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How 40,000 dumplings empowered solidarity for the Asian community

Even before becoming a chef and blogger, food has always been a gathering point in my life. From growing winter melons and Chinese chives in the yard with my grandfather to feasting at the best dim sum restaurants in Toronto, I learned at a young age that food has immense power to bring people together. One of my favorite memories from my childhood was when my mom would gather my sisters and me to fold dumplings with her. She habitually bought pre-made wrappers at the store and had the other ingredients and filling ready to go — a mixture of ground pork, blanched watercress, white pepper, oyster and soy sauce, bound with egg whites. Mom never measured any of the quantities, and somehow it tasted the same every time.

We would hover over our circular dining table — the shape best suited for sharing dishes family-style — folding and chuckling over the flimsiest looking sui gao. Mom would boil them as we went and we watched each bundle float to the top of the pot, a sign that they were ready to eat. We would pop the hot dumplings into our mouths far too quickly, and after a symphony of huffs and puffs, they would settle into our bellies and warm us from the inside out.

Gathering around food had always played an integral role in uniting my family, giving my immigrant parents a way to show love when they didn’t have the vocabulary to express it through words. Food breaks barriers and transcends language, and seeking those connections led me to become a chef.

When horrific videos of anti-Asian hate crimes surfaced online in early 2021, I knew I wanted to spread hope through food. I needed to transform my despair into support for my community. It was the first time I faced the reality of people who look like me getting violently attacked for simply walking down the street.

Instinctually, I reached for what I knew best — dumplings — and created the campaign Dump the Hate, a virtual dumpling-making fundraiser, encouraging anyone to make dumplings, sell them to friends, and donate the proceeds directly to organizations supporting the Asian community, such as Asian Americans Advancing Justice and Fight COVID Racism. I launched Dump the Hate on March 14th, 2021. Two days later, a gunman in Atlanta deliberately targeted Asian women at three massage parlors and killed eight victims. Confusion, anguish, and rage washed over me as I questioned how the world perceives me as an Asian woman. I began to unravel layers of internalized shame that I had carried with me for so long, and I became determined to stop hiding from the world. I was ready to stand up for myself and for people like me.

It was humbling to witness so many others filled with the same energy. Dump the Hate took on a life of its own, reaching cities from Honolulu to Denver, Paris to Hong Kong. The campaign morphed into more than just dumpling sales as teachers created lesson plans, students produced video assignments, chefs taught virtual dumpling workshops, and creators made dumpling-themed merchandise to raise money for the cause. Dump the Hate was exactly the outlet my community was searching for, uplifting and advocating for each other through dumplings.

People reached out personally, thanking me for helping them connect to their heritage.

“I came across your hashtag and was moved to take action under current circumstances.” — Eddie @maosbao

“It gives me a lot of meaning and purpose.” — @timothyhchan

“Beyond the financial motives of this movement to help support this community, you have made a difference for me as an Asian American.” — Allison @mykitchenmyheart.

What was supposed to last two weeks became an ongoing movement, with over 40,000 dumplings made and nearly $150,000 raised in 14 months. A year since the launch, I have collaborated with chefs like Mei Lin and Nuit Regular, who offered their own dumpling recipes to participants.

I hope Dump the Hate can continue to be a beacon of light for minority communities or anyone who has felt “othered,” particularly in the last couple of years. I want to give others a way to find solace by gathering with loved ones over something as simple as dumplings. I want people to feel empowered to speak up on issues that matter to them, and to recognize that anyone can make an impact.

For more information on how to participate, please visit mybfisgf.com/dumpthehate.

Texas state bar sues to punish AG Ken Paxton over “dishonest” attempt to overturn election

A disciplinary committee for the State Bar of Texas on Wednesday filed a professional misconduct lawsuit against Attorney General Ken Paxton for his attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential elections in four battleground states won by President Joe Biden.

The filing in Collin County by the Commission for Lawyer Discipline, a standing committee of the state bar, is an extraordinary move by the body that regulates law licenses in the state against the sitting attorney general. It stems from complaints against Paxton for a lawsuit that the U.S. Supreme Court threw out, saying Texas lacked standing to sue and that Paxton’s political opponents called “frivolous.”

It seeks a sanction against Paxton, which will be determined by a judge, that could range from a private reprimand to disbarment.

In its filing, the commission said Paxton had misrepresented that he had uncovered substantial evidence that “raises serious doubts as to the integrity of the election process in the defendant states.”

“As a result of Respondent’s actions, Defendant States were required to expend time, money, and resources to respond to the misrepresentations and false statements contained in these pleadings and injunction requests even though they had previously certified their presidential electors based on the election results prior to the filing of Respondent’s pleadings,” the lawsuit read.

The lawsuit also says Paxton made “dishonest” representations that an “outcome determinative” number of votes were tied to unregistered voters, votes were switched by a glitch with voting machines, state actors had unconstitutionally revised their election statutes and “illegal votes” had been cast to affect the outcome of the election.

The lawsuit says Paxton’s allegations “were not supported by any charge, indictment, judicial finding, and/or credible or admissible evidence, and failed to disclose to the Court that some of his representations and allegations had already been adjudicated and/or dismissed in a court of law.”

The complaint asks for a finding of professional misconduct against Paxton, as well as attorney’s fees and “an appropriate sanction.”

Earlier this month, Paxton had said he’d been notified that he and one of his top deputies would be sued for professional misconduct following a state bar investigation into multiple complaints against them. The lawsuit against First Assistant Attorney General Brent Webster in Williamson County was made public that day. But the lawsuit against Paxton was not filed until Wednesday, one day after Paxton defeated Land Commissioner George P. Bush in the GOP runoff for attorney general.

“Texas Bar: I’ll see you and the leftists that control you in court,” Paxton said earlier this month. “I’ll never let you bully me, my staff or the Texans I represent into backing down or going soft on defending the Rule of Law — something for which you have little knowledge.”

Later that day, Paxton announced an investigation into the Texas Bar Foundation for “facilitating mass influx of illegal aliens” by donating money to groups that “encourage, participate in, and fund illegal immigration at the Texas-Mexico border.” The foundation is made up of attorneys and raises money to provide legal education and services. It is separate from the State Bar of Texas, which is an administrative arm of the Texas Supreme Court.

The lawsuit against Paxton stems from multiple complaints filed by Kevin Moran, president of the Galveston Island Democrats; David Wellington Chew, former chief justice of the Eighth District Court of Appeals; retired attorney Neil Kay Cohen; attorney Brynne VanHettinga; and Gershon “Gary” Ratner, the co-founder of Lawyers Defending American Democracy.

Cohen said he was outraged by Paxton’s attempt to overturn the election results and filed a 51-page grievance to the state bar on why he thought the attorney general had violated state disciplinary rules for attorneys. The grievance was initially rejected, but Cohen and several others won their appeal to move the complaint forward. On Wednesday, Cohen said he was happy the state bar was moving forward with the lawsuit.

“I wasn’t sure this day would come,” Cohen said. “I wasn’t sure until they actually filed it that they were actually going to file it.”

Still, Cohen said, his reaction is tempered because Paxton has so far avoided punishment for other accusations that he’s violated the law. Paxton has faced securities fraud charges for seven years now, and more recently has come under FBI investigation after eight former top deputies accused him of bribery and abuse of office. Paxton denies all wrongdoing.

“I’m not sure what it matters,” he said. “Paxton’s in a lot of trouble already. If the worst that can happen to him is getting disbarred, well, compared to going to jail for obstructing a criminal investigation or for stock fraud, the penalties should be super embarrassing but the penalties are slight compared to the criminal things.”

Cohen said he still hoped those cases eventually go to trial, but that the professional misconduct suit by the bar is an opportunity to dispel the prevalent idea among some that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.

“I would like something on the record that these claims of a stolen election are bogus,” he said.

Disclosure: State Bar of Texas has been a financial supporter 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/2022/05/25/texas-bar-ken-paxton-2020-election/.

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

“Not even planning a vote”: Amid pleas for gun legislation, Senate skips town for 10-day vacation

The U.S. Senate is set to adjourn Thursday afternoon for a 10-day recess without taking any concrete steps to address the nation’s deadly epidemic of gun violence, following a pattern of inaction that has prevailed in the decade since the worst school shooting in the nation’s history in Newtown, Connecticut.

In the aftermath of the second-deadliest school shooting on record—the massacre of 19 children and two adults at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas earlier this week—there is little hope that Congress will move decisively to alter the country’s lax gun laws as Republicans beholden to the National Rifle Association and Democrats committed to the legislative filibuster continue to obstruct progress.

“Enough is enough. We must abolish the filibuster and pass gun safety legislation NOW,” Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., wrote on Twitter Wednesday. “No one in America needs an AR-15. How many more children, mothers, and fathers need to be murdered in cold blood before the Senate has the guts to ban assault weapons and take on the NRA?”

Democratic leaders in the upper chamber have tasked Sen. Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat and outspoken advocate for gun-safety measures, with seeking bipartisan compromise, an approach that has failed for years despite the thousands of mass shootings that have occurred across the U.S. since the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School atrocity.

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., one of the Senate’s most vocal filibuster defenders, is also holding talks with Republicans on gun legislation. With the filibuster intact, Democrats will need to find at least 10 Republican votes to advance a bill.

In a video update posted to social media late Wednesday, Murphy—who represented Sandy Hook’s district in the House at the time of the 2012 shooting—said he is unwilling to “accept that the Senate is going to do nothing in the face of this horrific slaughter.”

Just this year, there have been 27 school shootings in the United States.

“I don’t accept the status quo,” said Murphy. “While I’m sober-minded about our chances of getting 60 votes in the Senate, I can tell you that today, we made progress. I spent all day talking to every single Republican and every single Democrat that was willing to enter into a discussion about how we change our gun laws.”

“My hope is that over the course of the week and next week, we’re going to have a group of Republicans and Democrats in the Senate talking about how we can find common ground,” Murphy added, mentioning “limited but significant improvements to our background check system” and so-called “red flag laws” as potential areas of compromise.

There’s not yet any indication that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., intends to cancel the chamber’s Memorial Day recess in an effort to expedite progress.

In a floor speech on Wednesday, Schumer slammed the GOP’s “obeisance to the NRA” and persistent refusal to support even “the most simple, sensitive, positive, and popular gun legislation.” On Friday, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, former President Donald Trump, and other prominent Republicans are expected to speak at the NRA’s annual gathering in Houston.

“My Republican colleagues can work with us now,” the Democratic leader said. “I know this is a slim prospect. Very slim. All too slim. We’ve been burnt so many times before. But this is so important.”

Later Wednesday, Schumer vowed that the upper chamber is ultimately “going to vote on gun legislation” whether or not Republicans cooperate.

petition launched by MoveOn in the wake of the Uvalde massacre implores Schumer to “cancel recess, stay in D.C., hold votes, and deliver” legislative action on gun safety, a demand that came as students across the U.S. planned walkouts and other mobilizations aimed at ramping up pressure on lawmakers.

“Congress can act quickly—both houses passed new laws regarding security for Supreme Court justices after the leaked draft showing that right-wing justices are prepared to overturn Roe v. Wade,” reads the petition, which has garnered more than 72,600 signatures. “Our senators and representatives took action on that measure within 24 hours.”

“But the Senate isn’t even planning a vote before recess following the deadliest school shooting in a decade, which came on the heels of mass murders in Buffalo, New York, and Laguna Hills, California within the past ten days,” the petition continues. “Democrats in the House already passed critical gun violence prevention legislation earlier this Congress—we need Senate action to send these bills to the president.”

Redefining identity, one Asian American dish at a time

In one of his popular YouTube videos for “NYT Cooking,” Eric Kim introduces his Sheet-Pan Bibimbap as “really chill.” Drawing inspiration from the simplicity of his family’s preferred midnight snack, Kim gives the ultimate credit to his mother’s techniques before shyly admitting she now uses his recipe. The vegetables are roasted in olive oil, cooked rice is crisped on a hot sheet pan to emulate the effects of a dolsot. The result mimics a traditional bibimbap — though for a dish that varies from family to family, what is traditional? — and meets the simple aesthetics and unpretentious elegance that so many crave today. For me, there’s something validating about the bulk of Kim’s recipes. Despite not having my own midnight bibimbap memories (I’m Indian American), his food feels representative, because it is distinctly Asian American.

To consider an “Asian American” cuisine category when the entire concept of “Asian America” is up for debate could seem hypocritical. “The Loneliest Americans” author Jay Caspian Kang has devoted a book and several essays arguing against the idea, as the fast-growing group of more than 20 million who make up this identity differ in race, socioeconomic standing, and cultural norms. Kang argues the term is only used by “upwardly mobile professionals who enter mostly white middle-class spaces.” If he is correct, perhaps the term becomes even more apt when it comes to food, because this cuisine is often born out of cultural merging, even assimilation. Consider the nikkei and chifa cuisines of Japanese and Chinese Peruvians; the Gullah cuisine of the South Carolina islands created by West and Central Africans blending techniques of their homelands with the ingredients of the land they were forced to work; even the Tex-Mex food of the borderlands. Food evolves when cultures mingle.

But Asian American food is not the Westernization of Asian flavor, like the sweet tikka masalas and sticky General Tsos adapted for a presumed meeker American palate. Nor is it the “fusions” popular in the 2010s, often helmed by white chefs adapting European techniques to the “exotic” Asian flavors that enchanted them on vacation. It is a food steeped in reverence and culture. It is personal, yet representative. “Korean American as a whole is a third culture,” said Kim, whose first cookbook, the aptly titled “Korean American: Food That Tastes Like Home,” was published this month. “So if there’s American culture and Korean culture, Korean American is this third thing, and that’s what I was trying to get across.”

For many children of Asian immigrants, success is seen as hinging upon assimilation into white culture, which continues to dominate many spaces that can lead to upward mobility (this is part of the complex and hugely detrimental model minority myth). Food is one of few more visible ways to reclaim that heritage; and that very reclamation influences and complicates the identity of those of us who are assimilated.

Hetty Lui McKinnon, the Chinese Australian recipe developer and best-selling author who lives in New York, describes feeling an “urgent need” to re-create the foods of her childhood when she had children of her own. As a vegetarian, this takes some creativity. She uses modern techniques, “but it is rooted in real experience…flavor and texture from childhood. I don’t want to miss out on eating the flavors of my childhood. So I need to re-create them for myself,” she said.

Abi Balingit, the baker and blogger behind The Dusky Kitchen who is currently writing a Filipino American dessert cookbook, makes baked goods like kare-kare-inspired peanut butter and shrimp paste cookies. Like McKinnon, Balingit’s creativity came from a place of homesickness. “Being nostalgic for a lot of the foods that I would eat with my family really compelled me to go in and make more Filipino-inspired dishes and desserts,” she said, explaining how this passion took off during the pandemic, when access to her family was limited.

This Asian American cuisine reflects a nostalgia and reverence for the foods of our childhood (and the often maternal figures who made them), but those flavors can’t help but mingle with the identity of their creators who were raised in American surroundings. New York Times food reporter Priya Krishna wrote her cookbook “Indian-ish: Recipes and Antics from a Modern American Family” with her mother. It features recipes born out of their Dallas kitchen that nod to their roots, like pizza built on roti as crusts, or blocks of feta in the style of saag paneer. “I consider myself a documentarian of my family recipes,” she said. “My culinary identity is one generation from my mom’s culinary identity, but also inextricably linked to her cooking.”

Similarly, Kim spent nine months living with his mother while working on “Korean American,” and credits that time with helping him find his culinary identity. “There are moments where I feel like I’m echoing my mother’s cooking, revering the past and really honoring it, but it’s also [about] having the courage to sort of experiment on that, and to move forward and define your own sense of what Korean cooking is. And so that was really freeing for me.” While returning to his childhood home to share memories and develop ideas with his mother helped him find that courage, so did the physical space: a pantry full of syrups and spices and vinegars, tastes of his youth he could apply to his own cooking style.

McKinnon speaks to this, too. While working on her salad delivery project, Arthur Street Kitchen, she said her mother would bring her “very traditional” Chinese ingredients like lotus root or seaweed that McKinnon seamlessly incorporated into her popular, Australian-global menu. She paired the lotus root with charred Brussels sprouts and added a hoisin vinaigrette, taking her mother’s suggestions of the crisp freshness the rhizome offered and playing with it to make her own creation. “I’ve just kind of made things up. I’ll take my family’s cultural cuisine and just kind of riff on that to reflect who I am. Because, you know, I’m not my mother; I am a person who grew up in the third culture. So it’s very personal.”

This food is deeply personal, a blend of childhood memories, life experiences, and individual style on a plate. But when seen together, these separate experiences can represent a larger identity. There’s a reason Kim’s Korean American dishes or Balingit’s Filipino American baked goods might resonate with me, an Indian American, more than a traditional Indian dish: by creating dishes so true to their own Asian American experience, these recipe developers represent a wide-ranging group. There is immeasurable variation in the foodways and techniques, and the lived experiences, of Asian Americans — of course there are in this diverse group of 20 million, Kang might remind us — but there can also be unifying forces. These experiences are singular “with echoes of the plural,” as Kim described. Krishna said, “Even if my experience isn’t exactly the same, maybe people can find kernels within my experience that feel relatable. I feel like I’m constantly kind of balancing between recognizing that my experience is both unique and not unique at the same time.”

Still, this personal, identity-affirming food’s existence comes from a place of privilege. “I stand on the shoulders of giants . . . like Julie Sahni and Madhur Jaffrey,” Krishna explained, acknowledging two cooks who are most credited with bringing Indian cuisines to America’s attention. Indeed, American cookbook authors focusing on non-Eurocentric recipes no longer have to be compendiums that represent the cuisine of their heritage as a whole; instead they can have diasporic nuances. And yet, with this freedom comes a weight to protect the flavors of their respective backgrounds, and ensure that when these ingredients are used by people without a personal connection to them, it’s with respect and context. “I think about that as culinary diplomacy a little bit,” said Kim. He knows when he introduces a Korean ingredient, it may be the first time some readers are interacting with that ingredient, and there’s a responsibility that comes with that.

“Things that some people think of as new or trendy have actually existed in cultures for a really long time,” said Krishna, in this case speaking about turmeric. “I have a platform. I’d like to use it to, you know, protect my culture as much as possible.” This feeling of protection over cherished ingredients of their childhood was something all the recipe developers I spoke to expressed. This respect for an ingredient’s origins doesn’t always mean using it in the most traditional way, but instead recognizing its history and context in order to use them in newly conceived recipes.

“Authenticity is kind of a sham, but it is really important to have a conversation about appropriation,” said Balingit. She uses ube, the bright purple Filipino yam, as an example of an ingredient often not used in proper context. “You don’t want to gatekeep ube, but it’s really great to give respect to where an ingredient is from and what it tastes like.” Balingit explained the delicate — and challenging — balance of maintaining cultural context while encouraging culinary creativity: “Sometimes [I see] it used just for show, and not necessarily showcasing the subtle flavor. I think that it’s super important to give credit where credit is due, but also that innovation is super important for your culture to continue on. So it’s living in a half-and-half world.”


This weight of simultaneously honoring a cuisine’s past while pushing traditional ingredients and techniques into modern recipes is further complicated by the mainstream food media. Whiteness (and a presumed majority-white audience) has dictated — and today in many aspects, still dictates — much of what is covered in food media. An editor of a mainstream publication may remove key ingredients in a recipe from an underrepresented cuisine that they assume their audience is not familiar with. McKinnon, for example, says dried shiitakes are a staple in her pantry, so she was shocked when an editor asked for a more “accessible” replacement. “​​I didn’t grow up white so things that are ‘normal’ to [many] editors are not what’s normal to me. So that’s really hard, but I try and fight that as much as I can.”

With a large social media following often going hand-in-hand with the success of a recipe developer, self-branding becomes paramount. Sometimes this looks like taking ingredients or dishes out of their cultural context without explanation, or claiming a lack of personal culture inspired them to pull from a global pantry. “[Some developers] try to act like they discovered everything. I don’t even feel that confident about writing about Chinese food, you know? And I grew up eating Chinese food every single day of my life. I don’t even want to assert my supreme knowledge over that cuisine. Because I know that my experience is just singular,” said McKinnon.

In an industry where cultural appropriation feels rampant, listening to this “chorus of voices,” as Krishna put it, of Asian American creators who do honor a traditional ingredient’s context, and whose recipes are often deeply personal, feels especially important. But because the cuisine is so tied to the personal, it will continue to change and evolve. “As I write more books, more recipes, more articles, I’ve discovered more about myself. So, in many ways, I’m evolving at the same time as my work,” said McKinnon.

It is impossible to categorize “Asian foods” as a single thing. They represent some of the world’s greatest diversity in technique, ingredients, and norms. And yet, in its journey to America — or more accurately, in its mingling with American surroundings — Asian American food becomes easier to categorize as a style, not because it is minimized to a single thing or because this diversity is lost, but because those “echoes of the plural” show up through the shared experience of finding our identity through food. Asian American food reveres the past and is pushing culture forward, and it reflects the deeply personal and yet represents a diverse and changing identity. “So that’s the complicated part about ‘Asian American,’ right?” said Kim. “Sometimes it feels like a blanket term that erases us. On the other hand, if we wield it as a power, it can feel like an incredible community, and I think that’s beautiful.”

Ted Cruz quits interview after foreign journalist asks “Why does this only happen in your country?”

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Tex., called a journalist a “propagandist” on Wednesday before storming off from an interview about gun violence in the wake of a school shooting in Uvalde, Texas that left nineteen children and two adults dead. 

The interview came after a vigil for the victims of the massacre, where British journalist Mark Stone of Sky News approached Cruz to ask him if now was the time for gun reform. 

“You know, it’s easy to go to politics,” Cruz replied. “The proposals from Democrats and the media? Inevitably, when some violent psychopath murders people… if you want to stop violent crime, the proposals the Democrats have? None of them would have stopped this.”

RELATED: I haven’t gotten jaded or cynical about mass shootings – but it’s getting harder

Stone then asked the Texas senator why mass shootings are a uniquely American phenomenon.

“Why only in America?” Stone inquired. “Why is this American exceptionalism so awful?” 


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“You know, I’m sorry you think American exceptionalism is awful. You’ve got your political agenda. God love you,” Cruz shot back. “Why is it that people come from all over the world to America? Because it’s the freest, most prosperous, safest country on Earth. Stop being a propagandist.”

But Stone pressed on: “Senator, I just want to understand why you do not think that guns are the problem. It’s just an American problem.”

“You can’t answer that, can you?” Stone added before Cruz walked out of the interview.

Later during an interview with CNN, Cruz suggested that the Democrats are attempting to “politicize” the tragedy. “You see Democrats and a lot of folks in the media whose immediate solution is to try to restrict the constitutional rights of law-abiding citizens,” he said. 

Cruz is slated to make an appearance at a conference held by the National Rifle Association (NRA) on Friday in Houston.

In the past, countries like Canada, Norway, Australia, and Britain have clamped down on gun ownership shortly after mass shootings. According to The New York Times, such policies have historically diminished gun violence. The U.S., however, has been a notable laggard on this front, in large part because the Republican Party has worked hand in hand with the gun lobby to prevent meaningful reform. Congress has not passed any gun control legislation since the Sandy Hook shooting in 2012. But during this year alone, the U.S. has already seen over 200 mass shootings.

RELATED: “Go in there!”: People begged police to enter Uvalde school as gunman rampaged for up to an hour

Texas police find AK-47 and “hit list” while investigating “credible threat” against another school

Authorities may have disrupted another potential school massacre in Texas after investigating an alleged “hit list.”

The Donna Independent School District posted a notice on social media late Wednesday that a “credible threat of violence” was under investigation, and law enforcement officials said they turned up an AK-47 rifle and the threats against specific students during a search of a private home, reported The Daily Beast.

“In light of the recent events and in an abundance of caution, we will be canceling school district-wide classes and staff will work from home,” district officials said in a statement. “The safety and security of our students & staff is our first priority.”

Two or three people were allegedly part of the plot, according to police, but the note didn’t say which of the school district’s seven facilities would be targeted, and it’s not clear how many students were targeted.

The weapon was found at a student’s home a day after an 18-year-old brutally murdered 19 children and two teachers at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, about 280 miles to the north of Donna.

Yet another student was arrested Wednesday in Richardson, in suburban Dallas, outside Berkner High School with what appeared to be an “AK-47 style pistol” and a “replica AR-15 style Orbeez rifle” in his vehicle, police said.

Look like a professional baker with Martha Stewart’s no-knead focaccia bread

If you want a snack that’s easy on the eyes, taste buds and your precious time, Martha Stewart has got the recipe for you. Her no-knead tomato focaccia is packed with flavor, looks stunning, and only requires 15 minutes of prep. Mix your ingredients early in the morning or the night before, and all you’ll have to do is wait for your dough to rise. If you haven’t reconnected with your inner baker since quarantine, allow this vibrant side dish to help you get back in the groove.

Martha posted it on her Instagram, saying, “Garlic and thyme are perfect partners for the juicy cherry tomatoes that top this easy focaccia.”

To start, you’ll take a large bowl and whisk together flour, yeast, sugar, salt, and your fresh thyme. Make sure that the yeast you’re using is active dry yeast, rather than rapid-rise.

Related: The one simple tip that made my homemade focaccia instantly better

Add cold water and your olive oil. Stir the mixture, either using your hands or a wooden spoon, until you’re left with a wet dough and no traces of dry flour. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let it rise at room temperature for 12 to 18 hours. Your risen dough should quadruple in size and have a bubbly texture on top.

Once your dough has risen properly, oil your pan by pouring your olive oil into your rimmed baking sheet. This is where you’ll press out your dough for its second rise, followed by decorating it with tomatoes, garlic, red-pepper flakes, olive oil, thyme and salt.

 

Bake between 16 and 18 minutes, placing the baking sheet on the lowest oven rack. When your dough is slightly puffed and golden brown. Allow to cool for about 20 minutes before serving. Click here for the full recipe. 

More super simple weeknight recipes from Martha Stewart: 

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“Go in there!”: People begged police to enter Uvalde school as gunman rampaged for up to an hour

Onlookers pleaded for police to enter Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas while the gunman who killed 21 people was inside the school for roughly an hour, according to reports from the Associated Press and The New York Times.

The shooter, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos, was inside the school for about 40 minutes to an hour before he was shot several times by Border Patrol agents, Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) chief Steven McGraw said at a news conference on Wednesday, raising questions about why it took so long to stop the attack.

“Go in there! Go in there!” frustrated onlookers shouted at officers during the attack, according to the AP, but witness Juan Carranza told the outlet the officers did not go in.

“There were more of them. There was just one of him,” Carranza told the outlet.

Javier Cazares, whose fourth-grade daughter Jacklyn was killed in the shooting, said he raced to the school while officers were still gathered outside and suggested charging inside with other bystanders.

“There were five or six of [us] fathers, hearing the gunshots, and [police officers] were telling us to move back,” Cazares told The Washington Post. “We didn’t care about us. We wanted to storm the building. We were saying, ‘Let’s go’ because that is how worried we were, and we wanted to get our babies out.”

There are also questions about the initial information provided by police about the shooting. Though some reports initially said police exchanged gunfire with Ramos before he entered the school, officials now say no gunfire was exchanged until he entered the school. And although DPS spokespersons repeatedly said that the suspect barricaded himself in a classroom and started shooting after he was confronted by police, McCraw said Wednesday that the officers “were responsible” for containing the gunman in the classroom. All of the children killed in the shooting were in a single classroom, according to DPS Lt. Christopher Olivarez.

A law enforcement official told the AP that Border Patrol agents involved in the response also had trouble breaching the classroom door and had to get a staff member to unlock it with a key.

“Bottom line, law enforcement was there, they did engage immediately, they did contain him in a classroom,” McCraw said. “They put a tactical stack together, in a very orderly way, and breached and assaulted the individual.”

RELATED: Texas school shooting: The right responds to massacre by calling for more guns

McCraw declined to provide a timeline of events during a news conference on Wednesday but a state official told the Times that the gunman, who first shot his grandmother and then crashed her pickup truck outside the school at around 11:30 am, was killed shortly after 1 pm. Four Border Patrol agents from a tactical team entered the school and three of the agents fired their weapons after entering the classroom while the other held a shield.

The school went into lockdown around 11:43 am, according to a timeline put together by the Washington Post. Ramos encountered a school police officer after crashing the truck before making his way into the school through a side entrance. Two Uvalde police officers arrived and tried to get inside, exchanging gunfire with Ramos. Both officers were wounded and the gunman was forced into the classroom.

By 12:10 pm, a Facebook live stream showed that police had established a perimeter around the school. By 12:17 pm, school officials announced on social media that there was an “active shooter.”

Shots were still being heard at 12:52 pm, according to the Post. “Do not attempt to get closer,” a voice warned on the EMS radio channel.

Around this time, the Border Patrol tactical team formed a “stack” and eventually breached the classroom and killed Ramos in a shootout. “It was unclear whether he killed the students when he first barricaded himself inside or just before the police breached the room,” the Post reported.


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Law enforcement officials during Wednesday’s news conference acknowledged a “failure” to prevent the shooting but insisted that quick actions by law enforcement likely saved lives.

Texas officials after the shooting rejected calls to toughen gun laws and instead called to provide schools with armed police officers or even to arm teachers despite multiple armed officers being unable to stop the gunman.

The Uvalde City School District has its own police department with a chief, five officers, and a security guard. Schools around the country have taken similar measures: amid a rise in mass school shootings, the number of school resource officers around the country has skyrocketed. But researchers have found no evidence that school resource officers contributed to any reduction in mass shooting deaths.

“The idea that a standard armed school police officer is gonna stop someone in that situation has proven not to be true, time and time again,” Alex Vitale, coordinator of the Policing and Social Justice Project at Brooklyn College and author of “The End of Policing” told The Intercept, adding that police and security guards are often the “first casualties in mass shooting events.”

Instead, research has shown that more mental health counselors, social workers, and alternative resolution dispute programs help keep schools safe, experts told the outlet.

“Instead of marshaling a robust preventative intervention, we wait until the problem expresses itself as a mass killing, and then we microanalyze the police response,” Vitale said. “This is a completely backwards way to approach the problem. Because policing is an inherently inadequate response to these things. By the time the shooting starts, the police intervention is going to be reactive. People will already be dead.”

Read more:

Study: Climate change will spread toxic mold to Midwest corn

Climate change is expanding the reach of aflatoxin, a chemical produced by a gray-green mold that infects corn crops and could threaten widespread damage to the country’s lucrative Corn Belt. According to new research, aflatoxin has been primarily confined to the South. But as hot and dry weather moves northward, fungal infections will move with it, hitting the Midwest more frequently and on a wider scale than previously seen.

The study, published in the journal Environmental Research Letters, found that under current climate change scenarios, aflatoxin contamination will increase in 89.5% of corn-growing counties in 15 states by the 2030s. This includes a number of states in the Corn Belt, such as Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana, which produce the majority of the United States’ corn — an $82 billion industry

Although the U.S. has strong protections in place to prevent contaminated corn from reaching consumers, any increase in the food supply is concerning from a public health standpoint, said Felicia Wu, a food science professor at Michigan State University and one of the paper’s authors. “It’s a nasty thing to have in our crops,” Wu said.

Aflatoxin contributes to up to 155,000 cases of liver cancer per year, mostly in Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa, where contaminated products can more easily reach consumers; outbreaks in Kenyaand Tanzania have killed hundreds. In the U.S., the Food and Drug Administration limits aflatoxin levels to 20 parts per billionfor corn that’s destined for products like tortilla chips or feed for dairy cows, which can transfer the toxin into their milk. But even levels below the legal limit can be harmful, Wu said, with children and immunocompromised people being particularly vulnerable. No treatments for aflatoxin poisoning currently exist. 

It’s difficult to tell how much aflatoxin is ultimately reaching consumers. Storage facilities called grain elevators mix multiple batches of corn together to dilute aflatoxin amounts to stay under the FDA limit. But because of high rates of testing error, the actual levels could be higher, said Charles Hurburgh, a grain expert at Iowa State University.

“Normally the grain industry figures that the natural blending will hold the levels below FDA [limits] … and expect that when the grain finally gets to the user, it’ll be okay,” Hurburgh said. “It’s a little concerning to think that climate change may start gradually raising those levels.” 

Aflatoxin is produced by two different types of fungi, Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus, and is an extremely potent liver carcinogen. These fungi, which target corn as well as tree nuts and cotton, thrive in hot and moist environments. But drought conditions can encourage their growth by weakening the plant and making it more susceptible to infection. In 2012, a wave of hot and dry weather led to an aflatoxin outbreak in the Midwest, causing more than $1 billion in losses — a scenario Wu said will happen more and more frequently with climate change.

In a 2016 study, Wu and several other researchers estimated that climate change-related aflatoxin contamination would end up costing farmers up to $1.68 billion per year; since most crops are subsidized by federal crop insurance, a large portion of that loss would then be passed on to taxpayers. 

But Wu says there are steps farmers can take to lower the risk of aflatoxin contamination: those who have access to water can irrigate their corn when conditions get hotter and drier, while advances in plant breeding and genetic modification have developed strains that are both more drought-tolerant and resistant to fungal infections. 

Robyn Allscheid, the director of research and productivity at the National Corn Growers Association, says some producers are starting to think ahead in order to prevent the spread of aflatoxin, but she says that implementation hasn’t yet caught up with the research. 

“These aren’t issues that are typically at the top of [growers’] minds,” she said. “We’re going to see sporadic losses still throughout the Midwest.”

“Almost like malpractice”: To shed bias, doctors get schooled to look beyond obesity

When Melissa Boughton complained to her OB-GYN about dull pelvic pain, the doctor responded by asking about her diet and exercise habits.

The question seemed irrelevant, considering the type of pain she was having, Boughton thought at the time. But it wasn’t unusual coming from this doctor. “Every time I was in there, she’d talk about diet and exercise,” said Boughton, who is 34 and lives in Durham, North Carolina.

On this occasion, three years ago, the OB-GYN told Boughton that losing weight would likely resolve the pelvic pain. The physician brought up diet and exercise at least twice more during the appointment. The doctor said she’d order an ultrasound to put Boughton’s mind at ease.

The ultrasound revealed the source of her pain: a 7-centimeter tumor filled with fluid on Boughton’s left ovary.

“I hate that doctor for the way she treated me — like my pain was no big deal,” Boughton said. “She seemed to make a decision about me based off of a very cursory look.”

Research has long shown that doctors are less likely to respect patients who are overweight or obese, even as nearly three-quarters of adults in the U.S. now fall into one of those categories. Obesity, which characterizes patients whose body mass index is 30 or higher, is pervasive in the South and Midwest, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The state with the highest rate is Mississippi, where 4 in 10 adults qualify as obese.

Obesity is a common, treatable condition linked to a long list of health risks, including Type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and some cancers. Despite obesity’s prevalence, it carries a unique stigma.

Doctors often approach the practice of medicine with an anti-fat bias and struggle to communicate with patients whose weight exceeds what’s considered the normal range. Some obesity experts blame a lack of focus on the subject in medical schools. Others blame a lack of empathy.

To counter that, the Association of American Medical Colleges plans to roll out in June new diversity, equity, and inclusion standards aimed at teaching doctors, among other things, about respectful treatment of people diagnosed as overweight or obese.

That’s not happening for many patients, said Dr. Scott Butsch, director of obesity medicine at the Cleveland Clinic’s Bariatric and Metabolic Institute. “This is almost like malpractice. You have these physicians or clinicians — whoever they are — relating everything to the patient’s obesity without investigation,” Butsch said. “The stereotypes and misperceptions around this disease just bleed into clinical practice.”

The problem, Butsch argued, is that too little attention is paid to obesity in medical school. When he trained and taught at Harvard Medical School for several years, Butsch said, students received no more than nine hours of obesity education spread over three days in four years.

In 2013, the American Medical Association voted to recognize obesity as a disease. But, Butsch said, doctors often approach it with a one-size-fits-all approach. “Eat less, move more” doesn’t work for everyone, he said.

Parents and medical providers need to take special care when talking to children who have been diagnosed with obesity about their weight, psychologists have warned. The way parents and providers talk to kids about their weight can have lifelong consequences and in some cases trigger unhealthy eating habits. For children who are obese, obesity experts agree, weight loss isn’t always the goal.

“There are many different forms of obesity, but we’re treating them like we’re giving the same chemotherapy to all kinds of cancer,” Butsch said.

All but four of the country’s 128 M.D.-granting medical schools reported covering content related to obesity and bariatric medicine in the 2020-21 academic year, according to curriculum data provided to KHN by the Association of American Medical Colleges, which does not represent osteopathic schools.

Even so, research suggests that many physicians haven’t been sufficiently trained to address weight issues with patients and that obesity education in medical schools across the world is “grossly neglected.” A survey completed by leaders at 40 U.S. medical schools found that only 10% felt their students were “very prepared” to manage patients with obesity.

Meanwhile, “half of the medical schools surveyed reported that expanding obesity education was a low priority or not a priority,” wrote the authors of a 2020 journal article that describes the survey’s results.

Butsch wants Congress to pass a resolution insisting that medical schools incorporate substantive training on nutrition, diet, and obesity. He acknowledged, though, that the medical school curriculum is already packed with subject matter deemed necessary to cover.

Dr. David Cole, president of the Medical University of South Carolina, said plenty of topics should be covered more comprehensively in medical school but aren’t. “There’s this massive tome — it’s about this big,” Cole said, raising his hand about a foot off the top of a conference table in Charleston. “The topic is: Things I never learned in medical school.”

The bigger issue, he said, is that medicine has historically been taught to emphasize memorization and has failed to emphasize culturally competent care. “That was valid 100 years ago, if you were supposed to be the fount of all knowledge,” Cole said. “That’s just not valid anymore.”

The Association of American Medical Colleges is trying to tackle the problem in two ways.

First, it developed a professional readiness exam for aspiring medical school students, called PREview, designed to assess an applicant’s cultural competence, social skills, and listening skills, as well as their ability to think through situations they may encounter in medical school and clinical settings. “We call them softer skills, but they’re really the harder ones to learn,” said Lisa Howley, an educational psychologist and senior director of strategic initiatives at the association. More than a dozen medical schools now recommend or require that applicants submit their PREview test scores with their Medical College Admission Test scores.

Second, the medical college association will roll out new competency standards for existing medical students, residents, and doctors related to diversity, equity, and inclusion in June. Those standards will address racism, implicit bias, and gender equality and will aim to teach doctors how to talk with people who are overweight.

“The bias toward those individuals is way too high,” Howley said. “We have a lot more work to do in this space.”

After the source of Melissa Boughton’s pelvic pain was discovered, the OB-GYN who had recommended diet and exercise to ease her symptoms told Boughton the tumor was no big deal. “She acted like it was the most normal thing in the world,” Boughton said.

Boughton sought a second opinion from a doctor who marketed her practice as a “Healthy at Every Size” office. That doctor referred Boughton to a surgical oncologist, who removed the tumor, her left ovary, and part of a fallopian tube. The tumor was large, but it wasn’t cancerous. And although the surgery to remove it was considered successful, Boughton has since had trouble conceiving and is undergoing fertility treatment as she tries to have a baby.

“It’s an emotional roller coaster,” she said. “I feel very young at 34 to be going through this.”

Boughton — who describes herself as someone who doesn’t “fit into the BMI box” — said the experience taught her to choose her doctors differently.

“You can ask me if I diet and exercise like once,” she said. Any more than that, and she starts shopping for a different doctor.

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

I haven’t gotten jaded or cynical about mass shootings — but it’s getting harder

I refuse to grow numb.

I refuse to lose my anger.

I refuse to grow complacent even as our government refuses to do anything about the number of mass shootings in this country.

According to CNN, Tuesday’s shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, marks at least the 30th shooting at a K-12 school in 2022. Other news services say it’s only the 27th.

Mother Jones has compiled an excellent database of the 129 mass shootings since the early 1980s that fit the definition of a “mass shooting.” There have been many  more. I covered gang fights in San Antonio in the ’80s where three and sometimes more people were killed — but those weren’t indiscriminate killings. They were like the St. Valentine’s Day massacre: Criminal activity was the primary factor and a certain logic was involved — even if it was terrifying, violent and extreme. I couldn’t accept them, especially after seeing some of the dead in their final repose, lifeless and bloody in the street.

RELATED: Texas school shooting: The right responds to massacre by calling for more guns

The first time I remember a “mass shooting” that didn’t have anything to do with organized crime or gang violence was the 1984 Dallas nightclub shooting when a patron got pissed off and gunned down six people, including a woman who had brushed him off on the dance floor. He blew her a kiss before he blew her away. 

As the New York Times reported June 30, 1984: 

An unemployed waiter who was rejected by a dance partner at a plush Dallas nightclub ”blew her a kiss” before fatally shooting her and five other patrons early today, the police said. The suspect, who stopped firing only to reload his 9-millimeter Smith & Wesson, also seriously wounded a seventh person in what the police called the worst mass murder in Dallas history.

I was 23. The shooting was considered an aberration — an anomaly brought about because a man with a diseased mind acted irrationally. There were heartfelt outpourings of “thoughts and prayers” from legislators, celebrities and the general public. But no legislative action was taken. During the last 40 years, the best anyone could do to answer this problem has been that limp offering of “thoughts and prayers.” It was heartfelt, perhaps, in the beginning. Today it is an insult to the victims and their families. It is a brush off. It’s a refusal to act, hidden behind a faux-act of remorse and concern. It has become a middle finger hoisted to victims’ families and anyone who suggests we do anything more to end the violence.

“Legislation? Well, our thoughts and prayers are with the family.” Oh, by the way — you still have to pay for the funeral expenses. 

Maybe “thoughts and prayers” were heartfelt once upon a time. Today they’re just a middle finger to anyone who suggests we actually do anything.

A mass shooting by a disgruntled former employee at Standard Gravure printing company in my hometown of Louisville in 1989 marked the first time in my life I knew someone involved in a mass shooting. One of the victims was a family member of a friend of mine. By the time I was 30, I had covered my first of many mass shootings — the Luby massacre in Killeen, Texas, in 1991.

As I’ve grown older, the mass shootings have continued, growing more deadly — if that is possible — and more obtuse. Sometimes they seem to have no motive at all. Sometimes it is racism or misogyny, and sometimes it has to do with someone hating someone else because of their sexual preferences. We are a barbaric, brutish people in this country. We ignore the victims of carnage while remaining intent on defending a person’s right to stockpile weapons and use them on the very children we claim we want to protect. 

The shooting in Uvalde, Texas, this week involved school children as young as seven. Nineteen died needlessly. Perhaps one of them would’ve been a Rembrandt. Maybe one of them was destined to be a football coach who would mentor young kids. Maybe one was destined to be a just and wise politician who would find a way to limit the ownership of guns. We’ll never know. The families who survive will never get to see their sons and daughters go on a first date, go to the prom, get married or have children of their own. They will never know the joy of seeing their children grow up. They will only have bitter memories of things that might have been. 


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This is the American tragedy: Thousands of needlessly dead people. Their deaths spread across the last 40 years have not only poisoned the lives of the survivors, but by extension every person in the United States, as the cancerous poison has spread. 

Let that one sink in. In my professional life as a reporter, I’ve covered a wide variety of deaths. I’ve covered hundreds if not thousands of murders, from war and riots to crime and accidental killings. The accidents include people firing firearms into the air to celebrate the New Year – with people miles away killed by a bullet that fell back to earth. I’ve been able to handle these deaths and process them the way most cops and cop reporters do — with a dark sense of humor, and sometimes by imbibing copious amounts of alcohol. But it has never numbed me.

The youngest victim of a shooting I ever covered was a 14-month-old being walked by her mother in a stroller on a San Antonio street. She was killed from a wayward shot fired by two nearby battling street gangs. The image haunts me to this day.

Many have abandoned hope that this country will ever do anything about gun violence. But if we got ourselves into this hell, we damn sure can get ourselves out.

It is the epidemic of gun violence in this country, the steady rain of unwarranted death that has led to a flood of fear and anguish — that’s what overwhelms me at times. Wiser people than myself have said that hell is the absence of hope. There are many who’ve abandoned hope that this country will ever do anything about our peculiar hobby of indiscriminately shooting each other out of bitterness or for sport. That only means we live in a hell of our own construction. And if we got ourselves here, we damn sure can get ourselves out. There’s nothing wrong with America that can’t be fixed with what’s right with America. Remember that pithy political aphorism?

During the Clinton administration, the Senate narrowly approved an assault weapons ban that went away 10 years later, due to a sunset provision. There is some evidence that mass shootings may have diminished during those 10 years, but the ban was mostly symbolic and had little effect on gun violence in this country — especially after the law ceased to exist. Today, gun enthusiasts act as if the assault weapons ban was a nightmare. They still defend the need to go deer hunting with an automatic rifle — I guess just in case Bambi is walking through the forest armed for battle.

We have descended into a circle of hell populated by political candidates who actively promote Jesus and gun ownership in the same breath. Kandiss Taylor, a gubernatorial candidate in Georgia, literally had “Jesus, Guns, Babies” as a campaign slogan this year. Members of Congress like Lauren Boebert proudly sponsor commercials and photos promoting gun ownership and distribution.

The implied logic of the gun lobby is that if everyone is armed, everyone will be safer. I’ve never felt safer in an environment with lots of guns. Those are called war zones.

Some, like the moron Sean Hannity, have called for surrounding schools with militia members and retired military. Some advocate arming teachers. This would amount to escalating the violence. The implied logic, according to a gun lobbyist I spoke with, is that if everyone is armed, then everyone will be safer. I’ve never felt safer in an environment with lots of guns. Those are known as war zones.

Today, the entire United States of America is a war zone. It has been one for most of my adult life.

The people who continue to defend the unfettered right to own and use firearms are barbaric, moronic and twisted. Some have been twisted by the gun lobbyists — particularly our elected representatives. Some are incapable of imagining a world that isn’t the Wild West. No manner of shooting, no matter how horrific, will make them change their mind. Members of Congress were shot, and some of those shooting victims still oppose gun control.

President Biden took a slow walk off Marine One on the South Lawn on Tuesday after his trip overseas and faced the latest tragedy. He walked into the White House and addressed the violence as bluntly as any man could. “As a nation we have to ask, when in God’s name are we going to stand up to the gun lobby? When in God’s name will we do what we all know in our gut needs to be done?”

This president, like every other president, cannot wave a magic wand and make gun violence go away. We cannot just blame the gun lobby. We cannot just question the mental health of the shooters and we have to quit merely offering “thoughts and prayers” in a futile and useless gesture that only serves as a prologue to the next round of gun violence — which could occur before you finish reading this story.

Ultimately this boils down to us. If we continue to vote crap into office, it is crap we will get back. Garbage in, garbage out. Those who put their personal interests ahead of the interests of the nation are not only unsympathetic narcissists, but they lack the empathy a human being needs in order to serve and represent others.

You know who you are. We know who you are. And voting you out of office is the Christian thing to do.

Biden tried to shame opponents of gun control in his speech from the White House Tuesday. “We have to make it clear to every elected official in this country. It’s time to act. It’s time for those who obstruct or delay or block the common-sense gun laws, we have to let you know we will not forget. We can do so much more. We have to do more.”

Yes. But that is just a start. Shame doesn’t work on the shameless.

Mental health and education are part of the puzzle. But for now, let’s take the first step: Get rid of the goddamn guns.

Remember, the 18-year-old shooter in Uvalde bought two rifles just two days before he killed 19 children and a teacher.

In what circle of Dante’s hell is that acceptable?

Read more on the latest wave of gun tragedies:

5 Supreme Court decisions from this term that are terrifyingly radical — and not about abortion

While it likes to pride itself as a paragon of impartiality, the Supreme Court, now stacked with a strong conservative majority that is willing to legislate from the bench, is sliding into a crisis of credibility. Public approval of the court has plummeted by 15% over the past three years, while nearly two-thirds of Americans believe that the Supreme Court is primarily motivated by politics. 

Much of this crisis is informed by the body’s confirmation process, which has in recent years become an open invitation for partisan histrionics of all kinds. The GOP’s theatricality was center stage, for instance, during the confirmation hearings of Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, who they subjected to a medley of bad-faith questions like, “Can you provide a definition for the word ‘woman’?” and “Do you agree with this book that is being taught to kids that babies are racist?” 

Recently, Americans saw this spirit of partisanship carry over into the court’s actual jurisprudence, when Politico reported on a leaked draft majority opinion revealing that the court had already informally voted to overturn Roe, effectively turning back the clock on reproductive rights by half a century. But while Roe’s reversal will be incredibly consequential, the court has also handed down a number of separate decisions that similarly reek of political bias: 

1 Ohio v. Occupational Safety and Health Administration 

Last November, President Biden rolled out one of his most consequential COVID-19 policies to date, mandating that all private businesses with over 100 employees require their workforce to get vaccinated or undergo routine testing. The policy was set to be implemented by the Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) on the basis that COVID poses a unique workplace hazard. At the time, scientists and public health experts overwhelmingly backed the mandate, in large part because the data has shown that mandates are effective.

However, by last December, numerous businesses and trade groups, including National Federation of Independent Business, an association of small business owners, had filed emergency applications for the policy to be scrutinized by the Supreme Court. The following month, in a 6-3 opinion, the court shot Biden’s mandate down, calling it a “blunt instrument.” The mandate, the court wrote, “draws no distinctions based on industry or risk of exposure to Covid-19” and is “a significant encroachment into the lives – and health – of a vast number of employees.” 

2 Alabama Association of Realtors v. Department of Health and Human Services

In March 2020, at the height of the pandemic, the Centers for Disease Control announced that the federal government would be imposing an eviction moratorium in order prevent the spread of COVID and support millions of Americans who lost their jobs as a result of the crisis. The policy, according to Duke researchers, reduced the pandemic death rate by 11% and was extended by the Biden administration as the crisis dragged on. 

But in August, facing a clarion call from real estate interests, the Supreme Court rejected the CDC’s moratorium, putting millions of Americans with unpaid rent at risk of being evicted. The court’s decision, much to the contempt of many, was handed down via shadow docket, where judges can deliver unsigned rulings without jumping through the traditional hoops of argumentation and deliberation. 

RELATED: Millions at risk after Supreme Court overturns eviction ban in latest “shadow docket” ruling

3 Federal Election Commission v. Ted Cruz for Senate 

In 2018, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Tex., lent his own re-election campaign “Ted Cruz for Senate”  $260,000 on the day before his general election in order to spur a challenge to provision within campaign finance law. The 20-year provision, Section 304 of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, bars lawmakers like Cruz from raising any more than $250,000 after Election Day for the purposes of repaying pre-election loans that they gave themselves during their campaign. 

After Cruz filed a lawsuit challenging Section 304, the Supreme Court ruled this month that the cap violated the First Amendment and “burdens core political speech without proper justification.” Justice Elena Kagan, one of the court’s three dissenters, expressed concerns that the law’s rescission might allow problematic back-scratching, largely because lawmakers could have donors pay off their campaign loans in exchange for political favors. 

“The politician is happy; the donors are happy. The only loser is the public,” Kagan wrote. “It inevitably suffers from government corruption.”


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4 United States v. Vaello-Madero

In 1972, Congress passed the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) to supply people who are disabled, or low-income, or above the age of 65 with government-subsidized income. The program was designed to be eligible for residents living in all fifty states, including the U.S. commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and was never officially extended to residents of Puerto Rico, a U.S. territory. 

In 2016, Jose Luis Vaello-Madero, a Puerto Rico-born man who lived in New York for several decades, filed a lawsuit after his social security checks were discontinued when he decided to move back to Puerto Rico to care for his wife. A district court ruled in his favor, arguing that the exclusion of Puerto Rico from SSI contravenes the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. However, the case was appealed to the Supreme Court, which ultimately ruled 8-1 against Vaello-Madero. 

“In devising tax and benefits programs, it is reasonable for Congress to take account of the general balance of benefits to and burdens on the residents of Puerto Rico,” Supreme Court Justice Kavanaugh wrote, noting that the territory’s citizens are generally not required to pay taxes.

The Government Accountability Office estimates that more than 300,000 Puerto Ricans would have been eligible for the program.

 

5Shinn v. Martinez Ramirez

Back in December, the Supreme Court gathered for oral arguments around a case involving Barry Jones, who currently awaits his sentence on death row for the alleged rape and murder of girlfriend’s four-year-old daughter. In 2018, Jones’ conviction was overturned after a federal court found that he was not given sufficient legal representation in violation of the defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights. The judge ruled that “there is a reasonable probability that his jury would not have convicted him of any of the crimes with which he was charged and previously convicted.”

However, on Monday, the Supreme Court decided that state prisoners have no constitutional right to bring new evidence to court indicating that they were not provided with ample counsel. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas said such a right “encourages prisoners to sandbag state courts.”
Christina Swarns, executive director of the Innocence Project, told NPR that “the opinion leaves innocent people in the nightmarish position of having no court to go to for justice.”

RELATED: Biden’s vaccine mandate makes Republicans choose: culture war or corporate profits

A return to permanent war is here: First it will bankrupt America, then destroy it

The United States, as the near-unanimous vote to provide nearly $40 billion in aid to Ukraine illustrates, is trapped in the death spiral of unchecked militarism. No high speed trains. No universal health care. No viable COVID relief program. No respite from 8.3% inflation. No infrastructure programs to repair decaying roads and bridges, which require $41.8 billion to fix the 43,586 structurally deficient bridges, on average 68 years old. No forgiveness of $1.7 trillion in student debt. No addressing income inequality. No program to feed the 17 million children who go to bed each night hungry. No rational gun control or curbing of the epidemic of nihilistic violence and mass shootings. No help for the 100,000 Americans who die each year of drug overdoses. No minimum wage of $15 an hour to counter 44 years of wage stagnation. No respite from gas prices that are projected to hit $6 a gallon.

The permanent war economy, implanted since the end of World War II, has destroyed the private economy, bankrupted the nation, and squandered trillions of dollars of taxpayer money. The monopolization of capital by the military has driven the US debt to $30 trillion, $6 trillion more than the US GDP of $24 trillion. Servicing this debt costs $300 billion a year. We spent more on the military, $813 billion for fiscal year 2023, than the next nine countries, including China and Russia, combined.

We are paying a heavy social, political and economic cost for our militarism. Washington watches passively as the U.S. rots, morally, politically, economically and physically, while China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, India and other countries extract themselves from the tyranny of the U.S. dollar and the international Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT), a messaging network banks and other financial institutions use to send and receive information, such as money transfer instructions. Once the U.S. dollar is no longer the world’s reserve currency, once there is an alternative to SWIFT, it will precipitate an internal economic collapse. It will force the immediate contraction of the U.S. empire shuttering most of its nearly 800 overseas military installations. It will signal the death of Pax Americana.

RELATED: Pimps of war: Neocons who fueled 20 years of carnage in the Middle East are back for more

Democrat or Republican. It does not matter. War is the raison d’être of the state. Extravagant military expenditures are justified in the name of “national security.” The nearly $40 billion allocated for Ukraine, most of it going into the hands of weapons manufacturers such as Raytheon Technologies, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman, BAE Systems, Lockheed Martin and Boeing, is only the beginning. Military strategists, who say the war will be long and protracted, are talking about infusions of $4 or $5 billion in military aid a month to Ukraine. We face existential threats. But these do not count. The proposed budget for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in fiscal year 2023 is $10.675 billion. The proposed budget for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is $11.881 billion. Ukraine alone gets more than double that amount. Pandemics and the climate emergency are afterthoughts. War is all that matters. This is a recipe for collective suicide.

War is the raison d’être of the state. Extravagant military expenditures are justified for “national security.” The $40 billion allocated for Ukraine mostly goes to weapons manufacturers. Strategists talk of sending $4 billion more every month.

There were three restraints to the avarice and bloodlust of the permanent war economy that no longer exist. The first was the old liberal wing of the Democratic Party, led by politicians such as Sen. George McGovern, Sen. Eugene McCarthy and Sen. J. William Fulbright, who wrote “The Pentagon Propaganda Machine.” The self-identified progressives, a pitiful minority, in Congress today, from Rep. Barbara Lee —who was the single vote in the House and the Senate opposing an open-ended authorization allowing the president to wage war in Afghanistan or anywhere else — to Rep. Ilhan Omar are now dutifully lining up to fund the latest proxy war. The second restraint was an independent media and academia, including journalists such as I.F Stone and Neil Sheehan along with scholars such as Seymour Melman, author of “The Permanent War Economy” and “Pentagon Capitalism: The Political Economy of War.” Third, and perhaps most important, was an organized antiwar movement led by religious leaders such as Dorothy Day, Martin Luther King Jr. and Phil and Dan Berrigan, as well as groups such as Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). They understood that unchecked militarism was a fatal disease.

None of these opposition forces, which did not reverse the permanent war economy but curbed its excesses, now exist. The two ruling parties have been bought by corporations, especially military contractors. The press is anemic and obsequious to the war industry. Propagandists for permanent war, largely from right-wing think tanks lavishly funded by the war industry, along with former military and intelligence officials, are exclusively quoted or interviewed as military experts. NBC’s “Meet the Press” aired a segment May 13 where officials from Center for a New American Security (CNAS) simulated what a war with China over Taiwan might look like. The co-founder of CNAS, Michèle Flournoy, who appeared in the “Meet the Press” war games segment and was considered by Biden to run the Pentagon, wrote in 2020 in Foreign Affairs that the U.S. needs to develop “the capability to credibly threaten to sink all of China’s military vessels, submarines and merchant ships in the South China Sea within 72 hours.” 


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The handful of anti-militarists and critics of empire from the left, such as Noam Chomsky, and the right, such as Ron Paul, have been declared persona non grata by a compliant media. The liberal class has retreated into boutique activism where issues of class, capitalism and militarism are jettisoned for “cancel culture,” multiculturalism and identity politics. Liberals are cheerleading the war in Ukraine. At least the inception of the war with Iraq saw them join significant street protests. Ukraine is embraced as the latest crusade for freedom and democracy against the new Hitler. There is little hope, I fear, of rolling back or restraining the disasters being orchestrated on a national and global level.  The neoconservatives and liberal interventionists chant in unison for war. Joe Biden has appointed these warmongers, whose attitude to nuclear war is terrifyingly cavalier, to run the Pentagon, the National Security Council and the State Department.

Since all we do is war, all proposed solutions are military. War will cripple Russia. War will curb the growing power of China. These are demented and dangerous fantasies of a ruling class severed from reality.

Since all we do is war, all proposed solutions are military. This military adventurism accelerates the decline, as the defeat in Vietnam and the squandering of $8 trillion in the futile wars in the Middle East illustrate. War and sanctions, it is believed, will cripple Russia, rich in gas and natural resources. War, or the threat of war, will curb the growing economic and military clout of China.

These are demented and dangerous fantasies, perpetrated by a ruling class that has severed itself from reality. No longer able to salvage their own society and economy, they seek to destroy those of their global competitors, especially Russia and China. Once the militarists cripple Russia, the plan goes, they will focus military aggression on the Indo-Pacific, dominating what Hillary Clinton as secretary of state, referring to the Pacific, called “the American Sea.” 

You cannot talk about war without talking about markets. The U.S., whose growth rate has fallen to below 2%, while China’s is 8.1%, has turned to military aggression to bolster its sagging economy. If the U.S. can sever Russian gas supplies to Europe, it will force Europeans to buy from the United States. U.S. firms, at the same time, would be happy to replace the Chinese Communist Party, even if they must do it through the threat of war, to open unfettered access to Chinese markets. War, if it did break out with China, would devastate the Chinese, American and global economies, destroying free trade between countries as in World War I. But that doesn’t mean it won’t happen.

Washington is desperately trying to build military and economic alliances to ward off a rising China, whose economy is expected by 2028 to overtake that of the United States, according to the U.K.’s Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR). The White House has said that Biden’s recent visit to Asia was about sending a “powerful message” to Beijing and others about what the world could look like if democracies “stand together to shape the rules of the road.” The Biden administration has invited South Korea and Japan to attend the NATO summit in Madrid.

But fewer and fewer nations, even among European allies, are willing to be dominated by the United States. Washington’s veneer of democracy and supposed respect for human rights and civil liberties is so badly tarnished as to be irrecoverable. Its economic decline, with China’s manufacturing 70% higher than that of the U.S., is irreversible. War is a desperate Hail Mary, one employed by dying empires throughout history with catastrophic consequences. “It was the rise of Athens and the fear that this instilled in Sparta that made war inevitable,” Thucydides noted in “The History of the Peloponnesian War.”

A key component to the sustenance of the permanent war state was the creation of the all-volunteer force. Without conscripts, the burden of fighting wars falls to the poor, the working class and military families. This allows the children of the middle class, who led the Vietnam antiwar movement, to avoid service. It protects the military from internal revolts, carried out by troops during the Vietnam War, which jeopardized the cohesion of the armed forces.

The all-volunteer force, by limiting the pool of available troops, also makes the global ambitions of the militarists impossible. Desperate to maintain or increase troop levels in Iraq and Afghanistan, the military instituted the “stop-loss” policy that arbitrarily extended active-duty contracts. Its slang term was the “backdoor draft.” The effort to bolster the number of troops by hiring private military contractors as well has had a negligible effect. Increased troop levels would not have won the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but the tiny percentage of those willing to serve in the military (only 7% of the U.S. population are veterans) is an unacknowledged Achilles heel for the militarists.

“As a consequence, the problem of too much war and too few soldiers eludes serious scrutiny,” writes historian and retired Army Col. Andrew Bacevich in “After the Apocalypse: America’s Role in a World Transformed“:

Expectations of technology bridging that gap provide an excuse to avoid asking the most fundamental questions: Does the United States possess the military wherewithal to oblige adversaries to endorse its claim of being history’s indispensable nation? And if the answer is no, as the post-9/11 wars in Afghanistan and Iraq suggest, wouldn’t it make sense for Washington to temper its ambitions accordingly?

This question, as Bacevich points out, is “anathema.” The military strategists work from the supposition that the coming wars won’t look anything like past wars. They invest in imaginary theories of future wars that ignore the lessons of the past, ensuring more fiascos. 

The political class is as self-deluded as the generals. It refuses to accept the emergence of a multipolar world and the palpable decline of American power. It speaks in the outdated language of American exceptionalism and triumphalism, believing it has the right to impose its will as the leader of the “free world.” In his 1992 Defense Planning Guidance memorandum, then-Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz argued that the U.S. must ensure no rival superpower again arises. The U.S. should project its military strength to dominate a unipolar world in perpetuity. On Feb. 19, 1998, on NBC’s “Today,” Secretary of State Madeleine Albright gave the Democratic version of this doctrine of unipolarity. “If we have to use force it is because we are Americans; we are the indispensable nation,” she said. “We stand tall, and we see further than other countries into the future.”

This demented vision of unrivaled U.S. global supremacy, not to mention unrivaled goodness and virtue, blinds the establishment Republicans and Democrats. The military strikes they casually used to assert the doctrine of unipolarity, especially in the Middle East, swiftly spawned jihadist terror and prolonged warfare. None of them saw it coming until the hijacked jets slammed into the World Trade Center twin towers. That they cling to this absurd hallucination is the triumph of hope over experience.

There is a deep loathing among the public for these elitist Ivy League architects of American imperialism. Imperialism was tolerated when it was able to project power abroad and produce rising living standards at home. It was tolerated when it restrained itself to covert interventions in countries such as Iran, Guatemala and Indonesia. It went off the rails in Vietnam. The military defeats that followed accompanied a steady decline in living standards, wage stagnation, a crumbling infrastructure and eventually a series of economic policies and trade deals, orchestrated by the same ruling class, which deindustrialized and impoverished the country.

Donald Trump committed the heresy of questioning the sanctity of American empire, calling the invasion of Iraq a “big, fat mistake.” Told that Putin was “a killer,” he retorted, “You think our country’s so innocent?”

The establishment oligarchs, now united in the Democratic Party, distrust Donald Trump. He commits the heresy of questioning the sanctity of the American empire. Trump derided the invasion of Iraq as a “big, fat mistake.” He promised “to keep us out of endless war.” Trump was repeatedly questioned about his relationship with Vladimir Putin. Putin was “a killer,” one interviewer told him. “There are a lot of killers,” Trump retorted. “You think our country’s so innocent?” Trump dared to speak a truth that was to be forever unspoken, that the militarists had sold out the American people.

Noam Chomsky took some heat for pointing out, correctly, that Trump is the “one statesman” who has laid out a “sensible” proposition to resolve the Russia-Ukraine crisis. The proposed solution included “facilitating negotiations instead of undermining them and moving toward establishing some kind of accommodation in Europe … in which there are no military alliances but just mutual accommodation.”

Trump is too unfocused and mercurial to offer serious policy solutions. He did set a timetable to withdraw from Afghanistan, but he also ratcheted up the economic war against Venezuela and reinstituted crushing sanctions against Cuba and Iran, which the Obama administration had ended. He increased the military budget. He apparently flirted with carrying out a missile strike on Mexico to “destroy the drug labs.” But he acknowledges a distaste for imperial mismanagement that resonates with the public, one that has every right to loath the smug mandarins that plunge us into one war after another. Trump lies like he breathes. But so do they.

The 57 Republicans who refused to support the $40 billion aid package to Ukraine, along with many of the 19 bills that included an earlier $13.6 billion in aid for Ukraine, come out of the kooky conspiratorial world of Trump. They, like Trump, repeat this heresy. They too are attacked and censored. But the longer Biden and the ruling class continue to pour resources into war at our expense, the more these proto-fascists, already set to wipe out Democratic gains in the House and Senate this fall, will be ascendant. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, during the debate on the aid package to Ukraine, which most members were not given time to closely examine, said: “$40 billion but there’s no baby formula for American mothers and babies.”

“An unknown amount of money to the CIA and Ukraine supplemental bill but there’s no formula for American babies,” she added. “Stop funding regime change and money laundering scams. A U.S. politician covers up their crimes in countries like Ukraine.”

Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin immediately attacked Greene for parroting the propaganda of Vladimir Putin.

Greene, like Trump, spoke a truth that resonates with a beleaguered public. The opposition to permanent war should have come from the tiny progressive wing of the Democratic Party, which unfortunately sold out to the craven Democratic leadership to save their political careers. Greene is demented, but Raskin and the Democrats peddle their own brand of lunacy. We are going to pay a very steep price for this burlesque.

Read more on the Ukraine war and its contradictions:

How the NRA and the GOP are in financial cahoots

In the wake of the harrowing massacre at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas on Tuesday, progressive stalwart Nina Turner focused her ire on the right-wing lawmakers who take money from the National Rifle Association and argued that solutions to gun violence and other injustices plaguing the U.S. will continue to prove elusive until the role of big money in politics is confronted.

“The issue is money in politics,” Turner, a former Ohio state senator and co-chair of Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) 2020 presidential campaign, wrote on social media. “They’re allowing children to die because of the gun lobby. They’re allowing the planet to die because of Big Oil. They’re allowing people to go without healthcare and die because of the insurance lobby.”

“Inaction is bought,” she continued. “Whatever issue you care about, whatever issue you fight for, the roadblocks to progress are always put up by big money. If we’re going to talk about how to stop mass shootings, we have to talk about big money in politics and the role it plays.”

No shortage of congressional Republicans took to Twitter on Tuesday to offer their proverbial “thoughts and prayers” after 19 children and two teachers were fatally gunned down in a classroom located in a predominantly Latino town 80 miles west of San Antonio.

But when a dozen GOP senators and one ex-senator claimed to be shocked and devastated by the latest mass murder to take place in one of the nation’s schools, author Bess Kalb documented how much money they have accepted from the NRA.

Among others, Kalb’s spotlight on the glaring discrepancy between expressing condolences and raking in cash from a notorious pro-gun group that has lobbied aggressively to prevent common-sense safety reforms shone on Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, former U.S. senator and recently defeated gubernatorial candidate David Perdue of Georgia, and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who is scheduled to speak at an NRA meeting in Houston later this week.

Below is a collection of Republicans’ statements of concern, which Kalb juxtaposed with their NRA cash totals, in descending order:

“Did the NRA send out a message with the words ‘horrifying and heartbreaking’ yesterday or did its top paid politicians all coincidentally use the exact same language?” Kalb asked.

There have been more than 3,500 mass shootings in the U.S. since the 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newton, Connecticut. Over the past decade, Congress has repeatedly failed to pass legislation to meaningfully reform the nation’s gun laws, thanks in large part to the opposition of GOP lawmakers bankrolled by the NRA.

Turner, for her part, argued that “not only does every politician that takes NRA money have blood on their hands, so does every politician that partakes in and upholds a system that allows these big-money interests to exist.”

Ron DeSantis backed by deep pocket donors

Republican Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who is seeking a second term this November as a springboard to run for president in 2024, is backed financially by some of the wealthiest private donors in the United States.

According to an analysis published by correspondent Zac Anderson in Wednesday’s Herald Tribune, “dozens of billionaires and billionaire family members with a net worth of $275 billion have donated to DeSantis’ reelection effort, a level of billionaire support one expert called ‘extraordinary.'”

Anderson revealed that 42 individuals with net worths of 10-plus digits – or three commas – have invested at least $12.45 million of their cash in DeSantis, who has championed extreme right-wing policies in the Sunshine State and seeks to take his crusade nationwide.

The figures are staggering, per Anderson’s reporting:

Total billionaire donors: At least 42
Total contributions from billionaires: At least $12.5 million
State with most DeSantis billionaire contributions: Florida at 12, followed by New York with six, and Texas with five
Billionaire donor with highest net worth: Julia Koch and family at $62.2 billion
Billionaire donor who gave the most: Ken Griffin at $5 million
Billionaire donor who gave the least: Stanley Hubbard at $10,000
Number of billionaires who have given DeSantis at least six figures: 25
Number of states with billionaire DeSantis donors: 15

Other notable names pumping DeSantis full of campaign sugar include:

  • Publix supermarket heiress and financier of the January 6th, 2021 Capitol insurrection Julie Jenkins Fancelli (family net worth $8.8 billion)
  • Former President Donald Trump’s Secretary of Education and Amway heiress Betsy DeVos as well as three of her kin (family net worth $5.4 billion)
  • Ex-San Francisco 49ers owner, real estate mogul, and Trump-pardoned Louisiana gambling bribe recipient Edward DeBartolo Jr. (family net worth $2.5 billion).

The 5 most shocking moments from “Keeper of the Ashes,” Hulu’s Oklahoma Girl Scouts murders doc

The Oklahoma Girl Scout murders, perhaps the state’s most harrowing murder case yet, is painfully reexamined almost 45 years later in Hulu’s newest four-part documentary “Keeper of the Ashes.”

Taking place in 1977, three Girl Scouts were found brutally killed during a weeklong trip in Oklahoma, but the murders still remain unsolved to this day. To help shed more light on what actually went down on the campgrounds, experts, investigators and local officials turned to advanced technologies, like DNA testing, to help review old evidence and unearth new clues. Interviews with the victims’ families, camp counselors, reporters, private investigators and, yes, Kristin Chenoweth — who was unable to attend the trip due to sickness — also reveal a handful of new details, proving how intricate this whole case is.   

RELATED: Kristin Chenoweth reveals her connection to the 1977 Girl Scout murders in “Keeper of the Ashes” doc 

No amount of findings can diminish both the agony and fear that continues to plague the tight-knit community of Tulsa. While watching each episode of the series, it’s clear that the ongoing investigation has reopened old wounds and lasting trauma in the hopes of someday attaining justice.

From an cryptic ritualistic cave arrangement to the mythical tales surrounding one suspect, here are the most shocking moments from “Keeper of the Ashes: The Oklahoma Girl Scout Murders”:

1 The Girl Scouts found

On the morning of June 13, 1977, three Girl Scouts — Lori Lee Farmer, 8, Doris Denise Milner, 10, and Michele Heather Guse, 9 — were sexually assaulted and murdered on the first night of a weeklong camping trip at Camp Scott in Mayes County. Their bodies, crumpled under bloodied sleeping bags, were haphazardly discarded on a trail just 100 yards away from their shared sleeping tent.

Following a lengthy investigation, authorities arrested and charged Gene Leroy Hart, a local jail escapee who had previously been convicted of kidnapping and raping two pregnant women along with four counts of first-degree burglary. The case, however, was soon reopened after Hart was acquitted by a local jury in March 1979. Absolved of his charges, Hart only returned to state prison to continue serving sentences for his prior convictions.

Victims Michele Heather Guse, Doris Denise Milner and Lori Lee Farmer in “Keeper of the Ashes: The Oklahoma Girl Scout Murders” (ABC News/Hulu)

2 The ominous night sounds

“Whatever it was, I didn’t want to tangle with it.”

Carla Sue Wilhite, who was a camp counselor at the Kiowa unit and just 18 years of age during the murders, recalled her first day at Camp Scott, stating how humid the weather was and that it stormed heavily. 
  
On the first night of the trip, Wilhite said she woke up twice during the late hours. The first occasion was to check up on a nearby and noisy tent of campers. But the second occasion was more stomach-churning for Wilhite, who said she heard a strange noise that was like nothing she had ever heard before. 

The noise was coming from an area near her unit. When she got closer, the noise would get quiet. But when she walked away, the noise would get louder. According to Wilhite, the sound in question wasn’t a growl or a moan but rather, something in between.
 
“I was frightened. I didn’t want anything to pounce out of the woods at me,” she explains. “Whatever it was, I didn’t want to tangle with it.” She then said she walked away and retreated back to her tent. 

“You know, when I look back at it now, though . . . I regret,” Wilhite says, pausing frequently. “I have guilt that I didn’t . . . didn’t go there.”

The documentary doesn’t confirm what those specific noises were, but it’s assumed that what Wilhite had heard was possibly one of the victim’s final moments. The next morning, Wilhite said she saw a sleeping bag lying in the middle of the trail. When she got closer, she saw that underneath it was an unclothed and deceased camper, who was later identified as Milner. Farmer and Guse’s bodies were also found just a few feet away, covered in sleeping bags and piled next to a tree. 

3 A ritualistic cave site

Tim Stanley, a general assignment reporter for Tulsa World, said there were three principal cave sites topping the cliffs that surrounded Camp Scott. One site, which was described as a cave, was actually a cellar and inside was an arrangement of four spots for fires, with kindling and firewood. 

“I thought, ‘Well that’s symbolic of a ritual ceremony — four sacred fires,'” said Harvey Pratt, a former agent and Indigenous artist for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation (OSBI). “My first thought was, ‘Oh hell no, I hope this is not an Indian that did this.'”

A pair of sunglasses, which one of the camp counselors identified as stolen, was also found inside the cellar along with plastic tape, which was used on a hefty flashlight that was left behind at the scene of the crime. Alongside were black-and-white wedding photographs of three unnamed women. After the photos were shared publicly, investigators connected the dots and found their suspect — Gene Leroy Hart, a member of the Cherokee nation and a convicted rapist who escaped from a county prison four years prior to the murders.

It was learned that while taking part in a work release program in prison, Hart reportedly worked as a photo assistant for the photographer who captured those wedding pictures.

“Keeper of the Ashes: The Oklahoma Girl Scout Murders” (ABC News/Hulu)

4 The racist myths surrounding Hart

Following Hart’s escape from prison and his possible connection to the murders, investigators and law enforcement actively searched for his whereabouts, even enlisting help from the force’s K-9 units. The extra help proved to be useless, however, as the dogs could only sniff out small areas of the campsite before their targeted scent was gone. This led police to believe that Hart was an expert woodsman and exceptionally skilled at hiding in the vast wilderness. 

Mysteriously, two of the canines who were part of the investigation died shortly afterward.

“And pretty soon, he almost became a mystical,” stated Pratt. “Then you start hearing stories about how he can shapeshift. They said he can change into a bird. The trail just disappeared, and some said, well it’s probably because when he ran across that field, all of a sudden he turned into a bird and flew away.”

Mysteriously, two of the canines who were part of the investigation died shortly afterward.  

“Before you know it, they were blaming Hart for the death of these dogs and strange things that were happening,” Pratt continued. “Fantasies were just going crazy. They said that he’s using Native American magic.”

Hart was also referred to as “a boogeyman” and was described by law enforcement as “a person who doesn’t belong to what we accept as the normal human race.”

5 A shaky start to the trial

Sid Wise, the District Attorney of Mayes County, was in charge of prosecuting Hart during his trial in March 1979. Wise soon came under fire when he lied under oath, committing perjury, and denied sharing OSBI reports with sources outside of law enforcement.  

“We discovered Sid Wise had been sharing the reports of the OSBI with a journalist,” said Gary Pitchlynn, one of the attorneys representing Hart. “And the reason for that was that Wise had a contract to do a book about this case. The D.A. actually had a financial purpose for his prosecution.”

When Wise was placed on the witness stand and questioned, the D.A. was confident in his responses and claimed he committed no wrongdoings. Wise ultimately opted out of the case and Buddy Fallis, the District Attorney of Tulsa County, took over his position. 

Watch the trailer for “Keeper of the Ashes: The Oklahoma Girl Scout Murders” below, via YouTube

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“19 Kids and Counting” star Josh Duggar gets 12 years for child porn

Josh Duggar, oldest son of Michelle and Jim Bob Duggar and star of the TLC reality show “19 Kids and Counting,” has been sentenced to over 12 years in federal prison for child porn charges.

In addition to his jail sentence, Duggar has also been ordered to pay a $10,000 fine, and is to have no unsupervised contact with minors during a 20 year period of supervised release. He will also be made to participate in a “sex offense-specific treatment program,” according to documents obtained by USA TODAY.

Duggar’s sentence was given today by U.S. District Judge Timothy L. Brooks in Fayetteville, Arkansas. This is the end of an ugly ordeal that began back in December 2021 when evidence proved that the former reality TV star was guilty of receiving and possessing child pornography.

RELATED: Josh Duggar found guilty of federal child pornography charges

According to the Los Angeles Times, prosecutors at Duggar’s trial presented evidence that Duggar had obtained “material depicting the sexual abuse of children” from the dark web. After viewing the pornographic materials, which Duggar had downloaded onto his laptop, a Homeland Security agent referred to it as being “in the top five of the worst of the worst that I’ve ever had to examine.”

Josh Duggar poses for a booking photo after his arrest April 29, 2021 in Fayetteville, Arkansas. (Washington County Sheriff’s Office via Getty Images)

“While this is not the sentence we asked for, this is a lengthy sentence,” says U.S. Attorney David Clay Fowlkes. Duggar initially faced up to 20 years in prison, and fines of up to $250,000 for each count, per USA TODAY’s report.


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Father to seven children himself, Duggar was previously investigated during his teen years under suspicion of molesting young girls, including several of his sisters, which resulted in the cancelation of “19 Kids and Counting” once this information circulated. The show that brought him into the public eye centered on a strict Christian family and their homeschooled, anti-birth control lifestyle. During the show, Duggar married his wife, Anna, and started a position with the Family Research Council’s lobbying arm in Washington, D.C. Both his mother, and his wife, pleaded for leniency during Duggar’s trial, according to the Los Angeles Times, and his lawyer advocated for a lesser sentence of only five years saying he “has lived an admirable life while navigating unique challenges associated with being in the public spotlight since childhood.”

Read more:

Pennsylvania GOP primary for Senate between Dr. Oz and David McCormick heads to a recount

The race between David McCormick and Dr. Mehmet Oz for the GOP nomination to replace Republican Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania is heading to a recount more than one week after Election Day. ‘

According to unofficial counts reported by counties throughout the commonwealth on Tuesday, the margin between the two candidates was just 902 votes, according to Pennsylvania Secretary of State Leigh Chapman. That is within the 0.5% automatic recount threshold.

Days before, McCormick, the former hedge fund manager running to represent Pennsylvania in the U.S. Senate, has filed a lawsuit arguing that the state should count mail-in and absentee ballots that were submitted without dates on them, escalating a dead heat race against the Trump-backed celebrity doctor, Mehmet Oz. 

The suit, filed on Monday in the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, alleges that election officials have hurt McCormick’s odds by throwing out ballots that had no voting dates written on them even if they arrived on time. 

“These ballots were indisputably submitted on time – they were date-stamped upon receipt – and no fraud or irregularity has been alleged,” the suit says.

Chuck Cooper, McCormick’s chief legal counsel, told NBC News this week that a significant amount of precedent exists to warrant a legal challenge. 

“Both the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit have held that mail-in ballots should not be disqualified simply because the voters failed to hand write a date on the exterior mailing envelope of their ballots,” Cooper said. “Because all ballots are time stamped by the County Boards of Elections on receipt, a voter’s handwritten date is meaningless.”

RELATED: “Clear and present danger”: Trump urges Dr. Oz to “declare victory” while votes still being counted

State law currently mandates that voters write the date on all outer return envelopes for mail-in ballots – a requirement that the state GOP has fought to protect, according to The New York Times. On Friday, the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the requirement was “immaterial,” meaning that it should not dictate whether ballots turned in on time are counted. However, that decision has yet to be officially applied by election administrators. 


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McCormick’s suit strikes a markedly different tone than Republicans have in the past when it comes to mail-in ballots. During the 2020 presidential election, many GOP lawyers and lawmakers cast doubt over the practice by baselessly alleging that it opens the door for voter fraud. 

Notable among them is Ronald L. Hicks Jr., a lawyer for McCormick, who joined a brigade of right-wing attorneys in 2020 to challenge the validity of mail-in ballots, as the Times noted. Now representing McCormick, Hicks is arguing that mail-in ballots must be counted to ensure a fair election in the Pennsylvania primary. “The boards’ refusal to count the ballots at issue violates the protections of the right to vote under the federal Civil Rights Act and the Pennsylvania Constitution,” Hicks wrote in the suit.

McCormick could have chosen to waive his right to a recount but decided not to. A recount must conclude by noon on June 7 with results submitted by noon on June 8.

RELATED: Pennsylvania deserves better than Dr. O

Trump drains GOP of cash in Georgia — then suffers embarrassing defeat

Tuesday’s primary in Georgia saw some of the most lopsided defeats for Republican candidates endorsed by Donald Trump, including impressive performances from incumbents like Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger who fended off well-funded challenges as well as months of abuse from Trump himself. 

Beyond Georgia, Republicans are blowing through millions of dollars to ensure that Trump-backed gubernatorial challengers don’t oust establishment GOP incumbents, shrinking the war chest that the party has historically drawn from to fend off Democratic opponents.

The Republican Governors Association (RGA) has spent $5 million to bolster the campaign of Kemp, who quashed a primary challenge by the Trump-backed former Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga. The RGA’s cash injection proved a “devastating blow” for Perdue’s odds, according to The Washington Post. And it’s not the only state that the group has targeted. 

The RGA has spent at least $9 million to help incumbents in Georgia, Alabama, Ohio, Idaho, and Oklahoma over the 2022 election cycle, The Daily Beast reports. In Alabama, the group swatted away a primary challenge to Gov. Kay Ivey’s re-election campaign with a $2 million donation. Ivey won over 50% of the primary vote, immediately disqualifying all of her Republican challengers. 

RELATED: Trump’s guys may lose in Georgia – but his Big Lie is going strong

A similar story played out in Ohio, where Gov. Mike DeWine, who came under Trump’s wrath for backing common sense COVID-19 measures, faced opposition from three pro-Trump challengers. DeWine, who received $1 million from the RGA, ultimately trounced those contenders in the primary, winning 48.1% of the vote.

Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy has also been a beneficiary of the RGA, collecting $3 million to stamp out a primary challenge by Bill Walker, an anti-Trump Republican who served as the govenror of Alaska from 2014 to 2018. 


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Other beneficiaries of the RGA include Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt and Gov. Brad Little, who has collectively raked in $677,000. 

While all of this spending has helped ensure that Republicans maintain a sure footing at the state level, some Republicans argued that it hasn’t come without cost. 

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who is co-chairing the fundraising arm for the RGA, said that the need to ward off MAGA candidates draws from the resources that could be used to compete with Democrats in the general. 

RELATED: Election expert: Trump is about to get “embarrassed” in GOP primaries — and not just in Georgia

“This is just not the best use of our money. We would much rather use it just in races against Democrats,” Christie told the Post. “But it was made necessary because Donald Trump decided on the vendetta tour this year and so we need to make sure we protect these folks who are the objects of his vengeance.”

Doug Heye, a longtime GOP strategist, likewise told the Beast that Republicans would “rather avoid” getting roped into costly skirmishes with Trump-endorsed contenders. 

“It highlights why Republicans made a mistake to get in the business of Donald Trump, but that ship has sailed,” Heye said. “That’s the political reality of where they are.”

Training children to attack school shooters is cowardly victim-blaming

The first time I bought my child a bulletproof shield, he was in kindergarten. A school shooting had happened. I forget which one.

My child was too young for me to explain the story then, too young to worry that he might accidentally hear about the violence on the news, which I wouldn’t listen to around him. Too young for social media. But not too young to be in danger at school: a place children are supposed to be safe, with carpet squares for sitting in a circle, a cubbyhole with his name on laminated paper with a smiling red apple.

Sandy Hook had happened by then. Marysville Pilchuck High School. Dozens upon dozens of shootings that most of us don’t even remember or know by name because only a couple of children died that time. Only a few.

So, the shield. It was expensive, more than I could really afford as a struggling single mom. It was also heavy. I hadn’t planned on that. Naively, I had thought I could just slip it into his backpack, beside his construction truck lunchbox and mittens he kept losing, behind the drawings and finger paintings that kept getting crushed. He wouldn’t have to know. 

RELATED: At least 14 children, 1 teacher killed in school shooting in Uvalde, Texas

But he wouldn’t be able to lift his backpack, which already threatened to teeter his small frame off-balance, with the shield inside. I had to let him go the next morning with no protection.

Every parent does, most of us sending kids off for hours a day without us, relying on babysitters, child care workers, teachers. But watching a very small child walk hesitantly into a very large building alone is a different feeling knowing we live in a country where the child could be the victim of gun violence there. That a gunman could go there, purposefully choose as a target a place with a playground, juice boxes in the cafeteria. 

My child was taught, starting in kindergarten, to charge a mass shooter.

When I was in school, the threat of violence seemed to come from within. Kids called bomb threats into the hallway payphone, wanting a day off. I was in school before Columbine, the school shooting that changed perceptions of gun violence and mass shootings for many, but people still worried a gun could be hidden and taken to class. My rural public school could not afford metal detectors. Students had to use clear plastic backpacks or simply carry our books and things in our arms. People thought violence might come from a backpack.

Not from another child, an older one — or, a man — walking up to a school with much younger children inside. A gunman with much stronger firepower, bought legally. 

But now we know violence can happen that way. It does all the time. In the years since I left school, gun violence has escalated. According to Insider, at least 554 people, many of them children, have been the victims of school shootings since Columbine in 1999. The Washington Post reported that more than 311,000 children have experienced gun violence at school since then. But that report was in 2018.

There have been hundreds more mass shootings since then. As CBS News reported, there were more mass shootings in the U.S. than days of the year in 2019. This year, 27 mass shootings at schools have occurred so far. It is not yet June.

Other violence in schools, including weapon use, has decreased in recent years. Not gun violence.

My child was taught, starting in kindergarten, to charge a mass shooter. His school had more active shooter drills than tornado or fire drills. He told me his teacher kept a basket of tennis balls by the door. If a shooter entered, the children were instructed to throw tennis balls at him. When the teacher asked, “What else could the children throw at a person with a gun?” my son said he answered: chocolate milk, if they were in the cafeteria. 

The idea of children not yet old enough to read or tie their shoes fending off an assault rifle with cartons of milk is ludicrous, yet that’s the plan. 

It’s embarrassing that Congress asks 5-year-olds to do the job they’re too scared to do. 

Across the country, in every K-12 school (95% of them, to be precise) children are trained to throw wastebaskets, No. 2 pencils, chairs if they are strong enough to lift them, at shooters. To wave their arms to try to give their classmates an opening to escape. To be martyrs, sacrificing themselves, as teachers are expected to do also, in order that another small child might have the chance to survive.

When my child started his active shooter drills, I was teaching at a state university, in a basement classroom with one exit and one small window, painted shut. I knew that if a shooter entered our classroom, I would die. I prayed that across town at the elementary school, if they too experienced gun violence, the children might live. 

Putting the burden of preventing mass shootings onto children who are the targets of them is victim-blaming. It’s embarrassing that Congress asks 5-year-olds to do the job they’re too scared to do. 

In the near decade since 20 small children were killed at Sandy Hook, Congress has passed no gun reform and politicians have taken millions of dollars in donations from the NRA while generations of children learn trauma begins at school. 

It’s a Band-Aid, a cartoon Band-Aid worn by children, who may forever bear its scars.

With practices including turning the lights off, yelling, having fake shooters and sometimes even bringing law enforcement officers with weapons drawn into schools, active shooter drills are often intense and terrifying, especially for young children. They’re also ineffective. 

There’s no evidence that active shooter drills prevent or minimize gun violence at schools, but there is strong evidence that these drills do lasting harm to children, teachers and staff. One study found “active shooter drills in schools correlated with a 42 percent increase in anxiety and stress and a 39 percent increase in depression among those in the school community.”

In addition to doing potential psychological harm, as The New York Times wrote, active shooter drills “could detract from strategies that could actually prevent shootings from taking place . . . includ[ing] stricter gun laws, better threat assessment and more mental health counseling.”

It’s a Band-Aid, a cartoon Band-Aid worn by children, who may forever bear its scars.

At least 21 people died at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas, two days before summer break, including 19 children. The gunman had legally bought AR-style rifles.  

When I told my son about the latest school shooting, he asked me where. He didn’t ask why because there is no why.

For the past two years, families have been worried about their littlest ones, who have been left unprotected in the pandemic. Many parents of children under 5 – who still cannot be vaccinated — feel totally abandoned, especially as a large part of the rest of the country goes on blithely: to parties, to concerts, to vacations, flinging off masks as mandates drop like flies, despite rising infectionshospitalization rates and death. 

It can feel like we’re living in a state of perpetual gaslighting. People are dying again; people are dying still; people are being disabled in a mass disabling event — yet airline employees cheerfully encourage flyers to show their smiling, unmasked faces.

At least from COVID, some children have some protection, a tiny bit of preventative control, though many adults choose to willfully ignore it, in the form of vaccines, boosters and masks. 

By the evening of the Uvalde shooting, many places were out of stock of bulletproof backpacks, especially the smallest ones. 


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When I told my son about the latest school shooting, he asked me where. Where did it happen? He didn’t ask why because there is no why. There is only: what next? And if again, nothing happens next, no government action is taken, no change is made in U.S. gun laws, why not?

He’s old enough now to tell about the bulletproof shield, old enough even to carry it. But he shouldn’t have to. No children should have to, alone on their small shoulders.

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Gun violence is the health care crisis we’re ignoring

First, we should just assume it’ll happen again. Probably soon. We should accept that the pleas — like the one from Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy’s issued Tuesday night to his colleagues in Congress, in which he urged that we take action about the escalating horror in this country of mass shootings — will fall on deaf ears. We should understand that after Columbine, after Sandy Hook, after Parkland, that nobody is going to step in to save our children. We should understand that we are vulnerable to an angry, heavily-armed man bent on murder when we are shopping in our supermarket, or dancing with our friends in a nightclub, or praying in our church. America has made clear its choice, and that choice is not our lives; it is our guns. We have to look at gun violence as the public health crisis it is. There is no imminent cure. And given that grim, unyielding truth, our measures must at best be palliative.


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What if we talked about guns the way we talk abut disease and infection? The American Cancer Society estimates that about 43,250 women will die in the US this year from breast cancer. We have an entire month of the year devoted to awareness of the it. Aspiring oncologists go to school specifically to treat it. Roughly 40,000 people a year die of pneumonia. The American Lung Association offers advice and tips on how to talk to your doctor about it.

Now consider that in 2020, a similar number of Americans — 45,222 people — died from gun-related injuries. That figure is, as the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health observes, “the highest number ever recorded by the CDC since it began tracking firearm deaths in 1968.” Last year, the FBI reported that the incidence of active shooter incidents rose by more than 50% from the year before. Firearms are now the leading cause of death for children and adolescents in this country. And we seem, as a nation, somehow okay with that.

We leave the people who have to confront the reality of what a firearm does to the human body out of the conversation. 

The serious risk of gun violence is of course not confined to mass shootings. Suicide is one of the leading causes of death in this country, right behind kidney disease, and more than half of suicides involve firearms. More Americans die of firearm deaths than car accidents. The American Public Health Association flat-out calls gun violence “a leading cause of premature death in the US.” Then there are all the injuries, accidents, and assaults. Using annual emergency department statistics, the Brady Campaign estimates that 321 people are shot every day in the United States. Yet we barely have any organized guiding principles for preventing and treating gun violence in our health care system. We act as if gun violence is just a criminal issue or a political one, and we leave the people who actually have to confront the reality of what a firearm does to the human body out of the conversation.

It’s shocking how ill-educated our physicians are in handling gun violence. A 2021 report in the journal Teaching and Learning in Medicine found that, of the schools who participated in a curriculum audit by the Association of American Medical Colleges, only 13-18 percent of them “documented gun and firearm content in their curriculum” during the years 2015 through 2018. 

“Any other disease with similar number of deaths and injuries would be considered worthy of inclusion into medical education curricula,” the report continues. 

There is remarkably little literature on treating mass casualty events, though organizations like Scrubs Addressing the Firearm Epidemic (SAFE) pick up the slack by offering workshops and events for medical students in topics like treating gun wounds.

RELATED: Republicans don’t care about kids — just imaginary children

Part of the problem is that we are, as a nation, bad at health care communication, period. As Chethan Sathya and Sandeep Kapoor wrote in Scientific American last year, “Most health-care workers still do not talk to their patients about guns. In many settings, questions about firearm safety are taboo except in special cases such as those concerning people who are at risk of suicide… which hinders our ability to normalize conversations about firearm safety with our patients.” Think about it — at your last physical, your doctor probably asked about your sexual activity and alcohol consumption. Did the subject of your access to or exposure to guns ever come up?

We go so far as to actively prevent these conversations. Indeed, a decade ago, the state of Florida passed the NRA supported Privacy of Firearm Owners act, stipulating to health care providers that “inquiries regarding firearm ownership or possession should not be made.” Though the law was overturned in 2017, you can understand why physicians might assume that talking about guns is none of their business, preferring the safe and familiar terrain of blood pressure and cholesterol levels.

There are some encouraging efforts being made by members of the health care community to address the violence crisis. The American Foundation for the Firearm Injury Reduction in Medicine (AFFIRM) was founded in 2017 to foster education and build trust in communities, including firearm owners. That same year, two students at McGovern Medical School created an elective blue book course “Physicians and Gun Violence: What You Need to Know” to outline everything from risk factors to wound treatment. And the AAFP, which calls gun violence “a public health epidemic,” offers strategies for family physicians to “play an imperative role in the reduction of gun violence.” In 2018, the American College of Physicians issued a recommendation for “a public health approach to firearms-related violence and the prevention of firearm injuries and deaths.”

Yet these initiatives are largely regarded as optional, rather than an essential element of our firearms-burdened American medical system. We don’t educate family practitioners in how to discuss guns and the risks they can pose to the body with their patients — even though they’re just fine asking about, say, smoking. We don’t prepare doctors and hospitals adequately to treat the victims of gun violence, both in the short term and long term. A paper published in JAMA Surgery in 2020 reported that “The long-term outcomes after surviving a gunshot wound (GSW) remain unstudied.” Yes, unstudied. In 2020. In the United States.

We have a system that is built on sickness, and it is painfully evident it doesn’t quite know how best to treat this particular plague. But we need to learn, for the next time. And the time after that. And the one after that. We need to accept that, as a 2020 research letter from a group of physicians at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia implored plainly: “All hospitals should be prepared to care for victims of mass shootings.” 

More Salon coverage of gun violence: 

“The Real World Homecoming: New Orleans” recap: Outer darkness

The intense drama that we’ve seen unfold over the last five episodes of “The Real World Homecoming: New Orleans” pushes two members of the house to a crossroads in Episode 6; aptly titled “Spiritual Bypassings.” 

Signing up for “Homecoming” seeing it as an opportunity to heal from events and conversations that took place during the original season, Kelley Wolf and Matt Smith, for their own individual reasons, are now finding themselves on the verge of packing up and leaving the show. After suffering through one too many dramatic conversations opening up old wounds rather than healing them, the drama in the house is fun for some (Julie and Jamie) and misery for others (Matt and Kelley) leaving Tokyo Broom, Melissa Beck, and Danny Roberts to add perspective and comedic relief. 

When Danny first met Matt in 2000, Matt made it very clear that his Catholic teachings have instilled in him the belief that homosexuality is wrong, and those beliefs have not changed in 22 years, much to the discomfort of Danny.

The title of this episode is a reference to a comment made by Danny during an emotionally heated conversation had with Matt in which Danny attempts to explain the inherent issue behind the common religious practice of hating the “sin” but loving the “sinner.” When Danny first met Matt in 2000, Matt made it very clear that his Catholic teachings have instilled in him the belief that homosexuality is wrong, and those beliefs have not changed in 22 years, much to the discomfort of Danny who, as one would imagine, finds it difficult to attempt to have a friendship with someone who is unable to love him for everything he is, unconditionally.

RELATED: “The Real World Homecoming: New Orleans” recap: Sexy jump rope

Melissa, taking in what she hears from both Danny and Matt, describes the conflict so perfectly saying that she views Matt as a good person who, under the thumb of his religion, is struggling with his value system and unable to disavow the parts of his religion that are causing emotional pain for someone he cares about. 

“If you’re seeing that it hurts someone, let that part go,” Melissa says in an aside.

Reaching no immediate common ground, and with emotions escalating, Matt tells Danny, “I’ll never understand how God created you,” and then, later, tells a producer that he can’t take much more of this drama, and feels like the narrative is being bent in a way that feels “ruthless against the church kid.”

Towards the end of the episode, after their exchange has had some time to air out, Matt and Danny take a walk together and have what seems to be the most productive conversation they’ve had in the history of knowing each other. Danny shares that, years ago, he raised funds for the renovation of an LGBTQ-friendly Baptist church in Atlanta by auctioning off relics from the original “Real World New Orleans” season, including his beloved grey sweater. Matt, in turn, shares that he likely has more issues with his own religion than Danny would imagine, and they walk away with a lightness to their relationship that wasn’t there before. Is everything completely healed between them? No. Will it ever be? Probably not. But for now, they’ve both been given a bit of the grace and understanding they’ve been seeking.

While Matt has been struggling to be his true self plopped down in an atmosphere where drag queens, tarot cards and sex talk are now aspects of his daily life in a way he’s definitely not used to, Kelley is struggling with Julie and all the chaos she brings to the house.

During a visit to the house by her husband Spencer, who she’s been married to for 17 years, Julie shares more of her puzzling truth. Both former members of the Mormon church, Julie and Spencer met in something called “Institute” and were both involved in “marriage training” before deciding together to leave the church in 2008. 

Julie, clearly still smitten by Jamie, has told her poor husband all about their steamy past, and doesn’t do much to hide the sexual tension she shares with Jamie to this very day. 

At the mention of marriage training, Jamie blurts out “sounds romantic,” which doesn’t do much to endear him to an already very insecure Spencer. Julie, clearly still smitten by Jamie, has told her poor husband all about their steamy past, and doesn’t do much to hide the sexual tension she shares with Jamie to this very day. In fact, she stops just short of rubbing her husband’s nose in it. But don’t worry, she makes up for her marital misdeeds by making a blanket fort in the shared backyard and attempting to bone Spencer in it while everyone is hearing-distance away. 


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Kelley, as close to Gwyneth Paltrow as a woman could get without actually being Gwyneth Paltrow, is not about this type of behavior and looks physically sick every time she talks about Julie. Taking a break from all the drama to steal some tranquility in the park with Danny and Melissa, she makes what looks to be a Burberry blanket manifest from the ether and lays it down on the grass. Situating herself ever so, she says she’s thinking about removing herself from the equation, and Danny and Melissa are both like, “You’re not going anywhere.”

Earlier in the episode, just before whispering in her husband’s ear for no sensible reason that Jamie has good porn, Julie told everyone in the house that both she and her husband risk being sent to the “outer darkness,” a place worse than hell in the Mormon religion, for publicly speaking against the church. For Kelley, this outer darkness is experienced any time she has to see Julie and Jamie making sex eyes at each other. It’s doubtful that anyone who has threatened to leave the house will actually leave, but if one has to go . . . Julie we’ll help you pack.

Read more:

What is the key to creating Latin American flavor?

To me, food is more than just fuel; it represents the identity of many places and ties people to their roots. In Latin America, cooking is the magnet that draws families together. Meals manifest a sense of life-giving nurture that bonds those who cook and those who eat.

As the name suggests, Latin American cuisine combines a mix of cultural backgrounds, including the foods and preparations of indigenous peoples and influences and culinary traditions of the Old World. The spices and herbs in adobos (stocks) and sofritos (sauce or purée bases) are generally what gives Latin American cuisine its distinct flavor (even though each country uses different key spices, and countries that share a spice may use it in different proportions). So, every Latin American country has its own distinct cuisine based on how the indigenous culture’s food blended with Spanish colonial food and how that cuisine evolved over time (often absorbing the cuisines of immigrants, such as in Peruvian cuisine).

ICEChef Adriana’s snapper ceviche. (Kathryn Sheldon / Institute of Culinary Education)

Latin American food is highly structured: Even when we are not following a written recipe, the way many of us eat complete meals on a single plate shows that for a Latin dinner, the experience isn’t complete unless there’s a lively contrast of varied tastes and textures from the first bite. We want lots of flavors and textures going on at once, so we layer the components.

Of course, the cuisine’s journey didn’t just start in South and Central America. While much of Latin food revolves around the sourcing of local fruits, vegetables and proteins, there are deeply ingrained techniques and flavors that originated in Europe. This knowledge was brought to the region during the Age of Exploration and mixed harmoniously with available flora and fauna.

You’ll find these principles surfacing again and again with recipe names throughout Latin American countries, and always with the same underlying purpose: depth of flavor. The effect is the basic code that identifies sour, sweet, salty and sometimes hot and savory flavors. This effect of dimension begins in the kitchen with each dish as the cook creates layers of seasoning. Even if a cook seems to make a dish spontaneously, there is an inner structure of flavoring. Any good Latin cook understands this, even when combining the simplest ingredients. There is an effortless appreciation and utilization of everything that comes from the land and sea, and that translates directly into the food that Latin American people grow up with and pass on to future generations.

One of the benefits of Latin cuisine is how fundamentally simple most of the dishes are. Great variety in flavor, color and texture is achieved by using, in most cases, the same basic ingredients. Because of this, learning how to cook Latin food comes with a shallow curve when compared to French, Chinese or Japanese cuisine. Latin influences are sprouting up all over the world because simplicity combined with tastiness is a recipe for replication.

However, those influences, when in the hands of the right people, will mix and mingle with local ingredients and techniques from a host of other established food cultures, resulting in new and interesting foods that follow a thread through history. Treating ingredients like they are listening and feeling your company while you are cooking is one of the key secrets to Latin American cuisine that makes it so special for the rest of the world.

By Chef Adriana Urbana, Institute of Culinary Education

Greg Abbott attended campaign fundraiser hours after Uvalde school shooting

Gov. Greg Abbott attended a fundraiser for his reelection campaign Tuesday night in East Texas, hours after a gunman killed 19 children and two adults at an elementary school over 300 miles away in Uvalde. His campaign says he is postponing all political activities going forward.

Abbott went to the fundraiser after visiting Taylor County — another part of the state — to survey the state’s wildfire response there. While holding a news conference there, he gave an update on the Uvalde shooting, which had just happened.

The news of Abbott’s attendance at the fundraiser was first reported by Quorum Report.

“After holding a briefing and press conference on the current wild fires in Taylor County, where he also provided an update the situation in Uvalde, the Governor did stop by a previously scheduled event last night at a private home in Walker County,” Abbott campaign spokesperson Mark Miner said in a statement. “All campaign and political activity, including a scheduled fundraiser for this evening, have postponed until further notice.”

Abbott addressed the fundraiser during a news conference Wednesday afternoon in Uvalde, suggesting he only made a brief appearance cut short by the news of the shooting.

“On the way back to Austin, I stopped and let people know that I could not stay, that I needed to go and I wanted them to know what happened and get back to Austin so I could continue to my collaboration with Texas law enforcement,” Abbott said.

Abbott, a prolific fundraiser, is running for a third term against Democratic challenger Beto O’Rourke. O’Rourke’s response to the Uvalde shooting has included criticism of Abbott for loosening gun laws in Texas, and O’Rourke has called on Abbott to pull out of an appearance at a National Rifle Association convention this weekend in Houston.

Abbott’s appearance at the fundraiser came as other Texas politicians were canceling similar events due to the tragedy. State Sen. Roland Gutierrez, D-San Antonio, who represents Uvalde, canceled a campaign fundraiser that had been scheduled for Tuesday evening in Austin. A Republican state representative, San Antonio’s Steve Allison, also nixed a campaign fundraiser for Wednesday in Austin.

 

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2022/05/25/greg-abbott-political-fundraiser-uvalde-shooting/.

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