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“Trump’s uncontrolled ego is his own worst enemy,” says former White House attorney Ty Cobb

Former White House attorney Ty Cobb worked in the White House during a bulk of Trump’s presidency, affording him specialized insight on the former president’s comings and goings during that time, and the effect they’ve had on the GOP. In 2018, Cobb stepped away after clashing with Trump over what CNN phrased as Trump’s “combative posture” towards Robert Mueller’s investigation into the possibility of Trump being in cahoots with Russia.

“Ty was uncomfortable with the Mueller tweets,” a source said to CNN. “He was not going to be ‘part of a mud-slinging campaign,’ another anonymous source added.

In a recent interview with NBC News, Cobb offers his opinion that Trump “is a disaster for the GOP,” and though Trump once stated “I have full confidence in Ty Cobb, my Special Counsel,” that confidence wasn’t enough to steady his course in the years following Cobb’s departure as his adviser.

“One thing the Democrats know for certain is that Trump’s uncontrolled ego is his own worst enemy,” Cobb said to NBC. “They are praying they are able to goad him into an announcement for a 2024 presidential run.”

In terms of how he sees a second run for office shaking out for Trump, Cobb comments “A 2024 declaration of his candidacy serves no interest but his self-defeating and overwhelming need for relevance, attention and money. Such an announcement also does not inoculate him from criminal investigation.”

In 2019 Salon reported on Cobb serving as Special Counsel for Trump during Bob Mueller’s investigation into what was referred to then as “Russian meddling.” When it came to Mueller, Cobb had favorable things to say during these years working in the White House.

“I think Bob Mueller’s an American hero,” Cobb said in 2019. “He is a very deliberate guy. He’s also a class act and a very justice-oriented person.”

While Trump saw Mueller’s investigation as a “witch hunt,” Cobb saw it as due diligence.

“I don’t feel the same way about Mueller,” Cobb said. “I don’t feel the investigation is a witch hunt.”


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Trump’s most recent “witch hunt” is his belief that a second term in the White House was stolen from him and his obsession with proving that to be the case, at any cost, has snowballed into the “Big Lie,” a phrase coined by Adolf Hitler in “Mein Kampf” in which Hitler blamed Jews for “spreading lies” about the German army.

“The Big Lie has been good only for Trump and has brought him millions in donations, which some evidence suggests may have been mishandled,” Cobb says. “The Big Lie, and the related violence, election interference and other perceived misconduct, was and is an affront to this nation and its first principles. It has permanently soiled the history pages and deepened the abyss that divides our country and continues to expand due to the delusions and lack of accountability of politicians in both parties.”

No offense — but your shower head probably needs to be cleaned

Clean Like You Mean It shows you how to tackle the trickiest spots in your home — whether they’re just plain gross or need some elbow grease. You’ll get the cleaning secrets we’ve learned from grandma, a guide to our handiest tools and helpers, and so much more. Pull on those rubber gloves and queue up the tunes: It’s scour hour!


Cleaning a showerhead seems counterintuitive, right? Doesn’t it naturally get clean as I’m taking a shower? Sorry, but no. As the shower runs, minerals in the water start to build up in the holes of the shower, eventually forming moldy pockets and causing your shower to run less efficiently. So before you step in for your next rinse, here’s how to clean a showerhead with just a few minutes of prep work.

Step one

Not all showerheads require a deep clean. If you wipe yours down frequently with a microfiber cloth or an old toothbrush (once after each shower is ideal, but even once a week will do the trick), there might not be much buildup to dislodge. But if you can’t remember the last time you cleaned it, or didn’t even know that this was something you have to do, it’s time to get down and dirty.

Grab a gallon-size Ziploc bag, white vinegar, baking soda, a rubber band or sturdy twist tie, a soft cloth, and a toothbrush. The combination of vinegar and baking soda isn’t just a fun science experiment; it’s the key to deep (and I mean deep) cleaning your showerhead. The baking soda will get rid of any nasty, pesty odors and the volcanic-like combination will thoroughly remove moldy mineral deposits and disinfect the showerhead.

Now let’s put this plan into motion! Carefully fill a plastic bag with three cups of white vinegar and ¼ cup of baking soda. Do this over the tub or sink in case it bubbles violently over (if you stayed awake through science class, you’ll know this is a real possibility). The bag should only be filled about two-thirds of the way. Next, submerge the showerhead in the bag filled with the cleaning solution and secure the bag using a rubber band or zip tie. Unless you have a brass or gold showerhead, let it soak for a few hours; otherwise, keep specialty metals to 30 minutes or less. Any longer may damage the finish.

Step two

Once you’ve let the showerhead soak, remove the bag and carefully pour the vinegar and baking soda mixture down the drain. Turn the shower on to its hottest setting and let the water run for a minute or two to remove any remaining mineral deposits or cleaning solution.

Step three

If your showerhead was super grimy to begin with, scrub the holes with an old toothbrush to unclog them. Doing so will also help improve your water pressure and ensure that you get to enjoy a steady stream of warm water every time you shower.

If you’re diligent about cleaning your showerhead, this step might not be necessary. Instead, polish the showerhead with a microfiber cloth, which will also prevent any pesky water stains from forming.

Scrub-a-dub-dub

Need to really get in every nook and cranny of your showerhead? You’ll have a much easier time if you unscrew the showerhead, soak it in the solution, and then scrub it with a toothbrush in a sink. This is not only a much more comfortable way to clean the showerhead (no need to crane your neck!), but a safer method, too.

Next time you shower, revel in your squeaky clean environment. I know I will.

How to make soap at home (even if you failed chemistry)

My experimentations with homemade soap began when I became enamored with making things at home, like maintaining my own sourdough starterpainting my own kitchen cabinets, and repairing my own clothes. Even if time-consuming, I found that doing things myself, from start to finish, was immensely rewarding. It gave me a far greater appreciation for the goods that came my way, and made me a lot more conscious (in a good way) of the quality of ingredients. 

As time went by and my life got busier, my hobbies went on the backburner. However, soapmaking stuck around. It was very complicated at first, and therefore can be off-putting to some, but I’ve actually found it has one of the best effort-to-reward ratios out of all my hobbies. Much like knitting, it’s a meditative activity and a creative outlet. But unlike knitting, just a few evenings or weekends of work can reap great rewards, as well as furnish me with loads of ready-made gifts for the people I love.

With just some tools (many of which are old friends in the kitchen), and armed with an understanding of how it all comes together, homemade soap really doesn’t feel that much more ambitious than some of the more adventurous baking projects I’ve embarked on over the years, like baking bread — and the results are well worth it. Much like freshly baked goodies, they can also fill your home with delicious scents. Once you have a base recipe down, you can also play with shapes, colors, scents, and additives to customize each batch, and make them your own. 

Here’s how you can make homemade soap.

What you’ll need:

Ingredients:
16 ounces coconut oil 
14 ounces palm oil, preferably from a responsible source (alternatives to palm oil can be found here.)
21 ounces olive oil, any you can find
19 ounces distilled water
sodium hydroxide (lye), a 2 pound container of which will make about 4 batches of soap
7 teaspoons essential oil or fragrance oil (optional)

Tools:
Large heat-safe vessel such as an enamelware soup pot*
Measuring cup or small bowl*
Heat-safe vessel, ideally with a handle, such as a heavy glass pitcher*
Silicone spatula or other stirring utensil*
Instant-read thermometer*
Immersion blender*
Scale that can measure in grams and ounces
Soap mold or a 9-inch by 13-inch baking pan*
Plastic wrap (if using a baking pan)
Waxed paper or parchment paper
Teaspoon and additional measuring cup (if using fragrance)
Old towel or blanket
Sharp, thin knife
Rubber gloves
Safety goggles

*Any tools that touch lye should NOT be reused for cooking!

Notes on safety, lye, and sourcing tools:

Although the process of making soap is by and large simple and safe, it is necessary to practice caution during the process that involves handling lye. Lye is a caustic salt (also refered to as sodium hydroxide) that mostly comes in crystalline form and if handled incorrectly, can burn skin and eyes. To protect yourself, remember to always wear gloves, eye protection, and long sleeves, and work in a well-ventilated area like a garage or your driveway. Keep your face away from the lye as you mix it, and keep pets and children away as it’s cooling. But don’t worry about your soap being unsafe — all the lye will be used up in the saponification process (the reaction between lye and fat that makes soap and renders the lye safe to handle) and none will remain in the finished product.

If you’re at all concerned about working with lye, an easy way to ensure none remains in your finished soap is to use a little more fat than the amount listed so it’s cancelled out by the saponification process. This is called “superfatting,” and will almost definitely be covered in any calculator, chart, or other resource used for developing soap recipes.

For soapmaking, I recommend purchasing lye marked as “pure” or “food-grade,” and shop onlinerather than in stores. I don’t recommend buying lye that’s specifically marketed as a drain opener (its other primary use) for this process because it might have other ingredients as well. It comes in different forms like little beads or flakes; it doesn’t matter which you choose for this process. (Interestingly, lye is also used in some recipes. I’ve haven’t done it yet, but I’ve been wanting to try making these Bavarian-style soft pretzels.)

Although soapmaking becomes cost-effective if you do it often, making your first batch can seem like a bit of an investment since none of the tools can be reused for cooking (a good reason to make soap again and again). I’ve linked above to budget-friendly options for many of the tools required, but thrift stores are also a great option for items like the pitcher and pot. Oils for soapmaking can be purchased in 7-pound bags, which will keep costs down if you’re making more than one batch.

How to make soap at home:

1. Mix the lye. Put on your rubber gloves and safety goggles, and set up in a very well-ventilated area such as next to an open window. If you have access to a garage, driveway, patio, or balcony, head out there. Use your scale and measuring cup to carefully weigh 201 grams of sodium hydroxide and set it aside. Then, weigh 19 ounces of distilled water into your glass pitcher or other sturdy, heat-safe vessel. Now, carefully pour the sodium hydroxide into the pitcher of water, and stir just long enough to make sure it all dissolves. This creates a chemical reaction that heats the water to over 200° F and produces strong fumes at first, so work quickly and be extra careful here — I try to hold my breath while I stir. (Safety note: Always work in this order and add lye to water. Never add water to lye, which can cause spattering of the hot lye solution or even an explosion.)

The lye now needs to cool to below 100° F. I usually place mine outside on my porch to speed up this process. Depending on how cold it is out, it can take between 30 and 90 minutes for the lye to cool, which is why I recommend getting this step out of the way first. 

2. Prepare the mold and measure out fragrance. If you’re using a wooden loaf mold or a baking pan, carefully line the inside with waxed paper or parchment paper so its easier to get the soap out later. I often use some masking tape to help hold everything in place. If you use a silicone mold, you can skip this step.

If you like the simplicity of plain rectangular soap bars and think you’ll make more than a couple batches of soap, having a wooden loaf mold like the one shown here makes the process easy and consistent. (I’ve found eBay and Etsy to be good sources for wooden versions at lower prices.) Other options include silicone and PVC plastic molds, which come in many shapes and patterns. If you’re not ready to invest yet, a 9 by 12-inch baking pan or Pyrex dish that you’re willing to part with isjust fine. 

Now is also a good time to measure out your essential oils into an extra measuring cup, for ease of adding them later. Blending fragrances is probably one of the most fun parts of making soap. For this batch, I used 5 teaspoons of orange essential oil and 2 of sandalwood. Synthetic fragrance oils also work well and are generally less expensive than pure essential oils. Mixing fragrances is akin to mixing spices and other ingredients when experimenting with cooking a dish — here is a great set of tips for having fun with blending fragrance oils. You can also opt to make unscented soap if you’re very sensitive to scents and perfumes.

3. Melt and mix the oils. You can now prepare the blend of oils to which you’ll add the lye. If you’re using oils that are solid at room temperature, such as the coconut and palm oils in this recipe, you’ll first need to melt them so they can be poured, either by placing the container in a saucepan of simmering water or by melting them in the microwave.

Once your oils are in a liquid state, place your large pot on the scale and weigh (or re-weigh, if you’ve already done so) each oil into it for precision. Stir everything together and then check the temperature with a heat-safe thermometer. For the next step, the oils need to be between 80 and 100° F. I often find that mine are already in the correct range from being melted, but if not, place the pot on the stove over low heat until the oils reach the proper temperature or set aside to cool down.  

4. Blend and pour your soap. When both your lye and your oil mixture are between 80 and 100° F, you’re ready to blend. After removing the pot from the heat to a trivet or heat-safe surface, put your gloves and eye protection back on, and carefully pour the lye into the pot of oil. They’ll begin to react with each other, turning the mixture cloudy. Begin blending with your immersion blender, and over the next 3 to 5 minutes you’ll see the mixture become thicker and more opaque. You’re aiming for a mixture with the consistency of a runny pudding. If you lift the blender out and let some drips fall across the surface of the mixture, you should see them leave a visible pattern, called “trace,” before sinking back in.

Once the soap mixture has reached trace, stir in the fragrance oil, if using, until blended. Carefully pour the finished mixture into your lined soap mold, and cover with the lid (or plastic wrap, if your mold has no lid). Being sure to keep it level, wrap the whole thing in a towel or blanket to insulate it, and leave undisturbed in a well-ventilated area that’s out of the way for kids and pets for 24 hours. 

This method that I use for making soap is called cold process, where no additional heat is used to facilitate or speed up the saponification process. Hot process, on the other hand, uses an external heat source to accelerate it. While cold process soaps take longer to cure (the next stage, below), the choice to use one or the other is entirely personal.

6. Cut and cure your soap. When your clock indicates that 24 hours is done (don’t try and rush it), your soap is ready to be removed; many wooden loaf molds have fold-down sides or removable bottoms to make this process easier. If you’ve used a baking pan, you may need to use a knife to help pry the soap loaf out. Cut the loaf into bars with a sharp knife. 

Naturally, you don’t want your soaps to crumble when you cut them — and soapmakers have all sorts of ideas on which tools to use to cut soap with. Some use guitar strings, others use butcher’s knives. Still others opt for specialty tools like this (and this). Some DIY-ers even fashion their own instruments. I use a ruler and score the top of the loaf with a sharp knife before cutting to make sure everything stays straight and even. I like generous bars, so I cut them about an inch thick.

Your work is now done, but the bars need to cure for 4 to 6 weeks (remember what I said about patience?) before being used. This time allows the water in the bars to fully evaporate, resulting in a harder and milder soap. Leave the soap to cure on a paper bag or baking rack in the same airy location. If you use a paper bag, turn the bars once or twice during the curing time to make sure all sides are equally exposed to air.

Cleaning up:

The pitcher, measuring cup, and spatula just need to be thoroughly rinsed with water. For the pot with raw soap residue in it, I usually wipe it out first with paper towels before washing it with dish soap and water. Use any tools that touched the lye only for soapmaking, and store them away from the kitchen, ideally on a shelf separate from other kitchen tools in common use, to prevent any chance of confusion.

Creating your own recipes:

This recipe is only one of practically endless combinations and ratios of fats, lye, and other ingredients that you can use to make soap. A lot of the fun of soapmaking is in exploring new recipes and seeing what turns out. Some of my favorite combinations have been orange and sandalwood with poppy seeds, lavender and clary sage with dried lavender blossoms, and rosemary and cedar wood with dried thyme.

You can also change the ratios and types of fat to make soaps with different properties, as well as using liquids other than water (such as milk). Online oil charts and lye calculators can help you finish your recipe. The proportions for this particular recipe are taken from Susan Miller Cavitch’s The Soapmaker’s Companion, a good all-around resource for learning about the science of soapmaking, exploring options for ingredients and techniques, and troubleshooting problems.

Congratulations, you’re a soapmaker! Now get creative and have fun — but please be safe.

This post contains products independently chosen (and loved) by Food52 editors and writers. Food52 may earn an affiliate commission on qualifying purchases of the products we link to.

Trumpism before Trump: Misogyny remains the thread tying the right-wing coalition together

This week the nation bore witness to an especially shameful episode for Republicans, even by the right’s rock-bottom standards. Right-wing media came together to respond to the story of a 10-year-old rape victim by denying her existence and calling those who provided medical care liars. What was surprising about the whole thing was not that conservative media was reckless, hateful, and mendacious. That’s a permanent state of play for Republican propagandists. No, it was that the face of these attacks on a child rape victim and her doctor was not the usual doe-eyed Bible-huggers pretending they want to force fourth graders to give birth for Jesus and “the babies.” It was the noxious frat daddy Jesse Watters, the former Bill O’Reilly underlying who is now forever vying for Tucker Carlson’s throne as the Fox News host most like a rich boy villain in an 80s movie.

Sadly, there was a choir of jackasses making false, unevidenced accusations against the doctor who terminated the child’s pregnancy, but it was Watters and his smirking visage that was really the star of this clown show.

First, the Fox News hosted Ohio’s Republican attorney general falsely implying there was no case on file — even though one was reported in June. Once that falsehood was exposed, it was Watters who falsely accused the doctor of not reporting the rape (she did, even though it had already been reported by the victim’s family.) Watters also hosted the Republican attorney general of Indiana, gloating about the legal harassment campaign he intends to launch against the doctor. The move is clearly retaliation against her for — and this can’t be stated strongly enough — helping a child rape victim avoid forced childbirth. 

RELATED: Post-Roe gaslighting: The party of QAnon denies the very real rape of a 10-year-old 

Republican propagandists used to drape the anti-choice movement in fake piety, to put a moralistic veneer over what is actually a desire to punish women — and child rape victims — with forced childbirth. Clutching Bibles while making maudlin speeches about “babies” was helpful to lull the press into presenting anti-choicers as well-meaning Christians instead of the sadistic misogynists they are. But that strategy has given way to letting shameless creeps like Watters become the face of anti-choice ideology.  

Unfortunately, there are still a lot of people in both mainstream and liberal media who are pretty sexist themselves and don’t want to admit that women or LGBTQ people are important enough to hate.

And as with many things, we can blame Donald Trump.

Despite his half-hearted and unpersuasive attempts to feign Christian faith, Trump has mainly been received, with his pussy-grabbing ways, as an icon of secular misogyny. That doesn’t mean that the more fundamentalist-flavored misogyny has gone anywhere. This week, in fact, Republicans on Capitol Hill coughed up a stock judgemental church lady, who was previously spotted claiming that fetuses are used to power D.C.’s street lights, as their point person for lying about this 10-year-old rape victim. Trump’s entrance onto the political scene empowered every catcalling dirtbag out there who wants to hate women without having to go to church first. 


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As I note in this Friday’s Standing Room Only newsletter, despite the heavy focus on the Proud Boys during the January 6 hearings, almost no attention has been paid by either the House committee or the press to the group’s misogynist origins. It’s an unfortunate oversight because to truly understand the rising threat of fascism, it’s important to understand the role that misogyny and toxic masculinity play in it. That’s especially true when it comes to understanding radicalization, as these far-right groups recruit by targeting men who go online to complain about how modern women aren’t submissive enough to men. 

The Proud Boys continue to be a secular version of the fundamentalist groups that reject women’s equality and LGBTQ rights.

Back when most of the media was still treating the Proud Boys as a harmless drinking club, I was reviewing hours of footage, cataloged by researcher Juliet Jeske, of “The Gavin McInnes Show,” which is where the Proud Boys got their start. On this online program, the shock jock-style right-wing host pundit frequently waxed poetic about “Western civilization.” It was pretty unsubtle as euphemisms go, but much of what drew in his male audience was the overt sexism. 

RELATED: Fetus-powered street lamps? Republicans ramp up outrageous anti-abortion lies ahead of Roe’s demise

McInnes was unapologetic in romanticizing “traditional” marriage, in which women are submissive and financially dependent on men. He and his followers wallowed in outdated stereotypes accusing feminists of being sad, barren “cat ladies,” which really says more about their pathetic fantasies than women’s lived realities. Critically, though, McInnes didn’t present these as religious arguments. Instead, he appealed directly to the deep insecurities in his audience, telling them that they needed no excuse other than bolstering their own egos to demand women be kept in second-class status. 

In fact, the Proud Boys continue to be a secular version of the fundamentalist groups that reject women’s equality and LGBTQ rights. As Salon’s Kathryn Joyce has reported, Proud Boys chapters across the country have been targeting gay clubs and drag shows for harassment. They’ve also been joining anti-abortion protests, adding another layer of violent menace to the already notoriously violent movement


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The secularization of misogyny and homophobia as ideologies is an underreported phenomenon, especially in light of how dangerous it is. As the explosive growth of the Proud Boys since the Capitol insurrection suggests, there are a lot of white men who are bitter about gender equality and racial diversity but aren’t exactly keen on having to get up for church on Sunday mornings to justify themselves. Defeating Trumpism means grappling directly with the rise of misogyny and homophobia, especially the secular flavors of it, and rebutting those views forcefully.

Unfortunately, there are still a lot of people in both mainstream and liberal media who are pretty sexist themselves and don’t want to admit that women or LGBTQ people are important enough to hate. That makes it hard to have an honest public conversation about how much Trumpism is fueled not just by racism, but by this attachment to rigid gender roles that benefit straight cis men to the detriment of everyone else. 

The overturn of Roe v. Wade, however, is forcing a reckoning a lot of people would rather avoid.

As the smirking Watters shows, the people who are willing to go to the mat for forced childbirth aren’t just the Bible-thumpers. It’s a larger coalition of everyone who experienced nervous sweats during the #MeToo era and sees this as an opportunity to put women in their place. (Or, as in the case of the 10-year-old rape victim, to re-traumatize little girls.) It doesn’t matter to the misogynist Trump coalition, however, because the goal is restoring straight male supremacy, no matter how many lives they have to destroy to get there. 

GOP congressional witness claims that a 10-year-old terminating a pregnancy is “not an abortion”

With the U.S. Supreme Court having overturned “Roe v. Wade” after 49 years, the United States no longer has a national standard on abortion rights, but rather, a wide range of state laws — and on July 1, the “Indianapolis Star” reported that a ten-year-old Ohio girl had an abortion in Indianapolis, Indiana because of abortion restrictions in her own state. Other media outlets reported that she was allegedly raped, and on July 13, the “Columbus Dispatch” reported that a man had been arrested and charged in the case.

Democratic Rep. Eric Swalwell of California, during a July 14 hearing, discussed the case with anti-abortion activist Catherine Glenn Foster, president and CEO of Americans United for Life — and Foster denied, much to Swallwell’s shock, that the pregnancy’s termination qualified as an abortion.

When Foster was asked if a “ten-year-old” would “choose to carry a baby,” Foster responded, “I believe it would probably impact her life. And so therefore, it would fall under any exception and would not be an abortion.”

Sounding shocked by her response, Swalwell interjected, “Wait, it would not be an abortion if a ten-year-old, with her parents, made a decision not to have a baby that was the result of a rape?”

Foster replied, “If a ten-year-old became pregnant as a result of rape and it was threatening her life, then that’s not an abortion. So, it would not fall under any abortion restriction in our nation.”

Swalwell directed his next question to another witness at the hearing, Sarah Warbelow, legal director of the Human Rights Campaign — asking her, “Miss Warbelow, are you familiar with disinformation?…. Did you just hear some disinformation?”

Warbelow responded, “Yes, I heard some very significant disinformation…. An abortion is a procedure; it’s a medical procedure that individuals undergo for a wide range of circumstances, including because they have been sexually assaulted — raped in the case of the ten-year-old. It doesn’t matter whether or not there is a statutory exemption; it is still a medical procedure that is understood to be an abortion. Beyond that, I think it’s also important to note that there is no exception for the life or the health of the mother in the Ohio law. That’s why that ten-year-old had to cross state lines in order to receive an abortion.”

Far-right MAGA Republican Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio has claimed, in a tweet that he deleted, that reporting on the ten-year-old was a “lie,” and Swalwell called him out for it during the hearing.

“Speaking of disinformation,” Swalwell told Warbelow, “Jim Jordan called a ten-year-old rape victim a liar…. I know that he did that because he hates the president…. This law…. will bring us government-mandated pregnancies for ten-year-olds.”

Watch the video below or at this link.

Bill O’Reilly slammed by the right for defending AOC after Capitol catcalling incident

Disgraced former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly got slammed by his own base on Friday for defending Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y. after she was verbally harassed by a man while walking up the steps of the Capitol.

“Some loon stalked and insulted Congresswoman Ocasio-Cortez then posted it. This has to stop,” O’Reilly tweeted. “We need new laws to protect public officials and others. And we need them now.”

O’Reilly was immediately mocked by his fellow conservatives, who pointed out that pundit had left Fox News in 2017 after it was revealed that he’d sexually harrassed multiple women at the network. 

“Bill remind me why you got fired from @FoxNews? Didn’t you pay for multiple sexually harass lawsuits?” tweeted Alex Stein, a contributor at the right-wing BlazeTV and the provocateur who harrassed the congresswoman. 

RELATED: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez opens up about receiving death threats as the result of far-right hate

“They need protection from perverts like you,” echoed conservative author Michael Malice.

Steve Deace, a host at BlazeTV, also joined the chorus, asking, “Why do we make these has-been hacks like Bill ‘fire the unjabbed cops’ O’Reilly mind-numbingly rich, only to have them then turn around and betray us at every turn later on?”


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The online exchange came just hours after Ocasio-Cortez was sexually harassed by Stein just outside of the Capitol complex while walking up a staircase. 

RELATED: Dem lawmaker shares vile audio of death threats against her family since Trump targeted her

“Here’s AOC, my favorite big booty Latina,” Stein says in a video while filming her. “I love you AOC, you’re my favorite. She wants to kill babies but she’s still beautiful, you look very beautiful in that dress, you look very sexy”.

Ocasio-Cortez then condemned Stein over Twitter.

“The normalization of this event and this dismissiveness is dangerous,” Ocasio-Cortez told reporters at the Capitol on Thursday. “It’s not just about me. It’s about every person.” 

“It’s just a bummer to work in an institution that openly allowed this, but talking about it only invites more,” she later wrote online, explaining that she “took it down bc it’s clearly someone seeking extremist fame.”

“Just really sad.”

A spokesperson told The Independent that Stein committed no criminal act but described the commentator’s rhetoric as “inappropriate.”

“The comments, although inappropriate, are not criminal. In the video, the man never threatened or touched the Congresswoman,” they said. “Out of an abundance of caution, our officers stopped the man and ran his information, which did not show any warrants.

He’s running: The specter of Donald Trump looms over the GOP

For months the conventional wisdom has held that Democrats are in for an epic shellacking in November, perhaps on a scale that has never been seen in American history. This conventional wisdom is so hardened that if you watch cable news opinion shows or read the op-ed pages of the national papers, you’d think we might as well cancel the elections and just hand the reins over to California Republican Kevin McCarthy in the House and Kentucky Republican Mitch McConnell in the Senate. Just call it a day already. The assumption is that the Democratic congressional majority isn’t just a lame duck, it’s a dead duck.

There is certainly good reason to believe that the Democrats are facing a major loss. After all, the party in power almost always loses seats in the midterms. It’s often been because the president brings in a number of marginal winners on his coattails and the party loses them again when he isn’t on the ballot. (2002 was the only recent exception and that happened because of 9/11 and the fact that George W. Bush didn’t really win his election — which meant that he didn’t have any coattails to lose.)

Another big factor in determining midterm success and failure is the president’s approval rating, as you will hear every pundit and talking head repeat ad nauseam. This correlation is attributed to the idea that mid-term elections are referendums on the president and people will lodge their complaints against him at the ballot box. Since Joe Biden’s approval rating is very bad at the moment, hovering somewhere in the mid to high 30s, that spells big trouble for the party.

And then there is the idea that the generic ballot (which party will you vote for in November?) determines which specific candidates people will vote for in the end, the assumption being that they will vote the party line. For months, the generic ballot had Republicans up double digits, which helped cement the so-called beltway wisdom. With inflation running at a 40-year high, and the pandemic still hanging around, even the excellent job market can’t quiet the depressing feeling that nothing is working right anymore.

RELATED: Democrats’ time to pounce: Republicans suddenly find themselves vulnerable ahead of midterms

Right now, if you were to ask anyone who is somewhat informed about Democratic prospects in November they would say that it’s going to be a bloodbath. And from what we read, the Republicans in both chambers of Congress are already teeing up all the investigations and articles of impeachment so they can hit the ground running. After all, they have no agenda other than Trumpian vengeance, obstruction and bootlicking. But if you look a little bit more closely, this election may not unfold as everyone assumes it will.

All those circumstances I mentioned are true, but there are times when history just isn’t a perfect guide.

First of all, the presumed “red wave” in the House was largely predicated on the notion that Republicans were going to gain a large number of seats in redistricting. That didn’t happen. They gained a few but for the most part, the heavy gerrymandering already took place back in 2010 and there just isn’t a lot of room to create more districts for themselves. As a result, there are actually very few seats up for grabs, with Democrats mostly in solidly blue districts and Republicans in safe red ones. It’s possible that a bunch of blue districts will go for the Republicans this time, I suppose, but I wouldn’t bet on it, particularly since the most recent generic ballot polls show that the Democrats are now running even with Republicans.

CNN’s Ron Brownstein looks at some of the latest polling data and sees the suggestion of a “decoupling” of the vote from the president’s approval rating. Polls in several races show that among people who disapprove of Biden’s performance, many more than usual are still planning to vote Democratic. That is at least somewhat explained by the fact that Biden’s approval rating is so low largely because Democrats disapprove of him but they are not about to vote for some of these kooky candidates the Republicans are nominating.

That is yet another reason why this may not go the way the conventional wisdom blows. This election may be turning into a choice election rather than a referendum election, with voters being asked to choose between right-wing extremists and normal Democrats.

The GOP base is very happy about that but there are plenty of independents and centrists who are appalled by candidates such as Doug Mastriano and Dr. Mehmet Oz in Pennsylvania and Herschel Walker in Georgia who are completely out of the mainstream. Polls in statewide races are already showing this.

Axios reported again on Thursday that Mitch McConnell is not a happy fellow:

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has been sounding this alarm for months: electing fringe candidates with checkered pasts could squander a golden chance to reclaim power. Now, McConnell is left hoping for a red wave so wide and powerful that candidate quality is irrelevant.

He made his MAGA bed with a bunch of My Pillows and now he has to lie in it.

Democratic strategist Joe Trippi believes that this may also be dispositive in the House because “people are going to be shocked in their districts when they realize who the Republicans have nominated.” They are literally nominating QAnon believers and January 6 insurrectionists.

Finally, there are the three big issues that have moved to center stage in this election.

There is the Republican threat to democracy that’s being exposed on TV screens all over the country this summer. As Trippi says, “though we may not want to believe it, the last truly democratic election may be at our doorstep.”

There is also the issue of guns and mass shootings. Republicans are so devoted to their firearms fetish that this week 168 of them even voted against a bill called the  Active Shooter Alert Act this week. Apparently, it’s an infringement of 2nd Amendment rights to let people know they need to take cover from a gun-toting psychopath. They are way out of the mainstream on that issue.

And there is the reversal of Roe v. Wade, the consequences of which we are starting to see play out in states and localities across the country in ghastly living color. The polls show that this is having a galvanizing effect on the Democratic electorate and they are now as committed to voting in November as the Republicans.

RELATED: The fall of Roe has energized the left: Now will it wake up the Democrats?

I would also add that there is a grotesque orange cloud hovering over the GOP in the person of Donald J. Trump who is planning to announce his candidacy any time now and remind everyone in the country that the Republican Party has been remade in his image and still dances to his tune. When asked what he thought about Trump entering the 2024 race, Joe Biden said he welcomes it. No doubt. Biden may be unpopular but in head-to-head polls, he still beats Trump.

None of this is to say that Democrats are a shoo-in or that this big red wave won’t materialize. All the historical data is in the GOP’s favor. But we are not living in normal times and the Republicans are not a normal party. Remember: in a country that could elect Donald J. Trump to be president, anything can happen. 

Vaccine and testing delays for monkeypox echo failures in early COVID response

Andy Stone is one of the lucky ones. The New York City resident saw a tweet from a local AIDS activist saying that monkeypox vaccines would be available that day at a clinic in Manhattan. Stone, 35, and his husband booked appointments online right away and got their shots last month.

“I want to do what I can to protect myself and others,” said Stone, a marketing consultant living in Brooklyn, who said his primary care doctor advised him to get the vaccine as soon as possible.

Hundreds of men who showed up without appointments and waited in a snaking line around the Chelsea Sexual Health Clinic that day weren’t as fortunate. The 200 shots available went quickly, and many people were turned away, according to New York City Council member Erik Bottcher, whose district includes the neighborhood of Chelsea. When people tried to make online appointments for subsequent days, none were available, he said in a letter to state officials urgently requesting additional doses of the vaccine.

The first monkeypox case in the United States was confirmed in mid-May. As the number of monkeypox cases reached 605 nationwide as of July 6, some public health experts saw echoes of covid-19 in the government’s halting response.

“We’re six weeks in, and we’re still having problems with availability of testing and vaccine supply, all these issues that we saw with covid,” said Gregg Gonsalves, an associate professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health. “Now, the prospects for containment are receding quickly.”

Monkeypox is not covid. Covid has killed more than 1 million Americans, but no one has died from a monkeypox infection in the United States during the current outbreak. People can’t get monkeypox by simply walking into a room and breathing the same air as an infected person.

The monkeypox virus, which belongs to the same family as smallpox, typically causes painful, pimple-like sores on people’s face, hands, feet, chest, or genitals, along with fever and swollen lymph nodes. Until the lesions scab over and heal, people can infect others through close physical contact or by touching things like bedding that were in contact with the rash. People generally recover from monkeypox in two to four weeks.

Most infections identified so far have been in men who have sex with men, and many of the cases are in Europe. But the World Health Organization reported July 1 that cases are emerging among other groups — in some cases, among people such as household members, heterosexual contacts, and children. Up to 10% of patients have been hospitalized, according to the WHO.

Two vaccines are available to protect people against monkeypox, Jynneos and ACAM2000. Federal officials are focused on prioritizing providing Jynneos, given in two doses 28 days apart, because it has fewer side effects and can be administered to people who are immunocompromised, which ACAM2000 cannot. The federal government has distributed more than 800 doses of the ACAM2000 vaccine to date.

At the moment, however, vaccine distribution is barely a trickle, and health care providers on the front lines say they need more doses now.

In recent days, federal officials have announced a three-pronged response to the monkeypox outbreak that includes expanded deployment of vaccines, easier access to testing, and a campaign to educate the public and providers about the disease and promote vaccinations among people most at risk, particularly those in the LGBTQ+ community.

“While monkeypox poses minimal risk to most Americans, we are doing everything we can to offer vaccines to those at high-risk of contracting the virus,” Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said in a statement. “This new strategy allows us to maximize the supply of currently available vaccines and reach those who are most vulnerable to the current outbreak.”

Initially, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended that people get vaccinated only if they were exposed to someone with monkeypox. The federal guidance has been expanded to a much larger group, including men who have sex with men who have recently had multiple sex partners in a place where monkeypox has been reported.

On July 1, the CDC said it had purchased additional doses of the Jynneos vaccine, made by Bavarian Nordic A/S, bringing to 4 million the total number of doses that will be available in 2022 and 2023. On July 6, the federal government said that it had distributed 41,520 “patient courses” of the vaccine to 42 jurisdictions.

New York City received an initial 1,000 doses that were made available at the Chelsea clinic, but then got nothing more for nearly two weeks. In Washington, D.C., 300 vaccine appointments that were made available at the end of June were reportedly taken in minutes. In Los Angeles, 800 vaccine doses had been distributed as of July 1 to people who are close contacts of people who have the disease. In a news release, Los Angeles County’s Department of Public Health said it would provide more doses to high-risk groups as the vaccine supply increases.

In early July, the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene said it had been approved for nearly 6,000 additional doses of the vaccine, which it would make available at two city clinics. A software glitch halted efforts to make appointments, however. They are scheduled to resume next week. The city health department’s Twitter feed has chronicled its stop-and-go efforts to acquire vaccines and schedule appointments, along with residents’ exasperation.

“A sincere apology for the technical difficulties our vendor @medrite_ experienced with today’s monkeypox vaccine appointment rollout,” tweeted New York City Health Commissioner Ashwin Vasan. “We pledge to do better in the days and weeks ahead.”

The city has recorded 141 suspected cases of monkeypox, officials said.

The doses for New York will be a drop in the bucket, advocates said. At three clinics in New York City, the Callen-Lorde Community Health Center serves 20,000 primarily LGBTQ+ patients, many of whom are eager for the vaccine, center officials said.

“We’re promoting vaccines and working closely with patients to find access,” said Anthony Fortenberry, chief nursing officer at Callen-Lorde. “But right now, there’s a very small amount of vaccine available, and it’s much less than the demand is for it.” The health center has seen 15 patients with monkeypox so far, he said, up from four a week ago.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services didn’t respond to requests for information about vaccine and testing availability.

Epidemiologists said that speed bumps in testing for the disease are also hampering the nation’s ability to get in front of the monkeypox outbreak. Without widespread testing and contact tracing, the extent of the outbreak is not clear.

“Right now, we don’t have a sense if it is the tip of the iceberg,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist at Brown University’s School of Public Health.

To date, monkeypox testing has been handled by a network of public health laboratories and requires a cumbersome process that many physicians are not familiar with, according to some critics. “If you’re an average clinician, you may have never sent a sample to a public health lab,” said Dr. James Lawler, executive director for international programs and innovation for the Global Center for Health Security at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

As part of the expanded efforts announced by federal officials, five large commercial labs will begin running tests this month, dramatically increasing capacity.

Systemic improvements offer scant comfort to people at risk right now.

Charles Rockhill said he has nightmares about getting monkeypox. “I’m pretty worried. I work in a gay bar,” the Manhattan resident said. “I’m around a lot of people all the time.” Rockhill is a bartender at Greenwich Village’s Stonewall Inn, the site of the Stonewall uprising in 1969, considered the birthplace of gay pride. He has been searching for monkeypox vaccination appointments. Unable to get a vaccine, he wears gloves at work and washes his hands more often on the job. In his personal life, he’s erring on the side of caution too.

“I’m just trying to make the best decisions for me and hoping that I don’t become infected,” he said.

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

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

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Fury as Manchin tanks Biden’s climate agenda at the last minute

Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia informed Democratic leaders Thursday that he will not support any new climate spending or tax increases targeting the wealthy and large corporations, sinking his party’s revived push for renewable energy investments and further undercutting the country’s ability to rein in carbon emissions.

While Manchin’s refusal to endorse green energy funding may have been entirely foreseeable given his close ties to the fossil fuel industry and his role in tanking the Build Back Better package just months earlier, climate advocates nevertheless voiced dismay at the power one individual has been able to exert over a process with implications for billions of people across the planet.

“Biden must declare a climate emergency, and do everything in his executive power to stop the climate crisis immediately.”

“This is nothing short of a death sentence,” warned Varshini Prakash, executive director of the youth-led Sunrise Movement. “Our democracy is broken when one man who profits from the fossil fuel industry can defy the 81 million Americans who voted for Democrats to stop the climate crisis. It’s clear appealing to corporate obstructionists doesn’t work, and it will cost us a generation of voters.”

Manchin’s position, which he reportedly laid out during a closed-door meeting with the Democratic leadership on Thursday, marks a huge setback for the majority party’s last-ditch attempt to assemble a far more limited reconciliation bill ahead of the pivotal midterm elections, in which Democrats’ slim majorities in the House and Senate are at risk.

The Washington Post, the first outlet to report on the West Virginia Democrat’s stance, noted that party leaders had already “agreed to surrender their most prized spending proposals, from offering paid family and medical leave to providing child care, free prekindergarten, and tax benefits to low-income Americans” in a bid to win Manchin’s support, which is necessary to get a reconciliation package through the Senate.

“In more recent talks,” the Post added, “[Senate Majority Leader Chuck] Schumer and his colleagues set about trying to woo the longtime holdout over a scaled-back approach—including tax credits to spur clean energy, incentives to encourage the purchase of electric vehicles, and limited penalties on the producers of harmful methane gas.”

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), chair of the Senate Finance Committee, told the newspaper that the collapse of climate talks is a devastating failure.

“I’m not going to sugarcoat my disappointment here, especially since nearly all issues in the climate and energy space had been resolved,” said Wyden. “This is our last chance to prevent the most catastrophic—and costly—effects of climate change. We can’t come back in another decade and forestall hundreds of billions—if not trillions—in economic damage and undo the inevitable human toll.”

With new climate and tax provisions off the table, Manchin reportedly told top Democrats that he’s open to letting Medicare negotiate the prices of a small number of prescription drugs and extending Affordable Care Act subsidies that are set to lapse in the coming months, which would mean surging premiums for millions of people.

The removal of climate provisions from the nascent legislative package is disastrous for U.S. efforts to bring carbon emissions into line with international targets and transition the country away from fossil fuels, the primary driver of the climate crisis.

But it’s a major victory for the powerful and deep-pocketed oil and gas industry, which has been lobbying aggressively against renewable energy spending.

“Manchin has taken more money from the fossil fuel industry than anyone else in D.C.,” noted Bill McKibben, co-founder of 350.org. “And the return on that investment has been enormous. Big Oil got its money’s worth a thousand times over.”

Morris Pearl, chair of the Patriotic Millionaires—a group that advocates for higher taxes on the wealthy—said Thursday that “Manchin just handed victory in America’s class war to the billionaires.”

“He’s shown he doesn’t care about the American people, he only cares about the tiny wealthy minority of Americans who are opposed to rich people (like his family and friends who own the coal mining industry) paying taxes,” Pearl added. “Some may be ignorant, some may be corrupt, all are just sad pawns in the oligarchs’ takeover of America.”

The closure, for now, of legislative paths toward climate action spurred fresh calls for President Joe Biden to do everything he can through executive action.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) tweeted late Thursday that “it’s now time for executive Beast Mode” from the president, who has thus far resisted pressure to declare a climate emergency and take other steps to mobilize federal resources to combat a crisis whose deadly consequences are becoming more evident by the day.

“Do it all and start it now,” Whitehouse demanded.

In a press release, the Sunrise Movement outlined a list of actions Biden could take without needing congressional approval:

  • End the practice of leasing public lands and waters for fossil fuel production;
  • Stop the issue of permits for any new fossil fuel infrastructure, including pipelines, petrochemical plants, and export terminals, especially Line 3, Line 5, and the Mountain Valley Pipeline;
  • Declare a climate emergency;
  • Update and strengthen outdated standards limiting particulate matter, ozone, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, mercury, coal ash, and tailpipe emissions, as well as lead and copper rules preventing contamination of drinking water;
  • Finalize new methane standards for new and existing oil and gas operations, and make these standards strong enough to cut methane pollution at least 65 percent below 2012 levels by 2025; and
  • Direct the EPA to designate greenhouse pollutants as criteria air pollutants and set a science-based national pollution cap under the Clean Air Act.

“We won’t stop fighting,” said Prakash. “Biden must declare a climate emergency, and do everything in his executive power to stop the climate crisis immediately. That’s the only way he can salvage his presidency and save our generation. And we must uproot this broken system and rebuild it to work for us.”

Democrats’ time to pounce: Republicans suddenly find themselves vulnerable ahead of midterms

With the approval of the Republican Party plummeting and gas and commodity prices declining, Democrats suddenly have an opportunity to go on offense this midterm cycle by touting the success of the pandemic recovery — and contrasting that with the draconian proposals offered by the alternative. 

To do this, Democrats must center the innovation and grit of the American people and show how we are transitioning from a rapid recovery to sustainable growth. Republicans, by contrast, have devolved into a cult beholden to Donald Trump, doubling down on their support for him despite the shocking revelations of the January 6 commission.

Should they retake Congress, Republicans’ economic plan consists of taxing the lower and middle class and offering no solution for dealing with inflation. The one thing they can claim credit for, successfully striking down Roe V. Wade, is one of the most wildly unpopular actions ever taken by the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe is driving voter motivation for Democrats. 62% of voters say they are more motivated to vote in November after the decision. 62% say they are more motivated to vote for Democrats, including 55% of Independents. Just 27% say it makes them more likely to vote for Republicans in November.

According to veteran Democrat political strategist Simon Rosenberg, recent polling data suggests the race has moved 3-5 points to the Democrats in recent weeks. 11 polls have been released on the generic congressional perference since Roe ended. Seven of the 11 polls — more than half — show meaningful movement towards the Democrats and give significant leads in the generic polling. 

RELATED: Midterm support for Democrats soars after Supreme Court strikes down abortion access

In new comprehensive polls of battleground states, Future Majority found the generic ballot for congressional preference shifting from 43 Democrat – 45 Republican in March to 44-42 now, a four-point swing. Another new survey of voters from Navigator finds a 24 point drop in GOP favorability with independents and 10 points overall. This shift is very significant in a short time and further confirms data that the national landscape is suddenly becoming better for Democrats. 

A review of recent Senate polling suggests that if the election were held today, Democrats would retain the Senate and perhaps even pick up a few seats. The New York Times gave a significant Senate overview, which showed that in Arizona, Georgia, New Hampshire, and Nevada, Democrats are leading their GOP counterparts.  

With Republicans cratering with Independents and Democrats consistently leading in the generic ballot, it is a new, competitive cycle. Democrats now must seize this moment and make our case to voters about how left-leaning policies have strengthened our country’s economy.  

In 2020 the economy was in free fall. The racial employment gap was historically high. We have closed that gap today, adding 372,000 jobs to a strong labor market in June. The unemployment rate is currently 3.6% for the fourth month, just above a 50-year low. Average hourly wages grew 5.1% in June compared to last year. President Biden has created 4.5 times more jobs in 17 months than the previous 3 GOP Presidents combined over 16 years.

Gas and commodity prices have finally begun to decrease, in a needed reprieve from rising inflation and a hopeful sign that it may be starting to level off. Crude oil has fallen more than 8% and is trading at less than $100 per barrel for the first time since early May. U.S. oil production is at an all-time high, and the national average gas price declined for the third week after increasing following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The average price of a gallon of gas is now sitting at about $4.70, more than 33 cents less than when prices peaked last month. 

While commodity and gas prices continue to drop, we are increasing domestic economic output. The construction of new manufacturing facilities in the U.S. has soared 116% over the past year, dwarfing the 10% gain on all building projects combined. Massive chip factories are being built in Phoenix: Intel is making two outside the city. Aluminum and steel plants are being erected all across the south. This new semiconductor and steel output will help increase economic productivity domestically. Perhaps the most obvious sign that things are improving: this July, the baby formula plant at the center of recent shortages reopened this month. Finally, our global supply chain is improving; $ 20,000 container import costs are now down to $10,000, and shipping times are down by 35%. While we are not yet back to pre-pandemic times, things are trending in the right direction.

Democrats have helped lead a strong recovery and have made critical investments in our economy and the American people. They have effectively led Americans through tough challenges – COVID, Ukraine, and the ups and downs of the economy. 

Our country is better today than it was in 2020 — thanks to the resilience of the American people. Democrats must highlight and speak to the hard work and accomplishments they are responsible for to win. They must show the contrast with the toxicity of the divisive culture war rhetoric of the GOP. Voters must be informed and reminded of how toxic and out of control the Republican Party has become.

Far right’s latest cause: Manure-flinging Dutch farmers and the “Great Reset”

Last week on Fox News’ Tucker Carlson show, a young Dutch media personality introduced American viewers to a frightening new vision: The government of the Netherlands, she said, was stealing Dutch farmland “under the guise” of a fabricated environmental crisis, but actually as part of a communist plot to transform Holland’s countryside into mass housing for immigrants and to enact something called the “Great Reset.” 

The oracle behind this dire prediction was Eva Vlaardingerbroek, a former candidate for Holland’s far-right Forum for Democracy party whose strident demeanor and good looks have earned her the Dutch media nicknames “Aryan princess,” “shield maiden for the right” and, apparently since last week, “Eva Braun.” But Vlaardingerbroek and Carlson aren’t the only folks advancing this narrative. 

Half a year after it went all-in for the Canadian trucker convoy protesting COVID-19 vaccine mandates, the American right has adopted a new international cause: Dutch farmers who are demonstrating against environmental regulations by parading tractors down highways, lining roads with burning hay bales, blocking food distribution centers, international borders and airports, and spraying liquid manure on government buildings. 

Much as during the Canadian trucker protests last January, right-wing Twitter is overflowing with praise and protest tributes: montages of tractors chugging down highways and protesters kicking police vans, all to the tune of AC/DC’s “Thunderstruck.” The conspiracy-theory outlet Epoch Times dedicated much of the past week to dispatches from the Netherlands, including an interview with far-right Dutch politician Thierry Baudet, who claims the government is trying to sever the Dutch people’s connection to their land to further a “post-identitarian” agenda of “Great Reset mass migration.” Canadian website Rebel News, long affiliated with white nationalist and far-right groups, sent three young reporters to embed themselves among the protesters. And right-wing outlets from LifeSiteNews to Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s anti-vaccination website to the New York Post have cast the protests as a working-class uprising against authoritarian global elites. 

*  *  *

There is a real and significant issue playing out in the Netherlands, below the U.S. right-wing outrage cycle. Since late June, Dutch farmers have been holding large-scale demonstrations to protest new plans to radically reduce the amount of nitrogen oxide and ammonia emissions produced in the country, particularly from farms.

In 2019, Holland’s highest administrative court ruled that the country’s efforts to reduce nitrogen pollution were failing to meet the conditions of European Union environmental law. The ruling led to the suspension of thousands of new construction projects — including the building of sorely-needed new housing — and slower speed limits on Dutch highways, as well as plans to reduce the size of Holland’s agricultural industry.

There’s a significant issue of agricultural and environmental policy playing out in the Netherlands, which has little to do with America’s right-wing outrage cycle.

Part of the problem is that, given the size of the Netherlands — which, at 16,000 square miles, is smaller than 41 of the 50 U.S. states — many farms have adopted “intensive” agriculture methods, including heavy use of fertilizer and livestock factory farming, in order to increase output from limited land. Those practices have allowed the tiny country to become the second-largest agricultural exporter in the world and Europe’s largest producer of meat, but have also made it a major nitrogen and ammonia polluter from both fertilizer runoff and livestock waste, some of which particularly threatens nature preserves protected by European law.

For years Dutch politicians have debated how to address the issue, and in June, the Netherlands’ recently-appointed minister for nature and nitrogen policy, Christianne van der Wal, announced new restrictions to cut nitrogen emissions in half by 2030, to meet international climate action goals. Doing so will likely require an estimated 30% reduction in the country’s livestock herds as well as severe reductions in fertilizer use — changes that large farms may be able to afford but which could spell bankruptcy for many smaller, family-run farms. 

In a country where agriculture is closely tied to national identity, with family farms dating back generations, it’s an undeniable blow. Holland’s government, reported the AP, called the plans an “unavoidable transition” that would force farmers to “become (more) sustainable, relocate or stop.” Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte acknowledged that the move would have “enormous consequences. I understand that, and it is simply terrible.” 

The government has allocated around $25 billion to implement the plans, with much of that targeted toward helping farms become more sustainable — or offering generous buyouts to those that can’t. But as Anya van Wagtendonk reported this week at Grid, the “clumsy government rollout” of the regulations “made a bad situation worse,” particularly when the government released a map indicating that some farms near nature preserves would need to reduce emissions by 95% — effectively closing them — without providing additional information about plans to help farmers adapt or compensate their losses. 

Farmer protests began soon after the 2019 court decision, and some tipped into violence. That year, protesters carried a coffin emblazoned with the name of a Green party politician, compared farmers’ plight to the Holocaust and used tractors as battering rams to force open the doors of a provincial city hall, tear down neighborhood fences and drive into a police horse. But while the pandemic largely forced the protests to halt in 2020, they’ve come roaring back since June, growing widespread, aggressive and sometimes out of control.


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Last week, Dutch law enforcement shot at a tractor driven by a 16-year-old they claimed was trying to drive through a police barricade. (Nobody was injured and initial charges have been dropped.) The week before, protesters demonstrated outside the home of nature minister van der Wal, attacking a police van with sledgehammers and dumping manure on her street. In one province, local government offices that had been the site of protests were temporarily closed over a bomb threat, and a supermarket distribution center that’s become a focal point of protest conspiracism was mysteriously burned to the ground, although it’s unclear whether either incident was related to the demonstrations. 

*  *  *

All of this is complicated enough on its own: a seemingly zero-sum situation, in which some farmers are almost certain to lose their livelihoods. But as the farmers’ cause has been adopted by the far right, both in the Netherlands and abroad, it’s grown into something larger and uglier. According to those narratives, the new regulations are part of a globalist “Great Reset” intent on imposing liberal authoritarianism across the world. Global elites, in this view, are orchestrating a food crisis in order to subdue unruly populations, and Dutch farmers will be displaced to make room for new immigrants, in a literal recapitulation of the “great replacement” conspiracy theory shared by European and American white supremacists.

In this version of conspiracy theory, global elites are orchestrating a food crisis in order to subdue unruly populations — and displace Dutch farmers with new immigrants.

Some of that narrative is homegrown. On July 6, far-right Dutch parliamentarian and Party for Freedom chair Geert Wilders, best known for his aggressive Islamophobia, including calls to ban the Quran or tax women who wear hijab, tweeted an image of a document he claimed was proof that farmers were being forced off their land in order to build an “application center for asylum seekers.”

Another far-right Dutch parliamentarian went even further: Forum for Democracy founder Thierry Baudet, who was once viewed as a more genteel and intellectual face of the right, but has fallen into disgrace after a series of racism and antisemitism scandals and his claim that George Soros invented COVID-19 to “take away our freedom.” 

In an interview with Epoch Times this week, Baudet charged, “the people governing this country are following the script written by the EU to realize what they call a ‘Great Reset.'” That’s a reference to a slogan originally used in 2020 by the World Economic Forum to call for creating a more equitable post-pandemic global economy. But almost immediately, on the right, the term was adopted to refer to an amorphous conspiracy theory that globalist elites are using crises like the pandemic as pretext to radically reinvent society along authoritarian, one-world government lines. 

Baudet argued as much, claiming the EU wants to “weaken Dutch sovereignty” and impose “mass immigration” on the country with the goal of turning the Netherlands “into a giant city” without its own means of food production, so that people will be more “dependent on the international rulers, the globalists, who are trying to take over.” 

Part of the new farm regulations, Baudet continued, involved a “spiritual or deeper” impetus to sever the connection between Dutch farmers and their land, since farmers “form a direct threat to the globalists’ post-territorial, post-identitarian agenda.” In case that allusion to great replacement theory was too subtle, Baudet then made it explicit, calling on international allies to recognize this was a shared struggle, since “All our peoples are being diluted by the systematic influx of people from entirely different ethnicities and cultures and religions.” 

In multiple appearances on U.S. and Canadian media over the last week, the aforementioned Eva Vlaardingerbroek echoed a number of these claims. She told Tucker Carlson, “It’s very clear the government is not doing this because of a nitrogen crisis. They’re doing it because they want these farmers’ land and they want it to house new immigrants.” 

To Rebel News, Vlaardingerbroek said, “They’re taking away property because they see a future for us in which we’ll be completely dependent on the state. We eat bugs, they own your land.” She added, “‘You’ll own nothing and you’ll be happy'” — quoting a meme that’s become internet shorthand for the “Great Reset.”

That narrative is filtering down, mixing with ambient talk about “replacement theory” that figures like Wilders have traded in for years. The far-right, conspiracist Austrian weekly Wochenblick argued succinctly, “Mass immigration as part of the ‘UN Replacement Population Plan’ could be the reason for the mass dispossession of farmers.” 

In interviews with Epoch Times host Roman Balmakov, several Dutch protesters claimed their own government had “created the nitrogen hoax because the farmers own all the land on which the government wants to build” or “It’s all to get foreigners on their land.” (During one such episode, Balmakov paused to advertise his own survivalist prepping company, My Patriot Supply, offering $150 discounts on three-month food kits, so that viewers won’t be forced to eat “WHO-issued bug sandwiches” when the “global food crisis” comes.) 

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s anti-vax publication suggested the Dutch government was “disrupting food supplies” in order to “weaken people’s resistance” — along with the side effects of COVID vaccines.

But the story also became a broader phenomenon across a wide swath of U.S. right-wing media. Newsweek and Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk cast the protests as a “popular uprising” and a “historic” example of “worker-centered revolts,” pitting Davos and the WHO against “the citizen.” Right-wing anti-abortion news outlet LifeSiteNews launched a petition to gather support for the “fightback against not just environmental regulations and the resulting inflation, but also the elites’ Great Reset agenda.” 

Pizzagate promoter-turned right-wing media personality Jack Posobiec used his podcast to suggest the occasional violence of the protests was justified, saying, “Understand what point in the movie we’re in. These farmers clearly understand.” And Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s anti-vaccination publication The Defender suggested that the Dutch government was “disrupting food supplies” so that, in combination with side effects from COVID vaccines, they might “weaken people’s resistance.” Rebel News’ embedded reporters landed segments on One America News and Fox’s Laura Ingraham Show. 

*  *  *

The linkage of farmers’ grievances with “great replacement” and other conspiracies was “quite clever,” said investigative journalist Allart van der Woude, of the Dutch public radio show Argos. “It manages to combine a whole host of anxieties that are prevalent on the right.” The protest movement as a whole, he said, has done the same, drawing together two distinct groups: traditionalist conservatives “who see farming as a marker of Dutch identity, and view this measure as urban elites destroying rural livelihoods,” and then a group of people generally opposed to any large state projects, whether farm regulations, pandemic safety measures or vaccines. 

“One shared consequence of this, though,” van der Woude continued, “is that it’s become an incredibly aggressive discussion with a huge potential for violence.” In 2020, the country’s National Coordinator for Security and Counterterrorism published a threat assessment warning that the farmer protest movement was uniting groups with different grievances but shared antipathy to government, whose alliance could represent a troubling pathway toward radicalization. Last August, Dutch newspaper De Groene Amsterdammer published an investigation tracking the movement’s main social media hubs, finding that farm protest pages were increasingly dominated by other concerns: pandemic skepticism, the sale of fake vaccine certificates, QAnon-like fixations on pedophile networks or public riots and talk of the “Great Reset.”

The potential for violence also seems to be rising. Van der Woude noted that the police officer who shot at the tractor last week has reportedly been in hiding for a week. Last January, a photojournalist taking pictures of a car fire near a farm was attacked by bystanders wielding sticks before one used a tractor shovel to flip his car – with him and his girlfriend inside it — into a ditch.  

Last year, an Amsterdam newspaper found that farm protest pages were increasingly dominated by pandemic truthers, fake vaccine certificates and QAnon-like conspiracy theories.

In recent weeks, protest supporters like Vlaardingerbroek have taken aim at the Dutch supermarket chain Picnic through a sketchy web of insinuations. They claim the chain is owned by a relative of a Dutch minister who has pushed the new regulations, that Bill Gates invested heavily in the franchise and that Gates, as Vlaardingerbroek told Rebel News, is “the man who wants you to eat fake meat,” rather than, presumably, Dutch beef. This week, one Picnic supermarket was burned to the ground overnight, and while there’s no clear proof that the fire was connected to the protests, a number of protest supporters have shared the news triumphantly.

Also this week, Baudet’s Forum for Democracy colleague, legislator Gideon van Meijeren — who last year accused Prime Minister Rutte of supporting the “Great Reset” — told a group of protesters, “It is not always healthy in a democracy if there is a taboo on the use of violence,” prompting a formal complaint from another MP that van Meijeren was inciting “violence against the government.”

All the intensity, says van der Woude, ignores the fact that “there is an obscene amount of big money” behind the protests, from large-scale agricultural corporations that “stand to lose way more in absolute terms than the farmers themselves.” Leading that pack, as Dutch publication Volkskrant reported Wednesday, is one of the Netherlands’ five richest families, which controls a huge percentage of the country’s animal feed market and has stated its concerns about the future of its business if farmers are forced to reduce livestock. In response to that threat, Volkskrant reported, the family has funded journalism that “downplay[s] the effects of nitrogen” as well as highway billboards encouraging drivers to attend farmer protests.

While right-wing coverage has boasted that the protests enjoy huge public support, others have suggested that the Dutch public is unlikely to condone aggressive demonstration tactics or food shortages caused by blockades for long. But all that may be beside the point, at least for those intent on transforming the protests into an international cause.

“What we have been seeing in the last few years is the transnational nature of the white supremacist and far-right extremist movements,” said Wendy Via, cofounder and CEO of the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism. In April, Via testified before the Canadian House of Commons about the pattern of cross-border activism that surrounded last winter’s “trucker convoys,” and how conspiracy theories like the “great replacement” have become “unifying concept[s] for white supremacists worldwide.” 

That pattern, Via said, can be seen across all levels of the movement: in Tucker Carlson taking his show abroad, interviewing authoritarian leaders like Hungary’s Viktor Orbán and Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro, and introducing Europe’s “great replacement” theory to his fans; in the ways European politicians like Wilders and Baudet have made “quite a few white nationalist connections in the U.S.” just as grassroots far-right activists have built alliances with international peers; and in how legislators around the world have strategized on culture-war issues, as with Hungary’s anti-gay legislation, which was quickly mirrored by Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill.

“It is a true transnational movement,” Via said. “And it’s a lot more insidious than people might think.” In furtherance of their common agenda, Via continued, “far-right extremists will latch onto any event or protest that they can — including the serious issues at the heart of these farmer protests — and use [such issues] to further spread conspiracy theories, reduce faith in institutions and inspire hatred, in almost every case, against immigrants and Muslims.” 

Ali Velshi on the coming recession — and why Joe Biden can’t stop it

Republicans in Congress and Donald Trump want you to believe that the record-setting inflation we’re experiencing is all the fault of Joe Biden. But as MSNBC’s Ali Velshi, who has long covered the economy, made clear in our recent “Salon Talks” conversation, inflation is a worldwide problem that cannot be solved with politics alone. “It’s not Biden’s fault. It is not a particularly political matter,” Velshi said. 

Inflation has skyrocketed in Britain, France, Turkey and elsewhere around the world, Velshi notes, adding that Biden would if it be “pretty powerful if he can cause inflation to go up in pretty much every country.” Velshi, who hosts a namesake MSNBC show on weekend mornings, says the 40-year inflation high is due to several complex underlying factors, from higher oil prices to supply chain issues to increased demand from American consumers. The bottom line? There is no easy solution to the problem.

Velshi explains why we can expect the Federal Reserve to become more aggressive in raising interest rates, with the possible or likely result of a mild recession that may be politically unpopular.  “If you had to make the binary choice between inflation, in which you get the same amount of goods for more money, or you lose your job … most people will say inflation,” he said.

We also talked about Republican efforts to impose minority religious beliefs as nationwide law by banning abortion, now that Roe v Wade has been struck down by the Supreme Court. Velshi also told me why everyone he met on his summer vacation was laughing at America. You can watch my “Salon Talks” interview with Ali Velshi below, or read the following transcript.

This transcript has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

Ali, inflation is at 9.1 percent, the highest since 1981. What’s causing this, and especially this new uptick?

There are three things causing it. One is oil prices, that’s the most obvious recent one and that’s got to do with Russia and the war in Ukraine and the sanctions that have been put on Russia. It’s caused people to chase more oil around the world. Russia’s still selling oil, but increasingly depends on selling it to China and India. 

India is a very big buyer of oil, and one of the things India does, as a matter of habit, is to buy oil at a discount. When nobody was buying Iranian oil, India was buying it because Iran couldn’t sell it at the world’s price. Some of the world’s actually buying cheaper oil right now because it’s hard for Russia to unload its oil. The rest of us are buying market-price oil. And the OPEC countries, including Saudi Arabia, don’t really want to help out in this situation. They like oil at a certain price. There’s a certain price beyond which it becomes too expensive and people stop using oil. Oil is in a place where OPEC and Saudi Arabia kind of like it, but it’s costing us all a lot of money. So that’s bucket No. 1, energy prices. And by the way, other energy prices tend to move up with oil. 

“If you want Russia punished for invading Ukraine, there is a price for that freedom and that is higher gas prices.”

Bucket No. 2 is supply chain issues that continue. Some of them predate COVID, including semiconductors. We were short of semiconductors even before COVID and then COVID really had an impact on that, particularly because some of those companies are in China. China operates at almost full-capacity production of things they sell to the rest of the world. They don’t stockpile, they don’t have extra. So even if China’s down for a week, and in many cases it was shut down for months, that production doesn’t come through. 

We don’t make microchips and semiconductors in America in any meaningful way. They’re very hard to make. You have to have a place where there’s never earthquakes, never any rumbling. There are water and energy needs. Most of them are made in Taiwan. Semiconductors are in everything — every phone, every car. Your toaster has a semiconductor. That has just shot the prices of things up.

Then there’s the plain, old-fashioned fact that demand is outstripping supply. Part of that is because as the pandemic ended, we went and bought a lot of stuff. People bought dishwashers, which also have semiconductors, washing machines, cars, everything. So we’re short of stuff and as a result the prices are going up.


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That last one is where the opportunity for price-gouging exists. Because you may be a retailer selling T-shirts, and there may not actually be any increase to your costs. But since you know everybody else is raising prices — in a normal world, if you raised your prices 10 or 15 percent, people would say, I’m buying my T-shirts somewhere else. But now there’s an expectation: Oh, prices are up for everything. So there is possibly some price-gouging in here, but it’s not the fundamental underpinning of our problem.

These numbers that we see in America, in excess of 9 percent, it’s the same thing in Britain and in France. I just came back from South Africa, same thing there. To the extent that it’s all Joe Biden’s fault, that’d make him pretty powerful if he can cause inflation to go up in pretty much every country.

Turkey, by the way, is in excess of 75 percent inflation. Countries in Europe that depend on Russia for exports have very high inflation. Countries in Africa which depend on Ukrainian wheat, very high. It’s food inflation in cases like that. So it’s not Biden’s fault. It is not a particularly political matter. The issue is that it hurts everybody. Everybody feels it and everybody gets mad at the people in charge. It is a very hard problem to solve.

You touched on price-gouging. There are people, Democrats included, saying that we should bring the oil company CEOs in front of Congress and talk about it. Would that go anywhere? Is there any potential that might bring down prices?

I never mind the idea of holding people accountable for what they do. I just don’t want to misdirect people as to what the main problem is. Even if it’s 2 percent of the problem, they should be brought to account and we should have them not do that. But if you start thinking that’s what the issue is, you’ll miss the point. Nobody’s price-gouging on semiconductors. Nobody’s price-gouging on the actual market price of oil. In the absence of really good solutions to this problem, if we start to latch on to politically expedient solutions we don’t actually hit the bottom line here.

The bottom line here is a complicated thing that central banks and the Federal Reserve need to do. They need to try to slow the economy down, without slowing it down too much. They need to curtail demand without actually shutting it down. 

Now, high prices do curtail demand. I’m in the market for a car. My wife and I talked about it, and it’s like, we’re just not buying a car right now. I mean, the price of a car is too high. The increases on used cars are higher than the increases on new cars. This is just a bad year to buy a car. We’re not desperate for it, so we can wait. We’ve got an old car and it’ll work for another few years. That’s a decision a lot of people are making. Well, if enough people make that decision, the car industry collapses. Enough people make those kinds of decisions, the refrigerator industry or the construction industry collapses.

We’re not there right now. We still have an economy that’s moving fairly well, but interest rates affect people’s behavior. Once you start seeing increases in prices and increases in interest rates, your psyche starts to shut down. You start to say, 2022’s not gonna be a shopping year for me. It’s not gonna be a traveling year for me. It’s not gonna be a renovating-the-house year for me. If you do that enough, you get a recession.

Are there long-term, bigger consequences if we can’t get inflation under control?

The longer it’s out of control, the greater the long-term danger to your economy. But the point is, once you’ve triggered a recession, it generally curtails inflation because people just stop buying stuff. People get laid off from their jobs. So you cool demand very quickly. But then you’re in a recession.

“Should the least among us suffer because we have this economic problem?”

If you had to choose, make the binary choice between inflation, in which you get the same amount of goods for more money, or you lose your job. Which one would you choose? Most people will say inflation. But it’s a horrible choice to make. The problem is that the solution to the inflation problem is raising interest rates and slowing the economy down. But that’s not a science. That’s an art. It’s behavioral. It’s psychological. And we don’t know how people will react. There might be a point where people will say, this looks really bad. We’re spending on nothing now except the bare minimum that we need. And that’s why the problem is as big as it is. 

The Fed could sit there and raise interest rates three percentage points today and it’ll end inflation. It’ll also end the economy. And that could be two years, three years of sitting around. It’s not a long-term problem, in that one thing will lead to another and that it will all end. But nobody wants that. That’s where it becomes political. You do not want to be the president or the Congress or the political party that put America into a two- or three-year recession.

The Fed is raising interest rates. They’ve raised them already. They’re likely going to raise them again at the end of this month. It’s going to cost more to borrow money, your credit cards are going up.

They already did, yeah.

Everyone understands that part of it, but the next part is the possibility of recession, which you’re saying is more psychological. What exactly is a recession? Is there an agreed-upon definition? 

No.

Is the fact that we still have 3.6 percent unemployment, which is historically low — does that weigh against the possibility of a recession? 

With 3.6 percent unemployment, it means that people can demand higher wages, which is also part of inflation. Ifg the local restaurant is paying higher wages, which I think is a fantastic thing, then you’ve gotta pay more for your French fries, for your pizza, right? 

If you want Russia punished for invading Ukraine, there is a price for that, and it’s higher gas prices. A lot of Americans will say, OK, I don’t want Russia invading Ukraine, but I don’t want to pay more for oil. You can’t have that. That’s the world we’re in right now. And I think you have to think about what happens next. We have had remarkably low interest rates, unusually low interest rates. 

And pretty much no inflation. It’s been remarkable.

You can buy a bicycle, inflation-adjusted, for less money than you could 20 years ago. We have more stuff, partially because we get a lot more of it from Bangladesh and the Philippines and China, very low-wage countries. But at this point, a 30-year fixed mortgage for a house is about 5-3/4 percent, almost 6 percent. That’s double what it was six months ago. But that’s the long-term average for what a mortgage was. People were taking out mortgages when mortgage rates were 10 and 12 and 15 percent, so it’s not the end of the world. 

It is just difficult, because some people work really hard for very low wages. We have a $7.25 federal minimum wage. and Some states have higher, some cities have a $15 minimum wage. But $15 an hour is $30,000 a year, it’s just not that much money. Now, all of a sudden, your costs are 9 percent higher. What is that? Is that your kids’ food? Is that your kids’ education? Is that your vacation? Is that the car that I can afford not to buy for another year, but maybe you can’t if your car’s breaking down?

That’s what the problem becomes. It makes people angry, and it makes people want to see a change. And then, guess what? People will run in the midterm elections on “When I get into power, I will fix inflation.” It’s not a political fix. It is a very complicated technical fix, and it’s hard to do.

Is the Biden administration doing enough? Is there anything more it could be doing on inflation?

One of the things they could be doing, which would not be met with much approval, is to approve more drilling for oil in America. The more oil America or Canada or Norway or, you know, friendly non-OPEC countries produce, the lower the price of oil. A lot of climate activists say this administration’s already not doing enough. So that’s bind No. 1. 

Bind No. 2 is that there’s a bill before Congress to invest heavily in semiconductor companies, which we absolutely should be doing. But that takes years.

This oil situation, getting back to that. Germany gets its natural gas from Russia. Well, when winter comes, Russia might say, you guys are canceling your plans to buy our oil and gas in the long term, so guess what? We’re canceling it right now. We’re gonna shut it off. How do you get natural gas to a country that doesn’t have ports for that? We can do it. We did it in World War II. It’s the way they landed ships in Normandy, in some cases, with floating docks. Everything can be done. It depends on how much of an emergency you think this is, and how quickly you need to solve it. 

You can’t fix inflation in three to six months. So that’s the problem. The Fed can. Some people are worried the Fed’s already acting too fast and that we’re going to trigger that recession. Smarter people than I am do not have an answer for this question.

In the 1970s under Richard Nixon, they did price and wage controls. In the beginning it kind of worked, but then later, it wasn’t good at all. Where do you come down on that? Can legislation or an executive order put a cap on wages or prices?

If you think things are political now, that is really hard. Telling people, for the first time in close to 40 years, that these wage gains you’re getting because unemployment is low are something we’re gonna have to control because people don’t want inflation? That is a non-starter.

You could go to LaGuardia Airport and see the people who clean the airport. You know, family people who are earning $9 an hour. There are a lot of people in the last two years who’ve seen increases from $8, $9 or $10 an hour to $15 an hour. That is life-changing — a 50 percent increase in your wages to get to $30,000 dollars a year. I just want to remind everybody, that’s what $15 an hour is. They’re not stealing from us. It’s hardly a living wage. To take it out on those people is the wrong thing to do.

Now, some people will say, tax the rich. That’s also controversial. But the point is, should the least among us suffer because we have this economic problem? They’re always the first to go, right? When there’s more COVID relief, it’s like, oh you can’t be giving these people this stuff. They’re gonna stay home and play video games and drink booze and all that stuff. We always take it out on the least among us. That’s what wage controls do. Price controls are very, very hard to impose in a free, liberal economy. 

What you can do is go to oil companies and anybody else you think might be gouging and impose anti-gouging measures to say, you have to justify any price increases. But you can’t tell them they can’t pass that increase on, because in many cases people are buying raw materials that cost more from somewhere else. If you tell them they can’t pass it on, you might cost them their business.

Sounds like the best scenario would be, if there’s a mild recession and a slight slowdown, that unemployment really doesn’t move much, prices come down and we move forward as an economy.

Yes. That would be the answer. It doesn’t even have to be a recession. Remember, with recession, there’s no really agreed-upon definition, but it generally means negative growth. It means your economy is smaller than it was in a previous measurement period. You could just have very slow growth for a little while. That’s not a recession, if you grow your economy at half a percent or one percent. You’re just growing very, very slowly. That could also solve the problem. 

Two other quick things. One is that the Supreme Court has struck down Roe v. Wade, and now Republicans in various states are passing laws based on their religious beliefs. Didn’t they accuse us of wanting to do that as Muslims? 

Yeah, that’s exactly what’s happening. This is what “The Handmaid’s Tale” was about. Government policy becomes about religious beliefs. When Margaret Atwood wrote that in 1985, she said, if there’s going to be this kind of shift to authoritarianism in the United States, it’s gonna be based on theocracy. And everybody said, you’re crazy. There’s not gonna be theocracy. They have a First Amendment in the United States.

That book is more relevant today than it was in 1985 because that’s what’s happening. We have a thing that says there will be no establishment of religion in this country and yet we are, on the basis of religious belief, criminalizing women, anybody who helps women, anybody who helps women with an internet search, anybody who drives a woman to an abortion, anybody who provides advice.

The Taliban should sue the GOP for trademark infringement.

One hundred percent.

No Democrat would talk as bluntly as we just did about what’s going on. They don’t want to touch religion. They don’t want to touch terms like “Christian nationalism.” OK, I get it, bit they won’t even talk about how they’re taking their religion and forcing it on you by law, and why that’s un-American. I don’t hear President Biden or the Democratic leaders talking like that. Do you think there’s a place for that kind of blunt talk, to wake people up?

I think Biden comes by this very honestly. He wanted to come in and take down the temperature on the culture wars. Unfortunately, this brings it to the fore. This, guns, everything we’re dealing with today becomes a culture war. It is what it is, right? Your views on guns right now come into your larger political views, generally. It’s not about whether you feel safe or unsafe. It’s about what you think about the Second Amendment.

I think that in Joe Biden’s world and mine, it’s already too hot for anybody to have a reasonable discussion, and he doesn’t want to make it hotter. But for a lot of people, how do you make it hotter than taking away women’s reproductive rights? How do you make it hotter than taking away people’s democratic rights or their right to vote? How do you make it hotter than children getting massacred in schools and having, I don’t know — I think we’re averaging two or three mass shootings on a daily basis. How do you make it hotter? If this is not a nine-alarm fire, what is? 

I do see both sides of this argument. I probably fall on the side that this is a nine-alarm fire, but to the extent that Joe Biden sees this differently, and wants to move forward on the basis of dialogue between parties that might see some common ground, I think that’s interesting. And when you think about the gun legislation that just passed, it’s not satisfactory. It’s not enough for most people, but it did come along by virtue of old-fashioned politics. It’s a non-answer, but you know.

When you’re negotiating over religion, and how much your religion should be imposed as law, I think it’s a little hard to compromise on that.

You and I see these as absolutes. If one of us is in chains, none of us are free. I do think about it that way. But I also think the solution to that might not be yelling that from the top of the hills. It might be slowly and quietly convincing people. I totally get the people who say, they’ve just taken away my abortion rights. They’ve taken away this, they’ve taken away that. They’re killing our children in schools. Why is this the moment to be reasonable and to listen to other views? And that is the conundrum.

You and I are in the media, so we’re in the business of talking to people and interviewing people. I get it if most of society doesn’t want to have this conversation and wants to shut it out. I think that’s fair. You and I can’t decide we’re not going to argue with people, and I know you’re as willing as I am to find somebody who disagrees with you and debate them. That’s where the answer’s going to come. These people are our fellow citizens. We may deeply disagree with them, but we live in a pluralistic society. We’re gonna have to come to some form of agreement, and that seems to be absent in our political discourse these days.

I respect people’s religious beliefs, even when I disagree with them passionately, until they want to turn those beliefs into law. That’s when you have to push back. And maybe it’s personal, because the demonization of the Muslim community by the right for years. Ali, you’ve traveled the world. You were just in South Africa. You’ve covered everything. Have you ever seen a country, in the modern era, where a leader attempted a coup and suffered no consequences, was not even charged with a crime 500 days after that coup attempt? 

It’s wild. In my travels, it’s the most consistent thing that people say when they find out I’m from America and I’m a journalist. We have become a bit of a laughingstock to the world. We have become a place where this administration is trying to pick up the leadership mantle on climate, on NATO, on all sorts of things. And a lot of people, particularly in the global South, are saying, you haven’t got your house in order and, by the way, you weren’t here for us when we had COVID and all that. They’re not listening to America all that much.

While these Jan. 6 hearings are very, very effective, and they’re even moving the needle in politics in America, it is a lot of dirty laundry that we’re airing. There are a lot of people in the world who are ready to take that dirty laundry and say, how about you never lecture us about anything ever again, or fix your politics? Our politics are broken. This is crazy. 

“We have become a bit of a laughing stock to the world.”

Every time I hear one of these Jan. 6 hearings — I study this a lot like you do, I thought I knew most things — and every single day there’s some revelation that drops my jaw anew. Liz Cheney says Donald Trump tried to contact a witness. You’ve got to be kidding me. That’s mob TV show 101. I’m not a lawyer, I’ve never studied law for a day and I know that’s 100 percent not the way you do things. That’s the world we’re living in. It’s weird, man.

Trump is a guy who didn’t use emails because you don’t want a paper trail. But in desperation, in the closing days before Jan. 6, he got personally involved. He called Brad Raffensberger in Georgia. He called this witness personally. We don’t know who it is. We don’t know what the message was.

My dad ran for office when I was 11 years old in Canada. He was an immigrant, a Muslim. He runs for office. It’s election night. We were on the way to the campaign office at 8 o’clock. The polls close and we turn on the radio. It’s just my dad and me in the car. They announce that the polls are closed, it’s too early to tell what happened, except in this one constituency, which was the one in which my dad ran, to declare the incumbent the winner. In other words, we had lost.

I’m devastated. I’m looking at my dad, saying, how did we lose? And he said, what are you talking about? We were never gonna win. And I said, well, why did you run? He said, cause I could. Because they were South African, right? They had escaped apartheid. He ran because he could run, and the next day he wouldn’t be arrested. He was a full participant, but he took not just peace, but joy, in the fact that he participated in the political process. He lost. He ultimately won, by the way: He ran again and won years later. But that’s not actually the story.

The story is: Donald Trump, you lost. That’s all there is to it. Just move on. Don’t wreck democracy on your way out. And he is not a subscriber to that basic democracy that we all agree upon. The danger is that lots of Republicans continue to support him. And that is fundamentally anti-democratic.

Don’t run, Joe: After beating Trump, Biden can do the nation one more big favor

Pundits are focused on Joe Biden’s tanking poll numbers, while progressives continue to be alarmed by his dismal job performance. Under the apt headline “President Biden Is Not Cutting the Mustard,” last week The American Prospect summed up: “Young people are abandoning him in droves because he won’t fight for their rights and freedom.” Ryan Cooper wrote that “at a time when Democrats are desperate for leadership — especially some kind of strategy to deal with a lawless and extreme Supreme Court — he is missing in action.”

Yes, Sens. Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema, both nominally Democrats, team up with Republicans to stymie vital measures. But the president’s refusal to issue executive orders that could enact such popular measures as canceling student debt and many other policies has been part of a derelict approach as national crises deepen. Recent events have dramatized the downward Biden spiral. 

Biden’s slow and anemic response to the Supreme Court’s long-expected Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade spotlighted the magnitude of the stakes — and the magnitude of failure. The grim outlook has been underscored by arrogance toward progressive activists. Consider this statement from White House communications director Kate Bedingfield last weekend as she reacted to wide criticism: “Joe Biden’s goal in responding to Dobbs is not to satisfy some activists who have been consistently out of step with the mainstream of the Democratic Party. It’s to deliver help to women who are in danger and assemble a broad-based coalition to defend a woman’s right to choose now, just as he assembled such a coalition to win during the 2020 campaign.”

The traditional response to such arrogance from the White House toward the incumbent’s party base is to grin — or, more likely, grimace — and bear it. But that’s a serious error for concerned individuals and organizations. Serving as enablers to bad policies and bad politics is hardly wise.

Polling released by the New York Times on Monday highlighted that most of Biden’s own party doesn’t want him to run for re-election, “with 64 percent of Democratic voters saying they would prefer a new standard-bearer in the 2024 presidential campaign.” Indeed, “only 26 percent of Democratic voters said the party should renominate him.”

A former ambassador to Portugal who was appointed by Barack Obama, Allan Katz, has made a strong case for Biden to announce now that he won’t run for re-election. Writing for Newsweek under the headline “President Biden: I’m Begging You — Don’t Run in 2024. Our Country Needs You to Stand Down,” Katz contended that such an announcement from Biden would remove an albatross from the necks of Democrats facing tough elections in the midterms. 

In short, to defeat as many Republicans as possible this fall, Biden should be seen as a one-term president who will not seek the Democratic nomination in 2024.


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Why push forward with this goal? The #DontRunJoe campaign that our team at RootsAction launched this week offers this explanation: “We felt impelled to intervene at this time because while there is a mainstream media debate raging over whether Joe Biden should run again, that discussion is too narrow and lacking in substance — focused largely on his age or latest poll numbers. We object to Biden running in 2024 because of his job performance as president. He has proven incapable of effectively leading for policies so badly needed by working people and the planet, including policies he promised as a candidate.” 

Defeating Republicans this fall will be made much harder if progressive and liberal forces must circle the political wagons around an unpopular president in defense of an unacceptable status quo.

It’s no secret that Republicans are very likely to win the House this November, probably by a large margin. And the neofascist GOP has a good chance of winning the Senate as well, although that could be very close. Defeating Republicans will be hindered to the extent that progressive and liberal forces circle the political wagons around an unpopular president in defense of the unacceptable status quo.

While voters must be encouraged to support Democrats — the only way to beat Republicans — in key congressional races this fall, that should not mean signing onto a quest to renew Biden’s lease on the White House. RootsAction has emphasized: “While we are announcing the Don’t Run Joe campaign now, we are urging progressive, antiracist, feminist and pro-working-class activists to focus on defeating the right wing in this November’s elections. Our all-out launch will come on Nov. 9, 2022 — the day after those midterm elections.” 

With all the bad news and negative polling about Biden in recent weeks, the folly of touting him for a second term has come into sharp focus. While the president insists that he plans to run again, he has left himself an escape hatch by saying that will happen assuming he’s in good health. But what we should do is insist that whatever the state of his personal health, the health of the country comes first. Democratic candidates this fall should not be hobbled by the pretense that they’re asking voters to support a scenario of six more years for President Biden.

It’s time to create a grassroots groundswell that can compel Joe Biden to give public notice — preferably soon — that he won’t provide an assist to Republican forces by trying to extend his presidency for another four years. A pledge to voluntarily retire at the end of his first term would boost the Democratic Party’s chances of getting a stronger and more progressive ticket in 2024 — and would convey in the meantime that Democratic candidates and the Biden presidency are not one and the same.

 

House moves against amendments to decrease military budget

Progressive campaigners rebuked members of Congress who on Wednesday night voted down a pair of amendments to the latest National Defense Authorization Act that would have significantly limited the U.S. military budget.

With the U.S. House of Representatives set to vote this week on the NDAA for fiscal year 2023, progressive Reps. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) and Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) sought to include two amendments in $839 billion bill.

One of the measures would have reduced the overall Pentagon budget by $100 billion, while the other would have rescinded the $37 billion in additional Pentagon funding added in committee to President Joe Biden’s topline request. The former measure was defeated by a vote of 78-350, while the latter was voted down 151-277.

“We are racing toward a trillion-dollar military budget that tolerates and encourages mind-blowing waste, rewards military-industrial complex political spending with unfathomably large contracts—and fails to address priority national security needs,” Robert Weissman, president of the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen, said in a statement.

“With the United States spending more on its military than the next nine highest spending countries combined, there’s no serious argument that additional dollars for the Pentagon makes us safer,” Weissman continued. “The good news is: the American people are on to the racket and mobilizing to demand a reallocation of funding away from the Pentagon and to prioritize human needs.”

“Today’s votes on the amendments led by peace and common-sense champions, Reps. Barbara Lee and Mark Pocan, are the earlier indicators of that mobilization,” he added. “An overwhelming majority of the Democratic caucus—along with more than a dozen Republicans—voted to roll back the Pentagon spending increase added in the Armed Services Committee, showing that the congressional willingness to meet the military-industrial complex’s demand for more, more, more is fast eroding.”

Eric Eikenberry, government relations director at the peace group Win Without War, lamented that lawmakers “again underscored our nation’s broken budget priorities by upholding this eye-popping topline number—twice.”

“Two critically needed amendments offered by Reps. Lee and Pocan would have cut this outrageous amount,” he noted. “Either would have been a welcome shift to a status quo that continues to think more weapons and more war will make us safe. Unfortunately, neither received enough votes to pass.”

“Right now, there is no shortage of urgent crises that our government must address,” Eikenberry argued. “People across the country face crumbling infrastructure, critically underfunded schools, and a failing healthcare system—all while facing rising costs to pay for essential items like gasoline, food, and housing.”

“The harsh reality is that these billions weren’t simply given away to the Pentagon—they were taken from communities for whom even a fraction of these funds could have made a fundamental difference,” he added. “Despite the outcome of today’s vote, it’s never too late for members of Congress to come to their senses and budget for our actual needs over weapons-makers’ wants.”

Black principal fired in Texas for being antiracist

On Thursday, The Daily Beast reported that a school board member in North Texas defended the controversial recent firing of a Black principal for writing a letter about the George Floyd murder, calling him one of several “activists” who are “poison” to the minds of teachers in the district.

Members of the community, however, were having none of it.

The suspension and then firing of Dr. James Whitfield as a principal in the Colleyville High School in the Grapevine-Colleyville School District last year, ostensibly over his promotion of “critical race theory,” became a nationwide controversy.

“Tammy Nakamura may be new to the Grapevine-Colleyville school board but that didn’t stop her from weighing in on Whitfield’s controversial departure during a gathering of school board members last month hosted by the Republican National Committee,” reported Brooke Leigh Howard.

“In a video of the event posted to the Colleyville Citizens for Accountability Facebook group on July 8, Nakamura is seen commenting on Whitfield’s departure. After alleging Whitfield brought national attention to the school district because he was married to a white woman, Nakamura said it was the principal’s supposedly woke agenda that led to his ouster,” said the report. “‘I went in last week and read the whole file,’ she said during the meeting. ‘That’s the straw that broke the camel’s back … that got him fired,’ Nakamura said, referring to the letter Whitfield sent to parents about targeting racism and hate, which she claimed showed an activist agenda. ‘There is absolute proof [of] what he was trying to do,’ she said.”

According to the report, however, Nakamura’s comments have triggered anger from locals.

“‘First, Tammy Harris Nakamura, your story is incoherent so it’s hard to follow your misguided claims,’ posted Amyn Gilani in the Colleyville Citizens for Accountability Facebook group,” said the report. “‘Second, Dr. James Whitfield was targeted because he addressed the murder of George Floyd and he made himself available to support all students who have questions and thoughts about inequality and injustice,’ Gilani wrote. ‘James is an asset to our community, not poison.'” Another resident, Karl Meek, wrote “Sounds like a 15th century attempt to prosecute an old world inquisition,'” while another accused Nakamura of trying to create “an employment hit list.”

“According to the Star-Telegram, Whitfield is on paid administrative leave until his resignation officially goes into effect in August 2023,” noted the report. “Neither Nakamura nor the Grapevine-Colleyville Independent School District immediately returned requests for comment.”

FX’s “The Bear” officially renewed for Season 2! (Here’s what to expect)

FX’s “The Bear “is officially back in business!

The Hollywood Reporter confirms that the 2022 title has received a Season 2 renewal following endless praise for the show’s first season. Rotten Tomatoes couldn’t help but give the title a perfect score and general audiences were quick to rave about how much they see themselves in each and every one of the characters in the story, especially when it came to Carmy (Jeremy Allen White), a young man who, despite having endless potential as a chef, finds more happiness in being surrounded by friends in his late brother’s restaurant.

The rave reviews from critics and audiences alike certainly didn’t go unnoticed by FX execs, hence why giving “The Bear” a second season was a no-brainer.

Here’s what FX Entertainment president Eric Schrier had to say about the exciting news:

“The Bear” has exceeded our wildest creative, critical and commercial expectations. We deeply appreciate the brilliant work led by creator and co-showrunner Christopher Storer and co-showrunner Joanna Calo. Jeremy Allen White’s lead performance is spectacular, as are those of his co-stars Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Ayo Edebiri, Abby Elliott, Lionel Boyce and Liza Colón-Zayas. We can’t wait to get to work on season two.

Now that Season 2 is officially on the way, you probably have even more questions about what to expect. As always, we got you covered.

What will “The Bear” Season 2 be about?

Assuming that the upcoming sophomore season will follow the events of the first, we can safely assume that “The Bear” Season 2 will explore Carmy’s journey running a new and improved version of his late brother’s restaurant now that he has the money to sustain the business and his colleagues.

Despite the stress of finances lifted, we’re sure that Carmy & Co. will still run into their fair share of problems. After all, the threat of gentrification still looms over their Chicago restaurant, the team still hasn’t found the best way to cook great food at a healthy pace, and, above all, they are all still grieving the sudden death of Michael Berzatto, the former owner of the restaurant and Carmy’s older brother.

Having said all this, we hope all the aforementioned issues, the personal lives of the team, and so much more will be explored further in the new season.

“The Bear” Season 2 cast

With the cast of “The Bear” being as stunning as they were, we can certainly expect that the gang of chefs will remain the same for the most part. White is sure to return as Carmy, Ayo Edebiri may very well reprise her role as Sydney Adamu, and Ebon Moss-Bachrach will be back as Richard ‘Richie’ Jerimovich.

Also, we expect Liza Colón-Zayas, Lionel Boyce, Edwin Lee Gibson, Abby Elliott, and Corey Hendrix to return as Tina, Marcus, Ebraheim, Natalie ‘Sugar’ Berzatto, and Gary, respectively.

And last but not least, should season 2 have more of a focus on the backstory of Michael Berzatto, we expect “The Punisher “actor Jon Bernthal to be featured as a special guest star in an episode or two.

“The Bear” Season 2 release date

Fortunately for us, “The Bear” creator Christopher Storer did reveal to us that we won’t have to wait an excruciatingly long time for his amazing title to return.

“We are so grateful to FX, our insanely talented cast, our crew who worked hard, fast, and in the dead of winter, not to mention everyone who watched,” Storer and showrunner Joanna Calo stated. “And we can’t wait to bring you all back to ‘The Bear’ in 2023.”

With this in mind, our final prediction is that “The Bear” season will return in either Winter 2023 or Spring 2023. But, then again, perhaps this FX show is already one step ahead of the game and may already have a second season cooking. Because of this, be sure to take our guesses with a grain of salt and stay tuned for official announcements.

All in all, we’re super excited The Bear is returning with a second season. If you’re just as thrilled as we are, be sure to show the series some love and stream every episode of “The Bear” today on Hulu.

How to clean wood floors without damaging them

After living with wall-to-wall carpeting, old laminate and chipped tiles, you’re finally living in a new place with beautiful hardwood floors. Congrats! Or, you’ve been living there for a while and the fact that you’re blessed with wood flooring hasn’t occurred to you until now — the moment you’ve realized that you’re not quite sure, exactly, how to clean wood floors.

There’s vacuuming, of course, or sweeping if you’re old school. But maybe your floors seem to have lost a bit of their brilliance and are looking a little dull these days. Or perhaps, like me, you’re thinking that you own a bunch of different cleaning products and supplies (we like things tidy), but you’re unsure what’s safe to use on these natural beauties. No matter your particular predicament, you’ve come to the right place.

It’s not difficult to clean wood floors, but there are certain dos and don’ts to be aware of, so we spoke with a pro who walked us through them all. Before getting into the details, it might be a relief to know that, no matter what type of wood flooring you’re living with, “cleaning them follows the same process,” says Michael Clarke, a contractor and the founder of Pulled, a home services platform. Many types of wood are used in hardwood flooring, Clarke tells us, like oak, maple, cherry, bamboo, walnut, ash, and mahogany and exotic species like teak, jarrah, and mesquite. Engineered hardwood flooring is another “type” of wood that’s become popular because it’s a “veneer of real wood glued to several layers of wood underneath, like plywood, that’s durable and low-maintenance,” he adds, but they all clean up in the same way.

Check out all the steps for cleaning wood floors below.

Dry cleaning

First thing you’ll want to do is pull out your vacuum or that manual broom, if you prefer, and get rid of all the pet hair, crumbs, dirt, and general debris that collect on floors over the course of a week’s worth of living, but make sure you’re on the correct setting. “Use the vacuum’s ‘hard floor’ setting to deactivate the brush roller and only use suction,” Clarke says. The brush inside the vacuum is meant to get deep into carpets and some are so stiff that they can scratch your floors.

Wet cleaning

Making sure there are few particles left behind makes the rest of this simple process that much easier. After vacuuming, Clarke recommends using something like the Swiffer WetJet Wood Floor cleaning system, especially on high-traffic areas like in front of doors and near the kitchen. To keep wood looking polished and good as new, Clarke likes to add a few sprays of Bona Hardwood Cleanerto floors while using the WetJet once or twice a month as needed. The cleaner is fast-drying and great for removing any lingering residue to help floors shine their brightest.

Mind the don’ts

Now that we know what we’re proactively doing to keep our floors in tip top shape, Clarke gave us a few don’ts to keep in mind so we’re not accidentally making it all that much harder for ourselves. One major thing to be aware of is standing water. “Standing water or pools of liquid cleaner can damage the wood, and this is especially critical for pre-finished hardwood floors,” he says. Steam mops also aren’t your friend when it comes to cleaning hardwood floors, unless the product itself clearly states that it’s designed to be used with wood. If you’re keeping up with those few simple steps, steaming likely won’t be necessary.

While we love a great DIY hack with pantry staples, your hardwood floors aren’t going to be quite as receptive. “Don’t use vinegar to clean your floors or any other homemade cleaning product because they can damage the finish,” Clarke says, adding that harsh chemicals in vinyl and tile floor cleaner also won’t play nice with hardwood.

Knowing these simple steps and taking a few minutes each week or month to give your wood floors some TLC will result in an enviable characteristic of your home. Just don’t forget to look up every now and then as you’re walking around your home constantly looking downward, admiring your handiwork.

This post contains products independently chosen (and loved) by Food52 editors and writers. Food52 earns an affiliate commission on qualifying purchases of the products we link to.

6 ways to sniff out an online shopping scam

I recently fell victim to a scam while shopping for home decor online. The short version is that I ordered a set of decorative wall panels and waited several months for them to be delivered. Despite the company’s repeated assurances that my package was en route, nothing was ever delivered, and when I asked for my money back, they told me they couldn’t refund my purchase unless I returned the goods — which would have been tricky to do since I never received them in the first place.

In the end, I disputed the transaction with my bank and was thankfully able to get my money back, but it got me thinking about how convincing shady brands can be these days. They often have professional-looking websites and good marketing, and it can be hard to tell what’s a scam and what’s legitimate — even for someone like me, whose whole job revolves around the internet. After my latest experience with a duplicitous brand, I did some research on how to spot online scams, and I’m passing along the best tips to you, in hopes it saves someone from the frustration I went through.

1. Be wary of social media ads

We’ve all experienced it — you’re browsing for new curtains, and all of a sudden, your Facebook and Instagram are filled with curtain ads from every brand under the sun. This is actually how I discovered the company that ultimately scammed me, and I’ve heard similar stories from friends who bought products through social media ads. Unfortunately, it takes very little effort for less-than-trustworthy brands to create convincing and well-targeted advertisements, so learn from my mistakes and do your due diligence before you buy from a company you’ve never heard of before. (The steps below are a great place to start!)

2. Look for an address and contact info

One easy way to find out if a company is legitimate is to look for a physical address. Virtually every company has a headquarters somewhere, and if you’re unable to find a physical address, it’s a pretty big red flag. Some small businesses might not have their exact address listed, but you can generally find some information about where they’re based or where they ship from.

Similarly, be wary of brands that solely offer email as a contact method, as it’s an easy way to cover up a shady operation. That’s not to say all brands that don’t list a phone number are scams — it’s an increasingly common practice these days — but it’s a good sign if you’re able to call and speak to an actual person in customer service. If you’re skeptical about a brand, you might want to call or email them before you buy and ask a few questions about the product to see how they respond.

3. Look for inconsistencies on social media

When I got hoodwinked by the aforementioned home decor brand, one of my biggest mistakes was not looking closely at their social media accounts. At a quick glance, they had more than 600,000 Instagram followers and a nicely curated feed, but when I went back and looked closer, there were some fairly large inconsistencies. Despite their huge following, most of their posts only had 100 or so likes, and there were very few comments. The comments I did see were often nonsensical and came from private accounts with just a few followers. These are all signs that a brand is purchasing followers, likes, and/or comments, and it doesn’t bode well for their trustworthiness.

Some positive signs to look for on social media are people commenting about products they’ve actually purchased and tagging the brand in their own photos. Follower count isn’t a huge factor by itself, but the brand’s engagement level should be proportional to the number of followers it has — a small business with a few hundred followers shouldn’t be getting thousands of likes, and a huge brand shouldn’t only be getting a dozen.

4. Carefully check review sites

It’s easy for companies to put fake reviews or remove negative reviews on their own website, which is why third-party review sites are often a more reliable source of information. In particular, I like to check out Trustpilot and the Better Business Bureau when researching a company I’ve never heard of before, as brands can’t filter or have these reviews removed.

However, that said, take these kinds of third-party reviews with a grain of salt. Yes, they often highlight a brand’s shortcomings — whether it’s long shipping times, poor customer service, or poor product quality — but they can often paint an overly negative picture of the company. After all, people are much more likely to leave reviews when they’re upset.

If you regularly shop from retailers like Amazon, you can also install a browser extension like Fakespot, which helps to identify products with fake reviews or websites that could potentially be a scam. When I ran my scammy home decor site through Fakespot, it warned me that there were “problematic transactions” and “multiple eCommerce scam experiences detected.” Now, I use it on any unknown website before I buy.

5. Ask around

We all have a friend (or two) who does more than their fair share of online shopping — you know, the one who told you about Shein before it blew up and was shopping on Etsy before anyone else knew it existed — and it’s worth asking if they’ve ever heard of the brand you’re investigating. Even if they don’t have insight on that particular company, they might be able to point you in the direction of a similar product and/or company that they do know and trust.

6. When in doubt, don’t

If you ever have unanswered questions or just a bad feeling about an online retailer, err on the side of caution and buy from a company you know and trust instead. There are so many untrustworthy brands out there today, many of which look extremely convincing, and the last thing you want is to have your personal information, including credit card number, in the wrong hands.

2024 election projection: DeSantis beats Trump

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) could beat former President Donald Trump and become the Republican Party’s presidential nominee in 2024, according to the results of a new poll.

Per Newsweek, the latest survey, which was conducted by Blueprint Polling, suggests 50.9 percent of the Republican voters who participated in the poll would support the Republican governor while only 38.6 percent would back Trump. Blueprint Polling compiled its survey based on responses from 656 voters who offered their opinions between July 7-10. The poll’s margin of error is projected to be approximately +/- 3.82 percent.

The news outlet also offered a breakdown of voters who are standing firm on their decision. Among those voters, “DeSantis’ lead extends to nearly 14 points (47.6 percent to 33.2 percent) in a scenario in which the pair ended up as the final two choices in the GOP primary.”

The poll summary also noted, “Older Republicans are more likely to support Trump, but DeSantis still leads the former president in all age groupings.”

“Trump is tied with DeSantis among voters with some college but among high school graduates as well as college graduates and those with advanced degrees, DeSantis polls much better.”

The news outlet notes: “Sixty-six percent of respondents agreed that Florida Republicans believe that widespread election fraud cost Trump the 2020 election, while 11 percent said Florida Republicans do not believe but ‘will go along with the rhetoric’ because it energizes Republicans in upcoming elections.”

The widespread claims of voter fraud were perpetrated by the former president after his election loss to President Joe Biden in 2020. Echoing Trump’s claims, many of his allies and Republican lawmakers also started to push the unfounded claims, although no substantial evidence was ever provided.

Researchers just invented gloves that give your hands octopus powers

In the Academy Award-winning documentary “My Octopus Teacher,” a South African man named Craig Foster befriends a wild octopus while diving and exploring the nearby ocean. Among many other marvels, he observes how the cephalopod’s tentacles are remarkably dexterous, rapidly manipulating tool-like objects and conquering fearsome prey. Humans, by contrast, struggle to use tools underwater even under the best of circumstances; the slipperiness imbued by water makes underwater dexterity a rare skill.

But mankind no longer must suffer to manipulate wet or slippery objects, for scientists have invented an octopus-inspired glove that mimics the cephalopods’ tentacle skin. This “wearable adhesive glove” enabled researchers to “pick up and release a variety of items underwater including flat, curved, rigid, and soft objects.” 

“These capabilities mimic the advanced manipulation, sensing, and control of cephalopods and provide a platform for synthetic underwater adhesive skins that can reliably manipulate diverse underwater objects,” the researchers write of the technology, which the press release dubs the “Octa-glove.”

RELATED: Do octopuses have souls? “My Octopus Teacher” and the question of octopus consciousness

The breakthrough comes from a new study led by mechanical engineering professor Michael D. Bartlett and researchers from Virginia Tech. Writing in the journal Science Advances, the co-authors explain how the Octa-glove allows human beings for the first time to securely grip objects under water with the agility and ease of an octopus. That statement is more than just a poetic flourish; the scientists were inspired by how real-life octopuses can hold objects with strength and yet maintain a delicate touch. Using robotics and soft materials, Bartlett and the other scientists covered their glove in tightly integrated sensors and with synthetic suckers similar to those used by octopuses.

“This combination of switchable attachment, sensing, processing, and control is what we find so fascinating about the octopus and was the inspiration for our octopus-inspired adhesive skin that we integrated into a wearable glove.”

If it sounds challenging creating a glove that allows human hands to more effectively manage objects in water, that’s because it is.

“Most man-made adhesives do not work under water, especially if they are meant to strongly hold and then release on demand,” Bartlett told Salon by email. “Additionally, to manipulate objects under water, adhesion must be able to activate and release quickly. The octopus displays this ability with their suckers.” To solve those problems, the team used a rubber stalk capped with “a stretchable pneumatically actuated membrane” to create adhesion, and in particular for that adhesion to be able to turned on and off with extreme rapidness.


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Bartlett also elaborated on the specific ways that the octopus’ unique anatomy informed the scientists’ decisions as they designed their glove.

“In addition to eight arms and over 2000 suckers, an octopus has millions of mechanical and chemical sensors on their arms and suckers, allowing an octopus to feel and taste their environment,” Bartlett explained. “The neuroanatomy of the octopus is also very interesting, in that neurons are distributed throughout their body, including in their arms.  This allows an octopus to individually control their suckers by processing information from their sensors in their neural system.”

The engineers carefully designed the glove so that “all the user has to do is bring their hand near an object and the glove will immediately attach without any additional user input.”

He added, “This combination of switchable attachment, sensing, processing, and control is what we find so fascinating about the octopus and was the inspiration for our octopus-inspired adhesive skin that we integrated into a wearable glove.” The engineers carefully designed the glove so that “all the user has to do is bring their hand near an object and the glove will immediately attach without any additional user input.”

There are likely to be many practical applications for the glove, in fields as diverse as health care, manufacturing, and underwater robotics. One could also imagine — more theoretically than actually, as this would have to involve a commonly affordable glove rather than a newly-invented one — an Octa-glove that would allow ordinary people to enhance recreational activities. After all, it is not like the octopus only uses its tentacles for work.

“With such a highly intelligent creature, it’s likely to get bored,” Pippa Ehrlich, co-director of “My Octopus Teacher,” explained to Salon in an interview last year. “It wants to explore. It wants to be entertained. But it’s also completely liquid and soft. It has no physical protection against anything, apart from being able to hide in small spaces, because its liquid adds this incredible creativity that these animals have developed over time in order to receive predators and catch prey.”

Bartlett, for one, is a fan of the hit movie.

“The ‘My Octopus Teacher’ film was very motivational,” Bartlett told Salon. “Getting a chance to see an octopus live in its environment I think gives scientists and engineers inspiration. It really gave me a sense of how special these organisms are. They demonstrate extraordinary functions and behaviors while being self-healing and being composed nearly entirely of soft materials. What if we could create man-made materials that could do the same thing?”

For more Salon articles about octopuses:

Texas sues to stop Biden’s guidance on abortions in case of medical emergencies

Texas is suing the Biden administration over guidance released Monday telling the nation’s doctors they’re protected by federal law to terminate a pregnancy as part of emergency treatment — and threatening to defund hospitals that don’t perform these procedures.

The Biden administration’s guidance states that federal law requires doctors to perform abortions for pregnant people in emergency rooms when it is “the stabilizing treatment necessary” to resolve a medical emergency, including treatments for ectopic pregnancy, hypertension and preeclampsia.

On Wednesday, the Biden administration also warned retail pharmacies that they must fill prescriptions for pills that can induce abortion or risk violating federal civil rights law.

These two recent actions pit the federal executive branch against state governments after the U.S. Supreme Court undid a nearly half-century-old precedent that had affirmed access to abortion as a constitutional right.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office filed the suit challenging the guidance in federal court on Thursday, saying the Biden administration’s guidance violates the state’s “sovereign interest in the power to create and enforce a legal code.”

Texas is one of several states with laws banning abortion already in effect or trigger laws that will soon ban the medical procedure. Texas will soon ban all abortions from the moment of fertilization with narrow exceptions only to save the life of a pregnant patient or prevent “substantial impairment of major bodily function.”

The Biden administration reassured the nation’s doctors that they don’t need to wait until a patient’s health deteriorates before acting and that they can act in cases where nontreatment would result in serious impairment, guidance that comes as medical professionals in Texas and other states where abortion is banned are trying to figure out what kind of women’s health care is allowed under new restrictions. The guidance isn’t seeking to update existing law but is said to clarify a hospital’s duties under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act.

“In no uncertain terms, we are reinforcing that we expect providers to continue offering these services, and that federal law preempts state abortion bans when needed for emergency care,” U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said in a statement. “Under the law, no matter where you live, women have the right to emergency care — including abortion care.”

The Biden administration warned that if a hospital fails to provide emergency abortion treatment when necessary, it could be fined or have its Medicare status revoked.

“These hospitals are now threatened with having to choose between violating state law under the threat of criminal penalty or jeopardizing their ability to participate in Medicaid,” Paxton’s office argued in the suit.

Any ruling will likely be appealed. Paxton’s office argues that the federal guidance isn’t merely clarifying existing law but “includes a number of new requirements related to the provision of abortions that do not exist under federal law.”

“This administration has a hard time following the law, and now they are trying to have their appointed bureaucrats mandate that hospitals and emergency medicine physicians perform abortions,” Paxton said in a statement. “I will ensure that President Biden will be forced to comply with the Supreme Court’s important decision concerning abortion and I will not allow him to undermine and distort existing laws to fit his administration’s unlawful agenda.”

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre pushed back on Paxton’s suit, emphasizing that the guidance is based on existing law.

“The Texas Attorney General’s lawsuit is yet another example of an extreme and radical Republican elected official,” Jean-Pierre wrote on Twitter. “It is unthinkable that this public official would sue to block women from receiving life-saving care in emergency rooms, a right protected under U.S. law.”

Join us at The Texas Tribune Festival, happening Sept. 22-24 in downtown Austin, and hear from 300+ speakers shaping the future of Texas including Joe Straus, Jen Psaki, Joaquin Castro, Mayra Flores and many others. See all speakers announced to date and buy tickets.

Jamie Lee Curtis talks summer camp, being you and filming the “cathartic” end of “Halloween”

Jamie Lee Curtis has had quite the few months. Last fall, she returned to fictional Haddonfield, Illinois for “Halloween Kills,” the latest in the long, Michael Myers horror saga about the white-masked murder who just won’t die (but wants everyone else to). Earlier in 2022, she had a memorable role in “Everything Everywhere All At Once,” the Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheiner-directed Michelle Yeoh film that will cause you never to look at googly eyes (or bagels, or rocks) the same way again. 

Curtis’ performance in “Everything” is no less than astonishing. She plays Dierdre, an overworked, under-caring and deeply weird IRS auditor. At least, in one dimension. In another, Dierdre is a loving spouse and very talented pianist who has hot dog fingers. In another, she’s a raging cultist. That’s a lot for anyone to handle, let alone all in the same film.

What’s an actor to do to de-stress? Curtis is going to summer camp.

RELATED:  Jamie Lee Curtis on learning how to support her trans daughter: “I’m a grateful student”

Curtis is a producer on the Audible Original podcast “Letters from Camp,” written by Boco Haft and now entering its third season. Curtis also performs on the fictional show, appearing as Camp Director Sue, whom she describes as “a thrice-married woman who also was married to other camp directors, it turns out.” Sue leads Camp Cartwright, the pastoral summer camp where 11-year-old New Yorker Mookie (rhymes with Cookie), voiced by Sunny Sandler, is attending in her first experience away from home.

During an interview with Salon, Curtis speaks to the show’s personal origins. Haft is Curtis’ goddaughter (Jake Gyllenhaal is another godchild who lends his voice to the show), and the story was inspired by a letter Haft as a child sent to Curtis. A letter never mailed, it turns out.

“My goddaughter wrote me a letter from camp when she was 11 and she never sent it,” Curtis says. “It went into her little stationery box with my name on the outside. And 10 years later, whatever, now she’s 26, her mother found a letter to Jamie in a box and sent it to me.”

The letter detailed that Haft had “gotten into trouble and she had let everybody down and she was feeling terrible.” When Curtis finally got to read the letter, “Right away I said to her, ‘Oh, well this is a show. This is a show for sure. And you need to write it.'”

“Whatever your family’s rules are, whatever other people’s family’s rules are, social media is a real problem for teenagers. I feel it’s a very destructive force.”

Despite her initial misgivings, and some awkwardness with fellow campers, mainly due to a precocious desire to investigate (Mookie wants to be a journalist like her famous mother), Mookie returns to camp in Season 2. Each summer, there’s a new mystery, detailed in the form of letters Mookie is writing to . . . someone. The show is funny, sweet and while geared for tweens – an age group Curtis, a children’s book writer herself, feels strongly need their own stories (“dealing with sexuality in a very light way, dealing with divorce”) – it also contains jokes adults will appreciate.

The story begins in 2005, a time Curtis was also adamant about. It was when her goddaughter had first written that lost letter, but in addition, setting the story in the past skirted the problem of social media, which Curtis believes is a major issue. 

“We wanted to make sure there was no social media because we wanted the innocence of camp . . . . whatever your home experience is, whatever your family’s rules are, whatever other people’s family’s rules are, social media is a real problem for teenagers. I feel it’s a very destructive force and I’m concerned about it,” Curtis says. And anyway, she jokes, “You can’t have a show called ‘Letters from Camp’ and have it be emails.”

 “That’s what camp’s about: discovering who you are.”

First recorded during the initial year of COVID (“We were all trying to figure out how to record this show under desks and in closets”), “Letters from Camp” first aired in late summer of 2020, a time when Curtis was keenly aware many children were missing out on the classic experience of camp — and the essential experiences of self-reliance, independence and autonomy, experiences that seem more and more threatened. Getting to know yourself, just to be yourself as a growing kid, is a key part of the show. 

The camp’s motto after all is “Be you,” which Curtis says was a happy accident. She holds up a tote bag during our Zoom interview, bringing the image close to the camera. “I have swag,” she says, displaying the tote with the emblem of the camp, which includes a campfire that looks like an old woodcut illustration, the words BE YOU stamped below it.

“That was an artist giving us this wonderful gift because that’s what camp’s about: discovering who you are.”

These words ring true for Curtis, the supportive parent, with husband Christopher Guest, of two grown daughters, one who is trans. In the first joint interview she gave with her daughter Ruby, to People in 2021, Curtis acknowledged: “You still mess up, I’ve messed up today twice. We’re human,” but said, “If one person reads this, sees a picture of Ruby and me and says, ‘I feel free to say this is who I am,’ then it’s worth it.”

Curtis and I talk about how important it is for kids to be allowed to discover themselves and how the young protagonist of “Letters from Camp” changes when “confronted with the often lifelong struggle between your heart and your brain.”

Jamie Lee Curtis in “Halloween.”

Many final girls scream, get away and are never heard from again. Not Laurie. And not Curtis.

Season 3 will be Mookie’s final summer at camp. As for Curtis, she’s coming off a banner year in a long line of banner years. The daughter of Hollywood heavy hitters Janet Leigh and Tony Curtis, Jamie Lee Curtis first appeared on the small screen in the 1977 sitcom “Operation Petticoat.” Her big screen debut would define her: teenager Laurie Strode in John Carpenter’s1978 horror film “Halloween.” Curtis played a high school babysitter who becomes the target of killer Michael Myers; later, his very worthy adversary. 

Curtis went on to “The Fog” and a series of other horror films, but also branched out into very different roles, showing her comedic genius in films like “A Fish Called Wanda” and “Freaky Friday” with Lindsay Lohan, and her action prowess in movies like the blockbuster “True Lies.” 

Jamie Lee Curtis in “Everything Everywhere All at Once” (Allyson Riggs/A24)All three branches of Curtis’ genius are on display in “Everything Everywhere At All Once.” It is a hugely physical role, Curtis roaring as she moves and changes her body — her real body, no prosthetics — as Dierdre. (Curtis contributed to the creation of the character by texting the directors “photos of weird outfits and weird hairdos.”) It’s also a deeply tender role, a side of Curtis seen in our interview as well, where she asks about my own child, and expresses sincere hope that he can get to go to sleepaway camp someday.

Curtis has won two Golden Globe Awards, a British Academy Film Award, been nominated for Emmys, and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. But she always returned to “Halloween.” For 44 years, she did. 

When you call her a final girl — I never really understood how important that name was until I made this last movie. And now I really understand it.”

As the franchise grew up, so did Curtis, her Laurie faking her death and teaching at a school (in some timelines). In the 2018 “Halloween” film that is a direct sequel to the 1978 original, Curtis’ Laurie has dealt with PTSD her whole life. She’s become an excellent fighter, has fortified her house and has lived with the aftermath of severe trauma — divorces, substance abuse, poverty, losing custody of her daughter. Laurie became a grandmother, and Curtis brings her end of life to life as capable, strong as nails, breakable and true. 


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She played Laurie again in “Halloween Kills” (2021) and will for one last time, she says, in 2022’s “Halloween Ends.” Curtis grows wistful when she talks about it. “I’ve just finished it, you know? I  just three weeks ago finished shooting the last shot of Laurie Strode. It was deeply emotional and cathartic.” A different light comes into her eyes, and I realize where I know it: from Laurie. A character considered an iconic if not the iconic final girl: the girl who defeats the killer. 

Many final girls scream, get away and are never heard from again. Not Laurie. And not Curtis. We talk about how meaningful it’s been for horror fans like me that Curtis has stuck with the role, that we get to watch a final girl grow up, to be a final woman.

“Everything you just said is what happens,” Curtis says. “I mean, when you call her a final girl — I never really understood how important that name was until I made this last movie. And now I really understand it. And I think you’ll be very happy.”

Letters from Camp” seasons 1-2 are now downloadable on Audible. Season 3 premieres July 21.

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After binging “Stranger Things,” I’m craving this nostalgic pasta dish

The latest season of “Stranger Things” is making me nostalgic for the classics of the ’80s

Metallica. Musical Youth. “The Silver Palate Cookbook.”

Originally published in 1979, “Silver Palate” set the bar for a certain kind of upscale home cooking that defined the ’80s — and its influence echoes on to this day. There was pesto. There was quiche. There were little bites and artfully brunchy foods

The book was a reflection of its authors, Sheila Lukins and Julee Rosso, who paved the way for Martha Stewart and Ina Garten by launching their empire from the world of catering. To this day, the recipes retain a vibe of relaxed entertaining, the sort of food you’d serve on artfully mismatched dinnerware. And, like a classic Kate Bush track, they’re still absolute bangers.

At a recent dinner party, a friend served the book’s famed signature dish: an olive- and prune-infused Chicken Marbella. I was floored at how sensational it was.

“The Silver Palate” was the first cookbook I ever bought because I had a friend who worked at a Williams-Sonoma who got me a discount. Whereas other cookbooks seemed like they were written by and for wives and mothers, “Silver Palate” seemed to beckon with a voice that said, “Let’s party!”


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I still lean on the recipes — and the lessons on choosing cheese and making coffee — that I learned thumbing through my now battered copy of that book. In the summertime, I can’t get enough of a lazy pasta dish that Lukins and Rosso enticingly claimed to have discovered while dining “in a beautiful home in Sardinia.”

With tomatoes abundant and delicious right now, you can’t not make this rich, garlicky dish. The secret? Throw the sauce together a few hours ahead of time to let the flavors meld beautifully.

How can something so simple be so good? Some things, I guess, just never go out of style.

***

Inspired by The Silver Palate Cookbook from Sheila Lukins and Julee Rosso

Summery Garlic and Tomato Pasta with Brie
Yields
 4 servings
Prep Time
 5 minutes
Cook Time
 15 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2 large ripe tomatoes 
  • 1/2 pound brie, cut up
  • 1/2 cup fresh basil or mint leaves, shredded
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • 1 box ziti, or your favorite pasta

Directions

  1. Chop the tomatoes into small-ish chunks. Put them in a large bowl
  2. Add the cheese, basil, garlic, EVOO, salt and pepper. Give it all a stir.
  3. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it hang out on the counter for 2 hours or more. 
  4. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook according to the instructions on the package. 
  5. Drain the pasta before adding it to the bowl with the tomatoes and cheese. Stir everything together. Add more pepper on top, if you like. 
  6. Serve immediately with a very lemony salad.

Cook’s Notes

If you have them on hand, reach for heirloom tomatoes.

Forgot to make the sauce ahead of time? If you make it while the pasta is boiling, the sauce won’t have as complex a flavor, but it will definitely still be a weeknight dinner hero.

You can tweak this recipe to your heart’s content. While “The Silver Palate” suggests linguini, I think this dish is better with short pasta. Mint, meanwhile, makes a fresh alternative to basil. I also don’t cut off the rind of the brie; it’s expensive — and you should get your money’s worth. 

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Lesley Manville is endearing in “Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris,” a feel-good couture fairy tale

 “Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris” is like “Mary Poppins” for young-at-heart adults. Based on the novel by Paul Gallico, this whimsical film has the titular character, Ada Harris (Lesley Manville), a working-class British cleaning woman in the 1950s, realize her dream of buying a haute couture Dior dress. Along the way, her kindness and common sense enables her to change the lives of almost everyone she meets for the better. It may be pure wish fulfillment, but this fairy tale of a film is as irresistible as the Dior dress Mrs. Harris covets.

Director Anthony Fabian invites viewers to indulge in this fantasy from its opening scene, where Ada tosses a coin on a bridge and a bit of magic happens. Will it be her lucky day? Ada goes off to work for her clients, cleaning their homes, and listening to and solving their problems. Mrs. Harris has problems of her own; she finally gets word that her husband, Eddie, has died in the war. She also has a client, Lady Dant (Anna Chancellor) who has not paid her for her work. But Lady Dant does have a Christian Dior haute couture dress, and suddenly, a dream is awakened in Mrs. Harris. She desires one of her own. And she will scrimp and save the 500 pounds (plus expenses) to make her dream dress a reality.

“Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris” shows the ups and downs its plucky heroine has trying to earn the money. She wins some, she loses some. She is always endearing. And she is distraught that she and her best friend Vi (Ellen Thomas), who also cleans houses, are “invisible” — unseen by society. Even their friend Archie (Jason Isaacs), who has a good relationship with Ada, asks her to watch his dogs so he can dance with a younger, prettier woman.

But then Mrs. Harris’ luck comes in and she gets to Paris and, eventually, to Dior — where she is practically turned away at the door by the haughty directress, Claudine Colbert (Isabelle Huppert). However, Mrs. Harris quickly incurs the sympathy of the workers, who respect her dignity. So, too, does the Marquis de Chassagne (Lambert Wilson), a widower who asks her to accompany him to the fashion show that is about to start.

The collection sequence, which surprisingly features models of color, is a highlight of “Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris,” as one dress after another is exquisite. Viewers will likely share the title character’s breathy excitement with each presentation. However, Mrs. Harris is blocked from buying the “frock” she wants by a ritzier patron, Madame Avallon (Guilaine Londez), who gets exclusivity. Moreover, Ada is further dejected by having to unexpectedly spend a week in Paris to attend fittings for the dress she settles for instead. At least the accountant at Dior, André Fauvel (Lucas Bravo) can provide a free place for her to stay. What is more, a gracious model, Natasha (Alba Baptista), who is the “face of Dior,” befriends her. 

Mrs. Harris Goes to ParisLesley Manville as Mrs. Harris and Lucas Bravo as André Fauvel in “Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris” (Focus Features)

“Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris” is full of little contrivances that benefit its heroine and give her the opportunity to return the kindness tenfold. She cleans the apartment where she stays and feeds André and Natasha “toad in the hole” while also doling out advice about life and work, while nudging them to give in to their mutual attraction. (They both would rather be reading Sartre than working for Dior, but they each acknowledge they need to make a living.) 

Mrs. Harris is also wined and dined by the Marquis, who plies her with champagne and caviar — it’s “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous”! Although one night of drinking and dancing causes her to oversleep and miss her fitting. Quel horror! Madame Colbert now has an excuse to refund Ada’s deposit and send her packing tout de suite sans haute couture. At least, Ada is given a chance to see the atelier before she leaves. “It’s heaven,” she declares, and a few scenes later, Mrs. Harris, a “capable seamstress,” is living the dream and sewing buttons alongside the other workers. What happens next is predictably satisfying, but Mrs. Harris also has a serious exchange with Madame Colbert, who wants to understand what this British cleaning lady is going to do with a Dior. 

The answer, as “Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris” indicates, is less about looking good (though that is a plus) than it is about feeling good, and Fabian’s feel-good film features little setbacks that only pave the way for greater jubilation. It is completely saccharine, like Rael Jones’ score, but resistance is futile watching Mrs. Harris teach others how to live their best lives. 


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In the title role, Lesley Manville exudes a down-to-earth, goodhearted quality, and comes off more martyr than saint. It is enjoyable to see Mrs. Harris’ transformation from put upon to empowered and Manville sells it because she is almost always dignified. An exchange she has with the Marquis that causes her to rethink their relationship is especially revealing. 

In support, Isabelle Huppert plays Madame Colbert with suitable snootiness, but save for a nice vulnerable moment or two, she is mostly one-dimensional — like most of the supporting characters, including the Marquis, André, and Natasha in Paris, as well as Vi and Archie in Britain.

“Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris” offers no real surprises, just a series of mostly pleasant moments with a few unfortunate ones to make the triumphs sweeter. Fabian’s film is so benign and enjoyable, viewers may find themselves uttering one of its heroine’s oft-used refrains, “Oh, that’s lovely.” And for the romantics — not the cynics — in the audience, there is absolutely nothing wrong with that.

“Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris” is in theaters July 15. Watch a trailer via YouTube.

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