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Here’s why Trump won’t run in 2024 — and why the Trump cult ultimately can’t win

The evolution of the human species is not a straightforward proposition.

While in the past we produced Shakespeare, George Washington Carver, Einstein and Voltaire, to name a few more noteworthy evolved humans,  more recently we collectively coughed up phlegm like Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Boebert, Matt Gaetz, Mitch McConnell and Donald Trump.

Or, you can look at it another way; On Dec. 7, 1941, Japan forced the United States into World War II after dropping bombs on Pearl Harbor. Richard Pryor once wondered what Japan’s leaders must have thought at that time. “We teach them a lesson,” Pryor said. It was a fundamental misunderstanding of what America was about because Pryor joked that the Japanese hierarchy had only met laid-back Americans from California. They had never met the “white boys on chains” in Alabama or Florida, the white boys who “scare other white people.”

At any rate, exactly 31 years later to the day, about five hours into the flight of Apollo 17, either astronaut Harrison Schmitt, Eugene Cernan or Ron Evans, traveling at around 25,000 mph took the very first picture of the whole, fully illuminated Earth. 

This moving and beautiful photograph has been replicated countless times since and was nicknamed “The Blue Marble.” To say it has been thought-provoking is an understatement.

RELATED: Trump, Putin and their kind are still dangerous — but their time is almost up

Philosophers, historians and the late scientist Carl Sagan are among those who have mused about the significance of a photograph that shows no boundaries, no strife, no drama — just the serene beauty of a planet some eight billion of us now share and call home. Quite an advance in 31 years.

Fifty years later, the governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, born nearly six years after that photograph was taken, is fighting with Disney over the use of the word “gay.” He is the epitome of the person Pryor joked about — as is Donald Trump. But the joke is on us this time. Both of those reprobates have attracted a following of immense numbers of people — many who simply don’t get it. Our former president is convinced the world is impressed with his ability to hit a small golf ball into a gopher-sized hole from a few hundred yards away with one shot — and that’s more important than anything else occurring on the planet. A madman in Russia has started a war in Ukraine as a monument to his own twisted ego. NASA photographs and scientists confirm we are in the middle of a planet-changing climate event that could mean the end of the human species, even if others on the planet don’t want to believe it. In February 2015, Sen. James Inhofe of Oklahoma infamously brought a snowball onto the Senate floor to deny climate change. 

“It isn’t a lie if you believe it,” a Republican legislator told me recently, talking about exactly such things. While that is the most hypocritical thing I’ve been told on Capitol Hill in the last two days, it’s also the philosophy of fictional character George Costanza on “Seinfeld” — and was acknowledged as such by the legislator who, while dead serious, also thought he was being incredibly witty.

Fifty years after the last manned trip to the moon, some of our elected officials are basing their life’s philosophy on shallow, stunted fictional characters who were contrived by standup comedians. 

Meanwhile, there are those who believe we are trapped in a new Middle Ages.

“We are kind of in the middle of a technological-medieval age,” another Capitol Hill legislator told me. “Religion is taking precedence over science. People are denying facts. Hell, in Florida they’re banning math books! If we can’t agree on facts and truth, then we’re truly screwed.”

Lest you think there is no purpose to this madness, be assured there is. Those who wish to convince you that facts are not facts have a serious goal in mind: control. The more you doubt facts, the more they can get away with twisting them to their own ends. The next insurrection could therefore be successful — at local, state and federal levels — as the Republican Party continues to try and overturn elections and maintain power, even though a majority of Americans find them to be inveterate, spineless liars filled with the excrement of aging castrated bulls. 

Book burnings are apt to take place at county fairs, or be offered during prayer services at some churches under this scenario. In five years we could be dressed in pilgrim outfits, burning suspected witches at the stake and jailing pot smokers for life. Merely celebrating 4/20 could be a felony. Those who want an abortion will be reduced to once again using coat hangers. If you decide to give birth, as the comedian George Carlin said, “Pro-life conservatives are obsessed with the fetus from conception to nine months. After that, they don’t want to know about you. They don’t want to hear from you. No nothing. No neonatal care, no day care, no Head Start, no school lunch, no food stamps, no welfare, no nothing. If you’re preborn, you’re fine; if you’re preschool, you’re fucked.”

But there is hope. Progress never stops. As much as the atavistic asses of arrogance will use their ignorance to try and control the world, they can’t.

Science, facts and reality have a way of eroding the bullshit of humans — even when other humans cannot.

There are those convinced that an apocalypse is once again on the horizon because Donald Trump will run and win re-election in 2024. Former Illinois congressman Joe Walsh is among those who believe he will run. Former Trump fixer Michael Cohen doesn’t. “He’s always about the grift,” Cohen has repeatedly said.


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But the world sits and waits, either in anticipation of the second coming of their Christ and savior Trump, or in fear of the Antichrist and destroyer Trump. He ain’t coming. He’s too busy conning you into thinking he’s coming. So please cough up some more money.

Trump has played it close to the vest as he has traveled across the country to a variety of rallies, pitching baubles and trinkets to dazzle and amaze those of simple minds and limited funds. Buy a hat. Buy a shirt. Buy an ornament. Buy an autographed picture. Buy anything Trump is selling — probably up to and including autographed underwear. 

Millions continue to support him by buying his cheap and tawdry knickknacks. It makes me wonder what these homes look like. “Come in. clean your feet on the Trump doormat, hang up your coat on the Trump coat rack. Have a seat and a complimentary beverage out of our Trump lemonade pitcher, poured lovingly into a Trump autographed mug.” 

Meanwhile, you can take a look at a phone video shot by Donald Trump Jr. inviting you to visit a “top secret” rally with his father — and, gosh, even get a chance to meet Dad! What the hell is a top secret rally? Isn’t that what the KKK used to do?

Anyway, Trump won’t run in 2024. I’ve said that repeatedly, and I believe his recent pronouncement to the Washington Post is the reason he will give, eventually, for staying out of the race.

“You always have to talk about health. You look like you’re in good health, but tomorrow, you get a letter from a doctor saying, ‘Come see me again,'” Trump told the Post. “That’s not good when they use the word ‘again.'”

Did Trump already get such a notice? He never adequately addressed the medical condition that sent him to the doctor on short notice in the last year of his presidency — that was before contracting COVID, but after an announcement by the White House physician claiming that Trump was in such great health he could live to be 200, despite being, fat, flaccid, constantly unhappy and obviously stressed-out.

He may not have gotten such a notice. And if he didn’t, then he’s planting the seeds for a new con right now. There’s no way Trump will go through another rigorous campaign or the increased scrutiny of another presidency. He was impeached twice. He’s making more money pretending to run, without the headache of actually running or ruling, and he knows how to play to his crowd to keep the money rolling. In the end he will try to be a kingmaker — and Ron DeSantis is the leading candidate to become the next GOP emperor with no clothes.

Trump is incapable of evolving. He doesn’t know how. He doesn’t want to. There are still plenty of folks who will jump off a cliff with him, happily handing him the money that he’ll eagerly dive off the cliff to get.

The incredibly frustrating part of this moment in history is that we have an even older president in office now. But Joe Biden is a guy who not only gets it but is trying to do something about it — in an extremely limited amount of time. While he makes noise about running for a second term, that’s another variable that is not set in stone. Biden’s health seems fine, but it’s hard not to believe he’s exasperated with the continued popularity of a charlatan con artist and all those others who preach from the same script. What man, in the twilight of his life, would want to deal with such crap for eight long years?  Biden continues to dedicate himself to cleaning up Trump’s mess, only to be blamed for it.

Evolution is truly a haphazard, non-linear exercise.

But the evolution of the species depends upon the rigorous efforts of those younger than the two septuagenarians at the head of the two political parties — and the willingness of a majority of people to accept truth and facts for what they are, not what they want them to be.

Vaccines work.

Trump is a crook.

Biden is too old.

DeSantis is an idiot.

The Democrats have no bench strength.

The GOP has no soul.

The world is round.

The Holocaust occurred.

Man landed on the moon.

And Putin is a madman. 

Evolve, damn it!

Read more from Brian Karem on the Biden White House:

“Spineless” McCarthy, McConnell vowed to cancel “son of a b**ch” Trump over Jan 6 — then caved: book

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., blamed former President Donald Trump for the deadly Jan. 6 Capitol riot and vowed to push him out of politics before caving amid fear of retribution, according to a new book.

“I’ve had it with this guy,” McCarthy told a group of Republican leaders as he vowed to push Trump to “resign immediately,” according to excerpts published in The New York Times from the new book “This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden and the Battle for America’s Future” by Times reporters Alex Burns and Jonathan Martin.

McConnell, who condemned the “failed insurrection” on the Senate floor after the riot and blamed Trump for the violence, days after the Capitol riot expressed optimism that “the Democrats are going to take care of the son of a bitch for us” ahead of the impeachment for in the House, according to the book.

But neither leader followed up on their private complaints. McCarthy, who along with most of the House GOP caucus voted to reject the election results after the riot and became one of Trump’s leading defenders, soon backed off his insistence and traveled to Mar-a-Lago to repair his relationship with Trump. McConnell voted to acquit Trump in his second impeachment trial, despite privately saying, “if this isn’t impeachable, I don’t know what is.”

“I didn’t get to be leader by voting with five people in the conference,” McConnell told a friend, referring to the handful of Republicans who voted to convict Trump.

McConnell did not comment on the Times report. A spokesman for McCarthy denied that the congressman said “he’d call Trump to say he should resign.”

RELATED: “This will end badly”: New texts reveal Mike Lee played key role in Trump’s Jan. 6 election scheme

The previously unreported comments drew backlash from critics who have long accused Republicans of enabling Trump’s worst impulses despite privately condemning them.

“I wish we didn’t bastardize the word ‘leadership’ in Washington,” tweeted Rep. Sean Casten, D-Ill. “Leaders stand up when it matters. The people who get those titles in the @GOP are obedient and afraid.”

The Lincoln Project, a prominent anti-Trump group, said the report reaffirmed that McCarthy and McConnell “are, and always have been, spineless.”

McCarthy, who aims to become speaker of the House if Republicans retake control after the midterms, publicly said after the Capitol riot that Trump “bears responsibility” for the mob that stormed Congress but privately condemned Trump’s actions as “atrocious and totally wrong,” according to the book.

During a conversation with Republican leaders on Jan. 8, McCarthy asked about invoking the 25th Amendment, which allows the vice president and a majority of the cabinet to remove the president from office, before “concluding that was not a viable option,” according to the excerpt.

On Jan. 10, McCarthy spoke with GOP leaders as Democrats neared an impeachment resolution to vow that he would call Trump and tell him to resign.

“What he did is unacceptable. Nobody can defend that and nobody should defend it,” he told his leadership team. McCarthy said he would tell Trump that the impeachment resolution “will pass and it would be my recommendation that you should resign,” even as he acknowledged that Trump was unlikely to follow the advice.

McCarthy, who has repeatedly gone to bat for far-right members of his caucus, even suggested during the conversation that social media companies should ban other members who helped stoke the mob, like Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., just as they did with Trump.

“We can’t put up with that,” McCarthy said, according to the report. “Can’t they take their Twitter accounts away, too?”

A spokesman for McCarthy denied that he ever “said that particular members should be removed from Twitter.”


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Other Republicans on the leadership team agreed that Trump deserved “swift punishment,” according to the book. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., the No. 2 Republican in the House, said it was time to consider a “post-Trump Republican House.” Rep. Tom Emmer, R-Minn., the head of the National Republican Congressional Committee, suggested that Trump should be censured.

None of the leaders followed through on their suggestions after other Republican members, like Rep. Bill Johnson, R-Ohio, warned that their voter base would “go ballistic” if they criticized Trump instead of Democrats.

“I’m just telling you that that’s the kind of thing that we’re dealing with, with our base,” Johnson reportedly said.

Just 10 House Republicans joined every Democrat in the House to impeach Trump. By the end of January, McCarthy was headed to Mar-a-Lago to make nice with Trump and pose for a photo.

“I didn’t know they were going to take a picture,” McCarthy “somewhat apologetically” told a frustrated lawmaker after the photo, according to the report.

McCarthy never again repeated his criticism of Trump and instead blamed the riot on security officials and Democratic leaders while opposing a bipartisan commission to investigate the attack.

McConnell throughout January privately predicted that mainstream Republicans would break from Trump and even asked a reporter for information on how the 25th Amendment works. Though two of Trump’s Cabinet members resigned over the attack, including then-Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao, McConnell’s wife, it became clear that the Cabinet would not remove Trump from office and McConnell turned his attention to impeachment. During a Jan. 11 meeting with longtime advisers Terry Carmack and Scott Jennings, McConnell predicted Trump’s “imminent political demise,” according to the report.

Though it would have required at least 17 Republican senators to convict Trump, McConnell told advisers that he expected a “robust bipartisan vote for conviction” and then a vote to ban Trump from holding office again, the book says.

Though McConnell appeared open to voting to convict Trump himself, he soon realized that there was little appetite among his party’s members to confront Trump. McConnell and a majority of the party instead voted for a resolution proposed by Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., arguing that it was inappropriate to impeach a president after he already left office.

Trump since Jan. 6 has repeatedly attacked McConnell but the Senate GOP chief says he is still willing to support the man he said may still be subject to prosecution for his role in the riot.

Last year, Fox News anchor Bret Baier asked if he would support Trump if he wins the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. McConnell replied, “absolutely.”

Read more:

Michigan Democrat calls on “straight, white, Christian, married, suburban mom[s]” to fight GOP

A Michigan state senator blasted her Republican colleague in a viral speech for accusing her of wanting to “groom and sexualize kindergarteners.”

State Sen. Mallory McMorrow, a Democrat, took to the Senate floor on Tuesday to castigate Sen. Lana Theis, who apparently alleged in a recent fundraising email that McMorrow that supports child abuse. 

“I didn’t expect to wake up yesterday to the news that [Theis] had, overnight, accused me by name of grooming and sexualizing children in an email fundraising for herself,” McMorrow opened. “So I sat on it for a while wondering: Why me? And then I realized: Because I am the biggest threat to your hollow, hateful scheme. Because you can’t claim that you are targeting marginalized kids in the name of ‘parental rights’ if another parent is standing up to say no.”

RELATED: The goal of the GOP’s QAnon-influenced “groomer” troll: More political violence

Her speech comes as Republicans across the country pass bills to restrict the discussion of any LGBTQ+ subjects in the classroom, all under the dubious guise of protecting children from “grooming.” 


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On the senate floor, McMorrow invoked her experience growing up as a Christian but feeling alienated from her church at the time because they rejected her mother for being divorced.

“I learned that service was far more important than performative nonsense like being seen in the same pew every Sunday or writing ‘Christian’ in your Twitter bio and using that as a shield to target and marginalize already marginalized people,” she said. 

“I know that hate will only win if people like me stand by and let it happen,” the Democrat added. McMorrow. “So I want to be very clear right now: Call me whatever you want. I hope you brought in a few dollars. I hope it made you sleep good last night. I know who I am.”

McMorrow also noted that she is “a straight, white, Christian, married, suburban mom” who believes that white kids who learn about slavery or racism are not “being taught to feel bad or hate themselves because they are white.”

RELATED: The “parental rights” movement is harming our children

On Wednesday morning, Theis responded to McMorrow’s speech by saying that the Democrat “is not naïve about politics and fundraising.”

“I know that because it took her mere minutes to turn her Senate floor speech into a plea for campaign donations,” she said. “While Sen. McMorrow is on MSNBC preaching to her choir, I’ll keep my focus on Michigan parents, who Democrats are seeking to undermine as the primary decision-makers in the education of their children.”

McMorrow, 35, was elected in 2018 as the youngest woman to ever serve the Michigan state senate, according to The Detroit Free Press. She is currently running for re-election in the 8th District, which includes part of Lansing

Can the EPA make school buses greener?

The Environmental Protection Agency has a new strategy in mind to reduce kids’ toxic exposure: electrify more school buses.

Last month, EPA Administrator Michael Regan took a trip to Northern Virginia to publicize the agency’s Clean School Bus Program, which will reimburse districts $5 billion over five years if they replace their diesel-burning buses with electric, zero-emissions vehicles. These rebates could go a long way toward decarbonizing America’s transportation sector – the single-largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the country. But public health officials say the benefits go beyond the climate, potentially improving the health of millions of kids.

“Diesel exhaust is strongly associated with asthma risk, and it causes inflammation in the airways and the blood vessels,” Gina Solomon, a principal investigator at Public Health Institute, said to “E&E News”. “None of these are things we want to have happen to kids on their way to school.”

Researchers from the National Resources Defense Council and the University of California, San Francisco recently found that the diesel-based particulate matter inside school buses can be up to 10 times higher than outside the vehicle. They concluded that diesel fumes in school buses actually come up through the floors of the buses.

In contrast, fully electric buses have no emissions and would greatly reduce students’ exposure to harmful emissions.

But for all the health benefits of electrifying school buses, many districts have been stymied by the up-front expenses. Electric buses cost more than three times as much as diesel-powered ones, putting all-electric fleets out of financial reach for many communities. 

In line with his plan to electrify the federal vehicle fleet, President Biden originally proposed $174 billion for electrified school buses. That proposal involved electrifying 96,000 school buses – about 20 percent of the nation’s total school bus fleet. Those ambitions have since been scaled back. The current $5 billion Clean School Bus Program only provides enough funding for about 11,000 new electric buses. 

But while the money is welcome news to many districts, the program’s limitations have also led to equity concerns. “There are a lot of districts that just aren’t able to put this money down upfront and then apply for rebates,” said Molly Rauch, public health policy director for Moms Clean Air Force. And since communities of color often have higher exposure to on-road particulate matter emissions and fewer financial resources than their white counterparts, the program may not end up reaching those most at risk of poor health outcomes.

Still, several big municipalities seem eager to make the transition to electric buses. Last year, Boston announced it would replace its entire school bus fleet with electric buses by 2030. And earlier this month, New York became the first state to commit to fully electrifying its fleet – 50,000 buses by 2035. 

There are hopes that the new EPA funds will allow more school districts to be able to buy electric buses more quickly. As battery technology improves, the costs of electric buses are likely to go down, giving more school districts access to the electric vehicle market.

Historically redlined neighborhoods have twice the number of oil and gas wells

Neighborhoods that were redlined have nearly twice as many oil and gas wells as neighborhoods that were historically considered “desirable,” a new study has found. The findings underscore the connection between structural racism and polluting oil and gas infrastructure.

The analysis is the first of its kind, the work of researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, the University of California, San Francisco, and Columbia University. They compared data on the location of plugged and active oil and gas wells to data from maps generated by the Home Owners Loan Corporation, the federal lending program created to prevent home foreclosures during the Great Depression. The program excluded Black people — as well as Jews, other people of color, and immigrants — from opportunities by creating maps which labeled white neighborhoods as “desirable,” shading them green, and labeled Black neighborhoods, in particular, as “hazardous,” shading them red — hence the term “redlining.”

Looking at data for 33 cities where oil and gas wells are drilled and operated in urban neighborhoods across 13 states, researchers discovered the striking correlation between neighborhoods that were redlined and neighborhoods that have a high density of oil and gas wells.

This new analysis “clarifies the role of systemic environmental racism in creating disparities,” said Kyle Ferrar, a program director with FracTracker, a group that provides data on the health effects of oil and gas development.

“We know from other work that marginalized people — especially Black people, Latinx people, and low-income people — are more likely to live near oil and gas wells,” said David J.X. Gonzalez, lead author of the study. “But we don’t know the processes that lead to these disparities, and I think it’s really important that we understand those.”

To better understand those processes, Gonzalez and his colleagues also investigated whether redlining made a community more likely to have new wells drilled and operated near where people live. While they did not have enough data to prove a causal relationship, “we’re seeing a signal that redlining may have been part of why some neighborhoods had more wells compared to similar neighborhoods that weren’t redlined,” said Gonzalez.

Oil and gas wells release a slew of air pollutants, including volatile organic compounds, smog-forming compounds, and fine particulate matter. Numerous studies have found that living near oil and gas wells increases a person’s risk of cardiovascular disease, impaired lung function, anxiety, depression, preterm birth, and impaired fetal growth — serious concerns for the estimated 17 million people in the U.S. who live within a mile of at least one active well.

It’s not news that redlined communities tend to experience worse health outcomes. There are also links between neighborhoods that have undergone disinvestment and neighborhoods where there are higher rates of gun violence and less green space. But, said Gonzalez, “it’s important to consider the historical, racist policies that have led to disparities, and why we’re seeing worse health outcomes in these historically-redlined neighborhoods.”

Has the mainstream media already made its peace with fascism? We’ll soon find out

Joe Biden is still president, for now. But America’s democracy crisis is getting worse. The Republican-fascists and their allies are undeterred. If anything, they are energized and have escalated their attempts to end democracy in America.

In the new America the Republican-fascists are trying to force into being, If you are not one of the MAGA elect, your life will be hell. If you think your life is difficult now, it will be orders of magnitude worse if the fascists and their movement achieve their goals.

As the New Republic recently warned, “Our system of government is crumbling. Around the world, autocracy looms. The tasks ahead could not be more urgent.” But instead of explaining this reality to the American people in a consistent, clear, repeated, transparent and direct way — while providing the larger context and importance of these facts — the mainstream news media has, for the most part, chosen to focus on the latest distraction.

As public opinion polls have repeatedly shown, the result is a growing lack of concern about Trump’s coup attempt, the Republican-fascist movement and the overall crisis of democracy. Among those Americans who do care there is a lack of unity about the cause of the democracy crisis, who is most responsible and what can be done to solve it.

The mainstream media is possessed by normalcy bias and clings to fantasies of an old order of more or less functional democracy. What we describe as “normal politics” colors how the news media, and the country’s leadership class more generally, views all political events. Even if that framework has been broken for years, and no longer applies in a time of great change and disruption.

RELATED: Is America the “world’s greatest democracy”? In 2022, we don’t even crack the top 50

The Republican fascists are leading a revolutionary movement. The news media, with its outmoded tools and assumptions, is largely unable to comprehend such a force. For many in the news media, access is more important than truth-telling. The powerful cannot be trusted to police themselves, and also cannot be trusted to admit when a societal institution is in crisis because they are dependent on that institution for meaning, prestige, authority and resources.

Powerful interests in the American media may actually want Trump to win in 2024 — or at least to stage a bruising rematch with Joe Biden.

There are other reasons as well, which include avarice, greed, denial, fear, willful ignorance, laziness, bad habits, anxiety and immaturity. As the late media critic and author Eric Boehlert highlighted in what would be his last newsletter, there are powerful interests among the mainstream news media who actually want Donald Trump to win in 2024 — or at the very least to stage a competitive rematch with Joe Biden — because that would be “exciting” and “good for business.”

Right-wing propagandists who do the work of the Republican-fascists and larger white right represent a particular type of danger and threat to American democracy. But perhaps just as dangerous are the professional centrists and hope-peddlers who keep telling the American people — in the face of the preponderance of the evidence and common sense — that somehow everything will be OK.

This is like telling a person who has been impaled by their steering column during a horrific car accident that they will be fine, when in fact they will be lucky to survive and this event has dramatically altered the course of their life. The same will be true of America if it survives the neofascist assault.

The American people need to be told the harsh truth in this moment of impending disaster: What follows are some of the stories that should have dominated the headlines for weeks. Instead, they have come and gone almost immediately, to be replaced by the “controversy of the day,” such as an incident I hardly need to explain in which one grotesquely rich celebrity slapped another one before an entire auditorium full of obnoxiously rich people. That was apparently far more newsworthy than a literal threat to the safety, security and future of the American people.


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Earlier this month, the New York Times reported that Donald Trump Jr. was in communication with White House chief of staff Mark Meadows within days of the 2020 election, scheming about about how to alter the election results in his father’s favor. Trump Jr. specifically discussed the plan to use Republicans in Congress and state legislatures to nullify the vote, writing: “We have operational control Total leverage.… Moral High Ground POTUS must start 2nd term now.” These plans were effectively in motion weeks before Election Day. The New York Times highlighted these “revelations” for one day’s news cycle.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell also knew about Trump’s coup plot — and of course did not warn the public, Congress, the press or federal law enforcement. CNN’s Manu Raju reported on this last week, outlining the scenario by which Trump believed he could claim victory:

If Trump could successfully pressure Republican Gov. Brian Kemp to de-certify Biden’s narrow win in Georgia, that would lead to a domino effect: Officials in Pennsylvania and Michigan would follow suit and overturn Biden’s electoral victory, Trump believed, a stunning reversal that could keep him in the White House for a second term. And Trump was certain he could subvert the election outcome, telling McConnell, then the Senate majority leader, and other top Republicans that he had personally been on the phone with officials in Pennsylvania and Michigan — and they told him they would move to keep him in power, despite the results showing Biden had won their states.

“I’ve been calling folks in those states and they’re with us,” Trump is reported to have told the Senate GOP leaders in a private December 2020 phone call, according to a soon-to-be-released book by New York Times political reporters Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns, both CNN political analysts.

It is increasingly clear that Attorney General William Barr also knew about the Trump cabal’s various schemes to steal the 2020 election, which is why Barr abruptly resigned to protect himself from any negative consequences from a plot he knew was unconstitutional and illegal.

We also now know that Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, and Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, were coordinating with Meadows months before Jan. 6, 2021, as they plotted out scenarios meant to ensure that Trump would remain president — regardless of the actual results. 

Other reporting has revealed that right-wing activist Ginni Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, was involved in the planning and execution of Trump’s coup attempt. It appears highly likely that Clarence Thomas has abused his power to protect his wife from any consequences. Again, the mainstream news media mentioned this story only briefly before moving on.

John Eastman, the right-wing legal scholar who devised the quasi-legal plot by which Republicans in state legislatures and in Congress would help Trump steal the 2020 election (a plan described by Trump adviser Peter Navarro as the “Green Bay Sweep”) has continued with his machinations. Eastman and the other right-wing agents who are setting the stage for a “legal coup” in 2024 and beyond are ever closer to making it likely that the Republican Party can control the White House (and national politics more generally) regardless of how the American people vote.

On Monday, Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., a member of the House select committee investigating the coup attempt of Jan. 6, 2021, confirmed again what has been publicly known since well before that infamous day: Donald Trump had plans to use the Insurrection Act to declare martial law and remain in power indefinitely. Raskin told reporters:

This was a coup organized by the president against the vice-president and against the Congress in order to overturn the 2020 presidential election.… We’re going to tell the whole story of everything that happened…. Trump was prepared to seize the presidency and likely to invoke the Insurrection Act and declare martial law. There was a violent insurrection and an attempted coup and we were saved by Mike Pence’s refusal to go along with that plan.

The New York Times recently explored the possible role of Jason Sullivan, a former aide to Roger Stone, in inciting the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by Trump’s followers. According to Times reporter Alan Feuer, Sullivan was on a conference call a week earlier with a group Trump supporters during which he “made an urgent plea”:

After assuring his listeners that the 2020 election had been stolen, Mr. Sullivan told them that they had to go to Washington on Jan. 6, 2021 — the day that Congress was to meet to finalize the electoral count — and “descend on the Capitol,” according to a recording of the call obtained by The New York Times.

While Mr. Sullivan claimed that he was “not inciting violence or any kind of riots,” he urged those on the call to make their presence felt at the Capitol in a way that would intimidate members of Congress, telling the group that they had to ensure that lawmakers inside the building “understand that people are breathing down their necks.”

He also pledged that Mr. Trump was going to take action on his own; the president, he said, was going to impose a form of martial law on Jan. 6 and would not be leaving office.

“Biden will never be in that White House,” Mr. Sullivan declared. “That’s my promise to each and every one of you.”

In a new piece at the Guardian, Hugo Lowell reports that leaders of the Oath Keepers, who have been indicted on charges of seditious conspiracy over the Capitol attack, had contacts with members of the Proud Boys and the Stop the Steal movement, and may also have been in touch with Rep. Ronny Jackson, R-Texas (who was formerly Trump’s White House physician). The text messages revealing these contacts, Lowell writes, could “strengthen” the theory “that the Capitol attack included a coordinated assault”:

Oath Keepers text messages released in a court filing on Monday night showed members of the group were in direct communication with the Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio in the days before the Capitol attack….

That close relationship is certain to be of interest to the House committee as it zeroes in on whether the Oath Keepers and the Proud Boys coordinated an attack on the Capitol in an attempt to stop certification of Joe Biden’s election win over Donald Trump.

The key question here, as Lowell puts it, is “whether Trump oversaw a criminal conspiracy as part of his attempt to hold on to power.”

It is now clear that members of the Oath Keepers and other right-wing paramilitary groups were in communication about their plans for Jan. 6. Some members of the Oath Keepers actually stockpiled guns and ammunition in a hotel across the Potomac River in Virginia, anticipating what they believed would be a several-days long gun battle as part of a “patriotic” revolution to keep Trump in office and stop “traitors” such as Biden and the Democrats.

The news media’s decision not to emphasize all of these recent news developments, or to draw the clear connections between them, is part of a much larger problem.

Since at least 2015, the media has downplayed the danger of Trump and his movement, while mocking those who pushed back as suffering from “Trump derangement syndrome.”

Since at least 2015, the media has consistently downplayed the danger that Donald Trump and his movement represent — and in the 2016 campaign, consistently and grotesquely amplified Hillary Clinton’s real and imagined shortcomings. Once Trump became president, the pattern continued as the media defaulted to obsolete norms about “fairness” and “balance,” in service to their naive hope that Trump would “pivot” and become “presidential.” Those public voices who argued that would never happen, and that Trump aspired to lead an authoritarian or outright fascist regime, were mocked as suffering from “Trump derangement syndrome” or shamed for “lacking faith” in democratic institutions and the “good will” and “wisdom” of the American people.

As Trump’s coup attempt became imminent and the warning signs were obvious — Donald Trump and his allies and spokespeople publicly announced their intentions for months — most in the mainstream news media simply denied that such a thing was possible. When the nightmarish events of Jan. 6 unfolded in real time, many of those same voices then pretended that they had been on the right side of history all along. To this day, they have not publicly apologized for normalizing, enabling and empowering Trump, or for minimizing the danger he and his followers represented.

At Press Watch, media critic Dan Froomkin summarizes these failings:

When these reporters write about Trump these days, they generally pause to note the centrality of the Big Lie. But they don’t treat him as manifestly unfit for public office and a threat to American democracy. This is what I call the normalization of the profoundly abnormal….

This man is a provably hateful, vindictive, lying, cheating, stealing insurrectionist who inspires slavish devotion from a white nationalist base and sycophancy from craven Republican leaders. His even further accelerating authoritarian tendencies —  combined with his party’s full-on assault on voting rights and refusal to honor election results – directly threaten key constitutional protections and rights that have defined this country since its founding. It couldn’t be more clear that in a second term, he would ignore even the few rules he adhered to last time. The federal bureaucracy would be purged of expertise and competence, all of government would be turned to serve his whims and fortunes. To the extent that the U.S. remains the leader of the free world, it would cease to be.

This is not hard to support with evidence. Just in the past few weeks, the man who tried to steal an election said his only regret is that he didn’t personally set siege to the Capitol.

I suspect that reporters and editors at our leading news organizations assume that most readers already realize how dangerously unhinged Trump is — and that readers who don’t accept that will be turned off if reporters are blunt about it.

But it has to be said. It can’t just be assumed.

Not saying is enabling. So why don’t they say it?

My answer to that question is that mainstream media helps to police the boundaries of the approved public discourse, and cannot be trusted to police themselves. This has created an institutional crisis of legitimacy with no ready solution.

On Twitter, Nikole Hannah-Jones, New York Times reporter, author, and the creator of the 1619 Project, recently offered this suggestion: “I’ve been thinking more and more that newsrooms need to hold an all-staff meeting where they invite democracy experts & historians in & really do a massive reset of how we are covering what’s happening in our country right now. It’s not about partisanship but covering reality.”

At the Philadelphia Inquirer, columnist Will Bunch offers another intervention, arguing that what we see now is: 

… the failure of the powerful people who could change this dynamic — who could agree that when the American Experiment faces a life-or-death crisis, the promise of journalism isn’t to cover that cliff plunge with “objectivity” but to advocate like hell for democracy — who haven’t so far been listening.

The general attitude of newsroom leaders hasn’t been that journalism needs to reform to fight this asymmetrical warfare, but can just crank up the volume on the old inadequate ways. “We’re not at war … we’re at work,” the Washington Post’s now-retired Marty Baron insisted, while the New York Times’ Dean Baquet — spiritual godfather of the Trump-voters-in-diners-still-like-Trump genre — is lately more concerned that his reporters are engaging their critics on Twitter than with asking if maybe their Twitter critics are right.

If American democracy and society are to survive this dark period, leaders of American media must do better. They are running out of time. There is also the more cynical, and more likely, prospect that the news media as an institution, and many of its most prominent voices, will simply adapt to whatever new “normal” a full-on Republican-fascist regime imposes once it takes power in 2024 or in the years beyond. If one worships at the mantle of power and influence, rather than truth and democracy, such a decision is only natural. 

What happens to a democracy when its supposed truth-tellers and other guardians are complicit, actively or otherwise, with authoritarianism, fascism, anti-intellectualism, gangster capitalism and the other evils that seek to undermine and destroy that democracy? The American people are finding out right now.

Read more on the battle for democracy:

Mask mandate tossed as COVID spikes again: Unions face “chaos and confusion”

A ruling by a federal judge that strikes down the Biden administration’s mask mandate for air and mass transit travel arrives even as the nation has no idea, two years into the pandemic, how many essential workers in those sectors, or any others, have died or been permanently disabled as a consequence of workplace exposure to COVID. 

“There is no question that thousands of people died because they were ‘essential workers’ that had no choice but to go to work and their workplace was not prepared to have them work safely,” said Dr. Ed Zuroweste, assistant professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and founding director of the Migrant Clinicians Network. 

On Tuesday, the Department of Justice said it would appeal the decision if the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed that the mandate was still required to protect the public health.

RELATED: Public health experts are split on whether we still need masks on airplanes

The U.S. is currently closing in on one million COVID deaths and tens of millions of infections, with an undetermined number of individuals currently suffering with so-called long COVID. The CDC is working on a national analysis of COVID deaths based on the deceased’s occupational exposure to better understand how the infectious disease has impacted essential workers and their communities.

At least a million sidelined

“Long COVID has potentially affected up to 23 million Americans, pushing an estimated 1 million people out of work,” reported the U.S. Government Accountability Office last month. “The full magnitude of health and economic effects is unknown but is expected to be significant. The causes of long COVID are not fully understood, complicating diagnosis and treatment. The condition raises policy questions, such as how best to support patients.”

While there is no tally for the pandemic’s toll on the nation’s workforce, Dr. Zuroweste maintains the risk to workers from infectious disease “can be easily mitigated with air transfers and HEPA filters that can make a workplace much safer air-wise. While there is some expense to that, it’s nowhere near the expense of those workers who end up dying because of what they were exposed to.”

The ruling striking down the mask mandate was issued by U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle, a Trump nominee who was confirmed by a 49-41 vote in the U.S. Senate, after a ruling by the American Bar Association that she was not qualified.  Her ruling comes alongside a reported uptick in infections, particularly in the Northeast, although it has yet to produce a commensurate increase in hospitalizations or deaths. 

While conceding that “the public has a strong interest in combating the spread of COVID,” Mizelle ruled that “the [mask] mandate exceeded the CDC’s statutory authority, improperly invoked the good cause exceptions to notice and comment rule making, and failed to adequately explain its decisions.” 


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The plaintiffs, air travelers who maintained that wearing masks made them subject to anxiety and panic attacks, were represented by the Health Freedom Defense Fund, a nonprofit “that opposes laws and regulations that force individuals to submit to the administration of medical products, procedures and devices against their will.”  

Airlines act quickly

The nation’s major airlines, including Delta, United, Jet Blue and American, rapidly dropped their mask mandates after the ruling.

According to a White House statement, federal agencies “are reviewing the decision and assessing potential next steps,” but “CDC’s public transportation masking order is not in effect at this time.”

A statement from the TSA said the agency would “no longer enforce its Security Directives and Emergency Amendment requiring mask use on public transportation and transportation hubs, and would rescind new security directives scheduled to take effect this week. It added, “CDC continues to recommend that people wear masks in indoor public transportation settings at this time.”

Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, issued a statement warning against “confusion and chaos,” adding that “traveling can be stressful enough, and safety comes first with respect for everyone utilizing collective modes of transportation.”

She continued: “While we look forward to the day masks are no longer required, we also know the federal mask mandate for transportation was critical in its early days for confidence in travel and safety for workers and travelers while mitigation factors such as vaccines, adequate supplies of PPE and testing became more accessible. We urge all leaders to consider a thoughtful transition and implementation to any new policy, which includes the ongoing personal choice of protection for crew and passengers.”

NYC transit holds firm

There was less uniformity in the response from ground-based regional mass transit agencies to the ruling, with New York’s MTA opting to keep it in place on bus and subway lines as well as the agency’s suburban railroads. 

To date, 171 MTA employees have died from COVID, with more than 100 of those being members of TWU Local 100. The union welcomed the agency’s decision. “We support continuing the mask mandate on subway trains and buses to keep both riders and transit workers safe,” Local 100 President Tony Utano said in a statement. 

New York City’s MTA is keeping mask mandates in place on buses, subways and commuter rail, but New Jersey Transit and Amtrak have lifted theirs.

Early in the pandemic, Local 100 members who donned masks were threatened with being written up for wearing masks, which the CDC said needed to be reserved for sick people and health care workers because of inadequate national inventory. In April 2020, the CDC reversed that guidance after mounting evidence that asymptomatic individuals were also spreading the virus. Ahead of that guidance, the MTA and TWU had already begun distributing PPE to the MTA workforce.

Across the Hudson River, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy ordered New Jersey Transit to lift its mask mandate. Amtrak did likewise. “While Amtrak passengers and employees are no longer required to wear masks while on board trains or in stations, masks are welcome and remain an important preventative measure against COVID-19,” said the national railroad agency in a statement. “Anyone needing or choosing to wear one is encouraged to do so.”

Amalgamated Transit Union International president John Costa, whose union represents 200,000 bus operators and mass transit workers in the U.S. and Canada, urged “calm amidst the uncertainty and confusion” caused by the ruling.

“While many transit agencies have lifted the mask mandate, not all have done so,” Costa said in a statement, “and the CDC still recommends wearing masks on public transit and indoor settings to stop the the spread of COVID. We encourage our members and riders to check the latest updates from their transit agencies while any new policies are implemented.

“We can also not ignore the fact that the mask mandate required our members to deal with unruly passengers who refused to comply with the mandate as we continue to urge transit agencies to protect our members on the job.”

Dr. Celine Gounder, an internist, infectious disease specialist and epidemiologist at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine and Bellevue Hospital, said the overall picture on mask mandates remains confusing because “most public health powers reside with the states, and that means you’re going to get a lot of variability with respect to what measures are mandated from state to state.”

She continued: “We are moving into a phase of the pandemic when individuals are being asked to assess their own risk and take action to protect themselves. This will be challenging so long as individuals are not armed with easily accessible information that they know how to interpret; they don’t have free, convenient, rapid, equitable and stigma-free access to the tools to protect themselves, including masks, testing, treatment and vaccination; and they don’t have safety nets like paid sick leave and family medical leave or health care coverage if they or a family member get sick.”

Read more on the labor movement and the pandemic:

Russia plans to “grind up” citizens of NATO countries

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s propagandists issued a new warning this week that the war in Ukraine will soon turn into a direct conflict with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which is supplying Ukraine with military aid to fend off Putin’s troops.

Nearly eight weeks have passed since Putin launched his unprovoked, illegal, and genocidal invasion of Ukraine. His forces have suffered tremendous losses at the hands of Ukrainian resistance fighters and speculation has abounded about how far Putin will go to achieve his objectives.

The Kremlin has repeatedly jiggled its nuclear arsenal in the face of the West as a threat, but officials in the US and Russia have both conceded that atomic warfare is extremely unlikely unless Putin’s power is in jeopardy or the survival of the Russian state is at risk.

Putin has shamelessly lied to his people about why he attacked Ukraine, claiming that neo-Nazis are committing acts of atrocities against Russian-speaking residents, particularly in the separatist-controlled Eastern regions of Donbas and Luhansk.

Overwhelming evidence of war crimes has emerged from across Ukraine in the first two months of Putin’s campaign. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, meanwhile, has vowed that Ukraine will never surrender or give up an inch of its territory.

It is therefore critical to keep tabs on Putin’s ongoing narrative because the Russian population has been largely cut off from Western sources of information. The latest rhetoric spouted by state television host Vladimir Solovyov insidiously taps into the internal effects of Putin’s manipulation.

Solovyov proclaimed during a panel discussion on Russia 1 that Russia is preparing to “grind up citizens of NATO” in its eventual war “against Europe and the world” after it defeats Ukraine.

The translated video was posted to Twitter by Julia Davis, The Daily Beast‘s resident Russia expert and founder of the Russian Media Monitor, which tracks the Kremlin’s disinformation.

“I believe the special military operation is entering a new stage. Ukrainians alone are no longer enough. Now they’re talking about NATO countries supplying de-facto their own weapons. We’ll see not only NATO’s weapons being drawn into this, but also their operators, de-facto, we’re starting to wage war against NATO countries,” Solovyov said.

“We’ll be grinding up NATO’s war machine as well as citizens of NATO countries when this operation concludes. NATO will have to ask itself ‘do we have what we need to defend ourselves? Do we have the people to defend ourselves?'” Solovyov continued.

“And there will be no mercy. there will be no mercy,” he added. “Not only Ukraine will have to be denazified – the war against Europe and the world is developing a more specific outline which means we’ll have to act differently and to act much more harshly.”

Rudy Giuliani sings “Bad to the Bone” on “The Masked Singer”

No, you’re not high. That really was former attorney Rudy Giuliani singing “Bad to the Bone” by George Thorogood and the Destroyers while dressed as a bird in a box on Fox’s “The Masked Singer,” hosted by Nick Cannon.

In episode 7 of the show’s seventh season the big reveal Wednesday night was teased as “the biggest event in ‘Masked Singer’ history,” according to Variety; and although we all had fair warning that this was coming the internet is acting appropriately peeved. 

Related: American spirit, as seen on TV via “The Masked Singer” and “The Titan Games”

Although many faces in the crowd were seen laughing and seemingly enjoying the ordeal, none more than Giuliani himself, panelist Ken Jeong was visibly upset, and made no attempt to hide that fact.

“No, that’s not Robert Duvall,” Jeong said during Giuliani’s unmasking, at which point he crossed his arms and exited the stage saying “I’m done.”


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 Fellow judge Robin Thicke followed after Jeong and was heard saying “This is definitely something I never would have guessed.”

The show’s host, Nick Cannon, did his best to keep the show running smoothly in the midst of upheaval but couldn’t resist making a comment of his own.

“With all of the controversy that’s surrounding you right now I think it surprises us all that you’re here on ‘The Masked Singer,” Cannon said. To which Giuliani replied “Me too.”

In response to the obvious question here of why he would agree to be on the show in the first place, Giuliani said “I guess the main reason is I just had a granddaughter, Grace. I want her to know that you should try everything, even things that are completely unlike you and unlikely. I couldn’t think of anything more unlike me and unlikely than this. And I enjoy the show, I have for years, and it just seemed like it would be fun. I don’t get to have a lot of fun.”

Read more:

“The Batman” director swears that Joker scene wasn’t setting up a sequel

“The Batman” has officially made more than $750 million at the box office, which pretty much guarantees that it’s getting a sequel. Probably more than one. And indeed, there are lots of moments in the movie that seem to be setting up a sequel, most notably a scene near the end when the Riddler (Paul Dano), having been defeated by Batman, gets a creepy pick-me-up from the Joker (Barry Keoghan), who’s in the next cell over at Arkham Asylum. It sounds like the two villains are going to team up, which certainly seems like sequel fodder. But on the commentary track for the movie, which is currently available as an Apple exclusive, director Matt Reeves swears that’s not the case.

“A lot of people ask me, ‘Is this a set up for another movie?’ and to be honest it really isn’t,” Reeves said as the world arches its eyebrow. “This for me was tracking because Paul and The Riddler was in the action of the third act in a very particular way, and the last we’d seen him he was saying ‘Boom!’ in his window as the bombs went off, and we hadn’t yet seen him take in the fact that Batman had been able to pull things back from the brink and that his plan had not played out, I really wanted to see the end of that arc for Riddler.”

Reeves did try screening the movie without this scene, but thought that something was missing. “By not having this scene, not only did you not get to see what I think is a fantastic performance from both actors, from Barry and from Paul here and when Paul starts laughing after Barry does I find it so delightful, and it was a great texture change and a tonal change from what is a sort of painful ending to the movie. But also it changed the stakes of the finale scene. When Selina says to [Batman], ‘You know that this place is never gonna change,’ and he’s like ‘I gotta try,’ this idea that trouble is already brewing again. That in this moment of the power vacuum that people are already scheming. When you took this scene out it didn’t have that sort of same resonance and the idea that he could go away with her seemed more reasonable and you thought, well gee why is he staying?”

So that was critical, actually, to the ending of the movie and to the finishing of the Riddler’s arc as well. What we’ll do with these characters in the future remains to be seen, but it was never meant to be an Easter egg scene, to say like, ‘Oh guess who we’re using in the next movie.’ It was meant to be something delicious for the audience to sort of experience those two characters meeting, and in fact for the Unseen Prisoner to say to him, ‘Riddle me this,’ which is of course right out of ‘Batman’ 66.

Will we see the Joker from “The Batman” again?

That all sounds reasonable enough…but I’m still not sure if I buy it. Warner Bros. may not have announced a formal sequel to “The Batman” yet, but it is working on two HBO Max spinoff series, one about Colin Farrell’s Penguin and another set at Arkham Asylum, where the Riddler and Joker just happen to be interred. Hmm.

But the movie was pretty good, so whether it featured sequel bait or not, there’s not much cause for complaint.

You can watch “The Batman” now, either in the theater or on HBO Max.

“Moon Knight” episode 4 ending explained: Who is the hippo? (Is she a goddess?)

Since “Moon Knight” premiered, the Disney+ Marvel series has taken viewers on quite the roller-coaster ride, but episode 4 “The Tomb” throws the audience for the kind of loop no one could have expected. The majority of the episode is spent on Steven and Layla working together to find Ammit’s ushabti.

Major spoilers ahead of “Moon Knight” episode 4

After sharing a kiss that’ll definitely need some unpacking for Layla, Steven, and Marc, the two drop down into what will eventually be revealed as Alexander the Great’s final resting place. The emperor was Ammit’s final avatar, as such, it’s in his tomb that she’s been buried. Or rather it’s in his gullet.

Steven had to open Alexander’s sarcophagus and disturb his remains in order to get to Ammit’s ushabti, but he did it. However, it was a short lived victory. While he had been digging in the bowels of one of the world’s greatest conquerors, Layla had been combating the Heka priest the two had escaped earlier.

After her fight, she encountered Arthur Harrow who opened her eyes to Marc’s involvement in her father’s death. Her anger, mixed with the grief and horror of what Marc may have done, took precedence over Steven’s discovery of Ammit’s ushabti. Layla demanded that she speak to Marc and he took control of his shared body with Steven and told her the truth.

He didn’t kill Layla’s father, but it was his partner that did it. Marc told her of the man’s greed and how he had been shot and left for dead, too. However, it didn’t change the fact that he got in a relationship with her, even married her, while knowing this the whole time. When they’d met, Marc had intended to tell her the truth and instead he fell in love with her.

If that wasn’t enough of a head trip, Harrow and some of Ammit’s followers find the couple before they can talk further. Marc gives Layla the ushabti for safe keeping which was a good idea considering he’s shot moments later and falls backward into the water surrounding Alexander’s sarcophagus.

When Marc awakens, it’s to a psych ward where everything we’ve seen so far in the show can be explained away as the imagination and delusions conjured by a man in need of psychological care.

Is Moon Knight happening in Marc’s head?

While it’s clear something strange is going on, it doesn’t appear that Marc has been imagining everything that has happened to him in the series thus far. It’s toward the end of “The Tomb,” that it starts to become clear that Marc may be trapped in his own mind due to outside forces or the injury he’s sustained.

After he escapes a therapy session with an alternate Harrow who appears to be his psychologist, Marc scrambles down the hallway until he comes across a room with a sarcophagus. The person in it wants out and when he opens the casket, Steven pops out of it.

For the first time in “Moon Knight,” Marc and Steven have the opportunity to interact outside of speaking to one another through reflective surfaces. They’re so excited to see each other that they hug. Their joy, however, is short lived as they have to figure out what’s going on.

When the two exit the room, and continue their journey down the hallway, they come across another sarcophagus. This one is standing upright and is a fiery red.

Who is in the second sarcophagus in “Moon Knight “episode 4?

“The Tomb” doesn’t reveal who is in the second sarcophagus, but it has to be another alter. In episode 3, “The Friendly Type,” Marc blacked out during a fight and killed two of Ammit’s followers. Steven obviously wasn’t in control of the body, and it didn’t seem like Khonshu was either.

The moon god didn’t mention another alter making an appearance, but it’s doubtful that he would. As long as an action furthers his agenda and mission, Khonshu doesn’t care how something is done. He’s singularly focused on stopping Ammit from being awakened.

The red sarcophagus clearly denotes that whoever the alter is, he’s dangerous. We doubt we’ll be waiting too much longer to meet him, “Moon Knight” only has two episodes left in its six episode run. The most pressing matter at the end of episode 4, however, is the hippo that Marc and Steven encounter that adds yet another trippy element to “The Tomb.”

Who is the hippo at the end of “Moon Knight” episode 4?

The episode ends before we’re introduced to her but, judging by her appearance and her garb, it seems the hippo at the end of “The Tomb” is the Egyptian goddess, Tawaret. According to IMDb, she’s played by Antonia Salib.

Tawaret, whose name translates to “The Great One,” is a protective goddess in ancient Egyptian religion, specifically for mothers and children. Her fierce appearance was thought to ward off malevolent forces and put fear in those that sought to do others harm.

While we’ve only seen her as a hippo so far in Moon Knight, Tawaret bears the characteristics of a lioness and a crocodile. How she fits into the story being told in the series is unknown, but we expect she’ll be an ally to Marc and Steven the same way Hathor and her avatar Yatzil were in “The Friendly Type.”

Psychedelics permanently alter your understanding of what has “consciousness,” study says

Those who have experimented with psychedelics often describe a sensation of connectedness with objects around them, things like rocks, trees, or rivers. Sometimes the “connectedness” is more literal, as high doses of psychedelic drugs like LSD may cause users to believe the walls are talking to them. 

Now, researchers have found that a single psychedelic experience can leave users with enduring cognitive changes. Following a “trip,” many subjects assigned higher levels of consciousness to both living and non-living things alike. 

To be clear, the study, published in Frontiers in Psychology, was a survey of psychedelic users, and did not actually administer drugs to its subjects. Participants simply displayed a shift in beliefs. Their revelations post-psychedelic use were not of the superstitious variety, but rather represented a philosophical attitude change. These impacts persisted with survey respondents reporting an average of eight years after the experience in question.

“This study demonstrates that when beliefs change following a psychedelic experience, attributions of consciousness to various entities tend to increase,” Dr. Sandeep Nayak stated in a news release on the study, which was colorfully titled “A Single Belief-Changing Psychedelic Experience Is Associated With Increased Attribution of Consciousness to Living and Non-living Entities.” 

“The results suggesting that a single psychedelic experience can produce a broad increase in the attribution of consciousness to other things raises intriguing questions about possible innate or experiential mechanisms underlying such belief changes.” 

Following particularly profound experiences during usage of psilocybin, mescaline, ayahuasca, LSD, DMT, or other hallucinogenic drugs proceeded a marked impact on the very concept of consciousness. Indeed, only 26 percent of participants attributed consciousness to plants prior to their psychedelic experience; afterwards, that number jumped to 61 percent. The jump for fungi was comparable. One category surveyed was “inanimate natural objects”; researchers found that 8 percent of users did not believe such objects were conscious prior to their experience, while after taking psychedelics, 26 percent did. 

Though participants displayed high belief in the consciousness of non-human primates and four-legged animals, the respective shifts — from 63 percent to 83 percent and 59 percent to 79 percent — were smaller than those for other entities. (Notably, both non-human primates and four-legged animals were already considered to possess consciousness by the majority.)

RELATED: The true story of Michel Foucault’s LSD trip that changed history

Interestingly, those attributing such cognitive abilities to inanimate objects were in the minority, but a majority demonstrated attribution of consciousness to non-human beings. Relatedly, psychedelics users have been shown to exhibit more environmentally conscious behaviors

“It’s not clear why, whether that might be an innate drug effect, cultural factors or whether psychedelics might somehow expose innate cognitive biases that attribute features of the mind to the world,” Nayak added.

Such studies may evoke an eye roll and, perhaps, memories of college students discussing the merits of “stoned ape theory” over a blunt. For the unfamiliar, that hypothesis suggested hallucinogens, specifically “magic” mushrooms, spurred the evolution of human consciousness.

Still, the social ramifications engendered by taking psychedelics have alarmed state security apparatuses, historically speaking. The criminalization of LSD in the United States in 1968 was in part a reaction to the idea that the drug stimulated its users to be anti-war and anti-establishment; Governor Edmund Brown of California famously said that it “poses a growing threat to society.” Likewise, the counterculture seemed to believe that LSD could change one politics’, too: Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane plotted to dose President Richard Nixon with LSD during a White House visit in 1970.

In any case, there are numerous psychological and evolutionary theories as to how humans develop a sense of other things as conscious.

“Considering attribution of consciousness and the problem of other minds from an evolutionary perspective, the capacity for detecting and attributing agency has self-evident survival value, for instance in the detection of predators,” the study reads. “Thus, innate cognitive biases may partially underpin tendencies to attribute mentality to entities without brains. Interestingly, studies suggest that that wide attribution of consciousness may be developmentally normal in children and subsequently suppressed or unlearned.”

A postdoctoral fellow in psychiatry at Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research, Nayak co-authored the paper with Dr. Roland Griffiths, founding director of the research center. Nayak primarily investigates the potential treatment of psychiatric conditions with these poorly understood substances. Promising studies, including those of Nayak, have indicated treatment of addiction, depression, anxiety, and PTSD may be particularly useful applications.

“The results suggesting that a single psychedelic experience can produce a broad increase in the attribution of consciousness to other things, raises intriguing questions about possible innate or experiential mechanisms underlying such belief changes,” Griffiths stated in the news release. “The topic of consciousness is a notoriously difficult scientific problem that has led many to conclude it is not solvable.”

Inquiry into consciousness has perplexed our greatest minds since before the conception of science itself. At best, our definition of consciousness is hazy. Determination of consciousness in other organisms remains nearly impossible to determine, but under the current paradigm of cognitive sciences, no evidence supports such notions. 


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Phenomenal consciousness, which the study described as essentially an awareness of the state of existence, could be the root of the phenomenon. The use of psychedelics, researchers suggest, enhances the effect of phenomenal consciousness itself. Attribution of consciousness to others seems to appear as a side effect, but research is lacking. 

Emerging from a decades-long dark age for psychedelics research, a proto-renaissance in the field abounds. Studies have poured out of institutions as regulations weaken, offering further counters to schedule I classification of hallucinogens and other psychedelics.

Likewise, psychedelic legalization efforts have begun to snowball following decriminalization in Oregon, Denver, Oakland, Santa Cruz, and smaller municipalities. Similar decriminalization efforts have entered the arena of state legislation this year along with a continuous trickle of cannabis legalizations, with one decriminalization bill having been passed in the US House.

Read more on psychedlics:

Harry Potter and the retconning of Dumbledore: It’s no longer about the story

I first read “Harry Potter” in college, after my friend was clued into the series, years after their first publication, by the children she babysat. In those days, we saved the hefty books for school vacations, something to look forward to after finals and term papers were turned in, some actual reading for pleasure. And as English majors, what mostly alarmed us then were all the adverbs author J.K. Rowling used. So many adverbs.

It gave us pause, made things awkward when our professors criticized the books, but we kept reading. It was about the story after all. 

When I had a child of my own, I couldn’t really interest him in the boy wizard series, despite multiple attempts. And then Rowling, in increasingly bizarre statements, revealed the kind of person she is, not the kind whose work I can support. But even before the writer made her vehement anti-trans stance known, she said statements that not only distract from the story, they undermine its magic and call into question her intent. 

RELATED: “Fantastic Beasts 3” censors gay storyline for Chinese release

In an appearance at Carnegie Hall in 2007, when asked if Albus Dumbledore, the wizard headmaster and hero Harry Potter’s confidant, ever fell in love — despite championing love, he’s alone in the story, partnerless — Rowling said: “I always thought of Dumbledore as gay.” 

It could no longer be about just the story, but an attempt to cash in on an identity retroactively.

That line apparently brought the audience to their feet in a standing ovation. But Rowling didn’t exactly answer the question. You can be gay and find love (Did the writer know that?), even late in life, even requited love, unlike the long-suffering, tumultuous feelings Rowling then said Dumbledore had for bad boy wizard friend Gellert Grindelwald.

Dumbledore’s queerness was a surprise. Not an unwelcome one. It was only . . .  it didn’t seem to be in the text, all thick, seven volumes of it. But then Rowling said something that called her motives into question: “If I’d known it would make you so happy, I would have announced it years ago!”

It could no longer be about just the story, but an attempt to cash in on an identity retroactively, to retcon Dumbledore.

Retconning is an abbreviation for the phrase “retroactive continuity.” As Merriam-Webster describes it, “Retcon has had a busy life for such a young word,” — it was added to Merriam-Webster’s dictionary only in 2021 — including its “change from a noun to a verb, and move from the jargon-filled chat rooms of the Internet to general parlance.” In general parlance, to retcon is to alter a previously established fictional narrative, after the fact of its publication or release.

A term that first gained prominence in comic book circles in the 1980s, examples of retconning can be found much earlier: when Sherlock Holmes falls to his death in “The Final Problem,” for example — but it turns out, he wasn’t dead after all. Dead but not really dead is a big retcon. See: Emperor Palpatine, Professor X, multiple deaths in the “Fast and Furious” franchise.

Unfortunately, Rowling did not resurrect Dumbledore or Severus Snape in her retconning, but instead, tweeted out that Nagini, the giant snake in the Harry Potter universe, comes from the Indonesian myth of Naga. Indian writer Amish Tripathi corrected her that Naga is a story of Indian origin. Rowling was reacting to criticism of the film casting of an Asian actor to play Nagini in her human form, a subservient role of exoticism the Harvard Crimson derided as “dumping several Hollywood-produced Orientalist stereotypes into a cauldron and stirring them.”

In a “nobody asked for this ever” retcon, Rowling also revealed how wizards used to go to the bathroom. If you don’t know yet, spare yourself. 

And then there is Dumbledore’s queerness. Entertainment Weekly wrote of the author’s “long history of discussing — but not depicting – Dumbledore’s sexuality.” Writing in 2019, Devan Coggan argued: “Despite all that discussion and several years of new films, Rowling still has yet to confirm the wizard’s orientation in a book or on screen.”

If the “Harry Potter” books do at all depict the wizard’s queerness, it’s a shallow, antiquated and dangerous idea of who queer people are.

The new movie: “Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore” attempts to rectify that silence. Is it too little too late? 

Unlike the previous “Fantastic Beasts” films, young Dumbledore (Jude Law) talks directly, albeit briefly in moments that feel awkwardly inserted, about being in love with Grindelwald “with lines like “Because I was in love with you,” and “The summer Gellert and I fell in love.” It’s still not much,” Dan Selcke argues, “but better late than never.”

The lines do have the feel of being small patches on a sinking ship. So much has distracted from the latest “Fantastic Beasts” movie. So many scandals, including one of its stars Ezra Miller arrested for disorderly conduct after a previous star, Johnny Depp, already came under scrutiny for abuse allegations and was replaced by Mads Mikkelsen. And who can forget Vladimir Putin coming to Rowling’s defense?

It’s hard not to read too much into the title of the “Fantastic Beasts” film. Is one of “The Secrets of Dumbledore” Dumbledore’s sexuality? It shouldn’t be – and that’s the problem. 

If the “Harry Potter” books do at all depict the wizard’s queerness, it’s a shallow, antiquated and dangerous idea of who queer people are. The confirmed bachelor who never marries. Who is a non-romantic being and never finds or even searches for happiness in a loving partner. Or even dates. He’s a safe, non-threatening idea of what a gay person is, the gay best friend trope, headmaster-style. 

The books are set in a contemporary timeline. There’s no reason for Dumbledore to hide himself away forever, except for the homophobia of his author. And before you argue, as Lev Grossman did in Time, that readers don’t get a glimpse of any of the Hogwarts professors’ romantic lives, we do. Professor Snape’s love for Lily, Harry Potter’s mother, is a driving force of his character and of the very story itself.


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In a climate where queer people cannot tell their own stories, where books with queer characters are banned every day, and trans authors and children face legislature meant to strip them of their humanity and end their lives, the queerness of Dumbledore feels hollow, disingenuous. There are so many queer stories to tell — why this one, where an old man stays closeted and dies alone? Why give credit to this retcon, whose author wants queerness her way, tacked-on, safe, with no regard for the threatened lives of her queer readers?

More stories like this:

5 best munchies-themed gifts for the stoner in your life

It’s April 20, which we all know as a national holiday for the stoners among us. It’s also pretty well-known that indulging in marijuana can cause the munchies. After all, the active ingredient — tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC — stimulates appetite.

While weed-sparked cravings are very personal and capricious (and often dictated by what you have in your pantry or freezer at that exact moment in time), there are a number of thoughtful, non-edible gifts that exist at the intersection of food and cannabis, ranging from cookbooks to candles. 

Here are some of our favorites from the Salon Food desk: 

1 “Mastering the Art of Cooking with Weed” by the Editors of Munchies

When you think of cooking with weed, brownies are likely the first thing that comes to mind. However, this cookbook — which was inspired by the popular Viceland TV series “Bong Appétit” — offers countless of other suggestions, ranging from weed butter-basted chicken served alongside weed chimichurri to cannabis-infused coconut crab gratin. This book offers a new generation of cooks an opportunity to cook with cannabis in a modern, serious and sophisticated way. 

2 Glass fruit pipes from Flower by Edie Parker

These gorgeous glass pipes shaped like bananas, cherries, grapes and oranges are beautiful enough to display as subversive sculptures but functional enough to be used on a regular basis. “Offer it to guests as a post-meal snack or in place of dessert,” the product description recommends.

3 “The Art of Weed Butter” by Mennlay Golokeh Aggrey

Cannabutter, or butter infused with weed, is the optimal way to transfer the THC from cannabis into an edible. It can be used as the basis for sweet treats, like brownies and cookies, or savory items, such as nachos and stews. Author Mennlay Golokeh Aggrey walks readers through the ins-and-outs of “becoming a cannabutter master,” as well as how to infuse other types of cooking fats like coconut and olive oils. 

4 “Doobie Snacks Coloring Book” by Michaela McCarthy

Sometimes when you feel the high, you feel euphoric like you could run a marathon. Other times, you want to simply sink into the couch for 12 hours straight. On the days when you find yourself somewhere in between (and you’re looking for a low-effort, but engaging activity), flip open the “Doobie Snacks Coloring Book” by Michaela McCarthy. This intricate coloring book features images of pizza, boba tea, ice cream and fruit overlaid with detail-rich floral patterns. Grab your colored pencils — and prepare to lose yourself for a few hours. 

5 4/20 candle collection by Ctoan Co.

Wisconsin-based candle maker Jodyann Morgan recently released her 4/20 “Munchies”-themed candle collection, which features gorgeous candles molded into diverse body shapes. 

“Munchies might not seem like a natural focus of a 420 theme collection,” Morgan wrote in a press statement. “However, they are a byproduct that is often subject to a double standard, with fat people receiving a markedly different reaction. As a plus-size, queer, Black woman, sitting at the intersection of race, size and sexuality, this mission is personal.” 

She continued, “These lovingly hand poured, gender-free candles allow people to see their bodies, and the bodies of people they love, in accessible art.” 

Additionally, $2 from each item in the collection that’s sold will go to The Last Prisoner Project, which serves individuals who are currently or formerly incarcerated for marijuana-related crimes. 

Still feeling a little snacky? Here are some of our favorite treats from the Salon Food archives: 

Salon Food writes about stuff we think you’ll like. Salon has affiliate partnerships, so we may get a share of the revenue from your purchase.

Trump incensed over dossier of Piers Morgan’s disparaging comments read prior to interview

Donald Trump and journalist Piers Morgan had a tense exchange just prior to taping an interview segment for Morgan’s new show, “Piers Morgan Uncensored.” 

During the prep time for the segment, which is intended to be the highlight of the episode of “Uncensored” on Monday, April 25, Trump read aloud from a selection of comments made by Morgan over the years that put his former friend and “Celebrity Apprentice” host in a less than flattering light. The comments were said to be pulled from columns that Morgan had written, and interviews he’d given, all of which he had no idea would be served up to Trump on that particular occasion.

Related: Trump doesn’t apologize for retweeting British hate group

Among the snippets read by Trump were statements made by Morgan in the past such as “Trump’s a supreme narcissist,” and “Trump’s now too dangerous, he’s morphed into a monster that I no longer recognize as someone I considered to be a friend and thought I knew.”

“I thought we were friends?” Trump shouted at one point, according to Morgan. “This is so disloyal! After all I’ve done for you? Why would you say all this about me?”

In a recount of the exchange, written by Morgan himself for New York Post, he describes being worried that Trump would back out of the interview; but what ended up happening was far more dramatic.


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Morgan was able to diffuse the conflict with Trump by pivoting to golf talk and other pleasantries. Roughly ten minutes later Trump went from blind rage to interview mode, and all seemed right as rain. Until Morgan started questioning him about the  “rigged and stolen” 2020 election.

“I told him I believe he lost the supposedly “rigged, stolen” election,” Morgan said in The New York Post article. “I repeatedly pointed out his failure to produce any evidence of the widespread voter fraud he insists occurred to rob him of his presidency, and I blamed his refusal to admit defeat for the deadly riots at the Capitol.”

“Then you’re a FOOL!” [Trump sneered]. “And you haven’t studied!”

From this point Trump dissolved back into rage and stormed out of the interview shortly after Morgan’s election mention.

“Apparently, he was later heard denouncing me as a “scumbag” and saying he wished he’d never done the interview,” Morgan said in his recount. 

See a snippet from the exchange below, and tune in to “Piers Morgan Uncensored” on Monday to watch the rest. 

Read more:

When Dolly Parton’s critics said she looked “cheap,” she doubled-down to look like “the town tramp”

Dolly Parton couldn’t care less that people used to think her signature look was “cheap.”

The Queen of Country recently appeared on the “WorkLife with Adam Grant” podcast and recalled how many of her early critics told her to change her look if she wanted to be successful in the music industry.  

“The main advice that people wanted to give me was to change my look — to go simpler with my hair and the way that I dress,” Parton said. “Not to look so cheap, nobody was ever going to take me seriously, they would say.” 

In true Dolly fashion, the Grammy-winning singer-songwriter didn’t heed those requests and instead, stayed true to herself.

“The way I look and the way I looked then was a country girl’s idea of glam, just like I wrote in my ‘Backwoods Barbie’ song,” Parton explained. “People wanted me to change, they thought I looked cheap. But I patterned my look after the town tramp.

“Everybody said, ‘She’s trash.’ And in my little girl mind, I thought, ‘Well, that’s what I’m going to be when I grow up.’ It was really like a look I was after,” she continued. “I wasn’t a natural beauty. So, I just like to look the way I look. I’m so outgoing inside in my personality, that I need the way I look to match all of that.”

RELATED: How Dolly Parton’s “Coat of Many Colors” became an LGBTQ+ anthem 

Parton, whose nicknames include “The Iron Butterfly” and “The Book Lady,” has unapologetically flaunted her style and her trademark quote, “It costs a lot of money to look this cheap!” Another one of her fan-favorite lines is, “I was the first woman to burn my bra – it took the fire department four days to put it out.”

The “9 to 5” singer also talked about her childhood, saying she was raised by a religious mother and once lived in a “one-room cabin” with her 11 siblings. Despite her present success, Parton has continued to embody that humble spirit. In recent years, Parton was nominated as an inductee to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and offered the Presidential Medal of Freedom, which she turned down twice. She also has her own theme park, Dollywood, and her own book giving program called Imagination Library. But in the end, money is the least of Parton’s concerns. 

“I count my blessings far more than I count my money because I know this could have not happened to me. I see so many people more talented than me that never make it and the fact that I have just done so well I’m amazed myself. It’s almost scary sometimes,” she said. “I hope I can always live up to the expectations of me it would break my heart not to. I’m very humble and that’s because of my love to God and the blessings.”


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Parton previously spoke with Salon in 2014 and discussed her creative pursuits, talents and infectious persona.

“I have a sense of humor about everything,” Parton told writer Dina Gachman. “If you’re going to be in the public eye you have to. There are people like you who ask everything they want to know to write their articles, and I’ve never shied away from any of that. All that’s just part of who I am.”

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A jalapeño popper, reborn as your new favorite grilled cheese

Just like what it sounds like — a jalapeño popper, reborn as your new favorite grilled cheese. If two peppers per sandwich seems outrageous, it is, but in a good way. The char from the broiler mellows the heat from sharp and stingy to smoky and warm. (And if you don’t like spice at all? Well, you’re in the wrong place.) You’ll notice that the recipe offers two paths: crispy bacon or barbecue potato chips. Obviously, one way to think about this is: Do you eat meat or nah? But even if you do eat meat — not to pick favorites but, yeah, to pick favorites — the potato chips snatched my heart. 

***

Recipe: Jalapeño Popper Grilled Cheese

Yields
2 sandwiches
Prep Time
15 minutes
Cook Time
20 minutes

Ingredients

  • 4 large jalapeños, halved lengthwise and seeded
  • 4 slices bacon, halved crosswise — or 2 big handfuls barbecue potato chips
  • 4 slices sandwich bread, such as white or sourdough
  • 4 slices Pepper Jack cheese
  • Garlic powder, for sprinkling
  • Salted butter, at room temperature, for smearing

 

Directions

  1. In the oven or a toaster oven, heat the broiler to high with a rack no more than 6 inches from the heat source. Line a sheet pan with foil. Add the jalapeños, cut side down. Broil until blackened and flattened, rotating the pan halfway through, 6 to 8 minutes. Transfer the jalapeños to a small bowl and use the foil to tightly cover, so the jalapeños can steam for a few minutes. Peel away and discard the skins.
  2. Meanwhile, if you’re using bacon, add it to a (preferably cast-iron) skillet and set over medium heat. Cook for about 8 minutes, flipping halfway through, until it’s as crispy as you like. Transfer the bacon to a plate and pour the fat into a heatproof jar. (If you’re using potato chips instead, skip this step.)
  3. Lay 2 slices of bread on a work surface. Top each with a slice of cheese, 4 jalapeño halves, half the bacon or potato chips, another slice of cheese, and another slice of bread.
  4. Generously smear both sides of each sandwich with butter, then lightly sprinkle all over with garlic powder. (Psst: If you’d like an extra-bacony sandwich, you can use the rendered bacon fat instead of butter, or a combo.)
  5. If you cooked bacon, return the skillet to medium heat; if not, set a (preferably cast-iron) skillet over medium heat. Add the sandwiches and cook until crispy on both sides and melty in the middle, 5 to 8 minutes total. (If the sandwiches are browning too quickly, lower the heat as needed, and if the pan looks too dry at any point, add a smidge of butter.)
  6. Cut in half, sprinkle with salt if you’d like, and devour immediately.

“The Real World Homecoming: New Orleans” sees old ghosts take new form

The Real World Homecoming” is a great opportunity to dip a toe back into the gloriously nostalgic “fly-on-the-wall” days of early MTV programming without having to fully submerge in all the problematic issues attached to the years in which it originally took place. But what we learn in this latest cast reunion, “The Real World Homecoming: New Orleans,” is that nostalgia is no match for deep-seated grudges and a level of holier-than-thou ignorance that seems to have first taken root within the womb.

From the moment Matt Smith, Melissa Beck, Jamie Murray, Julie Stoffer, Kelley Wolf, Danny Roberts, David “Tokyo” Broom come together for the first time since 2000 we see pretty quickly that the personalities of the people who comprised one of the most popular seasons of “The Real World” have not changed one bit and for a few of the people, that’s a bad bad look. *cough cough. Julie and Matt. *cough cough* 

Matt Smith, David “Tokyo” Broom, Kelley Wolf, Julie Stoffer, Jamie Murray, Danny Roberts, and Melissa Beck in THE REAL WORLD HOMECOMING: NEW ORLEANS streaming on PARAMOUNT+ (Akasha Rabut/Paramount+©MTV ENTERTAINMENT 2022, All Rights Reserved)

In 2021 Paramount + debuted “The Real World Homecoming: New York,” which reunited the cast of MTV’s first “true story” for the first time since the show aired in 1992. Seeing how fans reacted favorably to watching this jar of bees get shaken up anew, they did it again later in 2021 with “The Real World Homecoming: Los Angeles,” and are back at it now with New Orleans. 

Related: “The Real World Homecoming: New York” is a beautiful suspension bridge between past and present

Rewatching the original “Real World New Orleans” season prior to their “Homecoming” was, for me, an example of how the Mandela effect can work in reverse. If you had asked me if just 22-years ago people were still walking God’s green earth referring to people as “colored,” or describing it to be normal practice in their family to cross the street whenever they saw a Black person coming their way, I would not have believed you. But yes, Julie Stoffer did say those things and watching her in the first episode of “Homecoming” it would not be wholly unjust to say she doesn’t seem to have changed all that much. She hasn’t come out with any outright racism just yet, but you can all but feel the collective audience bracing for it.

Julie now … identifies as an atheist. We’re not given the story behind that, but God, I bet it’s good.

In the premiere’s cold open, Julie manically exclaims, more than once, that she “just wants to have fun” before departing from the home she now shares with her husband and three kids to show her face in New Orleans again. She’s inexplicably wearing head-to-toe exercise gear and sets off to promptly get her ass handed to her by a house full of people she did incredibly dirty over 22 years ago.

A formerly staunch Mormon who boasted and giggled about never seeing a penis, never having any interest in knowing a gay person, and never befriending a single Black person, Julie has now fallen from those lofty prejudicial heights and identifies as an atheist. In Episode 1 we’re not given the story behind that, but God, I bet it’s good.

Stepping foot into the house in New Orleans, which is in the Audubon Park area of New Orleans and not The Belfort Mansion on St. Charles Avenue they shared in 2000, as it’s now privately owned, she’s met with a curt “Hi. How are you?” by one-time close friend Melissa Beck (then Howard) who is, I’ll just say it right here in print, the best one out of any cast of “The Real World,” in perpetuity. 

THE REAL WORLD HOMECOMING: NEW ORLEANS — Melissa, Julie and Danny in THE REAL WORLD HOMECOMING: NEW ORLEANS streaming on Paramount+. (Akasha Rabut/Paramount+©MTV ENTERTAINMENT 2022, All Rights Reserved.)

You see, Julie and Melissa were thick as thieves during their initial season, and for a short time after, but there was a permanent falling-out caused by Julie unfairly dragging Melissa’s name through the mud in an effort (which she denies) to bogart speaking gigs post-season. Julie also did this same level of dirty to former housemate Danny Roberts, one of the first “out” gay men on reality television whose boyfriend at the time was in the military during the “don’t ask, don’t tell” era. 

Danny’s not gonna giggle Julie’s ignorance away this time.

Before she’s even had a chance to put her yoga mat in her room, Julie takes Danny into a tearful embrace that is absent of actual tears and stage whispers an apology into his ear that Danny later refers to as performative. Julie may still be locked in her own personal hell but Danny, living in a cute cabin in Vermont in peaceful seclusion, is now the kind of emotionally secure that allows for him to push against what he would have otherwise politely leaned into in 2000. He’s not gonna giggle Julie’s ignorance away this time, smacking on a piece of gum (why was he always chewing gum??) and being “aw shucks” in the face of casual hatefulness. Here we can see the benefits of 22 years of a life lived well versus the cracked veneer of a life lived under the thumb of inherited, and then chosen, ignorance that no amount of yoga could ever hope to fix.


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Matt Smith, equal to Julie’s ignorance in every way during their original season, even donning a similar colorful pseudo-alternative wardrobe like a Catholic wolf in poser’s clothing, didn’t get the same level of backlash that Julie did, then and now, but that’s not to say he isn’t deserving of it. These days Matt lives in Arizona with his wife and kids, getting strange pleasure in making the housemates guess their number. “Six. I have six kids,” he beams. Almost like he’s thrilled for people to know he’s had sex at least six times.

Like Julie, Matt used to preach about the holy responsibility of chastity, telling Danny, a gay man, that sex was created by god as a way to procreate, and any sex outside of those confines is a sin. I mean, isn’t that the fun of it, nerd? Matt was also vocal in 2000 about not understanding people having “such sensitivities” because of their racial backgrounds, and revealed that he didn’t know who Anne Rice is which is a true sin, especially in New Orleans. 

Jamie Murray, David Broom (who goes by Tokyo now), and Kelley Limp (now Kelley Wolf as she’s married to actor Scott Wolf) remained relatively in the background of the first episode of “Homecoming,” but their time will come down the line over the course of the remaining episodes. For now, all eyes are on Melissa, Danny, Julie, and Matt as we watch the ghosts of their past take new form in New Orleans all over again.

Read more: 

The easiest vodka lemonade, plus a fun little party trick

I tell people not to worry too much about simple swaps and imprecise measurements. You want to go a little heavy on honey or use rum instead of tequila? Go for it — you’re not negotiating the Treaty of Versailles. Lavender is the exception. It’s so easy to overdo this ingredient and condemn your drink to barely potable potpourri. That said, lavender can be sublime when applied appropriately. My sweet spot is when it barely registers. I want people to ask, “What’s that flavor?” before I giddily reveal the secret.

Alcohol is a great solvent or, to put it another way, very “grabby.” Not only will it mix with water, sugar, and citrus juice when you shake it into a cocktail, but it also does a really good job of stripping essential oils from other substrates. (This is the same thing that was going on with the butter-infused rum from my Hot Buttered Butter Rum recipe.) In the case of this drink, we’re stripping the lavender essential oils from the dried flower buds. As opposed to the butter rum infusion, which takes hours, this infusion takes only 5 minutes, so you don’t need to plan ahead. Plus, with a mesh tea infuser, you only need to infuse the amount you’re about to use in the cocktail. (Although, you can infuse an entire bottle if you want — it will keep nicely. For a 750-milliliter bottle of vodka, combine with 1 1/3 cups of lavender. Let sit for 5 minutes, then strain. Rebottle and store in a cool, dark place for up to 3 months.)

With this drink, I really wanted to let the subtlety of the lavender speak for itself, and leave out any unnecessary adornments — except for the origami flower, a cute party trick that’s well worth the practice.

***

Recipe: Lavender Vodka Lemonade

Yields
1 drink
Prep Time
10 minutes

Ingredients

  • 2 ounces vodka
  • 1 3/4 tablespoons food-grade dried lavender
  • 1 1/2 ounces freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • 1 1/2 ounces simple syrup

 

Directions

  1. Pour vodka into a small shaking tin. Place the lavender in a mesh tea infuser and drop it in the vodka. After 5 minutes pull the strainer from the vodka, let drain, and discard the lavender. (If you don’t have a tea infuser, you can strain the vodka through a fine-mesh sieve.) Add the remaining ingredients and ice. Close the shaker and shake vigorously for 15 seconds. Pour the entire contents of the shaker into an old fashioned glass. Garnish with an origami flower, if you’d like.

 

Why autistic people (including me) are self-medicating with cannabis

Climate change activist Greta Thunberg — who, like me, is on the autism spectrum — once said that autism is her "superpower." I would say that this is true for me as well, yet like any superhero in an origin story, I was forced to discipline my powers so that I could use them to the best of my ability.

Weed definitely helps.

While the popular expression holds that marijuana makes you feel "baked," I often feel more of a cooling effect. When the experience of being bombarded with stimuli is too much, a nice toke is like water on flames. The same is true for the countless anxiety attacks, or the moments when I feel triggered by a traumatic event related to past autism-related abuse. In contrast to the stereotype of a shiftless stoner, I find that without marijuana, the sharp edges of my autism could cut me to ribbons.

I am not alone among people with autism who believe that weed helps. Yet curiously, scientific research hasn't really caught up with what myself, and it seems, many other people on the spectrum have noticed regarding cannabis' seemingly magical therapeutic properties for people like us. 

Russell Lehmann, a contributor to "Autism Parenting Magazine," is also autistic — and also uses weed to help him cope with his symptoms. Yet in doing so, Lehmann told me he often finds himself combatting stigmas associated with marijuana use, and its effects.

"I think the biggest stigma out there is that cannabis makes you lazy, or is a drug used to escape reality," Lehmann told Salon over email. "I personally function at a much higher level with this plant in my life than I do without it. I also don't smoke to escape reality but rather to process reality. We really need to engage in more open dialogues about this plant as there are many misconceptions out there that are preventing certain individuals from discovering the potential benefits."

While Lehmann was drawing from his personal experiences, his remarks speak to a deeper controversy about medical marijuana. There is scant literature about how marijuana can help people with autism, and the studies which do exist have not provided consistent results. Scientists generally agree that both cannabis and cannabinoids "may have promising effects in the treatment of symptoms related to ASD [autism spectrum disorder], and can be used as a therapeutic alternative in the relief of those symptoms," but the problem is simply that there have not been enough "randomized, blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials" to definitely determine that.

"I personally function at a much higher level with this plant in my life than I do without it. I also don't smoke to escape reality but rather to process reality."

 

Indeed, there may be downsides to marijuana use for autistic people, at least in certain cases. The American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, for instance, has expressed concern about medical marijuana being prescribed to people under the age of 18. Writing about the subject in 2019, the journal argued that "there are clear risks of harm for children and adolescents using marijuana and cannabinoids." Young people who regularly use marijuana are likely to suffer long-term cognitive damage as well as be increasingly likely to develop "psychotic, mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders." In addition, "short-term use can impair working and short-term memory, learning, attention, coordination, perception, and judgment, and can cause paranoia, anxiety, and irritability."

RELATED: Why autistic people tend to self-medicate at much higher rates

So where should one fall when it comes to the question of autism and marijuana? Is it simply a matter of keeping it away from young people?

This was not true for Joann Fouquette, who in December talked to CNN about how CBD helped her young autistic son Ezra. She described how the medication helped her child become less aggressive and made it possible for him to communicate. Joann Fouqette was overjoyed, telling CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta that "it helped him … whatever is going on in his brain, make those connections that he needed to make. And once those connections were made, he never lost them."

Spectrum News elaborated on exactly how scientists believe marijuana is helping forge those connections. Cannabis contains active ingredients like THC and CBD which bind themselves to proteins in the brain and throughout the body known as cannabinoid receptors. For instance, the CB1 and CB2 receptors seem to be activated by THC but blocked by CBD. "Blocking the CB1 receptor can relieve seizures and memory issues in a mouse model of fragile X syndrome, a condition related to autism," Spectrum News explained, citing a 2013 study in Nature Medicine. Similarly, a 2018 study on synthetic CBD by the pharmaceutical company Zynerba "showed significant improvements in anxiety and other behavioral traits in people with fragile X. Cannabinoid receptor activation has also been shown to lead to memory improvements in fragile X mice."

In short, we know for sure that marijuana has positive effects when it comes to helping both people and animals cope with autism-like symptoms. Marijuana may or may not be helpful to autistic young people, although autistic adults who use it frequently have positive things to say. If nothing else, the logical thing to do would be to study it more.

"It may feel like they are living in an overwhelming world with little support. It can be incredibly difficult to find health care providers who truly understand autism and the autistic experience."

Yet while the medical consensus is that there should be more research on autism and marijuana, federal law makes it difficult for scientists to actually conduct the necessary tests. Mere approval to perform such research requires approval from both the Food and Drug Administration and the Drug Enforcement Administration, and getting approval can take a year. And on top of that, there are extremely stringent rules regarding storing cannabis — including alarms and locked containers that must be bolted down. The burden is remarkable given that cannabis is legal in most states and can be purchased openly at stores in cities with a mere photo ID. 


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There is an obvious price to the federal recalcitrance on this issue: In lieu of autistic people being able to seek marijuana-based relief through their doctors, many of them will obtain the substances they think they need illicitly. As Sharon Kaye-O'Connor — an autistic psychotherapist who specializes in neurodiversity — explained to Salon in July, autistic people may see an appeal in self-medicating "in an attempt to cope with anxiety or an overwhelming sensory environment. Autism is so frequently undiagnosed, or misdiagnosed as other conditions, which then makes it difficult for things like sensory issues to be properly understood and addressed." She later added that for many autistic adults "it may feel like they are living in an overwhelming world with little support. It can be incredibly difficult to find health care providers who truly understand autism and the autistic experience."

As mentioned before, this author is also autistic and uses medical marijuana to cope with his symptoms. As Lehmann put it, I too have encountered stigmas because of my usage. The most notable occasion occurred in 2018, when I discussed my marijuana use with then-Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper (now a senator from that state).

"We also know that there are certain people that have an inclination to bipolar," Hickenlooper told Salon at the time. "It's not a large number — it's not a significant percent of the population. But it is — at least I've been told — it is connected or it's not infrequent that it would be connected with someone who is on the autism spectrum. That they can take this high THC marijuana, and it will trigger a permanent response. In other words, make them almost schizophrenic."

One year later, when asked about his remarks, Hickenlooper revealed that his views had evolved.

"I don't know," Hickenlooper reiterated. "I'm not a doctor, and I don't know enough to be able to speak specifically about the autism spectrum. And I probably shouldn't have said that."

For more Salon articles on autism:

The peculiar mystery of Nicolas Cage’s favorite pasta shape

In my 28 years of life, I’ve spent an unusual amount of time contemplating the respective merits of various pasta shapes

I listened intently when “Sporkful” host Dan Pashman released “Mission ImPASTAble,” a multi-episode recounting of his journey to make the perfect pasta shape. I was later thrilled to interview him about the resulting creation: cascatelli.

When Rachel Handler reported on the Great Bucatini Shortage of 2020, I empathized with her fanatical interrogation of the pasta supply chain. If you need me on a gloomy weekend, there’s a good chance I’m somewhere on the second floor of Chicago’s Eataly scanning for the perfect pasta to assuage my Sunday Scaries

I genuinely believe that if someone has enough opinions about pasta to have a favorite shape, that choice is likely to tell you something about who they are as a person. Case in point: Nicolas Cage

If someone has enough opinions about pasta to have a favorite shape, that choice is likely to tell you something about who they are as a person.

Earlier this month, the actor took to Reddit to participate in an AMA (Ask Me Anything) in anticipation of the release of his new semi-autobiographical film, “The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent.” Fans asked Cage about everything from what movies he can watch on repeat without getting bored (“Apocalypse Now” and “Spirited Away”) to his dream role (Jules Verne’s Captain Nemo). 

However, one Redditer took the question out of my mouth when they asked, “What’s your favourite pasta shape?” 

RELATED: This genius shrimp and spaghetti deserves a spot on your spring dinner rotation

Cage responded with a short story about visiting an unnamed Italian restaurant in San Francisco 25 years ago with Charlie Sheen because “they had square tube pasta and he was very interested in trying square tube pasta.” 

“And we did and we loved it so much we went back the next day to try it again,” the actor concluded. 

Square. Tube. Pasta. 

Related: Everything you need to know about cascatelli, the new “perfect” pasta shape that’s a viral hit

Cage didn’t elaborate further, but pasta-loving internet sleuths got to work trying to determine the actual shape, as well as where it would have been served. Some initially guessed ravioli which, while often square, don’t necessarily qualify as a “tube,” despite being filled with cheese or meat. Some suggested rigatoni, which are definitely more tube than square. 

My personal guess is that he meant calamarata. Named because the pasta mimics rings of calamari when raw, this shape flattens a bit upon cooking, causing it to ultimately lie on the plate like — you guessed it — a square. Per Share the Pasta, “it tends to be used in seafood dishes,” which only furthers my theory. When Cage was doing interviews for his food-themed film “Pig,” he told Yahoo that one of his specialties is seafood arrabiata pasta.

“I’m very careful to make it al dente,” he said. “I start by producing the calamari and clams in an olive oil base with plenty of garlic and sea salt. And then I throw in the chili peppers so you get that pop.” 


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Cage then puts tomato sauce in a frying pan with olive oil, garlic, sea salt, clams, lobster and calamari

Coincidence? Maybe. Maybe not. For all we know, the “square tube” pasta to which the actor was referring was a tremendous one-off shape, bolstered by some mystery chef’s understanding of molecular gastronomy and some bending of typical pasta physics. For now, the pasta remains enigmatic — much like Cage himself. 

Hungry? Try some of our favorite Italian-American recipes:

A breakdown of Johnny Depp’s two-day testimony against ex-wife Amber Heard in defamation case

Johnny Depp took the stand at Virginia’s Fairfax County Circuit Court on Tuesday to share his side of the story as both the actor and his ex-wife Amber Heard face off in a $100 million defamation trial.

The “Pirates of the Caribbean” actor delivered a three-hour long testimony on Tuesday detailing his early relationship with Heard, his tumultuous childhood and his struggles with substance abuse. Depp also denied Heard’s allegations of domestic abuse.   

“My goal is the truth,” Depp said in his opening remarks.

As a quick refresher, Depp is suing Heard over a 2018 Washington Post op-ed, in which Heard details personal accounts of domestic violence but refrains from explicitly naming Depp as her abuser. Depp sued Heard for $50 million, accusing her of defamation. Heard then countersued for $100 million, alleging Depp had attempted to taint both her career and name. 

In 2016, Heard filed for divorce from Depp and claimed the actor had physically assaulted her — usually while under the influence of drugs and alcohol — throughout their relationship. A court filing showcased photographs of Heard’s bruised face and images of smashed bottles in the couple’s apartment.  

RELATED: Johnny Depp and Amber Heard’s ongoing defamation trial: Here’s everything you need to know

Depp denied the accusations in his testimony and told the jury, “Never did I myself reach the point of striking Ms. Heard in any way nor have I ever struck any woman in my life.” He also explained why he brought the suit against Heard, stating that he felt a “responsibility to clear my name.”

“One day you’re Cinderella and then in zero point six seconds you’re Quasimodo,” Depp said about his career and reputation, which both took hits following the allegations and published op-ed. “I didn’t deserve that and neither did my children.”

On Wednesday, Depp resumed his testimony and accused Heard of name calling as well as verbal and physical abuse. He also compared his relationship with Heard to his relationship with his abusive mother.

Here’s a complete breakdown of Depp’s main points from his two-day testimony, separated by day and arranged in order:

Tuesday

Depp says he had to stand up for his children

Depp spoke about his children — Lily-Rose Depp, 22, and Jack Depp, 20 — and the responsibility he felt to protect them both during the height of his scandal with Heard.

“I felt it my responsibility to stand up not only for myself in that instance but stand up for my children, who at the time were 14 and 16, so they were in high school,” Depp shared. “I thought it was diabolical that my children would have to go to school and have their friends or people in the school approach them with the infamous People magazine cover with Ms. Heard with a dark bruise on their face. And then it kept multiplying, it kept getting bigger and bigger.”

Depp says he was a victim of “physical abuse” as a child and opens up about his childhood

Depp revealed that his mother, Betty Sue Palmer, would frequently hit him, throw things at him and ridicule him when he was a child. Depp also shared that he wore an eye patch during his youth to correct a vision problem. His medical condition, however, resulted in more “verbal” and “psychological abuse” at the hands of his mother. Depp earned the moniker “cockeye” from his mother while his brother, who wore glasses and had crooked teeth, was oftentimes called “four eyes” and “bucktooth.”

Depp then expressed sympathy for his father, John Christopher Depp, who he called a “good man.” The actor said his parents fought often but he never saw his father be violent towards his mother.  

“My father is not an abusive man,” Depp said. “At the same time my father was to some degree at the mercy of Betty Sue.”

Depp delves into the beginnings of his relationship with Heard

Depp and Heard met in 2009 on the set of “The Rum Diary.” The couple started dating in 2012 and three years later, they got married in a private ceremony in L.A.

In his testimony, Depp reminisced on his early relationship with Heard, telling the jury “from what I recall, what I remember, it was as if she was too good to be true.”

“She was attentive, she was loving, she was smart, she was kind, she was funny, she was understanding … we had many things in common, certain blues music, music, literature, for that year, year and a half, it was amazing,” Depp continued.

Heard later filed for divorce in 2016 and obtained a temporary restraining order against Depp. The pair officially split in 2017.

Depp apologizes for his foul language in texts sent to Heard

In his texts, Depp repeatedly referred to Heard as a “c**t” and once said he hoped Heard’s “rotting corpse was decomposing in the f**king trunk of a Honda Civic.” Depp also called Heard a “gold-digger” and wrote in an email, “I can only hope that karma kicks in and takes the gift of breath from her.”

“I am ashamed of some of the references made,” Depp told the court. “I’m embarrassed that at the time, the heat of the moment, the heat of the pain that I was feeling went to dark places.”

“Pain has to be dealt with humor, something dark, very dark humor,” he added.

Depp says his first experience with drugs was at age 11

Depp’s substance abuse began at a young age when he took his mother’s prescription pills “to escape the chaotic nature of what we were living through.”

“I’d done pretty much all the drugs I was aware of by the time I was 15 years old,” Depp said. “It’s never been for the party effect. It’s been for trying to numb the things inside that can plague someone who has experienced trauma.”

Depp said he also smoked marijuana and was “not shy” to try other substances that might “take the edge off.” The actor revealed that he became addicted to Roxicodone, also known as Oxycodone, following a leg injury.

Despite his heavy drug use, Depp acknowledged that substance abuse is not the right way to cope with emotional problems. “It was essentially just self-medication,” he said. “Where you want to escape from is your own brain, your own head.”

Depp also accused Heard of exaggerating his drug and alcohol use, saying her claims were “grossly embellished” and “plainly false.”

“I think I was an easy target to hit, because once you’ve trusted someone for a number of years and told them all the secrets of your life, that information can be used against you,” he said.

Wednesday

Depp claims Heard had a “pure hatred” for him and compares Heard to his mom

Depp began his second day of testimonies by criticizing his ex-wife and detailing the fear he felt during their relationship.

“As it escalated and continued to escalate, I went to what I learned as a youth, which was to remove myself from the situation so it couldn’t continue,” he said.  

When asked by his attorney why he decided to stay in a relationship with Heard, Depp said he “wanted to try to make it work.”

“Ms. Heard had spoken of suicide on a couple of occasions, so that also becomes a factor, that’s something that lives in the back of your brain,” he added. Depp then brought up a moment from his childhood, when his mother attempted to commit suicide after his father left, which influenced his decision.

“You slowly realize you’re in a relationship with your mother, in a sense,” he later shared, continuing that Heard would call him names and verbally abuse him in the same manner as his mother.

Depp says Heard wanted him to get a tattoo of her own name

Depp also spoke about his tattoos in court and revealed the one tattoo that Heard did not like. It was his “Winona forever” tattoo, which Depp got for his former-girlfriend, actor Winona Ryder. The tattoo was later changed to “Wino forever” after the pair broke up.  

Depp said that Heard insisted he get a tattoo of her name, which he eventually did.

“And ironically it wasn’t long after that that everything started going sideways,” Depp said.

“I was doing everything I could to bring a smile to her face as opposed to a frown and then the onslaught of whatever problems she was experiencing,” he continued. “I would try to wake her up with laughter, singing stupid songs in her ear. I generally just tried to keep bringing her mood up. Sometimes it worked, many times it didn’t. But I tried.”

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“F**king scumbag”: Bill O’Reilly threatens JetBlue worker over delayed flight to Turks and Caicos

Disgraced Fox News host Bill O’Reilly was recently spotted calling a JetBlue employee a “f**king scumbag” after he was told his flight to the Caribbean islands of Turks and Caicos was delayed.

The video, which has already racked up 3 million views on Twitter, was first published by The Daily Mail. In it, O’Reilly is shown at a JetBlue terminal in New York’s John F. Kennedy airport aggressively badgering an employee. 

“What you’re gonna do … it’s three hours late,” O’Reilly tells the employee. After the employee responds, O’Reilly says, “No, no, no. You’re going to find out.”

RELATED: Congratulations, everyone, you’ve broken Bill O’Reilly’s brain

“You fucking scumbag,” the former host continues. “Don’t talk to me like that.” 

At one point, O’Reilly is shown holding the employee’s badge, saying, “You’re lucky I don’t put my fist through it.”

“You’re threatening me with violence, man,” the employee responds. 

“No, I’m not,” O’Reilly shot back before storming off. “You’re gonna lose your job.”


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Asked about the incident, O’Reilly told The Daily Mail that he was set for a trip to Turks and Caicos but was told that his flight would be delayed by five hours. He reportedly acknowledged that the interaction had gotten “heated.”

In a subsequent tweet, the conservative claimed that he was being unfairly maligned by the press. “The character assassins on social media completely lying about my interaction with a JetBlue guy who misled passengers during a five-hour delay,” O’Reilly wrote.

RELATED: Bill O’Reilly has stopped his accuser from appearing on “The View”

It isn’t the first of O’Reilly’s outbursts. Back in 2008, a video of O’Reilly, then a Fox News host, showed the Republican commentator sounding off at his production team over his teleprompter malfunctioning.

“I can’t read it there’s no words on it,” he shouts repeatedly. “There’s no words there to play us out!”

“We’ll do it live! F**k it, we’ll do it live,” he added. 

Nearly a decade later, O’Reilly was fired from the network amid a series of sexual harassment allegations.

“He’s just a bad person”: Ex-staffer caught on tape blasting “habitual liar” Madison Cawthorn

A former staffer for Rep. Madison Cawthorn, R-N.C., is sharing her scathing opinion of the freshman lawmaker after working in his office.

According to Business Insider, the recording was uploaded to Wheeler’s website on Monday, April 18. During a secretly recorded phone conversation, Cawthorn’s ex-staff member Lisa Wiggins spoke with David Wheeler, the president of the “Fire Madison Cawthorn” political action committee (PAC). voiced her disapproval of the Republican lawmaker.

“As far as the candidate himself, I mean, he’s just a bad person,” Wiggins said on the call, adding, “He’s a habitual liar and he’s going to say and do anything he can to your face but behind your back, he’s completely opposite.”

Although the call was reportedly recorded without Wiggins’ knowledge or consent, the state of North Carolina has a law in place that only requires “one-party consent” wiretapping for call recordings. Wiggins also shared details about Cawthorn’s day-to-day operations noting that he was nearly impossible to reach and there was “no way you can get a meeting with him unless he’s trying to pull some votes.”

She also said that she had to personally shut down a number of Cawthorn’s congressional offices due to short-staffing. “I know that because I drove and closed them all,” Wiggins said. “He didn’t care, he doesn’t care about his constituents. He does not care.”

As for the lawmaker’s office, she revealed it had “more liquor bottles than they do water bottles” and that his staffers were also “drinking like crazy.”

“People need to know how this man really is,” Wiggins told Wheeler. “He’s still got a lot of people fooled.”

In wake of the latest reports, Cawthorn’s spokesperson Luke Ball addressed Wiggins’ claims during the call describing them as “verifiably false.” “We believe these comments potentially amount to defamation of character,” Ball said, adding, “and are exploring options to ensure the Congressman’s name emerges from these slanderous remarks unscathed.”