage Act of 1917. History certainly has a strange way of returning in our world and also of crushing alternatives. Whatever Trump did, that act has a sorry track record in both its own time and ours when it has been used, including by his administration, to silence the leakers of government information. And because my latest book, American Midnight: The Great War, A Violent Peace, and America’s Forgotten Crisis, is about the crushing of alternatives a century ago in this country, in the midst of all this, I couldn’t help thinking about a part of our history that The Donald would undoubtedly have been the first to crush, if he had the chance.  

But let me start with a personal event closer to the present. While visiting Denmark recently, I developed an infection in my hand and wanted to see a doctor. The hotel in the provincial city where I was staying directed me to a local hospital. I was quickly shown into a consulting room, where a nurse questioned me and told me to wait. Only a few minutes passed before a physician entered the room, examined me, and said in excellent English, yes, indeed, I did need an antibiotic. He promptly swiveled in his chair, opened a cabinet behind him, took out a bottle of pills, handed it to me, and told me to take two a day for 10 days. When I thanked him and asked where I should go to pay for the consultation and the medicine, he responded simply, “We have no facilities for that.”

No facilities for that.

It’s a phrase that comes back to me every time I’m reminded how, in the world’s richest nation, we still don’t have full national health insurance. And that’s far from the only thing we’re missing. In a multitude of ways, we’re known for having a far weaker social safety net than many other wealthy countries and behind that lies a history in which the Espionage Act played a crucial role.

A Danish friend who visited with me recently was appalled to find hundreds of homeless people living in tent encampments in Berkeley and Oakland, California. And mind you, this is a progressive, prosperous state. The poor are even more likely to fall through the cracks (or chasms) in many other states.

Visitors from abroad are similarly astonished to discover that American families regularly pay astronomical college tuitions out of their own pockets. And it’s not only well-off European countries that do better in providing for their citizenry. The average Costa Rican, with one-sixth the annual per capita income of his or her North American counterpart, will live two years longer, thanks largely to that country’s comprehensive national health care system.

Why hasn’t our country done better, compared to so many others? There are certainly many reasons, not least among them the relentless, decades-long propaganda barrage from the American right, painting every proposed strengthening of public health and welfare — from unemployment insurance to Social Security to Medicare to Obamacare — as an ominous step down the road to socialism.

This is nonsense, of course, since the classic definition of socialism is public ownership of the means of production, an agenda item not on any imaginable American political horizon. In another sense, though, the charge is historically accurate because, both here and abroad, significant advances in health and welfare have often been spearheaded by socialist parties.

The globe’s first national healthcare system, in Imperial Germany, was, for example, muscled through the Reichstag by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck in 1883 precisely to outflank the German socialists, who had long been advocating similar measures. Nor was it surprising that Britain’s National Health Service was installed by the Labour Party when it took power after the Second World War.

And in the United States, early in the last century, some of President Theodore Roosevelt’s modest moves to regulate business and break up trusts were, in fact, designed to steal a march on this country’s socialists, whom he feared, as he wrote to a friend, were “far more ominous than any populist or similar movement in times past.”

Back then — however surprising it may seem today — the American Socialist Party was indeed part of our political reality and, in 1904, it had come out in favor of compulsory national health insurance. A dozen years after that, New York Socialist Congressman Meyer London introduced a bill strikingly similar to the Obama administration’s Affordable Care Act of more than a century later. In 1911, another socialist congressman, Victor Berger of Wisconsin, proposed a national old-age pension, a goal that wouldn’t be realized for another quarter of a century with the passage of the Social Security Act of 1935.

Socialism was never as strong a movement in the United States as in so many other countries. Still, once it was at least a force to be reckoned with. Socialists became mayors of cities as disparate as Milwaukee, Pasadena, Schenectady, and Toledo. Party members held more than 175 state and local offices in Oklahoma alone. People commonly point to 1912 as the party’s high-water mark. That year, its candidate for president, Eugene V. Debs, won 6% of the popular vote, even running ahead of the Republican candidate in several states.

Still, the true peak of American socialism’s popularity came a few years later. The charismatic Debs decided not to run again in 1916, mistakenly accepting President Woodrow Wilson’s implied promise to keep the United States out of the First World War — something most Socialists cared about passionately. In April 1917, Wilson infuriated them by bringing the country into what had been, until then, primarily a European conflict, while cracking down fiercely on dissidents who opposed his decision. That fall, however, the Socialists made impressive gains in municipal elections, winning more than 20% of the vote in 14 of the country’s larger cities — more than 30% in several of them — and 10 seats in the New York State Assembly.

During that campaign, Wilson was particularly dismayed by the party’s popularity in New York City, where Socialist lawyer Morris Hillquit was running for mayor. The president asked his conservative Texan attorney general, Thomas Gregory, what could be done about Hillquit’s “outrageous utterances” against the war. Gregory responded that he feared prosecuting Hillquit “would enable him to pose as a martyr and would be likely to increase his voting strength. I am having my representatives in New York City watch the situation rather carefully, and if a point is reached where he can be proceeded against it will give me a great deal of pleasure.” Hillquit lost, but did get 22% of the vote.

Jubilant Socialists knew that if they did equally well in the 1918 midterm elections, their national vote total could for the first time rise into the millions. For Wilson, whose Democrats controlled the House of Representatives by the narrowest of margins, the possibility of Socialists gaining the balance of power there was horrifying. And so, already at war in Europe, his administration in effect declared war on the Socialists at home as well, using as its primary tool Wilson’s sweeping criminalization of dissent, the new 1917 Espionage Act. The toll would be devastating.

The Government’s Axe Falls

Already the party’s most popular woman, the fiery Kansas-born orator Kate Richards O’Hare — known as Red Kate for her politics and her mass of red hair — had been sentenced to five years under the Espionage Act for speaking out against the war. Still free on appeal, O’Hare, who knew the hardships of farm life firsthand and had run for both the House and the Senate, continued to draw audiences in the thousands when she spoke in the prairie states. Before long, however, her appeal was denied and she was sent to the Jefferson City, Missouri, penitentiary, where she found herself in the adjoining cell to anarchist firebrand Emma Goldman. The two would become lifelong friends.

In 1918, the government went after Debs. The pretext was a speech he had given from a park bandstand in Canton, Ohio, following a state convention of his beleaguered party. “They have always taught you that it is your patriotic duty to go to war and to have yourselves slaughtered at their command,” he told the crowd. “But in all the history of the world you, the people, never had a voice in declaring war.”

That was more than enough. Two weeks later, he was indicted and swiftly brought before a federal judge who just happened to be the former law firm partner of President Wilson’s secretary of war. At that trial, Debs spoke words that would long be quoted:

“Your Honor, years ago I recognized my kinship with all living beings, and I made up my mind that I was not one bit better than the meanest of the earth. I said then, I say now, that while there is a lower class, I am in it; while there is a criminal element, I am of it; while there is a soul in prison, I am not free.”

Spectators gasped as the judge pronounced sentence on the four-time presidential candidate: a fine of $10,000 and 10 years in prison. In the 1920 election, he would still be in the federal penitentiary in Atlanta when he received more than 900,000 votes for president.

The government didn’t merely prosecute luminaries like O’Hare and Debs however. It also went after rank-and-file party members, not to mention the former Socialist candidates for governor in Minnesota, New Jersey, and South Dakota, as well as state Socialist Party secretaries from at least four states and a former Socialist candidate for Congress from Oklahoma. Almost all of them would be sentenced under the Espionage Act for opposing the war or the draft.

Not faintly content with this, the Wilson administration would attack the Socialists on many other fronts as well. There were then more than 100 socialist dailies, weeklies, and monthlies and the Espionage Act gave Wilson’s postmaster general, segregationist Albert Burleson of Texas, the power to deem such publications “unmailable.” Before long, Burleson would bar from the mail virtually the entire socialist press, which, in the prewar years, had a combined circulation of two million. A few dailies, which did not need the Post Office to reach their readers, survived, but for most of them such a banning was a death blow.

The government crippled the socialist movement in many less formal ways as well. For instance, Burleson’s post office simply stopped delivering letters to and from the party’s Chicago headquarters and some of its state and local offices. The staff of a socialist paper in Milwaukee typically noticed that they were failing to receive business correspondence. Even their mail subscriptions to the New York Times and the Chicago Tribune were no longer arriving. Soon advertising income began to dry up. In the midst of this, Oscar Ameringer, a writer for the paper, called on a longtime supporter, a baker who had suddenly stopped buying ads. According to Ameringer, the man “slumped down in a chair, covered his eyes and, with tears streaming through his fingers, sobbed, ‘My God, I can’t help it…They told me if I didn’t take my advertising out they would refuse me… flour, sugar and coal.'”

Also taking their cues from the administration in that wartime assault were local politicians and vigilantes who attacked socialist speakers or denied them meeting halls. After progressives and labor union members staged an antiwar march on the Boston Common, for example, vigilantes raided the nearby Socialist Party office, smashed its doors and windows, and threw furniture, papers, and the suitcase of a traveling activist out the shattered windows onto a bonfire.

In January 1918, the mayor of Mitchell, South Dakota, ordered the party’s state convention broken up and all delegates expelled from town. One party leader was seized “on the streets by five unknown men and hustled into an automobile in which he was driven five miles from town,” a local newspaper reported. “There he was set out upon the prairie and… told to proceed afoot to his home in Parkston [an 18-mile walk] and warned not to return.”

The Big “What if?” Question

The Socialists were far from alone in suffering the wave of repression that swept the country in Wilson’s second term. Other targets included the labor movement, the country’s two small rival Communist parties, and thousands of radicals who had never become American citizens and were targeted for deportation. But among all the victims, no organization was more influential than the Socialist Party. And it never recovered.

When Debs took to the road again after finally being released from prison in 1921, he was often, at the last minute, denied venues he had booked. In Cleveland, the City Club canceled its invitation; in Los Angeles, the only place he could speak was at the city zoo. Still, he had an easier time than the socialist writer Upton Sinclair who, when he began giving a speech in San Pedro, California, in 1923, was arrested while reading the First Amendment aloud.

By the time Debs died in 1926, the party that had once elected 33 state legislators, 79 mayors, and well over 1,000 city council members and other municipal officials had closed most of its offices and was left with less than 10,000 members nationwide. Kate Richards O’Hare wrote to her friend Emma Goldman, who had been deported from the United States in 1919, that she felt herself a “sort of political orphan now with no place to lay my head.”

Despite their minority status, the Socialists had been a significant force in American politics before patriotic war hysteria brought on an era of repression. Until then, Republican and Democratic legislators had voted for early-twentieth-century reform measures like child labor laws and the income tax in part to stave off demands from the Socialist Party for bigger changes.

If that party had remained intact instead of being so ruthlessly crushed, what more might they have voted for? This remains one of the biggest “what ifs” in American history. If the Socialist Party hadn’t been so hobbled, might it at least have pushed the mainstream ones into creating the sort of stronger social safety net and national health insurance systems that people today take for granted in countries like Canada or Denmark? Without the Espionage Act, might Donald Trump have been left to rot at Mar-a-Lago in a world in which so much might have been different?

The last time you tried to pay a medical bill, might you, in fact, have been told, “We have no facilities for that”?

Andy Baraghani’s crispy mushrooms with soy butter are autumn on a plate

I had started the day at an academic conference in Belgium and capped it with a grueling class in the Netherlands. Now, it was nearing 9pm, and I was exhausted, famished and frankly, moody. As I trudged through the early autumn darkness to my temporary lodgings, I longed for a meal that would be simultaneously soothing and fortifying. I longed for . . . mushrooms.

From the moment I first tore into Andy Baraghani’s brilliant “The Cook You Want to Be” last spring, I knew it would become one of my favorite cookbooks. It’s everything a keeper cookbook should be. Baraghani’s recipes are approachable, adaptable and, to use one of his own words, mighty. Long on flavor, short on fuss, these are dishes feature all my favorite flavor profiles — buttery things, tangy things, slightly burned things. And Baraghani’s crispy mushrooms, cooked down until they are their richest, most umami selves and then enhanced with the sharpness of garlic and the unctuousness of egg yolk, are the culinary equivalent of a crackling fireplace.


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For a bright fall brunch or a just starting to get chilly evening, these mushrooms will do right by you, in about 15 minutes flat. Their one magic trick that makes them perfect is, Baraghani explains, is to “just let them be.” Don’t stir them around, don’t be impatient with them. Just let them cook; let their flavor deepen and deepen. And then be happy that at the end of a brisk, busy day, there’s a meal that asks you to do less, rather than more. By the time I’d all but licked my own plate of yolk slicked shiitakes and creminis clean, I felt more comforted and civilized than I had been in at least two Flemish regions.

Serve these mushrooms with good bread and a leafy salad, if you want to round it out, or eat just as is, if you want to go easy on yourself.

* * *

Inspired by “The Cook You Want to Be: Everyday Recipes to Impress” by Andy Baraghani

Crispy soy butter mushrooms and egg yolks
Yields
2 servings
Prep Time
5 minutes
Cook Time
15 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 1⁄2 pounds mixed mushrooms 
  • 3 tablespoons of vegetable oil
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 3 tablespoons of butter
  • 2 tablespoons of soy sauce or tamari
  • 2 tablespoons of sherry or red wine vinegar, or 1/4 of a lemon 
  • 2 tablespoons of chopped chives
  • 2 egg yolks
  • salt and pepper, to taste

 

Directions

  1. With a kitchen towel or paper towel, wipe the mushrooms of dirt and cut off any woody ends. Cut any caps into even slices.
  2. Set a skillet or cast iron pan over medium high flame and heat your oil. Let it get good and hot.
  3. Add your mushrooms, and stir to coat. Give a grind of salt and pepper and let them cook undisturbed about 3 – 4 minutes to brown.
  4. Flip the mushrooms to cook on all sides, another 7 or so minutes. Add a little more oil if needed. 
  5. Lower the heat a little and add the butter, garlic and soy sauce and stir everything together for just another minute. Add the splash of vinegar or squeeze of lemon and stir again. You’ll probably want to grind on a little more pepper.
  6. Spoon the mushrooms on to a plate, and nestle your egg yolks in their midst to make a luxurious, runny sauce. Top with a spinkle of herbs. Enjoy immediately.

Cook’s Notes

I substituted some fresh thyme and sage in my mushrooms for an early autumn vibe.

Baraghani says you needn’t be concerned about the yolks because salmonella is usually found in shells, not the eggs, but if you have any concerns, omit them or cook them gently in the pan before serving.

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“Mitch McConnell never needed free lunch”: Solving childhood hunger shouldn’t be a partisan issue

Last week, for the first time in over half a century, the White House held the Conference on Hunger, Nutrition and Health, meant to catalyze action for the millions of Americans struggling with food insecurity, as well as mitigate diet-related diseases such as diabetes and hypertension.

However, the problem of widespread childhood hunger and limited access to fresh food — especially amid pandemic-driven shortages and inflation — was top of mind for everyone in the room, President Joe Biden included. 

“In America, no child should go to bed hungry,” Biden said. “If you look at your child and you can’t feed your child, what the hell else matters?” 

More than 9 million U.S. children (or 1 in 8 kids) faced hunger in 2021, according to Feeding America. Black and Latinx children are more likely to face hunger than white children, while single-parent families are more likely to be food insecure. (In 2021, 24% of households headed by single moms were food insecure.) Food security is defined by the U.N. Committee on World Food Security as meaning that “people, at all times, have physical, social and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food that meets their food preferences and dietary needs for an active and healthy life.” 

Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has forecasted that grocery prices will rise an average of 11% this year, which would mark the largest year-on-year increase since 1974. That year, prices soared by 14.9%.

And while the White House conference teased some big, innovative ideas — specifically in the realm of corporate partnerships, such as Google updating its search experience to make it easier for individuals using SNAP to connect with benefits — it became clear that two of the most salient paths to curb food insecurity for American kids had already been successfully implemented in recent years. Why, then, were they stymied by Republicans in Congress?

The first was the American Rescue Plan, which included the expanded Child Tax Credit, a fully refundable tax credit for parents with children who qualify. In 2021, the credit increased from $2,000 per child to $3,600 per qualifying child under the age of six. Similarly, for each qualifying child from the ages of six to 16, the credit increased from $2,000 to $3,000. 

Under the American Rescue Plan, the Internal Revenue Service disbursed half of the 2021 Child Tax Credit in monthly payments during the second half of 2021.

“If you look at your child and you can’t feed your child, what the hell else matters?”

“Soon after I came to office, I signed what was called the American Rescue Plan into law,” Biden said. “It helped put food on the table and keep a roof over the heads of millions of American families . . . Overwhelmingly, working families used the Child Tax Credit to buy food and other basic needs for their families.” 

However, Congress failed to renew the credit in December 2021, which had immediate implications for vulnerable populations. Columbia University’s Center on Poverty and Social Policy estimated that 3.7 million more children were living in poverty by January — a 41% increase from the previous month, when families received their last check. 

A March NPR report illuminated that data by surveying families across the country who had benefited from the credit, many of whom cited purchasing food for their children as a source of worry.

“It helped shore us up in the middle of the month when we’d be running out of food money and trying to pay bills and worrying about the kids,” an individual named Grace told the outlet. “It uplifted us and gave us hope because we knew that money was coming into our bank account. And without the Child Tax Credit, the struggle continues as usual.” 

Sarah Anderson of North Carolina added: “[T]o lose that money, especially where the price of everything has skyrocketed — go to the grocery store, and groceries seem like they’re way more, almost double what they were, you know, even last year. I just feel really abandoned by this country, honestly, and by our Congress going to bed at night, just wondering how are we going to pay all of these bills this month. And I just don’t want my kids to feel that stress or to worry about it.” 

When compared to the implementation and retention of social programs like Obamacare, it’s perhaps a little surprising that Congress let the Child Tax Credit expire. As Dylan Matthews wrote for Vox, political scientists, including Berkeley’s Paul Pierson, argue that “beneficiaries became invested in these programs and would revolt against any politicians who threatened them.”


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“That’s basically what happened in 2017,” Matthews added. “Republicans should have had the votes to repeal Obamacare after Trump took the White House, but the prospect of throwing millions of people off Medicaid started to look so politically poisonous that several GOP senators bolted and killed the effort.” 

He continued, “I thought this would happen in 2021: letting the child tax credit expire would so enrage parents benefiting that Congress would be forced to extend it. That wasn’t so.” 

There’s a number of reasons as to why that didn’t transpire. Many Americans may have viewed the credits as temporary aid, akin to the three rounds of stimulus checks. Many of those same Americans likely lacked the resources or time to organize, especially amid a pandemic. 

Matthews offered another view: “Maybe it’s a matter of status quo bias: the credit was set to expire, and it’s always easier for Congress to do nothing than to pass new legislation to extend a program.” 

That said, passiveness alone didn’t lead the credit to expire. As parents received their first checks in 2021, Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., told the Huffington Post in 2021 that “every Democrat voted for this tax credit and every Republican voted no.”  

“Every Democrat voted for this tax credit and every Republican voted no.”

Similarly, this year also saw the expiration of universal free school meals — another pandemic-driven program that helped reduce the incidence of childhood hunger. As the USDA reported, the percentage of food-insecure households with children decreased by 2.3% between 2020 and 2021, after universal school meals were implemented.

And as Salon Food reported in June, the program allowed all students, regardless of economic status, to receive free school lunches. 

At the time, Linda — a mother from Kentucky who asked to use a pseudonym for privacy — told Salon that the program was a life-saver. As she balanced work and an internship while attempting to shift professional fields, Linda and her family couldn’t afford the cost of lunch for multiple children on a daily basis. She stated that universal school meals “leveled the playing field” for children who were experiencing food insecurity. 

“It seems like such a small and insignificant thing — $2.50 a day per kid — but there will be kids who will be teased for being on free lunch,” Linda then said. “Or kids whose parents are too proud to apply for benefits, or kids whose parents make $25 too much a month to qualify. I have also been in this category before for food stamps. With the cost of everything going up, it seems like this is a really bad time to pull the rug out from under folks.” 

However, Republican lawmakers opted not to renew the universal program as part of a spending package passed in March to keep the government open. Referencing fiscal responsibility, some, like Rep. Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., have claimed the program was never intended to be permanent.

“Congress never intended to provide universal free breakfast and lunches to all K-12 students regardless of need,” Foxx said during a floor speech debating waiver extensions in June. “By returning these programs back to normal, we can return our responsibility to taxpayers and the principle that aid should be targeted and temporary.”

According to an article published by Salon in March, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., was seemingly on “a mission to end expanded free school lunches.” Politico had reported that the senator was “forcefully opposing a provision in the omnibus spending bill that would extend a slew of waivers that have allowed schools to serve universal free meals during the pandemic.”

While McConnell never publicly commented on the issue, an aide for Republican leadership defended ending USDA’s broad pandemic waiver authority as an attempt to clamp down on government spending and get schools back to normal amid waning COVID-19 cases and expanded access to vaccines and other treatments.  

The ultimate dissolution of the program drew strong responses from Democrats. Nina Turner, the former Ohio state senator who served as co-chair of Bernie Sanders’ 2020 presidential campaign, called McConnell’s efforts to block a waiver extension “evil.” 

“Mitch McConnell never needed free lunch to get a hot meal at school. He never needed food stamps to survive,” Charles Booker, the Democratic U.S. Senate candidate in Kentucky, wrote in response to the GOP leader’s move. “Nearly half of Kentucky’s children live in households below 200% of the federal poverty line. I was one of them. He doesn’t see us.”

Outside of Washington, individual states have stepped in to make universal free school meals permanent. According to the National Conference of State Legislations, 20 states have considered or passed legislation to establish universal free school meals. California, Colorado, Maine and Vermont (all of which are states Biden won in 2020) were the first to implement such programs. Following the expiration of national meal waivers, these states will now pay for all student meals, regardless of income. 

“It sounds silly for a person to hear that who doesn’t have a child, but full school programs — food programs do a lot,” Biden said last week. “During the summer months, things change. Within the next 10 years, my plan, as was already referenced, would make at least 9 million more children eligible for free school meals — a major first step for free meals for every single student.” 

Bringing back the expanded Child Tax Credit and universal free school meals, Biden said during the White House Conference, is worth it. And you can follow the data.

“Look, folks, people are constantly looking at federal programs to see which ones are working and which ones are ineffective,” he said. “Well, during the pandemic, we had a real-world example right in front of us.” 

“The circuit court rejected Trump’s opposition”: Experts say appeals ruling a “bad sign” for Trump

A U.S. appeals court on Wednesday granted the Justice Department’s request to expedite its consideration of whether an outside legal expert should have been appointed to review the 11,000 documents seized by the FBI at former President Donald Trump’s Florida residence. 

The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals issued an order shortening the timeline for the Justice Department and Trump’s lawyers to finish submitting legal briefs to the court by November 17 after the DOJ argued that delaying the process could harm the agency’s investigation into the potential illegal retention of classified documents.

Judge Aileen Cannon’s injunction against the DOJ’s review of the material “caused irreparable harm because it constrained the government’s ability to assess and mitigate the national security risks arising from the improper storage of classified records and because the injunction hindered the government’s ability to conduct its criminal investigation,” the DOJ filing said.  

Trump’s lawyers opposed the request to expedite the case, arguing that they were not given enough time to file their brief in the case.

“The Government, on the other hand, cannot possibly be prejudiced if this appeal is not expedited and President Trump is afforded the few extra days provided under the Rules to file his brief,” Trump attorney Christopher Kise said in the filing.

In the new schedule set by the 11th Circuit, federal prosecutors must file their initial brief by Oct. 14, giving Trump’s team until Nov. 10 to respond. If the Justice Department chooses to reply, they have until Nov. 17 to do so. The court will not allow for any extensions. 

The previous schedule set by the court provided that federal prosecutors file their initial brief by Oct. 19, giving Trump’s lawyers until Nov. 18 to respond, and the government to file its reply by Dec. 9.


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The Justice Department already has more than 100 documents marked as classified that the FBI took from Mar-a-Lago, but appointing a special master temporarily bars investigators from using the 11,000 seized documents in the criminal investigation.

However, expediting the appeal means the 11th Circuit may rule on the case before Judge Raymond Dearie does, possibly by the end of next month. Meanwhile, Dearie’s deadline is for December 16. 

Former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann noted on Twitter that Trump opposed the DOJ request in this matter while pushing for an expedited appeal in the Supreme Court.

“Eleventh Circuit not to be outplayed by Trump’s Hail Mary to Supreme Court, where he incidentally asked for an expedited appeal while opposing the expedited schedule in the Eleventh Circuit,” he wrote. “Nice to see the Circuit having none of it.”

Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor, also added that this is “a bad sign for Trump”.

“It is apparent that the panel takes DOJ’s concerns seriously,” he tweeted.  

“Trump had opposed DOJ’s motion to expedite the 11th Circuit appeal from Cannon’s appointment of a special master,” wrote Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe. “Without dissent, the Circuit Court rejected Trump’s opposition, which was as baseless as is his trip to the Supreme Court on a collateral aspect of Cannon’s order.”

A different three-judge panel will review the appeal than the circuit court panel that sided with DOJ in earlier litigation. If the ruling is in the government’s favor, then it could have the potential to end the litigation over the seized materials and the outside review of those documents.

Herschel Walker is a ridiculous person — but his ex is a typical abortion patient

No one has accused former NFL player Herschel Walker — Donald Trump’s hand-picked GOP Senate nominee in Georgia — of being a nimble candidate or running a strong campaign. But even by Walker’s standards, it was a major fumble to claim he didn’t know a woman whose abortion he allegedly paid for in 2009. That’s because, as Roger Sollenberger of the Daily Beast (and formerly of Salon) reported in a follow-up to his original story on the abortion scandal, the woman in question is also the mother of one of Walker’s kids. 

On Wednesday, Fox News host Brian Kilmeade asked Walker point blank if he knew who the woman was. As is evidently his habit, Walker dissembled, while throwing in some incomprehensible commentary. “Not at all,” he said, adding that “everyone is anonymous” and “they want you to confess to something you have no clue about.”

This is implausible at best, considering that the woman in question held onto a copy of a $700 check signed by Walker and a get-well card he sent her, apparently after the abortion procedure. But with the revelation that this woman is also the mother of one of Walker’s children, the idea that he has no idea who she is becomes grossly insulting. Of course, as Sollenberger pointed out, Politico has also reported an “abortion allegation [that] was circulating among Republicans” that “doesn’t quite track” with the one he reported on. So it’s entirely possible that Walker hoped or believed this was a different woman, and not the one it’s extremely difficult to distance himself from. 


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Walker’s scandal-a-minute campaign is a wild ride, even in an election cycle that features another celebrity GOP candidate who is accused of torturing and murdering puppies. So it’s all the more remarkable that his ex-girlfriend’s story is so, well, ordinary and normal. While her identity has not been revealed to protect her safety, the details we know suggest that she sounds an awful lot like any random woman in any abortion clinic on any given day. It highlights the vast gulf between the ugly stereotypes Republicans perpetuate about women who get abortions and the everyday reality: Most are ordinary women, very often mothers, who are simply trying to get by with the cards life has dealt them. 

Republican reactions to the original Walker story played out along the standard sexist double standard: A man is instantly forgiven for just “spreading his seed,” while the woman is degraded as ” some skank.” This woman’s actual story, however, suggests a much different picture. She says dated Walker for many years and had a child with him. She told the Daily Beast that Walker “didn’t accept responsibility for the kid we did have together,” and won’t “accept responsibility” now. Like so many other women in roughly similar circumstances, she was the one who managed these challenging decisions “about my future and a potential child’s future.”

This fits with everything that decades of research about abortion patients shows: They aren’t “skanks,” as right-wing commentator Dana Loesch has claimed. They are women who take responsibility for their lives and their families. Sometimes they have the support of the men who got them pregnant, but very often they’re making this decision in large part because the men in their lives are evading responsibility. 

The Guttmacher Institute has the most robust and in-depth statistics on abortion patients, and Walker’s ex fits right in. A majority of abortion patients (59%) are already mothers, and many others would like to have children in the future. When asked about their reasons for seeking an abortion, women offer answers that have remained relatively stable for decades. They are concerned about finishing school or keeping their job, or they say they can’t afford to a baby right now. About half of them, like Walker’s ex, don’t have a stable relationship they feel comfortable about bringing a baby into. They say they are “not sure about the relationship” or are worried their relationship “may break up soon.” 


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In the aftermath of Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, the decision used by the Trump-shaped Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade, most media attention has focused on the most dramatic cases. There’s been a steady drumbeat of horror stories: Miscarrying patients forced to wait until they develop infections before getting treatment. Women potentially losing their fertility because doctors can’t treat ectopic pregnancies safely. Rape victims, some as young as 10, forced to travel long distances to get abortions. 

It’s important not to lose sight of the ordinary humanity of typical abortion patients. Overall, it’s a bunch of women whose stories are painfully mundane: Economic struggles and unreliable boyfriends.

These stories are important, of course, and need to be told. But it’s equally important not to lose sight of the humanity of more typical abortion patients. And the truly remarkable thing about most abortion patients is how unremarkable they are. Most of are in their 20s. They are racially diverse: 39% are white, 28% Black, and 25% Hispanic. Christians are just as likely as non-Christians to get abortions. The most significant differentiating factor is that women seeking abortion are disproportionately likely to be low-income, likely because it’s more difficult for them to get reliable contraception access. But overall, it’s a bunch of people whose stories are almost painfully mundane: Economic struggles and unreliable boyfriends. At current rates, one in four American women will get an abortion in her lifetime. 

Clearly, many more people understand this than the media discourse typically acknowledges. That’s why the public reaction to Dobbs has been overwhelmingly negative. But it’s also true that most anti-choice activists understand how mundane abortion is, and generally avoid the Loesch-style political error of calling abortion patients “skanks.” Their strategy for years now has been to embrace a benevolent sexism, portraying abortion patients as “lost” women who simply don’t know any better. This allows them to reframe forced childbirth as a favor they’re doing women, guiding them toward the “correct” choice.

But as Walker’s ex told the Daily Beast, these “are real life decisions that can completely change your life.” The Guttmacher research shows that abortion patients in fact have a clear understanding of their own lives and what they’re willing and able to handle now and in the future. Since most already have children, you can’t plausibly claim that they’re unaware of the joys — or the burdens — of raising kids.

Walker’s campaign has been dogged by credible allegations of domestic violence. He has been outed for having multiple unacknowledged children. It certainly sounds like there’s an irresponsible person in this extremely typical abortion story. But it’s not the woman who had the abortion. 

Election deniers failed to hand Wisconsin to Trump – but paved the way for future GOP success

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

 

Ever since claims of election fraud arose in 2020, Wisconsin has seen its share of quixotic attempts to taint the presidential results.

A group of phony electors tried to claim the state’s electoral votes for Donald Trump. Wisconsin’s top lawmaker launched a yearlong inquiry led by a lawyer spewing election fraud theories. And its courts heard numerous suits challenging the integrity of the 2020 election and the people administering it.

All those efforts failed, sometimes spectacularly.

But on a more fundamental level, the election deniers succeeded. They helped change the way Election Day will look in 2022 for crucial midterm elections in Wisconsin — and they are creating an even more favorable climate for Trump and Republicans in 2024.

This summer, the conservative majority on the Wisconsin Supreme Court banned most drop boxes for ballots, which had provided another quick and convenient method of voting during the pandemic, rather than relying on the mail. Until a federal judge intervened, the ruling also meant that people with disabilities could not have help delivering their ballots to their municipal clerks.

More recently, in Waukesha County, a judge sided with the Republican Party in a ruling that barred local clerks from fixing even minor errors or omissions — such as a missing ZIP code — on absentee ballot envelopes. The clerks could contact the voter or return the ballot to be corrected. In a state already known for limiting voter access, this was another example of a push toward more controls.

And the Wisconsin Assembly and the Senate, both dominated by Republicans, have passed a raft of bills that would tighten voting laws. Each was vetoed by Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat. But Evers is in a close race for reelection against Republican Tim Michels, who has said that “on day one” he will call a special session of the Legislature to “fix the election mess.”

Philip Rocco, associate professor of political science at Marquette University in Milwaukee, describes a dynamic he has seen across the country playing out on a large scale in Wisconsin. An onslaught of attacks on the voting process, he said, produces “an atmosphere of procedural chaos going into Election Day.”

“Just in general, it’s created a dangerous environment for elections to occur in.”

Republicans, who often benefit from lower turnout, frame the battles around issues of law, while Democrats argue that the fight is over voting rights. Neither side sees any benefit in giving in.

The seemingly daily news of legal machinations, legislative committee hearings, proposed laws or official investigations of Wisconsin’s election system have left many voters worried about what to expect when they next try to cast a ballot and unsure of whether their vote will count.

A swing state with 10 electoral votes and a history of razor-thin margins, Wisconsin will once again be a key prize in the 2024 presidential race.

Just how important the state is became clear in August, when the Republican National Committee announced that it will hold its 2024 convention in Milwaukee, a typically overlooked, Democratic-led city. The convention will saturate the state’s largest media market, reaching the conservative-leaning suburbs and the quiet towns and farms beyond.

But first comes November’s midterm election, with a chance to consolidate Republican power in the state and shape oversight of coming elections. Both ends of the political spectrum are keenly aware of the stakes.

“What can happen in 2024 is largely going to be determined by what happens this November,” said Wisconsin attorney Jeffrey Mandell, president of a progressive firm dedicated to protecting voting rights.

Endless Legal Battles

Nine attorneys, a parade of dark suits and briefcases, descended on a Waukesha County courtroom in southeast Wisconsin in September. Once again, the extreme minutiae of Wisconsin election law was being litigated.

The question before them: how to deal with absentee ballot envelopes that arrive with only partial addresses of witnesses?

Until then, municipal clerks had been able to simply fill in the information. Now, the Republican Party of Waukesha County argued that was unlawful and wanted to prohibit clerks from doing so. For some voters, that could mean having their ballots returned and figuring out how to fix them in time to have their vote counted.

A lawyer for the GOP-controlled Legislature favored a prohibition. Lawyers for government regulators, Democrats and the League of Women Voters argued against it. Ultimately, the GOP side prevailed.

In his ruling, Circuit Judge Michael J. Aprahamian added his voice to the doubts about absentee voting in Wisconsin and about the oversight provided by the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission, which has seen its every move scrutinized since Trump and his allies started questioning the 2020 results in Wisconsin.

Aprahamian excoriated the commission, saying that “it is little wonder that proponents from all corners of the political spectrum are critical, cynical and suspicious of how elections are managed and overseen.”

As court scenes like these play out elsewhere in Wisconsin, a healthy slice of the litigation can be traced to one man: Erick Kaardal, a Minnesota lawyer and special counsel to the anti-abortion Thomas More Society, a nonprofit law firm.

Despite some high-profile setbacks in Wisconsin, Kaardal told ProPublica he plans to keep scrutinizing the fine points of Wisconsin election law, a subject that takes up at least 122 pages in state statute.

His ongoing targets include the Wisconsin Elections Commission, which interprets laws and gives guidance to municipal clerks around the state; the Electronic Registration Information Center, a voter roll management consortium; and the Center for Election Innovation & Research, a progressive nonprofit that seeks to improve turnout.

“We’ll be litigating with the WEC and ERIC and CEIR for years to come,” Kaardal said.

Kaardal’s persistence is not appreciated by everyone. A federal judge admonished him for “political grandstanding” and filing bad-faith litigation against then-Vice President Mike Pence in December 2020 to prevent the counting of electoral votes. And in May, a judge in Madison said it was “ridiculous” for Kaardal to label pandemic-related grants to election offices as bribes.

In defending his tactics, Kaardal cited his years of legal experience and investigative abilities. He said he merely wants to hold government accountable and make elections fair.

Among Kaardal’s most passionate causes is his ongoing effort to document election fraud at nursing homes. During the pandemic, Kaardal alleges, an unknown number of cognitively impaired people ruled incompetent to vote under court-ordered guardianships somehow voted, perhaps with illegal assistance. He believes the voter rolls are not being updated to accurately reflect the court orders.

Kaardal brought lawsuits against 13 probate administrators across Wisconsin to force the release of confidential documents revealing the names of individuals under guardianship who have had their right to vote stripped by the court. His petition was denied in one case, but the others are ongoing.

Dane County Clerk of Court Carlo Esqueda worries that Kaardal’s quest is giving people the wrong impression. He points out that a person under guardianship can still vote. In some instances, that right is taken away because of extreme cognitive issues.

“Talk radio is saying everybody under guardianship should not be able to vote. That’s simply not true,” he said.

Election clerks, too, cite disinformation as they face mounting pressure over how they handle absentee ballots.

Celestine Jeffreys, the clerk in Green Bay, was forced to defend her integrity when a local resident represented by Kaardal filed a formal complaint with the Wisconsin Elections Commission this year, accusing her of “ballot harvesting” in the spring 2022 municipal elections by accepting multiple absentee ballots from an individual voter. The complaint is still pending.

Matt Roeser, the resident who filed the complaint, told ProPublica that the heavy reliance on absentee voting during the pandemic “opened up a door we’ve never had opened before. It created a lot of suspicion.”

Jeffreys said in a court filing that she had the discretion at the time to accept multiple ballots if they involved someone delivering their own ballot and a ballot for a disabled person.

Her legal brief called the complaint “another attempt by Attorney Kaardal to court scandal where there is none — intentionally undermining public confidence in legitimately-run elections in the process.”

Energized Activists

Wisconsin resident Harry Wait drew national attention in July when he announced that he’d gone on a state website and arranged for absentee ballots in the names of the Racine mayor, the state Assembly speaker and several others to be sent to his home.

The site requires only that voters enter their name and date of birth, and Wait claimed it had insufficient safeguards to prevent fraud.

The antic angered the Wisconsin Elections Commission, which held that it was a serious breach meant to undermine the state’s election system. Authorities charged Wait with election fraud, a misdemeanor, and misappropriation of ID information, a felony.

Notwithstanding the charges, Wait was treated like a hero a week later at a meeting of the right-leaning group he leads inside a Racine dive bar.

Wait formed H.O.T. Government, which stands for honest, open, transparent, four years ago over perceived government misconduct in Racine. It’s now focused on rooting out what it sees as widespread election fraud throughout Wisconsin and is taking special interest in absentee ballots. The group even briefly considered a plan to steal leftover drop boxes in southeast Wisconsin to ensure they couldn’t be used after the state Supreme Court ruling.

Wait has made it clear he’s no fan of the Wisconsin Elections Commission. “I’m going to make a declaration today that WEC is our enemy,” he told the crowd inside the bar.

He was proud how, in his view, he had exposed the flaws in the state government’s MyVote website, set up to help Wisconsinites find their polling place, register to vote or order an absentee ballot. The website, he said, “really needs to be shut down.”

Wait said in an interview that he plans to defend his action in court on the basis that, in his view, the MyVote system is “not a legal channel to order a ballot. It’s a rogue system.”

The administrator of the Wisconsin Elections Commission, Meagan Wolfe, has defended the online system. It “requires a person to provide the same information or more information than he or she would have to provide if the person made the ballot request through traditional mail,” she said at a commission meeting.

Still, the commission agreed to a new safeguard: When it gets a request to send an absentee ballot to a new address, it will notify the voter via postcard. The commission also asked clerks to be on the lookout for unusual requests.

At a preliminary hearing on his case, in September, Wait was represented by Michael Gableman, a leading figure among Wisconsin election deniers.

A former state Supreme Court justice, Gableman was special counsel for the Wisconsin Assembly, tasked with investigating the 2020 election. While spending more than $1 million in taxpayer money, he lent oxygen to election-fraud theories — including Kaardal’s accusations about nursing home irregularities — but couldn’t prove any. Attempts to reach Gableman for comment for this story were unsuccessful.

Even after being dismissed from that role by the Assembly speaker, Gableman has continued to exert influence within the state Republican Party to stoke the anger of citizens. Among hard-right activists, Gableman’s view of Wisconsin as a hotbed of election fraud is now taken for granted, as is the belief that voting options should be restricted, not opened up.

“I want it back to in-person, one day,” said Bruce L. Boll, a volunteer with We the People Waukesha, one of numerous groups supporting tighter controls. “Voting should not be a whim. It should be something you plan for and you do. Like your wedding day.”

Responding to this new atmosphere of distrust, the Wisconsin Elections Commission has proposed creating an Office of Inspector General to help it investigate the growing number of complaints and allegations of impropriety.

Chaos and Controversy

The chaos and controversy around voting rules has caught some Wisconsinites off guard. The drop-box ruling was especially disconcerting to people with disabilities and their relatives.

Before the August primary, Eugene Wojciechowski, of West Allis, went to City Hall to pay his water bill and drop off his ballot and his wife’s at the clerk’s office. A staffer asked him for ID and then told him he could not deliver his wife’s ballot. Not even spouses of the disabled could do so at the time, thanks to the state Supreme Court decision.

“I said: ‘What do you mean? She’s in a wheelchair,'” Wojciechowski recalled. He noted that the ballots were “all sealed and witnessed and everything.”

The voting constraints were “stupid,” he said, but ultimately he decided he would just mail his wife’s ballot for her, even though it was unclear at the time whether that was permitted.

He has filed an official complaint with the Wisconsin Elections Commission and weeks later remains exasperated.

“I mean, what the hell is going on in this city? I’ve lived here all my life,” Wojciechowski said.

“They’re stopping people from voting, that’s all it is.”

The state Supreme Court decision came in response to a suit brought by a conservative group, the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty. An attorney for the group, Rick Esenberg, argued that regulators had issued unlawful guidance allowing ballots to be delivered on behalf of others, including potentially “paid activists, paid canvassers who go around and collect ballots and place them in a mailbox.” Those allegations echoed a widely circulated conspiracy theory about people, labeled mules, delivering heaps of fraudulent ballots.

Esenberg conceded in his oral arguments that he had no evidence of that type of activity in Wisconsin.

Four people with disabilities sued in federal court, including Martha Chambers, of Milwaukee, who was left paralyzed from the neck down after being thrown from a horse 27 years ago.

“Here they are making things more difficult for me, and my life is difficult enough,” she said.

A federal judge ruled in favor of the plaintiffs and ordered the state elections commission to tell local clerks that voters with disabilities must be allowed to receive help from someone of their choosing to return their absentee ballots. The clerks do not have to confirm that the voter is disabled or ask the emissary for ID.

Still, it’s not at all certain that the ruling will be followed uniformly.

The state has approximately 1,850 local clerks who administer elections in cities, towns and villages. Even before the federal ruling, practices were wildly inconsistent, said Barbara Beckert, director of external advocacy for Disability Rights Wisconsin.

“There is continuing confusion in Wisconsin as voting practices and policies continue to change in response to litigation as well as action by the Legislature,” Beckert said.

Political observers say there’s increased trepidation among all kinds of voters over whether their ballot will count and who will be watching at the polls.

“People are afraid,” said Milwaukee native Bruce Colburn, a union activist and lead organizer of Souls to the Polls, a traditional get-out-the-vote drive in Black communities. “Are they going to do something wrong? Then you have all these lawyers and people making complaints in the court system for nothing. And it makes it more difficult. It scares people. If they get something wrong or they don’t do it exactly right, something’s going to happen to them.”

Jeffreys, the clerk in Green Bay, described poll watchers on primary day this year as “aggressive and interfering.” Rather than being cordial and unobtrusive, she said, some observers were repeatedly questioning voting officials and disrupting the process.

“That, I think, is a really big change with elections in Wisconsin. There’s just a lot more of a gaze, and the gaze is not always friendly and cooperative.”

Unlike poll workers, who carry out official duties and must be local residents, poll watchers can come from anywhere. They are not required to undergo training.

“Observers are a very important part of the process,” Jeffreys said. “They lend transparency; they help educate people. They themselves become educated. But sometimes observers have anointed themselves as the people who will uncover problems. And oftentimes observers are not equipped with the information in order to do that.”

The result, she said, can be baseless allegations.

Pointing Toward 2024

If Republicans in Wisconsin want to find a way around the Democratic governor, Evers, and his veto pen, they have two choices.

They can unseat him in November or bulk up their legislative advantage to what is called a supermajority. Achieving supermajorities in both the Assembly and the Senate, which would make bills veto-proof, is considered the longer shot. Winning the governor’s race is not.

Michels, the Republican nominee, is the owner of a construction company and has never held public office. He was endorsed by Trump in the primary.

Michels has embraced the idea that the 2020 election was not run fairly, even though a state recount showed Biden won and multiple courts agreed. Asked if the 2020 election was stolen, Michels told the “Regular Joe Show” on the radio in May: “Maybe, right. We know there was certainly a lot of bad stuff that happened. There were certainly illegal legal ballots. How many? I don’t know if Justice Gableman knows. I don’t know if anybody knows. We got to make sure. I will make sure it doesn’t happen again.”

A Michels victory would set the stage for reconsideration of a range of restrictive voting laws that were vetoed by Evers.

Among the bills passed by Republicans and blocked by Evers were proposals that would require the state to use federal databases to check citizenship status; remove voters from the rolls based on information submitted for jury selection; make it harder to request an absentee ballot; and classify it a felony to incorrectly attest that a person is “indefinitely confined” so they can vote absentee (a provision widely used during the pandemic).

Wisconsin already is a place that researchers have identified as difficult for voters to navigate. The Cost of Voting Index, a Northern Illinois University project that studies each state, lists it near the bottom, at 47th, because of a strict voter ID law, limits on early voting and proof of residency requirements that affect registration drives.

“Over the last several election cycles, other states have adopted policies that remove barriers to voting,” one of the researchers, Michael J. Pomante II, now with the election protection group States United Action, said in an email.

But Wisconsin, he added, “has continued to pass and implement laws that create barriers to casting a ballot.”

In 2024, all these factors — from who is able to vote to who runs the executive branch and who runs the Legislature — will play a role in determining which presidential candidate gets Wisconsin’s electoral votes.

The governor and the Wisconsin Elections Commission are part of the state’s certification process, with the secretary of state making it official by affixing the state seal. And the state Supreme Court stands ready to rule on election law disputes.

The Nov. 8 midterm election will determine which party holds the office of governor and secretary of state when voting occurs in 2024. Michels has proposed a “full reorganization” of the Wisconsin Elections Commission if he is elected.

He hasn’t explained what that would look like, other than to say in a primary debate that he envisioned replacing it with a board made up of appointees named by each of the state’s congressional districts. Wisconsin now has eight seats in the U.S. House, five held by Republicans and three by Democrats.

Evers, by contrast, backs the commission in its current form. He noted its origins in the state’s Legislature seven years ago.

“Republicans created this system, and it works,” he said in a statement released to ProPublica. “Our last election was fair and secure, as was proven by a recount, our law enforcement agencies, and the courts.”

Minnesota GOPer pushes conspiracy that schools gave litter boxes to kids identifying as “furries”

In Minnesota, Republican Scott Jensen — who is running against Democratic incumbent Gov. Tim Walz in the 2022 midterms — has promoted a bizarre conspiracy which claims that public schools are allowing children to use litter boxes instead of restrooms if they identify as “furry.” Now, according to KARE TV 11 (the NBC affiliate in Minneapolis/St. Paul), Jensen is drawing criticism from teachers and school officials for repeating a myth that has no basis in reality.

Jensen promoted the “litterboxgate” conspiracy theory, as it is being called in Minnesota, during a campaign event in September — telling the crowd, “What are we doing to our kids? Why are we telling elementary kids that they get to choose their gender this week? Why do we have litter boxes in some of the school districts so kids can pee in them, because they identify as a furry? We’ve lost our minds. We’ve lost our minds.”

But according to KARE, “Several Minnesota school districts, including a representative for Mankato Area Public Schools, confirmed to KARE 11 that children have not been given litter boxes to use.”

School superintendent Paul Peterson told KARE, “Litterboxgate is, in fact, complete nonsense.” And the group Education Minnesota described “litterboxgate” as a “bizarre internet hoax” that “appears to be an attempt to discredit school policies intended to make schools safe and welcoming for students.”

According to KARE, “Minnesota Dept. of Education spokesperson Kevin Burns told KARE there aren’t any public schools in Minnesota that provide litter boxes in restrooms. School districts don’t track the number of children who engage in the ‘furry’ subculture, which involves taking on the persona of an anthropomorphic animal. The unsubstantiated rumors have popped up in school districts across the country, including Michigan, Colorado and Nebraska.”

Lisa Olson, who heads the Elk River Education Association in Minnesota, has been critical of Jensen for promoting “litterboxgate.”

Olson, at a press conference, told reporters, “There are no litter boxes in schools. It’s simply not true. We know this misinformation that Scott Jensen is spewing is false and hurts our students and our schools.”

KSTP/Survey USA poll released on October 3 found Jensen, who formerly served in the Minnesota State Senate, trailing Walz by 10 percent. But an Alpha News/Trafalgar Group poll from mid-September found Walz with only a 3 percent lead over Jensen.

6 beverages to add to your Trader Joe’s cart this fall

In case you missed it, sweater weather is finally upon us! And no fall meal is complete without a hot and spicy beverage to level up the cozy factor.

From apple cider and pumpkin spice coffee to hot cocoa and seasonal teas, the selection of autumnal beverages is seemingly endless — especially at Trader Joe’s. In addition to its new lineup of fall goodies — which includes Caramel Apple Dipping Kits, Pumpkin Cheesecake Croissants and Pumpkin Spiced Joe-Joe’s Sandwich Cookies — the California-based grocer has rolled out a seasonal drink collection featuring both new and returning items.

Because it’s always easier to shop with a plan, here are 6 fall beverages to consider adding to your shopping list before your next TJ’s run. 

This list to Salon Food’s growing library of supermarket guides. If you’re on the hunt for something sweet, check out the 6 fall bakery items to try from TJ’s right now.

01
Pumpkin Spice Coffee
Trader Joe's Pumpkin Spice CoffeeTrader Joe’s Pumpkin Spice Coffee (Photo by Joseph Neese)
TJ’s Pumpkin Spice Coffee is an aromatic blend flavored with orange peel, nutmeg, ground vanilla beans cinnamon, allspice and pumpkin spice oil. According to a few Redditors (and loyal TJ’s shoppers), this coffee flaunts a delicious pumpkin spice taste, but it isn’t overbearing.
 
“I am a huge coffee drinker, and Trader Joe’s coffee has always severely disappointed me,” wrote user u/crindler. “It ranges from awful to tolerable from the ones I’ve tried. They all seem either burnt or overly bitter.”
 
“But this coffee is something I didn’t expect. It’s not bitter in any way, it reminds me of a mild medium roast, and the pumpkin spice flavor isn’t overbearing like some PS coffees can be, and is just perfect. Highly recommend if you were hesitant because of Trader Joe’s coffee history.”
 
User u/royal-ramen agreed and added, “I am obsessed with this coffee and currently have 3 extra cans stockpiled in my cabinet! So good! Much better than using pumpkin spice creamer in regular coffee imo.”
 
TJ’s Pumpkin Spice Coffee is available ground in 14-ounce tins or boxes of 12 single-serve coffee cups.
02
Pumpkin Spice Rooibos
Trader Joe's Pumpkin Spice RooibosTrader Joe’s Pumpkin Spice Rooibos (Photo by Joseph Neese)

This spicy herbal blend is made with rooibos tea and spices, including cinnamon, clove and nutmeg. Despite having no caffeine, it’s a lovely morning pick-me-up that pairs well with TJ’s Gluten Free Pumpkin Bread or Spiced Pumpkin Madeleine Cookies.

 

If you’re looking to enjoy a cup of tea in a more creative fashion, try fermenting the blend in maple syrup like this Redditor
 

03
Non-Dairy Pumpkin Oat Beverage
Trader Joe's Non-Dairy Pumpkin Oat BeverageTrader Joe’s Non-Dairy Pumpkin Oat Beverage (Photo by Joseph Neese)

TJ’s Non-Dairy Pumpkin Oat Beverage is only available during the fall months, so be sure to pick up a carton (or two) on your next grocery trip. It’s made from hydrolyzed oats and water that are then mixed with pumpkin purée, natural pumpkin-spice flavor, cane sugar and a sprinkle of sea salt for balance.

 

This oat drink can be added to seasonal smoothies or cereal, such as TJ’s Maple Pecan Clusters Cereal. It can also be used as a creamer in both coffee and blends of black tea.

04
Organic Hot Cocoa Mix
Trader Joe's Organic Hot Cocoa MixTrader Joe’s Organic Hot Cocoa Mix (Photo by Joseph Neese)
A fall staple, TJ’s Organic Hot Cocoa Mix includes 10 single-ounce packets of rich and dark cocoa. This hot drink can be made with warm water, milk or other dairy alternatives and tastes great alongside TJ’s Apple Cider Donuts and TJ’s Pumpkin Blondie Brownies. For a more indulgent beverage, try adding in mini marshmallows and TJ’s Pumpkin Spice Batons, another limited-time-only item.
05
Spiced Cider
Trader Joe's Spiced CiderTrader Joe’s Spiced Cider (Photo by Joseph Neese)

TJ’s Spiced Cider, a seasonal specialty, ramps up traditional apple cider with spices such as allspice, cinnamon and cloves. It can be enjoyed straight out of the bottle, over ice or warmed up. If you’re looking to imbibe, it would also pair well with bourbon, brandy or rum. 

 

In fact, this spiced beverage can be combined with hard liquor and citrus to make a “Spiked Spiced Cider” — here’s the recipe. Simply warm the Spiced Cider in a small saucepan over medium heat and slowly stir in a shot of TJ’s Sour Mash Tennessee Bourbon Whiskey (or your brand of choice) and the juice of a mandarin orange. Garnish with mandarin slices and a cinnamon stick.

06
Sparkling Apple Cider
Trader Joe's Sparkling Apple CiderTrader Joe’s Sparkling Apple Cider (Photo by Joseph Neese)

Made from ripe and fresh whole apples, TJ’s Sparkling Apple Cider is a delicious non-alcoholic alternative that you can bring to any fall dinner party. This beverage pairs exceptionally well with both sweet and savory meals, from apple pie and pumpkin pancakes to squash soup and oven-roasted root vegetables.