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“We’re probably going to see that”: Mike Flynn suggests governors can “declare war” over elections

Michael Flynn, the former U.S. National Security Advisor under the Trump administration, recently warned that governors may soon decide to “declare war.”

According to HuffPost, Flynn made the remarks during a campaign event recently held in Arizona for Mark Finchem, a Trump-endorsed candidate and QAnon enthusiast running the secretary of state.

During the event, Flynn echoed a number of conspiracy theories while also insisting that “90% of federal agencies” should be terminated. “Just lock ’em up,” Flynn said seemingly referring to federal agencies.

At one point during his speech, he claimed governors have the right to declare war.

“States’ rights,” he added. “Did you know that a governor can declare war? A governor can declare war. And we’re going to probably see that,” Flynn warned.

While it is unclear under what circumstances governors would take such action, HuffPost notes that Flynn may have been suggesting that this type of action be taken in the event governors are displeased with the outcome of elections.

The news outlet notes:

Article I, Section 8, Clause 11 of the Constitution states that it is Congress that has the power to ‘declare war,’ to ‘raise and support armies.’ For the U.S. to wage war, Congress has to pass a resolution in both chambers, then present it to the president, who shall then direct the military as ‘commander in chief of the Army and Navy of the United States,’ according to Article II, Section 2.”

As the video began circulating on social media, Twitter users shared their reactions criticizing Flynn. “Flynn has gone off the deep end,” one user tweeted.

“A state is going to declare war against the federal government?” another Twitter user said. “Sure, Mike. Good luck with that.”

Another user tweeted, “And this guy is a retired general. How he hasn’t been recalled to duty and court-martialed is beyond me.”

Watch the video below or at this link.

Hurricane Ian: Amid the wreckage, a major test for both Ron DeSantis and Joe Biden

The devastation in Florida from Hurricane Ian is staggering in scope. The massive storm churned across the state leaving wrecked homes and ruined lives in its wake, and it’s frankly hard to watch the footage, knowing the depth of the misery people must be feeling. And we don’t know the half of it yet. The scope of death and destruction will only become clear as time passes.

Over the next few days, that’s all we’ll be thinking about, and understandably so. But soon the focus will turn to whether or not the authorities are doing everything they can to mitigate the crisis. After a disaster of this scale there will almost certainly be fingers pointed and backs stabbed in the days to come. Natural disasters, and especially hurricanes, are often political disasters as well and the future of those in charge can be changed in an instant.

Any state that is prone to hurricanes is therefore also politically hazardous for any governor who happens to be in charge when it hits. Florida Gov. Lawton Chiles, a Democrat, saw his poll numbers drop to 22% after Hurricane Andrew, one of the most destructive storms in the state’s history, hit Miami-Dade County in 1992. South Carolina Gov. Jim Hodges, also a Democrat lost his re-election campaign in 2002 largely because he was perceived as mishandling the evacuation procedures ahead of Hurricane Floyd in 1999. Every governor of a hurricane state knows they need to have their windbreaker handy and be ready to get out there and show people they’re doing everything they can to handle the emergency.

This challenge doesn’t only confront governors, of course. Presidents must also do everything they can to summon resources and aid or they too will pay a price. The most infamous example of this, without a doubt, was the calamitous response after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans in 2005. It was truly dreadful. From the Red Cross to the police to the local and state and federal government, the failures were monumental up and down the line. But the one who rtook the greatest share of the blame among the public, and rightfully so, was the president of the United States, George W. Bush. From the first days when he largely ignored the crisis while running around the country to the infamous photo-op where he told his hapless FEMA director, Michael Brown, “You’re doin’ a heckuva job, Brownie,” Bush failed to project any sympathy for the victims or display the slightest competence, even as the country watched the widespread suffering unfold on television. His presidency never recovered, and Republicans up and down the ballot paid the price in 2008.

Another big hurricane damaged the political ambitions of another top Republican. That would be Chris Christie, who was governor of New Jersey when Hurricane Sandy destroyed much of that state’s famous shoreline back in 2012. Christie suffered for quite different reasons. Behaving as governors of both parties had always done, he welcomed Barack Obama to New Jersey and thanked him for his quick, dedicated commitment to the state’s recovery — and was excoriated by his fellow Republicans for ostensibly giving Obama a political boost ahead the 2012 election. Christie was eventually done in by a scandal of his own making a couple of years later but the lesson was made clear to potential rising stars in the GOP: Avoid giving any Democratic president credit for anything.

One of the new Republicans elected to Congress in that 2012 election was a young Florida hotshot who helped create the hard-right Freedom Caucus. His name was Ron DeSantis. On the day after he was sworn in to the House, he made his first big splash by voting against relief funds for Hurricane Sandy, saying, “This ‘put it on the credit card’ mentality is part of the reason we find ourselves nearly $17 trillion in debt.”


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Flash forward a decade and DeSantis is now governor of Florida. Apparently he has seen the light. Joe Biden’s administration declared a state of emergency in Florida days ahead of Hurricane Ian hitting landfall. Despite some goading by Fox News celebrities and a bit of waffling, DeSantis has generally been gracious toward Biden. The two elected officials who must face this crisis seem to be working together toward the greater good. This is one case where the GOP’s total abandonment of intellectual consistency may redound to the benefit of the public.

Florida’s most famous resident has posted absolutely nothing about Hurricane Ian on his homemade social media site. No doubt he’s waiting to see where his possible advantage in this crisis might lie.

In this single instance, DeSantis appears not to be emulating Donald Trump’s model, which was to insult any state leader who didn’t vote for him and threaten to withhold aid from blue states suffering from natural disasters. His treatment of California during the catastrophic wildfire seasons during his term& was especially odious, as he publicly insulted the state’s leaders, claiming they refused to obey his nonsensical (and nonexistent) edict to “rake the forests,” which he claimed would have prevented disaster. His handling of Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico was an epic disaster all its own, as he delayed $20 billion in desperately needed aid, insisted that the death toll was a fraction of what it actually was and denigrated local officials in public. (In fairness, Trump never seemed to comprehend that Puerto Rico was part of the United States.) Of course it’s true that Trump’s performance in all moments of crisis was appalling, and any ambitious politician with an instinct for self-preservation would be a fool to follow his example.

Speaking of Florida’s most famous resident, he has posted nothing about Hurricane Ian on his own homemade social media platform. Not one word. I have to assume that he’s waiting to see where the advantage to him in this crisis might lie — and that’s during the recovery effort. We can only imagine how much he’s currently hoping to see failure so he can cast his own disgraceful performances as superior. If things go well he can always flip a coin and decide whether to stab DeSantis in the back and give Biden the credit, or claim that Sleepy Joe was saved by his former protégé — or both at once.

Using disasters to make cheap political points has become a commonplace Republican tactic. If Ron DeSantis, of all people, is able to resist the temptation to follow Trump’s lead, then good for him. Here’s hoping everyone works together to save lives and get the people of Florida back on their feet. It would be one of the first positive signs in ages that America’s partisan polarization isn’t a terminal disease. 

“What does Trump have on Judge Cannon?”: Experts stunned after judge overrules own special master

Judge Aileen Cannon on Thursday overruled the special master she appointed to review thousands of documents seized from Mar-a-Lago, shielding former President Donald Trump from addressing his claims that documents may have been “planted” or “declassified” in court.

Cannon, a Trump appointee in southern Florida, issued an order extending the timeline of the review after Trump’s lawyers objected to the expedited schedule laid out by special master Raymond Dearie, who was chosen from a list proposed by Trump’s lawyers. Under the new order, the review and any surrounding issues around Dearie’s rulings “will almost certainly” stretch into next year, according to Politico.

Cannon, who has served on the bench for less than two years, also overruled Dearie, a Reagan appointee who has served for 36 years, on his requirement that Trump assert whether the FBI’s inventory of seized items is accurate, effectively challenging his public claim that agents may have “planted” evidence.

“There shall be no separate requirement on Plaintiff at this stage, prior to the review of any of the Seized Materials, to lodge ex ante final objections to the accuracy of Defendant’s Inventory, its descriptions, or its contents. The Court’s Appointment Order did not contemplate that obligation,” Cannon wrote.

She wrote that if any issues rise during the review “that require reconsideration of the Inventory or the need to object to its contents, the parties shall make those matters known to the Special Master for appropriate resolution and recommendation to this Court.”

Cannon also rejected other parts of Dearie’s plan for the review, giving Trump’s lawyers additional weeks to assert whether they believe any documents are covered by attorney-client privilege or executive privilege.

“If Judge Cannon was going to continue calling every ball in Trump’s favor, I’m not at all sure why she felt the need to appoint a special master to review the documents the government seized from Mar-a-Lago,” tweeted Joyce Vance, a former U.S. attorney. “No real surprises here. The name of the game is delay. Judge Cannon countermanded Judge Dearie’s streamlined schedule & helped Trump advance his usual delay game in litigation. That means it could be late December before DOJ can use documents it recovered from Mar-a-Lago.”

Cannon previously came under criticism for repeatedly siding with Trump in the case. Cannon’s initial order barred the Justice Department from continuing its criminal investigation into the documents and ordered documents marked classified to be included in the special master review and shared with Trump’s lawyers. A federal appeals court overturned those rulings, arguing that she had abused her discretion and that Trump “not even attempted to show that he has a need to know the information contained in the classified documents.”


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Harvard Law Professor Laurence Tribe said that Cannon’s order on Thursday was “clearly wrong.”

“But she’s a sideshow now that the Court of Appeals has lifted her injunction with respect to the classified documents,” he tweeted. “On the eve of her stupidly extended deadline, DOJ should indict Trump and render her delays and game playing moot.”

Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti said the order was a “minor win” for Trump.

“But this doesn’t change the difficult position Trump is in,” he added. “He still has to take a position regarding every seized document.”

Some legal experts criticized Cannon for repeatedly intervening on Trump’s behalf.

“She’s an embarrassment to the federal judiciary,” wrote conservative attorney George Conway.

“Cannon’s latest order has neither law nor reason on its side,” tweeted former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman. “Judges never micromanage special masters this way,” he said.

Former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann, who served on special counsel Bob Mueller’s team, said that the order was “one more piece of evidence that she is completely unfit to serve on the bench.”

 “What does Donald Trump have on Judge Cannon or her husband?” Weissmann wrote. “Something is SO off in her decisions (and the court of appeals said as much) that it is impossible not to ask this question in all seriousness.”

Read Cannon’s full order below:

Cannon overrules Dearie by Igor Derysh on Scribd

What I want Brett Favre to know about poverty and public assistance

Ignoring the poor is a great American pastime for the one percent. According to recent news reports, former NFL quarterback Brett Favre may have found a way, via his alleged involvement in a massive corruption scandal in Mississippi, to stand out in that game, too. 

The Hall of Famer has been embroiled in a complex web of allegations involving welfare funds meant for families experiencing poverty being diverted to fund, among other questionable projects, volleyball and football facilities at the University of Southern Mississippi, Favre’s alma mater, where his daughter also played volleyball at the time. 

Investigations alleging Favre’s entanglement in Mississippi welfare fund misuse date back several years, with ESPN reporting in 2020 that a “nonprofit group caught up in an embezzlement scheme in Mississippi used federal welfare money to pay former NFL quarterback Brett Favre $1.1 million for multiple speaking engagements, but Favre did not show up for the events.” The nonprofit had contracts through the state’s Department of Human Services funded by Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and allegations of misuse led to criminal charges being filed against nonprofit leaders and state officials in 2020

Favre has denied those allegations, claiming in 2021 on Twitter that he “would never accept money for no-show appearances,” that he was paid for commercials, but “[o]f course the money was returned because I would never knowingly take funds meant to help our neighbors in need.” 

In May of this year, Mississippi DHS sued Favre and several others in an attempt to recover some of the lost funds, which the Associated Press reports total “millions in misspent welfare dollars that were intended to help some of the poorest people in the United States.” 

And now, text messages have surfaced in court filings that appear to show former Gov. Phil Bryant helping Favre find funding for a new volleyball stadium using welfare funds, reported Mississippi Today in an explosive five-month investigation that brought the state’s scandal back into national headlines. “Bryant has for years denied any close involvement in the steering of welfare funds to the volleyball stadium, though plans for the project even included naming the building after him.” 

In July 2019, ESPN reports, “Bryant texted Favre that the founder of a nonprofit who paid him ‘has some limited control over Federal Funds in the form of Grants for Children and adults in the Low Income Community.'”

“Use of these funds [is] tightly controlled,” Bryant wrote, according to the filing. “Any improper use could result in violation of Federal Law. Auditors are currently reviewing the use of these funds.”

The following month, the filings show Favre texting the nonprofit leader, “If you were to pay me, is there any way the media can find out where it came from and how much?” 

None of this looks good for Favre’s reputation.

Favre texted Bryant again in September 2019, according to the filing: “We obviously need your help big time and time is working against us,” Favre wrote. “And we feel that your name is the perfect choice for this facility, and we are not taking No for an answer! You are a Southern Miss Alumni, and folks need to know you are also a supporter of the University.”

Bryant responded, “We are going to get there. This was a great meeting. But we have to follow the law. I am to[o] old for Federal Prison.”

None of this looks good for Favre’s reputation. He returned the $1.1 million, but the state is still seeking $228,000 in interest. He has not been charged with any crimes. But Sirius XM has placed his talk show on hold, and NBC Sports reports that his weekly appearances on ESPN Milwaukee have been suspended until further notice. Is that enough? So far, a rich man has forked over a relatively small slice of unearned dough from his otherwise massive sports-built empire.

Maybe Favre, who ranks among the NFL’s highest-paid players of all time and was fortunate enough to grow up in a two-parent household headed by college-educated parents who both worked as teachers, suffers from affluenza now. Maybe he can’t fully understand that there are poor people in Mississippi who need assistance for matters more pressing and important than new athletic facilities for his daughter’s volleyball team.

We fought through public housing and blocks of cheese and government-issued peanut butter until semi-gainful employment was available.

If I had Brett’s ear, I’d tell him about Coach Kevin in northeast Baltimore whose football team — kids ages 9-11, who love the game just like he does — practices in the dark, often running into each other, because the district lacks lights. That is what poverty looks like. Or I would tell Brett my own story, about the times we had to use the oven to heat our home during the winter and eat cereal with a fork to preserve the milk because we were broke and fighting our way through rough stretches. We weren’t lazy and we didn’t lack ambition, we just didn’t get callbacks for jobs because companies didn’t hire dudes with names like Dante or Keon. We fought through public housing and blocks of cheese and government-issued peanut butter until semi-gainful employment was available. And even when we beat public assistance, poverty blanketed our experience. Government funds are a small piece of it. The bigger battle involves securing stable housing, navigating adequate nutrition while living in food deserts, studying in underfunded schools and dealing with the way police officers treated us. We all needed more from a system that failed us repeatedly.

A system that has failed people for generations isn’t Brett Favre’s fault. I don’t think people should call for his arrest. However, this would be a great opportunity for the quarterback to listen to people who may not have been as fortunate. He should spend some time around Mississippians who were hurt by a lack of available funds for public assistance. He could use his platform to amplify those ongoing issues. Maybe some of those poor kids would get a boost up, and end up attending a school like Southern Miss themselves. Maybe as alums, they’d become successful enough to help build new university facilities themselves — the honest way. 

Trevor Noah isn’t gone yet, but he’ll leave “The Daily Show” better

On Wednesday, Trevor Noah hit his seventh anniversary as host of “The Daily Show with Trevor Noah.” We’re all a little lax in keeping track of time these days, so Noah’s mention at the top of Thursday night’s episode that “Daily Show” correspondent Roy Wood Jr. had to remind him of the milestone didn’t seem remarkable.

This forgets how masterful Noah is in wielding a conversational tone before depressing the brake, gently but assuredly, to arrive at punchlines or conclusions that aren’t always easy to hear.

After Noah spoke of being full of gratitude for the journey, calling it “absolutely amazing, it’s something that I never expected,” he dropped another harsh headline on his viewers.  

“I realized that after the seven years, my time is up,” he said.

Seven years does not seem long for a late-night talk show host who is young and still very much in his stride — especially compared to the tenure of Noah’s predecessor Jon Stewart, who saw 16 trips around the sun during his time with the show. During that time came 9/11, the start of the Iraq War, eight years of George W. Bush’s presidency and most of Barack Obama’s, as well as the rise of the Fox News misinformation machine.

One might be tempted to write off Noah’s decision to step down with less than half that time under his belt as a move typical of job-hopping Millennials. Generation Xers and Boomers, i.e. The Olds, still cling to some notion that company loyalty should mean something in this world. But chalking the decision up to succumbing to an itch or a lack of stamina isn’t fair or right.

Noah didn’t specify exactly what he plans to do next in his five-minute announcement other than saying that getting back out into the world made him realize he wanted to see more of it. Before the pandemic, he still performed live stand-up sets even while “The Daily Show” was in production, which he confessed he’s been missing.

“I spent two years in my apartment, not on the road, and when I got back out there, I realized there’s another part of my life out there that I want to carry on exploring,” he said on Thursday. “I miss learning other languages. I miss going to other countries and putting on shows.”

And that is precisely why this announced departure feels less sorrowful than the farewells from hosts before him when they’ve gotten the opportunity to deliver them. Thanks to his work on “The Daily Show,” Noah has made it plain he’s capable of much more than he can achieve by sitting behind a desk four nights a week.

Few late-night talk show hosts hit their stride straight out of the gate. But Noah stepped into the boots of a giant.

He’s already defied the expectations many had of “The Daily Show with Trevor Noah” when he took over in 2015 as a relatively unknown South African comedian on whom Stewart made a gamble. “I sort of felt like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” Noah said. “I came in for a tour of what the previous show was. And then the next thing I know I was handed the keys.”

Not many were pleased by the change in the product between Stewart and Noah. If you were to have polled many writers back then, nearly all would have placed long odds on Noah lasting more than a couple of years, let alone seven.

Consider this Salon headline from 2016, not even a year into his time on the job: “The Daily Show” is dead to me: Trevor Noah will never, ever be good at his job — also, thanks a lot for Donald Trump.”

That writer, Sophia A. McClennen, eventually changed her tune. Many people did. That’s part of the journey to which Noah refers, one that Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel and Seth Meyers all faced when they first slid behind desks we now assume they’ll occupy until their domes are as snow-covered as Johnny Carson’s used to be.

Few late-night talk show hosts hit their stride straight out of the gate. But Noah stepped into the boots of a giant, figuratively speaking. Never mind that Stewart had the dual luxury and ponderous task of overhauling “The Daily Show” after the self-aggrandizing bro who came before left. It still took some time for him, and the show, to find its raison d’être.

But if Stewart’s watch was defined by slicing through the Bush Administration’s thick and ever-expanding wall of bull, and serving as a nightly corrective to the right-wing media ecosystem, Noah’s quest was even more arduous. He made a point of looking beyond the politics and psychology of the U.S.A. to contextualize America’s place in the world.

As it turns out, that international view served him and the audience brilliantly when America elected an authoritarian and would-be dictator.

Noah famously foresaw Donald Trump’s presidency when few on the left could conceive of it, not even his writing staff. In a conversation I had with him in 2018, after “The Daily Show” received its first Emmy nomination for Outstanding Variety Talk Series, he remarked that before the 2016 election, “I spent so much time listening to people tell me that I had no idea of how American elections worked, or I wasn’t the right person to be doing ‘The Daily Show’ because I was not connected to politics in America in any way, shape or form.”

“And then,” he continued, “after Trump won, I realized: No, I, I had been connected to Trump’s politics for a very long time because of where I come from. It’s many Americans who had no familiarity with the phenomenon that is Donald Trump. If you come from a developing nation, his style of leadership is all too familiar.”

That is how Noah transformed “The Daily Show” from the media spin and propaganda filter it became during Stewart’s watch into the guide through racial and social injustice we needed during a presidency that thrived on bigotry and xenophobia.

To someone in Noah’s position and in his skin who was tasked with keeping our spirits up during one of the lowest, darkest periods in American history, seven years probably feels like 20. 

Noah was the host people turned in 2020 when civil rights protests revealed how blinkered white Americans are in matters of racial inequity. To an audience that sought understanding instead of comfortable humor, Noah retained the demeanor of a knowledgeable outsider and observer while dropping truth nukes.

This is why his viral video analysis about George Floyd and society’s broken social contract with Black America was at once emotionally pure and gutting in its evenhanded delivery. This is why his pandemic shows, rebranded as “The Daily Social Distancing Show” and produced from his apartment, had a value and urgency others lacked.

The network of late-night hosts pacified us and made us laugh at the government’s ineptitude in the face of social injustice and so much death caused by a virus we didn’t understand. Noah held our hand through it, and at a time when footage of Black people being shot, beaten and abused became a common viral fodder.

So sure, seven years is not 16, or close to the three decades in late-night that David Letterman clocked in. But to someone in Noah’s position and in his skin who was tasked with keeping our spirits up during one of the lowest, darkest periods in American history, seven years probably feels like 20.  

And although Noah staffed “The Daily Show” far more inclusively than Stewart, his departure could make broadcasting and cable’s late-night host line-up an all-white guy affair again, only now with 100 percent more “Gutfeld” on Fox News Channel.


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Yes, there’s still Ziwe on Showtime and Amber Ruffin on Peacock, but 2022 already saw the end of “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee” and the break-up and cancellation of “Desus & Mero.” There’s also a greater likelihood that Comedy Central will continue what Noah built and replace him with a host who isn’t a white guy or the profoundly problematic host of the new show “Hell of a Week,” Charlamagne Tha God. (Hasan Minhaj is available – just sayin’.)

But the network and the audience have a long time to think about that since, as Noah assured viewers, his exit plan hasn’t been nailed down. That’s the same playbook Stewart followed when he suddenly announced he was stepping down from “The Daily Show” in February 2015, months before he left. That news was shocking and yet, given all Stewart had brought the audience through, it was commonly accepted that he’d earned his rest.

The same is true of Noah, and the fact that he has the juice to announce his departure in the same way, and draw similar levels of shock and respect, is an indication of how far he’s traveled in a short time. Stewart was 36 and a mid-career comic when he took over “The Daily Show” from Craig Kilborn; Noah, at 38, transformed the show yet again and has many years of his professional life in front of him.

Certainly, late-night talk will be poorer for Noah’s departure. Depending on what he decides to do next, the world and our discourse about it could be much richer.

Li’l Marco’s big loan: The tale of a senator, his private-equity pal and an inexplicable appointment

Last year, Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida appointed his longtime friend and financial adviser Bernie Navarro to an advisory committee that helped select potential nominees for federal judgeships, even though Navarro had no law degree and no legal experience. Just three months earlier, Navarro — who runs a private equity mortgage lender — extended Rubio a short-term “bridge loan” of $850,000 that allowed the Republican senator to purchase a house. 

To be clear, there is nothing inherently unethical or suspicious about taking out a bridge loan. As the name suggests, they are often used in business or real estate transactions to bridge the gap between more conventional and permanent forms of financing. Homeowners can use bridge loans, for instance, to complete the purchase of a new home while they wait for their current home to sell, as was apparently the case with Rubio.

But this case seems noteworthy for a number of reasons, starting with the long, close personal and financial relationship between Rubio and Navarro. Furthermore, Rubio received his loan from Benworth Capital, Navarro’s company, on Jan. 18, 2021, but did not disclose it publicly for more than a year and a half, until his most recent financial disclosure form on Aug. 30, 2022. In April of 2021, after receiving the loan from Benworth but long before disclosing it, Rubio appointed Navarro to the Southern District Judicial Advisory Commission, which was responsible for picking finalists for several important federal appointments in south Florida, including U.S. district judges, U.S. marshals and the U.S. attorney.

Rubio got his $850,000 loan in January 2021, but didn’t disclose it for more than a year and a half. During that time, he appointed the lender to a commission that recommended federal judges.

Adam Bozzi, vice president for communications at the advocacy group End Citizens United, said he saw a clear “threat of conflict of interest” in Rubio’s relationship with Navarro. “It becomes worse when you actually are in debt to the person and you put them on a board that gives them special access [to give] advice to you,” he added, “and it becomes even worse when you don’t disclose it.”

Navarro has extensive career experience in real estate finance, investment, development and construction, but has no evident qualifications to serve as an adviser on judicial appointments. According to the Benworth Capital website, the company offers bridge loans with “a less stringent approval process” for real estate buyers with “less than perfect credit.”


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Those transactions have led to a certain amount of controversy over the years. In 2017, Benworth foreclosed on the family home of a 14-year old girl with cerebral palsy. Her parents had stopped making monthly payments, saying they had been “misled into taking out a high-interest, short-term loan … that they could not afford to pay back,” the Miami Herald reported. Ultimately, the family was allowed to stay in their home, after Benworth agreed to a settlement of $240,000 — nearly $100,000 more than the original loan amount.

In 2020, Navarro registered Benworth as a “woman-owned business,” in an attempt to fast-track receipt of emergency COVID relief funds under the Paycheck Protection Program. Salon was unable to determine whether one or more women own at least 51% of the company, which is the federal government’s definition of that term

Navarro’s two companies, Benworth Capital and Presto Payday, received at least $308,000 in COVID relief while his firm processed PPP loans. Benworth has continued to expand, opening an office in Puerto Rico, and donating more than $56,000 to Republican candidates and PACs, along with $14,200 to the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

Rubio and Navarro reportedly met in Florida Republican circles, and became friends long before the former entered politics. In April of 2015, Navarro hosted an intimate gathering for Rubio and a group of friends, family members and political allies at Navarro’s suburban Miami home, trumping the senator’s announcement by introducing him as “the next president of the United States.”

Navarro hosted several fundraisers for Rubio, first for his short-lived presidential campaign and then for his 2016 re-election to the Senate, serving as finance chairman for both campaigns. Navarro has personally contributed over $25,500 to Rubio’s campaigns and associated PACs throughout his career.

There is nothing manifestly illegal about Rubio’s personal or financial relationship with Navarro, although it points toward a number of unanswered questions. But as Adam Bozzi of End Citizens United sees it, this is a textbook example of how shadowy backstage deals involving money and influence have contaminated American politics.

“Giving these types of people influence where they can advocate for judges that will help corporations or help themselves rather than consumers or Florida families,” Bozzi told Salon, “that is the kind of quid pro quo corruption that hurts people and turns off voters.”

How the GOP weaponized ignorance — and how “smart people acting like dopes” stay in power

Political satirist Andy Borowitz has published a new book, “Profiles in Ignorance: How America’s Politicians Got Dumb and Dumber,” which may surprise some readers. Unlike his New Yorker column, The Borowitz Report, this book is not cast in the vein of genial or gentle humor. It’s a stinging indictment of how the Republican Party has, by design, devolved from at least somewhat reasonable or coherent discussions of politics and policy to full-on celebration of idiocy.

I spoke to Borowitz for a recent episode of “Salon Talks” about his deeply researched book on the GOP’s long arc into paralyzing dumbness. He shared his insight on the GOP’s “three stages of ignorance,” which come with laugh-out-loud moments when he quotes actual words spoken by leading Republicans to make his point. Consider this legendary utterance from former Vice President Dan Quayle: “I have made good judgments in the past. I have made good judgments in the future. … The future will be better tomorrow.” 

But it was Donald Trump, of course, who weaponized idiocy in a way that went from being amusing to literally deadly, especially with Trump’s mishandling of the COVID pandemic and the election lies that led to the Jan. 6 attack. Remarkably, there are now numerous Republicans with Ivy League degrees — or even two degrees, like Ron DeSantis — who deliberately play dumb to connect with the GOP base.  All is not lost, however: Borowitz shares a few concrete ways that reasonable, intelligent people can reach at least some Republicans. Watch or read our conversation below.

This transcript has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

This book is not exactly satirical. It’s substantive, though often funny too. Did you debate doing a book about the profiles in ignorance and making it truly satirical?

It was a departure for me, because I’m known for doing fake news. I’m known for making up stories. I think I wanted to try something a little different because the news has gotten so ridiculous recently. The idea of doing satirical news has become very, very difficult. With Donald Trump, I would wrack my brain trying to come up with something ridiculous that he might do, and then 10 minutes later he would do that thing. So the news wasn’t fake anymore, it was just early. And that I found frustrating.

I was on tour a couple of years ago — I did a standup tour called “Make America Not Embarrassing Again.” I got into the topic of ignorance a little bit and I had this throwaway line where I was talking about Sarah Palin and her interview with Katie Couric where she couldn’t name a single Supreme Court decision that she disagreed with, other than Roe v. Wade, of course. And I thought, you’ve got to be able to come up with something, like Ali v. Frazier or something, just pull something out of your ass. And I realized that was significant because Sarah Palin was the gateway idiot who led to Donald Trump. And that got me thinking about this whole rise of ignorance in America.

I went back in time and really focused on the last 50 years, which I call the age of ignorance. And I think that’s where, although we’ve always had dumb politicians in our country, ignorance has really reached critical mass. You don’t need to be satirical when you have comedians like Sarah Palin and Dan Quayle writing the jokes for you. You really don’t. You can’t top them, really.

You write about ignoramuses and argue that they’re attracted to the Republican Party, or so it seems. Democrats, by contrast, have eggheads. You mentioned Adlai Stevenson, Al Gore, even Mike Dukakis. Is there something about the parties that naturally self-select? 

I think both parties started in a similar place. If you go back to ancient history before either of us was born, to the 1950s, and you look at Harry Truman and Dwight Eisenhower, both of them were actually big readers. Harry Truman didn’t go to college, but he read like crazy. He read every library book in Independence, Missouri. Ike on the other hand, was also a huge reader, but he kept it a secret. He thought it was going to hurt his image. He acted like he just played golf all the time, but Ike stayed up every night until 11 o’clock reading. I think reading is actually a really good measure for determining how knowledgeable somebody is.

I’m a little bit hesitant to say that the Democrats are the party of smart people and the Republicans are the party of ignorant people. But I think the Republicans caught on a little bit sooner to the fact that this whole projection of anti-intellectualism was a vote-winner, and they really made it their brand. The Democrats were a little bit tempted by that too. I mean, certainly Bill Clinton was looking at Ronald Reagan and saying, “Now, he’s got a real winning message. How can I dumb down my message a little bit?” So the Democrats haven’t been immune to it, but the Republicans really are untouchable when it comes to this movement. They are really the vanguard.

Are you suggesting that Donald Trump didn’t bring home 11,000 documents to Mar-a-Lago because he wanted to read them? That’s not why he had those documents there?

This shows you how bad I am at predicting events. I never thought that, of all the things Donald Trump would steal from the White House, reading material would be among them. Never. I mean, silverware, yes. Maybe some extra bottles of ketchup, I don’t know. Reading material, never in a million years. 

We’ve always had dumb politicians, but in the last 50 years, ignorance has really reached critical mass.

They were begging him to read stuff when he was there. One trick they used with Donald Trump, and this isn’t made up — nothing in the book is made up — but one trick that the National Security Council would use, whenever they had a really important memo they wanted him to read, they would put the word “Trump” in as many paragraphs as possible, hoping that would catch his eye. He really likes that word. I don’t think it succeeded, but it was worth a try.

You describe three stages of the “profiles in ignorance.” The first one is ridicule. Tell us a little bit about ridicule.

First of all, I should say: Nothing in this book is just my opinion. As you point out, it’s very thoroughly documented. It’s all facts. That doesn’t mean it’s totally serious. It is hilarious because, and I’m not taking credit for it, I’m quoting very funny people. 

The three stages of ignorance are ridicule, acceptance and celebration. Ridicule came first. That was when dumb politicians had to pretend to be smart. It was still important, we thought, for our politicians to be knowledgeable. Then after that, we moved into the acceptance phase, where dumb politicians felt it was OK and even cool to appear dumb. That’s George W. Bush, the guy you want to have a beer with. And now we’re in a phase, which is really the most horrifying phase, where smart politicians pretend to be dumb because they think that wins votes. You have very well-educated guys, like Josh Hawley, the world class sprinter, and Ron DeSantis, who talk nonsense because that’s what they think their voters want to hear. 

But ridicule — let’s start with ridicule. There was an era a long time ago, say 50 years ago, where we still expected politicians to know stuff. The Republicans discovered in the 1960s, after the Kennedy-Nixon debates, that it was important to have somebody who was good on TV. Because Kennedy cleaned Nixon’s clock on TV. Not on the radio, because on the radio they both sounded knowledgeable. So the Republicans reverse-engineered this and thought, well, instead of finding a politician who’s knowledgeable and making him good on TV, let’s just find somebody who’s really good on TV and then make it appear as though he knows stuff.

And that was the beginning of Ronald Reagan. They recruited Ronald Reagan, who was at that point a has-been TV host. I mean, he’d hosted the “General Electric Theater.” They hired this guy, Stu Spencer, who was a really shrewd campaign manager. And he hired — this is not made up! — some UCLA psychologists to basically, “Clockwork Orange”-style, load Reagan with information.

It was barely convincing. I mean, he would get up there and do talking points and seem like he had memorized the script, which of course he was really good at, since that’s what he did for a living. But he won the California gubernatorial race by a million votes, and that really set the whole thing off. Because at that point the Republicans realized, we just have to find people who are good on TV. 

Now, this backfired in 1988, because they thought they had that guy in Dan Quayle. They were convinced Dan Quayle was the best-looking guy in the world. Dan Quayle thought he was better looking than Robert Redford. That was his humble opinion. The problem was, Dan Quayle, unlike Reagan, could not fake being smart. Reagan, when he didn’t know an answer to something, would just do a wisecrack. He’d say, like, “Well, there you go again,” something like that. Quayle just got really, really upset. Nothing is worse than a guy who doesn’t know the answer to a question and makes it really apparent that he doesn’t know and is pissed off that he doesn’t know. That was Dan Quayle. He just imploded every time his knowledge, or lack thereof, was tested.

Then you get into acceptance, with George W. Bush. He’s asked by a radio host who the president of Chechnya is, and he goes, “I don’t know. Do you know?” And they start spinning this. Instead of going, “We have to teach you more,” a light bulb goes off. And that’s the next stage. Share a little bit about that, please.

Well, this is where Karl Rove, who was really the Stu Spencer of George W. Bush — or Bush’s brain, as he was called — lucked out, because he started with George Bush being a candidate much in the mold of Dan Quayle. Their ignorance was very similar. Their backgrounds are very similar. They were in the same fraternity, Quayle at DePauw in Indiana and Bush at Yale. And they were both knuckleheads. But the difference was, Dan Quayle would get asked these questions and then freak out. 

George W. Bush would get asked questions and he would say, “Maybe I don’t know that. Maybe I don’t have to know that.” He would sort of embrace his ignorance. And he said, “I don’t have to know everything. I’m going to surround myself with people who know things.” That sounds familiar, because Trump said the same thing. “I’m going to surround myself with good people, the best people.” The problem is, those people didn’t know shit either.  

George W. Bush, just a few weeks before invading Iraq, did not know who Sunnis and Shiites were. I mean, he literally did not know. He was informed about this by some Iraqi exiles at the White House, and he said, “I thought the Iraqis were all Muslims.” I mean, this was weeks before invading Iraq. While the book is funny, it also has a tragic side because we see the consequences of ignorance. It’s not just all, ha ha ha. I mean, a lot of people die because politicians don’t know stuff. And that’s a problem. 

But George W. Bush really turned ignorance into an asset. Because he didn’t know anything and was like, “I’m like you. You don’t know much either, do you? So I’m the kind of guy you’d want to have a beer with.” That became so famous. That poll was commissioned not by an actual polling company, but by the marketing department of Sam Adams beer. So we’ve been living with this incredible political wisdom courtesy of the Sam Adams brewery. Well done, America.

Sarah Palin was the gateway idiot who led to Donald Trump. And that got me thinking about this whole rise of ignorance in America.

Sarah Palin, as you say, began to show us glimmers of what the GOP is today: the the celebration of ignorance and the trolling. Like, I’m going to stick it in your face and I’m going to gin up hate against people on the other side. Is that fair?

It’s totally fair, because what you find, and this is true in other countries too, is that when facts and information disappear, hatred and prejudice fill the void. It’s easier. Learning about geopolitics is tricky and complicated. Learning about economics, people’s eyes glaze over. But if you say something like, “There are rapists coming over from Mexico,” or, “Barack Obama wasn’t born here,” that’s easy stuff to grasp. There is a very nefarious side to ignorance, which is, what fills that void? In the case of Sarah Palin, her own campaign manager, Steve Schmidt, who was John McCain’s campaign manager, when he finally sat down with her after she’d been selected, he came to the horrifying conclusion, and this is a direct quote, “She doesn’t know anything.” And it’s true.

She had never heard of Margaret Thatcher. She thought that the queen of the U.K. commanded the armed forces. She didn’t know who attacked us on 9/11. She thought it was Saddam Hussein. This was somebody John McCain chose to be one heartbeat away from the presidency. I actually found her defeat, in the most recent election [as a candidate for Congress], really encouraging. I really feel that her status as a national joke may actually have caught up with her. Wouldn’t that be wonderful? We say history doesn’t move in a straight line. This book tells a story that’s pretty horrifying. But wouldn’t it be wonderful if we’re actually due for a correction? You can be dumb as a politician in this country, but not that dumb. That would be amazing.

Finally, you get to the celebration phase, and this is something. The celebration of idiocy and how dangerous it is. Donald Trump ushered in that celebration.

Donald Trump actually doesn’t have to make much of an effort. He is one of the most deeply ignorant presidents, probably the most ignorant, in our history. On the internet, especially on Twitter, it’s so easy to call somebody an idiot or a moron. I’m sure you and I have been called that many, many times — today already. But I really prefer the term “ignoramus” because ignoramus literally means somebody who doesn’t know things. And Donald Trump does not know any school subject well, even the areas of his so-called expertise, like business and construction and renovation. He doesn’t know about that either. I have a lot of quotes from people who worked for him who said he was completely at sea when it came to that stuff.

But what’s really horrifying about this stage — there are two kinds of ignorant politicians we’re dealing with now. We have Marjorie Taylor Greene, who comes by ignorance very naturally. I mean, she’s the one who says that I personally have a space laser — which I wish I had! I wish I could operate a space laser. That is such a flattering assessment of me, to think that I could operate such machinery. I barely can get on Zoom, and she thinks I can do a space laser. So she comes by it naturally. Lauren Boebert comes by it very naturally. Louie Gohmert, people like that. 

Marjorie Taylor Greene says that I personally have a space laser — which I wish I had! That is such a flattering assessment of me, to think that I could operate such machinery. I can barely get on Zoom.

But then there are these super-educated guys like Ted Cruz, Princeton grad, Ron DeSantis, Josh Hawley. These guys know better, and yet they’re making really dumb decisions because it appeals to this populist sense that we don’t want smart people running the show. To me, the celebration phase is the most heinous phase, because we have people who really know better who are acting like dopes, and it’s hurting us. It’s endangering us.

How do you think that impacts the base? When Donald Trump would say things like, “I know more than the generals. I know more than the doctors,” the way I interpret it is that his base, who loves him, is like, “Oh yeah, I know more than the experts too. I’m glad he’s finally saying the truth.” And I’m not saying you should question experts. But there are people who are like, “No, in my gut, I feel you’re wrong. I have no empirical, objective data to back that up. But because I disagree with you, I don’t care that you have a PhD and you’ve spent your life working in this field.” During the pandemic, we saw how dangerous that was. 

During the 2008 election, a British documentarian went out and interviewed voters in West Virginia and was asking them about Obama. Obama wasn’t very popular in West Virginia. One woman said, “I’m not going to vote for him because he’s a Muslim.” And the interviewer said, “Well actually, ma’am, he is a Christian.” And she said, “I disagree.” I mean that is where we are — we’ve elevated everyone’s opinion to the level of fact. That is very dangerous. But here’s the thing. If we’re going to believe in democracy — and I hate to be an optimist, but I am kind of an optimist — we can’t totally give up on the idea of Americans learning stuff. We can’t just say, “Well every Republican is an idiot and uneducable, and they can’t be taught the truth.”

Donald Trump does not know any school subject well, even in the areas of his so-called expertise, like business and construction and renovation.

One thing that I came across from researching the book is — you remember trickle-down economics, the Republican gospel that you cut the taxes of the rich and then the poor, magically, somehow get rich too. Doesn’t work. It’s been disproved a million times. I think, though, that trickle-down ignorance has been a roaring success, because we’re social animals and we’re actually very compliant. 
I mean remember during the “War on Terror”? We actually paid attention to Tom Ridge when he had that ridiculous color-coded chart and said, “We’re up to orange today.” We actually listened to that. So when our leaders say things like, to pull an example out of thin air, “I really think that drinking bleach could knock out the coronavirus just like that,” a certain number of us will say, “Well he’s really important, he’s the president, so that must be true.” So these people have an enormous responsibility, obviously. What they say has enormous power. 

If ignorance is trickling down, the only thing I can think of is that knowledge has to somehow push up. We’ve got to work locally and get involved locally and try to make our towns and communities better. Elect local politicians who are well-informed, get engaged in democracy in a way that reaffirms our belief in democracy. And then hope that will eventually spread upward.

We tend to nationalize every problem. We’re on Twitter constantly. We think it’s all about Trump and Pelosi and Biden and all this stuff. We take ourselves off the playing field when it comes to our little community, our town. Yet that’s probably where the best democracy is happening right now, at the local level. And it’s probably the thing that we ignore the most, unfortunately. 

What media didn’t tell you about the UN: 66 nations called for an end to Ukraine war

We have spent the past week reading and listening to speeches by world leaders at the UN General Assembly in New York. Most of them condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as a violation of the UN Charter and a serious setback for the peaceful world order that is the UN’s founding and defining principle.

But what has not been reported in the United States is that leaders from 66 countries, mainly from the global South, also used their General Assembly speeches to call urgently for diplomacy to end the war in Ukraine through peaceful negotiations, as the UN Charter requires. We have compiled excerpts from the speeches of all 66 countries to show the breadth and depth of their appeals, and we highlight a few of them here. 

African leaders echoed one of the first speakers, Macky Sall, the president of Senegal, who also spoke in his capacity as the current chairman of the African Union when he said, “We call for de-escalation and a cessation of hostilities in Ukraine, as well as for a negotiated solution, to avoid the catastrophic risk of a potentially global conflict.”

The 66 nations that called for peace in Ukraine make up more than a third of the countries in the world, and they represent most of the Earth’s population, including India, China, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Brazil and Mexico.

While NATO and EU countries have rejected peace negotiations, and U.S. and British leaders have actively undermined them, five European countries — Hungary, Malta, Portugal, San Marino and the Vatican — joined the calls for peace at the General Assembly. 

The peace caucus also includes many of the small countries that have the most to lose from the failure of the UN system revealed by recent wars in Ukraine and the greater Middle East, and who have the most to gain by strengthening the UN and enforcing the UN Charter to protect the weak and restrain the powerful.


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Philip Pierre, the prime minister of Saint Lucia, a small island state in the Caribbean, told the General Assembly:

Articles 2 and 33 of the UN Charter are unambiguous in binding Member States to refrain from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state and to negotiate and settle all international disputes by peaceful means.… We therefore call upon all parties involved to immediately end the conflict in Ukraine, by undertaking immediate negotiations to permanently settle all disputes in accordance with the principles of the United Nations.

“As countries in the global South, we see double standards. Our public opinion does not see the Ukraine war the same way it is seen in the North.”

Global South leaders lamented the breakdown of the UN system, not just in the war in Ukraine but throughout decades of war and economic coercion by the United States and its allies. President José Ramos-Horta of East Timor directly challenged the West’s double standards, telling Western countries:

They should pause for a moment to reflect on the glaring contrast in their response to the wars elsewhere where women and children have died by the thousands from wars and starvation. The response to our beloved Secretary-General’s cries for help in these situations have not met with equal compassion. As countries in the Global South, we see double standards. Our public opinion does not see the Ukraine war the same way it is seen in the North.

Many leaders called urgently for an end to the war in Ukraine before it escalates into a nuclear war that would kill billions of people and end human civilization as we know it. The Vatican secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, warned:

…the war in Ukraine not only undermines the nuclear non-proliferation regime, but also presents us with the danger of nuclear devastation, either through escalation or accident. … To avoid a nuclear disaster, it is vital that there be serious engagement to find a peaceful outcome to the conflict.

Others described the economic impacts already depriving their people of food and basic necessities, and called on all sides, including Ukraine’s Western backers, to return to the negotiating table before the war’s impacts escalate into multiple humanitarian disasters across the Global South. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina of Bangladesh told the Assembly:

We want the end of the Russia-Ukraine war. Due to sanctions and counter-sanctions, … the entire mankind, including women and children, is punished. Its impact does not remain confined to one country, rather it puts the lives and livelihoods of the people of all nations in greater risk, and infringes their human rights. People are deprived of food, shelter, health care and education. Children suffer the most in particular. Their future sinks into darkness.

My urge to the conscience of the world — stop the arms race, stop the war and sanctions. Ensure food, education, health care and security of the children. Establish peace.

Turkey, Mexico and Thailand each offered their own approaches to restarting peace negotiations, while Sheikh Al Thani, the emir of Qatar, succinctly explained that delaying negotiations will only bring more death and suffering:

We are fully aware of the complexities of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, and the international and global dimension to this crisis. However, we still call for an immediate ceasefire and a peaceful settlement, because this is ultimately what will happen regardless of how long this conflict will go on for. Perpetuating the crisis will not change this result. It will only increase the number of casualties, and it will increase the disastrous repercussions on Europe, Russia and the global economy.

Responding to Western pressure on the Global South to actively support Ukraine’s war effort, India’s foreign minister, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, claimed the moral high ground and championed diplomacy:

As the Ukraine conflict continues to rage, we are often asked whose side we are on. And our answer, each time, is straight and honest. India is on the side of peace and will remain firmly there. We are on the side that respects the UN Charter and its founding principles. We are on the side that calls for dialogue and diplomacy as the only way out. We are on the side of those struggling to make ends meet, even as they stare at escalating costs of food, fuel and fertilizers.

It is therefore in our collective interest to work constructively, both within the United Nations and outside, in finding an early resolution to this conflict.

“We are often asked whose side we are on. … India is on the side of peace and will remain firmly there. … We are on the side that calls for dialogue and diplomacy as the only way out.”

One of the most passionate and eloquent speeches was delivered by Congolese Foreign Minister Jean-Claude Gakosso, who summarized the thoughts of many, and appealed directly to Russia and Ukraine — in Russian!

Because of the considerable risk of a nuclear disaster for the entire planet, not only those involved in this conflict but also those foreign powers who could influence events by calming them down, should all temper their zeal. They must stop fanning the flames and they must turn their backs on this type of vanity of the powerful which has so far closed the door to dialogue.

Under the auspices of the United Nations, we must all commit without delay to peace negotiations — just, sincere and equitable negotiations. After Waterloo, we know that since the Vienna Congress, all wars finish around the table of negotiation. 

The world urgently needs these negotiations to prevent the current confrontations — which are already so devastating — to prevent them from going even further and pushing humanity into what could be an irredeemable cataclysm, a widespread nuclear war beyond the control of the great powers themselves — the war, about which Einstein, the great atomic theorist, said that it would be the last battle that humans would fight on Earth.

Nelson Mandela, a man of eternal forgiveness, said that peace is a long road, but it has no alternative, it has no price. In reality, the Russians and Ukrainians have no other choice but to take this path, the path of peace. 

Moreover, we too should go with them, because we must throughout the world be legions working together in solidarity, and we must be able to impose the unconditional option of peace on the war lobbies.

[Next three paragraphs in Russian:] Now I wish to be direct, and directly address my dear Russian and Ukrainian friends.

Too much blood has been spilled — the sacred blood of your sweet children. It’s time to stop this mass destruction. It’s time to stop this war. The entire world is watching you. It’s time to fight for life, the same way that you courageously and selflessly fought together against the Nazis during World War II, in particular in Leningrad, Stalingrad, Kursk and Berlin.

Think about the youth of your two countries. Think about the fate of your future generations. The time has come to fight for peace, to fight for them. Please give peace a real chance, today, before it is too late for us all. I humbly ask this of you.

At the end of the debate on Sept. 26, Csaba Kőrösi, president of the General Assembly, acknowledged in his closing statement that ending the war in Ukraine was one of the main messages “reverberating through the hall” at this year’s General Assembly. You can read his closing statement here, and all the calls for peace he was referring to. 

Ginni Thomas reportedly still believes that Trump won the 2020 election

CNN’s Jake Tapper was stunned on Thursday when Ginni Thomas reportedly said she still believed former President Donald Trump won the 2020 election, nearly seven hundred days after the incumbent lost to challenger Joe Biden.

“Our hurricane coverage continues in a moment,” Tapper said. “But I do want to turn to a major development in our politics lead, because Ginni Thomas, the conservative activist and wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, met today with Jan. 6 House Select Committee.”

“Her lawyers stressed it was a voluntary interview, even though members of the panel have wanted to speak to her for some time about her involvement in efforts to overturn the 2020 election results, including text messages to the White House chief of staff, begging him to keep fighting the results and state lawmakers in Arizona and Wisconsin encouraging them to meddle in their respective slates of presidential electors,” Tapper reported.

He spoke with CNN’s Jamie Gangel for more.

“We have learned that she had a prepared statement, in fact, at the top of her interview, in which she made clear — she addressed that her election activities were separate from her husband’s, so she did not wait for a question on that,” Gangel said. “We are told that she cooperated, that she answered every question, but Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-MS) has also told reporters that she still believes the election was stolen, Jake. So after everything we know, Ginni Thomas is still an election denier.”

“Even though 60 court cases, all the election boards, all the Trump-supporting governors and attorneys general and secretaries of state, et cetera, et cetera — no evidence of widespread fraud that would have swung the election in any state,” Tapper noted. “That’s just wild. I mean, that’s just untethered from all of the facts and evidence.”

Watch below:

Donald Trump Jr. says firearms training is a better way to prep for hurricanes than COVID-19 vax

Donald Trump Junior threw a fit on Thursday over President Joe Biden’s 2021 recommendation that unvaccinated people get their COVID-19 inoculations before hurricanes strike their states.

“Is that a cult? Is this a cult? What does it have to do with anything? I mean, there are so many more important things to dealing with a situation – an emergency situation – that could arise from a hurricane. And being vaccinated is not one of them, folks. Not even remotely. Not even pretend,” Junior raved. “I’m gonna say that this is my opinion because I know that someone will try to fact-check me for it, Not based on actual science, but they’ll have a couple people that agree and they want to push their crap upon us and so they’ll say I’m spreading misinformation. So this is just my opinion.”

In fact, Biden’s remarks were delivered last year at a meeting with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. FactCheck.org noted on Wednesday as Hurricane Ian battered the Sunshine State’s Gulf Coast that “social media posts were sharing an out-of-context clip of Biden’s 2021 remarks to incorrectly suggest he is proposing vaccination as a form of hurricane protection.”

Junior’s tantrum is the latest such example.

“It literally has no bearing on the situation at hand. If you’re dealing with 150-mile-per-hour winds, I can assure you that your vaccination status means nothing to you, your family, your friends, the situation at hand, your ability to actually survive it. No. Actually being prepared probably does, and actually having an understanding of what to do definitely does,” Junior seethed. “Actually taking the time and the precautions to take these things seriously, to get training – again whether that be with firearms if it gets really bad – hopefully that never has to come about.”

Access to public health services was likely crippled by Ian’s impact, due to the historic storm surge that flooded communities along the Gulf. It was also not clear why Junior believes that guns would be helpful in the aftermath of a Category 4 tropical cyclone.

Watch below:

The 6 wildest GameStop short squeeze revelations from Netflix’s “Eat the Rich” documentary

In January 2021, the biblical tale of David and Goliath became a reality of sorts in the high-stakes world of Wall Street.

In this modern rendition, Goliath was Wall Street hedge funds short sellers, while the underdog David was the retail investors seeking revenge on the aforementioned bullies. The tale’s conclusion ends on a triumphant note — or a tragic one, depending on how you choose to interpret it — with a short squeeze of the stock of GameStop, the once-failing video game and consumer electronics retailer.

The short squeeze — where investors bet against a particular stock that rapidly increases in price — was fueled by a Reddit forum called r/wallstreetbets. Collectively, the group used a series of app-based brokerage services, most commonly Robinhood, to purchase an influx of shares to cover for the nearly 140% of GameStop’s public float — the portion of outstanding stock that is available for trading by public investors — that had been sold short. Their initiatives were in full swing by August 2020 and later, reached its peak in January 2021 after countless business hot shots joined their efforts.

The rare occurrence, now known officially as the GameStop short squeeze, is narrated in Netflix’s latest docuseries, “Eat the Rich: The GameStop Saga.” Over the course of three episodes, the series spotlights a few Redditors who took part in the epic showdown along with hedge fund managers, finance experts and the journalists who covered the dramatic news.

Here are six of the wildest revelations from the recent series:

01
The controversial post that started it all
Eat the Rich: The GameStop SagaAlvan Chow from “Eat the Rich: The GameStop Saga.” (Netflix)
Alvan Chow, a retail investor and Redditor, prompted the GameStop short squeeze via his post on r/wallstreetbets. In the documentary, Chow said he first became interested in the GameStop drama after Ryan Cohen, the founder and CEO of the e-commerce company Chewy, invested in the dying brick-and-mortar store. Amid his research, Chow learned that GameStop’s stock price rose 30% but on a more shocking note, around 140% of Gamestop shares were short, thus leading to the conditions for a short squeeze.
 
For a better perspective on the percentage, Bob Sloan, founder of the New York City-based software company S3 Partners, said, “The way we calculate it, anything 7 to 10% is kinda normal. Things start ticking around 20%, it gets on the watch list. Thirty, 40 or 50, that’s very, very high.”
 
When the stock price begins to rise in such a manner, short sellers may buy back their shares to assuage their losses. However, that can also drive the stock price up even higher, which is basically a recipe for disaster.
 
“A true short squeeze is a rare event. There are probably a hundred predicted for every one that occurs,” said Chow. “There needs to be an unexpected positive event to start to drive the stock price higher. This could be a huge earning surprise or a takeover offer.”
 
On Reddit, Chow wrote, “Sup gamblers. Feel bad about missing the gain train on Tesla? Fear not, something much greater and stupider is here. We’re going to temporarily join forces with the Galactic Empire and hijack the Death Star. Our choice of weapon, GME.”
  
Many members of WallStreetBets disagreed with Chow. But a handful of individuals also supported his manifesto, especially after they came across a man named Keith Gill — also known as Roaring Kitty on YouTube and u/DeepFuckingValue on Reddit — whose online analyses of the GameStop stock played a large role in the short squeeze. 
02
The unexpected surge
Eat the Rich: The GameStop SagaJoe Fonicello from “Eat the Rich: The GameStop Saga.” (Netflix)
By the end of August 2020, Cohen purchased more than 6 million shares of GameStop. Three months later, he sent an open letter to the GameStop board, outlining a new vision for the company. And then, on January 8, 2021, he tweeted a series of cryptic memes that alluded to a future success with the company.
 
One meme simply said, “How you know it’s going to be a fun ride,” while another was a single photo of the now-defunct Blockbuster video store franchise. On Jan. 11, it was announced that Cohen would receive three seats on the GameStop board.
 
Cohen’s accomplishments along with GameStop’s imminent successes encouraged more Redditors, like retail investor Joe Fonicello, to buy more shares.
 
“I threw in the rest of my savings. I was like, ‘I’m in. The short squeeze is gonna happen.'”
 
Shortly afterward, the stock price of GameStop began increasing at a faster rate than ever seen before.
 
“We bought it about $8 a share, and now . . . we were in the 30s,” Fonicello added. “You had more and more people on WallStreetBets buying up shares of GameStop.”
 
Unbeknownst to many individuals outside of the group, the short squeeze had already begun at that point. Prior to Cohen’s acquisition of the board seats, GameStop’s stock traded around seven million shares a day, the series explained. Afterward, that number jumped to an astounding 144 million.
03
Andrew Left got left behind
Eat the Rich: The GameStop SagaAndrew Left from “Eat the Rich: The GameStop Saga.” (Netflix)
As the price of GameStop’s shares continued to rise, short sellers scrambled to prevent their anticipated losses in profits. Like clockwork, Citron Research, an online investment newsletter that provides stock market commentary, tweeted that the price of GameStop stocks would drop from $30 to $20 in no time.
 
“Gamestop $GME buyers at these levels are the suckers at the poker game,” the full tweet read. “Stock back to $20 fast.”
 
Andrew Left, an activist short seller, author and editor of Citron Research, had also shorted the stock and alleged that a short squeeze would not take place. Left was a “polarizing” figure within the WallStreetBets community — some individuals hailed him as a hero for exposing fraudulent companies while others called him a phony and awarded him the moniker “S**tron Research.”
 
“The irony of the whole GameStop story is I got caught on the side of what’s considered Wall Street, and historically, I’ve been the ‘anti’- Wall Street person,” Left said. “I put my money where my mouth is. So I was short GameStop and if I’m short GameStop, I’m gonna tell you the reasons why.”
 
He added, “Me personally who is short the stock, I have no problem selling the stock higher. You’re not going to change the underlying fundamentals of this company.”
 
But Left’s thesis stood no chance against the Internet, which was set on finalizing the short squeeze. A few retaliators even attacked Left’s personal life by hacking his social media accounts and using his name and photos to create a slew of fake Tinder profiles.
04
GameStop becomes (in)famous
Eat the Rich: The GameStop SagaEat the Rich: The GameStop Saga (Netflix)

In addition to garnering attention on Reddit, the GameStop hoopla became popular on Instagram, YouTube and TikTok. Per Taylor Lorenz, The Washington Post’s technology and online culture reporter, the short squeeze was “completely driven by influencer culture.”

 

One such influencer was Matt Kohrs, a retail investor and YouTube “finfluencer” who gained millions of views after he posted livestreams on GameStop’s stock. The short squeeze also caught the attention of prominent figures in the business world, including Chamath Palihapitiya, the founder & CEO of Social Capital, who had a reputation of sticking up for retail investors.

 

“Tell me what to buy tomorrow and if you convince me I’ll throw a few 100k’s at it to start,” he tweeted on January 26, 2021. “Ride or die.”

 

Similarly, Bitcoin investor Cameron Winklevoss also tweeted, “Thinking about going long GameStop $GME. Thoughts?”

 

The hype was further fueled by Elon Musk, who took to Twitter to simply write, “Gamestonk!!” More people, primarily Musk’s fans and followers, began investing in GameStop’s stocks.

 

“I got involved in GameStop straight-up because of Elon, dude,” said Chris “Krispy” Ream in the documentary. “Elon posted ‘Gamestonk!!.’ I was reading all this stuff. I was like, ‘Well, Elon’s a genius. Gotta jump into this, right?'”

 

He continued, “My whole plan is to make a TikTok house. I just want to do TikToks all day in a big mansion with pretty girls. That’s it.”

 

Even the state of Alaska and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints invested in GameStop shares.

05
The devastating losses
Eat the Rich: The GameStop SagaEat the Rich: The GameStop Saga (Netflix)
Hedge funds were hit hard by the short squeeze as many lost billions of dollars, per Sloan.
 
“We knew individual investors were trading more than ever, but I have never seen anything like this come together so quickly and lead to such an insane rise in a stock price,” recounted Gunjan Banerji, a reporter for The Wall Street Journal’s Money & Investing team.
 
According to the series, Gabriel Plotkin’s Melvin Capital Management, the hedge fund that originally shorted GameStop, lost $6.8 billion in just one month. In January 2021, other hedge funds began buying back the stock, which only pushed GameStop’s stock price up even further. By the end of the month, GameStop short sellers had lost nearly $20 billion.
 
“The sentiment was exactly one of revenge,” said Kohrs. “Not only did people make money on the ride up, but finally, we made hedge fund Wall Street pay.”
 
Derik, a retail investor, Redditor and rapper alongside Rachael, Mikey Guggenheim, added, “A lot of these people that bought GameStop stock, they watched their parents’ whole savings or retirement funds just go to nothing basically, ’cause of the subprime mortgages. So it’s like, getting back at the hedge funds.”
06
Robinhood’s shady deals
Eat the Rich: The GameStop SagaGunjan Benerji from “Eat the Rich: The GameStop Saga.” (Netflix)

On Jan. 28, Robinhood prohibited users from purchasing GameStop shares, thus causing a frenzy. According to a 2021 CNBC report, following the controversial move, “shares of GameStop initially reversed their gains, sliding quickly into negative territory. The stock, which traded about $500 at one point in premarket trading, closed down 44%.”

 

Retail investors, politicians and finance experts accused Robinhood of market manipulation and claimed that the investing app was wrongfully making money off of people’s addiction to trading.

 

“They have designed their user interface in a way that taps into some of these psychological blind spots to make people trade more,” said Dr. Vicki Bogan, professor of economics at Cornell University. “The research indicates that even if you’re aware of a blind spot, it doesn’t necessarily eliminate its effect on your behavior.”

 

Per Scott Galloway, a podcast host and New York University professor, “Robinhood is similar to a lot of other big tech companies and that is it’s based on the attention economy. And that is the more it can get you to trade, the more time it can get you to spend on the app, the more money it makes.

 

“Robinhood’s incentives are not for you to learn, not for you to generate wealth, but for you to engage in a trading activity that historically has resulted in less wealth and less economic security, and that is day-trading.”

 

Many Redditors and conspiracy theorists on Twitter also speculated that Robinhood had made a shady deal with Citadel Securities, a market making firm that was Robinhood’s primary customer, and Melvin Capital Management. To add to the mess, Citadel LLC, which is the sister company of Citadel Securities, invested $2.75 billion into Melvin Capital in January 2021.

 

As a result, a slew of class action lawsuits were filed against Robinhood. But despite the allegations, executives for Robinhood denied claims that Citadel had pressured them into limiting the trading of GameStop. In June 2022, however, the House Committee investigating the GameStop debacle concluded that Robinhood and Citadel Securities were indeed in communication with each other.

 

“There is a power shift and I think it’s important to acknowledge that literally Tiktok and Twitter and Reddit, they’ve become forums for information and they clearly can move markets,” claimed Banerji.

“Eat the Rich: The GameStop Saga” is now available for streaming on Netflix. Watch the trailer below, via YouTube:

McDonald’s serves up nostalgia with new, limited-time adult Happy Meals

McDonald’s beloved Happy Meal is no longer just for the kiddies.

The popular fast-food chain is partnering up with Cactus Plant Flea Market, a celebrity co-signed fashion streetwear brand, to release an adult version of the classic meal box. Beginning Oct. 3, customers can purchase a Cactus Plant Flea Market Box, which includes a Big Mac or 10-piece Chicken Nuggets along with fries, a drink and, yes, a collectible toy! The specific toys are redesigned figurines of classic McDonald’s characters, including Grimace, the Hamburglar, Birdie and a new addition called “Cactus Buddy.”

Each box is also specially designed with nostalgic illustrations meant to stir up memories of past Happy Meals.

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

“We’re taking one of the most nostalgic McDonald’s experiences and literally repackaging it in a new way that’s hyper-relevant for our adult fans,” said Tariq Hassan, McDonald’s USA chief marketing and customer experience office in a release per NPR.


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The Cactus Plant Flea Market Boxes will be available for a limited-time-only while supplies last. They can be purchased at McDonald’s restaurants nationwide or via drive-thru and the McDonald’s app. Customers who order through the app will also enter into a sweepstakes to win custom Cactus Plant Flea Market merchandise, including shirts and a Grimace-themed chair.

McDonald’s recent partnership succeeds a list of the brand’s prominent and successful collaborations. In 2020, McDonald’s partnered up with rapper Travis Scott to tout the Travis Scott Meal — a Quarter Pounder with fries and a Sprite. The following year, McDonald’s teamed up with the South Korean boy band BTS to release the aptly named BTS Meal.

The surprisingly sex positive “Resident Alien”

Syfy is known for many things. The cable channel that could boasts tales of science fiction, fantasy, horror and . . . sex positivity?

Dr. Harry Vanderspeigle will see you now. Specifically, the alien whose real name is unpronounceable by humans (and sometimes, for actor Alan Tudyk) who’s been wearing the person-skin of the Colorado doctor known as Harry, will see you.

In its second season, “Resident Alien,” the Syfy show based on the comic book series by Peter Hogan and Steve Parkhouse, has morphed from a quirky comedy to a downright emotional, heartwarming and still quirky ensemble piece with a townful of unique characters. Some of those characters have sex. A lot of sex. And the show? It doesn’t judge them. Instead, it presents some of the healthiest sex lives seen on TV.

In “Resident Alien,” extraterrestrial Harry has been sent to Earth to destroy it. Along with crash-landing his spaceship in colorful Colorado, his mission is thwarted when he meets Asta (Sara Tomko), an empathetic nurse to his doctor. Asta befriends Harry, as does her father (the wonderful Gary Farmer) and many other townspeople, and Harry, assisted by pizza, realizes humanity might be worth saving. But Harry’s isn’t the only alien species hellbent on taking over and/or annihilating Earth (we had it coming), and complications in Season 2 include the imminent arrival of other aliens who might not be so nice. Also he has to deal with fatherhood. Again with the otherworldly fatherhood.

Although surprised by the role, Harry takes parenthood seriously. But not so seriously that he forgets his actualization, which includes being a sexual creature. Harry is attracted to other aliens, specifically “blue aliens, which are very beautiful, if you are attracted to bird faces — which of course I am.” He grows nostalgic, waxing poetic to Asta about “hot, sexy worm breath. And wind blowing through the feathers in their hair.” Asta leaves the room.

Asta doesn’t judge Harry for his avian attraction. Or his crush on E.T., whom he calls “a beautiful moron.”

She’s used to Harry and his idiosyncrasies, and is very good at ignoring what she needs to ignore. But one of the strengths of “Resident Alien” is that it doesn’t forget. Harry’s attraction to blue aliens isn’t a one-time gag; it’s a multi-episode quirk, and it’s not a gag at all but part of his development as a character. Harry likes pizza and birds. To each their own. Asta walks away but she doesn’t judge Harry for his avian attraction. Or his crush on E.T., whom he calls “a beautiful moron.” There’s no crying in baseball and no shaming in “Resident Alien.”

Resident AlienAlice Wetterlund as D’Arcy Bloom and Meredith Garretson as Kate Hawthorne in “Resident Alien” (SYFY)The story also takes a non-judgmental hand with D’Arcy (Alice Wetterlund, in a typically unforgettable performance). D’Arcy has bonded with several women over their shared romantic issues . . . with the same guys. But D’Arcy is not the jealous type. She’s the rock solid, ride or die type. You can depend on D’Arcy. The only person she consistently lets down is herself. Her Olympic skiing dreams ended due to injury. She bartends, her hair in often-changing, lollipop-bright shades. She drinks and flirts with drugs in one of the few subplots that doesn’t seem quite developed. But if this is the most irresponsible person in town, what a town.

D’Arcy also works in search and rescue, literally saving people (and also hides a body for her friend, when needed). Romantically, when Harry rejects her, she’s disappointed but moves on. When she meets someone who might be different, Elliott (likeable Justin Rain), she’s the one attempting to quietly sneak out after they first sleep together. But in a surprisingly poignant moment, D’Arcy changes her mind. She turns, slips back in bed under Elliot’s arm and stays. The show allows her to change, in an unfinished portrait of D’Arcy, to be growing and healing, including in her interpersonal relationships and sex. 

Resident AlienTerry O’Quinn as Peter Bach, Jenna Lamia as Judy Cooper and Alan Tudyk as Harry Vanderspeigle in “Resident Alien” (SYFY)D’Arcy isn’t a fixed thing but another minor character, Judy (the priceless Jenna Lamia), resists type too. Judy works at the bowling alley, manages the Copper Ridge Motel and is a tour guide (to get by in a town like this, as in many parts of America, you must have one than one job). The “Gilmore Girls” Kirk of Patience, Colorado, Judy is easily distracted, straightforward and loves sex. 

Characters love, they fight, they laugh, they communicate in crop circles. And they have sex.

Her sexual openness is part of the warmth of the character. Judy is up for anything, be it playing video games and drinking soda with her friend’s dad, eating deviled eggs that have not been refrigerated, or reenacting a murder scene before skeptical cops. Judy goes all the way all the time; in her enthusiastic reenactment, she gets naked in a hot tub where a corpse has just been. Whoa, Judy. 

But in the words of her actor, “Judy DGAF.” She nurses crushes on Harry and the Sheriff (Corey Reynolds) and she’s not shy about telling anyone while also not being aggressive about it, just being. “She’s just like unapologetically sexual,” Lamia says. “She’s just like, let’s go!” while Tudyk says plainly, “Every scene is better with Judy.” Essentially, Judy’s sexuality isn’t played for laughs, though Lamia is hilarious and deadpan. Judy’s simply sexual, like she wears her blond hair with scrunchies and butterfly clips. No one calls her names or calls her out for it — but if they’re going out or need a friend? They call her.

Resident AlienLevi Fiehler as Mayor Ben Hawthorne and Meredith Garretson as Kate Hawthorne in “Resident Alien” (James Dittger/SYFY)And sexuality changes. It’s fluid. This is most evident in the characters of Ben Hawthorne, an earnest Levi Fiehler as the young mayor of town, and his wife Kate (compelling Meredith Garretson from “The Offer“), who works as a teacher. Kate was a lawyer but gave up her ambitious career dreams to support her husband and to live and have a son in the small town of Patience. Ben and Kate’s marriage is complicated and has its stumbles. The accommodating Ben defers to Kate often, then feels like she’s dominating their relationship. Everything changes when Ben and Kate work together to fight off a home intruder who threatens their young son. Covered in bruises and blood and charged with adrenaline, they get . . . turned on? 

Resident AlienLevi Fiehler as Mayor Ben Hawthorne and Meredith Garretson as Kate Hawthorne in “Resident Alien” (James Dittiger/SYFY)Thus begins a new chapter in Ben and Kate’s sex life: the adventurous one. From costumes to roleplay to water sports, the show doesn’t hold back in its frank discussions of kink. After a night with the girls, some of Kate’s friends discover just how daring the married couple is in the bedroom, perhaps marking the first time an ice dildo has made an appearance on basic cable. Though there’s laughter and teasing, there’s no condemnation. When Kate has a pregnancy scare, D’Arcy is right there for her. 

Kate and Ben’s marriage isn’t perfect, but being honest sexually with each other about their deepest desires has allowed them to come closer together. And the show presents it as “normal” because it is, worthy of occasional jokes and knowing glances but not fear-mongering or moral superiority. Sexuality is a part of a three-dimensional character, but it’s an aspect that is often missing in fictional development. Not here. Characters love, they fight, they laugh, they communicate in crop circles. And they have sex.


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There are all types of bodies in “Resident Alien.” Some of them are alien. No body is wrong, and sexuality? That’s just a normal part of human — and extraterrestrial — life in all its variations and complexities. No judgement.

The best shelf-stable emergency foods, tasted and explained

Floods in Kentucky. Fires out west. Hurricane season in the South. And with winter right around the corner, it’s time to consider how prepared you are for natural disasters. The CDC recommends Americans have, at any given time, at least a three-day supply of water and food that doesn’t require refrigeration or cooking. That kind of cushion, said FEMA experts in an interview, can give you enough time to figure out your next move in the event of an emergency.

“If you’re buying a case of soup or a big container of Jif peanut butter from Costco, you’re prepping,” said Eric Christianson of Nutrient Survival, whose company entered the so-called “emergency food market” in 2020. “A lot of people think it’s about fear or panic, but it’s about being prepared and being smart about it, especially if you have family, elderly, kids, [or] pets. You need to be ready.”

A new (emergency) frontier

Augason Farms, a 50-year-old Salt Lake City-based shelf-stable food company, witnessed the impact of September 11th, the Iraq War, the Ebola virus, and Y2K. Any time individuals prepared for disaster and supply chain disruptions, says Mark Augason, president of Augason Farms, they stocked their pantries and refrigerators, eager to keep themselves fed during what could be a long-time outage of typical services. His company sells powdered milk, rice mixes, pastasoup, and pancake mixes that can last for up to 25 years. The pandemic, however, shattered records for Augason Farms and other emergency food suppliers. Americans suddenly had to shift the way they prepare for crises, especially as they become more prevalent due to climate change, social and political turmoil, and health emergencies.

“There [was] nothing like [the] pandemic,” Augason said. “Every person saw the supply chain stop, and we all saw grocery stores empty.”

Prior to 2020, Augason said, his company was earning about $50 million in revenue annually. Today, it’s more than $200 million. Since the pandemic struck, emergency preparedness has been more important than ever before.

Tim Waller, chief marketing officer for ReadyWise, a “preparedness bundle” supplier, thinks emergency food is about to become less niche.

For a long time, those who bought buckets of emergency food were writing prepper blogs or, as Waller points out, assumed practitioners of religions that call for preparation. ReadyWise, like several similar companies, is based in Salt Lake City, which Waller attributes to the Mormon Church’s tenet calling for preparation.

“It was always [suggested that] that, at the end of the world, you should make sure to have your food storage,” he said. “So, culturally, it’s already baked in as an easier sell.”

When the pandemic hit, though, “our sales absolutely boomed,” he said. ReadyWise revenue has increased by about 600% since 2019. “When you have that uneasiness of, ‘Oh, is the grocery store going to have food?’ … things could go south, and you’d be fine. You have [a] runway.”

How it works

How do long-term non-perishable food products work? ReadyWise uses a common process: They freeze-dry food, removing as much liquid and oxygen as possible and then package it in airtight containers. The success of the process makes for a surprisingly diverse line of products, often packaged compactly and sold together in variety buckets that don’t take up much room in a pantry or closet. Depending on the company, consumers can choose from fruits, vegetables, powdered milk and butter, shakes, pasta, chicken and rice, coffee, baked goods, soups, black bean burgers, and powdered honey. Many are intended to be mixed and matched together, in order to prevent food fatigue.

And more and more Americans are preparing for just that. In 2020, FEMA reported a record-setting 226 major disasters or emergency declarations. In 2017, 36% of Americans perceived a risk for a potential emergency in their lives. By 2021, that number had risen to 76%, and 45% of Americans had reported assembling or updating their emergency preparedness supplies.

“Disasters are unfortunately something we should all prepare for,” said Jonathan Yoder, deputy chief of the CDC’s Waterborne Disease Prevention Branch.

Am I filling my storage unit with this stuff today?

It’s not exactly necessary to run out and buy, say, a M.O.A.B collection from ReadyWise, which includes 144 buckets that can sustain a person’s caloric needs for five full years or a “Just In Case” emergency food supply Mountain House.

“A lot of people who are preparing aren’t buying a year’s supply. They buy what they can afford,” Christianson explained.

Most emergency food lines are fairly affordable: You can get a single bucket for one person (which includes three days of just-add-water meals) from ReadyWise or Augason Farms for $40 to $45. Nutrient Survival’s version is $129 and comes with a 10-liter dry bag (a waterproof bag that’s easy to grab on your way out the door in a hurry).

But which tastes the best?

As demand for emergency food has expanded over the past few years, so have the products. There are some dishes you’re going to see over and over again: Expect lots of pasta, freeze-dried fruits and vegetables, granola, oatmeal, and powdered eggs. There are some other unifying characteristics, too. Whether you’re dipping into a supply of powdered milk, prepping a chocolate shake or warming up some pudding, ideally, you’ll have access to hot or boiling water. (Not all products require hot water, but it makes the final product more enjoyable.)

Word to the wise: When using dehydrated food products, tread lightly with the amount of water suggested to mix in with each item. Nearly every food mix was soupier than I’d prefer when using the serving of water suggested on the package.

Here are our recommendations for the best emergency food supply kits.

  • Best for variety: Augason Farms and ReadyWise, both of which offer variety buckets in addition to meat, dairy, fruit, and vegetable-specific bundles.
  • Best for dietary restrictions: Check labels for specific allergens, but try NuManna’s gluten-free family pack bucket, which is made without soy, high fructose corn syrup, or wheat. Northwest Fork also carries emergency foods that are Kosher, vegan, and free of soy, gluten, nuts, and GMOs.
  • Best for longevity: Most emergency food brands guarantee products up to 25 years without loss of flavor or integrity. But not every item carries that expiration date, so check your labels. Upon my review, Augason and ReadyWise seemed to have the most options hitting the longest shelf life.
  • Best for quick exits: Valley Food Storage’s “Bug Out Bag” includes basic first aid, safety, food, water, and shelter needs, including 30 meal servings, all in a waterproof dry bag, for $149.95. ReadyWise also offers go-bags and boxes themed for specific natural disasters, if you like a little comic relief with your emergencies. (Slap on some 3D glasses, and the ReadyWise Earthquake Bundle box looks like it’s shaking).
  • Best for flavor: To taste test, I wanted to compare like items offered by each brand — in this case, macaroni and cheese, and oatmeal — as well as stand-out items from each line that seemed genuinely appealing. Augason’s macaroni came closest to an EasyMac experience, which is my personal gold standard for the usual pantry staples I keep on-hand during hurricane season at home in New Orleans. For breakfast, however, ReadyWise’s brown sugar and maple oatmeal was the best, both in texture and flavor.

Nutrient Survival’s meat-free “Hearty Lasagna” and ReadyWise’s teriyaki-style rice had the best flavor overall, each of which seemed close to a standard, off-the-shelf pantry item.

Heading into this experiment, I expect the food to taste extremely salty and mushy, but happily, that wasn’t the case for any of the brands I tried. However, it was hard for me to get past the general weakness in the suggested prep method: Pour boiling water over the dry food, cover, and wait some number of minutes. It made for not quite all-the-way cooked macaroni, especially for ReadyWise, which had larger noodles, and tepid temps by the time I dug in. If I were to try cooking these kits again, I’d opt to prep them directly on my stove. (But, of course, that’s not always an option in an emergency situation.)

These emergency food supply kits didn’t exactly compel me to replace any of my pantry standards with their super shelf-stable editions. The next time there’s a storm churning, I’ll still rely first on what’s already in my freezer, fridge, and standard pantry. But as a New Orleanian, will I feel a little bit better knowing I’ve got a bucket or two stashed in the hall closet? Absolutely. Now go get prepped — and hope you never have to use your supply.

Activists made a life-size Ron Johnson statue out of poop to protest his views on climate change

Activists associated with NextGen PAC and MoveOn have created a six-foot-tall, 80-pound statue in the likeness of Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.). As a direct response to Johnson’s recent comments calling climate change “bulls**t,” the statue is made out of poop.

“The people in Wisconsin deserve a senator who believes in climate change and won’t take money from the fossil fuel industry to get richer himself,” Tweets NextGen PAC. “That’s why we joined @MoveOn in Milwaukee today to call out Ron Johnson’s bullsh*t… literally.”

In June 2021, Johnson blew his own claims that he was not a climate change denier when a video surfaced of him telling a Republican group how he really felt about the matter.

“I don’t know about you guys, but I think climate change is – as Lord Monckton said – bullsh*t,” Johnson said. “By the way, it is.”

The comment was made at the Republican Women of Greater Wisconsin Luncheon at Alioto’s in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, according to CNN. In a statement made after the remarks were brought to the public’s attention, Johnson said “My statements are consistent. I am not a climate change denier, but I also am not a climate change alarmist. Climate is not static. It has always changed and always will change.” 


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The Johnson poop statue, crafted by a Colorado manure artist, has been making its rounds in a series of events held by NextGen PAC and MoveOn as they lobby to unseat the Republican Senator. 

“Young people are fired up because they understand the urgency of the climate crisis and are hungry for change,” Sonja Chojnacki, the Wisconsin state director of NextGen PAC said in a quote to HuffPost. “We are ready to roll up our sleeves and get people to the polls. Ron Johnson must go!”

A new purple tomato will hit produce departments in 2023

Depending on your tastes, your favorite variety of tomato probably ranges from a red Beefsteak to a green Zebra to even a yellow Grape. One thing’s for sure: your go-to type of tomato probably isn’t purple.

But thanks to a recent announcement by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, that could very well change within the next year. In a press release shared earlier this month, the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service decreed that a genetically-modified purple tomato is “unlikely to pose an increased plant pest risk compared to other cultivated tomatoes,” and therefore “may be safely grown and used in breeding in the United States.”

This unique tomato isn’t the result of some renegade farmer trying way too hard to go viral. In fact, the attempt to bring a purple tomato to market is many years in the making. The unexpectedly purple plant is the brainchild of biochemist Cathie Martin, a professor at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England who’s been experimenting with pigments in plants and produce for 20 years. Her team first published research documenting their efforts to coax tomatoes to generate more anthocyanin, the pigment that gives blueberries, blackberries, and eggplants their color, back in 2008.

Given that long-standing record of research, this feat of genetic modification isn’t just about changing the color of your Caprese Salad — it’s what’s on the inside that counts. The increase in anthocyanin has the potential to boost the antioxidant capacity of the purple tomato, which could, in turn, offer additional health benefits. That same 2008 study cites “stunning” results in cancer-susceptible lab mice, with those fed a diet with high-anthocyanin tomatoes exhibiting lifespan increases of about 30%.

Not only can purple tomatoes offer more beneficial antioxidants than their red, yellow, and green counterparts; they can also tough it out in the produce section a bit longer. That’s according to a 2013 study from Martin’s team, which observed that purple tomatoes have the potential to enjoy a “significantly extend[ed] shelf life,” possibly due to the fact that “the increased antioxidant capacity of purple fruit likely slows the process of overripening.”

The promise of those results has taken Martin’s efforts out of the laboratory and into the world of produce sales through the launch of Norfolk Plant Sciences. The company is now tasked with eventually bringing these purple tomatoes to market, assuming their produce is able to secure FDA approval marking it safe for sale and consumption.

While skepticism over genetically modified foods could be an obstacle, brand recall certainly won’t.

“[It] strikes a cord with people in this very basic way,” Nathan Pumplin, Norfolk Plant Sciences’ CEO, told CNN. “It takes no imagination to see that it’s different . . . it really allows people to make a choice.”

For now, the plan is to launch purple tomatoes in a small number of markets in 2023, where they’ll no doubt add some color to the produce section.

Aaron Rodgers fumbles the science on psychedelics. Drugs like ayahuasca can alter the brain—but how?

Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers has been vocal about the positive benefits he’s experienced from using ayahuasca, a hallucinogenic brew from the Amazon which some research suggests has rapid antidepressant properties that quickly evaporate suicidal urges and can potentially treat addiction.

But Rodgers insists that ayahuasca isn’t a drug.

“It has properties in it that have hallucinogenative [sic] abilities,” Rodgers said during a recent appearance on “The Pat McAfee Show,” describing the exact behavior of a drug. “But it’s not a drug. We’re talking about plants here.”

It wouldn’t be the first time that Rodgers fumbled the science on a health topic. While ayahuasca specifically refers to a drink mixture of at least two plants, other plant-based substances are often swirled in, many of which contain drugs such as DMT (N,N-Dimethyltryptamine) or harmine. Otherwise, no one would likely drink it. It’s a little like saying decaf coffee would be a good backup player for espresso.

Psychedelics like ayahuasca are becoming increasingly popular — and not just among folks like Rodgers who can afford trips to Peru. In recent years, interest in LSD (sometimes called “acid”) and psilocybin “magic” mushrooms has exploded. Author Michael Pollan has wrung a popular book and Netflix series out of the idea that these drugs can “change your mind,” gripping Western audiences who are plagued by mental malaise.

Based on a huge volume of psychedelic research, that appears to be the case: These drugs can create long-lasting changes in the brain that seem to alleviate depression, anxiety and other mental health disorders. But how exactly is this accomplished? Putting aside semantic debates, what is it that makes psychedelics so life-altering?

A new paper in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology briefly summarizes what we know — and what we don’t — about the impact psychedelics have on the brain. Peeking under the hood, two scientists from the University Center for Psychiatric Research at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland, reviewed the available evidence to pinpoint what doses are necessary, where in the brain these changes occur, how long they last and whether any of this actually has any real therapeutic value.

Scientists used to think the brain all but stopped developing after a certain age. We now know that isn’t true.

Much of this psychedelic research hinges on a concept called neuroplasticity, or the brain’s ability to “modify, change and adapt,” as one article puts it. Scientists used to think the brain all but stopped developing after a certain age. We now know that isn’t true — using drugs and other methods, we can induce changes in the brain no matter how old.

But experts still aren’t entirely sure how this happens on a neurological level. Answering this question is crucial to understanding how the brain works, as well as developing tools (i.e. drugs) to keep it thriving and healthy.

A lot of psychedelic neuroplasticity research, however, is in animals — not humans. It’s not easy to measure brain changes in a living person, but feeding rats or mice psychedelics and measuring the size of neurons before and after a dose can teach us a lot about what may or may not be happening.

One of the most important aspects of psychedelics is the shape of the molecules. If you look at the chemical structure of drugs like LSD, psilocybin, DMT and 5-MeO-DMT (also known as “toad venom”), they all appear very similar to serotonin, a chemical that is widely used in the body for many biological processes — especially for keeping the brain online. Consequently, serotonin has been associated with numerous psychiatric and neurological conditions, such as schizophrenia and autism.


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Psychedelics are like keys that have almost — but not exactly — the same shape as serotonin. It’s a close enough fit that these drugs can slip into the “locks,” or receptors, in cells, creating downstream effects on the genes responsible for growing new brain cells and strengthening the connections between existing neurons.

Most brain changes appear related to brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a protein our bodies naturally creates to regulate the nervous system. It not only plays a critical role in memory but also appears to encourage the biological processes associated with neuron growth. Psychedelics seem to boost levels of BDNF. In fact, after introducing psilocybin to a mouse brain, you can watch this growth in almost real-time.

Our brains are filled with billions of neurons, each of which have long, dangly threads called dendrites. BDNF is like fertilizer for neurons, coaxing them to grow big bushy dendrites, creating more connections in the brain. A forest of healthy neurons is associated with positive mental health, whereas conditions like PTSD and depression are associated with low levels of BDNF.

Some evidence suggests that psychedelics can create a feedback loop between different receptors, producing large quantities of BDNF. This effect can last for several days, or what the Swiss researchers call the “window of plasticity,” and it can help humans become more responsive to therapy or recover from injuries like strokes. What’s more, the effects seem to be long-lasting, persisting for as long as a month in some individuals.

However, “prolonged experiences of anxiety and distress during a state of heightened plasticity have the potential to be damaging,” the authors warn. If someone under the influence of psychedelics has a traumatic experience, it could rewire the brain in a way that is unpleasant. One example is hallucinogen persisting perceptual disorder (HPPD), a condition in which some of the effects of psychedelics, such as hallucinations and psychological distress, persist long after the drug has worn off.

“Neuroplasticity may not only play a role in positive long-term effects of psychedelics, but also undesirable ones,” the authors caution. Thankfully, these side effects are relatively rare and can be managed by taking the drugs in safe settings or with a therapist or guide.

There’s a lot about the brain we still don’t know, let alone when a powerful psychedelic drug is added to the mix.

While these are some of the dominant theories on how psychedelics change the brain, they’re still theoretical. There’s a lot about the brain we still don’t know, let alone when a powerful psychedelic drug is added to the mix. For example, DMT (the main ingredient in ayahuasca) may involve receptors other than serotonin like the sigma-1 receptor.

To be certain, we need stronger evidence — including using human test subjects. The more we investigate the effects of drugs on the brain, the more we learn about how this magnificent metabolic machine works on its own.

We shouldn’t expect a football player such as Rodgers to score a touchdown on a subject as complex as neuroscience. Even experts are still unraveling this interesting phenomenon. The proof is in the pudding, and Rodgers’ experiences on drugs are valid. Only he can say if his ayahuasca trips are positive or life-affirming, but we can insist on correct terminology. “Drug” isn’t a dirty word: Psychedelics are drugs, and these substances have a lot to teach us about ourselves.

Little is known about the health impacts of the microplastics in our fertilizers and soils

Gazprom’s decision to turn off the taps of Nord Stream 1 this month has rocked Europe’s industrial and manufacturing sector, with fertilizer producers first in line.

This is because the production of synthetically derived fertilizers, which are manufactured from minerals, gasses from the air and inorganic waste materials, requires a huge amount of energy. By some accounts, the Haber-Bosch process, which converts nitrogen and hydrogen into ammonia, uses between 1% and 2% of all global energy produced annually. In Germany alone, ammonia production pumps up about 4.5% of the natural gas used by industries.

Organic fertilizers

So, what alternatives are left? The following organic fertilizers could represent one solution to alleviate the burden of increased costs for farmers and consumers. Let us weigh some of their pros and cons.

  • Manure. Used by farmers to boost crop yields since at least the neolithic age, manure is rich in primary nutrients necessary to plant growth, such as nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium and organic carbon. However, the food crisis has increased competition between farmers growing livestock feed and food (e.g. cereals) for land and could require us to reduce our consumption of animal products (e.g. meat). The reduction of herd size is also set to slash manure supply.

  • Sewage sludge and compost. A byproduct of private and industrial food consumption and processing, sludge and compost can replace some of the nitrogen and phosphor from synthetic fertilizers. They currently contribute little to Gemany’s plant food, reaching from 1% to 4% of the nutrients demanded (see Table 1). However, better recycling processes could boost biowaste and compost production by 50% in the medium term.

Chart on quantity of nutrients contained in organic fertilisers
Table 1: Quantity of nutrients contained in organic fertilizers as share of nutrients demand in German crop production. The data do represent the fertilization efficiency. Scientific Advisory Board on Fertilizer Issues (2015), Author provided

Fertilizers drenched in microplastics

There is a hitch, however. In recent years, research has shown microplastics have increasingly permeated organic fertilizers and agricultural soils, raising environmental and health concerns. While its impacts are still being gauged, some of the known culprits include littering and abrasive particles from tyre wear. Plastic films laid out on crops to prevent temperature fluctuations or water evaporation from soils known as mulch films are also suspected to emit them. Meanwhile, organic fertilizers compost and sludge soak up households and industry microplastics, accounting for a large part of the problem.

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Microplastics pollution is at its worst in agricultural soils of urban regions, where locals typically produce high quantities of sludge and compost to go on to apply them as organic fertilizers. In Germany, for example, the problem is particularly acute in the country’s industrial West, the Ruhrgebiet, or larger cities such as Hamburg or Hannover.


Area with microplastic pollution from sewage sludge (left) and from compost (right) in share of Utilised Agricultural Area (UAA) under high fertilisation intensity. Author provided, Fourni par l’auteur

Microplastics’ health and environmental impacts: The state of research

Science on microplastics is still very much in its infancy. Research that has been carried out has suggested they play havoc with the soils’ structure, release contaminants (e.g., plasticizers, flame retardants, light and heat stabilizers) and harm the soil biosphere.

It is even believed microplastics can enter crops and thus the food chain destined for food and human consumption. To this date, they have been found in mussels and fish, birds, marine and terrestrial mammals and yes, human beings.

Experiments conducted in laboratories (in vitro) have confirmed some of these hunches. In a 2019 paper, for example, scientists sprinkled microplastics on soil containing ryegrass and earthworms, resulting in the germination of fewer seeds, shorter shoots and greater soil acidity. However, we also know scientists apply higher microplastic concentrations under in vitro as opposed to natural conditions (in vivo).

This makes it particularly important for scientists to pursue in vivo experiments, which are more challenging to carry out than in vitro ones. This is because it is particularly tricky to distinguish soil from microplastic particles, while microplastics are also typically scattered across soils in small concentrations.

As for microplastics’ health impacts, scientists think they present risks at three levels: first through the plastic particles themselves, secondly through the release of persistent organic pollutants absorbed by the plastics, and thirdly, the leaching of additives from the plastics. The complexity involved in the analysis of microplastics’ endless combination of sizes, shapes and chemical signatures means there is currently little research about their health impacts.

More research is needed for better laws

Alarmingly, environmental legislation, be it at a German or EU level, does not have anything to say on the subject, handing farmers a free pass to contaminate their field.

Changing this will require urgently equipping lawmakers with better scientific research. In the meantime, however, there are practical steps policy-makers, farmers and citizens can take to slash our dependence on synthetic fertilizers amid the war in Ukraine. The first is to relocalize our food production and make it less dependent on trade, as Europe had already begun to do so during the Covid-19 crisis. We can also already start to improve the recycling processes of alternative organic fertilizers to substitute synthetic fertilizers in line with the EU’s Nutrient Management Plan from its circular-economy strategy.

Absent any measures, microplastic pollution will continue to accumulate in our ecosystems and possibly even bloodstreams.

Martin Henseler, Research engineer, Equipe d’Economie Le Havre Normandie, Université Le Havre Normandie

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

“A danger to democracy itself”: Authors fight back against limiting libraries’ digital rights

Neil Gaiman. Chuck Wendig. Hanif Abdurraqib. Eula Biss. 

These are but a handful of the writers who have signed their names to an open letter released Thursday by a nonprofit group concerned with digital rights issues, Fight for the Future. The letter, titled “Authors for Libraries,” expresses disheartenment about “the recent attacks against libraries being made in our name by trade associations such as the Association of American Publishers and the Publishers Association.”

The letter calls for libraries to be able to “permanently own and preserve books, and to purchase these permanent copies on reasonable terms, regardless of format.” That seems like a typical right of libraries, but the books in question are specifically e-books. Currently, libraries must pay to rent, not own, e-books from publishers, and the prices, according to the letter, “are often likened to extortion.” This, despite e-books often being cheaper to manufacture than print books and more accessible

Recent lawsuits, including one against the Internet Archive, seek to restrict e-books in libraries and to limit the lending of scanned material in general. The letter condemns this “undermining of libraries” and asserts that only “the wealthiest and most privileged authors and corporations” see financial benefits from going against libraries. “This behavior is utterly opposed to the interests of authors as a whole,” the letter reads.

Multiple authors included statements in the letter, such as David Weinberger, who says, “Publishers trying to limit the reach of libraries are hastening the death of literacy,” while Mirta Wake addresses writers in her statement: “Retracting the ability to read from the poor will not net you more sales, it will simply limit the reach that your work could have.”

The letter comes at a time when libraries and books in general are under attack. Books by queer writers and writers of color have been banned in school libraries and have become the subject of heated lawsuits. The letter addresses some of the recent lawsuits against libraries as well as “smear campaigns” leveled against those who work there, which have falsely painted librarians as “‘mouthpieces’ for Big Tech.”

Concerned about the reduction of libraries’ rights nationwide, the letter reads, “We fear a future where libraries are reduced to a sort of Netflix or Spotify for books from which publishers demand exorbitant licensing fees in perpetuity while unaccountable vendors force the spread of disinformation and hate for profit.”


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In his statement attached to the letter, the poet Philip Metres writes, “The public library, to me, is the closest thing to a church for everyone – a place where people seek stories and answers to every question under the sun. Those who threaten that sacred space, who seek to reduce access to that temple of learning and exploration, are a danger to democracy itself.”

 

I won’t disappear: How Ryan Murphy’s “Monster” turns Dahmer victims into people – but is it enough?

When Ryan Murphy first announced that he'd be adding the story of Jeffrey Dahmer to his chamber of horrors alongside a new season of "American Horror Story" and upcoming miniseries, "The Watcher," the gut check first reaction from many was to question, "Why?" 

Dahmer's cannibalistic killing-spree — in which he primarily preyed upon gay men of color in Wisconsin between the years 1978 and 1991 — has already been told in gruesome detail via umpteen documentaries, movies, true crime books and even comic books. The question of why "Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story" needed to be added to that list was, and is, a valid one. And Murphy offers what he sees as a valid answer. This latest retelling, which stars "AHS" alum Evan Peters as Dahmer, uses Murphy's near formulaic skill for curating horror to shift the focus away from the killer and tell the stories of the people he killed in a way that's never been done quite this effectively before. 

Unlike other "Milwaukee Cannibal" vehicles such as "My Friend Dahmer," "The Jeffrey Dahmer Files" and "Dahmer," just to name a few, "Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story" shows Dahmer's 17 victims as more that just body parts in a fridge or pieces left to dissolve into nothing within big plastic tubs. Here we're given the chance to see these men when they were living and laughing and breathing, not just as distant screams in the background of Jeff's story. And no episode from this limited series is a better example of how Murphy and his team set out to accomplish this than Episode 6, "Silenced."

While all of the other nine episodes of "Monster" introduce the men that Dahmer killed on or near the day they died, the Paris Barclay-directed "Silenced" takes us all the way back to 1960 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin to witness the birth of Anthony (Tony) Hughes. Shortly after his birth, Tony's mom Shirley (Karen Malina White) is informed that an antibiotic called Gentamicin that was used to treat a bout of pneumonia caused him to have permanent hearing loss, then we're shown how he grew into an adult – played by deaf actor Rodney Burford – who refused to see that as any sort of roadblock to his dreams. 

In just about every serial killer documentary you can name there's always a nurture/nature angle where a medical professional is brought on screen to tell "why" a person became a killer. In John Wayne Gacy's case; getting hit in the head with a swing is said to have had something to do with it. David Berkowitz (aka The Son of Sam) and Richard Ramirez were also said to have suffered severe head injuries as children that are attributed to their penchant for murder. In Dahmer's case, no reason is hinted at other than childhood loneliness and a love for sucking down cheap booze. After his arrest, he was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, schizotypal personality disorder and a psychotic disorder, conveniently timed with his lawyer's attempt to have him found unable to stand trial, but the judge wasn't having it. Dahmer targeted and killed men who had every obstacle life had to offer stacked up against them while he, even if just subconsciously, relied on his privilege as a white man to evade police scrutiny for years. 

According to Murphy's "Monster," which remains relatively true to the events as they took place, but not 100%, Tony first met Dahmer after returning to his home town of Milwaukee after breaking out on his own to pursue modeling in Madison, just under 80 miles away. Tony has a small group of supportive friends, several who are deaf themselves, but he's feeling unlucky in love, having a hard time meeting a man who won't run away the minute they learn that he's deaf. Unfortunately for Tony, Dahmer ends up being that man. 

Breaking from his norm of luring men to his apartment with money or booze and then drugging and killing them, here Dahmer is shown to fall into a brief relationship with Tony before ending his life. In reality, Dahmer and Tony knew each other for a year or more before the killing took place, according to witness reports in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.


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Even the most casual fan of true crime can likely rattle off the name of the street that Gacy lived on when he killed 33 young men and buried them under his house, or the make and model of the car that Ted Bundy drove when he hunted down women to kill them. Before "Monster," how many could have named even one of Dahmer's victims? 

We're spared having to witness the actual act of Tony being killed in "Silenced," but seeing him dance, have dinner with his family, hear from his sister Barbara that she's pregnant with a niece he'll never meet; a niece she plans to name Tony, saves this series from being just another retelling of Dahmer's story. It gives Tony, and the other men who died by Dahmer's hand before, and after him, a name. 

As for Dahmer's other victims who are not given a stand-alone episode in the way that Tony is, a woman named Glenda Cleveland lived the later part of her life in their memory. Played by Niecy Nash in "Monster," Glenda lived next door to Dahmer in the Oxford Apartments at 924 North 25th Street in Milwaukee where Dahmer killed the vast majority of his victims. On a now infamous night in 1991 she attempted to warn police about Dahmer's attempt to kill 14-year-old Konerak Sinthasomphone, but they personally led the boy right back to Dahmer's door. He was killed almost immediately after they left. Up until Glenda's death in 2011 she fought ceaselessly to have the former site of the Oxford Apartments made into a memorial park for Dahmer's victims, but it never happened. Whereas she was only recognized with small plaques for her bravery and a few pats on the back for her efforts, John Balcerzak, one of the cops who walked Konerak back to his death, was elected president of the Milwaukee Police Association. 

Despite these efforts to humanize Dahmer's victims and call attention to the homophobia and racism exhibited by police, "Monster" has received considerable backlash. Some families of the victims have claimed that they were blindsided by certain portrayals or that watching the series was retraumatizing. However, the series is currently at No. 1 on Netflix despite the controversies, and the heartbreaking "Silenced" in particular has struck a chord with viewers.

In Tony's last scene in the series, he writes a note to Dahmer to soothe his visible anxieties over him leaving. The note reads, "I won't disappear," which is as much a message to the man in front of him as it is to us. 

Is your gas stove bad for your health?

Cooks love their gadgets, from countertop slow cookers to instant-read thermometers. Now, there’s increasing interest in magnetic induction cooktops – surfaces that cook much faster than conventional stoves, without igniting a flame or heating an electric coil.

Some of this attention is overdue: Induction has long been popular in Europe and Asia, and it is more energy-efficient than standard stoves. But recent studies have also raised concerns about indoor air emissions from gas stoves.

Academic researchers and agencies such as the California Air Resources Board have reported that gas stoves can release hazardous air pollutants while they’re operating, and even when they’re turned off.

As an environmental health researcher who does work on housing and indoor air, I have participated in studies that measured air pollution in homes and built models to predict how indoor sources would contribute to air pollution in different home types. Here is some perspective on how gas stoves can contribute to indoor air pollution, and whether you should consider shifting away from gas.


Natural gas has long been marketed as a clean fuel, but research on its health and environmental effects is calling that idea into question.

Respiratory effects

One of the main air pollutants commonly associated with using gas stoves is nitrogen dioxide, or NO₂, which is a byproduct of fuel combustion. Nitrogen dioxide exposures in homes have been associated with more severe asthma and increased use of rescue inhalers in children. This gas can also affect asthmatic adults, and it contributes to both the development and exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

Nitrogen dioxide in homes comes both from outdoor air that infiltrates indoors and from indoor sources. Road traffic is the most significant outdoor source; unsurprisingly, levels are higher close to major roadways. Gas stoves often are the most substantial indoor source, with a greater contribution from large burners that run longer.

The gas industry’s position is that gas stoves are a minor source of indoor air pollutants. This is true in some homes, especially with respect to exposures averaged over months or years.

But there are many homes in which gas stoves contribute more to indoor nitrogen dioxide levels than pollution from outdoor sources does, especially for short-term “peak” exposures during cooking time. For example, a study in Southern California showed that around half of homes exceeded a health standard based on the highest hour of nitrogen dioxide concentrations, almost entirely because of indoor emissions.

How can one gas stove contribute more to your exposure than an entire highway full of vehicles? The answer is that outdoor pollution disperses over a large area, while indoor pollution concentrates in a small space.

How much indoor pollution you get from a gas stove is affected by the structure of your home, which means that indoor environmental exposures to NO₂ are higher for some people than for others. People who live in larger homes, have working range hoods that vent to the outdoors and have well-ventilated homes in general will be less exposed than those in smaller homes with poorer ventilation.

But even larger homes can be affected by gas stove usage, especially since the air in the kitchen does not immediately mix with cleaner air elsewhere in the home. Using a range hood when cooking, or other ventilation strategies such as opening kitchen windows, can bring down concentrations dramatically.


Ventilation is an essential tool for improving indoor air quality in homes.

Methane and hazardous air pollutants

Nitrogen dioxide is not the only pollutant of concern from gas stoves. Some pollution with potential impacts on human health and Earth’s climate occurs when stoves aren’t even running.

A 2022 study estimated that U.S. gas stoves not in use emit methane – a colorless, odorless gas that is the main component of natural gas – at a level that traps as much heat in the atmosphere as about 400,000 cars.

Some of these leaks can go undetected. Although gas distributors add an odorant to natural gas to ensure that people will smell leaks before there is an explosion risk, the smell may not be strong enough for residents to notice small leaks.

Some people also have a much stronger sense of smell than others. In particular, those who have lost their sense of smell – whether from COVID-19 or other causes – may not smell even large leaks. One recent study found that 5% of homes had leaks that owners had not detected that were large enough to require repair.

This same study showed that leaking natural gas contained multiple hazardous air pollutants, including benzene, a cancer-causing agent. While measured concentrations of benzene did not reach health thresholds of concern, the presence of these hazardous air pollutants could be problematic in homes with substantial leaks and poor ventilation.

Reasons to switch: Health and climate

So, if you live in a home with a gas stove, what should you do and when should you worry? First, do what you can to improve ventilation, such as running a range hood that vents to the outdoors and opening kitchen windows while cooking. This will help, but it won’t eliminate exposures, especially for household members who are in the kitchen while cooking takes place.

If you live in a smaller home or one with a smaller closed kitchen, and if someone in your home has a respiratory disease like asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, exposures may still be concerning even with good ventilation. Swapping out a gas stove for one that uses magnetic induction would eliminate this exposure while also providing climate benefits.

There are multiple incentive programs to support gas stove changeovers, given their importance for slowing climate change. For example, the recently signed Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, which includes many provisions to address climate change, offers rebates for the purchase of high-efficiency electric appliances such as stoves.

Dozens of U.S. cities have adopted or are considering regulations that bar natural gas hookups in new-construction homes after specified dates to speed a transition away from fossil fuels. At the same time, at least 20 states have adopted laws or regulations that prohibit bans on natural gas.

Moving away from gas stoves is especially important if you are investing in home energy efficiency measures, whether you are doing it to take advantage of incentives, reduce energy costs or shrink your carbon footprint. Some weatherization steps can reduce air leakage to the outdoors, which in turn can increase indoor air pollution concentrations if residents don’t also improve kitchen ventilation.

In my view, even if you’re not driven to reduce your carbon footprint – or you’re just seeking ways to cook pasta faster – the opportunity to have cleaner air inside your home may be a strong motivator to make the switch.

Jonathan Levy, Professor and Chair, Department of Environmental Health, Boston University

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

Dutch baby pizza is everything you love about pizza, any time you want it

Sometimes even the most pizza obsessed among us want something more… pizza adjacent. We want mozzarella and tomatoes and something hot, hot, hot from the oven, but also maybe a little less in your face than regular pizza. For those moments, I think what you want is a Dutch baby pizza.

The Dutch baby (also sometimes known as the Bismarck) is neither Dutch nor, fortunately, a baby. It is instead Germanic in origin and impressive in stature — a dish with the ta da! factor of popovers or crepes but without the fuss or stress. Thin batter is poured into a heated pan and baked at high heat, and in minutes, you’ve got a beautiful showstopper that’s crunchy and eggy and light but not too light. And while Dutch babies are traditionally served sweet (I’m not complaining), they hold their own with any kind of savory spin you want to put on them. This means they are as comfortable on the breakfast table as the dinner one, as adaptable to a crowd as they are to the personal pie treatment.


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I like this Dutch baby pizza in an easy to manage small portion, because it says “dinner is served” when you don’t even want to wait for takeout. The only trick is to show some restraint; this is a baby after all, it can’t handle a heavy hand with toppings. Round this out with salad or a side of vegetables and you will be very well fed, any time you want. Sautéed, garlicky spinach here would be very Italian restaurant. 

* * *

Inspired by CBC Life and One Dish Kitchen

Dutch baby margherita pizza
Yields
 1 – 2 servings
Prep Time
 10 minutes
Cook Time
 15 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup of milk
  • 1/4 cup of all-purpose flour
  • 1 large egg
  •  1/2 cup of plum tomatoes, sliced
  • 2 ounces of mozzarella, shredded
  • 1 clove of minced garlic
  • 1 tablespoon of butter, softened
  • Salt, to taste
  • Oregano and pepper, to taste
  • Torn basil leaves

 

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
  2. Rub the butter all over a 6-inch cast iron skillet or similarly sized oven safe pan. Put it in the oven to heat up.
  3. In a small bowl, whisk together the egg, salt and milk. Add the flour and whisk thoroughly. You can also mix everything in a blender.
  4. Remembering to wear your oven mitts, pull the skillet from the pan. Pour in the batter and then top with cheese, tomatoes and garlic.
  5. Bake until puffed up and golden, about 15 – 20 minutes. Top with torn basil. Serve immediately.

Cook’s Notes

This could definitely withstand a few slices of pepperoni.

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Republican Florida sheriff “declined” to evacuate inmates before Hurricane Ian hit: report

Dramatic video emerged on Wednesday as Hurricane Ian pummeled Fort Myers in Florida.

“When the storm came ashore on September 28, it decimated neighborhoods with Category 4 winds and brought a destructive storm surge that submerged city blocks in Lee County,” the Miami New Times reported Wednesday. “According to Lee County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Anita Iriarte, the sheriff’s office declined to evacuate inmates from its 457-bed downtown Fort Myers jail as Hurricane Ian neared Category 5 status and closed in on the area.”

The jail is run by Sheriff Carmine Marceno.

“Lee County’s own map indicates that the jail is in a mandatory evacuation zone. In advance of the storm’s arrival, the National Hurricane Center’s forecast suggested that downtown Fort Myers would face the threat of a storm surge of 9 feet or more,” the New Times reported.

The sheriff’s office said the inmates were safe on Wednesday afternoon.

“Footage of Edison Bank in Fort Myers, roughly two blocks from the river and about a half-mile away from the jail, showed a downtown block inundated with flood waters around 3:45 p.m. The water in one neighborhood in the downtown district reportedly rose to four-feet deep by 4:30 p.m.,” the weekly reported.

The New Times listed examples of inmates being left behind during hurricanes in Louisiana, South Carolina, Texas, and Virginia.

Read the full report.

New book reveals Trump’s response to impeachment: “I’ll just sue Congress. They can’t do this to me”

Former President Donald Trump wanted to retaliate against Congress after the House of Representatives endorsed two articles of impeachment against him.

According to HuffPost, the former president threatened to take legal action against Congress following his first impeachment. The allegation was detailed in the book “Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America,” written by The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman.

Multiple media outlets have shared reports about excerpts of the book that have been publicized ahead of its release.

Per HuffPost: “Trump’s alleged call for legal action came after the House adopted articles of impeachment against him in 2019, CNN reported, after a formal House inquiry revealed he had pressured Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate the son of Democratic presidential rival Joe Biden.”

“I’ll just sue Congress. They can’t do this to me,” Trump said, according to the excerpts from the book.

The book also includes comments made by Trump as he prepared for a debate with former Democratic presidential candidate Hilary Clinton ahead of the 2016 election. At that time, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus asked if she could use the women’s restroom.

In response to the question, Trump reportedly said, “‘I have a question, cocked or decocked?’ Trump reportedly asked,” per the news outlet, “before receiving ‘blank stares’ and making a ‘chopping gesture.'” He continued, “With cock or without cock?”

Other detailed accounts from the book have also surfaced this week. Haberman’s book, “Confidence Man,” is set to be released on October 4, 2022.