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Courting Trump, Zuckerberg ditches DEI and kills off LGBTQ+ themes for Facebook Messenger

Meta is continuing to roll back its diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, from changing its own hiring practices to eliminating user themes that celebrated LGBTQ+ rights.

Fresh off its CEO meeting with President-elect Donald Trump, appointing Trump ally Joel Kaplan to lead policy and ending a years-long partnership with independent fact-checkers on Facebook and Instagram, the social media company is suspending its diversity, equality and inclusion programs effective immediately, Axios reports.

Meta says it's axing the programs because the “legal and policy landscape surrounding diversity, equity and inclusion efforts in the United States is changing,” per a memo obtained by Axios.

In addition to letting go of the company’s dedicated DEI team, Meta will also end efforts to diversify vendors and end a hiring process that enables more diverse candidates to apply.

DEI, a broad term encompassing policies that promote inclusivity and equity in the workplace, has come under far-right fire in recent years, but Trump’s election has reignited a corporate frenzy to scrap the “woke” policies, as critics have labeled them. 

Meta isn’t alone in scrapping DEI policies — McDonald’s, Ford, and others have pared back equity efforts — but the move coincides with several other major changes that suggest CEO Mark Zuckerberg is all-in on Trump.

Zuckerberg is making major efforts to win back the online right and draw Trump’s attention, all as Meta’s fiercest competitor, TikTok, faces a ban that the president-elect has promised to stop. 

Earlier this week, Meta revised content moderation policies to allow a wider array of hateful speech, The Intercept reported. The publication reported that internal documents it obtained instruct moderators to now allow posts containing phrases like “trans people are mentally ill” or “Immigrants are grubby, filthy pieces of s—t.”

Kaplan, the chief global affairs officer at Meta, explained on Tuesday that Meta was easing the speech restrictions on “immigration, gender identity and gender” to keep up with shifting political narratives.

“It’s not right that things can be said on TV or the floor of Congress, but not on our platforms,” Kaplan wrote in a statement, adding that automated systems would no longer be used to target hateful content, just user reports.

The company went further than simply unleashing more hate on immigrants and queer Meta customers. 404 Media reported on Friday that the company even pulled back its trans and nonbinary-themed backgrounds on its Messenger platform.

The Meta CEO is just one of multiple big tech leaders lining up to appease the president-elect. Amazon, OpenAI’s Sam Altman, and Apple’s Tim Cook coughed up $1 million each for Trump’s inauguration, while X owner Elon Musk exerts an unprecedented level of influence over his transition.

Meta also added former WWE executive Dana White, who introduced Trump at the Republican National Convention this summer, to its board on Monday, and chipped in a $1 million sum to the inauguration.

Supreme Court leaning toward TikTok shutdown: reports

The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday seemed inclined to rule against TikTok, the social media app that faces a ban in the U.S. unless its parent company sells it to a non-Chinese company, media outlets reported.

Justices heard TikTok's argument that a federal law requiring its sale by Jan. 19 violates the First Amendment, as well as the U.S. government's counter that the law addresses a national security risk. A ruling is likely by the end of next week, The New York Times reported.

The law, signed by President Joe Biden last April, received bipartisan support from members of Congress. Some justices appeared concerned it could conflict with free speech rights, but a majority seemed to view it as an effort to regulate a foreign-owned app that can track and collect data on its 170 million American users, CNN reported. Several seemed worried that China could possibly use TikTok data for espionage or blackmail, per The Times. 

TikTok's departure from the U.S. would affect more than 7 million Americans who use it to advertise and sell products, according to the app. They stand to lose up to $1.3 billion in revenue per month, TikTok said. 

The app has found a new fan in President-elect Donald Trump, who asked the Supreme Court in late December to delay a ban so he could find a way to save it. It was a turnaround for Trump, who tried to ban the app through an executive order during his first term, citing national security concerns.

Trump told CNBC last March he still considered TikTok a threat but that young people "will go crazy without it" and that banning it would empower Facebook, which he said he considers "an enemy of the people." Following his reelection in November, Trump told the media he had "a warm spot in my heart" for the app, which he used as a way to reach younger voters.

Media outlets reported that his change of mind came around the same time he met with Jeff Yass, a major Republican donor with financial ties to TikTok's parent company ByteDance. Trump said they didn't discuss the company, per The New York Times.

Trump met in December with TikTok CEO Shou Chew, The Associated Press reported.

Robbie Williams’ “Better Man” swaps insight for spectacle—Complete with a CGI monkey

“Better Man,” a biopic of Robbie Williams — the famed bad-boy boyband member turned successful solo artist — is a bit of a risky undertaking. The singer never achieved the success in America that Freddie Mercury and Elton John did — both of whom are the subjects of other recent musical biopics. Moreover, to make a musical where Williams is played by a CGI monkey (while everyone else is in human form) is just bizarre. Metaphors about him being a performing monkey, a party animal, or just an animal come to mind, but watching Jonno Davies as Williams' chimpanzee form having a sexual encounter as he does in “Better Man,” is, technically bestiality. Thankfully, that awkward scene is discretely filmed in this otherwise maximalist production. 

In America, Williams may be best known for his song “Angels” which peaked at 53 on the Billboard Hot 100 (it went to 10 on the US Adult Contemporary chart). In the UK he is known for his cheeky behavior. He opens “Better Man” with a statement that he has been described as “a narcissist, punchable, and a s**t-eating t**t,” but that he wants to show “How I really see myself.” (As a monkey.) The film, however, would surely be better as a conversation with a therapist, rather than an estimated $110 million-budget movie.

“Better Man” charts Williams’ childhood in Stoke-on-Trent, and he claims, “I came out of the womb with jazz hands, which hurt my mother,” hoping to get a laugh. He performed badly in sports and in school, but was a decent singer and could get a chuckle hamming it up in the school play. Fame is pretty much all Williams craves because he doesn’t want to be a “nobody.” And the next two hours depict his relationship with fame after he is selected to be one of the members of “Take That,” a British boy band in the 1990s that achieved inexplicable success. For the uninitiated, the band first performed in gay clubs — and “Better Man” mentions Williams’ gay rumors — and then for thousands of adoring female fans. 

Williams wants to write songs for the band, but given that he is the youngest and weakest link, he is eventually asked to leave. He struggles with depression and feels he “can’t keep track of who I am.” “Better Man” presents these lows with the same lethargy as when Williams makes one of his unremarkable insights such as, “Fame is a powerful aphrodisiac. It means even ugly people can get laid.” 

Better ManAlison Steadman as Betty in "Better Man" (Paramount Pictures)The film has few insights about its subject. It is clear he loved his grandmother (Alison Steadman), and his mother (Kate Mulvany), and that he had a complicated relationship with his absent father, Peter (Steve Pemberton). After he found success as a teen, he became addicted to drugs and alcohol at age 21. Watching a CGI monkey snort lines of cocaine may be the most interesting and depressing moment in the film. 

The biggest revelation may be that Robbie Williams is just not a nice or likable person. He speaks contemptuously of the folks he makes music with, and treats both his girlfriend, Nicole Appleton (Raechelle Banno), and his best friend Nate (Frazer Hadfield) badly. The film gives viewers no reason to root for him. And it is hard to pity Williams when he has a moment of self-awareness and acknowledges his bad behavior. 


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To its credit, the film’s musical numbers are pretty fantastic, and the songs help tell Williams’ story well. In fact, “Better Man” might work better on the London stage as a jukebox musical than in cinemas. Director Michael Gracey, who helmed “The Greatest Showman,” knows how to deliver a showstopper when Williams performs his hit “Rock DJ” out in the streets. It is a fun, high-energy set piece that captures the enthusiasm Williams has for performing. Likewise, the introspective “Come Undone,” which he performs while contemplating suicide, is quite moving and visually inventive. Gracey has Williams’ car, which is about to hit an oncoming vehicle, plunge into water instead, enhancing the meaning of events by rearranging their context. It is an effective moment in a film that could use more scenes like this. 

In contrast, most of the concert appearances show Williams torturing himself with crippling self-doubt as voices in his head and visions in the audience tell him that he is no good. Perhaps the CGI monkey is a metaphor for imposter syndrome

Much of “Better Man” feels like Williams is trying to convince viewers he is all right — not just a good guy, but the “better man” of the titular song who has come out the other side. That may be the case as Williams does get to clear the air with his father right before he performs in front of 125,000 thousand fans at Knebworth, the largest concert ever. His goal in performing there was to one-up Oasis, revealing how ego-driven Williams is. 

But it is far more heartfelt when Williams sings “My Way” with his dad both as a child and as a superstar. (The film indicates that Sinatra, along with Dean Martin and Sammy Davis, Jr. are among Williams’ influences.) Williams wants to impress upon folks that he is an iconoclast, and it comes off as smarmy. 

The father-son storyline is ultimately the most emotional part of the film, but it takes almost two hours to get to the heart of it. Viewers may not have the interest or the patience. It is a very fair point when Peter tells his son, “No one buys a ticket to hear your problems,” and this may well be the problem with “Better Man.” This self-indulgent account of his troubles will not make folks who don’t know Williams appreciate him. And given that the film’s message is that Williams achieved the fame he thought would make him happy only to learn that it doesn’t is hardly a good message to send to fans. 

Maybe the monkeys will enjoy “Better Man.”

“Better Man” opens January 10 in theaters nationwide

In “Hard Truths,” a director and his muse reunite in a world that is far angrier than they left it

Ruminate on the title of the latest film from acclaimed British writer-director Mike Leigh, “Hard Truths,” and you’ll find it's comically ironic. Leigh’s movies have always relied on their titles to convey their contents plainly. Take 2008’s “Happy-Go-Lucky” about a perennial optimist whose cheery disposition irks everyone around her; or 1996’s “Secrets & Lies,” a tale of hidden secrets and — you guessed it! — lies. And though their titles may be frank, their stories are anything but. Leigh’s are uncomplicated films about incredibly complicated people, which is why calling his newest “Hard Truths” produces a chuckle: Sure, this is a movie about realities that are difficult to accept, but Leigh has been sharply focused on the hard truths of human life for his entire career. 

Leigh never lets his audience escape the underlying humiliation and helplessness Pansy feels, and Pansy never allows herself that grace either.

In that respect, calling the film “Hard Truths” almost implies a well-earned victory lap for a filmmaker who has dedicated his work to elucidating the complexities of the human condition, especially because the movie also finds Leigh reuniting with one of his foremost collaborators in Marianne Jean-Baptiste. The two worked together in a play Leigh put up in 1993, and again in “Secrets & Lies,” which earned Jean-Baptiste an Oscar nomination for her quietly stirring work as a young woman pursuing the identity of her birth mother. The same year she was nominated for an Oscar, Jean-Baptiste wrote the score and original songs for Leigh’s follow-up, “Career Girls.” Theirs is the kind of fruitful artistic partnership that is more reliant on the work to tell the story of their intimate connection and trust, rather than any sort of conventional glamour and reverence you’d see heaped onto a director and their muse a tad closer to Hollywood.

The unassuming closeness between the two artists is back on display in “Hard Truths,” which sees a powerhouse lead role for Jean-Baptiste and a formal exercise in potent, approachable filmmaking for Leigh. Here, Jean-Baptiste plays Pansy, a mother and a wife consumed and exasperated by the cellular indignation she feels daily. Pansy takes umbrage with just about everything in life: parking lot dynamics, cheery store associates, the noise of the outside world, the decorative pockets on baby clothes. Everything, including her husband Curtley (David Webber) and her son Moses (Tuwaine Barrett), creates a grievance for Pansy.

While Leigh plays some of Pansy’s frustrations for laughs, even the funniest of her complaints have a deep somberness embedded into their core. “Hard Truths” is deceptively difficult to watch. Leigh never lets his audience escape the underlying humiliation and helplessness Pansy feels, and Pansy never allows herself that grace either. The film is a blistering character study by one of cinema’s great humanist storytellers, made all the more mesmerizing by its stunning star. And really, the latest in Jean-Baptiste and Leigh’s longstanding creative partnership deserves all the same veneration lobbed at Martin Scorsese and Robert De Niro, Wes Anderson and Bill Murray, or any of the other notable industry directors and their onscreen muses. “Hard Truths” is a film for a world that has only gotten angrier, yet its prolific central collaboration cleverly suggests that enduring mutual respect is a force powerful enough to combat such profound rage.

Hard TruthsAni Nelson, Michele Austin, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Tuwaine Barrett, Sophia Brown, and David Webber in "Hard Truths" (Courtesy of Simon Mein / Thin Man Films Ltd / Bleecker Street)But to fight that enemy, we must first know it, and Leigh’s film is a brutally detailed picture of deeply set pain that’s impossible to watch without being moved in one way or another. Because Leigh’s characters are so realistic, it’s easy to see them as proxies for ourselves and, in turn, be affected by their behavior and their many intricacies. Jean-Baptiste has credited this verisimilitude to Leigh’s intensive rehearsal process, where he and his actors work together to create characters from the ground up before shooting ever begins. That intrinsic level of care is present in “Hard Truths,” but without the fussiness that often feels present in films made by notorious perfectionists. One could argue that “Hard Truths” is so austere that it’s altogether unstylish. The film is an admittedly flat, digital production that wouldn’t look out of place if it were bookended by pharmaceutical advertisements while being watched with the free plan of a streaming platform. But that starkness also provides “Hard Truths” with a realism that allows viewers to focus on what's most important: the characters.

As mercurial as Pansy can be, it’s difficult not to fall in love with her at first sight. Her prickliness makes her fascinating and multitextured, though that allure quickly wears thin for those who find themselves pulled into her orbit. Moses is most often on the receiving end of Pansy’s incessant lecturing, as she questions her son’s motivations and life prospects every chance she gets. There is no talking behind the back with Pansy, she doesn’t mind if anyone else hears. Even when Moses heeds his mother’s word and gets out of the house for his long, daily walks, Pansy launches another problem at him. “They’ll accuse you of loitering with intent,” she tells him. Moses — along with everyone else Pansy comes into contact with — is damned if he does and damned if he doesn’t. 


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Though it’s never explicitly said, part of Pansy’s ire stems from her inability to contend with the injustices she faces as a Black woman in the contemporary world. Abject violence hangs over her mind like a pall, and when her fear gnarls itself into irritation, she knows exactly how white people in the queue at the supermarket or a furniture store will look at her. Her vexation then turns into humiliation and shame, then to debilitating depression. It’s the most vicious of cycles, made all the more difficult by the fact that she feels like a spectator in her own life, seeing everyone around her enjoy themselves when she’s patently unable to do the same. Her sister, Chantelle (Michele Austin, another repeat collaborator with Leigh), has a career she loves and two daughters she’s exceedingly proud of. Watching her sibling bask in life’s simple pleasures stirs some resentment in Pansy, but the prevailing feeling she experiences observing Chantelle isn’t jealousy, it’s misery. 

“Hard Truths” is sublime and soft in the way that a rough surface is smoothed to the touch by sandpaper.

We are afforded some glimpses at why Pansy acts the way she does, but never any full explanation or justification. Instead, Leigh asks us to put the pieces together, to recall shades of people we’ve seen and known who behave similarly, if not our own deep-seated anger. In this way, Leigh and Jean-Baptiste force empathy’s hand. Much of “Hard Truths” reminded me of the confusion and anger dementia patients often display as their means to convey feeling overwhelmed, and my own experience witnessing the ramifications of that turmoil. But neither Leigh nor Jean-Baptiste ever makes Pansy feel like a spectacle, and it’s extraordinarily powerful to see a character so richly crafted be approached with care and love, even if those around her can’t fully understand her pain.

The question of whether (and how) Pansy’s overbearing exasperation and distrust will affect her family, most notably Moses, lingers in the ether until the film’s touching climax and unforgettable ending. The way Leigh concludes “Hard Truths” bowled me over with its sheer simplicity. The movie’s final 20 minutes are some of the most stunning of any film in recent memory, and they manage to impress themselves upon the viewer with very little dialogue at all. Instead, Leigh goes back to one of his favorite filmmaking signatures, a trick that hits like a cartoon piano and leaves the audience with a mouthful of black and white keys for teeth. He lets the film pause and breathe, believably extricating Pansy from her pain for just a moment to give her a taste of what reprieve and lightness might look like. 

Of course, it’s not that simple. Relief will never be that simple. But Leigh opens the door to let in comfort’s gentle breeze. “Hard Truths” is sublime and soft in the way that a rough surface is smoothed to the touch by sandpaper. His film confronts the inescapable anger that too often feels like a standard requirement of being alive today, a theme he and Jean-Baptiste are uniquely qualified to parse. “Hard Truths” is wrapped in the warmth of their palpable faith in one another, and it’s that trust that leaps through the screen to remind us that, even when things seem too damaged to be repaired, a little tender patience goes a long way in trying to mend what’s broken.

"Hard Truths" is in limited release now and expands nationwide January 10.

With lawsuits and legislation, Texas Republicans take aim at abortion pills

"With lawsuits and legislation, Texas Republicans take aim at abortion pills" was first published by The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

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Since the U.S. Supreme Court allowed states like Texas to ban nearly all abortions, the number of pregnancy terminations in the United States actually increased. This paradox, which pleases abortion advocates as much as it frustrates their conservative counterparts, hinges mostly on pills.

An average of 2,800 Texans receive abortion-inducing medications through the mail each month from states that still allow abortion, according to #WeCount, a tracking project from the Society of Family Planning.

Until recently, abortion-ban states like Texas mostly gnashed their teeth and railed against their blue state counterparts for allowing this underground enterprise to flourish. But now, they’re using lawsuits and legislation to more directly attack these abortion pill providers.

In December, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a first-of-its-kind civil lawsuit against a New York doctor for allegedly prescribing abortion pills to a Texas resident, setting up a conflict between Texas’ abortion ban and New York’s shield laws. Legislators are filing bills for the upcoming session that would give the state more tools to try to root out this practice. And they do all of this knowing the incoming Trump administration has their back.

“We’re getting to the point where, if we don’t start swinging, start adopting new tools, these websites and the 20,000 abortion pills coming into the state [each year] are going to become the new status quo,” said John Seago, the president of Texas Right to Life. “I don’t judge legislators for trying something that doesn’t work. But we are demanding that they start swinging.”

The lawsuit strategy

In 2023, on the eve of the first anniversary of the Dobbs decision, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signed into law a sweeping set of protections for abortion providers. The shield law meant New York wouldn’t cooperate with another state’s efforts to “prosecute, penalize, sue one of our health care providers who prescribed abortion medication,” Hochul said.

“You can continue hell-bent down your path on continuing this radical behavior,” she said, addressing anti-abortion states like Texas. “But we’ll be just as hell-bent on stopping you.”

Almost immediately, providers in New York joined those in Massachusetts, California and other shield law states in providing abortion pills via telehealth appointments and mail-order pharmacies to patients in abortion-ban states. The health care they provided was fully legal in the state they were based in, but clearly illegal in the states their patients are based in, and they undertook this work knowing they were courting legal challenges.

If anything, it’s a surprise how long it took, said Mary Ziegler, an abortion legal historian at UC Davis School of Law.

“Everyone has been expecting this and preparing for this,” Ziegler said. “And it’s no surprise that it’s Texas that brought this first suit.”

In mid-December, Paxton filed a lawsuit in Collin County alleging Dr. Maggie Carpenter, the founder of the Abortion Coalition for Telemedicine Access, provided a Texas woman with abortion pills in violation of state law.

Carpenter’s group not only provides direct patient care but also advises other shield providers on technical and legal support. The group was co-founded by Carpenter, Dr. Linda Prine and Julie Kay, a former ACLU attorney who led the lawsuit that overturned Ireland’s abortion ban.

“This is someone who is part of a network, part of a movement,” Ziegler said. “They’re prepared for this test of the shield law.”

But Texas was prepared, too, and legal experts are not certain how exactly this will play out. Nothing in New York’s shield law prevents a Texas court from hearing a case against a New York doctor, said Paul Schiff Berman, a law professor who specializes in conflicts of state law at the George Washington University law school.

If Carpenter doesn’t show up to the hearing, Paxton’s office will likely ask the court for a default judgement. If that is granted, Paxton can ask a New York state court to enforce it, which is where the shield law may come into play.

But much of the shield law’s protections are about protecting doctors from criminal investigations and regulatory consequences, like losing their medical licenses. In a civil suit, like the one Paxton has filed, it’s much harder for one state to undermine another’s ruling, Berman said. The U.S. Constitution specifically requires that a civil judgement issued in one state, like Texas, is enforceable in all states, regardless of their other laws.

This clause applies most clearly to private lawsuits — if a court orders you to pay someone you’ve harmed to make them whole, that judgement is enforceable no matter where you live.

“You don’t want it to be that if I sue you and win in Texas, and you flee to New Mexico, that I have to sue you all over again in New Mexico, and then you flee to California and it starts again,” Berman said.

But when it’s a state, not an individual, bringing the lawsuit, the judgement may not be as easily enforced. There’s an exception for “penal judgements,” when one state is using a civil lawsuit to try to enforce their state laws.

“This is clearly not just one random person suing another random person,” Ziegler said. “New York’s best argument is that this is the state of Texas enforcing its abortion policy through a lawsuit, which is a penal judgement, and they wouldn’t have to deal with that.”

But this is a rarely litigated question the federal courts haven’t meaningfully waded into in decades. Complicating matters further is a provision in New York’s shield law that would allow Carpenter to sue Texas right back, opening the door to more questions about sovereign immunity and state-on-state litigation.

It is, put simply, “a mess,” Ziegler said.

“If New York wins, as in they don't have to enforce the judgment, that doesn't mean that the state 100% would know what happens with other types of defendants,” she said. “And if Texas wins, I don't think that's going to be the end of abortion pills, or necessarily a guarantee that Texas's abortion rate will plummet. There are no quick fixes.”

Seago, with Texas Right to Life, agrees. He sees the Carpenter lawsuit as a “very encouraging step,” but said there’s no one legal strategy that will bring the practice of mailing abortion pills into Texas to a stop.

“There's a long list of areas of law that have not been tested, and areas where we need to start getting precedent,” he said. “We need to start getting some specific fact patterns before judges for them to determine whether some of the laws we already have on the books apply.”

Some of these lawsuits will be brought by Paxton’s office, but Seago said he anticipates private wrongful death lawsuits, as well as lawsuits against people who “aid or abet” in illegal abortions, as prohibited by Texas’ ban on most abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy.

“There's no silver bullet,” he said. “These are really difficult cases because these websites are run by individuals and others in other countries, their websites, their domains are out of our jurisdiction, the pharmacies they are using are outside of the country as well.”

The legislative approach

Last legislative session was the quietest in decades for abortion. After successfully banning nearly all abortions, Republicans were wary about continuing to push an issue that is widely unpopular with voters.

This session, coming off a Republican rout in November, Seago is hopeful that lawmakers will feel more empowered to continue restricting abortions, and especially abortion pills.

“Texas is uniquely positioned to lead on these cutting-edge pro-life issues,” Seago said. “Some of our friends in red states are still playing defense. They’re fighting off constitutional amendments. They’re still fighting off exceptions to their laws. We’re in a solid place to start fighting back.”

Texas has no mechanism to put a constitutional amendment to increase abortion access on the ballot without the approval of lawmakers, and while Democrats have filed bills to add more exceptions to the abortion laws, they are once again expected to not get any traction.

But whether conservative efforts to further restrict abortion pills will take hold also remains to be seen. Rep. Nate Schatzline, a conservative Republican from Fort Worth, has filed House Bill 1651, which would make it a deceptive trade practice to send abortion pills through the mail without verifying that they were prescribed by an in-state doctor after an in-person exam.

Another bill, HB 991, filed by Republican Rep. Steve Toth of The Woodlands, would allow lawsuits against websites that provide information about obtaining abortion pills. Elisa Wells, co-founder of Plan C, an information repository about telehealth abortion access, said they expect any challenge to their work to run afoul of free speech protections.

“Texas is a state that values free speech, but despite that, they're taking action to try and limit free speech with respect to abortion,” she said. “It's a bit hypocritical.”

Wells said they take seriously any legislation that might further restrict access to abortion in states like Texas. But she said even if all the domestic access routes were shut off by lawsuits and legislation, there are international providers prepared to keep providing pills to people who need them.

“It’s ironic that a lot of these legal actions and court decisions and attempts to restrict access are what is shining a spotlight on … the fact that abortion pills are available by mail,” she said. “Every time there's a decision like that, we just see the traffic to our site just exponentially increase. These anti-choice actions are the best advertisement.”

The federal allies

After the overturn of Roe v. Wade, the Biden administration took steps to shore up abortion access and protect providers and patients in states where the procedure remained legal. The incoming presidential administration is expected to undo most of those protections and more vociferously go after entities that are attempting to help people skirt state abortion laws.

One open question is whether Trump will direct the Food and Drug Administration to revoke the approval of mifepristone, a common abortion-inducing drug that conservatives tried to get moved off the market. The U.S. Supreme Court rejected those efforts, but nothing about that ruling would stop a new FDA from reviewing that approval.

Additionally, many are watching to see whether the Trump administration will issue new guidance on the Comstock Act, a 19th-century zombie law that hasn’t been enforced in decades. The Comstock Act prohibits mailing anything that could be used to facilitate an illegal abortion, which legal experts say could wreak havoc across the medical supply chain.

While trying to enforce the Comstock Act would spark significant legal challenges, it is a much more direct route to shutting down the infrastructure these shield providers have built, Ziegler said.

“This lawsuit [from Texas] isn’t likely to change much of these shield providers' behavior, because they’ve been expecting this,” she said. “But there’s much more anxiety about the possibility of Comstock prosecutions, because those would be federal charges.”

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2025/01/07/texas-abortion-pill-mail-order-ban/.

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

“Shameful”: Arizona activists slam Kelly and Gallego for supporting GOP immigration crackdown

Arizona’s Democratic Sens. Ruben Gallego and Mark Kelly are catching heat from advocates who call their support for the GOP’s “Laken Riley Act” a major disappointment from two candidates propelled by pro-immigration groups.

The bill, named for a college student killed by a Venezuelan-born immigrant, would direct authorities to detain undocumented people merely accused — not convicted — of certain nonviolent offenses. It has passed the House and picked up at least nine Democratic backers in the upper chamber, enough to overcome a filibuster and ensure passage.

But in a state where an estimated 540,000 residents live in mixed immigration status households, the GOP-backed bill could tear apart countless Arizona families without due process, critics say.

“The Laken Riley Act is immoral and unconstitutional…It’s shameful that Democrats like Ruben Gallego and John Fetterman support it,” Sam Weinberg, director of Gen-Z advocacy group Path to Progress, said in a post on Bluesky.

Jose Patino, vice president of education and external affairs for immigrant advocacy group Aliento, told Salon that his organization shared its concerns with the senators’ offices.

“One of them is the concept of indefinite detention without due process. Specifically, individuals that are arrested, charged, but they are not convicted,” Patino told Salon, adding that the bill would also give “broad power” to state attorneys general to dictate immigration law.

Patino told Salon that Gallego and Kelly haven’t returned the group’s calls voicing these concerns. He cautioned the senators to field community and advocate input before making any rash votes.

“​​There is time for us to caution and debate, read, and analyze the bill before making judgments,” Patino said. “It’s incumbent upon Senate Democrats to do that.”

Neither senator's office immediately responded to Salon's requests for comment.

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Sen. Gallego, a cosponsor of the bill, won a major victory in Arizona in November, besting Republican opponent Kari Lake by nearly 3 points in a state that saw the Democratic presidential candidate lose. But some are already drawing parallels with another Arizona pol who Gallego replaced: former Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, who left the Democratic Party before deciding against a run for reelection.

Mushed Zaheed, a Democratic strategist, said on social media that Gallego “campaigned with the theme that they were not going to betray the Democratic base by operating like Kyrsten Sinema” but was “off to an ominous start.”

Policy experts also say that Gallego’s defense of the bill relies on an incorrect understanding of its protections for DACA recipients. Gallego told Fox News on Wednesday that the bill was “clear” on excluding DACA recipients, a claim that experts say doesn’t pass muster.

"[Gallego’s claim] is just 100% incorrect…ALL Dreamers, including DACA recipients are covered by this bill,” Josh Bresiblatt, chief counsel on immigration for Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee, wrote in a post to X.

Patino argued that Gallego’s apparent misunderstanding could have been cleared up if he had reached out to immigration advocates and community members.

“I would caution any elected officials, including Mr. Gallego, too, before jumping on and cosponsoring legislation, to do the research, to hear from the community, especially the communities that are going to be impacted,” Patino told Salon.

Dunkin’ teams up with Native to launch a collection of doughnut-inspired personal care items

Fans and lovers of gourmand perfumes will be elated to know that Dunkin’ is releasing its own line of doughnut-scented items. 

In a recent statement obtained by Food & Wine, the popular doughnut chain announced that it partnered with Native to launch a limited-edition collection of pastry-themed personal care products, including deodorants, body washes, shampoos and conditioners. The collection is available at Walmart stores nationwide and on Native’s online website.

The products are available in four doughnut-inspired scents: Strawberry Frosted doughnut, Vanilla Sprinkle (which includes hints of coconut and citrus, according to Native), Blueberry Cobbler (which features a “tempting fusion of blueberry, apple, and caramel notes”) and Boston Kreme (which is reportedly "filled with goodness").      

“Native has earned a reputation for creating unexpected, gourmand-inspired partnerships in fragrance, and our collaboration with Dunkin’ brings the ultimate playful twist to your routine,” Chris Talbott, CEO of Native, said in the statement. “By combining Native’s iconic formulas with sweet aromas inspired by Dunkin’s beloved, classic doughnuts, this collection redefines how personal care can be both fun and delightful.”

“They’re not shortcuts” — but weight loss drugs became the business of shame

As New Year's resolutions kick into high gear, weight loss goals top many people's lists. Like clockwork, advertisements for weight loss programs and supplements are popping up on social media, ready to pounce on the demand.

The weight loss drug market is exploding, with new products entering the scene to compete with big names like Ozempic. It is no surprise, considering the millions of people worldwide struggling with obesity, PCOS and diabetes.

The medications' promise of weight loss without a complete lifestyle overhaul has sparked hope and controversy, and the market shows no signs of slowing down. Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and other GLP-1 drugs have transformed how obesity is treated and have corresponded with a 25% decrease in weight-loss surgeries. Sixteen new drugs are set to enter the market in the coming years, per Reuters, and analysts estimate the overall market could expand to $200 billion by 2031.

There's an ongoing debate about how GLP-1 drugs fit into a comprehensive strategy for managing obesity, their potential side effects and costs. 

The growing market also has revealed societal attitudes that include complicated layers of stigma and misunderstanding. 

How shame boosted GLP-1 drugs

Fat-shaming is not a new concept. "In western society, fatphobia and anti-fatness are so ingrained in how we think about body size, health and self-worth," said Katherine Metzelaar, dietitian and owner at Bravespace Nutrition. "There's this belief that being thin equals being beautiful, disciplined and healthy while being fat is often unfairly linked to laziness or a lack of self-control."

"It all leads to this idea that fat people are somehow less deserving of respect or dignity," she said. "Diet culture plays a significant role in pushing this, too, making people believe that anyone in a larger body is just not trying hard enough, leading to the scorn and derision we see.”

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The use of GLP-1 drugs sparked the term "Ozempic shaming" to describe the negative perceptions faced by those who choose medical interventions for weight management. Some critics argue that using the drugs is akin to "taking a shortcut," overlooking the complex factors that contribute to obesity. 

"Some people think weight loss has to be grueling to be 'real' or 'earned' and see things like surgery or medication as taking shortcuts," said Dr. Raj Dasgupta, chief medical advisor for Garage Gym Reviews. "This belief overlooks how tough those options are and ignores that everyone's journey is different. It's an outdated mindset that simplifies a very complicated issue."

Joshua Collins, licensed clinical social worker at SOBA New Jersey, said "medications like Ozempic (Semaglutide) help address underlying metabolic and hormonal issues, such as insulin resistance and appetite regulation."

"They're not shortcuts; they're tools — much like using medication to manage diabetes or high blood pressure," he said. "Criticizing someone for using Ozempic reflects a misunderstanding of weight science and reinforces harmful stereotypes about health and effort."

"Criticizing someone for using Ozempic reflects a misunderstanding of weight science and reinforces harmful stereotypes about health and effort"

GLP-1 competitors also use shame

The rest of the weight loss-market has tried to capitalize on this criticism through a marketing approach that devalues GLP-1 medications. Advertisements tout over-the-counter supplements as “Nature's Ozempic," and warn that “GLP-1 meds are effective but come at a steep price."

“My doctor thinks I am being scammed,” some ads say, with the taglines "This is NOT Ozempic, but Your Metabolism Will Love It," "Ozempic Power In a Capsule” and "Works 3x Faster than Ozempic."

Dr. Michael Chichak, medical director at mental health clinic MEDvidi, said GLP-1 medications come with benefits and risks like any other treatments, but "fear-mongering tactics and misinformation are done to further a certain agenda."

"The weight loss industry already preys on individuals, using fear and shame as they are known to be more emotional triggers as opposed to using scientific evidence when marketing their product," he said. "These companies begin by diffusing trust in the medical and pharmaceutical industry, advertising themselves as a safer option, highlighting how GLP-1 medications are more dangerous and encouraging using ‘natural’ alternatives."

This can discourage people from seeking treatment altogether, experts said. Many patients may feel pressured to justify their treatment choices, which can lead to stress and feelings of inadequacy, affecting their overall well-being. Treating obesity as a moral failing rather than a medical condition has been "immensely harmful to patient care," said Dr. Rehka Kumar, chief medical officer at online weigh loss program Found.

"The weight loss industry already preys on individuals, using fear and shame, as they are known to be more emotional triggers as opposed to using scientific evidence when marketing their product"

"As a physician, I find it deeply troubling when patients are shamed for using evidence-based treatments, whether anti-obesity medications or bariatric surgery," Kumar said. "This stems from the persistent but incorrect view that body weight is a matter of willpower. Science shows that weight regulation involves genetic, environmental, hormonal and neurological factors. This bias results in inadequate care, with less than 10% of eligible patients being offered evidence-based medical treatments for weight management and insurance coverage for obesity treatment being denied at rates three to four times higher than other chronic conditions."

Combating the stigma requires increased awareness and education about the legitimate medical purposes of these medications while providing evidence-based, personalized care that considers the patient's unique circumstances and goals and treats them with dignity, experts said.

"We have the opportunity to reshape the culture and impact a realistic symbol of beauty which is based on healthier standards and body types, genetics, among other factors," said Max Banilivy, clinical psychologist and vice president of education, training & client/staff well-being at WellLife Network. "We need to teach children and families and the media to have accurate and healthy messages. Not all bodies are the same."

“He wants to meet”: Trump says he’s arranging a meeting with Putin

President-elect Donald Trump said he’s ready to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin, adding that the pair will seek to get Russia’s war in Ukraine “over with.”

Speaking Thursday during a summit of Republican governors, Trump said a meeting was in the works.

“He wants to meet, and we are setting it up,” Trump told reporters at his Mar-a-Lago estate. “President Putin wants to meet. He’s said that even publicly.”

Trump, a frequent critic of President Joe Biden’s support for Ukraine, said working with Putin to end the war was essential.

“We have to get that war over with. That’s a bloody mess. Soldiers are being killed by the millions,” Trump said. Though official tolls aren’t published, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said last month that 43,000 Ukrainians had been killed in the war. As many as 200,000 Russian soldiers have been killed.

Putin’s invasion of Ukraine will enter its fourth year shortly after Trump takes office. Trump vowed to end military support for Ukraine while on the campaign trail.

Putin previously praised Trump for his election win, dubbing him “a brave man” and saying he looked forward to working with the president-elect to wrap up his assault on Ukraine. In his first stint in office, Trump was cozier with Putin than his predecessors, reportedly continuing to speak with the Russian leader even after he left office.

Ringo Starr’s “Look Up” is a triumphant return to form with a twist of twang

Now holding forth during its sixth decade, Ringo Starr’s solo career has largely been an uneven affair in terms of studio albums. There are the 1970s-era highwater marks associated with the "Ringo" (1973) and "Goodnight Vienna" (1974) LPs, of course, and there is no denying the remarkable contributions to popular music that he regularly makes with his All-Starr Band, a moveable feast of hitmakers who never fail to entertain and enlighten.

Which brings us to "Look Up," his twenty-first studio album and easily his finest record in decades. Produced by T. Bone Burnett, "Look Up" takes brilliant advantage of Ringo’s longstanding and well-honed country and western affectations. During his Beatles years, Starr provided lead vocals on such country-infused gems as cover versions of Carl Perkins’ “Honey Don’t” and the Buck Owens hit “Act Naturally,” as well as such original compositions as "The White Album" track “Don’t Pass Me By” and "Abbey Road"’s “Octopus’ Garden.” In the wake of the Fab Four’s disbandment, he recorded "Beaucoups of Blues" (1970) with Pete Drake handling production duties in Nashville.

For Starr, "Look Up" is a triumphant return to form. In Burnett’s able hands, the album is chockful of exciting and, at times, tender-hearted turns. In addition to production duties, Burnett composed (or co-wrote) the album’s songs, which were clearly arranged to accommodate Ringo’s unmistakable vocal stylings. In his eighty-fourth year, Ringo handles the vocals with impressive skill, modulating his drawl for maximum effect. 


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With "Look Up," there are plenty of memorable songs to go around. Take “Time on My Hands,” for instance, in which Starr contributes a heartbreaking vocal about the fleeting nature of human experience, or “Come Back,” wherein Ringo contemplates loneliness with fiddle and mandolin accompaniment. In yet another standout track, “I Live for Your Love,” the veteran musician sings movingly about the brutal truths of living and finding a way to negotiate the realities of growing older. “I don’t live in the future / I don’t live in the past,” Ringo sings. “I live in the moment / I live in the now.”


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With Ringo’s steady drumbeat guiding the way, "Look Up" benefits from the contributions of a host of guest performers, including Alison Krauss and Billy Swann, as well as such country and western players as Billy Strings, Molly Tuttle, and the Larkin Poe duo. The result is a star-studded array of top-flight musicians working in support of one of popular music’s indisputable legends. And Ringo, who has proven time and time again that he does his best work in a community of top-notch players, wouldn’t have it any other way.

Brooke Shields reveals a doctor performed vaginal rejuvenation on her without consent

Brooke Shields has opened up about a traumatic experience with a plastic surgeon. 

The former child star has spent several years exploring and sharing her troubling experiences in the limelight. In the past, she has detailed the unwanted sexualization she faced as a child and now in her new memoir, "Brooke Shields Is Not Allowed to Get Old: Thoughts on Aging as a Woman," she dives further into other violations that have happened to her, revealing that in her 40s, a doctor performed unwanted vaginal rejuvenation surgery on her.

In an Us Weekly interview, Shields, 59, said it all started with a visit to her gynecologist, who asked her whether she experienced discomfort over her labia's size. She replied that she had struggled with "bleeding and chafing" for years and the doctor suggested she could have a surgical reduction, to which Shields agreed.

“I’d be lying if I said I’m not embarrassed to share this very intimate information,” she wrote. “But, if we are to change the way we approach and talk about women’s health, then we need to bring up the uncomfortable but very real issues. Shame is no longer an option.”

However, after the surgery, Shields said the male plastic surgeon, “informed me that he threw in a little bonus. It felt like such an invasion — such a bizarre, like, rape of some kind."

She explained that she and her gynecologist were furious. “Nothing pointed toward this need to be tighter or smaller or firmer or younger, especially there," she said.

But the doctor “legitimately proudly explained to me that he, you know, threw in a little twofer.”

Shields said she never talked about the "irreversible” procedure because she felt “shame” and “anger.” 

The star did not take legal action against the doctor. 

“I thought, I don’t want anybody else telling me what I have to do,” Shields said.

Israel’s war on Gaza may have killed almost 65,000 people in under 9 months, Lancet study suggests

The death toll from Israel’s assault on Gaza may be tens of thousands higher than local health authorities have said, a new study finds.

A study from researchers at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, published Thursday in The Lancet, estimates that 64,260 people died from traumatic injuries between Oct 7, 2023 and June 30 of last year, 41% more than the Gaza Ministry of Health’s estimate of 37,877 dead.

The figure would represent the deaths of nearly 3% of Gaza’s pre-war population. Researchers noted deaths were the heaviest in the three months following Oct 7, 2023, but that sustained warfare made counting more difficult.

Israel has been accused of willfully directing attacks on civilians in Gaza by the International Criminal Court, which issued arrest warrants for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant last November.

The figures published by The Lancet do not account for deaths by disease and starvation, issues the United Nations said last year could further devastate Palestinians as bombing campaigns decimated health care facilities, food production and international aid efforts.

Researchers concluded that women, children and the elderly made up nearly 60% of all estimated deaths for which age and sex were available.

Multiple challenges have plagued death toll estimates in Gaza, including skepticism of the figures produced by the Hamas-run Ministry of Health. Researchers say their estimate is based on comparing pre-war records to death lists published by local authorities and morgue data, as well as obituaries posted on social media.

Gaza’s Health Ministry has reported nearly 10,000 further deaths since June 30 of last year, when the Lancet paper’s estimations ended, meaning cumulative deaths could top 75,000.

Trump’s team is “trying to run out the clock” on Jack Smith, but will the Supreme Court bite?

With special counsel Jack Smith’s final reports the subject of litigation and just over a week remaining until President-elect Donald Trump takes office, lawyers are skeptical about whether his findings will ever become public.

Under normal circumstances, special counsels submit a final report on their investigation to the Justice Department, which the attorney general may then choose to make public or not. 

In the final days of President Joe Biden’s term, however, Trump’s attorneys, alongside his one-time co-defendants in the classified documents case in Florida, have been working to prevent the release of Smith’s final report on his investigation into Trump’s efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election and his hoarding of classified documents at his estate, Mar-a-Lago.

Earlier this week, Trump’s co-defendants asked Judge Aileen Cannon to block the release of the special counsel’s report and on Wednesday Trump’s attorneys themselves asked the federal appeals court for the 11th Circuit to block the release of Smith’s final report.

That motion from the remaining defendants was denied by the 11th Circuit Thursday evening. However, an order from Cannon blocking the release of the report until three days after the 11th Circuit rules on the matter remains in effect. (Later Thursday evening, the Justice Department appealed Cannon's order.)

So far, the Justice Department has indicated that it plans to release the report in two volumes, with the first, concerning Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election, being released publicly, and the second, concerning Trump’s retention of classified documents, being released only to senior lawmakers in the House and Senate.

However, Trump and his one-time co-defendants' various moves to block and delay the release of the report — combined with the fact that Trump will soon assume office and thus control of the Justice Department — is causing some to question whether the full report will ever be released. 

Barbara McQuade, who served as a US attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan, told Salon that “Donald Trump is clearly trying to run out the clock until he is sworn in on Jan. 20,” adding: “Once he gains control of DOJ, he can try to kill the report.”

McQuade said that the remaining two defendants in the classified documents case have a valid concern over the release of Smith’s report on the classified documents investigation and that the “volume of the report relevant to their case would need to be redacted to protect their interests,’ which she suspects the Justice Department has already done. 

“While it seems that Smith could have issued his report sooner to avoid the risk that Trump would use friendly judges to run out the clock, ultimately, the report is subject to FOIA,” McQuade said. “Someday, when the investigations are closed, the public will learn the contents of the report.”

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Ty Cobb, a former member of the White House legal team in the first Trump administration, told Salon that he’s optimistic that the first volume of Smith’s report will be released before Trump takes office but that he doesn’t believe the second volume will become public. 

“It should and there will be a lot of litigation, I expect. I expect media and public interest groups will move for its release at least at the conclusion of the proceedings of the two co-defendants,” Cobb said.

Cobb said he expected much of what’s contained in the final report to have already been public information, but that the final report would probably include substantiation of that information from new sources and witnesses.

“I think what you’ll see in the report is that each of the allegations in the complaint is reasserted but the evidence for those allegations gets expanded beyond what the public currently,” Cobb said. 

Cobb also suspects that the issue could end up before the Supreme Court. Justice Clarence Thomas handles emergency matters arising from the 11th Circuit, meaning he could potentially delay making a decision until Trump assumes office and control of the Justice Department. But Cobb said he doesn’t think Chief Justice John Robert would let that happen, in part because the legal arguments coming from Trump’s team to block the release of both volumes are thin. 

“There’s no legal issue. It doesn't tie in in any way to immunity or to transition,” Cobb said. “There’s no legal hook to get the intended transparency of the special counsel process to be obscured.”

Sarah Krissoff, a former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, told Salon that she too thinks Trump's legal team will ultimately fail to block the release of Smith's work.

"It is hard to imagine that this issue will get traction with the Supreme Court," she said.

Trump receives sentence of “unconditional discharge” in New York hush money case

Donald Trump received a sentence Friday of "unconditional discharge" as punishment for his felony convictions in the state of New York. 

According to New York state law, unconditional discharge is a sentence "without imprisonment, fine or probation supervision."

Last summer, Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts in New York for falsifying business records relating to payments made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election. 

The conviction marked the first time that an American president was convicted of a crime and was the only of the three criminal cases against Trump to go to trial. The judge overseeing the case, Juan Merchan, had earlier said he did not plan to give Trump jail time or probation.

Ahead of the sentencing, Trump had repeatedly attempted to have his conviction overturned and his sentencing delayed. On Tuesday, his attorneys asked the Supreme Court to intervene in the criminal sentencing, arguing that it presented a “grave injustice” to the office and the federal government. 

However, the Supreme Court cleared the way for the sentencing late Thursday, with Justice Amy Coney Barrett and Chief Justice John Roberts joining the court's liberals in allowing the sentencing to go forward. The other conservative justices would have granted Trump’s request to block the sentencing.

Trump was not physically present at the New York courtroom but rather attended virtually from Palm Beach, Florida, where he resides and has been holding court at his Mar-a-Lago estate.

At the hearing, Merchan said he had handed down “the only lawful sentence" in light of the Supreme Court’s presidential immunity decision and its ruling allowing the sentencing to go forward.

Speaking to Salon, Ty Cobb, a former White House lawyer in the first Trump administration, highlighted how the Supreme Court’s decision to allow Friday's sentencing to move forward was predicated on the understanding that Trump would not suffer any of the typical consequences of a felony conviction.

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“In fact, the Supreme Court relied on the assurance by Judge Merchan that the sentence would be penalty-free in rejecting the delay sought by Trump," Cobb said. "There is a consequence, though it may be illusory: Trump is now a lawfully convicted felon. The sentencing perfects that status."

Cobb added that the sentencing also triggers Trump’s rights to appeal the case; he's skeptical that Trump’s conviction would withstand such a challenge.

“I do not think the case survives on appeal. Sadly, the one criminal case that got to trial, unlike the two serious and well indicted federal cases which have been dismissed now as to Trump, quite likely was ill founded,” Cobb said.

Bennet Gershamn, a former prosecutor at the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, also noted that there will be “no significant legal consequences” for Trump.

“There may be political consequences if anybody cares,” Gershman said. “And I’ll assume that when historians write about this dark period in American history, they will surely note that the 47th president was a twice-impeached convicted felon.”

This article was updated to include expert reaction.

Trump’s Greenland plan could affect Ozempic, Legos, hearing aids: report

President-elect Donald Trump's threat to "tariff Denmark at a very high level" if it refuses to give up Greenland could affect weight loss medications like Ozempic, Lego bricks and hearing aids, The New York Times reports.

Denmark is the leading supplier of hearing aids to the U.S., per The Times, and is home to Novo Nordisk, the maker of Ozempic and Wegovy. The toymaker Lego Group also is based in Denmark.

The country is the latest to join a list that Trump has vowed to tariff when he takes office on Jan. 20 if his demands aren't met. His plan includes across-the-board tariffs of 10 to 20% on imports from other nations. Trump wants 25% tariffs on imports from Mexico and Canada and an additional 10% tariff on goods from China unless the countries stem the flow of migrants and drugs into the U.S.  

Economists have warned the tariffs could increase consumer prices in the U.S., and Trump hasn't disagreed

His latest comments came during a news conference at Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday, where he discussed taking over Greenland, the world’s biggest island. Greenland has gained prominence given the increasing strategic importance of the Arctic region, with the U.S., China and Russia all vying for power over an area rich in national resources

Trump didn’t rule out the use of military force to acquire Greenland or to retake the Panama Canal, according to a BBC account.

"No, I can't assure you on either of those two,” he said.  "But I can say this, we need them for economic security.”

While the European Commission said his ideas were “hypothetical,” if implemented they would have profound implications on trade relations. Denmark would likely retaliate.

The U.S. received $11.6 billion in imports from Denmark in 2023 and $9 billion last year, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That's a small slice of the $3 trillion the U.S. received in 2023, The Times reports. 

"Roughly half of Denmark’s recent exports to the United States are packaged medicines, insulin, vaccines and antibiotics,” The Times reports, citing data from the Observatory of Economic Complexity.

Greenland and Denmark showed no signs of welcoming Trump’s annexation idea.

“Greenland belongs to the people of Greenland,” Greenland’s prime minister, Múte Egede, wrote on Facebook.

Trump could tamper with government data to make his administration look better, ex-official warns

With Donald Trump taking over the government for a second time with grandiose promises to reshape the federal government, he will be in a strong position to install loyalists who may be willing to fiddle with data that experts rely on to assess the economy. Such a shake-up would cripple the state's ability to fulfill even its most basic obligations — and transform it into an instrument of political power, a former high-ranking civil servant warned in an interview with Salon.

Rising costs of living has been at the top of many Americans' minds, and one key source of information for them has been the national inflation rate produced by the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. The inflation rate, along with job creation numbers, census data and other statistics produced by federal civil servants, not only gives the public insight on the state of the economy in hard numbers, but also informs federal decision-making from routine duties to crisis situations.

With President-elect Donald Trump widely expected to revive the "Schedule F" employment category, which would expose thousands of federal employees to easy dismissal, former Commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Erica L. Groshen said that such a proposal would have devastating effects on the government's statistics infrastructure and erode public trust.

"Senior civil servants would now be vulnerable to being fired for political reasons, and have pressures on them to do things that would violate the norms that protect trust," she told Salon.

The employees who work at the Department of Labor Statistics and other statistics bureaus  are nearly always professional civil servants, their work normally protected from political interference by a number of safeguards. The secretary of any given department, for example, cannot see data before it is released, except under special arrangements, which are Memorandums of Understanding, or MOUs, available for the public to see in any case.

But Trump has accused government statistics agencies, along with other components of the so-called bureaucratic "deep state," of manipulating data for political ends. In August 2024, he pounced on a jobs report revision to claim that the Department of Labor Statistics had purposely inflated job growth to allow Democrats to "say what a wonderful job they're doing" and were now only releasing the revision because the real data had already been leaked by a "Patriot."

When Trump was in office in 2019, the Labor Department issued a similar revision without the then-president raising any hackles. Now that Trump is returning to the White House with a vow to restructure the administrative state, experts have expressed concern over just how much it will be transformed into an extension of his political whims.

Under politicized statistics agencies, Groshen explained, policymakers could pressure civil servants to speed up or delay release dates, depending on their agenda; arbitrarily change statistical methods; replace career experts with unqualified or unbiased candidates; and grant earlier special access to data for non-political purposes, such as personal enrichment, political advantage or enforcement activities.

Any one of these things could severely impact the government's ability to perform its most basic functions.

"Federal statistics are information infrastructure for our economy. They promote good evidence based decision making in many, many spheres, and are mechanism for us to jointly decide on what are the public goods — roads, national defense, clean air — that we need, and to then make sure that we have them so that our country functions effectively," Groshen said. "Without impartial data on poverty rates, the government wouldn't be able to efficiently allocate money to fight poverty; the same applies to unemployment insurance programs based on local unemployment rates, or apportionment of congressional seats based on census data, or any number of other functions."

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The revival and potential abuse of Schedule F could destroy trust in the system among the general public as well as organizations in a contractual relationship with the federal government; the latter would include manufacturers whose contracts include inflation-proof escalation clauses and unions in collective bargaining agreements. The erosion of credibility would potentially force the government to waste time renegotiating shorter-term contracts and deter organizations from working with them at all.

Lawmakers would also be wary of using information provided by a compromised system to guide their policy-making. The result could be a slew of federal programs that are "based on lawmakers' thoughts about where the problems are and what sectors need relief," Groshen said, rather than on professional sources of data. American citizens making personal and business decisions would also be left without a clear sense of where they can obtain reliable information, and might rely on alternative sources of information like social media that "are not transparent, have no history, and could be produced by someone with an agenda."

"There's now the risk of a world where you have more industrial unrest between workers and employers, more protracted and continual negotiations about a lot of things that are now handled pretty smoothly, more uncertainty in financial markets — and financial markets hate uncertainty, so higher interest rates because people feel more uncertain — more spending on lawyers and negotiators, and generally conflict both in the public and private sector," she said.

Groshen and other critics have warned that if the Trump White House uses Schedule F to clear out the federal bureaucracy, the government would lose institutional expertise that, along with trust, would be extremely difficult to replace. For some advisors with Trump's ear, that's exactly the point.

“DEI is deadly”: Fox News spin on California wildfires exposes MAGA’s total incoherence

One thing no one can deny: MAGA influencers put a lot of work into pushing really incoherent talking points. Most everyone with sense understands that the fires ravaging Los Angeles are, in large part, a predictable consequence of climate change. However, it is an article of faith in MAGA circles that climate change is a "hoax" invented by the "libs" to deny gender-affirming care to cis men, in the form of oversized gas-guzzling trucks. So they quickly jumped into action during a time of immense need, seeking someone or something else to blame. And because the movement takes all its cues from a right-wing influencer named Chaya Raichik — who posts under the name "Libs of Tik Tok" — they've settled on blaming women.

On Wednesday, Raichik tweeted a picture while falsely implying both that the entirety of the Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) leadership is female and also that women's inherent inferiority is why the fires are spinning out of control. 

The people that supposedly care about women's rights when it comes to trans people openly mock women for their appearance when they're in positions of power. These are the people that actually hate women.

[image or embed]

— Alejandra Caraballo (@esqueer.net) January 8, 2025 at 6:40 PM

It would be cool if women occupied the top three positions of the LAFD, but readers will not be surprised to find out this is not the case. The fire chief, Kristin M. Crowley (pictured left), is a woman. But a quick view of the orgaztional chart shows the chief of staff, the head of emergency operations, the head of administrative operations, the heads of the regional bureaus, the head of the prevention bureau, and the head of IT are all men. Out of the 12 leaders on the page, only 3 are women — meaning a full 75% of the leadership team is male. And that is to say nothing of the first responders from Los Angeles County.

Raichik has, so far, successfully rallied the MAGA masses to prevent a community note pointing this out from being appended to her post. But what is fascinating is how much work she seems to have put into pumping out this nonsense. A reverse image search of the photo shows it was taken in February 2016 and posted on the LAFD's Flickr page, which contains almost 57,000 photos. Raichik, or whoever sent her this photo anyway, had to comb through hundreds of pages to find an 8-year-old photo to make this point. 


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And what point are Raichik and her MAGA followers making? Not clear! The acronym "DEI," which stands for "diversity, equity, and inclusion," is being thrown around, but an acronym does not actually explain why women in leadership is a bad idea. Commenters responded to the photo with "Answers a lot of questions" and "And that’s all you need to know," but no one is willing to say what answers they arrived at, knowing nothing about these leaders but their gender. Jesse Watters of Fox News recycled this photo but also declined to spell out why he believed women are unable to handle the job of being upper management at a fire department. 

"This, right here, ladies and gentlemen? This is the leadership of the LA Fire Department. I sure hope I know what they're doing" (Jesse's point is that they are women and possibly queer women at that so they can't possibly know what they're doing)

[image or embed]

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) January 8, 2025 at 8:15 PM

Watters also griped that the fire chief had marched in Pride parades and claimed, "California is committing suicide before our very eyes. DEI is deadly." He did not explain how either being queer or female made someone less capable of doing the job of fire chief. 

They won't say, of course, because they know the claim being implied here is too embarrassingly dumb to speak out loud. The unspoken argument is that women are stupidbrains who can't do anything right, and instead we need geniuses, who are all men like Donald Trump, running things. But they won't come out and say that, because they know that this argument is self-refuting. So instead, they gesture in the direction of the argument, yell "DEI" a lot, and deny that they're misogynist when someone draws the obvious inference for the sexist theatrics. 

Welcome to this era of MAGA, where they have given up even pretending their points make sense. 

With the election of Trump to a second term, there's been a lot said about the "post-truth" moment that Republican voters live in. But this entire exercise shows that it's beyond that. This is the right's post-coherence era. Even within the context of this false information about the gender makeup of the LAFD, there's no attempt to explain why having women in leadership would harm the ability of the firefighters on the ground to do their jobs. It's just a vague gesture — "ew, women" — and a total unwillingness to explain why women are unfit to serve. 

In the not-so-distant past, Republicans would at least try to make their arguments sound plausible, by populating their claims with "evidence," even if it was fake, and framing it as "reasoning," even if it was specious. Much effort was put into fortifying argument-shaped rationales for the belief that women are inferior. Shoddy "evolutionary psychology" claims were put forward, positing that women evolved to be so focused on nurturing that their brains had no resources left for higher-level reasoning. Even centrists got involved, such as economist Larry Summers, who baselessly suggested biology put a hard limit on women's intelligence, one that doesn't exist for men. 

There are serious drawbacks to actually making arguments, however. Doing so gives one's opponents a way to rebut your false claims. Critics can demonstrate that you got your facts wrong. They can carefully peel apart the flaws in your logic. Over time, for instance, the pseudo-science of "evolutionary psychology" started to collapse, as real scientists educated journalists and the larger public about why it's demonstrable nonsense. Plus, the "women are just born dumber" claim is harder to sustain in an era when women graduate college at significantly higher rates than men. 

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The advantage of incoherence for MAGA is that if you never say anything substantive, there's nothing for critics to argue with. Raichik and Watters have blamed the LA fires on these three women, but they won't say how or why their gender supposedly made them incompetent. If you argue with the obvious implications, they'll just get huffy and deny that's what they meant. We are expected to understand that it's bad for women to be in leadership, but no one will tell us why that might be. But they don't need to defend their point, because their audience is there to affirm "that's all you need to know," without ever explaining what they are even saying. 

It's easy to dismiss Raichik as a random who just saw a photo, had an emotional reaction and can't explain why because she's living the stereotype of female stupidity she promotes. But it appears she — or someone helping her, anyway — spent a good deal of time combing through thousands of photographs on the LAFD Flickr page to find just the right one that would create this "knowing" reaction in the MAGA base, without having to spell out what she's saying here.

It's also why she and her fans are working so hard at keeping the embarrassing facts, especially that most LAFD leaders are men, out of view. The coverup shows this decision was not an accidental or impulsive, but a deliberate effort to sow disinformation. This tactic isn't just sinister, but cowardly. Raichik, Watters, and everyone promoting this nonsense is well aware it's nonsense, which is why they're so afraid to defend it.

Alito can’t save Trump from sentencing. He just made the Supreme Court’s credibility issue worse

The U.S. Supreme Court has a mounting credibility problem with the American public — and Justice Samuel Alito isn’t helping. Why should he care? Who will make him?

On Tuesday, just hours before Donald Trump’s legal team asked the U.S. Supreme Court to intervene and pause his sentencing today in the New York case involving hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels, the president-elect and the conservative justice talked on the phone.

This is highly unusual. And while Alito told ABC News that they only discussed one of his former law clerks who applied for a job with the incoming administration, there’s no actual reason for Trump himself to be conducting a reference check for a staff position. (As Slate observed, the former clerk worked for Alito more than a decade ago, and also served as a chief of staff to attorney general Bill Barr four years ago; Trump and Alito had no need for a call to vouch for his bona fides.)

They delegitimize themselves, then call talk of their legitimacy dangerous.

Let’s say Alito merely sang the praises of his clerk, and Trump – as has been suggested — somehow disciplined himself and asked only specific questions about the applicant's qualifications. This doesn’t pass the most basic smell test. 

Put aside for a moment that the gilded career path from Alito’s chambers into the Trump administration exemplifies why majorities of Americans understand the Roberts court and its decisions as another extension of partisan politics, not law.  

Alito’s entire job is measured judgment. It shouldn’t be asking too much for him to exercise common sense — especially when the court’s standing is at its lowest point ever with the American people. 

Yet again and again, as the conservative justice accepts luxury vacations from right-wing donors and grants interviews to lawyers with cases pending before the court, Alito fails to meet even that simplest standard. By now, it’s hard to interpret as anything other than a justice’s contemptuous refusal to be held to any rules at all.

In 2008, Alito joined hedge fund billionaire Paul Singer, a leading funder of the conservative legal movement who has invested at least $80 million in right-wing political entities, on an opulent Alaska fishing retreat. The group’s private jet flight has been valued at $100,000 each way. They caught salmon during the day, then feasted on multi-course dinners featuring Kobe beef filet and Alaskan king crab legs, and consumed $1,000 bottles of wine into the evening.

Federal law requires justices to publicly disclose most gifts; private airfare would certainly be among them. Alito did not include any of this on his financial disclosure forms — until, that is, ProPublica discovered the trip 15 years later. In the Wall Street Journal, Alito brushed aside any conflict of interest, suggesting that if he had not taken the private flight, his seat “would have otherwise been vacant.”

Then, between the Alaskan getaway and his grudging disclosure, ProPublica counted at least 10 cases where Singer had issues before the court. That included a 2014 dispute between Singer’s hedge fund and the country of Argentina, which the court decided in Singer’s favor to the tune of $2.4 billion. That’s a fine return on a private flight and some fancy wine. Alito did not recuse himself and joined the majority decision. 

In 2023, Alito sat for four hours of interviews for the Wall Street Journal, in a late July feature that dismissed the Alaska revelations as a “hit piece” and instead fluffed the justice as “the Supreme Court’s plain-spoken defender” and an “important justice” with a “distinctive interpretive method that is pragmatic yet rooted in originalism and textualism.” 

In the piece, Alito, incorrectly but without pushback, argued that “no provision in the Constitution gives (Congress) the authority to regulate the Supreme Court — period.” Most constitutional scholars disagree. The Constitution establishes the court. It awards Congress the power to regulate it — its budget, the building where it meets, the number of justices, their pay, its jurisdiction and the types of cases it can hear, even that a new session begins on the first Monday in October.

Also left unsaid? David B. Rivkin Jr., one of the interview’s two co-authors, is a well-known Federalist Society and conservative lawyer who has represented Leonard Leo and that very month sent a letter to a Senate committee that wanted to hear from Leo on Supreme Court ethics and his role facilitating relationships between justices and wealthy benefactors. Also, Rivkin at that very moment was representing a couple with a novel challenge to federal tax laws that the court had agreed to hear the month before. (Alito refused calls to recuse.)

Then, after two flags linked to Donald Trump supporters — an upside-down American flag “in distress” and the Appeal to Heaven flag — were spotted flown outside Alito’s home and vacation home, he again declined to recuse himself from two cases involving the Jan. 6 insurrection.

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Alito, in his arrogance, wants everything both ways. He wants to enforce checks and balances without being subject to any himself. He wants to be able to act politically, fly political flags, and associate with partisans and wealthy donors while still insisting on his own neutrality. And he is part of a court that has been handpicked by the Federalist Society and a conservative legal movement for the manifest purpose of pushing the judiciary rightward, but in its triumphant moment wants to insist that the court is doing pure law and not politics. 

Then, when he works on behalf of the same conservative career network that elevated Alito to the court and vetted Trump’s three selections, and holds private conversations with Trump the same day the president-elect looked to the conservative supermajority he helped create for help evading his own conviction, he expects the public to shrug and look away. (Chief Justice John Roberts refused to answer questions about court ethics before the U.S. Senate because he said it would be inappropriate, but Alito can boost his staff’s career prospects directly to the president.) While they enrich themselves and please their political patrons, we must pretend they are neutral arbiters of law. When the chief justice even deigns to address the crisis he and his colleagues have created, they look everywhere except at their own behavior. They delegitimize themselves, then call talk of their legitimacy dangerous. Trump suggests it should even be criminal

This is imperious nonsense. Americans know it. Confidence in the judiciary has plummeted over the last four years, to record lows, across party lines, and at such speed that it can only be best compared to the collapse of trust experienced in dictatorships and banana republics. An unelected, conservative supermajority, with lifetime appointments, no ethics code, no accountability and even less self-awareness make the rules for us but abide by none themselves.

Their law is the law of the fifth-grade playground. Because they say so. Because they can.

The flames from wildfires aren’t always the most dangerous part

The spate of devastating fires hitting the Los Angeles area has dominated headlines and understandably so. At least 10 people have died and upwards of 180,000 people have been evacuated with more than 10,000 structures destroyed. One of these fires, the Palisades Fire, began burning on Tuesday and continues at the time of this writing, has destroyed at least 17,000 acres, the most in Los Angeles history. But there's also the Eaton Fire, the Hurst Fire, the Kenneth Fire and other fires in the area, many with little to no containment.

While hundreds of thousands of Californians are fleeing from flames, there are other risks aside from the immediate damage: air pollution and the charred toxins that are left behind. 

To give one example, a recent study in the journal JAMA Neurology has looked at the effects of wildfire smoke on  dementia. Previous research has established that tiny particles in the air (2.5 micrometers or less in diameter, known as PM2.5) are linked to dementia, but the researchers found that long-term exposure to wildfire smoke specifically “was associated with dementia diagnoses.” They added that as climate change worsens, “interventions focused on reducing wildfire PM2.5 exposure may reduce dementia diagnoses and related inequities.”

To conduct their research, the scientists looked at health data from more than 1.2 million people from between 2008 and 2019 among members of Kaiser Permanente Southern California. Within this cohort, they discovered “people with higher exposure to wildfire fine particulate matter (PM2.5) had elevated risk of developing dementia,” explained Dr. Joan Casey, the study’s corresponding author and a professor of public health at the University of Washington.

Because this study only examined existing patient data, Casey told Salon that scientists will need to do more research on the precise relationship between wildfire exposure and dementia. “We looked at the umbrella of all dementia diagnoses, but certain sub-types like Alzheimer’s or frontotemporal dementia might have stronger links with wildfire PM2.5,” Casey said. “We also want to understand the relevant time window of exposure. Here, we looked at exposure in the prior three years, but a longer window is likely important (up to 20 years.)”

"As temperatures and humidity increase, conditions such as stroke, migraines, meningitis, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, schizophrenia, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease may worsen."

The researchers’ work is unfortunately relevant to human beings because climate change is making wildfires more frequent and more intense. From California and Hawaii to Greece and Spain, more and more of Earth’s wooded areas are bursting into flame as humanity overheats the planet with heat-trapping fossil fuel emissions. While these conflagrations engulf millions of acres of lands, they belch fine particulate matter into the air, which humans inevitably inhale. But more and more research is making it clear how devastating to our health this toxic air can be.

Although this study focuses specifically on wildfire PM2.5, other research firmly establishes that PM2.5 in general is bad for human health. A report from the National Bureau of Economic Research released last April found that wildfire smoke contributes to the deaths of around 16,000 Americans per year, with that number expected to rise to 30,000 by mid century. A systematic review published in the journal Neurotoxicology found a link between air pollution and increased depressive and anxiety symptoms and behaviors, as well as physical alterations in brain regions believed to be associated with those conditions. A 2024 study in the journal Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety likewise found links between various types of common air pollution and diseases including PTSD and multiple sclerosis, while a 2021 study in the journal Neurology found a link between urban air pollution and central nervous system diseases.


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"The results of our studies on the effects of nanoparticles in the air show a link between exposure to air pollutants and neurological diseases and neuropsychiatric disorders," 2021 study lead author Mojtaba Ehsanifar, an assistant professor of environmental neurotoxicology at Kashan University of Medical Sciences' Anatomical Sciences Research Center, told Salon by email. Although Ehsanifar has not specifically worked on the effects of pollutants from fires, he noted that pollutants produced by both gases tend to be similar. He blames climate change for this problem.

“A recent investigation establishes a connection between climate change and the exacerbation of certain neurological disorders,” Ehsanifar said. “As temperatures and humidity increase, conditions such as stroke, migraines, meningitis, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, schizophrenia, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease may worsen.”

He added that as temperatures continue to rise, the heat will combine with the smoke to hurt our brains.

"This is yet another example of the profound, yet grossly understated negative health consequences of human-caused climate change."

“Currently, brains are already operating toward the upper thresholds of these ranges, and as climate change elevates temperature and humidity, our brains might struggle to maintain temperature regulation, even malfunctioning,” Ehsanifar said. “A high internal body temperature, especially above 104 degrees Fahrenheit, with cognitive impairment such as confusion, defines heat stroke.”

This research underscores how global heating is intrinsically linked to our health.

University of Pennsylvania climate scientist Dr. Michael E. Mann said it is fair to directly attribute diseases like dementia to climate change when they are demonstrably caused by wildfire exposure.

“The connection is epidemiological, much like the negative health consequences of smoking are epidemiological, i.e. statistical in nature,” Mann said. “So in other words, while it’s always possible that a victim could have suffered neurological diseases for other reasons, we can say that exposure to wildfire smoke substantially increases the likelihood of e.g. developing dementia, enough so that there is effectively a causal connection there.”

Mann added, “This is yet another example of the profound, yet grossly understated negative health consequences of human-caused climate change.”

Dr. Kevin Trenberth, a distinguished scholar at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, told Salon that he is not surprised the study found adverse effects of wildfire pollution. The revelation that PM2.5 may indirectly increase dementia risk, however, was new to him.

“But there is no question that air pollution is bad for health in many ways,” Trenberth said. “On bad pollution days, either one should not exercise or should do it indoors. So this affects exercise, which should help health. With wildfires around, one should not breathe the foul air. So this can be partially controlled from industry although mainly for larger particles. It is harder to see the smaller particles.”

Nor are humans alone in suffering, Trenberth noted. “Think of all the poor animals exposed.”

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Scientists writing in 2022 for the journal Environmental Research described air pollution broadly as an underrecognized public health risk, arguing that “policy needs to be matched by scientific evidence and appropriate guidelines, including bespoke strategies to optimise impact and mitigate unintended consequences.” In addition to mitigating the impacts of climate change, experts urge ordinary citizens to take measures to protect their lungs during times of intense air pollution. Whether it is caused by wildfires, urban smog or any other source, the overwhelming evidence is that breathing it in is bad for a person’s respiratory health.

What remains after a wildfire can also be dangerous. The charred ruins of houses and burnt out cars contain countless pollutants from melted plastics, paints, electronics and household waste.

Until the environment is adequately cleaned up, the likelihood is that those who struggle with disease because of exposure to wildfires both during and after may continue to risk their health.

“Seeing the magnitude of the relationship between wildfire PM2.5 and dementia was quite striking,” Casey said. “I was especially struck by how much stronger this relationship was for people living in communities with higher levels of poverty, suggesting that climate change is again increasing health disparities.”

“A mixed bag”: Joe Biden rebuilt the refugee program while ramping up deportations

As the nation prepares for a second term under President-elect Donald Trump, his proposed policies on immigration have taken center stage. He has repeatedly stated plans to deport undocumented immigrants en masse and nominated immigration hardliners — including an instrumental player of his first-term crackdown — to his cabinet and staff, both probable signs of how extreme he hopes to be. 

But the Biden administration's approach to immigration, marked by a record rise in irregular immigration at the southern border, has also garnered pushback. During his time in office, President Joe Biden issued a record number of executive actions on immigration policy, facilitating an increase in legal immigration and an overhaul of the refugee resettlement program while presiding over a steep, last-ditch uptick in deportations. 

While the growth in immigration and pathways to legal status was welcomed by advocates, the Biden administration's rightward shift in border policy — limiting the number of people who can apply for asylum and dragging its feet on ending a COVID-era expulsion program — overshadows those gains, argued Nayna Gupta, the policy director of the American Immigration Council, a nonprofit advocacy group seeking a fair and just immigration system.  

"The Biden administration has been a mixed bag," she told Salon in a phone interview. "While there have been positive actions overall in an obviously challenging political moment on immigration, we did see the Biden administration acquiesce to a rightward shift in immigration law and policy that's more right-leaning — particularly on policies related to migration and the border — than we've seen from the Democratic Party in a long time."

Upon entering office, Biden worked to deliver on campaign promises to end Trump-era immigration policies, including the Migrant Protection Protocols, which forced asylum seekers to stay in Mexico as their cases in the U.S. progressed. The Biden administration succeeded in ending that policy in August 2022.

The administration also rolled out new options to encourage legal migration and discourage irregular crossings in the fall of 2022, launching that October an option for Venezuelans to apply for humanitarian parole if they have a U.S.-based sponsor and could pay for their own plane ticket. The parole program later expanded in January 2023 to include Cubans, Haitians and Nicaraguans, three demographics with rising arrivals stemming from economic and political turmoil in their home countries.

As of October 2024, nearly 532,000 individuals had migrated to the U.S. through the parole process, according to an analysis by the Migration Policy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank.

The Biden administration continued to bolster other pathways for legal status in the U.S, expediting work permit determinations to allow immigrants to lawfully find employment and expanding temporary protected status, a legal status provided to immigrants who can't be deported to their home countries due to unsafe conditions. Those efforts included extending eligibility to 1.7 million unauthorized immigrants. 

Over Biden's four years in office, the administration is also estimated to have naturalized nearly 3.5 million people, which is the most in any presidential term, according to the Migration Policy Institute. From fiscal years 2021 to 2024, preliminary estimates show 4.3 million noncitizens became permanent residents, and in 2024 the Department of State issued 11.5 million visas.

Notably, the Biden administration fulfilled a campaign promise in rebuilding the refugee resettlement program, which had reached a historic low at just over 11,400 resettled refugees in fiscal year 2021 under the Trump administration. In 2024, that number skyrocketed to more than 100,000 — the highest value in 30 years.

One of the greatest facilitators of these changes in legal migration and status was the administration's technological upgrades to the immigration process, drawing on advancements put in place to ease processing during the pandemic and retaining what it could after COVID restrictions lifted, said Kathleen Bush-Joseph, a policy analyst at MPI and co-author of the think tank's report. 

"U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and the Executive Office for Immigration Review increasing online filing and online adjudication where possible, really made a big difference," she told Salon in a phone interview, noting that parts of the court system and the administrative service still operate on paper. "These were differences that impacted immigrants' lives concretely. Being able to file an application online might mean that you hear back within days, as opposed to months. When we're talking about work permits, which people need to feed themselves and try to have a roof over their heads, these are life-changing measures."

But the administration's handling of the uptick in people attempting to enter the country through the southern border soon came to shroud the president's immigration achievements. The expansion of pathways to legal status also came alongside an increase in border enforcement that restricted access to asylum as pressure from both sides of the political aisle mounted.

"We saw the administration really embrace restrictionist border and asylum policies, much like the Trump administration, and increase the use of immigration detention as a tool of immigration enforcement," Gupta said.

U.S. Immigration Customs and Enforcement detained just under 37,700 people by the end of fiscal year 2024, according to the agency's annual report. While that represents only a marginal increase from fiscal year 2023 — just 2.2% — it's nearly double the number of people detained when Biden took office (19,068 people were detained in 2020, during the pandemic, compared to nearly 51,000 in 2019).

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In May 2023, the Biden administration enacted the Circumvention of Lawful Pathways rule in May 2023, making ineligible for asylum any immigrants who do not use the U.S. Customs and Border Protection's CBP One scheduling app and arrive at the southern border, with limited exceptions.

In June 2024, the administration tightened asylum access further by enacting the Securing the Border rule. Under that rule, the government withholds asylum at ports of entry where there has been a seven-day average of at least 1,500 border encounters over the 28 days prior. This intervention worked, in part, to slow irregular border arrivals, with Border Patrol recording fewer than 200,000 nationwide encounters each month after the Securing the Border rule took effect, compared to the upwards of 240,000 nationwide encounters seen in each prior month of fiscal year 2024. 

Amid the efforts to manage the swell of immigrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border, the Biden administration leaned on another tool: removals. It hinged enforcement and removal operations on immigrants who were considered threats to national security, public safety and border security, or were recent border crossers, according to the 2024 ICE annual report from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. 

Gupta said that the figures on removals conducted by the Biden administration largely focused on people newly arriving to the country, "many of whom are fleeing danger, persecution, violence and have a right to seek asylum," and demonstrated a pivot to the "use of Trump-like immigration policy."

"That's different than what we're hearing as a threat from the Trump administration, which is an aggressive increase in enforcement of immigration laws in the interior of the U.S. against undocumented people with decades of life here," Gupta said.

Biden had made it a goal to end Title 42 — a COVID-era, Trump policy that allowed the country to expel immigrants without an asylum screening — but didn't deliver on that campaign promise until May 2023.

Over the nearly three years that the provision was in effect, the Department of Homeland Security expelled migrants at the U.S. border with Mexico more than 2.9 million times — 86% of the expulsions coming during Biden's term, the Migration Policy Institute analysis found.

By the end of the 2024 fiscal year, the Biden administration had matched the pace of deportations, including removals and enforcement returns, of the Trump administration, Bush-Joseph said. By October 2024, approximately 1.5 million had been carried out between fiscal years 2021 and 2024, with most originating at the border, according to the MPI report. 

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), which Gupta said largely focuses on the interior, reported that its officials removed more undocumented immigrants during the 2024 fiscal year than in any other fiscal year since 2015. The agency's 2024 annual report also showed that fiscal year 2024 saw a greater number of ICE deportations than each year of Trump's first term.

Enforcement and Removal Operations removed significantly more noncitizens in fiscal year 2024 than in both fiscal years 2023 and 2022, deporting just under 271,500 immigrants to 192 countries, the annual report found. That sum is up 90.4% over fiscal year 2023 and 276.1% over fiscal year 2022.

The majority of those removals — 223,752 — were carried out by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

Data from the Department of Homeland Security, which Bush-Joseph said includes people removed from the interior of the country and those returned at the U.S.-Mexico border, reflects a similar dynamic, though data for fiscal year 2024 is only available through August. 

Of the 315,480 removals DHS recorded by that time, 275,470 of them were conducted by CBP compared to the just 40,010 ICE had executed. 


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The stark difference between removals from the interior and returns from the border, Bush-Joseph explained, showed that the Biden administration was not "indiscriminately deporting people" but actually "evaluating who had ties in the United States," such as those with U.S.-born children.

Bush-Joseph noted that one of the Biden administration's challenges in immigration policy was navigating a system that is "extremely overwhelmed, outdated, under-resourced" and "for the most part, is stuck in the 90s," relying on laws and quotas governing the border, asylum processes and employment visas that were last updated 30 to 40 years ago. 

While the Trump administration has announced grand yet uncertain plans for immigration, including conducting mass deportations and ending temporary protections, Bush-Joseph said she believes the incoming president will be frustrated by the immigration system's defects as Biden was.

"It's going to take congressional action for the Trump administration to be able to attempt the scale that they are talking about," she said, calling for congressional authorization of updates to the system, such as sending notices to immigrants electronically. "Having Republican control of the House and the Senate could mean that there are increases in your resources, but it's not clear yet whether there will be a fundamental overhaul of the system to really update it."

Gupta added that the incoming Trump administration is threatening "unprecedented change" to immigration law and policy that "will impose harm on thousands of undocumented people who have decades of life in this country, who contribute richly to our economy, to our labor market and to our tax base," marking a stark departure from Biden's policy.

"Those changes will not just impact those immigrant communities but will absolutely impact local economies and American communities more generally," she said, "and that is a threat of aggressive interior enforcement of immigration laws that is far different than what we saw from the Biden administration."

Appeals court allows release of Jack Smith’s Trump Jan. 6 report

Americans may soon see Special Counsel Jack Smith's report on President-elect Donald Trump’s alleged actions on Jan. 6.

The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals allowed the release of the DOJ report written by Smith which lays out Trump's alleged attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. The court denied a motion to block the report's release in a Thursday night ruling

Smith was mandated to prepare and share a report on investigations into Trump's alleged election interference and mishandling of classified documents. Attorney General Merrick Garland could then choose whether or not to share them. Trump employees Walt Nauta and Carlos de Oliveira, still facing charges in Trump's classified documents case, asked on Monday that Judge Aileen Cannon toss the reports. 

Nauta and de Oliveira attached a letter from Trump’s attorneys arguing that releasing the reports “unlawfully encroaches on the Executive authority of the incoming Administration of President Trump to resolve the issues surrounding Smith’s Office.”

Cannon granted that ask, before Nauta, de Oliveira asked the 11th Circuit Court on Tuesday to stop the report’s release again. In the brief ruling, the court declined to do so. The Department of Justice had already agreed to release only the Jan. 6 report, to avoid prejudicing a jury in any future classified documents cases against the Trump employees.

The ruling doesn’t immediately allow for the report’s release, however. Cannon ruled that her block on the release wouldn’t end until three days after the 11th Circuit’s response. The Thursday ruling leaves that portion of her order in place. Further appeals will likely attempt to block the report in that time. The ruling also left the DOJ the option to separately appeal Cannon’s three-day delay rather than wait it out.

Trump’s team is expected to file an appeal in the interim to block the release until he takes office, one which could end up before the Supreme Court. Trump has been vocal about his plans to can the report once he takes office on January 20 should it not be released before then.

Supreme Court declines to stop sentencing in Trump hush money case

Donald Trump can be sentenced for his felony convictions, the Supreme Court ruled on Thursday night.

The court's 5-4 ruling denied the president-elect's emergency request for a stay, allowing a scheduled sentencing hearing on Friday to proceed. Liberal justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Kentanji Brown Jackson were joined by Amy Coney Barrett and Chief Justice John Roberts in the majority.

In a request to halt Trump's impending sentencing, Trump’s attorneys accused the lower court of evidentiary violations and suggested that his sentencing on 34 counts of falsifying business records would interfere with the transition to the president-elect's second term. They claimed the hearing and sentence would impose “an intolerable, unconstitutional burden on him that undermines these vital national interests.”

The unsigned ruling on Thursday implored Trump to exhaust his state-level options, noting that his evidence concerns could be handled “in the ordinary course on appeal.” They also doubted that the sentencing would be a major imposition, as presiding Judge Juan Merchan has stated that he has no intention of sentencing the president to jail time.

The burden that sentencing will impose on the President-Elect’s responsibilities is relatively insubstantial in light of the trial court’s stated intent to impose a sentence of 'unconditional discharge' after a brief virtual hearing," the ruling reads.

In his order setting a date for the sentencing, Merchan said that vacating the conviction or further delaying the hearing “would constitute a disproportionate result and cause immeasurable damage to the citizenry's confidence” in the rule of law.

Several justices noted in the ruling that they would have granted Trump’s request. Justice Samuel Alito, who spoke privately with Trump in the hours before he filed his request to the court, came down on the side of the president-elect.

Trump said he "respect[s] the court's opinion" while meeting with Republican governors at Mar-a-Lago on Thursday night.

"We’ll see how it all works out," he said, per Fox News. "I think it’s going to work out well." 

Trump’s sentencing hearing is slated for Friday, Jan 10 at 9:30 a.m.

Fox loses appeal to duck $2.7 billion Smartmatic defamation suit

A New York appeals court has rejected Fox Corp.’s request to toss a $2.7 billion defamation suit from voting machine manufacturer Smartmatic.

Smartmatic alleged in a suit that the Fox News parent company “effectively endorsed and participated in” a campaign suggesting that the voting machine company participated in election fraud by manipulating the results of the 2020 presidential election.

In the ruling from the New York Supreme Court First Appellate Department, a five-judge panel cited a Delaware court decision against Fox Corporation for defaming Dominion Voting Systems as precedent for implicating the Fox News parent company. Fox Corp. agreed to pay $787 million to Dominion in 2023.

In its initial 2024 complaint, Smartmatic accused Fox News of making “over 100 false statements and implications” about the company. Judges wrote this week that Smartmatic's claims that Fox News ran “a disinformation campaign in [its] post-election coverage” were enough to warrant a trial.

Smartmatic demands a jury trial, Bloomberg Law reports, alleging that Fox Corp. executives Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch directed Fox News to air “conspiracy theories” involving Smartmatic.

Smartmatic attorney Erik Connolly celebrated the ruling, telling Bloomberg that the network “attempted, and failed, to have this case dismissed, and it must now answer for its actions at trial.”

A Fox spokesperson told Salon: “We will be ready to defend this case surrounding extremely newsworthy events when it goes to trial. As a report prepared by our financial expert shows, Smartmatic’s damages claims are implausible, disconnected from reality, and on their face intended to chill First Amendment freedoms.”

The ruling comes six weeks after Fox News competitor Newsmax settled with Smartmatic, announcing in a statement that its reporting on voting machine discrepancies in 2020 was “factually false/untrue” and retracted claims that the company was owned by the Venezuelan government. Neither party revealed any financial details of the settlement.

 

Editor's note: This article has been updated with a statement from Fox.

Zuckerberg made fact-check changes after Trump visit: GOP congressman

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg met with President-elect Donald Trump before removing misinformation guardrails and fact-checks, Oklahoma GOP Senator Markwayne Mullin claimed on Thursday.

In an interview with right-wing commentator Benny Johnson, the senator said Meta’s announcement that it would ditch independent fact-checkers in favor of an X-style community notes system came just a day after a visit with Trump, fueling accusations that Zuckerberg made the changes to appease the incoming administration.

“Mark met with President Trump the day before he announced that they were going to change the way that they do uhh, censorship, essentially,” Mullin told Johnson. “The big announcement that he made the other day, President Trump, and spoke about that, and Mark had been down to see the president several times already.”

The fact-check change came alongside a set of sweeping policy and staffing refreshes at Meta, including the appointment of Trump ally Joel Kaplan to helm the Facebook parent company's policy department. NBC News reports that the company also changed its hate speech rules on the platform, now allowing users to call LGBTQ+ people mentally ill.

The Oklahoma senator claimed he hears from Zuckerberg regularly, alleging the Meta CEO and martial arts enthusiast texted him “a couple of times” to ask about sparring together.

“The guy’s got into jujitsu real heavy. He wants me to come down there and roll with him,” Mullin said, adding the CEO has “changed” his ways towards the GOP. “He wants to train – He actually wants to get in the cage and fight. He said, ‘I’d love for you to come down and spar if we can.’”

Zuckerberg isn’t the only figure seeking Trump’s blessing, Mullin said.

Mullin characterized Barack Obama's chummy attitude toward Trump at Jimmy Carter’s funeral on Thursday showed the former president was “kissing the ring," adding that Obama “recognizes” Trump as the most popular politician in the country.