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Democrats are boosting extremists in GOP primaries to get easier matchups — but it could backfire

In several midterm primary races across the United States, political organizations affiliated with the Democratic Party—including Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s House Majority PAC—are spending big to boost far-right Republican candidates in the hopes of securing more favorable general election matchups for Democrats.

What could possibly go wrong?

Quite a lot, according to progressive critics who have warned in recent days that the strategy has a strong chance of backfiring horribly, potentially ushering into office extremist candidates who pose an even greater threat to democracy than the run-of-the-mill establishment Republican.

“On the one hand, they’re trying to motivate voters to come to the polls by raising legitimate concerns about what will happen to the country if Republicans retake power,” The New Republic‘s Alex Shephard noted in a column on Tuesday. “On the other, they’re working behind the scenes to elevate many of the most dangerous Republicans running for office right now. It’s untenable for Democrats to ally themselves with their own executioners.”

In Colorado’s newly created 8th Congressional District, the Pelosi-aligned House Majority PAC has spent tens of thousands of dollars on television and digital ads spotlighting the far-right record and policy positions of Weld County Commissioner Lori Saine, who is competing against three other Republicans in the June 28 primary for a spot in the U.S. House.

The Colorado Sun reports that while one of the Democratic-funded Saine ads is “framed as an attack on Saine, it also calls her a ‘conservative warrior’ and highlights her strident positions on abortion, immigration, and guns—stances that appeal to many Republicans.”

A new Democratic super PAC is also running ads characterizing Colorado state Rep. Ron Hanks—a far-right U.S. Senate candidate who attended the rally and march that preceded the January 6 Capitol attack—as “one of the most conservative members in the statehouse,” a portrayal that’s likely to bolster his status among many GOP primary voters.

According to one recent survey, just 21% of Republican voters believe President Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory was legitimate.

“The eleventh-dimensional chess-like thinking behind this spending is clear: The 2022 midterms will be tight, and boosting ultraconservatives more likely to alienate moderate voters might help Democrats in desperate need of a leg up,” Shephard wrote Tuesday. “And yet this elliptical strategy is also incredibly reckless given the increasingly authoritarian turn within the Republican Party.”

If extremist, election-denying Republicans win the races in which Democratic groups are intervening, added Shephard, “Democrats would have played a role—and perhaps a decisive one—in the ongoing MAGAfication of the Republican Party.”

As Audrey Fahlberg of The Dispatch reported last week, “Democrats are deploying similar tactics across the country and down the ballot.”

“Take Pennsylvania,” Fahlberg noted, “where Democratic gubernatorial candidate and state Attorney General Josh Shapiro spent $1.7 million on TV ads boosting the conservative credentials of gubernatorial candidate and state Sen. Doug Mastriano, a far-right candidate who bussed rally-goers to the Capitol on January 6, 2021 and who was subpoenaed by the House Select Committee investigating the events of that day.”

“That single ad buy,” according to Fahlberg, “amounted to more money than Mastriano’s campaign spent during the entire primary.”

Mastriano, who was endorsed by former President Donald Trump, won the key battleground state’s Republican gubernatorial primary last month.

The Democratic Governors Association (DGA), which is running ads characterizing far-right Illinois gubernatorial hopeful Darren Bailey as a candidate who “embraces the Trump agenda,” insisted in a statement to The Dispatch that its efforts are simply educational, an attempt to make voters aware of the danger posed by GOP extremists.

“These elected and formerly elected officials want to deceptively retell their histories,” said DGA spokesperson David Turner, “and we’re just filling in the gaps.”

While the approach of assisting supposedly unpalatable candidates in primaries has been touted as a success in the recent past, it infamously crashed and burned in 2016 when Hillary Clinton lost the presidential election after her campaign worked to elevate Trump in the GOP nominating contest.

Concerns that the Democratic groups’ strategy could backfire like it did in 2016 aren’t just being voiced by progressive commentators and watchdogs; some establishment Democrats are also raising alarm, particularly as Republicans appear well-positioned to seize control of at least one chamber of Congress in November.

“I think it’s very dangerous and potentially very risky to elevate people who are hostile to democracy,” Democratic strategist Howard Wolfson told the Washington Post earlier this month. “Either this is a crisis moment or it isn’t. And if it is—which it is—you don’t play cute in a crisis.”

Shaye Moss’ ordeal and the Texas GOP platform: Trump’s Big Lie was always about white supremacy

Wandrea “Shaye” Moss’s abuse at the hands of Donald Trump is terrifying for the same reason serial killers are terrifying: Because the victims feel so randomly selected. Ted Bundy roamed beaches and college campuses looking for any long-haired white girl he could torture and kill. Moss did not speculate, during her short but powerful testimony before the January 6 committee on Tuesday, on why Trump and his odious sidekick Rudy Giuliani picked her and her mother, Ruby Freeman, for a vicious smear campaign falsely accusing them of injecting fake ballots into counting machines. She didn’t need to speculate, because it was painfully obvious. Trump and Giuliani wanted their victims to be Black women because their conspiracy theories about a “stolen” election are all about tickling the lizard brain racism of the GOP base. 

Moss and Freeman were singled out for the same reason that Fox News runs endlessly ridiculous segments villainizing Vice President Kamala Harris for every sneeze or smile. She was targeted for the same reason Republicans turned the confirmation hearings for Ketanji Brown Jackson into a circus of white resentment. Trump zeroed in on these two women for the same reason he spent years hyping the ridiculous conspiracy that President Barack Obama was not a natural born citizen of the United States. It’s all a head nod in the direction of the unspeakable but clearly animating belief of MAGA nation: People of color are not legitimate American citizens. 

RELATED: The moral case against the Big Lie: Trump’s targeting of Americans laid out in Jan. 6 hearing

The conspiracy theory about Moss and Freeman was, in both its intent and effect, a hate crime.

With all the right-wing noise about Dominion voting machines and “dead people voting,” it can be easy for some to lose sight of how the Big Lie was, from its inception, a white supremacist conspiracy theory. The Big Lie channels the white conservative belief that only they are real Americans and gives them the pretext to discredit voters of racially diverse cities like Philadelphia and Detroit as “frauds.” There were endless numbers of photos and videos of election workers counting ballots that Trump and Giuliani could pretend to see illicit activity in. They clearly wanted Black women to be the face of their accusations about “fraud” voters, and unfortunately for Moss and Freeman, they were the unlucky names pulled out of the red baseball cap. The conspiracy theory about Moss and Freeman was, in both its intent and effect, a hate crime. 

The background articles giving context to Moss’ testimony were a brutal reminder of what unsubtle and noxious racists both Trump and Giuliani are. Falsely accusing Freeman of supposedly passing thumb drives to Moss (it was actually candy), Giuliani literally used the phrase “like they were vials of heroin or cocaine” during a hearing with Georgia lawmakers. He was leaving nothing to chance in trying to make this conspiracy theory go viral on the right. Trump referred to Freeman as a “hustler” in his infamous phone call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. The over-the-top racism worked, as the lie crashed through right-wing social media like a tsunami, resulting in the horrendous abuse and threats to her life that Moss recounted Tuesday. 


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It’s not even fair to describe the GOP mask as “slipping” off these days. It’s much more like they’re gleefully ripping it off.

Over the weekend, the Texas GOP held their convention and released a new party platform, which included a call to repeal the Voting Rights Act of 1965. It’s telling how straight-up fascist the overall document was that this item barely registered in mainstream media coverage of it, which was more focused on the declaration that “President Joseph Robinette Biden Jr. was not legitimately elected” and that homosexuality is an “abnormal lifestyle choice.” But it’s startling nonetheless. The Voting Rights Act was pivotal legislation that made voting a right in practice and not just theory for Black Americans. Openly demanding the repeal of the law is nothing less than publicly endorsing the Jim Crow laws that prevented over 90% of Black Americans in some states from voting prior to the law’s passing. 

The GOP base is moved by a visceral loathing of Black people, especially women, participating in the machinery of democracy as full and equal members of society

The call to repeal the Voting Rights Act isn’t the only direct shot at the right of people of color to vote in the platform, either. As Paul Waldman of the Washington Post pointed out on Monday, the platform also calls for a “state-level electoral college, eliminating one person-one vote” so that “the votes of white rural Republicans will count more” in statewide elections for races like governor, senator, and president. Even the white Southerners who passed Jim Crow laws didn’t think to do that. But, as Waldman observed, the goal here is gutting democracy so “the voters can’t stop you and all your darkest fantasies can be realized.”

RELATED: Lone Star hate: Right-wing activists in Texas drive a new wave of anti-LGBTQ bigotry

These attacks on voting rights are, of course, intimately tied up with the Big Lie.

The Big Lie is wielded as the main justification for the crackdown on voting, which is justified as an attempt to root out “fraud.” But the call to repeal the Voting Rights Act and to overweigh white rural voters in elections gives the game away. Republicans aren’t worried about dead people voting or double votes or fake votes. What angers them is not illegal voting at all. They’re mad at all the legal voting. They’re furious that people of color have the franchise, and they’re doing everything they can to reduce the power of those votes, if not eliminate those votes completely. 

Much of the mainstream media discussion about this white supremacist assault on voting rights reframes it as a partisan issue. Voters of color, especially Black voters, favor Democrats and so Republicans are targeting them for partisan reasons. The presumption is that the desire for partisan advantage is the motivator and the racist results are collateral damage. Hopefully, Moss’s testimony rattles that assumption.

Her ordeal is a chilling reminder of how much the Trumpist base is motivated by naked racism. Her image was put out there by Trump and his cronies because they knew how his supporters would react with nearly animal rage at the sight of two Black women in the banal process of counting ballots. He and Giuliani knew because they feel it themselves. The GOP base is moved by a visceral loathing of Black people, especially women, participating in the machinery of democracy as full and equal members of society. It’s not that partisanship leads to racism. It’s the other way around: White supremacy is why Trump and the Republicans are so hell bent on gutting democracy. 

Trump “annoyed” after DeSantis snubs his endorsement for re-election amid 2024 rumors: report

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis used former President Donald Trump’s endorsement to win his first race for governor in 2018 — but he won’t bother seeking it for his reelection campaign this year.

Politico reports that DeSantis has not asked for Trump’s endorsement and will not ask for it in the future.

This comes as speculation mounts that DeSantis will run for the White House in 2024, which would set up a possibility of the Florida governor and the former president squaring off in a Republican primary.

Politico’s sources say that this has annoyed Trump, who doesn’t want any Republican challenges to a 2024 bid.

“One Republican donor to DeSantis, who was allowed to speak anonymously to discuss the sensitive matter, said Trump has privately questioned DeSantis’ loyalty while also raising questions about whether DeSantis is personable enough to win over voters,” the publication writes.

A report from earlier this month claimed that Trump is planning to announce his 2024 bid at a location close to the Florida governor’s mansion as a way to “assert his dominance” over DeSantis.

DeSantis has emerged as Trump’s top potential competitor in a 2024 race, although other Republicans ranging from former Vice President Mike Pence and Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., have also hinted at presidential ambitions.

In New Jersey, Ford faces lawsuit over polluting tribal land

New Jersey is suing Ford Motor Company, one of the country’s largest automobile manufacturers, for allegedly dumping waste on the homelands of the Ramapough Lenape Nation, a Native American tribe recognized by the state. 

The lawsuit, filed Thursday in state court, accuses the company of disposing of thousands of tons of toxic paint sludge and other pollutants on the site of a former iron mine in northern New Jersey in the 1960s and 70s, then donating or selling the land without disclosing the contamination. As a result, tribal members say they have experienced cancer, birth defects, and other negative health effects. 

“I lost my grandmother to cancer,” Ramapough Lenape Nation member Angel Stefancik said at a press conference announcing the suit. “I’m 22 years old and I suffer with a list of chronic illnesses because of what has been done to me.” At the same time, Stefancik said, leaving is not an option. “I want to be there for the rest of my life … I was born there, and I’m gonna die there.” 

The lawsuit, though, doesn’t focus on these health issues specifically. Instead, it seeks damages for the destruction of natural resources, and accuses the company of “deliberate acts or omissions taken with a wanton and willful disregard for the welfare of the residents of New Jersey.” Contaminants such as lead, arsenic, benzene, and polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs — likely human carcinogens, according to the federal Environmental Protection Agency — have been found at the site. 

In a statement, Ford told Grist that it has not yet had time to review the lawsuit and fully respond to its claims. “Ford takes its environmental responsibility seriously and has shown that through our actions to address issues in Upper Ringwood,” the neighborhood where the dumping occured, the company said through a spokesperson. “We understand this has affected the community and have worked cooperatively with the Borough of Ringwood, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency while implementing the remediation plan stipulated by the EPA.” 

Ford opened an auto assembly plant in the nearby town of Mahwah in 1955, and the company purchased the 500-acre Ringwood Mine site 10 years later to use as a landfill. Over the next decade, according to the EPA, it dumped toxic waste into the forests and wetlands of the site, as well as abandoned mine shafts. The area has been the home of the Lenape people since long before European colonization, and parts of the site were used as affordable housing for the Ramapough people, who trace their ancestry to the Lenape, in the 1970s. Ringwood meets the criteria for an “overburdened community” under New Jersey’s 2020 Environmental Justice Law

“Today we hold Ford accountable for Natural Resource Damages — for knowingly polluting some of the State’s most precious environmental assets, then walking away without disclosing the toxic mess they had made or attempting to mitigate the harm,” New Jersey’s acting attorney general, Matthew Platkin, said in a press release

In 1983, the EPA designated Ringwood a Superfund site, and Ford conducted cleanups throughout the 1980s and 1990s. But further waste was discovered in the following years, and Ringwood was re-listed as a Superfund site in 2006, the only time the EPA has done so; Ford eventually agreed to pay the state $2.1 million to cover the costs of the cleanup. The new lawsuit builds upon this past recourse, seeking an as-of-yet-unspecified amount in damages for the destruction of natural resources, which would fund projects to further restore the contaminated land as much as possible. 

Ford has also faced a class-action lawsuit from around 600 Ramapough Lenape Nation members, who sued the company in 2006 for property damage and personal injury. The legal battle was the subject of an HBO documentary, “Mann v. Ford,” that followed the tribe’s lawsuit against the backdrop of the 2008 financial crisis and subsequent automotive industry downturn. Fearing that Ford might go bankrupt, the Ramapough accepted an $11 million settlement with the company, according to the documentary. But waste remains at the site, and cleanup is ongoing; the EPA doesn’t expect “final remedial action” to begin until 2024. 

The Ramapough Lenape Nation’s struggle against Ford is part of a global trend; around the world, Indigenous people suffer disproportionately from the impacts of pollution, according to a 2020 study from Helsinki University. Also on Thursday, the U.S. government announced it had reached a $32 million settlement with New Mexico over a 2015 spill that polluted rivers in the Navajo Nation with arsenic, lead, and other heavy metals. 

This is the best way to get rid of a coffee stain

Coffee stains are a fact of life if you weren’t born with the balance of a gymnast. Since I drink coffee almost every day and have no sense of balance to speak of, the number of times I’ve spilled coffee on myself, or something in my immediate environment, numbers in the thousands, if not more.

And since these coffee stains usually happen to me in the wild — on the train, in the middle of a restaurant meal, or en route to run errands — I usually don’t have the option of tossing something in the washing machine until the end of my day. Not to mention, if stain removal were just a matter of doing a load of laundry, none of us would need hacks on how to remove them.

According to Jolie Kerr, cleaning expert and advice columnist: “When a drink stain happens, whether it’s red wine, dark beer, coffee, colorful cocktails, or fruit juice, you always want to deal with the stain as it happens.” And that right there is the first line of defense: prompt action.

How to remove coffee stains

There are several ideas out there on what you should do immediately after you spill your coffee, but generally, here’s what you should do.

  1. Blot your stain with cold water and a damp towel. If the spill just happened, this might be enough to tide you over until you can launder your clothes.
  2. Otherwise, sprinkle baking soda, salt, baby powder, or liquid dish soap over the area and let it seep in.
  3. Gently rub it away with cold water or vinegar, and a towel or cloth, and then launder as soon as you can.

I have, through trial and error, arrived at what works best for me. For coffee stains, I find that the best thing to do — it’s also Kerr-recommended — is to first flush the stain with cold running water, as heat will set the stain into the fabric. I wash out as much of the stain as possible, and then lather up with liquid dish detergent. I rinse with white vinegar and water, and usually, at this point, the stain is gone. Per the University of Illinois, which has a whole section of its website dedicated to stain removal (I don’t know why, but we could probably use all of it), you can also soak your stained items for 15 minutes in a mixture of dish detergent, white vinegar, and water, but I find applying my cleaning “ingredients” one by one to be more effective.

If you’ve got a more serious coffee spill on your hands, your work isn’t done. Use a sponge to apply rubbing alcohol to the stain, working outward from the center. Then, soak the stain in at least a quart of water with a tablespoon of an enzyme cleaner, and then wash as you normally would.

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.

Pair of Georgia losses puts Trump’s political power in question

Two Trump-backed candidates lost their respective elections this week, marking significant defeats in Donald Trump’s broader effort to install MAGA-friendly surrogates in state governments as well as the U.S. House and Senate.

On Tuesday, Republican former state Rep. Vernon Jones lost out in a runoff to Republican trucking executive Mike Collins to represent Georgia’s 10th Congressional District, according to the Associated Press. Collins’ victory comes just a week after he earned a rare endorsement from Republican Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, who himself has been put on Trump’s hit list for failing to sufficiently promote the Big Lie and baseless claims of election fraud. 

Jones, a former Democrat, has been described as the “Black Donald Trump.” He has featured in numerous Trump-related events and supported the former president’s failed attempt to overturn the 2020 election. Back in 2020, Jones made headlines after speaking at a Trump rally in Macon, Georgia, where he crowd-surfed in the middle of a global pandemic.

RELATED: Trump’s “bloviating from Florida” backfires: Republicans on Trump’s “hitlist” easily win primaries  

Trump also suffered another loss in the Peach State’s 6th Congressional District, where Trump-backed lawyer Jake Evans was beat out in a GOP primary by emergency room physician Rich McCormick. McCormick handily won by a 20-point margin. Throughout the race, Evans and McCormick repeatedly casted doubt over the other’s right-wing bona fides. Trump gave Evans a $10,000 donation and supported Evans in a tele-rally on Monday


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Georgia’s 6th district, which flipped red after the latest round of redistricting, is currently represented by Democratic Rep. Lucy McBath, meaning that McCormick is likely to strip the incumbent of her seat in coming midterms, as Axios reports.

RELATED: Trump drains GOP of cash in Georgia – then suffers embarrassing defeat

Numerous commentators have suggested in recent weeks that Trump might be losing his grip on GOP voters. But with dozens of elections still on the docket, and some Trump-backed wins to boot, it may be too hard to tell. 

On Tuesday, Rep. Mo Brooks, R-Ala., was trounced by his Republican opponent, Katie Britt, in a recent recall election after Donald Trump rescinded his endorsement of Brooks back in March, according to the Associated Press. Brooks, who has spent over a decade in Congress, lost the former president’s support after the lawmaker suggested that the nation should move on from the 2020 election. Adding insult to injury, Trump formally backed Britt earlier this month, giving her campaign the jumpstart needed to soar in the polls.

Ivanka testified she didn’t buy dad’s lies — but said something very different in unreleased video

Former first daughter Ivanka Trump has sought to position herself as a voice of reason throughout the Trump years — most notably in her taped deposition played by the House Select Committee on January 6 saying that she agreed with former Attorney General William Barr’s debunking of the former president’s conspiracy theories.

But according to a report in The New York Times, she had a very different opinion on the matter when discussing it with a filmmaker.

“Ivanka Trump … told a documentary film crew in the middle of December 2020 that her father should ‘continue to fight until every legal remedy is exhausted’ because people were questioning ‘the sanctity of our elections,'” reported Maggie Haberman. “The video, which was played for The New York Times by someone with access to it, was part of a trove that the filmmaker Alex Holder turned over to the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the Capitol. He recorded several hours of interviews with Mr. Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, some of Mr. Trump’s adult children and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner.”

Holder is scheduled to give testimony to the committee in a public hearing on Thursday.

“The interview for the documentary was conducted on Dec. 10, 2020, the person with access to the video said. That was nine days after a public statement by Attorney General William P. Barr, who declared at the time that there was no widespread fraud impacting the election’s outcome, a rare public rebuke of Mr. Trump’s claims at the time,” said the report. “In her recorded interview with the House committee, Ms. Trump said that Mr. Barr’s comments ‘affected my perspective.'”

According to analysts, former President Donald Trump was likely incensed by his daughter’s seeming public turn against him during the hearings.

Lessons in speed-cleaning your kitchen, learned from a video set

In 2020, I went from writing cookbooks and articles about food to also making cooking videos. Ever since, I have hosted four cooking shows, making everything from Punjabi chole to Raj kachoris, chaats in waffle cones, even a laborious nalli nihari — all under the hawk eye of the camera.

Even as I was teaching viewers how to make these recipes, I was constantly picking up tips and tricks from the set. For instance, it blew me away to see food programmers use everything from glue in ice cream commercials to plastic ice cubes for chilled colas and motor oil on pancakes in place of real honey (oops — did I give it away?). But I also noted the little things that our kitchen stylists did to make the space look pretty between shots — giving the kitchen a facelift in a hurry, if you will. It continues to be endlessly fascinating to me to see a set kitchen go from looking like a hurricane had blown through one minute to being completely calm and clean the next.

Here then are nine practical tricks to use in your kitchen when you want to spruce it up in a hurry (like that surprise visit from family).

Marie Kondo the clutter

Any room that needs an instant lift should start by getting rid of clutter. Clutter on the kitchen counter always makes it hard for me to enjoy the process of cooking — I work effortlessly when the space has only the equipment and ingredients needed for each shot. I’m not joking when I say: take your cues from Paris Hilton in “Cooking With Paris” because she cleans up after every single dish.

At home, one way to get rid of clutter in a hurry is to use the cabinet right underneath the sink (bye bye, unwashed dishes). At the studio, we use sturdy laundry baskets to stash excess, and wheel them back in we need things back.

Stash away supplies

No one needs to see your kitchen soap, detergent, stain remover, sink scrub, and cleaning gloves, so hide them underneath the sink inside a cabinet, in a tidy basket lined with a kitchen cloth — you know, in case someone chances upon them. Put things like pantry items and other boxes and bags away in their rightful homes. Dishes left for drying should also be wiped and put away. We use everything from our empty dishwasher, to our oven, even our refrigerator for this! I am pretty convinced this is heavily inspired by Carrie Bradshaw using her oven for sweater storage in “Sex And The City.”

It’s nearly impossible to clean a messy space without feeling really overwhelmed. So once you’ve decluttered and stashed things away, it’ll be much easier to give your counters and floor a quick clean (and no — you cannot avoid doing this).

Just add greens

Whether at home or on set, potted plants can help camouflage everything from food stains to wall cracks. They are a great piece of decor, and according to our set stylist, “give an illusion of freshness — of food and flavor.” Some of my favorites are snake plants, succulents, English ivy, and of course, herbs. Simply transfer them from the balcony to nooks around your kitchen.

Make it smell good

The bridge between a kitchen that is not ready to welcome guests, and the one that has it all figured out is a great scent: citrus, floral, and spice notes are top choices. You can do this by using a diffuser or starting a simmer pot. Closed kitchen spaces, both studio and real ones, hold on to cooking smells. Once the cooking is done, start a simmer pot and keep it going on a slow flame until your last guest is in.

Keep a cookbook (or many) handy

I’ve never seen a better trick in the book (pun intended) than stacks and stacks of cookbooks. Pepper Teigen, author of “The Pepper Thai Cookbook” champions this one. Use cookbooks not only to cook from, but also to lend order to open shelves or hide grease stains on the kitchen counter or wall. All you have to do is stack them up. Our stylist says, “Besides, adding lots of cookbooks to your kitchen shelf will suggest that you’re an informed host or cook.”

Use the cotton call trick

When we’re cooking big meals, kitchen waste is unavoidable. On set, since so many things are being made simultaneously, there is always a looming concern about smells emanating from the garbage bin. The cleverest hack is to simply soak a cotton ball in your favorite essential oil, drop it in the bottom of your trash can under the liner, and voila! It will release its aroma each time you open the lid.

Leave no fingerprints

Since it is impossible to empty all cabinets and open shelves and give them a deep-clean minutes before your guests arrive, (or before we start filming), here’s what to do. Cheat-clean open shelves by spraying your favorite glass cleaner or multipurpose cleaner on old newspaper (or use mild soap and water and a soft cloth) and giving any visible objects a quick clean. If you have 30 seconds to spare, wipe any fingerprints off of stainless steel appliances, using white vinegar and a damp soft cloth. All of this will create an illusion of a sparkling clean kitchen.

Fix the accents of your kitchen

If you don’t have the time to polish the handles and various other metal accents in your kitchen, the best way to hide any rust, stain, or grease is to throw a couple of kitchen towels on your drawer and oven handles. “We pick bold prints and bright colors to distract the viewer from any problem areas,” a stylist once told me.

But ultimately . . . A well-worn kitchen is the best kind

With over four million subscribers on YouTube, chef Ranveer Brar knows a thing or two about appealing kitchen studios. Brar says that perfection is overrated and the best way to showcase your kitchen to a guest (or a viewer) is by embracing it with all its irregularities and messes. “Let your kitchen look like a frequently used space,” he says. He also says it’s important to highlight things like personal art and random but meaningful objects. “These symbolize experience and warmth.”

“I can see your screen”: Ron Johnson busted after saying he’s on the phone to avoid Jan. 6 questions

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., on Tuesday denied allegations that he attempted to replace the 2020 slate of presidential electors with pro-Trump partisans, saying that he had “no involvement” in the failed scheme to overturn the Donald Trump’s loss. 

The allegations first arose this week out of text messages, received by the January 6 committee, between Johnson aide Sean Riley and Pence’s legislative director, Chris Hodgson, according to Politico. Their never-before-seen exchange suggests that the Republican senator wanted an alternate cohort of electors to be passed along to Pence during the presidential certification ceremony on January 6. 

RELATED: Ron Johnson “must resign”: Wisconsin senator implicated in fake elector scheme

Johnson “needs to hand something to VPOTUS please advise,” Riley wrote to Hodgson just ahead of the joint session. 

“What is it?” Hodgson asked.

Riley responded: “Alternate slates of electors for MI and WI because [the Archivist of the United States] didn’t receive them.”

“Do not give that to him,” Hodgson demanded. 


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But as Politico’s Kyle Cheney pointed out, the National Archives had already received the the necessary electoral votes from Michigan and Wisconsin by the time of Riley’s writing. It’s likely, Cheney said, that the Archives “did not consider the WI and MI electors to be legitimate and therefore did not transmit them to Pence in the first place.”

“So it appears RonJohn’s chief either misled Pence’s staff – or was misled himself – about whether the Archives’ received of the false elector certificates,” Cheney added.

On Tuesday, Riley and Hodgson’s exchange was presented by the select committee during its fourth official hearing around the Capitol riot. Johnson, for his part, has adamantly denied being involved in the communications, saying he had “no idea” who tried to enlist him in the illegal effort.  

“I was aware that we got this package and that somebody wanted us to deliver it so we reached out” to Pence’s office, he told CNN in an interview. “I had no involvement in an alternate slate of electors. I had no idea this’d even be delivered to us, got delivered staff to staff. My chief of staff did the right thing, contacted the Vice President’s staff. They said they didn’t want it so we didn’t deliver it.”

RELATED: Ron Johnson “must resign”: Wisconsin senator implicated in fake elector scheme

Alexa Henning, the senator’s spokesperson, echoed Johnson’s remarks. “The senator had no involvement in the creation of an alternate slate of electors and had no foreknowledge that it was going to be delivered to our office,” she tweeted. “This was a staff to staff exchange. His new Chief of Staff contacted the Vice President’s office.”

Johnson has not yet been called to provide testimony to the January 6 committee, which confirmed to CNN that no decision has been made on the matter. When approached by a reporter after the hearing, Johnson falsely claimed to be too busy on the phone.

Johnson is up for re-election in Wisconsin this fall. 

Judge rejects Fox bid to dismiss election lawsuit after calling out Rupert Murdoch’s role

According to Bloomberg News, Fox Corp. has once again lost a motion to dismiss the defamation suit levied against them by Dominion Voting Systems — and this time, the judge presiding over the case made it clear that the Murdoch family themselves may have been in on knowingly spreading the false attacks against them.

“Delaware Superior Court Judge Eric M. Davis on Tuesday denied Fox Corp.’s motion to dismiss the suit, saying Dominion Voting Systems had shown that the Murdochs may have been on notice that the conspiracy theory that rigged voting machines tilted the vote was false but let Fox News broadcast it anyway,” reported Erik Larson and Mike Leonard. “Dominion cited in its suit a report that Rupert Murdoch spoke with Trump a few days after the election ‘and informed him that he had lost,’ the judge noted.”

This is the latest of multiple efforts by Fox Corp. to have the suit dismissed; in December, Davis dismissed another such motion.

“Davis noted in his ruling that, according to Dominion’s suit, various news outlets reported that Rupert Murdoch spoke with Trump and other senior Republicans shortly after the election and urged them to drop their election-fraud narrative and concede defeat. The voting-technology firm was also able to point to a claim that Murdoch urged a Republican leader to ask other politicians in the party not to endorse Trump’s false theory about Dominion, the judge said,” said the report. “The ruling is the latest by a judge allowing defamation suits to proceed against conservative news outlets and Trump allies who allegedly repeated the false theory extensively on-air — a theory that ultimately helped trigger the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot.”

As the report notes, proving defamation against a media outlet requires an extremely high bar of evidence — the plaintiff must establish not only that the claims against them were false and injurious to their reputation, but that the defendant knew the information was false or else acted with a reckless disregard for what they knew or didn’t know to be true.

As the report notes, proving defamation against a media outlet requires an extremely high bar of evidence — the plaintiff must establish not only that the claims against them were false and injurious to their reputation, but that the defendant knew the information was false or else acted with a reckless disregard for what they knew or didn’t know to be true.

Beyond Jan. 6: Trump’s mob violence is now the standard GOP model

There is so much evidence emerging from the January 6th hearings that it’s sometimes hard to wrap your arms around what it all means. They are making a strong case that Donald Trump knew the election was legitimate yet spread the Big Lie that it was stolen anyway. He was also told that his scheme to have his vice president, Mike Pence, overturn the election was illegal and unconstitutional. The committee on Tuesday, during its fourth hearing, laid out how Trump was intimately involved in the pressure campaign to persuade Republican state officials to illegally change the legitimate results and “decertify” the will of the people. Future hearings will discuss the plot to corrupt the Department of Justice(DOJ) and incite the mob to intimidate the joint session of Congress and the vice president into overturning the election.

All roads lead to Trump and his henchmen. It’s clear that there were many enablers around him — as even those who resisted internally didn’t publicly sound the alarm.

Trump ordered the Republican National Committee to “help” with the “fake elector” scheme, knowing that there was no constitutionally valid alternative, which they were happy to do. Yet the so-called Team Normal surrounding Trump, who knew their leader was staging a coup, simply shrugged and backed away quietly. Lawyers in Trump’s orbit testified that they knew the “fake elector” scheme was illegal and unethical and simply washed their hands of it rather than step up to say something.


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Nonetheless, there were Republican officials who did their duty and Tuesday’s hearings featured three of them.

Arizona’s Speaker of the House Rusty Bowers movingly testified to the intense pressure brought to bear on him to use his office to help Trump overturn the election in his state. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger talked about that famous phone call in which Trump asked him to “find” just enough votes for him to win and Gabriel Sterling, the Chief Operating Officer of Raffensperger’s office, spoke at length about how the accusations of fraud were disproved over and over again. Unlike most of the people around Trump (and many in the states), these were people who took their oaths of office seriously and refused to do Donald Trump’s bidding. Their testimony in that regard was very compelling. 

RELATED: Trump’s unrelenting attacks against dissident Republicans continue with Rusty Bowers

Elected officials were harassed for failing to follow Trump’s orders to make him the winner of the 2020 election regardless of the legitimate election results.

Hovering over all these hearings, however, is the ongoing threat of political violence and that narrative is unfolding right along with the narrative of the coup plot itself. The violence was unleashed long before Jan. 6th and looking back it seems inevitable that it was leading to an insurrection. Tuesday’s hearing illustrated how that was felt by the individuals on the receiving end of those threats. Various officials relayed their experiences with threats and harassment at their homes and on their jobs, some of which is ongoing. Bowers’s gravely ill daughter and neighbors, for instance, were threatened and he still has video panel trucks running by his house and in his neighborhood calling him a pedophile and pervert. Raffensperger’s wife got what he called “sexualized” threats and Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson was intimidated at her home. These stories can be repeated all over the country as elected officials were harassed for failing to follow Trump’s orders to make him the winner of the 2020 election regardless of the legitimate election results.

But that was nothing compared to the horrors inflicted on innocent election workers who were targeted for allegedly cheating on behalf of Joe Biden. None suffered more than Fulton County election worker Shaye Moss and her mother Ruby Freeman, both of whom gave testimony to the committee.

In his famous phone call to Raffensperger, Donald Trump called Freeman a “professional vote scammer and hustler.” His lawyer Rudy Giuliani told a Georgia legislative hearing that the two women were committing voter fraud, “surreptitiously passing around USB ports as if they are vials of heroin or cocaine.” It turned out that the “USB ports” (the supposed tech expert meant USB drive) was actually a mint that Freeman passed to her daughter. This disgusting slander was all over right-wing media:

RELATED: The moral case against the Big Lie: Trump’s targeting of Americans laid out in Jan. 6 hearing

And where did that come from? It started in the far corners of the right-wing fever swamp and ended up on Fox News and in Donald Trump’s mouth.

Moss described how her life was turned upside down by what Trump and his followers did to them. Angry Trumpers tried to push through her grandmother’s front door saying they were there to make a citizen’s arrest. The FBI told Freeman she needed to leave her home because her life was in danger. Both of them are afraid to use their names in public and Moss has quit her job as an election worker along with everyone she worked with on the 2020 election. These women were hounded, harassed and threatened all because Donald Trump’s ego wouldn’t let him admit he lost the election and many of his followers have lost all common sense and common decency.

The violence of January 6th had been a long time coming, even before the election.

We saw state houses taken over by armed militia “protesting” mask mandates. Public health officials were threatened at their homes. School board members were plagued with taunts of “we know how to find you” at public meetings. Many of these “protesters” are armed.

The RNC even called January 6th “legitimate political discourse.” The threat of political violence is now an everyday feature of right-wing political activism.

The threat of political violence is now an everyday feature of right-wing political activism.

Trump didn’t create this phenomenon. He’s just the first president to openly endorse it and coerce the GOP establishment to fully embrace it. The violent rhetoric of the right-wing media was way ahead of him. Recall original gangster Rush Limbaugh who said decades ago now, “I tell people don’t kill all the liberals. Leave enough so we can have two on every campus — living fossils…. ” Or consider Ann Coulter when asked what was her biggest ethical dilemma said, “There was one time I had a shot at Clinton. I thought ‘Ann, that’s not going to help your career.'”

Violent rhetoric has been the coin of the realm in right-wing media since Trump was a Democrat. But it’s gone into overdrive since he came on the scene and his Big Lie and coup attempt were destined to end up with people getting hurt and killed.

We don’t yet know what the committee has uncovered about Trump’s knowledge of the various violent plots that were cooked up around January 6th. It’s possible he knew nothing of them. But that doesn’t absolve him of responsibility for the atmosphere he amplified during his time in office. He not only publicly modeled the bullying and authoritarian style of the mob boss, but he also encouraged his followers to use threats and intimidation to force political acquiescence over democratic means. Of course, they would resort to violence. That’s the whole point.  

Uvalde teacher’s police officer husband tried to save her. Other cops detained him and took his gun

A Uvalde police officer married to a teacher killed in last month’s shooting at Robb Elementary School tried to save her but was detained by authorities, Texas Department of Public Safety Director Col. Steven McCraw testified on Tuesday.

Ruben Ruiz, an officer for the Uvalde school district, arrived on the scene after the gunman entered the school and opened fire. His wife, teacher Eva Mireles, called him and said “she had been shot and was dying,” McCraw said during a Texas Senate hearing.

“As he tried to move forward into the hallway, he was detained and they took his gun away from him and escorted him off the scene,” McCraw said.

He did not say who specifically detained the officer. Ruiz, a 16-year veteran, had posted photos on Facebook of him conducting an active-shooter drill on Facebook weeks before the shooting. Numerous parents previously reported that they were detained and some even tackled, Tasered, or pepper-sprayed by authorities while trying to enter the school as officers waited 77 minutes before confronting the 18-year-old gunman armed with an AR-15-style rifle.

RELATED: Texas cops’ claims unravel: Police didn’t “engage” Uvalde shooter — but they cuffed scared parents

McCraw on Tuesday called the police response an “abject failure,” faulting Uvalde School District Police Chief Pete Arredondo for placing “the lives of officers before the lives of children.” He said that “one of the biggest problems” was “not only the lack of leadership, but also the misinformation that’s being provided.”

McCraw said that officers arrived on the scene within three minutes.

“What officers were being told was, ‘The subject is contained, the chief is in the classroom or the office, negotiating or talking to the subject. So everyone is treating it, that comes in afterwards, you’re in the hallway and you’re looking at it, and you’re being told this, there’s no reason to discount that,” he said. “Now, certainly if you heard, ‘Well, wait a minute, we’re getting 911 calls from children in the classroom.’ And we didn’t know the timeline.”

McCraw disputed initial reports about the shooting, testifying that officers with rifles arrived on the scene within minutes and could not have been locked out of the classroom because the door did not lock from inside. He faulted Arredondo but acknowledged that all law enforcement agencies on the scene ultimately failed under his direction.

“I don’t mean to be hypercritical of the on-scene commander,” McCraw said. “But those are the facts … this set our profession back a decade.”


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McCraw’s testimony came after weeks of shifting timelines and details about how the shooting unfolded. But Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin held a press conference on Tuesday faulting McCraw for the confusion and falsehoods around the shooting.

“I’m gonna be throwing people under the bus tonight in a speech because for too long, we’ve been told we can’t talk, we can’t answer, and we can’t say anything. Today that’s over with,” he said, accusing McCraw of repeatedly pushing false accounts of the shooting.

“Col. McCraw has continued to, whether you want to call it a lie, leak, mislead or misstate information in order to distance his own troopers and Rangers from the response,” he said. “Every briefing he leaves out the number of his own officers and Rangers that were on the scene that day.”

Officers from at least eight law enforcement agencies were in the hallway outside the classroom during the shooting, the mayor said.

“Col. McCraw has an agenda and has not to present a full report and to give factual answers to the families of this community,” McLaughlin added. “The petty infighting to make headlines and politically motivated scapegoating is not helping anyone. It is dividing a community and further frustrating grieving families.”

Read more:

Sobering lessons in untying the knot of a homeless crisis

Michelle Farris never expected to become homeless, but here she was, sifting through garbage and towering piles of debris accumulated along a roadway on the outskirts of Northeast Portland. Farris, 51, has spent much of her adult life in Oregon, and has vivid memories of this area alongside the lumbering Columbia River when it was pristine, a place for quiet walks.

Now for miles in both directions, the roadside was lined with worn RVs and rusted boats doubling as shelter. And spilling out from those RVs, the trash and castoffs from this makeshift neighborhood also stretched for miles, making for a chaos that unnerved her.

Broken chairs, busted-up car parts, empty booze bottles, soiled blankets, discarded clothes, crumpled tarps. Every so often, it was more than she could bear, and she attacked the clutter around her own RV, trying furiously to organize the detritus into piles.

“Look at all this garbage out here — it used to be beautiful nature, but now it’s all polluted,” she said, as a stench of urine and burned rubber hung in the damp air. “The deer and river otters and beavers have to live with all this garbage.”

She paused a moment, glancing in the distance at a snow-capped Mount St. Helens. A line of RVs dotted the horizon.

Portland’s homeless problem now extends well beyond the downtown core, creating a crisis of conscience for this fiercely liberal city that for years has been among America’s most generous in investing in homeless support services. Tents and tarps increasingly crowd the sidewalks and parks of Portland’s leafy suburban neighborhoods. And the sewage and trash from unsanctioned RV encampments pollute the watersheds of the Willamette and Columbia rivers.

The RV encampments have emerged as havens of heroin and fentanyl use, a community of addiction from which it is difficult to break free, according to interviews with dozens of camp inhabitants. Even while reflecting on their ills, many of the squatters remarked on the surprising level of services available for people living homeless in Portland, from charity food deliveries and roving nurses to used-clothing drop-offs and portable bathrooms — even occasional free pump-outs for their RV restrooms, courtesy of the city.

Giant disposal containers for used syringes are strategically located in areas with high concentrations of homeless people. Red port-a-potties pepper retail corridors, as well as some tony family-oriented neighborhoods. In parts of the city, activists have nailed small wooden cupboards to street posts offering up sundries like socks, tampons, shampoo, and cans of tuna.

“Portland makes it really easy to be homeless,” said Cindy Stockton, a homeowner in the wooded St. Johns neighborhood in north Portland who has grown alarmed by the fallout. “There’s always somebody giving away free tents, sleeping bags, clothes, water, sandwiches, three meals a day — it’s all here.”

Portland, like Los Angeles, Sacramento, and much of the San Francisco Bay Area, has experienced a conspicuous rise in the number of people living in sordid sprawls of tents and RVs, even as these communities have poured millions of tax dollars — billions, collectively — into supportive services.

Portland offers a textbook example of the intensifying investment. In 2017, the year Mayor Ted Wheeler, a Democrat, took office, Portland spent roughly $27 million on homeless services. Under his leadership, funding has skyrocketed, with Wheeler this year pushing through a record $85 million for homeless housing and services in the 2022-23 fiscal year.

Voters in the broader region of Multnomah, Washington, and Clackamas counties in 2020 approved a tax measure to bolster funding for homelessness. The measure, which increases taxes for higher-income businesses and households, is expected to raise $2.5 billion by 2030.

But as debate roils about how best to spend the growing revenue, Portland also offers a sobering lesson in the hard knot of solving homelessness, once it hits a crisis level.

What Portland has not managed to do is fix the housing piece of the homeless equation. The city has about 1,500 shelter beds, not nearly enough to meet the need. It lacks ready access to the kind of subsidized permanent housing, buoyed by case managers, medical care, job placement, and addiction treatment, that has proven successful in cities such as Houston in moving people off the streets.

Nor has Portland come close to replenishing the stocks of affordable housing lost as its neighborhoods have gentrified and redeveloped.

Wheeler rejects claims that Portland has attracted homeless people to the region with its array of day-to-day services. But he acknowledged that the city does not have enough housing, detox facilities, or mental health care options to meet the need: “We are not appropriately scaled to the size and scope of the problem.”

“And, you know, is that our fault?” he said, calling for more state and federal investment. He pointed to “a foster care system that delivers people to the streets when they age out,” and a prison system that releases people without job training or connections to community services.

Meanwhile, the mission has grown more daunting. The 2019 homeless count in the Portland region, a one-night tally, found more than 4,000 people living in shelters, vehicles, or on the streets. This year, that number stands at roughly 6,000, according to the mayor’s office, a 50% surge that is, nonetheless, widely considered an undercount.

Making it more humane to live homeless in Portland, it turns out, has not moved people in large numbers off the streets. Nor has it kept those who have found housing from being replaced by people in yet more donated tents and more battered RVs.

South of the Columbia River in an industrial section of north Portland, not far from Delta Park’s bustling soccer and softball complex, another RV encampment lines a side street that juts off the main drag. Many of the camp’s inhabitants have parked here for years and are protective of their turf. Group leaders hold down the numbers — no more than 20 or so RVs. And they enforce tidiness rules, sometimes using physical force, so as not to draw undue attention from city code enforcement.

“We’ve maintained a symbiotic relationship with the businesses here,” said Jake Caldwell, 38, who lives in an RV with his girlfriend, Sarah Bennett. “We keep it clean and orderly, and they let us stay.”

Nearly all those interviewed in the encampments said they have noticed a sharp increase in the number of people living out of RVs in Portland, a trend playing out up and down the West Coast. Some of the newcomers lost their jobs in pandemic-related shutdowns and couldn’t keep up with rent or mortgage. Others, already living on the edge, described being kicked off couches by family or friends as covid made cramped living situations dangerous.

They’ve joined the ranks of the more entrenched homeless and people who can no longer afford to live here. Minimum-wage earners who grew up in the region only to be priced out of the housing market as wealthier people moved in. People who lost their financial footing because of a medical crisis. People struggling with untreated mental illness. People fresh out of prison. Street hustlers content to survive on the proceeds of petty crime.

And an overwhelming theme: People left numb and addled by a drug addiction. Some lost jobs and families while struggling with drug and alcohol use and ended up on the streets; others started using after landing on the streets.

“It’s like a hamster wheel — once you get out here, it’s so hard to get out,” said Bennett, 30, a heroin addict. “My legs are so swollen from shooting heroin into the same place for so long, I’m worried I have a blood clot.

“I feel like I’m wasting my life away.”

Most of the RVers interviewed in these north Portland encampments openly discussed their addictions. But they routinely cited a lack of affordable housing as a key factor in their predicament, and blamed homelessness for exacerbating their mental and physical ailments.

“You get severe depression and PTSD from being out here,” Bennett said.

Still, she and others consider themselves lucky to have scored an RV, which even broken down can cost a few thousand dollars. One camp dweller said he bought his using unemployment funds after losing his job in the pandemic. Caldwell and Bennett, who both use and deal heroin, said they purchased theirs with help from drug money. Some RVs are stolen; others were donated or simply taken over after being abandoned.

The benefits, RVers said, are innumerable compared with tent-living: Portland weather is notoriously soggy, and RVs offer more reliable shelter. They have doors that lock instead of zip, so you’re not ripped off as often. Women feel less vulnerable. It’s easier to organize possessions.

They also spoke of downsides. With the exception of the “high rollers” who can spare a few hundred for a portable generator, most of the RVers have no electricity. Nor hookups for the septic systems. The city comes by on occasion to pump out the waste, but more often it’s illegally dumped into rivers and streets. Most of the RVs are no longer drivable; occupants have them hauled from site to site. Bennett was among dozens of people who complained about the rats that regularly chew up through the undercarriages.

“A lot of people out here are criminals, flat-out,” said James Carter, 60, who became homeless after losing his job as an automotive refinish technician early in the pandemic and now lives out of a cargo van. “Stolen cars get dropped on this road constantly. There have been dead bodies.”

Carter, too, uses heroin. He and others said they support their habit by using food stamp benefits to purchase palettes of bottled water, then empty the water and recycle the bottles for cash. Some said they steal electronics from big-box stores and resell the goods. They say the retailers generally don’t try to stop them, worried about the risk of violence to their employees.

“We call it getting well, because you feel like shit until you get high,” said Carter, describing a heroin habit that costs him about $40 per day. “There’s a lot of people who need help out here.”

Laurelhurst Park is a forested oasis in east Portland. Situated south of the Columbia River with the mighty Willamette to the west, it spans 32 acres and features a spring-fed duck pond, running trails, tennis courts, horseshoe pits, and a playground.

But the recreational areas are often littered with debris from a homeless encampment in the park that ballooned during the pandemic and has proven difficult to disband despite a series of law enforcement sweeps. Many homeowners in the surrounding neighborhood, a historical enclave of Craftsman and Colonial Revival-style homes, say they’ve been thrust into the role of vigilantes, leaning on the city to do something about the mess.

They feel Portland’s charm ebbing, as the lives of the unhoused collide with the lives of the housed.

“This used to be the most beautiful, amazing city — now people’s houses and cars are getting broken into, and you can call 911, but no one is going to come,” said TJ Browning, who chairs the public safety committee for the Laurelhurst Neighborhood Association.

“We’re a progressive city, I’m a progressive, but the worst part is I can feel the compassion leaving,” she said. “I recognize people are self-medicating mental illness with drugs, but so many people like me just don’t care anymore. We want the criminal element out, even if it means taking people to jail.”

It’s her job to collect neighborhood complaints, and there has been no shortage as the city has allowed the amorphous encampment to take root in the park and smaller offshoots to pop up on surrounding streets. Every so often, when the neighborhood has complained enough, authorities sweep the camps, only to see them take shape once more.

One night, a propane tank exploded, causing a fire. Children have picked up used needles. Some of the homeless campers rant at parkgoers and wade into traffic. She fields calls from neighbors concerned about nighttime prowlers.

“It’s just not safe anymore,” Browning said. “It’s hard to feel compassion for the person creating the problem, when the problem is a threat to you or your family.”

Like many residents interviewed, Browning is a longtime Democrat who has watched in dismay as her liberal values give way to frustration and resentment. And she understands the good intentions, spawned by liberal policies, that brought Portland to this tipping point.

They include a dedicated effort to decriminalize low-level drug possession; a shift toward “harm reduction” programs that offer addicts shelter and medical care without coercing abstinence; court rulings that make it difficult to clear homeless encampments if the city can’t offer beds to the people displaced.

The problem is not so much the policies, in theory, as it is how they play out in Portland’s broader reality. Drug users stay out of jail, but Oregon has too few drug treatment programs and no easy way to mandate participation. Advocates for the homeless ardently protest efforts to roust the encampments, arguing people have nowhere else to go.

And cuts to police services have left housed residents feeling they are on their own to deal with the repercussions.

In recent years, Portland has made major cuts to police funding, spurred in part by the movement to “de-fund police” and shift resources into economic development and social services. In 2020, the Portland Police Bureau took a funding cut of $26.9 million, and eliminated officer positions assigned to a gun violence reduction team, narcotics, organized crime, neighborhood safety, schools, and traffic patrol.

There are 774 sworn officers in Portland today, down from 934 in 2020.

“The Police Bureau is the smallest it has been in modern times, with fewer sworn members than any time in anyone’s memory,” said Sgt. Kevin Allen, a spokesperson for the bureau.

“It is not surprising that people believe they aren’t seeing as quick a response, or as many officers on patrol — because there aren’t as many. We have to prioritize what we can do based on our resources.”

With crime on the rise — property crimes are up 33% over last spring, and homicides last year eclipsed a three-decade record — Mayor Wheeler has restored some of the funding as part of a broader investment in public safety. But residents say they can’t rely on police to respond to emergency calls.

“If nobody is dying,” Browning said, “no police officer is going to show up.”

In some ways, Portland’s liberal constituency is at war with itself, the devout at odds with the disillusioned.

“We want a more holistic solution to support people out here, and for this neighborhood to be livable regardless if you are housed or unhoused,” said Matchu Williams, a volunteer with the Mt. Scott-Arleta Neighborhood Association.

Williams is helping lead efforts to bring in more public restrooms, free shower services at a community center, and “community care cabinets” with donated items like toothbrushes and canned vegetables. “This is just neighbors coming together buying what they can to put in here, and it’s usually stocked full,” he said. “It’s small, but meaningful.”

Williams gives voice to another core constituency in Portland who say the city has a responsibility to ease the burden of living homeless, while also investing more energy and resources to address the affordable housing shortage he sees as the genesis of the problem. On a brisk spring day, walking past the slick coffee shops and brew houses that have made Mt. Scott-Arleta a draw, he recounted the city’s difficult slog pushing through a 100-unit affordable housing complex in his neighborhood.

Portland residents are quick to approve funding for homeless services, he noted, but more resistant when it comes to supporting sites for low-income and homeless housing.

“There’s been a lot of frustration with how slow things are moving,” Williams said. “It’s important to understand how we got here, but also how we get out of it.”

Others, like Cindy Stockton, whose north Portland neighborhood sits at the confluence of the Willamette and Columbia rivers, wonder if there are lessons to be gleaned from more conservative cities. Phoenix, for example, takes a less accommodating approach to encampments. People living homeless are steered to a loosely designated encampment in the city center that is cordoned off by chain barriers and patrolled by police. Campers are supplied with food, water, sanitary facilities, and medical treatment. But the arrangement comes with the understanding that camping generally is tolerated only within those boundaries.

“I’m a lifelong Democrat, but I find myself wondering if we need to elect Republicans,” Stockton said. “We’ve been Democratic-led for so long in this state, and it’s not getting us anywhere.”

Browning, in Laurelhurst, described a similar transformation: “I look in the mirror, and I see a hippie — but a hippie wouldn’t be advocating for more police. I sometimes can’t believe I’m having these thoughts: ‘Why don’t these people get hauled to jail? Why can’t they get a job?’

“I wonder, what the hell happened to me?”

Buffeted by the political crosswinds of Portland’s homeless dilemma, Mayor Wheeler is looking to adjust course. Wheeler, who took office in 2017, was elected as part of a wave of progressive politicians seen as standard-bearers for a more socially conscious approach to social ills.

That has meant a focus on police reform, and a host of programs anchored in the concept that people living homeless, addicted, or with untreated mental illness are victims of a broken system. Rather than blaming them for their plight, the idea is to meet their immediate needs with sensitivity while working to get them services to address the issues that put them on the street.

In vogue is a push to create permanent housing options with wraparound services that can start before someone is stable or sober; frowned upon are the old-school emergency shelters with curfews and drug bans that many advocates denounce as warehousing.

But it takes time — and funding and zoning changes and neighborhood buy-in — to design and approve sites for the longer-term programs. Portland’s homeless population has outpaced the city’s efforts.

“Fentanyl is making the rounds, and we have a major meth and heroin problem,” Wheeler said. “There are a lot of people living on the edge, and more and more are living in their RVs. It’s a catastrophe for people living on the streets, and they are absolutely traumatized, but we also acknowledge that this creates a problem for the entire community — for public safety and the environment.”

In the short term, Wheeler said, Portland is trying to address the public health risks by installing public restrooms and hygiene stations and offering RV sewage services. And, he has riled some liberal allies by adopting the stance that the city has an obligation to clear out more encampments and move people into emergency shelters for their own health and safety.

Wheeler’s budget for the coming year, recently approved by the city council, calls for 10 new shelter programs offering nearly 600 beds. He wants to reserve 130 apartments for people living homeless and 200 motel rooms for older homeless people with chronic conditions, and to expand drug treatment options. Most controversial, the city would funnel $36 million over two years to help create eight “safe-rest villages,” a mix of tiny homes and RV parking with support services and space for up to 1,500 people.

The proposal is mired in controversy, with many neighborhood groups opposed. At the same time, Wheeler said, “I am hearing overwhelmingly from the people in this city that they do not want to simply criminalize homeless people and throw them in jail because they are homeless. I don’t think that’s a real solution.”

Larry Bixel, who lives in a 1987-issue Fleetwood Bounder near Delta Park, has his doubts about the city’s ability to put a dent in the homeless numbers, much as he’d like a real house. “I don’t recognize Portland anymore,” he said. “There’s tents all along the freeway. It’s the pills and drugs everywhere.”

A former car salesman, Bixel, 41, said his free fall into homelessness started after he got addicted to painkillers prescribed for a shoulder tear sustained while playing softball at Delta Park nearly 20 years ago. He progressed from Vicodin to OxyContin to heroin, a cheaper habit that his wife also took up. Life spiraled as he wrecked his car and racked up felony convictions. Over time, the couple lost their jobs, their home, and custody of their three young children.

“I went from painkillers after the accident to addiction taking over my life,” he said.

But Bixel hasn’t given up on himself. He thinks with the right opportunities — a job, a landlord willing to take a chance on him — he could find the motivation to get clean again.

“My wife and I, we’re looked at like scum now,” Bixel said. “But honestly, this is also one of the best things that has happened to me. I used to look down at homeless people for not having a job, and if somebody asked me for change, I’d say, ‘I worked hard for this.’

“Now, if someone asks me for a cigarette, I’ll give them two.”

Lone Star hate: Right-wing activists in Texas drive a new wave of anti-LGBTQ bigotry

Last weekend in Houston, Texas Republicans got a taste of just how far right their party has become. At the state’s biennial GOP convention, delegates officially declared Joe Biden an illegitimate president, proposed repealing the 1965 Voting Rights Act and voted for a platform calling on schools to teach that life begins at conception and to avoid all discussion of gender identity or sexuality. Additional planks attacked trans rights, cast gender-affirming medical care as actionable malpractice and declared homosexuality “an abnormal lifestyle choice.” When one delegate pushed back on that last point — saying, “We are the Republican Party of Texas, not the Westboro Baptist Church” — he was greeted with boos, laughter and another delegate’s tirade about “dildos and fisting.” 

But perhaps the most explosive takeaway from the convention was a series of heated confrontations (inevitably turned into viral videos) in which a group of far-right activists and social media personalities, led by self-described comedian Alex Stein, followed Rep. Dan Crenshaw, R-Texas, through the hallways of the convention hotel, chantingeyepatch McCain.” This ended in a violent scuffle between Stein and two Crenshaw staffers. Stein also targeted Sen. Ted Cruz in similar fashion, while a different protester shouted that Crenshaw should be hanged. After the hecklers were ejected from the convention, some were photographed standing amid a group of men wearing the black-and-gold shirts of the “Western Chauvinist” Proud Boys.

RELATED: Self-described “Christian fascist” movement is trying to sabotage LGBTQ Pride Month

Although Stein and his cadre’s complaints on Saturday were mainly focused on gun laws and Ukraine aid rather than queer rights, his presence at the convention followed the national notoriety he’d gained just two weeks before, when he filmed himself trying to force his way into a Dallas gay bar that was hosting a family-friendly drag show. 

As Salon reported at the time, the protest, organized by a right-wing nonprofit called Protect Texas Children, attracted a broader coalition of far-right activists, including members of the white nationalist America First/groyper movement, which hosted a conference last February praising Vladimir Putin, Hitler and the hanging of political enemies. Also involved were a Catholic youth organization that openly endorses theocratic fascism and a network of anti-LGBTQ activists who have gained substantial social media followings through stunt provocations in the broader Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW) area, often with the Proud Boys in tow. 

Kelly Neidert, the youthful founder of Protect Texas Children, was banned from Twitter for posting: “Let’s start rounding up people who participate in Pride events.”

At least two other people involved in the confrontation with Crenshaw hailed from that network: social media personality Cassady Campbell, a YouTube streamer with a following of 1.6 million people, and Alex Rosen, a self-styled “pedophile” hunter who makes videos of himself conducting vigilante sting operations against alleged child predators, sometimes enlisting actual minors as bait. Cheering them on from her official booth within the convention was Kelly Neidert, the founder of Protect Texas Children, who has appeared alongside Stein and Rosen in targeting LGBTQ people and events in the DFW Metroplex and who earned a permanent suspension from Twitter this weekend for tweeting, “Let’s start rounding up people who participate in Pride events.” 

The protest in Dallas earlier in June was just one among a wave of troubling attacks on LGBTQ people or events that have disrupted Pride Month. Many of these occurred after events or groups were targeted by high-profile right-wing social media accounts like Libs of TikTok, and many have involved far-right groups that in the past were mostly focused on white nationalist causes. 

A report from the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism last week tracked seven such events this month, finding “that anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric now serves as a central rallying issue for at least some white supremacists.” On June 11 alone, the ADL’s report noted three incidents. In San Lorenzo, California, a group of Proud Boys, one wearing a shirt that read “Kill your local pedophile,” stormed a Drag Queen Story Hour at a public library, calling the performer a “pedophile” and “that thing” and the parents in attendance “godless whores.” The same day in Jacksonville, members of the neo-Nazi organization NatSoc Florida protested outside a Hamburger Mary’s restaurant in swastika shirts, carrying signs that read “Child groomers work here” and “Judaism allows child rape.” (Before she was banned from Twitter, Neidert called on her followers to protest a Houston branch of Hamburger Mary’s this July.) 

Most notoriously, on that same day 31 members of the white nationalist hate group Patriot Front — the rebranded version of a group that helped lead the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia — were arrested in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, where they had arrived in a U-Haul truck with shields, metal poles, at least one smoke grenade and alleged plans to incite a riot at a local Pride event. Arrest records showed that eight of the men hailed from Texas, including seven from the greater DFW area, six of them from a tight cluster of suburbs north of Fort Worth, where the group’s founder attended high school several years ago. 

In one sense, says Peter Montgomery, a senior fellow at People for the American Way, the wave of local far-right activity is an indication that both the mainstream and extremist wings of the conservative movement have effectively trained their followers’ sights on local issues — “to start building influence for the long term by getting involved in local politics” and “take over the Republican Party from the ground up.” It’s the same strategy the Christian right followed in the 1990s, he noted, and it’s what Steve Bannon has told MAGA activists to do much more recently. 

“The Proud Boys are part of that,” Montgomery said. “And we know this year the right is making anti-LGBTQ local battles a huge part of their political strategy.” 

But as the convention in Houston made clear, that influence goes both ways. 

*  *  *

On Tuesday, June 7, for the first time in its history, the city council of Frisco, Texas, a suburban community of some 220,000 people due north of Dallas, issued a proclamation recognizing June as Pride Month. After an opening invocation by a local minister, praying for open hearts and minds, around two dozen members of the local LGBTQ community came on stage, one sparking tearful cheers by declaring, “Progress is here.” Across the majority of the auditorium, there was sustained applause, a standing ovation and the waving of rainbow flags. But from one corner, there were boos. 


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After the proclamation was read, most of the audience left, walking to a nearby burger joint for a planned reception hosted by the recently-formed group Pride Frisco. And so, when the meeting was opened for public comment, those who rose to respond to the proclamation came almost exclusively from the right, as one person after another got up to condemn the recognition of Pride Month and the LGBTQ community more broadly. 

One middle-aged woman called for the mayor to instead dedicate June to “traditional families with traditional Christian values.” An older man pushing a walker with a Confederate flag affixed to one side complained about rainbow merchandise being sold in Walmart. But the rest of the speakers were young adults who seemed to have arrived as a block, sitting in one corner of the audience, live-streaming themselves and mocking the proceedings. A number of men in the group had covered their faces with hats, sunglasses and red neck gaiters bearing the buck-toothed grin of a cartoon beaver — the mascot of rest stop franchise Buc-ee’s — which has become part of the unofficial uniform of local Proud Boys. 

Steph Gardella, a local candidate for justice of the peace, was seated in front of the group with her husband. She says she heard them call the LGBTQ community “disgusting” “pedophiles” and suggest that parents who brought their children to the event should be taken outside and beaten up. 

“It got so uncomfortable and aggressive that my husband and the person in front of me went up to the police officers [in attendance] to explain there was going to be a problem,” said Gardella. The group seemed “very clear,” she said, “that their job was to show up at these events all over the area to cause problems.” Indeed, at least three people who rose to speak were recognizable from the protest outside the LGBTQ bar in downtown Dallas, Mr. Misster, earlier this month. 

One of those was the aforementioned Kelly Neidert, founder of Protect Texas Children and a recent graduate of the University of North Texas (UNT), where she became a ubiquitous anti-LGBTQ presence. Between this June’s protest at Mr. Misster and the Frisco city council meeting, she also showed up at a Denton church hosting a children’s Pride story hour, taking and posting photos without permission, and has called for additional protests since then, including one this Wednesday outside a medical center that treats trans patients in Dallas. At the Frisco meeting, Neidert said she was driven by concerns about children, saying that no matter how anodyne the proclamation was, “Pride Month is inherently sexual” and kids “have no business being around it.” Rather than celebrating the LGBTQ community, she said, the council should get LGBTQ people “mental help.” 

Kevin Whitt, a self-described former “transsexual and drag queen,” filmed himself on Jan. 6, 2021 — not inside the Capitol, but yelling abuse at diners and staff in Comet Ping Pong, the “Pizzagate” restaurant.

Another speaker was Kevin Whitt, a self-described former “transsexual and drag queen” who has become a fixture at anti-LGBTQ events in the DFW area, including a May anti-trans event at UNT that sparked violent confrontations between student protesters and Proud Boys. Until 2021, Whitt was also a field organizer for the Republican Party of Texas, although he lost that position after filming himself in Washington on Jan. 6, 2021. He told the Texas Tribune that he did not enter the Capitol that day. But he did film himself yelling at diners and staff in Comet Ping Pong, the pizzeria targeted in 2016 by believers in the Pizzagate conspiracy theory. (In a subsequent interview with the Dallas Observer, Whitt claimed the restaurant “put baby parts in their pizza sauce” and said he wanted to decipher what he described as “satanic and pedophilic” symbols in the artwork on its walls.) 

Andrew LaFuente, a leader with the far-right Catholic group New Columbia Movement — which led a Rosary protest outside Mr. Misster on June 4 — also spoke in Frisco, asking the council, “What does promoting sodomy and promoting an axe wound to your son’s genitals and grooming do to help our people here in Frisco?” Declaring that June wasn’t Pride Month but the observance of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, LaFuente began chanting “Christ Is King!” — a phrase that has become a rallying cry at America First/groyper events and was picked up by the right-wing protesters in Frisco, who kept chanting until a council member warned they’d be asked to leave. 

The last speaker was Cassady Campbell, the YouTuber who participated in heckling Dan Crenshaw last weekend. In Frisco, he launched into an angry, six-minute rant about the city celebrating “sodomites” and “sick predators” whose end goal was clearly to “normalize pedophilia.” Slamming his fist repeatedly on the podium, Campbell loudly declared that the Bible calls homosexuality an “abomination.” “It says abomination! Are you stupid, mayor?” he yelled. “Get it through your thick skull!” 

Meanwhile, at the nearby restaurant hosting the after-party for those celebrating the proclamation, several men wearing the same Buc-ee’s masks, one also clad in a military-style tactical vest, walked into the back rooms where people had gathered, glaring at them until other diners grew alarmed enough to call the police. The men left without incident, flashing the “OK” hand gesture that’s become associated with white supremacists. But as the reception wound down, organizers warned attendees to leave in pairs. 

“Bluster doesn’t bother me. People being incredibly mouthy and saying hateful things doesn’t bother me. But there was something about the energy of these guys that had the hackles on the back of my neck standing up,” said Gardella. “What I saw in Frisco made me scared to open my door at home.” 

*  *  *

While the men in Buc-ee’s masks in Frisco struck attendees as likely being Proud Boys, other events in the DFW area have left no doubt. As local progressive activists and UNT students have documented in numerous videos and photographs, anti-LGBTQ events and protests hosted by Neidert and her allies have drawn Proud Boys on multiple occasions. On June 12, Neidert, Whitt and local far-right media activist Tayler Hansen — who is best known for filming inside the Capitol on Jan. 6 when Ashli Babbitt was shot, but now specializes in surreptitious videos shot inside drag shows — showed up in Arlington, Texas, to protest an adults-only drag queen brunch. In videos later shared on Twitter, a line of masked Proud Boys arrived at the protest, shaking hands with Neidert and her group before blocking counter-protesters on the sidewalk and threatening one with “citizen’s arrest” for being “a pedophile.” (In 2020, the Tribune reported, Whitt defended the Proud Boys on social media as being “an ‘amazing’ group of men.”)

“These people are all connected, they all know each other, they coordinate with each other and show up to events as groups,” said Steven Monacelli, an investigative reporter in the DFW area who wrote about Neidert’s UNT antics for the Daily Beast this spring. As Monacelli and coauthor Jack Wheatley reported, Neidert hosted a Texas legislature candidate who is campaigning on banning gender-affirming care for minors after losing custody of his own trans child, and Neidert has received public offers of legal assistance from former Proud Boys lawyer Jason Lee Van Dyke, who now represents a Patriot Front member arrested in Idaho. 

“There’s a whole category of social media personality that has emerged across the country,” Monacelli said: online influencers who leverage local confrontations into viral content, that content into conservative stardom, and that stardom into institutional backing. “But in Dallas, we’ve got this critical mass of them.” 

“There’s a whole category of social media personality” who leverage local confrontations into viral content and right-wing stardom. “But in Dallas, we’ve got this critical mass of them.”

“They post all these events online and these people show up,” said Jess Ferricher, a member of the local LGBTQ community who was present at the city council meeting and after-party in Frisco earlier this month. After Frisco elected two new right-wing school board members this May, Ferricher noted, one of them was promptly invited onto Steve Bannon’s podcast War Room, where Bannon praised her as a “representative of something much, much larger.” “I suspected at the time,” Ferricher said, “and still do, that the national groups were testing areas like Frisco as a sort of barometer or focus group for talking points to see what is successful for the November midterms.” That’s part of what “has made the atmosphere feel ‘off’ here for a while,” she continued, noting that the DFW suburbs are “starting to feel unsafe” and her family is considering moving. 

After the revelation that seven of the Patriot Front members arrested in Idaho hailed from the greater DFW area, Dallas business owner Brandon Friedman, a former member of Barack Obama’s administration and a current member of Dallas’ police oversight board, posted a viral Twitter thread illustrating how an arc sweeping across the western and northern suburbs of the DFW Metroplex has become a hotbed of right-wing activity. To the west of Frisco is Southlake, which became a nationally-recognized center of anti-critical race theory activism last year, electing a new slate of right-wing school board members who had campaigned against a district diversity council they believed was spreading “Marxist” “leftist-indoctrination.” (Southlake subsequently made more headlines when a district official instructed teachers to offer “opposing” views of the Holocaust.) 

In nearby Colleyville, a Black principal who’d already been asked by district administrators to take down a Facebook photo of him kissing his white wife was later pushed to resign over allegations that he’d promoted CRT through a letter he wrote to the community after the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery. And in the same DFW suburb where several of the arrested Patriot Front members live, a local fundamentalist church preaches that “all homosexuals are pedophiles” who should be “shot in the back of the head.” 

The area has also become a hive of activity around book bans. State Rep. Matt Krause of Fort Worth made a list of 850 books he considers suspect — most written by women, LGBTQ people or people of color — and asked school districts across Texas to check for those titles and to identify any other books about sexuality or topics that might make students feel bad about their sex or race. (Krause was also the legislator who asked Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to determine whether gender-affirming medical treatment for trans youth should be considered child abuse, prompting Gov. Greg Abbott to issue an order this February calling on child welfare authorities to investigate parents who get their children such care.) 

To the east of Frisco, in McKinney, a local couple has sparked a months-long battle after calling for the district’s schools to remove nearly 300 books included on Krause’s list. In Denton County, home to UNT, state Rep. Jared Patterson has attacked book vendors that support the American Library Association’s position that minors have a right to privacy in their library records, and asked school districts to blacklist vendors who “supplied pornographic materials to schools.” Meanwhile in Granbury, southwest of Fort Worth and home to Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes, a local constable who urged other law enforcement officials to join the militia group recently launched a criminal investigation involving certain library books. 

Not least, the DFW suburbs — a region that has grown significantly in population and racial diversity over the last two decades, as a number of corporations have relocated to Dallas — are also overrepresented when it comes to residents charged in connection with the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. As the Washington Post reported soon after the insurrection, that fact seems tied to experts’ assessment that many Jan. 6 rioters were motivated by anxiety over changing demographics in their own communities — anxieties expressed in one local contest in Plano, where a conservative candidate vowed to “keep Plano suburban.” Frisco, by the way, is also home to real estate agent Jenna Ryan, who infamously chartered a private plane to Washington ahead of Jan. 6. 

In 2015, Northeastern University historian Edward Miller (most recently the author of the first biography of John Birch Society founder Robert Welch), wrote a book about the region in the 1950s and ’60s, “Nut Country: Right-Wing Dallas and the Birth of the Southern Strategy.” Miller’s title was borrowed from the assessment of the city made by John F. Kennedy on the eve of his assassination, while his subtitle summarizes his argument that Dallas Republicans in the 1950s pioneered the playbook of using racial tensions “to get white Democrats to vote for Republicans,” more than a decade before Richard Nixon deployed the strategy nationwide. In time, Miller says, other messages besides the bedrock promise of opposing civil rights were added to the strategy, tying anti-feminist and homophobic messaging to race-baiting in attempts to expand the Republican electorate. 

Today, says Friedman, conditions have changed: The city of Dallas is now strongly Democratic, “and Fort Worth just went blue for Biden in 2020.” So the most intense right-wing activity “has been pushed out into the northwestern suburbs.” As a veteran, he added, “I tend to think in military analogies. It’s like whatever was in Dallas 50, 60, 70 years ago has been pushed north and west. It almost looks like a front line in the culture war, where Blue Dallas is meeting rural Texas and that’s where all the conflict is.” 

*  *  *

It’s not just DFW, said Ricardo Martinez, CEO of Equality Texas, which in response to the escalation of threats to Pride events this year has sent safety kits to LGBTQ organizations across the state. “The fear-mongering about the rise of trans and LGB people has fueled bias and discrimination that has had serious consequences for a lot of people across Texas,” Martinez said. “But it’s also not surprising, given that last year there were 76 anti-trans bills filed and we spent the majority of the year debating the humanity of LGBTQ people.”

None of this, of course, is taking place in a vacuum. 

“There’s a straight line,” said Peter Montgomery, “between the sort of rhetoric coming out of the [Ron] DeSantis camp, when his press secretary smeared anybody who’s an advocate for LGBTQ equality as a ‘groomer'” and the pattern of intimidation and threats we have seen this June. 

“Texas is a bellwether for anti-LGBTQ and anti-trans legislation, and now we’ve seen it spread across the country.” Greg Abbott and his advisers have said “this is a topic they think they can win on.”

In Texas in 2021, said Shelly Skeen, a senior attorney at the LGBTQ legal advocacy firm Lambda Legal Dallas, state legislators proposed more anti-LGBTQ legislation in one year than any other state ever had, with more than half of those focused on restricting trans rights. “I think Texas is a bellwether for anti-LGBTQ and anti-trans legislation, and now we’ve seen it spread across the country in 2022,” said Skeen, noting that more than 325 pieces of anti-LGBTQ state legislation were introduced nationwide in just the first quarter of this year. 

“Gov. Abbott and his political people will admit to you that this is a topic they think they can win on,” Skeen added. Indeed, a senior campaign adviser to Abbott told reporters this year that he saw targeting trans youth and their families as a “75, 80% winner” for the governor’s reelection campaign. 

“It’s so important to see these not as isolated incidents, but as the inevitable result of bold lies and misinformation streaming constantly on networks like Fox News, alt-right news sites and on unchecked social media accounts dedicated to harassing and targeting LGBTQ people,” said Sarah Kate Ellis, president and CEO of the LGBTQ media organization GLAAD. “The anti-LGBTQ rhetoric we see during these incidents comes straight from lawmakers like DeSantis and Abbott and their co-conspirators on Fox News, who are leading the charge to misrepresent, demonize and target our community.” 

That atmosphere has led to an almost inevitable sense of oneupmanship: Fearful of being labeled RINOs, Republican politicians keep ramping up the eliminationist rhetoric. Consider South Carolina pastor and congressional candidate Mark Burns, who recently promised to revive the House Un-American Activities Committee to hold public hearings, and then public executions, of parents of trans children and LGBTQ-sympathetic teachers.

In a media environment where conservative Americans are “being told 24/7” that “LGBTQ people are dangerous ‘groomers’ harming kids,” added GLAAD rapid response manager Mary Emily O’Hara on Twitter, it shouldn’t be a surprise to see a corresponding rise in violence. Without excusing those who harass and threaten LGBTQ people, wrote O’Hara, “what’s clear to me is those people are just foot soldiers. The people who need to be held accountable most are the ones feeding them lies and misinformation.” 

At the same time, the influence seems to be running up the food chain as well: Mobilized local extremists are now helping shape Republican priorities at both the state and national level.

In the aftermath of the protest at the Mr. Misster drag show earlier this month, lawmakers in both Texas and Florida vowed to introduce legislation banning the presence of minors at drag events and, in Florida, terminating the parental rights of any adult who allows a child to attend. At the federal level, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia announced last week that she was introducing similar legislation, and dedicated an hour-long episode of her livestream show to clips of Pride events from around the country, declaring trans rights “a complete attack on God’s creation.” 

In another episode of “MTG Live” last week, Greene hosted DFW right-wing media activist Tayler Hansen for a nearly hour long interview, and last Friday, she followed in the footsteps of activists like Neidert or Libs of TikTok in posting details to her Facebook page of an upcoming Drag Queen Story Hour in her hometown of Rome, Georgia. “It is not a hate crime to protest and force these things and these people to stop targeting our children,” Greene urged her supporters. “It’s immoral and irresponsible not to.” 

At the Texas GOP convention, Log Cabin Republicans were barred from any official presence. Neidert got a booth to display LGBTQ books she hopes to ban.

At the Texas GOP convention over the weekend, while the Log Cabin Republicans were once again barred from any official presence, Neidert’s Protect Texas Children was granted a booth, where she displayed images of LGBTQ-friendly youth and children’s books she hopes to see banned. YouTube stuntman Alex Stein was photographed posing with former Texas gubernatorial candidate Don Huffines as well as state GOP chair Matt Rinaldi. 

Ultimately, suggested Martinez, positions like theirs are not substantively different from the Texas GOP’s declaration that LGBTQ people are “abnormal.” If Neidert’s views weren’t permissible in the Republican Party, Martinez said, “she wouldn’t have gotten that table.”

What it amounts to, says Steven Monacelli, is a “bi-directional outrage machine” that is neither top-down nor bottom-up, but a reflexive relationship between the right’s foot soldiers and its elite. There are still right-wing leaders and organizations laying out playbooks and talking points, he said, but also “a sort of Frankenstein’s monster situation” in which “elements of conservative politics that have been fostered and encouraged from the top down come roaring into life, and are out of their control. They’ve unleashed something that you can’t really rein back in, because of how much hatred is involved.” 

Some may say that the people who show up to harass Pride events, or even to GOP conventions, are activists who don’t represent the broader party. “But if they keep controlling the pipeline of candidates and policy planks and implementation,” said Monacelli, “I don’t know what the difference is.”

Read more from Kathryn Joyce on the rise of the far right:

The Four Horsemen of the 21st century: War, capitalism, fascism and mass death

It is hard to be sanguine about the future. The breakdown of the ecosystem is well documented. So is the refusal of the global ruling elite to pursue measures that might mitigate the devastation. We accelerate the extraction of fossil fuels, wallow in profligate consumption, including our consumption of livestock, and make new wars as if we are gripped by a Freudian death wish. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse — Conquest, War, Famine and Death — gallop into the 21st century.

Those who rule, servants of corporations and the global billionaire class, accompany the suicidal folly by cementing into place corporate tyranny. The plan is not to reform. It is to perpetuate the corporate pillage. This pillage, more and more onerous for the global population, necessitates a new totalitarianism, one where the billionaire class lives in opulence, workers are serfs, rights such as privacy and due process are abolished, Big Brother watches us all the time, war is the chief business of the state, dissent is criminalized and those displaced by conflicts and climate breakdown are barred entry into the climate fortresses in the global north. Portions of the human species, the most privileged, will, in theory, hold out a little longer before they succumb to the great die-off.

RELATED: Jesus, endless war and the irresistible rise of American fascism

The persecuted and the abandoned, now in the tens of millions, know the future. For them, the future has already arrived. Julian Assange, the most important publisher of our generation, whose extradition to the U.S. was approved last Friday by British Home Secretary Priti Patel, is an example of what will befall all publishers and journalists that expose the inner workings of power. His imprisonment for revealing the war crimes, mendacity, cynicism and corruption of the ruling class, including the Democratic Party, heralds a new era. Investigations into the centers of power, the life blood of journalism, will be a criminal offense.

It does not matter that Assange, who suffered a stroke and is in poor physical and psychological health, is not a U.S. citizen or that WikiLeaks is not a U.S.-based publication. It does not matter that all of Assange’s meetings with his attorneys were recorded by UC Global, the Spanish security firm at the Ecuadorian embassy where Assange lived for seven years, and turned over to the U.S., obliterating attorney-client privilege. The campaign against Assange, and I have sat in on hearings in London, is a Dickensian farce, the persecution of an innocent and heroic man, far more reminiscent of the Lubyanka than the best of British jurisprudence. He is being used to send a message: If you expose what we do we will destroy you.

Workers, whether in the vast sweatshops in China or the decayed ruins of the Rust Belt, struggle on subsistence wages without job protection or unions. They are cursed by trade deals, deindustrialization, austerity, rising interest rates and rising prices. They, too, know the future.

The decision to raise interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point, with new rate hikes on the way, will further depress wages, which have stagnated for decades, increase unemployment and personal debt and make food and other basic necessities more expensive. Raising interest rates usually induces a recession. But the oligarchs are more than willing to extract blood from the working class. Inflation reduces investment returns. It disrupts leveraged financial strategies.

Prices are not rising because of wages.

The Fed’s decision to raise interest rates will depress wages, increase unemployment and make basic necessities more expensive. The oligarchs are more than willing to extract blood from the working class.

 

 They are rising because of supply shortages and price-gouging by corporations and oil conglomerates. U.S. corporations posted their biggest profit growth in decades by raising prices during the pandemic. Corporate pretax profits rose last year by 25 percent to $2.81 trillion, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. That’s the largest annual increase since 1976, according to the Federal Reserve. When taxes are included, last year’s corporate profit rose to 37 percent, more than any other time since the Fed began tracking profits in 1948.

Antitrust laws and breaking up monopolies would ease the strain of inflation and lower prices. Rationing would break inflation. So would a wage-price freeze. Nationalization, reversing the capture of public utilities, the health care system, banking and other services by corporations, would also blunt price rises. But the billionaire class is not about to impose measures that diminish their profits. They will keep their monopolies. They will keep their grip on what were once public assets. The message from the billionaire class is this: The economy is run for our benefit, not yours.

Ukrainians, enduring a war of attrition with the infusion of tens of billions of dollars of weapons from the U.S. and Europe, know the future. War is the chief business of the state. It enriches the arms industry. It expands the military budget. The U.S. now sends $130 million a day in military aid and assistance to Ukraine, part of the $55 billion in aid promised by Washington.

The U.S., struggling with societal breakdown and an ailing economy, sees its military as the only mechanism left to destroy global competitors, especially Russia and China. Russia, hemmed in by an expanding NATO in Central and Eastern Europe, and China, harassed by a succession of carrier groups in the South China Sea, which Washington has called a “national interest,” have been united as U.S. adversaries. China sees the waterways of Asia and the Pacific as part of its sphere of influence, as Russia sees Ukraine and other neighboring states. The aggressive military posturing of the U.S. on the borders of China and Russia has provoked an unnecessary cold war, one many Washington policy makers nonchalantly expect may evolve into a hot war amongst nuclear armed nations that would potentially obliterate life on the planet.


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There is an intensifying scramble for control, with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and China’s building of air bases from Japan to Australia along the Asian littoral, giving it the ability to attack warships, including aircraft carriers, in the western Pacific. The refusal of the U.S. to accommodate itself to a multipolar world and to stop chasing the chimera of unrivaled global hegemony has seen Russia and China solidify an alliance that cold warriors worked hard to prevent. The hostilities, a self-fulfilling prophecy by U.S. warmongers, delight the Washington establishment whose goal is to perpetuate endless war.

You know you are in trouble when Henry Kissinger, who has called for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia and open negotiations with Moscow “in the next two months before it creates upheavals and tensions that will not be easily overcome,” is a voice of sanity.

Despotic governments need an enemy to justify the repression of dissidents, the reduction and cancellation of social programs and the iron control of information. Wars justify the unjustifiable — black sites, kidnapping, torture, targeted assassinations, censorship and arbitrary detention — off-the-book war crimes. War induces a state of perpetual paranoia and fear. It demands mass obedience.

You know you’re in trouble when Henry Kissinger is a voice of reason. As Orwell wrote, “The war is not meant to be won, it is meant to be continuous.”

 

“The war is not meant to be won, it is meant to be continuous,” George Orwell writes in “1984.” “Hierarchical society is only possible on the basis of poverty and ignorance. This new version is the past and no different past can ever have existed. In principle the war effort is always planned to keep society on the brink of starvation. The war is waged by the ruling group against its own subjects and its object is not the victory over either Eurasia or East Asia, but to keep the very structure of society intact.”

The message of endless war is this: If you defy the ruling class, the militarists and the government, you are a traitor.

The 140 million people across the globe suffering from acute hunger, a result of the pandemic, the climate crisis and the war in Ukraine, know the future, along with the families of the 15 million people who died from the pandemic, hundreds of thousands of whom with proper prevention and medical care could have been saved. The refugees fleeing failed states and climate disasters — there could be 1.2 billion climate refugees by 2050 — in the global south know the future. 

The message imparted to the poor, the vulnerable, the sick and the weak is this: Your lives and the lives of your children do not matter.

The oligarchs in the Democratic Party and the establishment wing of the Republican Party are aware they are in political trouble. Is it due to Russian meddling? Is it due to Donald Trump and his proto-fascist minions? Is it caused by journalists and publishers like Assange who give them a bad name? Is it a failure of messaging? Is it a lack of rigorous censorship of the far-right and leftist critics?

The Democratic Party, now united with the establishment Republican Party, is flailing around for a solution. It is bankrolling far-right candidates in the Republican primaries, a tactic that backfired on Hillary Clinton when her campaign worked during the primaries to promote Donald Trump as the Republican nominee. Retrograde Republicans, de facto members of the Democratic Party because they voted to impeach Trump, are being lionized as true patriots, as if they can lure people away from Trump and Trump-like clones. Robert Reich, along with other Democratic leaders, argues that Rep. Liz Cheney — who voted for Trump policies 93 percent of the time as a member of the House but now looks set to lose her bid for reelection in Wyoming — has “demonstrated more courage and integrity than any other politician in America” and might just be “the best president of the United States for the perilous time we’re entering.” Jonathan V. Last, in an article headlined “Mike Pence is an American Hero” in the Atlantic, writes that Pence “did more to protect democracy — both on January 6 and since — than any other person inside the Trump administration.”

Perhaps the expected Supreme Court ruling that will overturn Roe v. Wade will work in their favor. Perhaps the televised hearings on the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol, an extended campaign commercial, will convince voters to support them. Perhaps the promise of more stringent gun laws will excite the electorate.

What can we possibly expect from a political party that believed Michael Bloomberg would save them from Bernie Sanders?

What can we expect from a party leadership that believed Michael Bloomberg, who has switched allegiance between the Democratic and Republican parties several times, would save them from progressives such as Bernie Sanders? What can we expect from a party leadership that anointed Joe Biden, who spent his political career dispossessing working men and women, building the world’s largest prison system, militarizing police, destroying the welfare system and funding military fiascos in the Middle East, as president?

The Biden administration is defined by failed expectations, from its stymied Build Back Better Plan to its refusal to raise the minimum wage. It is running on fumes, using gimmicks, empty rhetoric, spectacle and fear to intimidate the electorate.

The descent is pathetic to watch, reminiscent of the moment Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu tried desperately to placate an unruly crowd from the Balcony of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Romania building by offering to raise pensions and family allowances by $2 a month. He and his wife were executed four days later. The discredited East German Communist Party, which like the Romanian revolution I also covered as a reporter, made similar empty gestures, promising to open its closed party headquarters to the public long after anyone cared.

The billionaire class, or at least many of them, would prefer to loot and pillage under the cover of the old political decorum and rhetoric. They like the fiction of paying homage to an emasculated democracy. It gives them the veneer of respectability.

But this is not to be. The rage of the betrayed is articulated by imbecilic demagogues vomited up from the social and political swamp. Corporations and the billionaire class will continue to exploit, but under a cruder and crueler authoritarianism. The social, political, economic and environmental breakdown will accelerate. Reality, increasingly unpalatable, will cease to exist in public discourse. It will be replaced by millenarian cults, such as the Christian fascists, and bizarre conspiracy theories, a retreat into magical thinking where evil is embodied in demonized individuals and groups that must be eradicated. Truth and lies will be indistinguishable. The vulnerable will be cast aside, blamed for their own misery, as well as ours. Those who resist will be criminals. Mass death will sweep across the planet. This is the world our children will inherit unless those who control us are wrenched from power.

Read more from Chris Hedges on war, peace and the future:

Ron Johnson “must resign”: Wisconsin senator implicated in fake elector scheme

Wisconsin Democrats on Tuesday led calls for Sen. Ron Johnson’s resignation after the House Jan. 6 committee revealed texts indicating that the Republican’s office wanted to hand-deliver certificates of fake electors to then-Vice President Mike Pence in service of Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

The bipartisan congressional panel probing the deadly 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol showed an exchange of text messages initiated by Johnson’s chief of staff Sean Riley to Pence legislative director Chris Hodgson, indicating that the Republican senator wanted to advance an “alternate slate of electors” for Wisconsin and Michigan, both of which Biden won.

RELATED: Ron Johnson blames Democrats’ “impeachment travesty” for Putin’s invasion of Ukraine

“Do not give that to him,” Hodgson texted back.

In response to the presentation during Tuesday’s hearing, Wisconsin state Rep. Francesca Hong, a Democrat, tweeted that “Sen. Ron Johnson should resign, effective immediately.”

While Johnson was not among the 147 congressional Republicans who voted to overturn President Biden’s Electoral College victory, he did host a December 2020 hearing at which supporters of Trump’s “Big Lie” that the election was stolen spent hours promoting conspiracy theories about the contest.

Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Democrat who is Wisconsin’s other U.S. senator, called Johnson’s action “direct support for Trump’s conspiracy to overturn the will of the people in Wisconsin.”


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Four Democratic candidates for Johnson’s Senate seat also called on him to resign.

“Ron Johnson actively tried to undermine this democracy. He literally tried to hand Mike Pence fake ballots,” Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes said in a statement. “Once again, Ron Johnson has proven he’s a danger to our country and our fundamental rights. I’m calling for him to resign immediately.”

State Treasurer Sarah Godlewski argued that “it is clear Ron Johnson is a threat to our democracy and is unfit to continue serving in the United States Senate.”

Former state lawmaker Tom Nelson called Johnson “a criminal and a traitor” who should “be prosecuted.”

“He must resign,” Nelson added.

Milwaukee Bucks executive Alex Lasry, also running in the primary to oust Johnson, tweeted that “Trump and his MAGA allies planned, promoted, and paid for a seditious conspiracy to overturn an election they lost. And Ron Johnson attempted to deliver it to D.C. on a silver platter.”

Responding to the congressional committee’s revelation, Johnson spokesperson Alexa Henning tweeted that “the senator had no involvement in the creation of an alternate slate of electors and had no foreknowledge that it was going to be delivered to our office.”

“This was a staff-to-staff exchange,” she added. “His new chief of staff contacted the vice president’s office,” which “said not to give it to him and we did not. There was no further action taken. End of story.”

Read more on Sen. Ron Johnson’s illustrious career:

Black pastor torches Christian leaders that became “whores” for Trump at Southern Baptist convention

A Southern Baptist minister recently accused his fellow pastors of becoming “whores” for Donald Trump — which elicited howls of protest from some of them.

Kevin Smith, pastor at Family Church in West Palm Beach and former executive director of the Baptist Convention of Maryland/Delaware, spoke the first day at the SBC General Convention, where he accused some ministers of “losing their minds” after Barack Obama was elected president in 2012 and then shamed themselves by supporting Trump, reported Protestia.

“I think some Southern Baptists lost their minds when a Black man was elected president — not all, but some,” Smith said. “I think some Southern Baptists were unloving to Black people beginning in 2012 with the killing of Trayvon Martin.”

“I don’t mean agree about politics or policy … I just mean giving a darn that somebody else is hurting who is supposed to be your brother or sister in Christ, and I think some Southern Baptists just bent over and became political whores with this whole Trump stuff,” Smith added.

Watch below or at this link.

Texas Republicans tried to insert support for Jan. 6 Capitol rioters into official party platform

Texas Republican Convention calls Biden win illegitimate and rebukes Cornyn over gun talks” was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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HOUSTON — Meeting at their first in-person convention since 2018, Texas Republicans on Saturday acted on a raft of resolutions and proposed platform changes to move their party even further to the right. They approved measures declaring that President Joe Biden “was not legitimately elected” and rebuking Sen. John Cornyn for taking part in bipartisan gun talks. They also voted on a platform that declares homosexuality “an abnormal lifestyle choice” and calls for Texas schoolchildren “to learn about the humanity of the preborn child.”

The actions capped a convention that highlighted how adamantly opposed the party’s most active and vocal members are to compromising with Democrats or moderating on social positions, even as the state has grown more diverse and Republicans’ margins in statewide elections have shrunk slightly in recent years.

Votes on the platform were collected at the end of the party’s three-day convention in which party activists moved to add multiple items to the official Texas GOP platform. As the convention closed, two separate sets of ballots — one allowing delegates to choose eight of 15 legislative priorities and another allowing delegates to vote on the 275 platform planks — were gathered. Those will now need to be tallied and certified in Austin, but it is rare for a plank to be rejected, according to party spokesperson James Wesolek.

The convention reinforced the extent to which former President Donald J. Trump’s unfounded claims of a stolen election continue to resound among the party faithful — even though his claims have repeatedly been debunked, including by many of his own former aides, and after a week of televised hearings about the Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

The denunciation of Cornyn represented a remarkable rebuke to a Republican who has served in the Senate since 2002. The hall at the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston filled with boos on Friday as he tried to explain the legislation, which would allow juvenile records to be incorporated into background checks for gun buyers younger than 21 and encourage “red flag” laws that would make it easier to remove guns from potentially dangerous people, along with more funding for school safety and mental health.

Meanwhile, the party platform vote on Saturday by roughly 5,100 convention delegates would argue that those under 21 are “most likely to need to defend themselves” and may need to quickly buy guns “in emergencies such as riots.” It also would say that red flag laws violate the due process rights of people who haven’t been convicted of a crime.

About 9,600 delegates and alternates were eligible to attend; organizers said turnout was a bit more than half that.

The new platform would call for:

  • Requiring Texas students “to learn about the humanity of the preborn child,” including teaching that life begins at fertilization and requiring students to listen to live ultrasounds of gestating fetuses.
  • Amending the Texas Constitution to remove the Legislature’s power “to regulate the wearing of arms, with a view to prevent crime.”
  • Treating homosexuality as “an abnormal lifestyle choice,” language that was not included in the 2018 or 2020 party platforms.
  • Deeming gender identity disorder “a genuine and extremely rare mental health condition,” requiring official documents to adhere to “biological gender,” and allowing civil penalties and monetary compensation to “de-transitioners” who have received gender-affirming surgery, which the platform calls a form of medical malpractice.
  • Changing the U.S. Constitution to cement the number of Supreme Court justices at nine and repeal the 16th Amendment of 1913, which created the federal income tax.
  • Ensuring “freedom to travel” by opposing Biden’s Clean Energy Plan and “California-style, anti-driver policies,” including efforts to turn traffic lanes over for use by pedestrians, cyclists and mass transit.
  • Declaring “all businesses and jobs as essential and a fundamental right,” a response to COVID-19 mandates by Texas cities that required customers to wear masks and limited business hours.
  • Abolishing the Federal Reserve, the nation’s central bank, and guaranteeing the right to use alternatives to cash, including cryptocurrencies.

Not every far-right proposal was advanced. The party chair, Matt Rinaldi, ruled that a motion to defend the due process rights of those who rioted at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and to “reject the narrative” that the riot was an insurrection was out of order and could not be voted on.

Taken together, the new provisions would represent a shift even further rightward for the Republican Party of Texas, once known as the party of Presidents George Bush and his son George W. Bush. Land Commissioner George P. Bush, a grandson and nephew of the two presidents, was defeated handily in May in his runoff race against Attorney General Ken Paxton, an arch-conservative who sued to challenge the 2020 election outcome and convinced voters that he was the truer Trump loyalist.

Party platforms are mission statements rather than legal doctrines and, in Texas, they have long reflected the opinions of the most activist wings of the parties. Republican elected officials are not bound to adhere to the platform, and party activists at times have expressed frustration that some parts of their platform and legislative priorities have not become law, despite complete Republican control of the state Legislature.

But the platforms are broad indicators of the sentiments of the most active Republican voters — those who dominate party primaries. Republicans have controlled every statewide elected office in Texas since 1999 and both houses of the Legislature since 2003, so the wishes of the party’s populist, pro-Trump base inevitably affect actions taken in Austin.

“The platform is largely symbolic but important as a measure of ideological drift,” said Brandon Rottinghaus, a political scientist at the University of Houston. “Party platforms are often used as a cudgel in party primaries. A more muscular ideological platform eventually leads to a more conservative legislature as challengers knock off more moderate members.”

The convention was noteworthy for the relatively low profile of top officeholders. Gov. Greg Abbott, who is seeking a third term in the November election, only appeared at a reception on Thursday on the sidelines of the convention. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who effectively controls the state Senate, addressed the convention, but House Speaker Dade Phelan only spoke at a luncheon, not to the main body of delegates.

Tensions within the party at times got personal. Video posted online showed far-right activists physically accosting U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, calling the conservative Republican “eye-patch McCain” over his criticism of Russia. The group included self-identified Proud Boys and Alex Stein, a social media activist from North Texas. A Navy SEAL veteran, Crenshaw lost his right eye to a bomb in Afghanistan.

“A more aggressive party platform sends a clear message to politicians about where the base is going,” Rottinghaus said. “Donald Trump radicalized the party and accelerated the demands from the base. There simply aren’t limits now on what the base might ask for.”

Mark P. Jones, a political scientist at Rice University in Houston, said the 2022 platform indicated how emboldened hard-right party activists now feel — a far cry from 2020. Significant gains by Texas Democrats in state House elections in 2018 raised the prospect of the Republican Party losing its dominant status in Texas, making it moderate its platform in 2020 to focus on bread-and-butter issues. Texas Republicans did well in the 2020 elections — even though Biden won 46.5% of the Texas vote, the highest proportion for a Democrat since 1976 — and this year, culture-war issues were once again at front and center.

Jones said that Republican redistricting has made incumbents safer and less inclined to appeal to moderates. Moreover, inflation, the risk of a recession, the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and growing acrimony over race, gender and sexuality make it seem increasingly likely that Democrats will lose the U.S. House in the November midterm elections.

“As a result, the 2022 GOP feels free to veer to the right to its heart’s content, confident that it won’t come back to haunt the party in November, except perhaps in a half dozen races,” Jones said. “And even the party’s pragmatic center right conservatives lack the ability to argue, as they did successfully in 2020, that an ultra conservative platform could cost the GOP its majority status in the Lone Star State. This year, even the absolute worst case scenario has the GOP winning statewide, increasing its number of U.S. House seats, boosting its Texas Senate majority by a seat, and maintaining the 83 seats it held in the 2021 Texas House.”

Before delegates voted on the platform, party activists delivered fiery speeches attacking Democrats.

“They want to destroy the racial progress we have made by saying that we are a racist nation,” said Robin Armstrong, a Black doctor in Texas City who treated COVID patients with unapproved drug therapies touted by Trump, including hydroxychloroquine. “The Democratic Party are now a party of chaos. They benefit from causing us to question the foundations that this country was built upon. The misery, the crime, the drug abuse, the high gas prices are all by design, so that the Democratic Party can permanently transform society. We Texans cannot and we will not allow this to happen.”

The Republican-dominated Legislature last year passed new voting restrictions that prompted Democratic lawmakers to flee to Washington to break quorum in an ultimately futile protest. However, Republican leaders said repeatedly on Saturday that it was the other side that was a threat to fair elections.

“The Democrats wants three things: Their goals are to steal elections, suppress Republican votes and federalize elections,” said Cindy Siegel, the chairperson of the Harris County GOP and a former mayor of Bellaire.

Immigration continued to be a major theme, with delegates lamenting Biden’s reversal of Trump-era border policies. U.S. Rep. Jodey Arrington, of Lubbock, described an “unprecedented, unmitigated, self-inflicted disaster that is creating the worst humanitarian and national security threat to the American people in the history of our southern border,” adding, “this is an invasion, folks.”

“President Biden has ceded control of our borders to paramilitary, narco-terrorist cartels,” Arrington told delegates.

The mood of this convention was not hopeful. The themes ran dark, and activists spoke in apocalyptic, even cataclysmic, terms about the state of the country.

“Everything is topsy-turvy. What’s right is wrong and what’s wrong is right,” said state Sen. Donna Campbell, an emergency room doctor in New Braunfels, reflecting a state of uncertainty that is shared by Americans of many political backgrounds, even if they don’t agree on the causes. “Our country is on a trajectory to self-destruct, unless we change the direction.”

Campbell and other activists frequently spoke of their Christian faith.

“I believe that in the sovereignty of God, you and I were purposely born into this moment, into this confusing time that we face,” Campbell said. “We’re meant to be alive, at this time, right now, and here in this state.”

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


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This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2022/06/18/republican-party-texas-convention-cornyn/.

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“Big Lie” vigilantes publish targets online — but Facebook and Twitter are asleep at the wheel

The dummied-up flyer bore the hallmarks of a real WANTED poster. A grainy photo of a woman outside an election office in the suburbs of Atlanta stamped with the word “WANTED.” An image of a sheriff’s badge and the phone number for the Gwinnett County Sheriff’s Office. The implication was clear: The woman was being sought by the local sheriff for voter fraud.

The flyer was fake, and though the sheriff’s office eventually called it out, the false poster went viral, amassing tens of thousands of shares, views and threatening comments on Facebook, Twitter and TikTok and raising fears that harm could come to the unidentified woman.

Stolen-election activists and supporters of former President Donald Trump have embraced a new tactic in their ongoing campaign to unearth supposed proof of fraud in the 2020 presidential race: chasing down a fictional breed of fraudster known as a “ballot mule” and using social media to do it.

Inspired by a conservative documentary film that has won praise from Trump and his allies — and debunking from critics including former Attorney General William Barr — self-styled citizen sleuths are posting and sharing photos of unnamed individuals and accusing them of election crimes. They are calling on their followers to help identify these “ballot mules,” who are accused of having violated laws against dropping off multiple absentee ballots during the 2020 election. A state lawmaker in Arizona has even encouraged people to act as “vigilantes” and catch future “mules.”

Promoting such false information violates the policies of Facebook, Twitter and TikTok. Facebook’s “Community Standards” says its policy is to remove content that incites harassment or violence or impersonates government officials. Twitter and TikTok have similar rules and guidelines for what can and can’t appear on their platforms.

ProPublica identified at least a dozen additional posts on Twitter, Facebook and TikTok that accuse unnamed individuals of being “ballot mules” and engaging in allegedly illegal activity. Some of these posts echo the “WANTED”-style language seen in the Gwinnett County meme, while others include similar calls to action to identify the individuals.

None of the posts reviewed by ProPublica include evidence that any of the people depicted in the posters engaged in illegal activity. Yet the social media companies have reacted slowly or not at all to such posts, some of which clearly violate their policies, experts say.

Disinformation researchers from the nonpartisan clean-government nonprofit Common Cause alerted Facebook and Twitter that the platforms were allowing users to post such incendiary claims in May. Not only did the claims lack evidence that crimes had been committed, but experts worry that poll workers, volunteers and regular voters could face unwarranted harassment or physical harm if they are wrongfully accused of illegal election activity.

So far, there is no sign that any of the people depicted have been identified or suffered any threats.

Emma Steiner, a disinformation analyst with Common Cause who sent warnings to the social-media companies, says the lack of action suggests that tech companies relaxed their efforts to police election-related threats ahead of the 2022 midterms.

“This is the new playbook, and I’m worried that platforms are not prepared to deal with this tactic that encourages dangerous behavior,” Steiner said.

Spokespeople for Facebook and TikTok said they would remove posts flagged by ProPublica for violating their respective community standards policies. A Twitter spokesperson did not comment.

Thirty-one states allow a third party to collect and return an absentee or mail-in ballot on behalf of another voter. These laws help voters who are disabled or infirm, live in spread-out rural areas or reside on tribal lands with limited access to polling places or ballot drop boxes. In states with a history of absentee voting, both Democratic and Republican operatives have engaged in organized ballot-collection drives.

Critics, labeling the practice “ballot harvesting,” have sought to restrict its use, warning about the potential for fraud. However, incidents of proven fraud related to ballot collection are extremely rare. A database maintained by the conservative Heritage Foundation identifies just 238 cases of “fraudulent use of absentee ballots” since 1988. One high-profile case of fraud involving absentee ballots occurred in a 2018 North Carolina congressional race. A Republican operative engaged in a ballot-tampering scheme involving hundreds of ballots. The state election board later threw out the election result and ordered a redo. It was likely the first federal election overturned due to fraud, according to historians and election-law experts.

The phrases “ballot mules” and “ballot trafficking” — with their intentional echoes of the language of drugs and cartels — started to gain traction online in 2021, according to Mike Caulfield, a misinformation researcher at the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public. An analysis by Caulfield and his colleagues found that prominent Republicans including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna Romney McDaniel invoked “ballot trafficking” last spring.

But it wasn’t until conservative provocateur Dinesh D’Souza and a discredited conservative group called True the Vote last fall began to tease findings that would later appear in D’Souza’s movie “2000 Mules” that uses of “ballot trafficking” and “ballot mules” shot up, according to Caulfield’s research.

The “2000 Mules” film claims that a network of thousands of people illegally stuffed ballot boxes in swing states to steal the presidency for Joe Biden. It draws heavily on the work of True the Vote, which purported to use surveillance footage and geolocation data to make its claims of illegal ballot activity.

Numerousfact-checks of the film have cast serious doubt over its central premise. In a deposition with the Jan. 6 select committee, Barr said he found the conclusions of “2000 Mules” far from convincing. “My opinion then and my opinion now,” he said, “is that the election was not stolen by fraud, and I haven’t seen anything since the election that changes my mind on that, including the ‘2000 Mules’ movie.”

D’Souza and True the Vote did not respond to requests for comment.

Despite its flimsy conclusions, “2000 Mules” found an enthusiastic audience in Trump and his supporters. In early May, Trump screened the film at his Mar-a-Lago private club. The film has since earned nearly $1.5 million at the box office, according to Box Office Mojo. In a recent 12-page letter responding to the public hearings organized by the Jan. 6 select committee, Trump cited “2000 Mules” nearly 20 times.

As the film’s dubious claims have spread online, stolen-election activists are creating and sharing online content purporting to reveal more “mules” and accusing those individuals of illegal behavior without actual evidence of wrongdoing.

The most striking example is the meme that depicts an older white woman leaving a ballot drop box in Georgia’s suburban Gwinnett County. The word “WANTED” appears above her head as does the image of a sheriff’s badge labeled “Gwinnett County” and the sheriff office’s phone number.

“Ballot mule,” the meme says. “If you can ID her, call Gwinnett Co. sheriff’s office.”

A spokeswoman for the Gwinnett County Sheriff’s Office says the meme is fake. The sheriff’s office hasn’t received calls purporting to identify the woman. The spokeswoman said that the office was investigating who created the meme.

ProPublica was unable to identify the woman in the “WANTED” meme. A spokesman for the Gwinnett County elections office confirmed that the name tag worn by the woman in the meme matched those worn by county election workers in 2020. He also verified that the drop box in the video was located outside of the county’s election headquarters.

The origins of the woman’s photo in the “WANTED” meme appear to point back to a Georgia businessman and self-described election-fraud investigator named David Cross.

For months Cross has posted short clips of surveillance footage showing people depositing ballots at drop boxes in Gwinnett County. Cross sometimes narrates these videos and makes unverified accusations of illegal ballot harvesting. In a clip that Cross posted online on May 3, an older white woman — the same woman in the “WANTED” meme — deposits multiple ballots into the drop box outside the headquarters for Gwinnett County’s elections office. In his narration, Cross accuses the woman of depositing as many as 35 ballots, though it’s not at all clear from the video exactly how many ballots the woman deposited. “Totally illegal,” he says in the video. (Cross did not respond to requests for comment.)

Georgia law prohibits many third parties from submitting a ballot that’s not their own. However, the law makes exceptions for caregivers for the elderly and the disabled, immediate family members, members of the same household, in-laws, nieces, nephews, grandchildren and more.

Cross, the Georgia activist, has filed complaints with the State Election Board and secretary of state’s office alleging illegal ballot deliveries and citing his surveillance footage clips. Last month, the State Election Board dismissed three complaints alleging “ballot harvesting” after an investigation by the secretary of state’s office found that the alleged “mules” were voters dropping off ballots for themselves and family members.

A spokesman for Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger told ProPublica that the office has a pending investigation into the woman in the “WANTED” meme. The spokesman, Walter Jones, stressed that no one should assume that an individual shown in a video delivering multiple ballots is automatically guilty of a crime, nor would the ballots in question be invalidated even if someone had violated the state’s ballot-collection law.

The video published by Cross of the woman at the Gwinnett County drop box spread rapidly online. Twitter users accused the woman of being one of the “2000 mules” and urged their followers to “MAKE HER FAMOUS!” — in other words, reveal her identity and share it widely.

One Twitter user shared the woman’s image with the “WANTED” text and the fake Gwinnett County sheriff’s badge. “Once we find out who paid these people the whole story will become clear,” the account wrote. That tweet amassed more than 9,000 retweets and more than 14,000 likes before Twitter removed it.

The “WANTED” post spread across Twitter, Facebook and TikTok. A Facebook group called “Celebrities for Trump” shared it. “We need more if [sic] these,” the post said, referring to the WANTED sign. “Keep your eyes open. Report them all it is a crime.”

Several days after the “WANTED” flyer surfaced and reached a large audience, the Gwinnett County sheriff stated that the post was “false.” Yet despite the post impersonating a law-enforcement agency, social-media companies have been slow to remove it.

While Twitter removed dozens of posts with the “WANTED” sign, ProPublica was able to find instances of it still on the platform.

Disinformation researchers tell ProPublica that they also identified posts accusing people of being ballot mules in other states with laws that restrict third parties from submitting people’s ballots. “Mule right here in PA,” one TikTok post read. “Make this Upper Dublin resident famous #2000Mules #2000MulesDocumentary #2000MulesTheMovie.”

In Arizona, a Republican state senator named Kelly Townsend has encouraged people to camp out at ballot drop boxes and write down license plate numbers of people deemed to be suspicious. “I have been so pleased to hear of all you vigilantes that want to camp out at these drop boxes,” Townsend recently said. “So, do it. Do it.”

Even if “2000 Mules” were accurate — which experts stress it almost certainly is not — the ballot-trafficking theory put forward by the film would not change the result of any election. Rick Hasen, a professor and election-law expert at the University of California, Irvine, says he believes the rigged-election message in “2000 Mules” is just the latest attempt to more broadly lay the groundwork for challenging and overturning the outcome of a future election.

“If you believe the last election was stolen, you’re going to be more likely to take steps to steal the next one back,” Hasen said. “It’s pretty obvious that what’s going on here is using false claims of fraud as a potential pretext to engage in election subversion in 2024 or another future election. That’s very dangerous for American democracy.”

What we learned from “The View” reunion, from the fight that started it all to Joy Behar’s firing

The New York Times once called “The View” the most important political TV show in America.” For 25 years, the popular ABC series has drawn in a loyal audience that tunes in daily to listen to discussions on the nation’s most divisive topics.

The daytime talk show first premiered on August 11, 1997 and over time, it developed its “funny and fun” entertainment brand hat showcased intelligent yet lighthearted conversations on equally lighthearted topics, from pop culture to sex. It was also headed by a panel of five women: show creator and retired journalist Barbara Walters, veteran broadcast journalist Meredith Vieira, lawyer Star Jones, television host Debbie Matenopoulos, and comedian Joy Behar.   

RELATED: Barbara Walters’ real legacy is “The View” — and that’s worse for women than we realize

“We are four women of different ages getting together the way you do at home, the way you wish you could talk about anything and everything,” said Walters while describing the show in an early clip.

In celebration of the show’s 25th anniversary, the special “Behind the Table: The View Reunion” gathers together the original co-hosts (sans Walters) with Behar acting as moderator to mull over the earliest days of “The View” and how the show evolved and impacted TV.

Here’s what we learned from the reunion:

How that Rosie O’Donnell and Elisabeth Hasselbeck fight started it all

The co-hosts reflected on the “critical” on-screen cat fight between former panelists, Rosie O’Donnell and Elisabeth Hasselbeck. The quarrel — which exploded after a discussion on then-President George W. Bush’s tactics during the Iraq War suddenly turned personal —  was also featured in a dramatic split-screen format for the very first time. In clips, O’Donnell, who is unapologetically queer and liberal, is seen plastered on one side while the conservative Hasselbeck is on the other. 

“What you did was not defend me,” O’Donnell retaliated in a snippet of the segment. “I asked you if you believed what the Republican pundits were saying. You said nothing. And that’s cowardly.” 

The shouting match was so harrowing that O’Donnell quit the show shortly afterward, weeks before her contract was set to expire.
  
For Jones, the altercation was a significant “The View” moment as it highlighted how she and her fellow co-hosts handled live discourse. 

“I thought that honestly, if I had to be critical, that would be the moment that I’d be critical of because I thought, no matter when we disagreed, we had the ability to disagree without it being disagreeable,” Jones said, much to the agreement of both Vieira and Matenopoulos. “And when we set that up — it was a set-up.” 

Matenopoulos added that the decision to use a split-screen was intentional because it heightened the drama and helped boost the show’s ratings. 

“It was a choice because they knew, we’re gonna get the ratings this way,” she explained. “It’s like when someone cries and they go, ‘Go in tight, go in tight. Quick ask her another thing to make her cry. Go in tight.'” 

That split-screen format, not to mention the heightened conflict, has become a staple of “The View.”

Star Jones on what she owes Barbara Walters

While discussing the early beginnings of her career on the show, Jones praised Walters and her efforts to push forward diversity, especially within an industry that was — and still is —  dominated by white men. 

“I’m gonna tell you, one thing Barbara does not get as much credit for — she raised the whole conversation of diversity and put it on television,” Jones said. “She made sure that everybody heard the opinion of an overweight Black woman. She made it a big deal. I owe her my career. I really truly do.”

Jones, who previously worked as a Brooklyn prosecutor and district attorney, added that Walters helped her become a better journalist. 

“I ask questions. I hear myself parroting something she would say,” said Jones. “She taught me about the follow-up question. Which is more important than the card.” 

Meredith Vieira found her inner “freakazoid”

Vieira, who is a 14-time Emmy Award-winning host and renowned broadcast journalist took both her career and persona quite seriously. But while on “The View,” she oftentimes showed her more playful and silly sides.

As Behar recalled, Vieira once donned a head-to-toe hot-dog costume from and on another occasion, gave actor Wesley Snipes a lap dance on live television. Vieira was also known to stir up eccentric conversations on sex, which earned her the moniker of “freakazoid” amongst her fellow co-hosts.

“I was laughing about the craziest stuff you would do, and I wanted to go, ‘Ladies and gentleman, the award-winning journalist Meredith Vieira,'” Jones said jokingly.

 Barbara Walters would pinch Debbie Matenopoulos to keep her in check

Matenopoulos had joined the show at 22, having just graduated from New York University and worked as a production assistant at MTV. Most of her work at that time, was strictly behind the scenes and she recalled that “The View” gig was her first in front of the cameras.

“I remember it all like it was yesterday,” Matenopoulos said of the audition process. “I had never been on television before. Not in my wildest dreams did I think I was gonna get this job.”

She was invited to audition after meeting a man who worked for Walters’ production company, Barwall Production, at her friend’s going-away party at Calvin Klein’s home in uptown New York City.

“I had pink hair because they had just dyed it pink at MTV for ‘House of Style,'” Matenopoulos recalled, never imagining that she’d land the gig. “I go to meet Barbara and Bill [Geddie] with pink hair and I thought, ‘Oh my gosh, this is gonna be the best cocktail story. I’m gonna tell everyone that I met Barbara Walters.'”

Though memorable, the audition process was also difficult as Matenopoulos faced criticism from older, more experienced women who were also seeking a hot spot on the show. One woman, Matenopoulos recalled, belittled her lack of work experience and described her budding career as a “girl’s career.”

“And everyone laughed at me. So I turned around to walk out,” Matenopoulos continued. “And when I was walking out . . . I opened the door and Barbara was standing there.”

Matenopoulos was placed into the first audition group, which consisted of Vieira, Jones and Behar, and instantly had great chemistry with them all. Of course, she was hired and the rest is history.

While co-hosting, Matenopoulos said she was frequently — but discreetly — “punished” by Walters for her poor takes during discussions.

“She would pinch me under the table because I’d be like…So Meredith would say, ‘Debbie what do you think?'” Matenopoulos explained. “And I would say, ‘Well what I think is –’ and I would get into the conversation and for whatever reason, Barbara would not like it and she’d do the church pinch under the table. And I would literally stop speaking mid-sentence as if I had stroked.

“And people in America, on live TV, they’re like, ‘What? Did she just stroke? God she’s a dope. She can’t even finish a sentence,'” Matenopoulos said.

Joy Behar was fired not once, but twice

Behar, who was fired back in 2013, was almost fired in 2006 after Walters learned that she had spilled the beans about O’Donnell joining “The View” as a host.

Walters had already warned that the news would be exclusively announced during that year’s Emmy Awards. But unfortunately, Behar let the news slip when questioned by Entertainment Tonight, giving them the scoop.

“Phone rings. ‘Hello, Joy? It’s Barbara,'” Behar recalled the horrifying phone call she eventually got from her boss

One the phone, Walters said, “I just got a call from ‘Entertainment Tonight’ and guess what they said? They said, ‘Oh, and Rosie O’Donnell’s coming on the show.’ And guess who told them?”

A comedian at heart, Behar pretended to guess Vieira’s name, throwing her colleague under the bus.

“[Walters] said, ‘No, you! Joy Behar did that. And I want you to know that I’m not renewing your contract,'” Behar recalled. “I said, ‘Barbara, it was just a mistake. It was an honest mistake.'”

Walters, however, did not accept the apology and instead, called Behar “a loose cannon.”

In the end, things worked out for Behar who continued working as a co-host and is still a member of the show’s current panel.

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Everything we know about Paxlovid, the COVID-19 pill that’s saving lives

The COVID-19 vaccines may be waning in effectiveness as the virus mutates, but their fast production time and initial excellent efficacy rates mark them as a modern marvel of biotechnology. 

Yet a less-appreciated but widely used COVID-19 drug, called Paxlovid, is perhaps equally impressive, a testament to human ingenuity.

You’ve perhaps heard of Paxlovid — an antiviral treatment manufactured by Pfizer that is very frequently given to COVID-19 patients, whether vaccinated or unvaccinated, when they show up at the hospital with difficult symptoms. It works very well at lowering death and hospitalization risk. It comes in a convenient pill form. And unlike the COVID-19 vaccine, Paxlovid has existed for years — in fact, it was brought to market almost twenty years ago, long before SARS-CoV-2 existed in human populations.

RELATED: Why the kids vaccine took so long

But as Paxlovid is increasingly doled out to Americans, the drug is gaining a popular reputation. Given the way that the pandemic has been marred by pseudoscience and social pressure to take drugs that don’t work, many Americans are rightly wondering whether Paxlovid truly is a miracle drug, as it is hyped, or if its effectiveness outweighs its occasional side effects.

We spoke to experts about how the drug works, what circumstances it might be prescribed for, and much more. 

So what is Paxlovid, exactly?

Paxlovid is actually not one drug, but two generic medications that are packaged together: nirmatrelvir and ritonavir. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted emergency use authorization of Paxlovid in December 2021 for anyone ages 12 and older who weighs at least 88 pounds. The drug is an oral antiviral pill that can be taken at home to help keep people who are high-risk for severe disease from getting so sick from COVID-19 that they need to be hospitalized.

“It is an antiviral treatment for use against COVID-19,” Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center and infectious disease doctor, told Salon. “It’s a pill that’s taken for five days and that works by interfering with the way the virus processes its proteins, and it’s been shown in clinical trials to be highly effective at preventing severe disease, hospitalization and death and high-risk individuals.”


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In one clinical trial conducted in the second half of 2021 in unvaccinated individuals, the Pfizer-developed drug showed that it lowered the risk of hospitalization and death by 89 percent compared to a placebo group, without evident safety concerns.

Notably, Paxlovid isn’t new; the compound was identified in 2003 for treating Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) epidemic in China. SARS is closely related to SARS-CoV-2, as the names of the two viruses hint.

How does it work?

Technically, Paxlovid is made up of two medications: ritonavir, which is best known as an HIV/AIDS treatment, and nirmatrelvir, which keeps the SARS-CoV-2 protein from replicating. A combination of these pills inhibits the virus from infecting more cells in the body, which essentially stops the infection from progressing. People who take Paxlovid will consume three pills twice a day for five days; in total taking 30 pills.

How can people access it?

Unlike some cold and flu drugs, Paxlovid is not an over-the-counter medication: you need a prescription from your physician to access it.

“Once you test positive, you need to be seen by a doctor, physician assistant or nurse practitioner in order to get a prescription written for you,” Adalja told Salon. “There are also places that are part of the federal government’s ‘Test to Treat’ plan where there might be a nurse practitioner or a doctor or physician assistant working at an urgent care clinic that might be housed within a pharmacy.”

Indeed, as Adalja mentioned, a person can visit COVID.gov to find the Test to Treat database, which will help you locate pharmacies that can test and prescribe antivirals on the spot. As part of the government program which purchased 20 million doses of the drug, Paxlovid is free at the moment. However, depending on a person’s health insurance status, there can be a price tag for a doctor’s visit if it’s not at a Test to Treat location.

Can anyone get Paxlovid?

The FDA provides physicians with a screening checklist for Paxlovid eligibility, but notes “the checklist is not required to prescribe Paxlovid under the EUA [emergency use authorization].”

However, Adalja notes that some are more likely to benefit from the treatment than others. First, a person needs to take it within the first five days of showing symptoms.

“You need to call fast — it’s not really going to work with people that are more than five days into their symptoms,” Adalja said. “And the data does really support its use for people who are at risk for severe disease as its primary benefit is to prevent hospitalization.”

Does it work? 

In short, yes, there is much evidence that it works well. But, the devil is in the details: the jury is still out on if Paxlovid benefits everyone, or just those who are at high risk for severe disease.

Last week, Pfizer said in a press release that the results of one study showed that the drug failed to alleviate symptoms in people who weren’t high risk for severe disease. The press release also noted that there wasn’t a statistically significant reduction in hospitalizations and deaths in vaccinated patients with at least one risk factor for severe COVID-19. More data is needed to make a conclusion on who does and doesn’t benefit from this treatment, as these findings were only noted recently in a press release.

“The drug is about keeping high risk people out of the hospital and the clinical trials data supports this, but we don’t have good data about its effectiveness in patients who have no risk factors for severe disease,” Adalja said. “That may come over time, and I think they need to do more studies to understand if there are benefits to low risk people.”

Are there side effects?

If you’re worried about side effects, you may have heard stories about the side effect informally dubbed “Paxlovid mouth,” in which one’s mouth and saliva tastes a bit strange for a little while after taking the drug.

Indeed, according to the FDA, potential side effects are “impaired sense of taste, diarrhea, high blood pressure and muscle aches.” But as The Atlantic reported, “Paxolovid mouth is real” and “gross.” For some people, the taste is a metallic one. For others, it’s like “grapefruit juice mixed with soap.”

The medical term for this condition is dysgeusia, which  5.6 percent of patients reported in Pfizer’s clinical trials.

And then there’s the so-called “Paxlovid rebound,” which is when a person’s symptoms return after the treatment. According to a study published in Clinical Infectious Diseases of 483 high-risk patients treated with Paxlovid, four people (0.8%) experienced a rebound of symptoms.

“There are a lot of anecdotal reports out there, so this is something that needs a lot more study to be able to know, but I think it’s probably a real phenomenon,” Adalja said. “What Paxlovid’s role is in this, and what the mechanism is for this rebound, is what I think is really important to understand.”

Adalja said that while rebound patients may still be contagious, anecdotally they seem to do OK in warding off the virus despite a rebound.

More recently, a study published in Clinical Infectious Diseases suggests rebound symptoms could have to do with an “insufficient” exposure to the drug.

“Our main concern was that the coronavirus might be developing resistance to Paxlovid, so to find that was not the case was a huge relief,” said author Aaron F. Carlin, MD, PhD, assistant professor at UC San Diego School of Medicine, in a press release. Instead, the researchers suspect that not enough of the drug was getting to the infected cells to stop the virus from replicating.

Can you take Paxlovid if you’re pregnant?

Yes. But like many drugs, it hasn’t been tested on pregnant people directly.

“There is no experience treating pregnant women or breastfeeding mothers with Paxlovid,” the FDA states. “For a mother and unborn baby, the benefit of taking Paxlovid may be greater than the risk from the treatment. If you are pregnant, discuss your options and specific situation with your healthcare provider

Notably, the FDA warns that Paxlovid might affect how your hormonal birth control works.

Can you take Paxlovid if you are reinfected?

“I wouldn’t re-treat somebody who has a rebound, but you can take it as many times as you want,” Adalja said, adding that the difference between a relapse and reinfection is time. An infection after 90 days is considered a reinfection if a person tests positive 90 days after their first positive test.

Read more on COVID-19:

A fudgy cheesecake with a two-ingredient filling and two-ingredient crust

Fudgy, tangy cheesecake with a two-ingredient filling and two-ingredient crust. Yes, it’s possible. The trick is to skip the oven, which, if you ask me, only leads to more trouble (like a water bath) and more ingredients (like eggs and flour). A no-bake approach makes this recipe as simple as mix, scrape, refrigerate, done. Most of the chocolate is melted and beaten into soft cream cheese until billowy, like a halfway point between ganache and frosting. The rest is chopped, then stirred in, so each bite has a little crunch. Bittersweet chocolate is often my go-to, but stick to semisweet here. It’s our primary source of sweetness, since there’s no added sugar, not even in the crust. If you want to skip measuring the chocolate, Nestle makes a 10-ounce bag of mini chips. And if you don’t have (or want to buy) salted butter, you can use the same quantity of unsalted butter and increase the salt in the crust from 1/4 teaspoon to 1/2 teaspoon. And yes, you could skip the flaky salt on top, but do me a favor and try it on one bite first. It’s striking, you’ll see. — Emma Laperruque

Watch the recipe

Salty Chocolate Cheesecake

Yields
1 9-inch cake
Prep Time
15 minutes
Cook Time
5 minutes

Ingredients

  • 7 ounces Ritz or graham (classic or chocolate) crackers
  • 4 ounces (8 tablespoons/1 stick) salted butter, melted, plus more for greasing
  • 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt, plus flaky salt for sprinkling (optional)
  • 10 ounces (1 2/3 cups) semisweet chocolate chips, divided
  • 12 ounces (1 1/2 cups) cream cheese, at a cool room temperature

 

Directions

  1. Add the crackers to a medium bowl and crush with your hands to yield fine crumbs. (You can also put the crumbs in a bag and whack with a rolling pin, or use a food processor.) Stir in the melted butter and salt.
  2. Grease the bottom of an 8- or 9-inch springform cake pan. Line the bottom with a circle of parchment, then grease the parchment and the sides of the pan. Using a measuring cup, firmly press the cracker mixture into the bottom for an even, flat crust. Freeze until firm.
  3. Once the crust is firm, melt 8 ounces (1 1/3 cups) of chocolate and let cool until barely warm. Finely chop the remaining 2 ounces (1/3 cup) chips.
  4. With a hand mixer or a stand mixer fit with whisk attachment, beat the cream cheese on medium-high until very fluffy, about 2 minutes, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed. Add half of the melted chocolate and beat until incorporated. Add the rest of the melted chocolate and keep beating until incorporated. Using a spoon or flexible spatula, stir in the chopped chocolate.
  5. Evenly spread the chocolate — cream cheese on top of the frozen crust. Tightly cover and refrigerate until firm, at least 1 1/2 hours or up to 1 day.
  6. Just before unmolding, slicing, and serving, sprinkle with a pinch of flaky salt.

 

Colbert on “shameful” Fox News coverage that painted dog puppet act in the Capitol as “insurrection”

Stephen Colbert has set the record straight about what really happened on Capitol Hill after several of his staffers were arrested on-site Thursday night.

During Monday’s episode of “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,” its host revealed that seven members of his production team were detained at the U.S. Capitol in Washington D.C. while filming a comedy segment involving the crude, cigar-smoking puppet character Triumph the Insult Comic Dog (the brainchild of comedian Robert Smigel).

“Last week I heard from my old colleague Triumph the Insult Comic Dog,” Colbert said in the beginning of his monologue. “Triumph offered to go down to D.C. to interview some Congress people to highlight the Jan. 6 hearings. I said ‘Sure, if you can get anyone to agree to talk to you, because — and please don’t take this as an insult — you’re a puppet.'”

But that didn’t stop Triumph from securing interviews with politicians on both sides of the aisle. The puppet and his crew went through security, filmed “for two days in congressional offices” and were even “invited into the offices of the Congress people they were interviewing.”

Amid filming, the group was arrested by the Capitol Police and charged with unlawful entry.

“After they finished their interviews, they were doing some last-minute puppetry and jokey make-em-ups in a hallway, when Triumph and my folks were approached and detained by the Capitol Police — which actually isn’t that surprising,” Colbert continued, before subtly mentioning the congressional hearings regarding the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection. “The Capitol Police are much more cautious than they were, say, 18 months ago, and for a very good reason. If you don’t know what that reason is, I know what news network you watch.”

RELATED: Are late night TV hosts showing us what returning to the new normal looks like?

Colbert then defended his staffers and the Capitol Police, stating that both parties were “just doing their job.”

“My staffers were detained, processed and released,” he added. “A very unpleasant experience for my staff, a lot of paperwork for the Capitol Police, but a fairly simple story.”

The story, however, quickly escalated shortly afterward the incident last week when FOX News’ Tucker Carlson along with conservative critics on Twitter lambasted Colbert’s team and accused them of “insurrection.”  

“Last night, producers for Stephen Colbert’s CBS show committed insurrection at the United States Capitol,” Carlson said on Friday’s episode of “Tucker Carlson Tonight.” “Adam Schiff gave producers from CBS access to the Capitol. And then the group remained in the Longworth House Office Building after hours.”

He continued, “It is likely that some members of Stephen Colbert’s team will be held in solitary confinement for a year and a half without being charged. Because this is an insurrection. Joking aside, how could they not be held? — The precedent is in place.”

Mollie Hemingway, the editor-in-chief of the conservative online magazine “The Federalist,” expressed similar sentiments online.

“What did the J6 committee know and when did they know it about the Colbert insurrection at the Capitol?” she wrote.

In a quote tweet disclosing the news of the arrest, radio/TV host Mark Simone also asked, “This is exactly what the January 6th protestors are charged with, so will these Colbert creeps get the same, no bail, solitary confinement treatment???”


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Colbert jokingly addressed these reactions in his monologue, saying, “First of all, what? Second of all, huh? Third of all, they weren’t in the Capitol building. Fourth of all — and I’m shocked I have to explain the difference — but an insurrection involves disrupting the lawful actions of Congress and howling for the blood of elected leaders, all to prevent the peaceful transfer of power.”

“This was first-degree puppetry,” he added. “This was hijinks with intent to goof. Misappropriation of an old ‘Conan’ bit. It’s really Conan’s fault.”

On a more serious note, Colbert then criticized the far-right for making such meaningless comparisons, which he said was a way for them to divert attention away from the ongoing hearings.  

“They want to talk about something other than the Jan. 6 hearings or the actual seditionist insurrection that led to the deaths of multiple people, and the injury of over 140 police officers,” he said.

“But drawing any equivalence between rioters storming our Capitol to prevent the counting of electoral ballots and a cigar-chomping toy dog is a shameful and grotesque insult to the memory of everyone who died. And it obscenely trivializes the service and the courage the Capitol Police showed on that terrible day.”

Watch Colbert’s full monologue below, via YouTube:

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