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“Unprecedented trove of leaked IRS data” reveals how little the 15 highest earners pay in taxes

Periodically, we get a glimpse into the financial lives of the ultrarich. A pro athlete signs a huge contract, a tech CEO sells a boatload of shares in their company, or a billionaire heir unloads a Manhattan penthouse. Based on these nuggets of information, the media speculates as to how much income the rich might bring in every year. But nobody actually knows.

Thanks to an analysis of its unprecedented trove of IRS data, ProPublica is revealing the 15 people who reported the most U.S. income on their taxes from 2013 to 2018, along with data for the rest of the top 400.

The analysis also shows how much they paid in federal income taxes — and it demonstrates how the American tax system, which theoretically makes the highest earners pay the highest income tax rates, fails to do so for the people at the very top of the income pyramid. The top 400 earners pay noticeably lower tax rates than the merely rich; and, if you include payroll taxes, a married couple making $200,000 a year could end up paying higher tax rates than a person making $200 million a year. (The full analysis is here; it includes selected names beyond the top 15.)

Names That Won’t Surprise You

Scan the names on the list of the top 15 income earners and you’re certain to recognize several names — or at least the names of the companies they founded. Bill Gates hasn’t been involved in the day-to-day operations of Microsoft for over a decade, yet he still earned the most during the years we studied, reporting an average yearly income of $2.85 billion — and an effective federal income tax rate of 18.4%. Steve Ballmer, his former colleague, is also a well-known public figure, both for his time as Microsoft CEO and his current ownership of the Los Angeles Clippers NBA team. Ballmer’s average annual reported income of $1.05 billion landed him in the 10th spot on the list, and his effective federal income tax rate was 14.1%. The other side of the PC/Mac wars is represented here by Laurene Powell Jobs, widow of Apple founder Steve Jobs. Her average reported income of $1.57 billion ranked fifth-highest; she paid an effective tax rate of 14.8%. (ProPublica sought comment from everyone mentioned in this article. Nobody disputed the numbers cited here. Unless otherwise noted, representatives for people named in this article either declined to comment, declined to comment on the record or did not respond to requests for comment.)

Another well-known billionaire sits just below Gates on the list: Media and tech mogul and former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, with an average reported income of just over $2 billion, paid an effective income tax rate of 4.1%, by far the lowest rate among the top 15. (A spokesperson told ProPublica for an earlier article that Bloomberg “pays the maximum tax rate on all federal, state, local and international taxable income as prescribed by law,” and cited Bloomberg’s philanthropic giving.)

The presence of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos — either the first- or second-wealthiest person in America, depending on the day — won’t shock most people, but Bezos’s annual reported income during these years of $832 million put him only at number 15. He paid an effective tax rate of 23.2%; as we’ve previously reported, Bezos had so little income in a couple of recent years that he was able to pay $0 in federal income taxes in those periods.

Who Are These Others and Why Are They Paying Higher Tax Rates?

Tech billionaires dominate the top 15, but hedge fund managers account for a full third of the names on this list, and some of their incomes were just as huge. Most of them paid relatively high effective tax rates, especially compared to most of the tech sector representatives. Hedge fund managers often make their money through short-term trades, which are taxed at a much higher rate than when tech titans cash in on long-term investments.

The highest-earning hedge funder is Ken Griffin, founder of the Chicago-based firm Citadel. From 2013 to 2018, he reported an average income of nearly $1.7 billion, putting him fourth on the list. Griffin paid a tax rate of 29.2% during these years. (A spokesperson for Griffin said the tax rates in the IRS data “significantly understate” what Griffin pays, because they were lowered by charitable contributions and do not reflect local and state taxes. He also said Griffin pays foreign taxes, which aren’t included in IRS calculations of effective tax rate.)

Israel Englander, co-founder of Millennium Management, paid at a 30.8% rate, while the co-founders of Two Sigma Investments, David Siegel and John Overdeck, paid tax rates of 31.6% and 34.2%, respectively.

Some of this variation in rates reflects how people structure their businesses under tax law. Income earned by publicly traded corporations is taxed at the company level. When it’s passed on to big shareholders, such as tech billionaires, it can come in the form of dividends, which are taxed at lower rates than ordinary income. By contrast, the income from some manufacturing companies and hedge funds flows directly to company owners, who pay taxes on it, resulting in higher effective tax rates on average.

Where Are the Heirs?

Lists of the world’s wealthiest individuals are always heavily populated by heirs, ranging from descendents of old money to scions of more recently minted fortunes. Dozens of heirs made ProPublica’s list of 400 biggest income earners. Descendents and relatives of Sam Walton, founder of Walmart, claim 11 spots.

The DeVos family, heirs to the Amway fortune, also have multiple members in the top 400. Perhaps the best known is Betsy DeVos, who served as U.S. secretary of education during the Donald Trump administration. With a reported annual income of $112 million, she was the 389th-highest earner in this period.

Much like the tech titans who top the list, most of these heirs get their income from dividends or long-term investments, which are taxed at a lower rate. Their effective tax rates ranged from as low as 10.6% for Betsy DeVos to a high of 23% paid by Walmart heir Tom Walton.

Don’t Forget the Deductions

Another key way that some top earners reduced their tax liability was to claim significant deductions, often in the form of large charitable contributions. This is particularly true for wealthy investors who are able to make their donations with shares of stock. Thanks to a generous provision of the tax code, they can then deduct the full value of the stock at its current price — without having to first sell it and pay capital gains tax.

Michael Bloomberg achieved a tax rate of 4.1% from 2013 to 2018 by taking annual deductions of more than $1 billion, mostly through charitable contributions. From 2013 to 2017, he also wrote off an average of $400 million each year from what he’d paid in state and local taxes. The 2018 tax overhaul limited that deduction to $10,000 — but also introduced a huge new deduction for pass-through companies that Bloomberg benefited from.

Wait — What About the Celebrities?

The earnings of actors, musicians and sports stars are a subject of nonstop scrutiny in the media, yet few celebrities cracked the list of the top 400 earners, which would have required them to report annual incomes of at least $110 million.

ProPublica’s trove has data on many celebrities. One who came close to the top 400 is basketball superstar LeBron James, who averaged $96 million a year in reported income. Grammy-winning singer Taylor Swift also came within reach of the top 400, averaging $82 million in reported income during these years. Actor George Clooney would have had to double his average income of $55 million to crack the top 400.

THE TOP 15

Here are the details on the top 15 income earners. Read the full analysis of the top 400 here.

For the full list of America’s top 400 income earners and their tax rates, along with our methodology, click here.

New report details how CNN and MSNBC war pundits profit from undisclosed ties to defense contractors

U.S. corporate media outlets are saturated with pundits—many of them ex-military or national security officials—who take to the airwaves to promote hawkish policies and actions in Ukraine and elsewhere without disclosing their own ties to the arms industry, according to a report published Tuesday.

Analyzing punditry across a range of outlets including CNNMSNBC, and NBC News, Aditi Ramaswami and Andrew Perez at The Lever found that the networks failed to inform viewers that many of their expert guests who called for supplying Ukraine with more weapons to defend against Russia’s invasion were currently employed by the weapons industry or its advocates.

“I think it’s awesome you can be a consultant for a company that manufactures certain missiles and go on NBC or CNN and say how important it is that we get more of those missiles shipped out, with no one saying [by the way], this guy works for the missile company,” Perez sardonically quipped in a tweet promoting the report. 

The revolving door between the national security, private, and media sectors has become a prominent feature of the military-industrial complex. Perez and Ramaswami note that the media watchdog Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) found that 20 of the 22 featured American guests appearing on corporate networks’ Sunday politics programs in the wake of the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan last year had ties to the arms industry or its boosters.

Unsurprisingly, many of these experts argued against ending the longest war in U.S. history. Few, if any, disclosed their conflicts of interest.

“This type of revolving-door behavior should be prohibited for military officials to serve in a private capacity representing military contractors,” Craig Holman, the government affairs lobbyist at the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen, told The Lever. “If not prohibited, it should be disclosed to everyone so when they’re going on television trying to affect [President Joe] Biden’s policy on whatever war they have in mind, they ought to be straightforward.”

However, as Perez and Ramaswami point out, “the Ukraine crisis and the potential for greater conflict have been a goldmine for defense contractors, sending stocks skyrocketing and prompting sharp increases in defense spending.”

FAIR editor Jim Naureckas told The Lever that “the people who have the most interest in influencing the direction of the coverage are weapons-makers. They have the most direct financial stake in the way we cover issues of war and peace. Unfortunately, they are interested in more war and less peace.”

Perez and Ramaswami write:

Since the start of the Ukraine crisis, U.S. defense stocks in leading companies like Raytheon, Northrop Grumman, and Lockheed Martin have surged, and they are expected to continue rising in the coming months. And in the wake of Russia’s invasion, President Biden signed into law a spending package that directs a record-breaking $782 billion towards defense—almost $30 billion above his initial request.

The bill signed by the president authorizes $6.5 billion in military aid for Eastern European countries, including $3.5 billion in new weapons for Ukraine. This is in addition to the $1 billion already spent on arming Ukrainian forces with weaponry such as Javelin anti-tank missiles made by Raytheon and Lockheed Martin, and Raytheon’s Stinger surface-to-air missiles.

Various former U.S. officials appearing on corporate media news programs have ties to these and other companies or groups representing their interests. Leon Panetta, a former defense secretary, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) director, and White House chief of staff, regularly appears as a television guest expert. On CNN last week, he asserted that Russian President Vladimir Putin only understands “force” and that “the United States has to provide whatever weapons are necessary to the Ukrainians, so that they can hit back, and hit back now.”

Neither CNN nor Panetta disclosed that he is a senior counselor at Beacon Global Strategies, a defense industry consulting company whose clients have reportedly included Raytheon.

Another Beacon Global Strategies employee appearing regularly on network and cable news programs is former Pentagon and CIA Chief of Staff Jeremy Bash, who went on NBC‘s “Meet the Press” days after Putin’s invasion and called for arming Ukrainian forces so they could “shoot Russian aircraft out of the sky, open up those tanks with can openers, like the Javelins, and kill Russians.”

Beacon advisory board member and retired U.S. Navy Adm. James Stavridis has frequently appeared on MSNBC, where he once said the solution in Ukraine is to “flood the zone” with ” troops, tanks, missile systems, warships, all the above, in order to send a signal to Vladimir Putin.”

“What we ought to do is give the Ukrainians the ability to create a no-fly zone,” he said. “More Stingers, more missiles that can go higher than Stingers.”

FAIR’s Naureckas told The Lever that “everyone involved is aware of the transaction that is going on. Journalists know this as well, but you can’t admit it because that would spoil the grift if you said, ‘Here’s a person who’s funded by the weapons industry to tell you about this crisis.'”

“It should be the reporter’s instinct to explain the agenda of the people they are quoting,” he added, “but because this is such an integral part of what is done in the journalism system, you can’t give away the game.”

GOP lawmaker launches primary challenge against Lauren Boebert over “embarrassing juvenile antics”

Controversial first-term Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., is facing a primary challenge from a longtime state legislator.

“U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert will face a Republican challenger in Colorado’s June primary election after state election officials announced Tuesday that state Sen. Don Coram submitted enough valid signatures on nominating petitions,” the Denver Gazette reports. “The Montrose lawmaker said he’s anxious to put up his record of delivering results for the Western Slope against what his campaign described as Boebert’s ’embarrassing juvenile antics on the national stage.'”

Coram, who got his start as a school board member, was elected to the Colorado House of Representatives in 2010 when a seat opened up because Scott Tipton was elected to Congress. In 2016, Coram was elected the state Senate. Tipton served five terms in Congress before losing to Boebert in the 2020 primary.

When Boebert won the primary, The New York Times described her as “a political novice and gun-rights activist who has spoken approvingly of the pro-Trump conspiracy theory QAnon.”

On his website, Coram warns of “rhetoric, grandstanding, and cheap political tricks.”

“When the fringe leaders of both political spectrums have taken all the oxygen in the room and act more like out-of-touch celebrities than members of Congress, we have a problem,” he argued.

On his website, Coram warns of “rhetoric, grandstanding, and cheap political tricks.”

“When the fringe leaders of both political spectrums have taken all the oxygen in the room and act more like out-of-touch celebrities than members of Congress, we have a problem,” he argued.

Exclusive: How the creators of HBO Max’s “Julia” painstakingly recreated The French Chef’s kitchen

Julia Child’s home kitchen is so iconic that it’s preserved in the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History. There, on the ground floor, you can see the very room in which one of the country’s preeminent chefs changed the way we cook (except for the floor and the walls, which are fabrications).

From the signature blue pegboard wall that held her copper cookware collection to the bespoke countertops that were constructed two inches higher than store-bought models in order to accommodate her 6-foot-2 frame, Child’s kitchen remains one-of-a-kind and instantly recognizable in popular culture. 

That’s why the creators of the HBO Max’s limited series “Julia” had to take such care in recreating The French Chef’s kitchen

Related: The joy of HBO Max’s Julia Child series, a deliciously affectionate celebration of an icon

In a new featurette from HBO Max called “Inside Julia’s Kitchen,” the creative minds behind the painstaking recreation of Child’s two most famous kitchens — her home kitchen and her TV kitchen on the set of “The French Chef” — pulled back the curtain on their work, which grounded the real-life story being told in authenticity. 

“We enlarged it just a little bit for our set,” production designer Patrizia Von Brandenstein said. “But we brought veritas to it that ordinarily a set would not have.”

Production designer Stephen Cooper concurred, “If the average person went to the Smithsonian and looked at the kitchen there and our kitchen, I don’t think they’d tell very much apart.” 


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The feat not only required having a sharp eye for detail but also the ability to creatively source discontinued cookware and materials that were “near impossible to find.” Function for filming was also top of mind; for instance, the ovens were designed in such a way that the production’s cameras could capture unique shots from the inside. 

The attention to historical accuracy didn’t end with the set, however. The producers of “Julia” worked with veteran food stylist Christine Tobin — whose credits include “American Hustle,” “Little Women” and “Olive Kitteridge” — to ensure that iconic Child dishes like beef bourguignon and Queen of Sheba cake also passed muster. Together, they guaranteed that everything felt authentically “Julia” on camera. 

“Working with Sarah (Lancashire, who plays Child) and her cooking was almost like choreographing a dance,” Tobin told Salon Food in an interview. “There were days like that, which were very heavy in meetings and planning, but on past projects, I’ve never really been brought into that bubble, or as I like to call it, ‘the stew.’ I really got to understand all the moving parts to making a series like this from beginning to end.” 

To learn more about the making of the “Julia” set, you can watch HBO Max’s never-before-seen featurette for the very first time below.

More stories about the beloved Julia Child: 

Mark Meadows purged from North Carolina voter rolls after official caught him voting in Virginia

Former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows will no longer be allowed to vote in North Carolina after he was caught voting in Virginia.

The Asheville Citizen-Times first reported that the former Trump aide had been removed from Macon County voter rolls by Board of Elections Director Melanie Thibault.

“What I found was that he was also registered in the state of Virginia. And he voted in a 2021 election. The last election he voted in Macon County was in 2020,” she told the paper.

North Carolina state law requires voters to be removed from the rolls if they vote in another state.

“[I]f a person goes into another state, county, municipality, precinct, ward, or other election district, or into the District of Columbia, and while there exercises the right of a citizen by voting in an election, that person shall be considered to have lost residence in that State, county, municipality, precinct, ward, or other election district from which that person removed,” the law states.

Meadows’ wife Debra remains on the voter rolls in Macon County.

The couple came under scrutiny after it was reported that they claimed to live at a small Scaly Mountain home with a rusted roof. Meadows was never seen at the address.

DeSantis gerrymandering power grab threatens to reduce Black voting power even more than GOP plan

Never Trump conservative and former Republican strategist Rick Wilson has described Florida as a swing state in which Democrats “struggle” — one where Democrats often come within striking distance of Republicans in statewide races but ultimately lose. Partisan gerrymandering stands to make Florida even more difficult for Democrats, and according to The Guardian’s Sam Levine, Black voting power is likely to suffer in the Sunshine State thanks to Gov. Ron DeSantis’ gerrymandering scheme.

“The Florida legislature will allow Gov. Ron DeSantis to take the lead on redrawing the state’s 28 congressional districts — a highly unusual move that will probably diminish Black political power in the state and allow Republicans to further distort the state’s map to their advantage,” Levine reports in an article published on April 13. “State legislatures, including Florida’s, usually draw a proposal for a plan that the governor approves or rejects. DeSantis vetoed the GOP-controlled legislature’s proposed congressional districts on 29 March after proposing his own map that would increase the number of GOP seats while eliminating two districts represented by Black Democrats.”

The redistricting plan proposed by Republicans in the Florida State Legislature was bad enough for Democrats, but the one DeSantis has in mind, according to Levine, would be even worse.

“The legislature approved a plan earlier this year that would have given Republicans an 18-10 advantage in the state’s delegation,” Levine explains. “DeSantis’ proposal would have given Republicans a 20-8 advantage.

Levine adds, “DeSantis appears focused on eliminating two congressional districts with sizable non-white populations. One of those is Florida’s 5th Congressional District, which stretches from Jacksonville to Tallahassee, is 46% Black and represented by Al Lawson, a Black Democrat. He has also targeted the state’s 10th Congressional District, which is majority non-White and is represented by Val Demings, another Black Democrat.”

One former GOP strategist who has been critical of the power grab that DeSantis has in mind is Mac Stipanovich, who left the Republican Party after Donald Trump won the 2016 presidential election. Stipanovich believes that Florida Republicans are “prostrating themselves” for DeSantis.

Stipanovich recently told the Washington Post, “The legislature has abdicated its responsibility; the leaders in the Republican Party in the legislature have abandoned all principle. It’s just all about maintaining and acquiring power and holding on to (it). What we’re witnessing is a mile marker on the road to one-man rule in Florida, at least for the time being.”

Putin’s big fail: He’s a spook, not a military commander — and not even a good spook

It’s becoming more obvious every day that they didn’t teach “On War” by Carl von Clausewitz at the 401st KGB school in Leningrad when Vladimir Putin was a student in 1975. Right from the start of the invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, Putin violated Clausewitz’s most famous axiom, that a true strategist should “identify the decisive point and concentrate everything on it, removing forces from secondary fronts and ignoring lesser objectives.”

Putin’s invasion was all over the map. He had forces in Belarus, north of Kyiv; in Russia, north of Kharkiv; in the eastern Ukrainian regions of Donbas held by separatists; and in Crimea, which he had taken in 2014. He attacked on all four axes at once. The force in Belarus, ostensibly located there for a training exercise, was to be what they call in the army “the tip of the spear” for the attack on Kyiv, some 100 miles from the Belarus border. This military grouping quickly turned into the infamous 40-mile convoy, which was heavily hit by dismounted Ukrainian troops who decimated supply trucks, tanks, armored personnel carriers and fuel trucks with shoulder-fired weapons. 

RELATED: Putin’s war crimes — and his military failures — are making his GOP apologists squirm

Russian forces in the vicinity of Belgorod, Russia, were only 50 miles from the northern city of Kharkiv. Their attack on Ukraine’s second largest city was similarly stalled by Ukrainian forces that kept the Russian army from ever entering the city. Putin moved several battalion combat teams into the region of eastern Ukraine held by separatists, but they were unable to take either Donetsk or Luhansk, the major cities in the Donbas. Putin’s forces in Crimea were sent east into Mariupol with orders to link up to Russian units moving south from the Donbas, and west into Kherson with orders to take the fight further west and capture Odessa. To this day, neither Mariupol nor Kherson nor any other major Ukrainian city have been occupied, though all but Kyiv have been heavily damaged by Russian shelling with artillery and rockets. 

Estimates of the size of the army Putin used to attack Ukraine ran from 150,000 to as many as 190,000. Neither number was anywhere near sufficient to invade a country of 44 million with an army of 125,000 and 900,000 reservists, and the results prove it. Putin’s army has pulled back from areas it held around Kyiv and returned to bases in Belarus and Russia to regroup and resupply, according to experts. On Tuesday at a news conference in Russia’s far eastern Amur region, where he traveled to meet with Belarus president Alexander Lukashenko, Putin said that his “special military operation” in Ukraine was going as planned and there was “no doubt” it would continue “until its goals are met.”


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It was a hollow boast, given the fact that Putin appears to be already distancing himself from his failed invasion by calling it “the plan that was originally proposed by the General Staff.” His appointment late last week of an overall ground commander in charge of his forces in Ukraine, Gen. Alexander Dvornikov, who has been called the “butcher of Syria,” ignored yet another axiom found in “On War”: “Anyone who falls into the habit of thinking and expecting the best of his subordinates at all times is, for that reason alone, unsuited to command an army.” Putin, like an American president, is commander in chief of his country’s military, which if you take the word of Clausewitz, does not bode well for Russia’s future in Ukraine.

“Putin had been keeping the plans very closely held, with top military commanders and trusted advisers unaware that Russia was going to mount an offensive,” the Washington Post reported on Tuesday. “By early this year, according to U.S. and European officials, he was operating in an echo chamber.” Which was yet another problem with his invasion of Ukraine. Not only was Putin not a student of military strategy and tactics, he also hasn’t listened to anyone who was or ever had been.

Putin’s failure results from his near-total isolation; he seems to derive his sense of power from seclusion. Trump, on the other hand, derives his power from crowds: His rallies are as essential as his hairstyle.

Failure to listen to the counsel of others is a trait that has been shared by many national leaders over the years, but Putin seems to be, appropriately, alone in his near-total isolation. Lately, many have attributed his absence from public events and tendency to closet himself in his various dachas to the COVID epidemic, but several Putin-watchers have noted his increasing insulation from the Russian public and even his closest friends over the past decade. It’s a curious thing. He seems to derive his sense of power from seclusion. Donald Trump, on the other hand, derives his sense of power from crowds. His rallies are as essential to who he is as his hairstyle. Taking away his presence on Twitter put a crimp in his style, but if he couldn’t hold rallies and yap at his MAGA masses, he would probably disappear. 

The kleptronic Putin is said to be the richest man in the world, with a net worth that is unknowable but could reach many tens of billions. Trump, it can be said without much risk of being wrong, would love to be that rich.  

But neither of them has learned what’s necessary to be a great leader in time of war: the exercise of power in the absence of money. To be a successful military leader, it’s absolutely essential. Military commanders cannot dangle money as a reward even for heroism. Orders given in combat are obeyed not because a soldier expects to get a raise if he or she carries out a successful mission. Soldiers are willing to risk their lives in combat for their compatriots, and even for their country — until they aren’t, as happened in the final years of the war in Vietnam. But risk with money as the reward simply isn’t part of that profound equation.

It’s a big reason the Russian army has been shown to be, in a word, weak. They’ve been fed more lies than field rations over the last month and a half, according to many reports. Now Putin is reaping the rewards of a man who, while understanding the fine points of a police state, knows nothing of leadership that isn’t attached to fear. Threats of arrests and prison and even poisoning are hard to make when the men you’re trying to intimidate are being shot at. Putin’s soldiers may be afraid of being killed, but not by a man in a suit hiding in a bunker beneath a lavish dacha many hundreds of miles from the front lines.   

Read more on Vladimir Putin and the war in Ukraine:

Possible challenger surges, as Sinema promises big donors she’ll protect their tax breaks

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., assured corporate donors on Tuesday that she would fight her party’s efforts to unwind tax breaks for America’s elite as Democrats try to revive portions of President Biden’s stalled Build Back Better plan.

Sinema, who has received more than $900,000 in donations from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other industry groups opposing Biden’s plan, attended an event held by the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Phoenix to assuage donors’ concerns that the renewed spending negotiations may threaten their low tax rates.

“What I can’t tell you is if negotiations will start again or what they’ll look like,” she said. “But what I can promise you is that I’ll be the same person in negotiations if they start again that I was in negotiations last year.”

Sinema assured the group that she would oppose raising taxes on corporations with her pivotal vote in the 50-50 Senate.

“You all know, the entire country knows, that I’m opposed to raising the corporate minimum tax rate,” she said, adding that she opposes “any tax policies that would put a brake on any type of economic growth or forestall business and personal growth for America’s industries.”

Sinema repeatedly held talks with donor groups that oppose key parts of Biden’s proposal throughout the earlier round of negotiations, even as she largely avoided discussing the bill with journalists or constituents. Her latest remarks threaten to upend negotiations over a slimmed-down spending package before they even begin. She has privately told donors that a revival of the spending bill is “unlikely,” according to Axios.

RELATED: Kyrsten Sinema, a traitor to the cause of women’s rights, loses support of feminists

Fellow holdout Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., who blew up negotiations entirely in December, last month floated a revised $1 trillion proposal that would provide $500 billion in funding for climate programs and lowering the cost of prescription drugs, as long as other Democrats agree to use the other $500 billion to reduce the deficit and approve new oil-drilling permits. But Manchin’s proposal would be funded by allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices — a provision Sinema and other pharma-backed Democrats dramatically watered down in talks last year — and rolling back Trump-era tax cuts on the wealthy and corporations. Sinema has repeatedly opposed rolling back the Trump tax cuts despite her previous criticism of corporate tax breaks and her demand that big companies “pay their fair share.”

“We’ll just see if there’s a pathway forward,” Manchin told reporters on Tuesday. “We don’t know if there’s a pathway forward yet.”

Sinema told another industry group this week that she is “always willing” to engage in negotiations but is focused on making sure any spending proposal is “responsibly offset and that new revenue provisions protect qualified small business income where possible.”

“I work every day to ensure any government spending is targeted and thoughtful because a lean, efficient government helps avoid price hikes,” she said at a National Federation of Independent Business event.


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Republicans who roundly opposed Biden’s proposal have expressed confidence that Sinema will block any Democratic plans to undo the tax breaks for corporations and wealthy donors.

“Sinema is unenthusiastic about tax hikes. Hopefully that will be enough to keep this thing underwater permanently,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said at a Kentucky Chamber of Commerce event on Tuesday. “I don’t know if it’s dead yet,” he added. “I’d like to smother it if I knew how to do it.”

The dynamic has frustrated Democrats for months.

“The fact that we haven’t been able to come up with something that we can agree on yet — it’s just shocking to me,” Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., told Insider. “I think we need to get a deal.”

Sinema’s role in the stalled Democratic agenda has also baffled supporters back home in Arizona, where numerous efforts have been launched to back a potential primary challenger to the first-term senator.

Sinema’s political future is in doubt: Prospective challenger Ruben Gallego is raking in donations, and holds a huge lead over her in polls of Arizona Democrats.

Rep. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., has emerged as a leading potential progressive primary foe after repeatedly calling out Sinema, though he would have to compete with a well-funded effort backed by Sinema’s corporate supporters if he chooses to challenge her in 2024.

Gallego raised more than $510,000, a personal record, in the first three months of the year — officially for his re-election bid in the House, which he is expected to win easily. That number is more than four times the amount he raised during the same period last election cycle, according to Insider. He raised a total of $1.8 million in 2020.

Groups backing a potential primary challenger have also reported hundreds of thousands in donations.

Speculation about Sinema’s political future has continued to mount. Along with her opposition to rolling back the Trump tax cuts, Sinema has opposed Democratic efforts to repeal the filibuster to pass legislation related to voting rights, LGBTQ protections, union protections and raising the minimum wage.

Just 19% of Arizona Democratic primary voters have a favorable opinion of Sinema, according to a January Data for Progress poll, compared to 78% for fellow Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz. The poll showed Gallego with a 58% favorable rating and leading Sinema by a 74-16 margin.

“In the wake of her recent vote to preserve the filibuster and kill voting rights legislation — and after months of her repeated obstruction of the president’s Build Back Better agenda — it’s clear that Sinema’s continued obstruction has only served to lower her support,” the pollsters’ analysis warned. “And it may well be to the benefit of Rep. Gallego, who has been courting calls to run for Senate for months, that Arizona Democratic primary voters are so prepared to unseat her.”

Read more from Salon on Sen. Kyrsten Sinema:

Radar is tracking down missing indigenous grave sites

Over four days last May, members of the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc — a First Nations community in the interior of British Columbia — oversaw a site survey of around two acres of land surrounding the province’s former Kamloops Indian Residential School.

Using an electromagnetic technology called ground penetrating radar (GPR), an archeology professor charted what appeared to be the grave shafts of 215 children lying below the ground. The technology furthered the long-held suspicion that there were remains of missing children hidden on the land of the school. Former students at the school recall being woken at night to dig graves, for example, and a child’s rib bone and a juvenile tooth had surfaced in the area. Kamloops was the largest of the 139 government-sanctioned residential schools in the country that operated between the 1880s and 1990s. The facilities separated 150,000 Indigenous children from their families and educated them in English or French while banning native languages and indoctrinating them into Christianity.

“We had a knowing in our community that we were able to verify,” Rosanne Casimir, the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc chief, stated in a press release after the graves were discovered. “To our knowledge, these missing children are undocumented deaths,” she said. “Some were as young as three years old.”

At the time, few people in Canada had heard of GPR. This century-old technology emits a high-frequency pulse into the ground. When the pulse is reflected back to the surface, the elapsed time gets fed into computer software, offering a visual representation of what’s under the earth. Utility companies and archeologists have been using it for decades, but more recently it has been used to unearth Canada’s bleak history surrounding its residential schools.

So far, Indigenous groups across Canada have used GPR — along with other site survey technologies such as magnetometry and drones — to identify more than 1,800 possible graves at former residential schools, confirming an open secret.

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, established as part of a settlement agreement between residential school survivors and the Canadian government in 2008 to document the history and impact of the school system, has identified 3,200 child deaths at the schools. But in 2009, its request for $1.5 million Canadian dollars (about $1.35 million U.S dollars at the time) to hunt for unmarked graves was turned down by the Canadian federal government. In 2020, though, the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc secured a Canadian Heritage grant to fund its search, taking advantage of increasingly affordable and accurate GPR technology.

“The depth at which you can get a signal from and the quality of the data that it produces has increased rapidly over, let’s say, the last 10 years,” said David Markus, an assistant professor of archeology at Clemson University in South Carolina.

The Kamloops discovery kindled a fiery national conversation about residential schools, and last August the Canadian government announced 250 million Canadian dollars (around $200 million U.S dollars) in support for residential school grave searches and community emotional support.

The news also intensified interest in the United States in the use of GPR and other non-invasive technologies at its own Indian boarding schools, and to help locate hidden graveyards of Native Americans and Black people. Last June, citing the Kamloops news, U.S. interior secretary Deb Haaland — a member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe in New Mexico whose grandparents were sent to boarding schools as children — announced the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative, which seeks to create an inventory of schools, discover burial sites, and identify the names and tribal affiliations of children who went to these schools.

Such a process is currently underway at the former Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania. In 2017, a GPR survey confirmed which grave markers in its cemeteries likely corresponded to a burial, and discovered 55 other underground anomalies that needed further investigation. Since then, the U.S. Department of the Army, which owns the property, has exhumed the remains of at least 23 children and returned them to their home communities.

Even with the advances in GPR and other tools, however, the public can misunderstand what the equipment actually reveals. Major media outlets have published headlines stating that people are finding “bodies” in Canada. And according to Marsha Small, who is doing her Ph.D. at Montana State University and has been searching for burial sites at the Chemawa Cemetery near Salem, Oregon, on and off for nearly a decade, people often mistakenly think of GPR as a magic tool that can help uncover bodies and burial sites, when often what’s being detected are tree roots and other masses.

“All it’s going to give you is pixelated images of difference in soil composition — that’s it,” says Markus. “When you’re doing ground penetrating radar, there’s this misconception from some quarters of the general population that we can scan the ground and magically we’re going to see a skull or a femur or whatever.”

To fully identify graves, remains, and identities, researchers must also gather records, collect oral histories, and possibly disinter bodies — and it’s not clear yet if communities will want to take the final painful step.

“Everyone is up in arms and wants answers yesterday,” says Eldon Yellowhorn, an Indigenous studies professor at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia. For communities with children who died at Kamloops and at other schools with unmarked graves, technology serves as just an early step: Only years of painful work and substantial funding will help the secretly buried find a semblance of home. Says Yellowhorn: “Let’s make a 20-year plan or a 30-year plan. [It’s] not going to happen overnight.”

Before the advent of GPR, you often had to grab a shovel or use other basic technologies to locate a possible unmarked grave. “Not everybody likes you poking holes in the cemetery,” says Markus. As a result, there was little people could do when they suspected hidden burials.

Then accessible GPR emerged. Invented around 1910, just six years after radar technology itself, GPR was initially used in the late 1920s to measure the thickness of glaciers, then by the military to locate underground tunnels. In recent decades, utility companies have used GPR to look for underground wires and pipes. Over time, the technology became more finely tuned and affordable, and archeologists have become skilled at using GPR to locate buried artifacts. Today, the cheapest devices sell for around $14,000, and numerous private companies offer survey services.

Results from a GPR survey are displayed on a computer showing a signal to indicate soil disruptions. “Not every hyperbola is a burial or a grave — there’s tree roots, there’s masses, and other things in the substrate,” Small says. She notes that it takes years of training to operate GPR equipment and interpret the results. “I’ve just barely started my journey even though I’ve been immersed in it for some time.”

Small and others also employ magnetometers — handheld instruments often used by engineers and archaeologists to monitor the magnetic field of a given location. Magnetic readings of topsoil are different than those of subsoil, so detecting changes can indicate previous digging. But magnetometers must be held at a steady distance from the ground while walking, a process that requires a deft touch.

GPR equipment, in contrast, gets mounted on something that looks like a lawn mower or baby carriage, and gets rolled over the ground. In her work, Small depends on both technologies to help sort through tree roots, different soil types, and moisture content.

Andrew Martindale, a professor of archaeology at the University of British Columbia, says there are 23 variables identified by GPR that can indicate underground graves, but not every variable is present in every grave shaft. “Unmarked graves are in various contexts,” says Martindale, who has worked with the Musqueam Indian Band in Vancouver, British Columbia. “The technology may not work to the same degree in all places.”

In many cases, cemeteries are placed in areas where the soil is easy to dig, and GPR can produce clear readings. But “[the] residential school landscape includes clandestine burials,” Martindale says, and these locations can prove trickier.

When the technology detects anomalies outlining a rectangle in an east-west orientation, that may be a grave, since Christians usually bury people facing east. Even secret burials at residential schools, which were often church-run, would be orchestrated by staff and follow this custom, although some unofficial burials may not have this orientation. The size of the disturbance can suggest if the buried could be an adult or a child. But a site survey alone can’t distinguish between an abandoned dig and an actual grave; it can’t reveal bodies or bones, and it can miss graves or overestimate them. If there’s an area of earth that has been disturbed, “it’ll tell you the edges of that disturbance,” said Yellowhorn. “It won’t tell you anything beyond that.”

Yellowhorn, who is part of a collaborative effort led by the Sioux Valley Dakota Nation and supported by researchers at three Canadian universities to conduct site surveys at the 600-acre Brandon Indian Residential School in Manitoba, uses multiple technologies to get more accurate results, sometimes starting with a controlled burn of a suspected graveyard depending on the location. “Vegetation can obscure a lot of what’s there, ” he said.

Yellowhorn also uses drones to take images of the land at different times of the day, which can reveal swales or other surface inconsistencies that could indicate previous digging. He carries out burns when the vegetation is dry, including in the fall, and then observes how the snow settles and melts by spring. After that, he will often use both GPR and a magnetometer.

Those buried in graves that are unmarked, uninscribed, or indicated with an ephemeral object, such as a piece of wood, often come from disenfranchised communities. Decades later, their ancestors often lack the rights to the burial site, and site survey technology cannot be brought in without access to the land.

In the U.S., no one even knows how many boarding schools existed. The National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition, formed in 2012 to understand and address the trauma these schools caused, estimates there were 367 in 29 states, with some still in operation today.

Residential schools for Indigenous children in Canada were government-sponsored schools run by churches, and some of their land has been sold off to private individuals who were often not Indigenous themselves. In Brandon, Yellowhorn says, one plot his team wants to search is now part of a trailer park, where one of the cemeteries was located. “That’s something we don’t have any control over,” he said.

The situation is grim for Black cemeteries in the U.S. as well. As America expanded and developed more highways and suburbs, they “were allowed to pave over and build over cemeteries, Black cemeteries,” says Kami Fletcher, an associate professor of history at Albright College in Reading, Pennsylvania.

The African-American Burial Grounds Network Act was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2019 and is working its way through Congress. If passed, it would direct the Department of Interior to set up a network within the National Park Service to help discover, record, and preserve long-ignored cemeteries and graves. Fletcher says widespread support for uncovering and respecting Black graves signals an important change. “Honestly, it really will do a lot because it brings attention to want to study these places,” she said.

A related bill that “directs the National Park Service (NPS) to conduct a study of ways to identify, interpret, preserve, and record unmarked, previously abandoned, underserved, or other burial grounds relating to the historic African American experience” passed the Senate in late 2020.

U sing technology to find unmarked graves can have profound emotional consequences for affected communities. “You can’t just show up with a bunch of gear and push it around and not think that you’re going to have an impact on peoples’ lives,” says Martindale. He says GPR research at residential schools used to be run by universities before some communities began hiring professional firms to do the work.

The preferred model is First Nations themselves developing capacity, says Martindale. Across Canada, many Indigenous groups are acquiring their own site survey equipment, learning how to use it, and leading their own searches.

Small says she’s seldom the most technically skilled person on a survey site, but has a valuable role in bringing in people who know the local tribal customs and language. “I know that as a Cheyenne person that I am more linked to these people, to the children in the cemetery than a non-Native is,” she says.

The Canadian Archaeological Association working group on investigating unmarked graves has outlined a 10-step process for conducting this research. While the order of the steps is up to each community, the first step mentioned recommends community-based work that encourages Indigenous people to lead the effort in finding missing children and includes training people to use site survey technologies. Another step involves offering spiritual and mental health support for the communities. “Before you bring the gear out and start surveying, physically looking for unmarked graves, there’s a lot of things that need to be taken into account,” says Martindale, who is a member of the working group.

Another step, conducting archival research, comes with its own challenges. According to The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, one-third of children who died at residential schools did not have their names recorded upon their death, about one-quarter did not have their gender noted, and one-half had no cause of death cited. While Canada’s federal government signed a memorandum of understanding in early 2022 to release residential school records, that won’t offer a complete picture. Many school records still have not been released by religious groups, including the Catholic Church — and the government says privacy issues can complicate what may be shared.

Yellowhorn and his team in Brandon have identified the names of more than 100 children they suspect may have died at the site of the school. “We ferret through every kind of nook and cranny where we can find any kind of information,” he says, including archival records and oral histories.

The final stage of the process — deciding whether or not to disinter graves — is among the most difficult, and for the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc, still years away: Last year’s GPR survey covered just two acres of the 160-acre site, and its archival research efforts have been stymied by a lack of access to school records held by the federal government and the religious order that ran the school — although the group has committed to handing these over.

As for Yellowhorn, whose research team is still in the early stages of site work in Brandon, he remains optimistic despite the obstacles posed by finances, politics, public perceptions, and the ongoing pandemic. “[It’s] all very new and very raw for people,” he says. Moving forward will involve “finding ways to deal with this, find solace in the work, and recognize that there are things we can do, we’re not powerless here,” and that “knowledge is power.”

Right-wing switchback: “National conservatives” dump Putin, want to claim Ukraine

From the first day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, conservatives on both sides of the Atlantic have been placed in an uneasy position. For more than two decades, right-wing activists and politicians have praised Russia as the unlikely wellspring of renewed traditionalism, as Vladimir Putin intertwined church and state in an effort to bolster Russian nationalism and, more quietly, his aspirations to reconstruct the Soviet empire. 

When the launch of Putin’s war coincided with the first day of the Conservative Political Action conference in late February, a dizzying ideological switchback began. Speakers who had declared just days or hours earlier that they didn’t care about the fate of Ukraine were rapidly forced to recalibrate. Fox News’ Tucker Carlson, who in 2019 declared he was “root[ing] for Russia” in its conflict with Ukraine, was compelled to recant, at least temporarily. In Europe, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who had celebrated his long and fond relationship with Putin in Moscow just weeks before Russia invaded, issued a tepid condemnation. (Hungary is a member state of both the EU and NATO, though its relationship with both is tense.)

At least initially, on the broader, more ideological level, there was a sense that Russia’s aggression — and Putin’s claims that he was fighting not just Ukraine but the whole of the “degenerate” West — would engender a rebuke of the “illiberal” populist movements that have swept far-right leaders into power around the world. 

RELATED: Russia’s holy war: Vladimir Putin, Pope Francis, the Virgin Mary and the fate of Ukraine

As the Washington Post editorial board put it this week, Putin had launched two wars, the second being a war of ideas over the international illiberal agenda Russia has helped lead. Or as columnist Brad Littlejohn wrote at The American Conservative, “behind the battles being waged on the plains of Ukraine was a deeper battle over the narrative that would frame Russia’s invasion, the lessons the West must learn from it, and the vision for a future Europe that ought to emerge on the other side of this crisis.” 

One contingent on the right that might have seemed particularly vulnerable to this reordering of the political arena are the National Conservatives: a relatively new international right-wing coalition that seeks to rehabilitate the idea of nationalism as a virtue and to oppose the emphasis on individual freedom and pluralism in classical liberalism — meaning the libertarian, small-L liberalism that “mainstream” conservatives used to embrace — as incompatible with traditional values. 

For the last several years, the “NatCons,” who held a high-profile meeting in Orlando last November that drew numerous conservative intellectuals and politicians, have labored to combine right-wing social mores, public religiosity and newly interventionist economic policies into a movement better positioned for a populist age. In that effort, they’ve frequently looked to Orbán as inspiration, especially for the way he has wielded authoritarian measures toward traditionalist ends, even as Orbán has clearly been looking to Russia. 

At their recent conference, the NatCons pivoted to the mind-bending claim that Ukraine’s struggle embodies right-wing nationalism, not “Western liberal values.”

Yet when the NatCons gathered several weeks ago in Brussels, for their fifth international conference, the dominant message of the speakers was not reassessment or remorse, but vindication. Not because of any overt or coded sympathy for Russian aggression — the speakers were so uniformly vitriolic in condemning the invasion that conservative writer Rod Dreher, another presenter, noted it was “almost impossible to dissent from anti-Russian maximalism” — but rather because of their ambitious and perhaps mind-bending claim that Ukraine’s struggle against an invading army embodied their values, not those of the democratic center or left. 

One former European Parliament member from the U.K., Brigadier Geoffrey Charles van Orden, claimed, citing an unnamed observer in Ukraine, that there were no evident “Western liberal values behind the noble Ukrainian struggle,” which was rooted in centuries of Ukrainian nationalist patriotism instead. Another speaker, former Hungarian diplomat Attila Demkó, suggested that a woke Western fixation on “micro-aggressions” had left Europe too soft to anticipate a macro-aggressor like Putin. 

Chris DeMuth, former president of the American Enterprise Institute and chair of the 2021 National Conservatism conference, opened the gathering (in a speech later adapted for a Wall Street Journal op-ed), by arguing that “the free world has fallen prey to certain soft conceits which Putin and his ilk are right to see as weaknesses.” While “experts claimed that nation states and borders were barbaric vestiges and global bureaucracies could usher in peace and harmony,” he continued, “it turned out that we had actual barbarians in the here and now, and that nations with borders were essential to peace and harmony.”

All told, reflected conference organizer Yoram Hazony, it was “not a bad moment” for nationalism. Hazony, an Israeli political theorist and chair of the Edmund Burke Foundation, is not just the chief organizer of the NatCon conference series, but one of the main architects of the movement, as author of the 2018 book “The Virtue of Nationalism.” For years, Hazony said, critics of his movement had argued there was little difference between nationalism and imperialism. But the Ukraine war, he said, had demolished that argument. 

Nationalists, he said, looked at Russia’s invasion and recognized it as unjust, proclaiming “that a people has a right, if it’s capable of asserting that right, to be able to chart its own course.” By contrast, “imperialists” — a category Hazony defines in his own terms — viewed the idea of independent nations dismissively, asking, “What difference do the borders really make? And why should everybody have their own laws when we know what the right laws are?” 


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You may guess where this is going. As Hazony continued: “There are plenty of people in Russia who think that.” And likewise, he said, “plenty of people in Brussels, and in Berlin and in Washington.” 

This speaks to a core conviction of the national conservatives: that ever since World War II, the concept of nationalism has been unfairly smeared as the driving force behind the crimes of Hitler’s Germany or Stalin’s Soviet Union, when both examples should correctly be seen as the excesses of empire. 

Ofir Haivry, Hazony’s right-hand man at the Herzl Institute, a Jerusalem think tank, argued that this narrative was a deliberate misrepresentation concocted by liberals and Marxists, who he said had conspired in the aftermath of World War II to deflect blame from their own ideologies — since, as he put it, “many liberals were imperialists and Marxists of course were totalitarian.” Since then, he argued, the liberal domination of academia had propagated the anti-nationalist argument until it became canonical. Today, he continued, the same old con was continuing, with liberals casting Russia’s war “as a conflict between nationalism, represented by Russia, and liberal democracy, represented by Ukraine.” That, in turn, he said, was leading to calls for a new round of imperialism: to erect a “liberal empire” to stand against Russian imperialism. 

The new “Evil Empire”

This, too, gets at a driving narrative among NatCons, and the “post-liberal” conservatives who largely compose its ranks. For them, nationalism, properly understood, represents the good fight against empire, and imperialism these days is primarily found on the left, deploying the soft power of culture, international standards and corporate might to build a “woke” empire that represses conservative or “traditional” values. 

For this new wave of conservatives, nationalism is the good fight against empire, and “woke” imperialism is the province of the left.

The Brussels conference drew numerous politicians, including a Ukrainian ambassador, multiple members of the European Parliament and representatives from national governments including Poland, Hungary, Britain, the Netherlands, Greece and more. Writing in the British publication The Critic, Sebastian Milbank noted that Marion Maréchal, the estranged niece of far-right populist French presidential candidate Marine Le Pen, was initially listed as a speaker but apparently dropped out. But Finnish legislator Päivi Räsänen — whose recent prosecution under Finnish hate speech laws for making anti-LGBTQ statements briefly made her a Fox News cause célèbre — was there with one of her attorneys: an Irish lawyer in France who works for the international wing of Alliance Defending Freedom, a Christian right advocacy group based in the U.S. 

Räsänen’s prosecution — which ended in acquittal two weeks ago — as well as the European Union’s recent sanctions against Poland and Hungary for their repressive policies toward women, LGBTQ people and migrants, and their restrictions on free speech and the courts, were all held up at the conference as examples of how liberal empire works today. 

Judit Varga, Hungary’s minister of justice, delivered an angry rebuke to the EU over the sanctions, charging that the body was using “the rule of law” as “a blackmailing tool to press member states to [toe the line] and if legal measures are not enough, to pressure member states ideologically.” 

Arguing that “political correctness and multiculturalism” have supplanted the common sense that once made Europe great, Varga said, “What is at stake is the European way of life, the respect for Judeo-Christian heritage, our common history and culture, our diversity of national identities and our European freedom. I might say the Christian freedom … that is resilient to the pressure of ideological hegemony and [which] includes not only civil and political freedoms … but also, for example, the right to decide with whom we want to live, the right to defend our families and raise and educate our children in a way we wish to do.” 

Varga was clearly referring to some of Hungary’s most controversial positions, without quite spelling them out. Those include its near-total ban (at least before until the Ukraine war) on migrants and refugees, whom Orbán has cast as “Muslim invaders”; its prohibition on same-sex marriage and LGBTQ adoption rights; and its Russia-inspired “don’t say gay” law that forbids sharing LGBTQ “content” with children. 

Constantinos Bogdanos, a former Greek lawmaker recently expelled from his own party for extremism — he appeared with members of Golden Dawn, a now-defunct neo-Nazi party, and publicized the names of migrant kindergarteners at a school in Athens — described Ukrainians’ valiant defiance of Russia as a model for how conservatives should respond to a liberal political order. “We live in a world that aims towards negating the terms that are the foundation of our common perception and experience,” he said. “There is no respect or even no allowed concept nowadays of what is right and wrong, good or bad. There is no permission to talk about nations, there is no permission to talk about genders. So we all stand with Ukraine because it reintroduces what is right, as simple as that.” 

David Engels, a Belgian historian, was more succinct: The European Union, he declared, was the new “evil empire.” 

Ukrainians are “real refugees” 

There were relatively few American speakers, but Josh Hammer, the right-wing opinion editor of Newsweek, used the occasion to offer his prescription for a NatCon-style immigration policy, founded on the premise that a nation is not just an idea or a constitutional construct, but rather “a common people with a shared culture, religious heritage, customs, habits and a way of life.” 

Such a definition of nationhood, Hammer said, was imperative if countries wanted to be able to establish limits on immigration — contrary to what he described as the EU’s intentional effort to use immigration “to stamp out any local or parochial difference” and “dilute” Europe’s “Christian heritage” by “flood[ing] the continent with migrants of alien cultural or religious backgrounds…and with other colorful inflows more broadly that better reflect the modern left’s intersectional sensibilities.” 

Allowing such a diverse influx, he said, inevitably leads towards “balkanization” as immigrants fail to assimilate. Instead he argued that the U.S. should “codify into law a prioritization above all else of the need for cultural assimilation,” rejecting merit- or skill-based immigration policies in favor of the explicit ethnic restrictions found in countries like Israel or Japan. 

This too was a common theme, as numerous speakers took pains to distinguish between the refugees fleeing war in Ukraine, and the other sorts of refugees they have vehemently opposed for years.

A Hungarian speaker insisted that we can’t “draw any parallel between the Ukrainian refugee crisis and the migration crisis of earlier years,” because they are somehow “completely different.”

Reiterating Orbán’s perspective that migration endangers Hungary’s “cultural sovereignty and self-identity” as well as bringing “social tension and inevitable disturbances while destroying the cultural identity of Europe,” Varga said it was “important not to draw any parallel between the current Ukrainian refugee crisis and the migration crisis of earlier years,” because “this crisis is completely different.” 

Juan Ángel Soto Gómez, the international director of Fundación Disenso, a think tank established by Spain’s right-wing Vox party, likewise charged that large-scale immigration “dissolves national identity” and is a tool being used strategically “by third parties” to create domestic unrest. 

Demkó, the former Hungarian diplomat, made a similar point, declaring of displaced Ukrainians, “These are real refugees from a neighboring country. Not like in 2015 when we were told we had to take refugees from five countries away, 80% [of them] young male.” 

Dreams of a conservative “reconquista”

Following this theme, a number of speakers argued that it was imperative to revive Christianity on a grand scale in Europe in order to maintain its culture. 

Dreher, another mainstay of the NatCon conferences and discourse online, said that while “we must never return to a form of Christianity that persecutes” non-believers, that threat should not deter the faithful from striving to establish “a healthy Christian democracy,” like Hungary’s. “The idea that public Christianity inevitably means bigotry is a slander that secular liberals use to marginalize believers, to intimidate us and to dispossess European peoples of their past,” he said. 

Just such a dispossession had occurred, Dreher continued, when the EU Constitution rejected proposals to designate Christianity as a special aspect of European heritage. That reflected, he claimed, the “totalitarian” impulse to “eliminate the shared memories of the peoples they wish to conquer.” 

David Engels said that there was a deep feeling among conservatives “that our own civilization, like all others before, is gradually coming to an end,” largely due to the dwindling numbers of people who embrace Western civilization as their heritage. “Whoever is a true national patriot knows that the defense of his country is only possible through the defense of the Western identity in its entirety,” he continued. “Only by acknowledging our common Western identity and our common Judeo-Christian values, only by creating a new sacrum imperium, a new holy empire, can we overcome the current EU, the evil empire.” 

Belgian historian David Engels called the EU an “evil empire,” which can be overcome “through the defense of Western identity” and “creating a new sacrum imperium, a new holy empire.”

Engels called for conservatives to establish parallel education, media and social welfare systems outside government control, and to establish “regional power centers” that could serve as a launching pad “for the reconquest of the state as a whole.” Similarly, within the larger context of the EU, he called for Eastern European states to “become an offensive agent of Western patriotism and the conservative reconquista of our continent through economic engagement, media outreach, political pressure and cultural example.” 

Conservatives had reason to hope, he argued, that the war against Russia might not only liberate Ukraine but, eventually, other Russian-dominated countries as well, which would expand the ranks of conservative states to the East. These revitalized nations, he imagined, might “become an effective counterweight to the current Paris-Berlin axis and perhaps bring about a decisive change of course for the European Union.” 

“National populism is not dead”

In the weeks since the conference, questions around the role of the right in Europe have only continued. 

At the beginning of this month, Orbán was reelected to a third term in Hungary, and last weekend in France, far-right candidate Marine Le Pen, long known for her vehement anti-immigration rhetoric, advanced to a runoff against President Emmanuel Macron. The news on both fronts, wrote New York Times conservative columnist Ross Douthat, served as a rude awakening for those who’d hoped that the war in Ukraine might reinvigorate Western liberalism. 

In the case of France, Le Pen’s strong showing, just a few percentage points behind Macron, raised the possibility that a cornerstone of NATO might become one of the newest illiberal nations in the EU. After two previous failed presidential campaigns, Le Pen has tried to soften her image — leading, among other things, to her niece Marion Maréchal endorsing the even further-right Éric Zemmour, a favorite of the NatCon crowd — but has maintained some of her most xenophobic positions, including a promise to amend the French constitution to ban “the installation on national territory of a number of foreigners so large that it would change the composition and identity of the French people.” This result suggests that Le Pen’s connections to Russia, including a 9 million euro Russian bank loan that financed an earlier campaign, and a flyer this year that showed her shaking hands with Putin, haven’t proved politically fatal. 

In Hungary, Orbán proclaimed victory over not just his actual opponent but also against “the international left, the Brussels bureaucrat, the Soros empire with all its money, the international mainstream media, and … even the president of Ukraine.” The last was a response to Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who had chastised Hungary’s neutral stance and challenged Orbán to decide “once and for all…who you are with.” 

To NatCons like Dreher, Orbán’s victory was a heartening sign. The Hungarian leader had savvily positioned himself as a right-wing “peace candidate,” Dreher wrote, and avoided being “morally blackmailed by Zelensky.” This also proved that “national-populism is not dead,” he argued, and that despite the hopes of the “liberal internationalist class,” Putin’s war had not vanquished “Trumpist populism.” 

Dreher called on American conservatives to follow in Orbán’s footsteps and confront the supposed leftist domination of cultural institutions through measures like Republicans’ recent call for punishing Disney. That, Dreher said, was “a pure Orbán move. We need to see more of it.” 

In all likelihood, we will.

Read more from Kathryn Joyce on religion and the far right:

Another Trump hate rally: The threats get worse, and polite America turns away

The American news media has collectively decided to ignore Donald Trump’s threats of white supremacist violence and sedition. If you believe this will keep you safe from his schemes and machinations, or from what his legions of followers may do, you are greatly mistaken.

Apparently, the gatekeepers of the approved public discourse have convinced themselves that they are somehow serving the public interest by ignoring these escalating threats. In reality, these gatekeepers are doing exactly the opposite: They are normalizing American fascism by minimizing its dangers. In a moment when the news media as an institution should sound the alarm even more loudly about the threat to American democracy, safety and security represented by Trumpism and neofascism a choice has been made to mock or whitewash the imminent danger.

One does not ignore an arsonist in the hope that he will stop burning down buildings; the same logic should apply to political arsonists as well.

Did you know that last Saturday Donald Trump held a political hate rally in Selma, North Carolina? If you follow the mainstream news media, the answer is likely no. Here is what you missed. As he has done repeatedly, Donald Trump summoned up the demons of Jim Crow and the Confederacy. He may try to hide his hatred and bigotry by sharing a stage with Black and brown people, and he may disingenuously employ the language of the civil rights movement, but Donald Trump is at his core a white supremacist and racial authoritarian.

RELATED: New research on Trump voters: They’re not the sharpest tools in the box

Donald Trump remains the de facto leader of the Republican Party. He won almost 75 million votes in 2020 — significantly more than in 2016 — because Republican voters enthusiastically agree with him and what he represents. His values are their values. Trumpism and neofascism more generally are both a symptom and a cause of an American political culture and society that is deeply sick with multiple ailments: racism and misogyny, cruelty and greed, anti-LGBTQ bigotry, religious fundamentalism, anti-intellectualism, an obsession with violence and other antisocial and anti-human values.

The relationship between the leader and follower in a political cult such as today’s Republican Party is deep and powerful. Diane Roberts of the Florida Phoenix summarizes this unhealthy psychodynamic:

Republicans are angry.

So very, very angry.

Deranged White Man Syndrome has not yet been listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, but it’s just a matter of time.

Seriously, these dudes (and they are mostly male-gendered persons) are on a rampage of rage and loathing which cannot be healthy….

Living in a constant tantrum must be exhausting for Republicans. I suspect that somewhere in the deep recesses of their brains, they know that while they may hold power at the moment, the world is changing.

And they can’t stand it.

Let’s hope they get serious therapy: This is a sick, sick, sick bunch of people.

To the uninitiated — and also to those who have just become numb to it all — Trump’s North Carolina speech was an uninspired recitation of his personal grievances, malignant narcissism (“I’ve got to be the cleanest, I think I’m the most honest human being, perhaps, that God has ever created”) and victim fantasies, mixed with now-standard talking points about the Big Lie, the 2020 election and Jan. 6, “parents’ rights”, “invaders” at the U.S.-Mexico border, supposed crime and barbarism in “Democrat-run” major cities and an assortment of lies both small and large about Joe Biden and the Democrats.


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But for those attuned to the poisonous gospel that is white supremacy in America, Trump’s words and the danger they represent were very clear. As a matter of self-defense and survival, Black and brown folks must be keenly aware of such words. Trump’s cult followers and other members of the conservative movement and larger white right also hear his words and understand their message clearly. For them, Trump’s words are inspiration and aspiration.

Too many Americans choose not to hear Trump’s gospel of hate — it all feels so unseemly and uncomfortable. They truly believe that they have the luxury to ignore reality.

Too many other Americans choose not to hear Trump and the white right’s gospel of hate because it all feels so unseemly and uncomfortable. They may be fence-sitters, in denial about the realities of American neofascism and this moment of crisis. Or they may turn away because various forms of privilege, be it race, class, gender, religion or sexual orientation enables them to do so. Those who possess such privilege and other forms of unearned advantages truly believe that they have the luxury to ignore reality — until it is no longer possible to do so.

Trump’s gospel of hate in Selma focused on three main points. He spoke about the “heritage” of the South and how it is supposedly being destroyed or deleted by “woke” liberals with their political correctness. Here Trump was directly alluding to Confederate statues and other monuments — as well as the Confederate flag — originally erected to honor the white supremacist Southern secessionist traitors and their bloody desperate struggle to keep Black Americans as human property forever. Many or most such monuments were actually erected in the first decades of the 20th century, specifically to terrorize Black Americans, reminding them that they are supposed to be second-class citizens in their own country.

Today’s Republican Party embraces the Lost Cause ideology and the Confederacy as something noble and good. That was visible in the Confederate flags seen at Selma, as well as those seen at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Those symbols cannot be salvaged or reclaimed. They represent a white supremacist insurrection against the very idea of multiracial democracy.

In an example of the rhetorical strategy known as “narrative laundering,” Donald Trump also summoned up the Black Freedom Struggle and the 14th Amendment to the Constitution and the Equal Protection Clause while defending his followers who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6. This is the newest iteration of the Big Lie, with its claims that these fascists are “political prisoners” who were “entrapped” by the Democrats and law enforcement agencies. Trump echoed the lie that has become widespread among Republicans that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is somehow responsible for the violence of Jan. 6, rather than Trump and his fellow coup plotters. 

To use the language of the 14th Amendment — explicitly added to the Constitution to protect the civil rights of Black Americans after their centuries of enslavement and then hard-won freedom — as a cheap tool for defending the fascists who were fighting to overthrow multiracial democracy is perverse even by Trump’s standards. 

Using the language of the 14th Amendment — added to protect the civil rights of Black people who had won their freedom — to defend fascists is perverse even by Trump standards.

As he has reliably done at all his recent political hate rallies, in Selma Trump continued to incite political violence and terrorism against Joe Biden, the Democrats and liberals and progressives more generally. He called the Democrats “sick and radical politicians,” claiming they were “destroying” America from within and must be stopped. Trump also claimed the right-wing paramilitaries who were recently acquitted on charges of planning to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer as fellow “victims” of some non-existent Democratic Party conspiracy. 

Like other Republican-fascists and their propagandists, Trump continued to fan the flames of the QAnon conspiracy theory and the larger right-wing moral panic around “gender issues” and “critical race theory,” claiming that (white) children and the (white) American family are in physical and moral danger from “the left.” These threats are not implied: such language is an encouragement to violence and other forms of right-wing terrorism. As seen by the events of Jan. 6 such combustible language has real-world effects.

When more right-wing violence inevitably occurs, the news media will of course engage in collective shock and surprise, expressing wide-eyed disbelief that such things could actually happen in America. 

Indeed, how could such things happen? After seven or so years of a rising fascist threat, none of this should be a surprise for anyone who has paid even the slightest of attention. That it is still a “surprise” to many of the country’s pundits, opinion leaders and others who are supposed to know better says far too much about their increasing irrelevance in this interregnum of American history. 

Trump’s Republican Party and the larger neofascist movement are unified around one goal, which is creating a 21st-century version of American apartheid. This revolutionary campaign involves reversing the gains of the civil rights movement and Black Freedom Struggle and also undoing the victories of the women’s rights, LGBTQ rights, labor and environmental movements, along with all other attempts to build a social democracy in which equal freedoms and rights are enjoyed by all Americans.

The Democratic Party has shown itself to be largely ineffective, powerless and incompetent in their response to the neofascist attacks on democracy. This is part of a much larger pattern: For more than 50 years the Republican Party and the “conservative” movement have won and kept power by leveraging the politics of white racial resentment and grievance-mongering, even though their policies are extremely unpopular with most of the public. In many ways, Trumpism, neofascism and straightforward white identity politics are the next step in that political strategy.

What should the Democrats do? They need to speak in clear and direct terms about the dangers the Republicans represent. Democrats also need to make clear to their voters and the larger public that Republicans (and the Trump movement specifically) view liberals, progressives, Black and brown people, the LGBTQ community and other marginalized groups as enemies and an existential threat to their right-wing nightmare version of America. That animus is not about “mere” disagreements about public policy or just a matter of “polarization,” partisanship or hyperbolic language. It is a direct threat of violence, with the goal of eliminating the “enemy” in order to “purify” America.  

In even more plain speech: if you are not white (and a man), a heterosexual, and a so-called “Christian,” today’s Republican Party, the “conservative” movement, and the larger white right do not like you. They want you to suffer. Republicans are masters at the personalization of grievance, and will lie and distort reality and the facts to frighten their voters in order to win, maintain and expand their political power and societal control.

Democrats need to respond in kind by personalizing the dangers that Republicans, the “conservative” movement, and the larger white right pose to the American people as a whole. This is a remarkably easy strategy to implement: All it requires is for Democrats to tell the truth about the human misery that Republicans and “conservatives” have caused for decades — and the much worse misery they will cause in the future. 

Yet out of gross denial, or perhaps naive investment in a “normal” political order that is dying and cannot be resurrected, the Democrats have not done that and likely never will. This is not even defeat. It’s surrender, and a pitiable sight at a moment when courage is required to save American democracy and society from the neofascist assault.

Read more on the endless saga of our 45th president:

New trucker blockade shuts down shipments — to protest Texas GOP Gov. Greg Abbott’s border policies

Commercial traffic at a key South Texas border crossing has stopped after Mexican truckers on Monday blocked north – and southbound lanes on the Mexico side of the Pharr-Reynosa International Bridge in protest of Texas Gov. Greg Abbott‘s decision to have state troopers inspect northbound commercial vehicles — historically a job done by the federal government.

The bridge connecting Pharr and Reynosa is the busiest trade crossing in the Rio Grande Valley and handles the majority of the produce that crosses into the U.S. from Mexico, including avocados, broccoli, peppers, strawberries and tomatoes. On Monday, with trucks backed up for miles in Reynosa for the fifth day in a row, some produce importers in Texas said they have waited days for their goods to arrive and already had buyers cancel orders.

“One of our customers canceled the order because we didn’t deliver on time,” said Modesto Guerra, sales manager for Sterling Fresh Inc., which imports broccoli from Central Mexico via the Pharr bridge before shipping it to the Midwest and East Coast. “It’s something beyond our control.”

While many companies cross perishable foods in refrigerated trucks, Guerra said the bottlenecks could lead to equipment failures that cause produce and other products to spoil in the heat.

“Those refrigerated units are powered by diesel,” Guerra said. “These trucks are in line and when the diesel runs out they have no way of refueling.”

International bridges elsewhere in the Valley, as well as in Eagle Pass, El Paso and Laredo, have also seen delays, with many commercial products produced in Mexico — like electronics, vehicle parts and medical instruments — also held up. A similar protest appeared to be playing out in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, on Monday afternoon, affecting traffic into and out of El Paso, according to Border Report.

In response to the Biden administration’s recent announcement that it plans to end Title 42 — a pandemic-era emergency health order that lets federal officials turn away migrants at the border without the chance to request asylum — Abbott on Wednesday ordered the Texas Department of Public Safety to increase its inspections of commercial vehicles, which he said drug cartels use to smuggle humans and drugs into the United States.

At times, DPS troopers appear to be checking every commercial vehicle that crosses select international bridges, with each inspection taking between 45 minutes and an hour.

Mexican news outlets reported that about 500 truckers are blocking southbound traffic into Mexico to prevent the entrance of U.S. trucks. Truckers told El Mañana in Reynosa that they had waited three to four days at the international bridge and were running out of fuel while they waited.

One trucker told the news outlet that prior to Abbott’s order, he made two crossings into the U.S. a day. Now, he’d be lucky to have one or two a week given the long delays at the bridges.

“We are losing just as much as them,” he said. “When they start needing more produce, the prices are going to go up.

“No one has told us what the reason for this is or asked what solutions we can come up with together,” he added, saying the blockade will continue until their issues are resolved. “All we know is that it’s an order from the governor of Texas.”

Abbott’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Drivers at the Ysleta Port of Entry connecting El Paso and Ciudad Juárez, also commonly referred to as the Zaragoza Bridge, parked their trucks in the northbound commercial lanes with their trailers also blocking the southbound commercial lanes around 3 p.m. Monday after complaining about spending several hours in line to cross the border, according to Border Report.

David Coronado, El Paso’s managing director of international bridges and economic development, did not respond to a request for comment on Monday evening.

From 3 to 5 p.m. Monday, the average time for commercial vehicles to cross the border at the Ysleta Port of Entry peaked around 420 minutes, or seven hours, according to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection website. That’s far above normal wait times.

For personal vehicles and pedestrians, wait times to cross at the Ysleta Port of Entry remain standard for a Monday evening, according to the Border Protection website.

U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez, D-McAllen, joined a chorus of elected officials from the border who called on Abbott to rethink his strategy, saying the DPS inspections duplicate inspections already conducted by the federal government at the ports of entry.

“Governor Abbott’s unnecessary secondary inspections are killing business on the border,” Gonzalez said in a written statement to The Texas Tribune. “If this continues it will cause further supply line issues impacting America. And we will see prices of produce and other imports rise at the grocery store. He needs to allow the U.S. Customs and Border [Protection] inspection folks to do their job.”

Commercial traffic bottlenecks on the Mexican side of the Pharr-Reynosa bridge are not unusual. From time to time, disgruntled Mexican farmers have used their tractors to block traffic in the border state of Tamaulipas to protest low government payments. Sometimes their protests disrupt traffic flow within Reynosa, and other times they block bridge traffic.

International bridges across the Texas-Mexico border also saw significant lines in 2019 when former President Donald Trump reassigned hundreds of customs officers from ports of entry to assist Border Patrol in dealing with detaining migrants crossing the border in between the bridges.

Those delays lasted hours or days in some cases. This time, importers and local officials are bracing for an even longer disruption to cross-border trade. Even without state troopers stopping vehicles, inspection times at international bridges have long been a source of delays due to federal staffing shortages as well as technology and infrastructure problems.

Hidalgo County Judge Richard Cortez said he can’t remember a Texas governor upending international trade along the border like this.

“This is a very serious situation,” Cortez said in an interview. “Truckers on the Mexican side closed the bridge so nothing can come across. I mean, what has happened is idiotic. It really is.”

The delays are happening during one of the busiest weeks of the year at border crossings. Semana Santa, or Holy Week, started on Sunday and lasts through Saturday, and many families typically cross the border to see relatives, causing long lines at the bridges.

Teclo Garcia, the economic development director for Laredo, said city officials understand there are security issues the state wants to address, but the state didn’t contact local officials to discuss the best way to address those issues.

“We’re dealing with 20,000 truck crossings a day [in Laredo] — there are security issues but that’s why our federal partners are there,” Garcia said. “If [the state] wants to do more we can do more, but let’s not impede trade.”

Garcia said it’s too soon to know what economic impact the DPS inspections will have on the city, which has the busiest commercial crossings on the southwest border, but he added that eventually they could affect the entire country.

“Of course, this is going to affect Laredo, El Paso and Brownsville, but the real impact is going to be in the supply chain which is already strained and the consumer,” Garcia said.

On Saturday, five state senators from the border region asked Abbott in a letter to reconsider his directive, saying the increased inspections were “generating delays and stalling the movement of goods at the ports of entry.”

On Monday, state Sen. Juan “Chuy” Hinojosa, D-McAllen, whose district includes the Pharr bridge, called the situation “a crisis and a mess that has been created, but it was not necessary.”

“Many of my constituents are asking ‘Why are we being punished?’ The Valley supports border security, but this doesn’t seem to have much or anything to do with border security,” Hinojosa added. “This is hurting people in their pocketbook.”

State Rep. Terry Canales, D-Edinburg, said a group of state House members from border communities also plans to send a letter to the governor. He said the governor’s announcement last week appeared to be purely political and the new inspections will have little effect on border security.

“All the stated goals of border security are not working and they don’t have a practical aspect other than [being] red meat,” he said. “I’m a big fan of beef for dinner but enough red steak and red meat will kill you.”

Abbott on Monday touted the state’s increasing border security efforts during a speech at the annual meeting of the Texas Border Sheriffs Coalition in El Paso, saying it’s been successful in apprehending drug smugglers and people previously convicted of murder. He said the Biden administration’s plan to end Title 42 next month could be “cataclysmic” for border communities because immigration officials are expecting up to 18,000 encounters a day with immigrants once Title 42 removals end. The current average is 6,000 a day.

According to an investigation by The Marshall Project, ProPublica and The Texas Tribune, the state had been including drug seizures and arrests for crimes far from the border to its Operation Lone Star tally — and later revised the arrest numbers.

Last week, Abbott announced the state would be transporting migrants who already have been processed and released by federal immigration officials to Washington, D.C., or other places on buses. Later, he said the bus rides would be voluntary.

On Monday, Abbott said the buses are already available in some border counties and instructed local officials who need a bus to contact their county emergency management coordinator to request one.

He said the state is offering bus rides because some border cities don’t have the services or infrastructure to help transport the migrants to their final destination.

“If Border Patrol drops people off in your county, you will be able to work with the state to transport people out of your county to a location where they will be immediately connected with either Border Patrol professionals, [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] officials or other appropriate federal authorities,” Abbott said.

Typically, when migrants have been released from immigration officials’ custody, local nonprofit organizations help many of them get in touch with friends and family already in the United States. The migrants usually pay for their own transportation to other parts of the country, then wait for their asylum requests to be resolved in immigration courts.

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

Russian state TV teases “preparations” to help “partner” Trump win in 2024

Propagandists on Russian state television told their public audience last week that the time has arrived to sever diplomatic relations with the United States and that the Kremlin is finalizing its “preparations” to interfere with future American elections.

“The Daily Beast’s” Julia Davis reported on Monday that President Joe Biden’s unwavering support for Ukraine has revitalized Moscow’s appetite for manipulating the American electorate.

Their objective, one of the individuals revealed, is to “again help our partner,” former President Donald Trump, “to become president.”

But Davis’ takeaway was a little broader. While Trump is certainly a valued asset inside of Russia, Davis believes that “the real agenda of the Kremlin’s operatives was never limited to boosting any particular candidates, but rather aimed to harm America as a whole.”

This line of thinking was evident in conversations that occurred among Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “puppets” on state television, Davis found.

“With Europe, economic wars should take priority. With America, we should be working to amplify the divisions and — in light of our limited abilities — to deepen the polarization of American society,” political scientist Malek Dudakov said on Thursday’s edition of “The Evening With Vladimir Soloviev”.  

“There is a horrific polarization of society in the United States, very serious conflicts between the Democrats and Republicans that keep expanding. You’ve already mentioned that America is a dying empire — and most empires weren’t conquered, they were destroyed from within. The same fate likely awaits America in the near decade,” he continued. “That’s why, when all the processes are thawed, Russia might get the chance to play on that.”

Davis noted that the show’s host, Vladimir Soloviev, believes that Putin’s bloody war in Ukraine and the US’s backing of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s government is a preview of an upcoming clash between the US and Russia that is only starting to heat up.

He lamented that Russia’s ability to spread disinformation was significantly diminished when Russia Today was banned on American airwaves after Putin attacked Ukraine. 

“I would act through various diasporas” to make up for the elimination of that channel for misinformation, Soloviev said. “For example, I would work with the Spanish-speaking media—since America is becoming predominantly Spanish-speaking, with the colossal influence of Latin America, I would work through their press, through those narratives, moving in that direction… they aren’t allowing us to work with American media directly, but we have many opportunities that we aren’t using thus far.”

Other chatter, however, went far beyond ideological battles, according to what Davis’ witnessed on Soloviev’s program just days earlier:

Pundit Karen Shakhnazarov: “I would find it useful to break diplomatic relations with the United States. I don’t see any point in maintaining them. And that would deliver a crushing blow to Biden. There are plenty of people in the U.S. who say that he is bringing us all to the edge of nuclear war. That will be a strong signal.”

Soloviev expanded on that point, suggesting that Russia should just go ahead and nuke the US because that is the true nature of the war in Ukraine.

“De facto, we aren’t fighting a campaign against Ukraine, but against the entire West,” he said. “Maybe it’s time we strike them?” he added, referring to the US, “since we’re already a pariah state, a war criminal if everything is so bad.”

Davis pointed out that “short of nuclear holocaust, it is now clear that Russia is focusing its efforts on distracting America from its foreign policy objectives by threatening to meddle in US internal affairs.” 

Konstantin Dolgov, the deputy chairman of the Committee on Economic Policy of Russia’s Federation Council, confirmed as much on Soloviev’s show.

“The results will apparently not be good for the Democrats,” he said of the November midterms, which he designated as “just a rehearsal. The main elections are further ahead and preparations for those are already underway.”

The poignant victory of Britney Spears’ pregnancy announcement

Britney Spears may have caused some confusion with her latest Instagram post but regardless, the pop star’s ardent fans are both excited and supportive of her major announcement.

On Monday, Spears posted a photo of a pink teacup and matching pink flowers on her Instagram page alongside a lengthy caption, generously filled with emojis, about her sudden weight gain following a recent trip to Maui.

I thought “Geez . . . what happened to my stomach ???” My husband said “No you’re food pregnant silly!!!” Spears wrote. “So I got a pregnancy test . . . and uhhhhh well . . . I am having a baby . . . 4 days later I got a little more food pregnant It’s growing!!!”

RELATED: #FreeBritney! And while we’re at it, free the women of Saudi Arabia too

Spears then opened up about her experiences with perinatal depression, which she experienced during her previous pregnancy. According to the National Institute of Mental Health, perinatal depression can affect women during pregnancy and after childbirth. Symptoms include intense and prolonged feelings of extreme sadness, anxiety, and fatigue.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CcONvpGOelB/?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet

“I have to say it is absolutely horrible . . . women didn’t talk about it back then . . . some people considered it dangerous if a woman complained like that with a baby inside her . . . but now women talk about it everyday . . . thank Jesus we don’t have to keep that pain a reserved proper secret,” Spears continued.

“This time I will be doing yoga every day!!! Spreading lots of joy and love!!!” she added, ending her message on a positive note.

The post easily earned close to 2 million likes and a slew of celebratory messages from followers and celebrities alike.  

“Congratulations sis!! I’m so excited for you!! Love you!!!” wrote her pal, socialite Paris Hilton, who has been public about using IVF to try and conceive.

“Jersey Shore” star Jenni Farley, better known as JWoww, simply commented “Congratulations” next to the heart and bottle with popping cork emojis. Even the official accounts for Spotify, the audio streaming provider, and additional young adult focused retail companies, like Boohoo and Aerie, issued their simple congratulations with plenty of exclamation marks and hearts.

While congratulations are often in order when it comes to pregnancy/baby announcements, this one feels particularly poignant because of what it took to get there. For Spears, this baby represents one of many major decisions she can finally make about her personal life and bodily autonomy after being denied for over a decade.

Spears has two children — Sean Preston Federline, 16, and Jayden James Federline, 15 — from her previous marriage with dancer Kevin Federline. The “Gimme More” singer has previously expressed her desire to have a baby with her current partner Sam Asghari, a personal trainer, but was forced to stay on birth control under her 13-year-long conservatorship, which finally came to an end in November of last year.

“I want to get married and have a baby,” Spears told the court. “I wanted to take the IUD out and have a baby but the conservator won’t let me because they don’t want me to have a baby.”


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Throughout her legal battles, Spears has amassed a growing fanbase that helped launch the trending #FreeBritney hashtag and additional social media campaigns to kickstart a widespread movement on behalf of the singer’s well-being. The outpouring of support under Spears’ post once again illustrates just how much the public is still very much engaged with cheering on her hard-earned agency.

Shortly after Spears’ post, Asghari also took to Instagram to share a picture of a lion family and a supportive yet vague caption, which may have implied but did not explicitly confirm if the pair is expecting.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CcOnyBevSVC/?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet

“Marriage and kids are a natural part of a strong relationship filled with love and respect. Fatherhood is something i have always looked forward to and i don’t take lightly,” he wrote. “It is the most important job i will ever do.”

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“More human than we thought”: Orangutans have their own “dialects,” just like us

Perhaps via word association or inundation in popular culture, orangutans are synonymous with their recognizably reddish-orange fur. But the “orang” sound in their name has nothing to do with their distinct coloration: the name orangutan means “person of the forest” in the Malay language. The moniker may be more accurate than we knew.

“They’re extremely intelligent, they’re very similar to us, they have cultures, they have prototypical behaviors that are assumed to be precursive of language,” Dr. Adriano Lameira told Salon.

One of our closest living relatives, orangutans share 96.4% of their genes with humans. These critically endangered great apes also share a similar knack for communication. Indeed, orangutans, like other great apes, have long been known to exhibit high levels of cognitive functioning. They can recall and convey information about the past or the future to others, despite their solitary nature. 

Now, scientists have demonstrated that social dynamics play a role in verbal communication among orangutans. The results discredit a widely held view that orangutans are pre-wired to produce vocalizations instinctually. What they found was that orangutan communication style depends on social influence, and is startlingly similar to human expression.

Related: The Bornean orangutan population has fallen by nearly 150,000 in just 16 years

Intriguingly, orangutans that lived in densely populated areas expressed more individuality in their verbal communication style. Lameira compared the effect to the variety of fashion choices in a city.

“Like us, when great apes are exposed to different social settings, this molds how they communicate — which is basically what happens when a person is learning a new language, as a child or an infant learning the mother tongue or later as an adult learning a second language.” 

“There seems to be a premium on novelty,” he described. “They tend to always search for new variants in the sound space that they can use. They’re always picking new combinations and new inflection almost like an expression of individuality to stand out. The thing is that everyone is doing that, so the shared repertoire between all individuals is actually very small because everyone is always trying to be novel.”

He described it as “a bit of a cacophony.” Those orangutans living in isolation were more likely to revert to familiar vocalizations, like old friends falling back on familiar phrases or inside jokes. More complex repertoires also emerged in conjunction with isolation.


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“Like us, when great apes are exposed to different social settings, this molds how they communicate — which is basically what happens when a person is learning a new language, as a child or an infant learning the mother tongue or later as an adult learning a second language,” Lameira continued.

However, Lameira cautiously avoided describing verbal skills of orangutans or other great apes as a “language.” Still, his team’s findings, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, suggest humans are not alone in our capacity for language development. We just got there first.

Studying great apes is the key to understanding the origin of humanity’s linguistic abilities. Traditionally-held hypotheses assert that short of divine intervention some massive genetic jackpot led humanity to dramatically leapfrog over other hominids. Lameira explained that a growing body of evidence, including this report, shows a gradual transition. 

“We like to enjoy ourselves on a pedestal above the rest of the animal world, but it creates a puzzle because then we have no idea of how our capacity for language, which was transformative, came to be,” Lameira elaborated. “The only chances that this traditional idea leaves us is that there was a huge jump, very sudden, almost random, unpredictable.”

The report goes so far as to offer support for rights of great apes akin to those held sacrosanct for humans. Indeed, Lameira added that these findings go further than simply explaining human evolution. They should be a call for a greater level of respect for what is simply another branch in the same evolutionary lineage.

“There’s not much that differs us from these animals,” he asserted. “If they are open to social influence as we are, then either they are a little bit more human than we thought, or we are a bit more ape than we would like to admit.”

The dire conditions of orangutans and other great apes in the wild are a testament to a failure of human stewardship of our planet, much to the contrary of the human superiority complex. Their very existence is in question as a direct result of humanity. Deforestation, hunting, and illegal wildlife trade contribute to their dwindling numbers. Fewer than 120,000 orangutans remain in the wild with a range limited to the rainforests of Borneo and Sumatra, according to the World Wildlife Fund.

Read more about great apes and cognition:

J.K. Rowling organizes boozy TERF lunch amidst protest and march for transgender rights

A boozy lunch at London’s prestigious River Café — an exclusive Michelin-star restaurant — soon became the talk of the town on social media. Why? Because the Sunday morning affair was essentially a trans-exclusionary fest attended by writer J.K. Rowling and a slew of gender-critical women’s rights campaigners.  

The private event, which was broadcast on Twitter, celebrated the launch of “Respect My Sex If You Want My ‘X,'” a women’s rights campaign that “encourages voters to ask politicians for their views on sex and gender identity,” per The Times.

“In corporations and councils, from parliament to playgrounds, the two sexes — man and woman, male and female — are being sidelined in language, law, policy and public spaces,” the campaign’s official webpage states. “Biological sex is a fact of life. It is simple and straightforward, and central to how we organise our world. But now the concept of sex is being undermined.”

RELATED: What makes some people hold transphobic views?

The lunch reportedly took place at the same time as a trans-rights protest urging Prime Minister Boris Johnson to include transgender people in a U.K. conversion therapy ban. According to Pink News — which first broke the news — the legislation was recently reinstated but only covers “gay conversion therapy,” making it completely legal for trans people to be subjected to such atrocities.

Rowling previously tweeted that she would march with her trans followers if they “were discriminated against on the basis of being trans.” She was, of course, nowhere to be seen during the demonstration and instead, mingling with her to further diminish trans-rights.  

Alongside Rowling was journalist Helen Joyce, who penned the 2021 book “Trans: When Ideology Meets Reality,” and radical feminist writer Julie Bindel, who is also the co-founder of the campaigning organization Justice for Women. Rosie Duffield, the Labour MP for Canterbury, who has been criticized by trans activists for her discriminatory beliefs, was also in attendance. And so were feminist philosopher Kathleen Stock, who resigned from the University of Sussex over her controversial views on transgender rights, and researcher Maya Forstater, who notably lost her job in 2019 for the same reasons.

Rowling’s own transphobic rhetoric first came to light in June 2020, when she called out a Devex op-ed for using the term “people who menstruate” instead of “women.” The “Harry Potter” author continued to voice her harmful beliefs in blog posts and even a 3,500-word essay, asserting that trans-rights essentially threatens the women’s rights movement. Last month, Rowling also openly opposed Scotland’s Gender Recognition Reform Bill, which would improve the process by which trans people can legally change their gender.

In recent years, Rowling has emerged as a contentious, radical figure. And her opinions, which are available to view on Twitter, garnered backlash from fans and co-workers alike, prompting Rowling to label herself as a “victim of cancellation.” But according to a recent report from IndieWire’s Chris Lindahl, that is simply not true. Rowling’s own business is booming — U.S. sales of her books are increasing, Universal’s Harry Potter theme parks are flourishing and the “Harry Potter” spin-off “Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore” releases Friday. Rowling also touts approximately 14 million Twitter followers and flaunts an impressive net worth of around $1 billion.   


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“That Rowling is able to maintain such strong opinions often viewed as unfavorable — especially in the liberal Hollywood community — while continuing to rake in many millions of dollars likely speaks to the ability of the Harry Potter brand to stand on its own,” writes Lindahl.

“Another test for Rowling’s popularity will come in August, when she releases the sixth book in her Cormoran Strike series, published under the pen name Robert Galbraith,” he concludes. Rowling allegedly chose a male pseudonym “to take my writing persona as far away as possible for me.”

More stories to check out:

Omelets are hard to master and more lessons learned from “The Julia Child Challenge”

Before Julia Child ever demonstrated her “bean trick” for learning how to make omelets on TV, she wrote about it in “Mastering the Art of French Cooking.”

“A simple-minded but perfect way to master the movement is to practice outdoors with half a cupful of dried beans.”

I have to admit it was a genius gimmick for TV (though filming me trying to do it on Jackson Avenue in the early aughts might have come close).

And so we are led into “Julia on TV” week on “The Julia Child Challenge” with a montage of Julia’s various mistakes and adjustments while filming. But I have a question: Aren’t all the weeks about Julia on TV? Isn’t that the whole point of the competition?

The guest judges are Sherry Yard and Stephanie Boswell, both pastry chefs, so I suspect I can guess a thing or two about the second challenge.

Meanwhile, the first challenge is an omelet aka the first dish Julia ever made on TV. This moment is depicted in the HBO miniseries “Julia,”  which makes for an interesting double-feature with this show. (Sarah Lancashire is terrific!)

The judges discuss how tricky omelets are to master. For one thing, you don’t want any color on it, and the texture inside has to be custardy — not too runny, not too dry. It’s very much a goldilocks situation. Omelets are hard, man!

“Actually, they’re all wearing the same clothes. Did they all churn these out in one day? That sounds exhausting.”

First, something has been bothering me. Why is Jaíne wearing the same (adorable) crawdad dress in every interview? Actually, they’re all wearing the same clothes. Did they all churn these out in one day? That sounds exhausting.

Simple is the name of the game. Dustin adds leeks and Gruyère to his omelet, which he drapes with saffron hollandaise. Sherry twice questions his choice to top his egg omelet with hollandaise. “Egg on egg?”

Dillon responds by saying, “Uh, eggs benedict?” which makes me laugh. 

The omelets are perfectly cooked. Head judge Antonia Lofaso (“Top Chef“) likes his trick of grating the Gruyère on the microplane so it melts seamlessly into the omelet. “To me, that is brilliant cooking.”

Bill turns out a simple omelet with a take on Coquilles St.-Jacques (scallops in wine sauce) to top it, though he seems to be using shrimp instead of scallops. It sounds great, but something is wrong. The sauce tastes weirdly sweet, and he can’t figure out why. 

“The mystery is solved . . . He definitely accidentally grabbed the sweet vermouth instead of the dry.”

The mystery is solved by Antonia during the judging process. Bill definitely accidentally grabbed the sweet vermouth instead of the dry. (This is why you don’t keep sweet vermouth in the house.) He’s doctored it up, however, and Stephanie actually likes the sweet! His omelets are also perfect.

Jaíne accompanies her simple omelet with blue cheese, salad and prosciutto. Antonia thinks the blue cheese is a little overwhelming, while Stephanie thinks it was just slightly overdone. 

The second challenge is French desserts. To see what dessert they’ll be drawing inspiration from, the challengers each pick a remote, which makes me roll my eyes . . . but wait! Wait, this is kind of cute! Each remote has a number on it that corresponds to an episode of “The French Chef.” 

Britt clicks and gets Apple Charlotte. She does a fist pump. Apparently, apples are her favorite fruit to bake with . . . which OK! Sure!

Jaíne gets chocolate cake. I have the feeling she has this one in the bag.

Julia ChildAmerican chef Julia Child stands in front of a countertop, holding a whisk and a ladle by a mixing bowl, possibly on the set of her TV series, “The French Chef.” (New York Times Co./Getty Images)

Bill gets a meringue cake thingy that makes me break out in a cold sweat simply from looking at it. And, indeed, he seems to be dreading this task. “Not only have I never made a meringue cake, I’ve never even tasted one, so I have no reference for this.”

Dustin gets a strawberry tart, which doesn’t seem so bad to me, but he winces. In an earlier interview, he admitted that his experience with baking was “failure after failure after failure after failure.” This is the first time we’ve seen him uncertain. A little humility can be a very good thing — even for fitness instructors.

Jaíne makes (among many other things) something called briadeiro, a Brazilian bite-sized fudge candy, to top her chocolate coffee trifle. It looks magnificent coming out to the table. Everyone deems it a great success, though Sherry starts her critique with “it’s shockingly un-sweet” and “the oxymoron of desserts.” It remains unclear for several seconds if these are compliments.

RELATED: Julia Child’s secret sauce and the little black dresses of French cuisine

Bill brings out a meringue tartlet with passion fruit curd and a blueberry compote, which looks both adorable and correct despite his worry. As usual with Bill, everything comes off well in the end.

Britt has brioche pudding roundlets (whatever those are). I had my doubts about her ability to make a bread pudding in the time allotted — and it turns out I was right. Soaking the bread longer would have improved the texture. There are also issues with the cook on her apples. Uh oh, Britt! Her flavors are generally good, but time keeps biting her in the ass.

Dustin makes a strawberry tart napoleon. They look lovely — even after Stephanie warned him about his pastry being overdone. Everyone is coming (gently!) down on him for not having enough patisserie cream. It’s a rare stumble for our Dustin.

“Despite my nitpicks about the silly stretches this show makes to create weekly themes, it’s a great use of the Julia Child footage.”

In the end, it’s down to three — and next week’s finale. Bill comes in first, with Jaíne in second. Personally, I would have switched those two rankings — but I’m not mad about it. Britt is, unsurprisingly, out.

Despite my nitpicks about the silly stretches this show makes to create weekly themes, it’s a great use of the Julia Child footage available from the archives. Is it treacly? Sure! Contrived? Yeah. But, by now, I actually believe these amateur cooks have come to love Julia — if they didn’t already.

The Julia Child Challenge” airs Mondays at 9pm EST/8pm CST on The Food Network; it is also available to stream on discovery+.

Read more stories about Julia Child and Julie Powell on Salon:

Scott Galloway on big tech, doctor’s offices and why “free college is a dumb idea”

Scott Galloway thinks we’ve weaponized obesity and that free college is a “dumb” idea. The author, podcaster, entrepreneur and, as he is known on Twitter, Professor isn’t afraid to speak his mind. As the host of a brand new CNN + series called “No Mercy, No Malice” and the author of “Post Corona: From Crisis to Opportunity,” he’s shared plenty of them.

On a recent episode of “Salon Talks,” Galloway opened up about how COVID transformed scientific innovation, why going to see your doctor is such a terrible retail experience and why we need to stop talking college education like we do about Chanel bags. Watch my conversation with Galloway here, or read it below.

This conversation has been lightly edited for clarity.

Let’s start with CNN +. New network, new show. Tell me about what the show is, and what you’re going to be talking out every week.

We’re still figuring it out, but we’re trying to talk about the collision of technology and business and society. When I was initially asked to do the show, I asked them what they wanted, and they said, “We want your unfiltered takes on technology in the business world.” “Unfiltered” is the way I would describe it.


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One of the phrases I have heard you using has been, “Corona as an accelerant.” Tell me what that means. What that has meant in terms of an accelerant in health care, in business, as opposed to a change agent? 

I think that will be COVID’s enduring feature from a business standpoint. It hasn’t really spawned a ton of new trends. It’s just taken the slope of the trajectory of trends who were already in place. There were more kids moving in with their parents, but now more young adults under the age of 30 are living with their parents than living on their own. Home delivery of grocery was growing, but it accelerated a decade. E-commerce, in the first eight weeks of the pandemic, accelerated a decade. For government spending, in 2020, we spent what we were supposed to spend in 2044. Remote work was a trend. It accelerated dramatically. Pre-pandemic, less than 1% of doctor’s office visits were virtual. By the middle of 2021, 30% were virtual.

“Everything is here, it’s just here faster.”

We’ve seen telehealth, remote learning, work from home, home delivery of grocery, e-commerce, government spending this notion that we should just cut checks to our neediest, a trend towards UBI [universal basic income]. There’s just been a massive acceleration in some of the biggest trends in our society. The consumption of media at home, we’ve going to see $140 billion invested in the original scripted programming this year. That’s greater than the defense budget of Germany. I would argue everything is here, it’s just here faster.

RELATED: Sanders still championing for universal Medicare

Telemedicine is an opportunity to bring health care to people who don’t have access, who can’t travel. But there’s the potential there to disrupt health care in a way that’s not great. As you put it, there’s a lot of ill will we have towards health care. What can we be doing to take advantage of this, especially those of us who don’t have unlimited resources?

There’s a lot of silver linings here. Arguably health care is the most disruptable business in the world. It’s arguably the largest consumer business in the world. It’s about a $3 trillion business in the US, and 17% of our economy. The ability to disperse health care away from doctors’ offices and hospitals to our smart speakers and our smartphones could be a really dramatic unlock. Think about the tens, if not hundreds of millions of Americans, who end up in the emergency room because of a lack of preventive care. Get into the head space of that person. They don’t have the time to get to the doctor to check out the rash on their arm. They’re intimidated. They’re underinsured. They don’t have the money. They don’t quite frankly have the knowledge. They don’t have the cultural impetus to treat health care offensively instead of defensively.

Imagine that I’m an investor in a text-based preventive health care company. We use a certain amount of AI. We ask [patients] questions and then we pair them with a medical professional to try and answer their questions. They might turn on their camera to look at the rash. The dermatologists who they’re referred to might prescribe them a steroid cream that’s then delivered to them within two hours. If you think about all those steps and the amount of time it would take to do that and reduction in friction and cost, you might have this dispersion away from hospitals and doctors offices. 

You could distribute health care out to the home — and by some estimates about two-thirds of it could be digitized and dispersed to home. You can’t have an appendectomy on your iPhone, but you can get the pre-consultation, you can get the physical therapy, you can get the drugs, you can get the check-in.

An example would be the mother of a child with childhood diabetes. Let’s be honest; it’s always the mom handling this. She spends five months of her year managing that child’s health care between the insurance forms, the specialists, the traipsing off to the primary doctor to get a referral to a specialist, to get to CVS. If you could give her two or three of those months back for self-care, care for others, the opportunity to make the more money, there just could be a huge unlock. There could also be a huge decrease in preventable ailments.

When we start thinking about dying, when we start thinking about, “Okay, this is a UTI now, but it could get much worse if we don’t treat it right away,” it’s pretty obvious. Treat these things. I think health care could be a huge unlock.

Could we use remote learning as a means to dramatically increase the supply across universities and hopefully bring down some of the costs? Dispersing media — I think most of us have decided we just would prefer to consume content in our homes versus a movie theater. The dispersion of financial services — people don’t want the language of their financial life to be an ATM or a teller or a branch. They want it to be their phone and they want to be able to transmit funds seamlessly at low transaction costs, so that’s being dispersed to our phones.

” I’d like to think we’ll re-embrace science again.”

There’s enormous unlocks on a more spiritual level. This taught us that we should be cooperating across nations. There were some nations that handled this really well, others that didn’t. Why aren’t we learning from one another? Why isn’t the World Health Organization connective tissue? I’d like to think we’ll re-embrace science again. I like to think that America’s brand on one level has grown in power because we invented the vaccines. At the same time, we stand here as the wealthiest nation in the world that has the highest per capita death rate. A lot’s going to come out of this, a lot of potential unlocks. That is the winners.

Whenever you have technology come into a sector, it ends up in a great winner-take-most. One thing coming out of this pandemic that I don’t think is a good thing is it used to be one in three people met online. Now, it’s one in two. Online dating creates sort of this mating inequality, where the most attractive get 80% of the opportunities and everybody else gets shut out. I think you’re going to have lower marriage rates, lower household formation, much lower sex rates, which is a bad thing in terms of household formation. It’s usually a key component of establishing a relationship. I think there’s big winners and big losers coming out of this.

A lot of us have been looking at what happened over the past two years and asking, “Where is our Operation Warp Speed? If we can do it for this, why aren’t we doing it for diabetes? Why aren’t we doing it for Parkinson’s?” Or we are, but we’re not doing it to the same level that apparently is possible. Do you think that Operation Warp Speed was a one off? 

These are all great questions. I just want to be clear, I don’t have the domain expertise to answer them thoughtfully. I have read enough to feel somewhat confident that the one of the great unlocks might be the development of different omnibus vaccines. There’s been more money, financial and human capital that have gone into vaccine research in the last 24 months than the last 24 years. Vaccines were seen as an unprofitable side of the pharmaceutical industry, so they didn’t get a lot of attention. That changed dramatically.

You can imagine an omnibus vaccine, after we distributed diagnostics to our home. There’s a company called QHealth that got its start by doing in-home COVID tests, but you can see it starting to track your blood sugar levels, your PSA levels, all kinds of things for early diagnosis.

And then here’s the opportunity to develop these omnibus vaccines, where we say, “Once every couple of years, we might give you something that not only screens or protects you against COVID-19, but protects you against a variety of different ailments.” There’s been 11,000 academic papers published on vaccines in the last 24 months. You’d like to think that we’re going to get all sorts of what I’ll call the pandemic dividend around health care and around vaccines. I think health care is going to be a very exciting place to work, and that will be the beneficiaries of a lot of hopefully wonderful discovery.

“Our vaccines are just better. They’re better than the Chinese vaccine. They’re better than the Russian vaccine.”

When you think about it, people in business will say that the most important product of the last quarter-century has been the iPhone. I think, vaccines. I think American vaccines have been probably the most important product of the last half century. They estimate that somewhere between two and three million additional Americans would have perished without the vaccine. We produce them. By the way, our vaccines are just better. They’re better than the Chinese vaccine. They’re better than the Russian vaccine. And we developed them in record time. The supply chain is here. That’s just an enormous feather in our cap, that America still has kind of the right stuff, that we produce the best and the most important product of the last 50 years.

The downside is that we’re so politicized and polarized, we decided not to take them, that we’re at sitting at vaccination rates at 68% versus a lot of wealthy nations at 90-plus%. It’s just staggeringly disappointing. We invented them. We have the supply chain and an unlimited supply. And yet, on the right, we’ve weaponized vaccines or politicized vaccines. Also on the left, we’ve weaponized obesity. Now, what do I mean by that? Highest per cap death rate of any wealthy nation and the two data sets or the two strongest signals around the explainer for that death rate is one, see above, lower vaccination rates and two, we’re an obese nation. We don’t want to talk about that because the left wants to describe it as body positivity or finding your true self.

There’s some hard conversations around re-embracing truth in the science, on the right. And on the left, recognizing that biology is not politically correct. We need to provide more low income households with opportunity to have good food, we need to do away with food deserts. At a young age, kids need to be taught about nutrition. I grew up with the Presidential Physical Fitness Awards, and it instilled this sense that even if you weren’t an athlete, there was reward and motivation to be fit. I think we need to return back to that. So I’d like to think there’ll be a huge pandemic dividend around vaccine progress and innovation.

When you look at where you have innovation, you also have the opportunity for malice. Not everyone is necessarily vetting their sources as well. That is also a huge problem in terms of what happens to our privacy and what happens with the information that we get. What do you think we can do to arm ourselves as better informed consumers when we have unlimited information coming at us and we have very limited time to make those kinds of assessments?

I would argue that new sources of information are tremendous forms of research, but they’re not tremendous forms of prescription or diagnosis. You want Google to be a source of information, but you should never go to Dr. Google when you’re sick. You shouldn’t go to Google to try and figure out what’s going on with you. I mean, all of us hit Google when we have any question, including, “What is this rash?” Or, “I can’t sleep.” But at the end of the day, the actions you take need to be a function. I think about the expertise that is developed by this incredibly well-trained, thoughtful group of people with various high standards called medical professionals but I do think there’s huge opportunity to push some of that expertise.

Just a few years ago, my doctor wasn’t allowed to text me. I had a question, you can’t text them. It’s HIPAA. A lot of these regulations that I would argue are put in place to protect insurance companies and serve the medical industrial complex, came down, and that was a good thing. I don’t see any reason why you shouldn’t be able to text your doctor. I don’t see any reason why I shouldn’t be able to send a photo of my kid’s rash on his arm to a pediatric dermatologist, and for him to say, “I recognize this immediately. I know what this is. I’m in a position to prescribe medication and I’m on a system that immediately sends it to the closest pharmacy and gets dispatched to your home within an hour. I already have your insurance information. We’re all set. Or if you don’t have insurance, I can charge you less because it’s pretty efficient.”

“I think doctors’ offices are the second-worst in retail in America.”

I think doctors’ offices are the second-worst in retail in America. The worst is a gas station. I bought an electric car just because I never want to go into a gas station again, but doctors’ offices are a close second. Imagine going into a Williams-Sonoma or a Best Buy and the person doesn’t even stand up. They pull back a cellophane window and you say, “I’m interested in cookware. I’m interested in Calphalon or I’m interested in a big screen TV.” And they say, “I know you filled it out thousands of times before, but before I can talk to you about a big screen TV or a Le Creuset, I need you to fill out a ton of paperwork.” Then you wait, and then someone will talk to you about a TV 30 minutes later, and they’re there for three minutes.

The medical profession from a retail standpoint is terribly broken. It makes the experience so intimidating and so expensive that it’s just not getting into the corners of where it needs to be most. I think health care is probably what I would call the most optimistic place.

“It’s the big tech companies that don’t give a s**t about your privacy.”

I don’t share your views around privacy. I believe that people’s HIV status is held somewhere on a server. I think there’s a central repository for it, I don’t know if it’s the CDC. But your doctor has an obligation, if you test positive for HIV, to report it. That has tremendous potential for abuse but our government’s actually done a very good job of protecting our privacy. They realize that you’re not going to get people to come in and get tested if you abuse that privacy.

It’s the big tech companies that don’t give a s**t about your privacy. They’re in the business of molesting it and then leaking it out to anyone that will pay for it. I do think, as much as we like to go on a screed against incompetent government, our government probably knows the most personal things about us. It knows how much money we make. It knows what we spend it on it. It knows our health status. It knows if we have STDs. They’ve managed to keep it secure. Despite all the brilliance of the engineers at Meta, the government has actually done a much better job with our privacy.

“With a small layer of AI, Uber can tell when you’re terminating a pregnancy or if you’re having an affair.”

I would argue that there’s some consumer dissonance, that we’re worried about privacy, but the majority of young people are telling Snap or Instagram 40 times a day where they are and what exactly they’re doing. Uber knows your location. With a small layer of AI, Uber can tell when you’re terminating a pregnancy or if you’re having an affair, just with a very basic layer of intelligence based on where you are traveling and at what times. We’ve decided that we are willing to risk real potential violations of our privacy in exchange for utility. 

Everyone’s had one of those scary moments, you’re at a Beyoncé concert and you get served an ad for Beyoncé album. You’re like, “They’re listening to me?” The answer is, “Yeah, they are.” The answer is you still keep your phone on. You complain about it, but consumer behavior is different than the rhetoric around privacy.

You and I are both passionate about higher ed and have personal stakes in that game. Two of the things that you talk about are that we need to have more kids taking gap years and free college is not the solution. Those are pretty radical ideas, Scott. Why?

“There are a lot of 18-year-olds that are just not emotionally ready for college.”

Gap year is an easy one. I showed up to UCLA at the age of 17 and I just wasn’t emotionally or academically prepared for college. That led to me getting too drunk and ending up in the emergency room and being on an academic probation by the end of my freshman year. I’m a big believer in mandatory conscription or public service, which is easy to say once you’ve aged out of that. But I think that there are a lot of 18-year-olds that are just not emotionally ready for college. We’ve seen skyrocketing teen suicide rates because as parents, we use so many sanitary wipes on our kids’ lives. They get to NYU or University of Texas, they get their heart broken, they get their first C, and they don’t have the emotional capability to deal with.

Some sort of public service not only gives them a chance to maybe season a little bit, emotionally and psychologically, but also gives them the opportunity to meet other great Americans from different backgrounds. In the ’60s, when we had great legislation, people saw themselves as Americans before they saw themselves as Republicans or Democrats, I think parents, kids and America would benefit from some sort of public service, whether it’s Teach For America or military conscription. I think we’d be better off as a society if for 12 to 24 months, kids coming right out of high school had a choice of several different things, where they were going to serve in their nation in the agency of others. I’m a big fan of whatever you want to call it, gap year, mandatory public service.

If you were to make college free, you’re doing nothing but continuing what we do really well in America and that’s transfer wealth from the poor to the rich. About 80% of kids in top quintile learning households go to college. It’s about 18% at the lowest quintile. So if you’re going to take government money and make college free, you’re basically saying we’re going to make country clubs and Lexus free. And that is we’re going to take a product that is mostly consumed by middle class, upper-middle and wealthy people and we’re going to make it free. I think you leave the prices exactly where they are, except for anyone who needs money, which is most people, most people cannot afford that, and then you provide them with Pell grants and loans if they need it.

It’s not about making it free. Free college is a dumb idea. The majority of people at Yale can afford it. And what you want to do is you want to make sure the ones that can’t don’t end up with a quarter of a million dollars in debt, which hangs over their household like a cloud, ready to erupt in lightning and creates despair and anxiety. They don’t want to start new businesses. They don’t want to get married. They don’t want to buy houses and they have this huge economic strain. So I think college should not be free for all, it should be available. And also even more than the economic barriers to college, the real barrier is that we haven’t grown supply. Thirty years ago, one in three jobs demanded a college degree. Now, it’s two in three. Yet, we’ve barely kept pace with population growth because we live in a scarcity economy where once we own a house, we become NIMBYists and we don’t want new developments to increase the value of our house.

If we’re a big company, we spend a ton of time and tens of millions of dollars trying to keep other small businesses out of business with regulatory capture or with anti-competitive acquisitions. The moment we have a degree from a good school, we encourage the dean to tighten admission standards. We love it. At my university, when the dean stands up and says, “We rejected 90% of applicants,” the faculty goes crazy and applauds and the alumni feel good and want to put their name on the side of this luxury brand. The reality is that’s tantamount to the head of a homeless shelter boasting that he or she turned away nine to ten people last night. We’re not Chanel bags, we’re public servants.

The reason I’m here with you today is because when I applied to UCLA, the admissions rate was 76% and I had to apply twice. The admissions rate now is 12%. We can scale Google and Salesforce 24% a year, but we haven’t figured out a way to scale are great public universities 1-1/2%? I know you have a kid out in California looking at schools. She should have amazing opportunities from numerous schools because I’m going to go out on a limb and assume that she’s one of the 99% of kids that’s probably not in the top 1%. That by the time she was 16, she didn’t have patents or wasn’t building wells in Africa or wasn’t captain of the lacrosse team.

It’s like you know me.

Well, that’s who I was. And without more freshman seats and without the culture of higher education for me and my colleagues busting out of this self-aggrandisement, arrogant, luxury brand positioning, the children of single immigrant mothers who lived and died as secretaries, i.e. yours truly, are not going to get the opportunity to go on and do remarkable things and be sitting here with you. America is higher education. It’s where we develop our leaders. It’s where we develop our primary thoughts and methodologies around how we’re going to approach society.

Do we want America to be “The Hunger Games,” where it’s never easier to be a billionaire, but it’s never been harder to be a millionaire, where the two cohorts who really succeed in America are the children of wealthy people working in the top one-income-earning household? America needs to be a place again that offers remarkable opportunities for unremarkable kids. I’d like to move higher education back from being a luxury brand, to the greatest upward lubricant of unremarkable kids in history.

More Salon Talks: 

Move aside, brisket! 8 seder-ready Passover chicken recipes

When you want a change of pace from serving brisket for Passover seder, make roast chicken. These 8 recipes for this crowd-friendly dish are kosher for Passover and will look so good at the center of your table, surrounded by good wineroasted vegetablesmatzo-ball soup, maybe a spring-forward soup, and of course, flourless chocolate cake. And once you’re done cooking and serving a whole chicken, use the remaining carcass and bones to make the stock for a matzo ball soup.

1. Roast Chicken with Lemon Curd, Garlic, and Chiles

“Lemon curd is typically used for sweet recipes — but why not think outside the box and take it someplace savory? This dinner makes the most of lemon curd, adding tart richness to sheet-pan chicken thighs. Fresh rosemary is a natural pairing, and chile offsets it from being overly sweet,” writes Food52 Resident Melina Hammer. Swap out the bread for serving with cooked quinoa or matzo.

2. Barbara Kafka’s Simplest Roast Chicken

When you want a really simple, super-classic roast chicken to serve for Passover, this is it. Recipe developer Barbara Kafka swears by roasting the chicken at a high temperature for just one hour, which will ensure that the skin stays nice and crispy, while the meat remains moist.

3. Slow-Roasted Chicken with Extra-Crisp Skin

There’s nothing worse than eating soggy chicken skin but on the other hand, there’s nothing better than eating crispy chicken skin. Whereas Barbara Kafka prefers to roast a whole chicken in one hour (or less!), recipe developer Lindsay Maitland Hunt goes for a lower, slower method, then removes the skin and crisps it separately.

4. Honey-Garlic Chicken

Entertaining for the holidays is stressful enough, but this “set it and forget it” recipe for slow-cooked chicken will help make one thing on your list so much more manageable.

5. Lemon and Onion Roasted Chicken

This aromatic preparation of roast chicken is obviously totally doable year-round, but recipe developer Bevi especially loves serving it for Passover—she recommends doubling the recipe to feed a crowd.

6. Braised Moroccan Chicken and Olives

“This flavorful dish was inspired by two of my favorite Moroccan ingredients, olives and preserved lemons. They work beautifully together in this dish to add a ton of flavor to the sauce. In addition, braising the chicken makes the meat wonderfully tender and juicy.” writes recipe developer Sonali (aka The Foodie Physician). Sonali recommends serving this with couscous, but for Passover you could easily swap in cooked quinoa for a kosher side dish.

7. Shaheen Peerbhai and Jennie Levitt’s Cold-Oven Roast Chicken

If you’re not interested in having to cook and carve a whole roast chicken for Passover, stick to individual chicken thighs. They’ll cook faster, be simple to serve, and will likely be more flavorful and more forgiving than a whole chicken (but shh, don’t tell the full-size bird).

8. Slow-Cooker Rotisserie Chicken

This low-fuss, high-reward chicken tastes like your favorite grocery store rotisserie chicken . . . dare we say it’s better?

Writer Nava Atlas reflects on the (vegan) return of her cult-classic “Vegetariana” cookbook

In 1984 when a twentysomething vegetarian illustrator and graphic designer named Nava Atlas published her first book — the quirky, illustrated veg cookbook, Vegetariana (Amberwood Press) — plant-based eating was gaining traction in America, but still well outside the mainstream. 

A 1985 Gallup Poll done for American Health magazine estimated there were 8 to 9 million vegetarians in the U.S., as more embraced the diet for animal welfare, health, environmental and, occasionally, contrarian reasons, according to a 1987 New York Times article. Yet ever-contradictory Americans ate more meat than ever that year — to the tune of 237.4 pounds per capita of red meat, chicken and fish, up more than 6 pounds from 1980. The NYT piece noted that many of those claiming to be vegetarian “continue(d) to eat fish or chicken” under the manufactured identifiers of “pescevegetarian” and pollovegetarian. The Vegetarian Times discovered this transgression while interviewing celebrities who dubbed themselves vegetarians. 

Related: 6 tips for adopting the vegan diet

“It must be trendy to be a vegetarian,” then-executive editor Sally Hayhow told NYT‘s Trish Hall. “I can’t think of another reason people would fight to be called one.”

Atlas became a vegetarian in her teens, largely because she preferred eating plants. By her mid-20s she’d amassed a trove of colorful, satisfying vegetarian meals through years of cooking for her husband — which she decided to turn into a cookbook. Her quirky, hand-illustrated book chock full of sustaining recipes, literary wisdom and lore, appeared in the shadow of seminal veg-forward tomes of the time, like Mollie Katzen’s groundbreaking Moosewood Cookbook (1977) and Anna Thomas’s The Vegetarian Epicure (1972). To Atlas’s surprise, Vegetariana was instantly critically lauded. Publishers Weekly predicted it “should prove itself a classic” with its “savory recipes, witty anecdotes, delightful aphorisms and fascinating folklore.” 

The book would spark a long career of producing cookbooks such as 5-Ingredient Vegan (2019), Plant Power (2014) and Wild About Greens (2012). Elsewhere, Atlas has explored topics ranging from gender roles to cultural bias and animal rights through her art and visual books, including Why You Can’t Get Married: an Unwedding Album (2013), Secret Recipes for the Modern Wife (2009) and Sluts & Studs (2008). She also built a website devoted to classic women’s literature called LiteraryLadiesGuide, and had two children. Regarding the latter, history would repeat itself when her youngest, then-10-year-old, son declared himself vegan. Atlas’s own enlightenment of the horrors of factory farming led her to fully adopt veganism soon thereafter.

Now some 37 years after Vegetariana‘s debut, Atlas published a new, entirely vegan edition. In addition to axing the dairy and eggs chapter altogether, she replaced some of the original illustrations and incorporated new quotations from more diverse sources. As she notes in the intro to the new edition, “too many male voices dominated the literary quotations and lore in the earlier editions.

The longtime author and artist sat down virtually with Salon Food to discuss the state of vegetable cooking in America, the challenges and joys of adapting her recipes to be fully vegan, and what it’s like to take a magnifying glass to your own work more than three decades later.

Maggie Hennessy: What was it like to revisit something you wrote so long ago and so early in your career? Did you cringe at all, as writers often do when we re-examine old work? 

Nava Atlas: That’s a great question, and one I’m not asked too often! Yes, there were a few illustrations and recipes that made me cringe, and that’s the beauty of being able to revise and update a book, with the perspective of a long career in the rear view.

Back then even being a vegetarian was an anomaly, so I had to learn to do my own cooking. At the time the project was being pitched to publishers, I wasn’t very confident in my recipe developing skills. But apparently the recipes worked for a lot of people.

I began Vegetariana when I was in my mid-20s, and though I enjoyed cooking I wasn’t a recipe developer at all. I had a BFA, and was working as an illustrator (and) graphic designer. Back then even being a vegetarian was an anomaly, so I had to learn to do my own cooking. At the time the project was being pitched to publishers, I wasn’t very confident in my recipe developing skills. But apparently the recipes worked for a lot of people; even until recently, people would bring falling apart, stained copies for me to sign at my talks. 

For this edition, I did end up jettisoning about a dozen or so illustrations that I no longer liked and/or whose companion recipe was also replaced. That said, doing new illustrations to match the detail and flavor (so to speak) of some of the originals was no easy task — especially when it came to drawing a likeness of a well-known personality. Sometimes I had to do a drawing three or four times before I was satisfied. Rosa Parks was hard to draw because I didn’t have the best reference photos for her; but I nailed Karl Marx on the first try.

MH: I loved that you wanted to incorporate more diverse voices, particularly women, in the quotations and lore. When and why did you have that epiphany?

NA: Back in the “dark ages” of the 1980s, the male default was still the norm, despite the emergence of the women’s movement in the 1970s. I’ve always been a voracious reader and nerd, so why it didn’t dawn on me sooner is a little embarrassing. 

In 2011 I had a book published called The Literary Ladies’ Guide to the Writing Life, and after that, I launched its companion website, LiteraryLadiesGuide.com. So I’ve been learning about and presenting classic women authors and their literature for more than 12 years. The site has grown tremendously, especially in the last four years. Being immersed in this niche was how I got the message. I wanted the new edition of Vegetariana to reflect that.

MH: Were any recipes particularly tricky to convert from vegetarian to vegan? Can you share the story of one, and why that was the case?

NA: There was a Cheddar-Garlic Soup in the original that I was thinking of letting go of, but in the end, decided to create a vegan version of it. The original was really almost like a fondue, very ooey-gooey and melted cheesy. Rather than try to recreate that mouthfeel and heavy consistency, I decided to base it on vegetables, using the vegan cheddar as more of a flavoring than a main component. So the base is made of butternut squash soup (the kind that comes in cartons), cauliflower, tomatoes, and silken tofu or cannellini beans. A generous but not ridiculous amount of vegan cheddar is melted in, and the soup is topped with green peas, parsley, and/or croutons. 


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MH: Was it a struggle to drop the dairy/eggs chapter altogether? It must have also been liberating in a way, to feel we’ve come that far in our embrace of vegetable cooking. 

NA: I did debate with myself about the Dairy/Eggs Chapter. For a while I thought I might do a vegan version of some of the dishes — for example, an omelet made with chickpea flour instead of eggs. But in the end, I decided to take that chapter out because it was becoming too complicated.

MH: By the way, how do you feel about the state of veg cooking in America?

NA: I feel like unlike the hard and sad things going on in the world, being able to see the phenomenal growth of the vegan/plant-based movement over the decades has been such an oasis of positivity and inspiration. When Vegetariana first came out in 1984, the concept of veganism existed, but wasn’t in the general atmosphere at all. By the ’80s, there were hardly more than a dozen of us who had broken into any kind of mainstream with vegetarian cookbooks; now, there are more vegan books, blogs, YouTube channels, Instagrams, etc., than can be counted. 

A plant-based diet is more sustainable for the planet, as is well known by now.

As far as ingredients, whether produce varieties or packaged products, there’s no comparison. It makes it so much easier and more convenient to make great meals with ingredients available at most any supermarket. 

In addition, I wanted Vegetariana to reflect my own evolution. I became a vegetarian in high school, before it was “cool” to do so, mainly because I didn’t like meat or the way it looked on my plate. I went vegan twenty years ago, with the primary motivation of compassion for animals. And a plant-based diet is more sustainable for the planet, as is well known by now

MH: In the first edition, you mentioned in one leek recipe that they’re a very underrated vegetable. I wonder, are there any vegetables that remain vastly underrated 37 years after the book first appeared? And on the flip side, have you seen any ingredient get its due that you never thought would?

NA: Bok choy and collard greens are two vegetables that made it into the new edition; I really learned to appreciate both of them immensely when I was developing my 2012 book, Wild About Greens. And on the flip side, that’s an easy one — Brussels sprouts! They went from being an often dreaded vegetable to a popular bar snack — in that case usually deep fried, but still, who could have predicted that?

MH: It feels like illustrated cookbooks have never made a full comeback — it remains all about aspirational, full-color photography. I get the value of depicting finished dishes. But there’s so much vintagey whimsy in an illustrated cookbook. Can you talk about the process of illustrating Vegetariana? Did the illustrations come before the recipes or vice versa?

NA: You’re right, I think especially in the age of the internet, cooks have come to expect gorgeous, full-color photography. I fought with my publishers for many years to have my books fully or nearly fully photographed, not just a measly 8-page insert — or no photos at all (I finally won that fight). But it sure is fun to go back to the era of illustrated cookbooks, like Mollie Katzen’s, which she also did herself. There’s something about the hand-wrought pages that makes us feel like we’re being pulled back to a simpler time. Of course, nostalgia can be an illusion.

When I was writing and illustrating the original Vegetariana, the literary quotations, aphorisms, and food folklore came first. I would then dream up the illustrations for them, and then finally the recipes, though it’s not like the recipes were an afterthought in any sense. That’s simply the order in which I built each page. So many people love food, and whether or not they like to cook, I’ve always maintained that this is a book that’s as much for reading in bed as for using in the kitchen!

Buy Vegetariana at Bookshop.org, Indiebound, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Books-a-Million and wherever books are sold. 

More by this author:

“The View” host calls out co-host: “You were part of the administration that politicized the virus”

On ABC’s “The View”, co-hosts Sunny Hostin and Alyssa Farah Griffin got into a disagreement over Vice President Kamala Harris’ brief mask removal. Hostin called out Griffin for her critique on mask mandates saying, “You were part of the administration that politicized the virus!”

Tuesday’s episode started with a discussion of the debate swirling around Harris’ recent visit to Thomas Elementary School in Washington, DC, where she delivered a speech without a mask while students standing behind her had their faces covered. School administrators stated masks at the event were optional, but many students were masked up.

Children in schools across the country are still required to comply with masking mandates but on March 16, public schools in D.C. announced masks on school premises were optional and up to “individual decision.” That didn’t stop Republicans, however, from taking the opportunity to call out the vice president over social media. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas tweeted, “Kamala Harris: Rules for thee but not for me.”

RELATED: CDC director rebukes Ron DeSantis for scolding high school students over masks

On “The View”, Griffin nodded to Nancy Pelosi’s visit to a hair salon in 2020 as another example of “Covid theater.” Joy Behar responded to the comment by backing up to the beginning of the pandemic with Trump and the Republican Party’s refusal to listen to science.

“You can blame the Rose Garden or you can blame Nancy Pelosi, but she didn’t start this war,” said Behar. 

Griffin responded to the comment by saying she had personally been an “outspoken Republican” on vaccination as well as boosters. She went on to say comments from Democrats at the beginning of the pandemic also politicized the virus.

Behar asked for an example to which Griffin responded, “It is a fact that Vice President Harris said. I’m not going to. Vice President Harris said, in the VP debate…” 

Hostin interrupted her co-host saying, “You were part of the administration that politicized the virus!”

Griffin said while Trump politicized the virus, “Vice President Kamala Harris, in the vice-presidential debate, said if Dr. Fauci says I should get it, I will, but I’m not getting a Trump vaccine. That’s dangerous. That leads people…” 

Griffin was interrupted again, this time by Behar who interjected to asking who had made that comment. Farah Griffin pointed to the Vice President. 

Hostin called out Griffin saying, “That was waaay after this vaccine was politicized by your boss.”

Griffin then said she took responsibility to which Hostin ended the exchange with a firm “Thank you.” 

Watch below, via ABC

GOP-controlled House impeaches Republican attorney general of South Dakota

The South Dakota legislature on Tuesday voted to impeach Attorney General Jason Ravnsborg for running over a pedestrian who Ravnsborg claims to have thought was a deer.

Ravnsborg will be suspended from his position, at least temporarily, according to Politico. The decision, handed down in a 36-31 vote, comes despite the state’s conclusion last month that the attorney general did not commit an impeachable crime. 

Ravnsborg’s impeachment proceedings will now move to the Senate, which is set to hold a trial over the matter. 

RELATED: “A deer doesn’t look like a human”: Republican attorney general involved in fatal South Dakota crash

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem has praised the move. “Today, the House of Representatives did the right thing for the people of South Dakota and for Joe Boever’s family,” Noem tweeted, referring to the victim.

Ravnsborg has accused Noem of interfering with the state probe for political gain, according to The Argus Leader, in part because the attorney general has investigated Noem over her own alleged misconduct. 

The investigation stems from an incident that took place in September 2020, when the attorney general was returning home at night from a Republican fundraising event. According to Ravnsborg’s account, the attorney general struck what he thought was a deer or a large animal while driving on a rural highway. 


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Ravnsborg called 9-11 and reported the incident as a traffic collision with an animal. The next day, the attorney alleges, he returned to the site of the crash and found the corpse of 55-year-old Joseph Boever, who had apparently been walking along the shoulder of the road the previous night. 

RELATED: Kristi Noem called out over “clear conflict of interest” and “abuse of power”

Ultimately, the attorney generally pleaded no contest to two misdemeanors and received no jail time. 

Ravnsborg has repeatedly claimed that he did not know that he had collided with Boever, but numerous criminal investigators have casted doubt over the official’s account. 

For instance, last February, it was reported that investigators found Boever’s glasses inside of Jason’s Ravnsborg’s car. 

“His glasses are there, Jason. Those are Joe’s,” an investigator said during an interview with the attorney general. “The only way for them to get there was through the windshield.”

As the investigation remains underway, Ravnsborg is seeking re-election as attorney general, facing opposition from attorney general Marty Jackley, a Republican

The ubiquity of at-home testing could make the next COVID-19 wave “invisible”

On Monday, Philadelphia announced that it would be the first major U.S. city to reinstate its indoor mask mandate. Public health officials say they’re concerned by a sharp increase in COVDI-19 cases in the city — over the last 10 days, cases have spiked by 50 percent.

“If we fail to act now, knowing that every previous wave of infections has been followed by a wave of hospitalizations, and then a wave of deaths, it will be too late for many of our residents,” said Dr. Cheryl Bettigole, the city’s health commissioner. “This is our chance to get ahead of the pandemic, to put our masks on until we have more information about the severity of this new variant.”

However, the news comes at a time when overall cases across the country continue to drop or remain somewhat static, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), despite mixed predictions that BA.2 — the highly transmissible BA.2 subvariant of omicron — will cause another surge in COVID cases in the United States.

But what if that data, unlike previous data from COVID-19 waves, is wrong? That’s the prospect posed by this latest COVID wave, and the reason for it is simple: most positive at-home tests don’t get officially counted in public health numbers the way clinic-administered tests or COVID-related hospital visits might. 

Hence, while the official increase in cases in Philadelphia amounts to more than 140 cases per day — a fraction of what Philadelphia saw at the height of the omicron surge — some experts who monitor COVID-19 cases across the country are wondering whether at-home tests are affecting accurate data tracking, especially when it comes to knowing whether or not the country is experiencing a BA.2 surge.

RELATED: What will COVID-19 look like in 2100? 

Indeed, the CDC doesn’t track the results of at-home tests. Some state health departments, who track their own COVID-19 data, have systems set up for people to report if they have positive at-home tests. But it’s unclear how many, if any, do.

While this concern was raised prior to BA.2 at the end of 2021, it had less of an effect in part due to the lack of at-home tests available during the omicron wave. Many of those concerned about symptoms had to take PCR tests if they couldn’t find at-home tests. PCR, or polymerase chain reaction tests, require laboratories and special laboratory equipment, but are considered more accurate than at-home tests. PCR test results are also typically reported to state public health agencies, unlike at-home tests.

As Salon reported in January, the shortage of at-home tests were a result of a supply and demand mismatch, and a shortage in testing materials. Since then, the Biden administration has purchased one billion at-home, rapid COVID-19 tests to distribute to Americans for free.

“There’s actually going to be a huge tidal wave coming in; we just don’t see all of it.”

To be clear, the availability of at-home tests is welcome news, as the country faced many previous waves without adequate testing resources. However, as the U.S. faces another contagious variant, the lack of reporting of at-home test results in official counts may create an incomplete picture for local health departments and citizens.

Sara Willette, the founder and Chief Data Officer of Iowa COVID-19 Tracker, said the state of Iowa doesn’t include at-home testing in official COVID-19 counts. Willette, who also has an immunodeficiency disorder, has served as something of a community data scientist during the pandemic as she helped track case numbers. Yet she is no longer convinced that official state counts are accurate. 

“The people I know personally — who tested positive at home and never got a PCR mandatory test — were in the counties that we do have wastewater data for, and they tested positive at similar points in time when we saw wastewater data starting to tick up a bit,” Willette said. “And that’s, at least for me, that’s why wastewater data is more reliable.”

Willette was referring to the practice of wastewater observation to ascertain how prevalent COVID cases are. In September 2020, the CDC launched the National Wastewater Surveillance System (NWSS) as a means of tracking the presence of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, in wastewater samples collected across the country. The CDC says this type of surveillance can stand in as an “early warning that COVID-19 is spreading in a community.”

“People infected with SARS-CoV-2 can shed the virus in their feces, even if they don’t have symptoms,” the CDC states. “The virus can then be detected in wastewater, enabling wastewater surveillance to capture the presence of SARS-CoV-2 shed by people with and without symptoms.”

“Wastewater is the most objective, unbiased, politics-free kind of testing . . . and it’s clearly showing an increase throughout all regions of the country.”

Willette said it isn’t a “concern” necessarily that at-home test results aren’t included in official public health data counts, but it does imply a “transition in understanding” how COVID-19 is trending. Willette personally prefers looking at local wastewater data as a gauge for figuring out if COVID-19 is spreading in a community.


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Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease and critical care medicine doctor, told Salon “using wastewater is a more useful tool in the current era,” and that “case counts have different meanings than they did pre-home tests.”

However, Adalja said “the focus on severe cases is most important, and hospitalization numbers are well suited to that purpose.”

Epidemiologist Eric Feigl-Ding, who is also the founder of the World Health Network, told Salon he believes a wave is already underway if one looks at the wastewater data.

“The wastewater doesn’t lie; wastewater is the most objective, unbiased, politics-free kind of testing . . . and it’s clearly showing an increase throughout all regions of the country,” Feigl-Ding said. “And we’re also seeing cases rise in many places, too.”

Feigl-Ding said that state and federal data counts might not reflect the gravity of case counts due to some states and countries closing their testing sites as well.

“[A wave] is already happening. It is a very unsubtle wave, what we see right now in the next few weeks crashing on the shores is a small, small wave,” Feigl-Ding said. “But there’s actually going to be a huge tidal wave coming in; we just don’t see all of it.”

More on COVID-19:

What’s the difference between pastrami and corned beef? We asked Katz’s deli

Stepping inside a New York Jewish deli is a spiritual experience. All of my hopes and dreams are served right in front of my eyes, in the form of crispy potato pancakes wrapped in deli paper, a mountainous slice of noodle kugel, and thin, juicy shavings of pastrami on rye bread. But any good Jewish deli will have you answer one major question: pastrami or corned beef? Before you place your next order, learn the true difference between corned beef and pastrami, according to someone who has perfected the art of both: Jake Dell of New York’s Katz’s Delicatessen.

Cut of meat

“Traditionally, pastrami is a navel cut and corned beef is made with brisket,” explains Dell. Each cut contains different amounts of fat, which translates into how the beef breaks down during the cooking process. The navel contains fat in the middle, whereas the beef brisket has fat mostly along the exterior of the meat. “The fat on the inside means that when you smoke pastrami, it distributes throughout the entire cut of meat,” says Dell.

The cooking process

Both pastrami and corned beef are brined, but pastrami is smoked and corned beef is boiled. Pastrami is rubbed with a dry seasoning blend of salt, pepper, coriander, and garlic, “which develops that awesome bark that’s just so delicious.” Some delis may also brine pastrami with mustard seeds, brown sugar, and other pickling spices. Corned beef, on the other hand, is salt cured — hence the corning process.

So which is more popular?

To understand the history of corned beef and pastrami, we have to go back to 1888 when Katz’s Delicatessen first opened and the first Eastern European immigrants settled in New York City. For the first hundred years of business, Dell says that corned beef was twice as popular as pastrami. “For one reason or another, that switched and pastrami now sells double the amount of corned beef each week. We sell 20,000-30,000 pounds of pastrami a week.”

How to serve them

The classic preparation for both of them is on rye with mustard. Given how complex the flavor of pastrami is, most people tend to not add more than that. With corned beef, you have more flexibility to turn it into say a hash or Reuben sandwich, says Dell. Plus, there’s always the classic preparation of corned beef and cabbage for St. Patrick’s Day.