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Alice Walker’s “Gathering Blossoms Under Fire” and the rare gift of Black women’s published journals

Publication day is here for “Gathering Blossoms Under Fire: The Journals of Alice Walker,” a book that has kept Alice Walker fans waiting for an “intimate glimpse into an important writer’s life.” Best known for her 1982 novel “The Color Purple,” Walker has worked in many genres — poetry, fiction, essays, films, children’s books — and influenced public thought as a critic and activist.

At 500 pages, “Gathering Blossoms” includes entries from more than 35 years of Walker’s journals, starting with a travel diary given to her in 1962 when she was 18. The book’s editor, Valerie Boyd, notes how “the personal, the political, and the spiritual are layered and intertwined” through the ensuing decades.

The journals offer inside details of Walker’s work, family, and lovers, including her relationship with songwriter and performer Tracy Chapman, which Walker has been reticent to discuss until now. But readers interested in diaries are also asking: How does her book claim a place in the history of African American women’s diaries?

RELATED: “Racism is really just a mask for greed”: Salon talks to Alice Walker on the 40th anniversary of “Meridian” about the power of revolt

While Walker was keeping these journals, virtually all published diarists were white. Walker discusses Virginia Woolf and Anaïs Nin — even echoes Samuel Pepys’ famous words “and so to bed” — but makes no mention of 19th century abolitionist poet Charlotte Forten, nor the other diaries by African American women that slowly began to appear in the 1980s. 

Because the spontaneity of a diary brings greater risk to the writer, many more novels and memoirs by African American women have been published than full-length diaries.

Entrenched social obstacles — from the belief that women’s diaries lack literary or historical value to the writer’s own concerns that material found in her diary might be twisted to reinforce racist or sexist stereotypes — have added up to make the publication of African American women’s diaries an unusual occurrence even today. Because the spontaneity of a diary brings greater risk to the writer, many more novels and memoirs by African American women have been published than full-length diaries. Walker’s journals represent a new contribution to this rare tradition.

With the success of “The Color Purple” — which won both a Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and a National Book Award, after which it became an acclaimed motion picture, a Broadway show and (now in production) a film version of the musical — Walker has achieved fame and wealth that remained an unattainable dream for the earlier African American women whose diaries have been published. 

RELATED: “Put the fangs back in feminism”: Author Rafia Zakaria on how feminism loses relevance to whiteness

But the record shows they had that dream. Going back to the journal of Charlotte Forten in the 1850s, we find that 21-year-old Charlotte earnestly asks herself, “‘What shall I do to be forever known?'” But she quickly adds, as if required to view herself through others’ eyes and imagine their judgment, “This is ambition, I know. It is selfish, it is wrong. But oh! How very hard it is to do and feel what is right.” 

As Charlotte Forten voices her dream followed by self-criticism, she illustrates two key features of the diary form. First, unlike a story or essay, conventionally expected to add up in a way that makes sense, the diary lets fragments float. An entry can pose several statements — comment on the weather, describe an act of lovemaking, note the day’s news headlines and confide something that’s worrying the writer — without needing to decide between them or draw a conclusion. Thoughts, even ambivalent ones, appear together under the date on which they occurred.

And second, in contrast to the retrospective process of memoir and autobiography, where selected past events culminate in a chosen ending, the diary — even if it’s been edited — perennially catches its writer in the moment as she faces daily struggles, experiences shifting emotions and undergoes each transition to a new home, job or relationship, never knowing what comes next.

A literary form that’s open to an unknown future and hospitable to internal tensions offers distinct value for African American women.

A literary form that’s open to an unknown future and hospitable to internal tensions offers distinct value for African American women, who must battle, even in solitude, against damaging stereotypes and restricted options imposed by the dominant culture. On the pages of her journal where Walker questions a choice after making it, writes admonitory notes to herself as “you,” or searches for the right word to describe her sexuality, these sentences are not composed for their effect on readers, even if readers may eventually see this internal dialogue and the contradictions embodied by its writer.

Journalist and activist Ida B. Wells admits in her 1886 diary, “I am an anomaly to my self as well as to others. I do not wish to be married but I do wish for the society of the gentlemen.” And editor Gloria Hull believes that 1920s poet Alice Dunbar-Nelson — who, like Alice Walker, describes in her diary passionate attachments to both men and women — may have turned to her diary because “there was not a person in her life with whom she could openly be all of the things that she was.” 

Gathering Blossoms Under Fire by Alice WalkerGathering Blossoms Under Fire by Alice Walker (Cover photo provided by Simon & Schuster)

Keeping a diary, like sewing a quilt, involves stitching together its different parts. Walker’s essay “In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens” celebrates a revival of arts like quilting, cooking and gardening, all mentioned in her journal entries. These show Walker out there digging and weeding, even as literary success allows her to buy new properties that are increasingly spacious, landscaped and high in price. “My fascination with owning houses,” she confides in 1998, “comes from the desire to make where I live beautiful, comfortable; a place where everything works.” 

But diaries also open a space larger than the individual “room of one’s own.” Each time writers begin an entry by writing down the date, they anchor that page to a specific moment in history. Diaries offer what “Gathering Blossoms” editor Valerie Boyd calls “an intimate history of our time.” 

Readers turn to Charlotte Forten and Emilie Davis to learn about African American women’s lives during the Civil War. Juanita Harrison chronicles the global adventures of a solitary woman traveler in the 1920s. Walker’s journals describe events specific to the late 20th century: civil rights marches, work as an editor with Ms. magazine, a film project that gave visibility to the practice of female genital mutilation in Africa and other parts of the world.

Perhaps the most compelling moments in her journal occur when Walker envisions, begins to draft and greets with joy the success of “The Color Purple.”

Perhaps the most compelling moments in her journal occur when Walker envisions, begins to draft and greets with joy the success of “The Color Purple,” subsequently becoming deeply involved in its production as a Steven Spielberg film. These accounts are vivid and filled with energy, and — given all the editing needed to produce the book — hopefully they were given in full. 

The book’s final entry is dated January 8, 2000. For readers wanting to see journal entries written in the 20 years since then, Walker promises in a postscript that “of course, there will be a volume two.” However, that promise was made before Valerie Boyd, Walker’s trusted editor who worked for over eight years on “Gathering Blossoms,” died after a long struggle with cancer. Speaking with a reporter from The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Walker has said that she’s no longer sure about a second volume. 

While waiting to see whether “Gathering Blossoms” will have a sequel, it could be time to check out some of the beautiful earlier examples — like Ida B. Wells’ “Memphis Diary,” Juanita Harrison’s “My Great, Wide, Beautiful World” and Audre Lorde’s “Cancer Journals” — that embody the rare tradition of African American women’s diaries.


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“Salon Talks” interviews with notable Black women authors on memoir: 

Naomi Watts survives “Infinite Storm,” a harrowing mountain-climbing tale based on a true story

Based on a true story, the compelling, life-affirming drama, “Infinite Storm,” recounts Pam Bales (Naomi Watts) unexpectedly rescuing a young man she calls “John” (Billy Howle), on a mountain in New Hampshire on one extremely cold November day. Director Malgorzata Szumowska captures this inspiring triumph of the human spirit tale with aplomb, focusing on the isolation, the beauty and brutality of nature, and often uses silence and ambient sound to convey emotion.

The film is very different from Szumowska’s previous features, which include, “The Other Lamb” with Michiel Huisman as a messiah-like cult leader, and “Elles” which had a journalist (Juliet Binoche) investigating a student prostitution ring. Szumowska also has made some fantastic films in her native Poland, such as “In the Name Of,” about a gay priest, and “Never Gonna Snow Again,” a satire about a masseur who invades a gated community.

Szumowska finds a common humanity with her characters and depicts their stories with a real sensitivity. Pam may be haunted by a tragedy from her past — it is what drives her to go up the mountain on a day when severe weather makes climbing risky. And Watts gives a gutsy performance, straining to crawl out of a hole when Pam makes a misstep or determined to keep John — who makes some errors in judgment — alive at all costs. Howle’s character is more of an enigma, but the bond these two strangers share ultimately changes their lives. 

RELATED: The Mount Everest mystery deepens: Was there an international cover-up of a dead climber’s ascent?

Szumowska spoke with Salon about her new film.

I’m amused you followed “Never Gonna Snow Again,” with “Infinite Storm.” This film is very different from your previous work in terms of content — in that it’s an “action picture” — but it is a character study as well.  What was the appeal of making “Infinite Storm”?

You’re absolutely right; it’s very new and different. The key thing is not the story, which, yes, is more adventure and genre-driven, but that I didn’t write the script. I had a desire for a long time to try something like this — in a different language and in a different cinematic language. The balance, the temperature, everything is different, but now I’d like to go do my own film, written by me, in Polish, and then do another film like this.

Are you into mountain climbing? What are your experiences with outdoor activity? 

I am very much into sports, and I am very hardcore. I am a surfer. I do CrossFit, indoor climbing, swimming. The hiking was very integral for me to make a film like this, We spent hours hiking for pre-production and for the shoot. It was very physical experience. I like it. That’s why I wanted to make this film to have this physical experience on a high mountain super close to nature. 

I really liked the line about nature providing wilderness, refuge, escape and hope. I like the use of silence in the film, and the ambient sound. What can you say about shooting on location?

Everything on the project was beautiful and brutal. We had 24 shooting days, and 10 on the high mountain. We were limited with everything, including the budget. I’m going to put Naomi and Billy into the real situation and real environment, so they are going to have to survive; otherwise, we would not achieve that spectacular effort. Naomi said she was ready, but on the first day, it was hard for her. Then he’s naked, and it was minus-10 degrees out. Each day we would wake up at 2:00 or 3:00 a.m. and travel to the high mountains, so we faced the sunrise. It was a tough, physical experience. But I think Naomi found freedom being with us. We Eastern Europeans have a different history, and culture-wise, it was interesting for her. It is the nature of people from that part of Europe; there is brutality in us. We had recent war experiences – in Poland there was the communist regime, and Croatia and Slovenia also had wars. We are very different and warriors. We were fighting to make this film and give life to all of these scenes.

Can you talk about your approach to telling this story visually? 

I worked closely with my cinematographer and cowriter/codirector Michel Englert. Our collaboration was super effective; we don’t need words to communicate. The visuals are super important, so he was like: How do we make white snow interesting? You can’t recognize one place from another, but Michel never wanted to shoot twice in the same location. He never used the same camera setup. We worked hours on the prep, hiking through crazy mountains. I lost a lot of weight which was good, and I completely quit smoking. We tried to find the right visual and angles and lens. Then we decided to use handheld camera and be close to the characters to give this feeling that you are breathing with them and the cold, and their struggle. 

How did you work with the actors on the physicality of their roles? Both Watts and Howle gave muscular performances, and they are very internal having very little dialogue. Can you talk about that?

In the script, there was much more dialogue. When Michel and I saw it, we were, “No! How can they say all those lines in those weather conditions?!” It wouldn’t work. We reduced the dialogue. Naomi wondered why we are taking out all her lines. But they would have to scream their lines because of the wind! We wouldn’t hear any of their words. She said, “Yes, you’re right.” We tried to express everything through their face, and with no dialogue, through the physicality. I presented the film to a friend, and he said this film is super physical. When I was thinking of who could play Pam, it had to be an actress of a certain age, who is very fit and able to be believable. Naomi is super fit, and I like that she is a very physical actress.


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John’s character is stubborn, reckless, and hurting. Pam is grieving but determined. We come to know her story, but he is more enigmatic. What observations do you have about these people?

It was the biggest question mark of the story was his character. He is a mystery. He is a real person, and it is a true story. We were limited by that fact. We couldn’t invent his [back]story. I tried to make his character interesting on the screen, but I knew the audience would be more with her because we know more about her. So, we decided to make him less sympathetic and to have a contrast between them. You like her, but you don’t like him because he’s a troublemaker. But at the end, you really like him.

There is a thread of spiritualism running throughout your work. This is a story that would be suitable for discussions of faith. Can you speak to that?

The religious element is the nature. That’s what I feel. It is very hard to have God and religion plus nature. It’s almost the same. The metaphysical speaks to us through the nature. There is a kind of faith that people who pass, they are somewhere. You can feel their presence.

“Infinite Storm” is about someone who changes Pam’s life. Who has changed your life, and how?

My life was changed by people I met, and definitely by my father, who was a strong personality. And it was changed in a good way because of him. I met amazing teachers and directors at film school, and they changed my life. They encouraged and empowered me to do what I am doing.

“Infinite Storm” is now available on VOD. Watch the trailer via YouTube.

More stories to read: 

 

Tucker Carlson brags that he “skipped” getting the COVID vaccine

Fox News host Tucker Carlson finally revealed this month that he “skipped” all three COVID-19 vaccines, putting to rest months of speculation around whether he’d actually received the jab. 

The much-awaited admission earlier this month during a speaking engagement at San Diego’s Awaken Church, according to a recording obtained by The Daily Beast. The development was first reported by Voice of San Diego.

“I’ve had like a million of them,” Carlson said of vaccines in general. But when it comes to the COVID-19 shots, he noted, “I skipped the first three.” 

RELATED: Tucker Carlson has a grand plan

“I’m not getting that one either,” the host added, alluding to additional booster shots. He reportedly received a round of applause. 

Over the past year, Carlson has been somewhat gun-shy about his vaccination status.

When Time Magazine asked about his vaccination status back in June, Carlson called the inquiry “supervulgar.” In another exchange with The New York Times, he claimed the question was tantamount to asking, “When was the last time you had sex with your wife and in what position?” 

Though he remains Fox News’ reigning pundit, Carlson’s vaccination status might flout the network’s official COVID-19 policies. 


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Last year, Fox Corporation, Fox News’ parent company, announced that it would be ending its regular testing option for a select group of New York-based employees, instead requiring that all staffers are fully vaccinated as a condition of their employment. 

According to a memo from last September, roughly 90% of all employees at Fox Corporation were vaccinated. 

RELATED: Tucker Carlson wonders if vaccine mandates are racist, cites voter ID laws: “I don’t understand”

In the past, Carlson has made a number of outlandish and downright dangerous claims about vaccines and masks.

Just this January, the Fox News firebrand compared vaccine mandates to “Nazi experiments,” saying in a broadcast, “I thought that American physicians agreed that compulsory medical care was unethical.”

Last April, Carlson likened mandatory mask-wearing for kids to “child abuse” saying that “your response when you see children wearing masks as they play should be no different from your response to seeing someone beat a kid in Walmart.”

Carlson has also baselessly alleged that Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was the “guy who created COVID.”

New emails reveal Trump allies’ effort to get DHS to conduct “forensic” probe of voting machines

A Donald Trump ally who’s running to oversee Arizona’s elections played a key role in the effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election, and he was joined in those efforts by a fringe figure who was in constant contact with White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, according to a new report.

Arizona state Rep. Mark Finchem asked the Department of Homeland Security to conduct “a full spectrum forensic examination” of voting machines” in the final weeks of the Trump presidency, and he got the attention of the department’s acting director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, reported Politico.

“We need to do a call on this today,” wrote acting director Brandon Wales minutes after receiving the request from Finchem, early on the morning of Christmas Eve 2020.

Politico reviewed the emails obtained by the watchdog group American Oversight through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit and showing attempts by Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and outside allies like Finchem to reverse the former president’s election loss, and some of those individuals remain active in government roles.

Trump met in the Oval Office on Dec. 18, 2020, with supporters, including Giuliani, Sidney Powell and Michael Flynn, to discuss extreme measures — such as an executive order to have the Department of Defense seize voting machines — to change the election outcome, and Finchem’s outreach to CISA appears to have originated around that time.

The newly released emails show that top CISA officials reviewed Finchem’s request, which was sent through a standard online form, six days after the Oval Office meeting, and the request made its way up the chain of command over the following days and an employee whose name was redacted noted the agency conducted fact-finding on the issue with Arizona’s secretary of state Katie Hobbs and the state election director.

Finchem specifically asked for help probing voting machines from CISA’s Hunt and Incidence Response Teams, a term that’s not widely used outside the cybersecurity world, and he asked for a company known as CyTech, which he believed was connected to Raytheon Technologies, examine the voting equipment using their CyFIR technology.

CyTech, CyFIR and their former owner Ben Cotton eventually did play a role in the effort to overturn Trump’s election loss when they were hired by Cyber Ninjas to examine voting machines in Maricopa County, Arizona, in an audit ordered by the Republican-led state Senate.

Cotton copied data from the county and drove with it to a lab in Montana, and he also gave a presentation when the final report was delivered to the state Senate.

He sold CyFIR last year to eSentire and works for that company, which was aware of its role in the Arizona audit, as a vice president for incident response.

Another email obtained by American Oversight appears to show another Trump ally, which the watchdog believes to be Flynn associate Phil Waldron, directly contacted Chad Mizelle, DHS’ acting general counsel, on Dec. 21, 2020, to request a collaboration.

Waldron reportedly originated the strategy to have the Defense Department seize voting machines, and he also distributed a PowerPoint presentation urging Trump to declare a state of emergency

“It’s concerning that someone like Phil Waldron had this degree of access to DHS officials even while he and other Trump allies were pursuing dangerous schemes to reverse the election,” said American Oversight spokesperson Dera Silvestre. “It’s even more concerning that we’re only now finding out about it, over a year later.”

Republicans follow Putin’s playbook: Target LGBTQ rights first

The conservative government was alarmed at the rise in the numbers of young people espousing LGBTQ identities. So leaders decided it was time for a crackdown. Claiming that it was all about “protecting” the children from supposedly sexually predatory adults, a “don’t say gay” law was passed that barred “promoting non-traditional relations to minors.” Defenders of the law insisted that LGBTQ people were “not being discriminated against in any way.” However, as human rights advocates pointed out, the law was so vaguely worded as to bar any open expression of queer or trans identities. Simply being out of the closet became reason enough to be accused of “gay propaganda,” since, after all, one could read that as a signal to minors that being gay is okay. 

This is Florida now— but it was Russia first. 

Florida in the year 2022 is where Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a law that threatens financial ruin for any speech that could be construed as “instructing” kids about LGBTQ identities. But nine years ago, the same controversy was centered in Russia, where President Vladimir Putin signed a federal “don’t say gay” law. The only difference is Putin could apply it to the whole nation, whereas DeSantis can only exert power on public schools in his state. In both cases, however, the same baseless justification was used: kids were being “groomed” by adults with nefarious intent so speech needed to be restricted to protect kids. In both cases, however, the actual reason for the law is to force people to live in the closet and punish anyone speaking out on behalf of equal rights. 

There’s been a longtime mutual admiration society between the organized Christian right in the U.S. and Putin’s government. 

Though it’s not being talked about much, if at all, in the mainstream media, the 2013 ban on “gay propaganda” in Russia and the current Florida law barring any “instruction” on “sexual orientation or gender identity” are incredibly close to each other. So close, in fact, that’s it’s impossible to imagine that DeSantis and his allies didn’t draw inspiration from the same Russian dictator who is currently waging a genocidal war on Ukraine.

As NPR reports, “don’t say gay” bills are spreading as Republicans in over a dozen states have introduced copycat legislation meant to ban books and shove teachers and students back into the closet. There’s good reason to think Putin inspired this current raft of “don’t say gay” bills beyond just the similarity in how the bills are worded and the same “groomer” lies being used as justification. The American religious right has long and deep ties to Putin and the authoritarian government in Russia. Indeed, they’ve spent years specifically advocating for and supporting the “don’t say gay” law in Russia.

As Right Wing Watch reported in 2014, “several American Religious Right leaders have spoken loudly in favor of Putin’s crackdowns on gay people.” Worse, “American anti-gay activists quietly provided intellectual backing and international support that directly and indirectly fueled the resurgent anti-gay movement in Russia.” In a 2017 report, the site noted, “The Kremlin, through financing and conferences, has also built up ties with America’s Religious Right.”


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It’s impossible to imagine that DeSantis and his allies didn’t draw inspiration from the same Russian dictator who is currently waging a genocidal war on Ukraine.

In other words, the religious right has long been aware of Putin’s “don’t say gay” law and the lies his government used to defend it. It’s not a coincidence that the same ideas and rhetoric are being deployed by Republicans here. Indeed, at the same time Russia passed its “don’t say gay” law in 2013, they also passed an “anti-blasphemy” law that recommended jail sentences up to three years for “offending religious feelings.” If that sounds familiar, it should. The same kind of language is being used in the Republican war on what they call “critical race theory.” For instance, the “Stop WOKE” bill DeSantis is also pushing bans any materials that discuss racism that white people claim causes them “discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress.” The anti-“critical race theory” movement in the U.S. has been used to ban books teaching that slavery or the civil rights movement happened, just as Russia’s “anti-blasphemy” law is used to punish any criticism of the Christian right. 

RELATED: Florida Republicans revive deadly “queers recruit” myth with passage of “don’t say gay” bill

Despite Putin’s claims to the contrary, human rights advocates were right about the impact of his “don’t say gay” law: The Russian “don’t say gay” law has been used as an all-purpose excuse to crack down on LGBTQ rights, all under bad faith claims of “protecting” children. Public materials that portray same-sex couples have been censored. Gay rights activists have been arrested. People were fired for being out of the closet. Pride parades were banned. Right now, the Russian government is trying to shut down one of the nation’s biggest LGBTQ rights groups. Ukrainian citizens worry that the campaign of terror against queer people will be extended to their country if Russia succeeds in its invasion. WNBA star Brittney Griner is being held hostage in Russia right now, and while the official excuse is drug-related, gay rights activists are accusing the government of holding her in no small part because she’s an out lesbian. And while the European Court of Human Rights ruled against the “don’t say gay” law in 2017, unsurprisingly that’s done little to stop the human rights abuses in Russia. 

Due to Russia’s horrific invasion of Ukraine and the seemingly unending war crimes being committed there, most Republicans have become shy about the pro-Putin sentiment that’s been churning through their party for years and was only amplified by Donald Trump’s robust admiration for the Russian dictator. But it is hard to ignore that this explosion of “don’t say gay” and “critical race theory” bills look like they were directly inspired by Russia’s “gay propaganda” and “anti-blasphemy” laws. Even the justifications — wild accusations of “grooming” and whining about the dominant class’s hurt feelings — sound identical. The American right’s affinity for Putin’s Russia is still going strong, even if some of them are being a little quieter about it these days. 

RELATED: Don’t be fooled: The GOP love affair with Putin is worse than it looks

Cancel culture strikes again: Lee, Cruz want to punish Yale students for protesting Christian group

Since its formation 29 years ago in 1993, the far-right Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) has consistently fought against gay rights — often equating anti-gay discrimination with religious freedom. When Kristen Waggoner, legal counsel for ADF, spoke at Yale University on March 10, about 120 students protested her appearance. And in Utah, two well-known Republicans — Sen. Mike Lee and State Attorney General Sean Reyes — have added their names to a letter demanding punishment for Yale students who protested the March 10 event.

Salt Lake Tribune reporter Bryan Schott explains, “More than half of the school’s students signed an open letter critical of the decision by the Federalist Society to invite Waggoner to speak and condemned the presence of armed police at the protest. Yale Law School Dean Heather Gerken said the protest was ‘unacceptable’ behavior from the students, but they had not violated the school’s free speech policy.”

Co-founded by Focus on the Family’s James Dobson, the ADF (formerly the Alliance Defense Fund) represents a far-right form of White evangelical Christian fundamentalism and is considered a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).

“In addition to Lee and Reyes,” Schott reports, “Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, several U.S. House of Representatives members, five governors, and more than two dozen other state attorneys general also signed on. The letter was drafted by the same group responsible for the Philadelphia Statement, a document that decries the persistence of ‘cancel culture’ in American society. More than 1400 people signed the letter to Yale.”

The letter reads, “Instead of engaging with the panelists, a shocking number of Yale Law students hurled constant insults and obscenities at them.” But according to Schott, “The letter’s depiction of the event is primarily based on an initial report from the conservative Washington Free Beacon. That reporting has been credibly debunked by other publications, multiple videos and the school’s official account of the incident.”

Some of the debunking came from Slate’s Mark Joseph Stern. On March 18, Stern reported, “The students made their point at the very start of the event and walked out before the conversation began. Their exercise in free speech, however rowdy or distasteful, did not prevent the panelists from expressing their views. And their demonstration did not — contrary to the Free Beacon’s reporting — require administrators to summon the police.”

NY political scandals keep coming as Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin arrested on federal bribery charges

On Tuesday, “The New York Times” reported that New York Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin has surrendered to federal authorities on bribery charges.

“The indictment, the result of an investigation by the F.B.I. and the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, accused Mr. Benjamin of conspiring to direct state funds to a Harlem real estate investor in exchange for orchestrating thousands of dollars in illegal campaign contributions to Mr. Benjamin’s unsuccessful 2021 campaign for New York City comptroller, the people said,” reported William K. Rashbaum and Nicholas Fandos. “The investor was arrested on federal charges in November.”

“There is no suggestion that Ms. Hochul was aware of Mr. Benjamin’s alleged criminal conduct, which prosecutors said occurred when he was a state senator. Still, she took office last year promising to end an era of impropriety in Albany, and selecting Mr. Benjamin, 45, was among her first major decisions as governor,” said the report. “Federal prosecutors and the F.B.I. were expected to announce the charges later on Tuesday, and Mr. Benjamin is scheduled to appear in United States District Court in Lower Manhattan on Tuesday afternoon.”

Hochul herself was promoted to the governorship after the resignation of Gov. Andrew Cuomo, following multiple allegations of sexual harassments.

Oklahoma Republicans ram through most restrictive abortion ban in the nation

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt signed a near-total abortion ban on Tuesday, making it a felony for anyone to perform an abortion, as part of a years-long Republican crusade to roll back abortion access for people across the country.

The measure, S.B. 612, subjects anyone who provides an abortion to $100,000 fine and up to ten years in a prison. While the bill does allow exemptions for medical emergencies, it makes does such thing in cases of rape or incest. 

“I promised Oklahomans that I would sign every pro-life bill that hits my desk and that’s what we’re doing today,” Stitt said during the bill’s signing. “We want Oklahoma to be the most pro-life state in the country. We want to outlaw abortion in the state of Oklahoma.”

State Sen. Nathan Dahm, the measure’s sponsor called it the “strongest pro-life legislation in the country right now, which effectively eliminates abortion in Oklahoma.”

RELATED: “Devastating”: Oklahoma’s near-total abortion ban is “worse than Texas” — and impacts other states

Abortion advocates have sounded alarm of the measure, indicating that it will almost certainly be challenged in court. 

“It has never been more obvious that politicians are using tricks and games to pass these harmful laws,” Dr. Ghazaleh Moayedi, an obstetrician and gynecologist in Texas and Oklahoma and a board member at Physicians for Reproductive Health, said in a statement. “Oklahoma legislators are trying to ban abortion from all sides and merely seeing which of these dangerous, shameful bills they can get their governor to sign.”


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Oklahoma Republicans are also attempting to push a parallel bill, H.B. 4327, though the legislature that would outlaw abortion after six weeks into pregnancy, likening the legislative rubric established by Texas’ near-total abortion ban passed back in September. 

Emily Wales, Interim President and CEO at Planned Parenthood Great Plains, called Oklahoma’s latest measure a “vigilante, bounty-hunter law copied from anti-choice politicians’ Texas playbook.” 

Like that of Texas, H.B. 4327 would also establish a cause of action against anyone who aids or abets in an abortion, allowing private citizens to sue wrongdoers for at least $10,000. 

RELATED: Oklahoma readies for near-total abortion ban

S.B. 612’s passage comes as the Supreme Court considers a landmark case on a Mississippi Abortion law, which prohibits abortions after 15 weeks into pregnancy. The case is likely to set a legal precedent for the recent rash of restrictive abortion bills passed by states like Oklahoma, Alabama, Arkansas, and Texas, as The Washington Post noted.

Last year, multiple members of the Supreme Court, in which conservatives hold a 6-3 majority, indicated that they might be open to reversing Roe v. Wade, the 1973 case that established a woman’s constitutional right to abortion.

“Unprecedented and dangerous”: Florida GOP gives up power to draw new district maps to Ron DeSantis

Florida’s GOP-controlled Legislature on Monday effectively handed Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis control over the process of drawing the state’s congressional map for upcoming U.S. House elections, a move that voting rights advocates decried as an “unprecedented and dangerous” abdication of responsibility.

Caving to pressure from the right-wing governor’s office, Florida’s state Senate President Wilton Simpson and state House Speaker Chris Sprowls said in a joint statement that “at this time, Legislative reapportionment staff is not drafting or producing a map for introduction during the special session.”

The “Miami Herald” reported Monday that “while DeSantis has not produced a new congressional map since the Legislature made its final version, his general counsel, Ryan Newman, had earlier offered a map that experts said would have reduced Black and Hispanic voting strength in congressional districts, and that raised new questions about DeSantis’ commitment to the Fair Districts standards of the Florida Constitution.”

According to the “Orlando Sentinel”, “DeSantis also provided a seven-page analysis… making it clear that he thought the majority-Black Congressional District 5 should be eliminated.”

With the pivotal 2022 midterms looming, DeSantis has reportedly faced pressure from prominent figures in former President Donald Trump’s orbit, including Steve Bannon, to craft congressional maps that are even more friendly to Republicans.

In a Twitter post Monday evening, the ACLU’s Florida branch warned that “the Florida Legislature’s decision to cede this decennial process of redrawing lines for congressional districts to Gov. DeSantis is undemocratic.”

“People should pick their politicians, not the other way around,” the group added.

The statement from the Republican leaders of Florida’s Legislature—which recently approved a sweeping voter suppression bill that was later blocked by a federal judge—also drew outrage from state Democrats.

State Rep. Carlos Smith told the “Tampa Bay Times” that the Legislature “has totally surrendered its authority as a separate and equal branch of government.”

“Republican lawmakers should have rejected the governor’s overt attack on Black representation in our democracy,” said Smith. “Instead, they’re fully capitulating to 100% of his demands out of fear of retribution.”

State Rep. Anna Eskamani similarly condemned the Republican leadership for “just bending over backward to do what the governor wants.”

“Whatever happened to the separation of powers?” Eskamani asked. “I mean, why are we elected?”

The “Washington Post” reported Monday that prominent figures “affiliated with Trump’s Make America Great Again movement, like radio host Stephen K. Bannon, put pressure on DeSantis to demand a map that gave Republicans additional seats in Congress at a time when the balance of power hinges on outcomes in just a handful of districts.”

Last month, a pair of watchdog organizations filed a federal lawsuit against DeSantis, Simpson, Sprowls, and other Republican officials in Florida, alleging that DeSantis improperly influenced the time-sensitive redistricting process and demanding court intervention to ensure that Floridians have the “equal, undiluted votes to which they are constitutionally entitled.”

The state’s U.S. congressional primaries are set to take place on August 23.

“By inserting himself into the map-drawing process in this inappropriate and unprecedented way, Governor DeSantis began to diminish the prospect that the Legislature would timely pass a legally- and constitutionally-compliant congressional map,” reads the lawsuit filed by Common Cause Florida and Fair Districts Now.

Break out of your lunch rut with Ina Garten’s ultimate tuna melt

If you’re falling into a weekday lunch lull and need a bit of inspiration, Ina Garten is here to remind us that sometimes a slight spin on a classic is enough to do the job. You could go for the traditional tuna sandwich, sure. But why not level it up with Ina’s Ultimate Tuna Melt? The mixture can be prepped ahead of time so you can remix it on different breads for different days, without too much time or effort.

For your tuna mixture, you’ll take a medium sized bowl, and flake the tuna finely using a fork. Ina recommends imported tuna that comes in olive oil, but whatever you have on hand will work, too. Then, you’ll mix in your diced celery, minced scallions, minced fresh dill, and continue incorporating your ingredients until the mixture is fluffy and fully combined. Next, you’ll add your lemon juice, salt, pepper, mayonnaise and anchovy paste (if you choose to include it) and combine.

Now you’ll need to fire up your broiler. Toast your bread in a toaster first to get that initial crisp. Then, take the slices and place them in a single layer on a sheet pan. Add your desired amount of tuna mix to each slice, and spread thickly and evenly. Sprinkle your Swiss cheese on top to cover the tuna, and pop your sheet into the broiler for one to two minutes, or until the cheese on top is golden brown and melted. 

Broilers can be intense, so make sure to watch over your melts carefully. Add some microgreens for a fresh garnish, and serve warm. Click here for the full recipe

More simple (Ina-approved!) comfort recipes to make at home: 

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Marsha Blackburn mocked on Twitter for claiming “Tennesseans want a wall on our southern border”

Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., suggested on Monday that Tennessee residents want a “wall” on state’s southern border to guard against illegal immigration – even even though Tennessee is not located along the U.S.-Mexico border. 

“Tennesseans want a wall on our southern border,” the conservative tweeted without any further explanation.

The comment bewildered many critics online, many of whom noted that south Tennessee is bordered by Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi – none of which border Mexico. 

“YOUR southern border is with Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia, MORON,” tweeted political commentator Keith Olberman.

“In Joe Biden’s America, people can just cross between Alabama and Tennessee at will!” joked Ian Millhiser, Senior Correspondent at Vox.


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Historian Kevin M. Kruse also chimed in, saying that he was “surprised Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia haven’t already built one there themselves” given the “sheer amount of stupidity Republicans are pushing on the state.”

RELATED: Marsha Blackburn gets ripped for ‘klansplaining’

Blackburn, a stalwart conservative, has been a fierce critic of Biden’s immigration policies. Back in August, the Tennessee lawmaker introduced a bill that would defund Amtrak in order to fund Donald Trump’s failed border wall. Blackburn has also proposed a measure with Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Tex., designed to preserve Title 42, the Trump-era policy that allowed border patrol agents to mass-expel thousands of migrants over COVID-19 concerns.

Blackburn came under fire recently during the March confirmation hearings of Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Jackson Brown, the first Black woman and former public defender to sit on the bench. 

In one exchange, Blackburn demanded that Brown define the word “woman,” alluding the recent debates around transgender identity. However, Brown declined to indulge the senator, noting that she’s “not a biologist.”

Days after the back-and-forth, Blackburn was asked to define the word herself. According to HuffPost, the Tennessee Republican dodged the question three times before answering: “Two X chromosomes.”

However, not every person who identifies as a woman has two X chromosomes. And some people, like those with Swyer syndrome, have both an X and a Y chromosome, even though they have biologically female reproductive organs. 

RELATED: 6 Republicans who used the Ketanji Brown Jackson hearings to throw out the wildest right-wing meme

“The coup attempt is ongoing”: Ex-Trump lawyer John Eastman still trying to overturn 2020 election

Former Trump lawyer John Eastman is still trying to overturn the results of the 2020 election amid a legal battle with the House Jan. 6 committee over his role in the former president’s failed effort to reverse his loss.

Eastman played a key role as a top adviser in Trump’s scheme to block the certification of President Joe Biden’s win and wrote a plan outlining how then-Vice President Mike Pence could supposedly reject legitimate electors from states won by Biden. Eastman’s efforts have come under the scrutiny of the Jan. 6 committee, which subpoenaed his records related to the scheme. Eastman fought the subpoena before a judge last month ordered him to turn over documents after finding that he and Trump “more likely than not” committed federal crimes when they “corruptly attempted to obstruct” Congress.

But Eastman is not done trying to undo Trump’s loss. He was one of several Trump allies who last month secured a two-hour private meeting with Wisconsin state Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, a Republican, to pressure him to “nullify” the 2020 election and “reclaim the electors awarded to Biden,” which legal experts say is not possible, according to ABC News.

Eastman urged Vos to “decertify the election,” according to the report. Jefferson Davis, a Wisconsin activist who also attended the meeting, told ABC that Eastman pushed Vos to start “reclaiming the electors” and move forward with “either a do over or having a new slate of electors seated that would declare someone else the winner.”

Eastman did not comment on the meeting.

“By explicit request from Speaker Vos, that meeting was confidential, so I am not able to make any comment,” he told ABC.

RELATED: Former Trump lawyer John Eastman says his coup plan would have worked if it wasn’t for Mike Pence

Eastman previously worked with other Trump allies to push Wisconsin officials to decertify the state’s election, writing an eight-page analysis last December claiming that if there was “acknowledged illegality” in an election then the result of the election could be nullified and the legislature could then choose new electors “as it sees fit,” according to Rolling Stone.

After the March meeting, Vos reiterated that the election could not be decertified. He has nonetheless has played a key role in ginning up election-related conspiracy theories in Wisconsin. He has pushed claims of widespread election fraud and hired election conspiracist Michael Gableman to lead a taxpayer-funded investigation into the 2020 race. Gableman, who spoke at a pro-Trump “Stop the steal” rally before he was hired, last month presented a preliminary report echoing numerous debunked conspiracy theories and called on the legislature to decertify the results, even as Vos and legal experts explained there was no legal mechanism to do so. Gableman also called for the prosecution and possible imprisonment of election officials who refused to cooperate with his probe. A judge last month found Vos in contempt of court for refusing to release records from Gableman’s investigation. Vos last week released 20,000 pages of previously-deleted emails showing extensive contact with election conspiracy theorists who were seeking ways to undo Trump’s loss.

Eastman has also been active in other states. He joined a group of Colorado election deniers in February for an “emergency town hall meeting” at which participants baselessly accused Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, a Democrat, of participating in an election fraud conspiracy,” according to ABC News. Eastman bragged at the meeting about his role in election lawsuits in Texas, Pennsylvania, Georgia and Wisconsin, accusing those who oppose the effort of “pure evil.”

Eastman has previously said he met with Trump allies at the Willard Hotel one day before the Capitol riot, where the Republican’s supporters convened a “war room.” He was among the speakers at Trump’s “Save America” rally at the Ellipse on Jan. 6, shortly before the Capitol assault began.


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Trump has also pushed Wisconsin to decertify the 2020 election.

“Speaker Vos should do the right thing and correct the Crime of the Century — immediately!” the ex-president said in a statement last month. “It is my opinion that other states will be doing this, Wisconsin should lead the way!”

Trump has been in contact with “multiple” people working on the effort, according to ABC, and receives “regular updates” from MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, who has sunk millions of his own money into pushing widely-debunked election claims.

“The coup attempt is ongoing,” tweeted journalist Christopher Ingraham. “I hope I’m wrong, but all signs point to 2024 being a massively destabilizing event that nobody is preparing for, aside from the coup plotters.”

Radio host and Salon contributor Dean Obeidallah called on Attorney General Merrick Garland to act to prevent the hijacking of democracy, echoing the growing frustrations of Biden and members of the Jan. 6 committee over the Justice Department’s reluctance to pursue charges against Trump and his inner circle.

“The COUP is not over,” he wrote, “and it will NEVER be unless Trump and his co-conspirators are prosecuted.”

Read more:

Russian invasion of Ukraine threatens the future of the International Space Station

New U.S. sanctions on Russia will encompass Russia’s space agency, Roscosmos, according to a speech U.S. President Joe Biden gave on Feb. 24, 2022.

In response to these sanctions, the head of Roscosmos on the same day posted a tweet saying, among other things, “If you block cooperation with us, who will save the ISS from an uncontrolled deorbit and fall into the United States or Europe?”

The International Space Station has often stayed above the fray of geopolitics. That position is under threat.

Built and run by the U.S., Russia, Europe, Japan and Canada, the ISS has shown how countries can cooperate on major projects in space. The station has been continuously occupied for over 20 years and has hosted more than 250 people from 19 countries.

As a space policy expert, the ISS represents, to me, a high point of cooperation in space exploration. But for the current crew of two Russians, four Americans and one German, things may be getting worrisome as tensions rise between the U.S. and Russia.

Several agreements and systems are in place to make sure that the space station can function smoothly while being run by five different space agencies. As of Feb. 24, there were no announcements of unusual actions aboard the station despite the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. But the Russian government has brought the ISS into geopolitics before and is doing so again.

Managing the ISS

What came to be known as the International Space Station was first conceived on NASA drawing boards in the early 1980s. As costs rose past initial estimates, NASA officials invited international partners from the European Space Agency, Canada and Japan to join the project.

When the Soviet Union collapsed at the end of the Cold War in the early 1990s, the Russian space program found itself in dire straits, suffering from lack of funding and an exodus of engineers and program officials. To take advantage of Russian expertise in space stations and foster post-Cold War cooperation, the NASA administrator at the time, Dan Goldin, convinced the Clinton administration to bring Russia into the program that was rechristened the International Space Station.

By 1998, just prior to the launch of the first modules, Russia, the U.S. and the other international partners of the ISS entered into memorandums of understanding that spelled out how major decisions would be made and what kind of control each nation would have over various parts of the station.

The body that governs the operation of the space station is the Multilateral Coordination Board. This board has representatives from each of the space agencies involved in the ISS and is chaired by the U.S. The board operates by consensus in making decisions on things like a code of conduct for ISS crews.

Even among international partners who want to work together, consensus is not always possible. If this happens, either the chair of the board can make decisions on how to move forward or the issue can be elevated to the NASA administrator and the head of the Russian space agency, Roscosmos.

Territories in space

While the overall operations of the station are run by the Multilateral Coordination Board, things are more complicated when it comes to the modules themselves.

The International Space Station is made of 16 different segments constructed by different countries, including the U.S., Russia, Japan, Italy and the European Space Agency. Under the ISS agreements, each country maintains control over how its modules are used. This includes the Russian Zarya, which provides electricity and propulsion to the station, and Zvezda, which provides all of the station’s life support systems like oxygen production and water recycling.

The result is that ISS modules are treated legally as if they are territorial extensions of their countries of origin. While all crew onboard can theoretically be in and use any of the modules, how they are used must be approved by each country.

International tensions and the ISS

While the ISS has functioned under this structure remarkably well since its launch more than 20 years ago, there have been some disputes.

When Russian forces annexed the Ukrainian territory of Crimea in 2014, the U.S. imposed economic sanctions on Russia. As a result, Russian officials announced that they would no longer launch U.S. astronauts to and from the space station beginning in 2020. Since NASA had retired the space shuttle in 2011, the U.S. was entirely dependent on Russian rockets to get astronauts to and from the ISS, and this threat could have meant the end of the American presence aboard the space station entirely.

While Russia did not follow through on its threat and continued to transport U.S. astronauts, the threat needed to be taken seriously. The situation today is quite different. The U.S. has been relying on private SpaceX rockets to transport astronauts to and from the ISS. This makes potential Russian threats to launch access less meaningful.

But the invasion of Ukraine does seem to have upped the intensity of geopolitical maneuvering involving the ISS.

The new U.S. sanctions are designed to “degrade their aerospace industry, including their space program.” The tweet in response from Dmitry Rogozin, the head of Roscosmos, “explained” that Russian modules are key to moving the station when it needs to dodge space junk or adjust its orbit. He went on to say that Russia could either refuse to move the station when needed or even crash it into the U.S., Europe, India or China.

Though dramatic, this is likely an idle threat due to both political consequences and the practical difficulty of getting Russian cosmonauts off the ISS safely. But I am concerned about how the invasion will affect the remaining years of the space station.

In December 2021, the U.S. announced its intention to extend operation of ISS operations from its planned end date of 2024 to 2030. Most ISS partners expressed support for the plan, but Russia will also need to agree to keep the ISS operating beyond 2024. Without Russia’s support, the station – and all of its scientific and cooperative achievements – may face an early end.

The ISS has served as a prime example for how nations can cooperate with one another in an endeavor that has been relatively free from politics. Increasing tensions, threats and more aggressive Russian actions – including its recent test of anti-satellite weapons – are straining the realities of international cooperation in space going forward.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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

The same cabal of warmongering pundits, foreign policy specialists and government officials, year after year, debacle after debacle, smugly dodge responsibility for the military fiascos they orchestrate. They are protean, shifting adroitly with the political winds, moving from the Republican Party to the Democratic Party and then back again, mutating from cold warriors to neocons to liberal interventionists. Pseudo-intellectuals, they exude a cloying Ivy League snobbery as they sell perpetual fear, perpetual war and a racist worldview, where the lesser breeds of the earth only understand violence. 

They are pimps of war, puppets of the Pentagon, a state within a state, and the defense contractors who lavishly fund their think tanks — Project for the New American Century, American Enterprise Institute, Foreign Policy Initiative, Institute for the Study of War, the Atlantic Council and the Brookings Institution. Like some mutant strain of an antibiotic-resistant bacteria, they cannot be vanquished. It does not matter how wrong they are, how absurd their theories, how many times they lie or denigrate other cultures and societies as uncivilized or how many murderous military interventions go bad. They are immovable props, the parasitic mandarins of power vomited up in the dying days of any empire, including ours, leaping from one self-defeating catastrophe to the next.

I spent 20 years as a foreign correspondent reporting on the suffering, misery and murderous rampages these shills for war engineered and funded. My first encounter with them was in Central America. Elliot Abrams — convicted of providing misleading testimony to Congress on the Iran-Contra Affair and later pardoned by President George H.W. Bush so he could return to government to sell us the Iraq war — and Robert Kagan, director of the State Department’s public diplomacy office for Latin America — were propagandists for the brutal military regimes in El Salvador and Guatemala, as well as the rapists and homicidal thugs who made up the rogue Contra forces fighting the Sandinista government in Nicaragua, which they illegally funded. Their job was to discredit our reporting.

RELATED: The dangerous myth of American innocence: Only our enemies commit “war crimes”

They, and their coterie of fellow war lovers, went on to push for the expansion of NATO in Central and Eastern Europe after the fall of the Berlin Wall, violating an agreement not to extend NATO beyond the borders of a unified Germany and recklessly antagonizing Russia. They were and are cheerleaders for the apartheid state of Israel, justifying its war crimes against Palestinians and myopically conflating Israel’s interests with our own. They advocated for air strikes in Serbia, calling for the U.S. to “take out” Slobodan Milosevic. They were the authors of the policy to invade Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Libya. Robert Kagan and William Kristol, with their typical cluelessness, wrote in April 2002 that “the road that leads to real security and peace” is “the road that runs through Baghdad.”

We saw how that worked out. That road led to the dissolution of Iraq, the destruction of its civilian infrastructure, including the obliteration of 18 of 20 electricity-generating plants and nearly all the water-pumping and sanitation systems during a 43-day period when 90,000 tons of bombs were rained down on the country, the rise of radical jihadist groups throughout the region, and failed states. The war in Iraq, along with the humiliating defeat in Afghanistan, shredded the illusion of U.S. military and global hegemony. It also inflicted on Iraqis, who had nothing to do with the attacks of 9/11, the widespread killing of civilians, the torture and sexual humiliation of Iraqi prisoners, and the ascendancy of Iran as the preeminent power in the region. They continue to call for a war with Iran, with Fred Kagan stating that “there is nothing we can do short of attacking to force Iran to give up its nuclear weapons.” They pushed for the overthrow of President Nicolás Maduro, after trying to do the same to Hugo Chávez, in Venezuela. They have targeted Daniel Ortega, their old nemesis in Nicaragua.

They embrace a purblind nationalism that prohibits them from seeing the world from any perspective other than their own. They know nothing about the machinery of war, its consequences or its inevitable blowback. They know nothing about the peoples and cultures they target for violent regeneration. They believe in their divine right to impose their “values” on others by force. Fiasco after fiasco. Now they are stoking a war with Russia.

“The nationalist is by definition an ignoramus,” Yugoslav writer Danilo Kiš observed. “Nationalism is the line of least resistance, the easy way. The nationalist is untroubled, he knows or thinks he knows what his values are, his, that’s to say national, that’s to say the values of the nation he belongs to, ethical and political; he is not interested in others, they are no concern of his, hell — it’s other people (other nations, another tribe). They don’t even need investigating. The nationalist sees other people in his own images — as nationalists.”

The Biden administration is filled with these ignoramuses, including Joe Biden. Victoria Nuland, the wife of Robert Kagan, serves as Biden’s undersecretary of state for political affairs. Antony Blinken is secretary of state. Jake Sullivan is national security adviser. They come from this cabal of moral and intellectual trolls that includes Kimberly Kagan, the wife of Fred Kagan, who founded the Institute for the Study of War, William Kristol, Max Boot, John Podhoretz, Gary Schmitt, Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, David Frum and others. Many were once staunch Republicans or, like Nuland, served in Republican and Democratic administrations. Nuland was the principal deputy foreign policy adviser to Vice President Dick Cheney. 

They are united by the demand for larger and larger defense budgets and an ever-expanding military. Julian Benda called these courtiers to power “the self-made barbarians of the intelligentsia.”

The ideologues who demand ever-larger defense budgets and an ever-expanding military don’t see the corpses of their victims. I did, in Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Gaza, Iraq, Sudan, Yemen and Kosovo.

They once railed against liberal weakness and appeasement. But they swiftly migrated to the Democratic Party rather than support Donald Trump, who showed no desire to start a conflict with Russia and who called the invasion of Iraq a “big, fat mistake.” Besides, as they correctly pointed out, Hillary Clinton was a fellow neocon. And liberals wonder why nearly half the electorate, who revile these arrogant unelected power brokers, as they should, voted for Trump.

These ideologues did not see the corpses of their victims. I did. Including children. Every dead body I stood over in Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Gaza, Iraq, Sudan, Yemen or Kosovo, month after month, year after year, exposed their moral bankruptcy, their intellectual dishonesty and their sick bloodlust. They did not serve in the military. Their children do not serve in the military. But they eagerly ship young American men and women off to fight and die for their self-delusional dreams of empire and American hegemony. Or, as in Ukraine, they provide hundreds of millions of dollars in weaponry and logistical support to sustain long and bloody proxy wars.

Historical time stopped for them with the end of World War II. The overthrow of democratically elected governments by the U.S. during the Cold War in Indonesia, Guatemala, the Congo, Iran and Chile (where the CIA oversaw the assassination of the commander-in-chief of the army, Gen. René Schneider, and President Salvador Allende), the Bay of Pigs, the atrocities and war crimes that defined the wars in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, even the disasters they manufactured in the Middle East, have disappeared into the black hole of their collective historical amnesia. American global domination, they claim, is benign, a force for good, “benevolent hegemony.” The world, Charles Krauthammer insisted, welcomes “our power.” All enemies, from Saddam Hussein to Vladimir Putin, are the new Hitler. All U.S. interventions are a fight for freedom that make the world a safer place. All refusals to bomb and occupy another country are a 1938 Munich moment, a pathetic retreat from confronting evil by the new Neville Chamberlain. We do have enemies abroad. But our most dangerous enemy is within.


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The warmongers build a campaign against a country such as Iraq or Russia and then wait for a crisis — they call it the next Pearl Harbor — to justify the unjustifiable. In 1998, Kristol and Robert Kagan, along with a dozen other prominent neoconservatives, wrote an open letter to President Bill Clinton denouncing his policy of containment of Iraq as a failure and demanding that he go to war to overthrow Saddam Hussein. To continue the “course of weakness and drift,” they warned, was to “put our interests and our future at risk.” Huge majorities in Congress, Republican and Democrat, rushed to pass the Iraq Liberation Act. Few Democrats or Republicans dared be seen as soft on national security. The act stated that the United States government would work to “remove the regime headed by Saddam Hussein” and authorized $99 million towards that goal, some of it being used to fund Ahmed Chalabi’s Iraqi National Congress, which would become instrumental in disseminating the fabrications and lies used to justify the Iraq war during the administration of George W. Bush.

Warmongers build a campaign against a country such as Iraq and Russia and then wait for a crisis — they always call it the next Pearl Harbor — to justify the unjustifiable.

The attacks of 9/11 gave the war party its opening, first with Afghanistan, then Iraq. Krauthammer, who knew nothing about the Muslim world, wrote that “the way to tame the Arab street is not with appeasement and sweet sensitivity but with raw power and victory. …The elementary truth that seems to elude the experts again and again … is that power is its own reward. Victory changes everything, psychologically above all. The psychology in the [Middle East] is now one of fear and deep respect for American power. Now is the time to use it.” Removing Saddam Hussein from power, Kristol crowed, would “transform the political landscape of the Middle East.”  

It did, of course, but not in ways that benefited the U.S.

They lust for apocalyptic global war. Fred Kagan, the brother of Robert, a military historian, wrote in 1999 that “America must be able to fight Iraq and North Korea, and also be able to fight genocide in the Balkans and elsewhere without compromising its ability to fight two major regional conflicts. And it must be able to contemplate war with China or Russia some considerable (but not infinite) time from now.” (Emphasis mine.)

They believe violence magically solves all disputes, even the Israeli-Palestinian morass. In a bizarre interview immediately after 9/11, Donald Kagan, the Yale classicist and right-wing ideologue who was the father of Robert and Fred, called, along with his son Fred, for the deployment of U.S. troops in Gaza so we could “take the war to these people.” They have long demanded the stationing of NATO troops in Ukraine, with Robert Kagan saying that “we need to not worry that the problem is our encirclement rather than Russian ambitions.” His wife, Victoria Nuland, was outed in a leaked phone conversation in 2014 with the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Geoffrey Pyatt, disparaging the EU and plotting to remove lawfully elected President Viktor Yanukovych and install compliant Ukrainian politicians in power, most of whom did eventually take power. They lobbied for U.S. troops to be sent to Syria to assist “moderate” rebels seeking to overthrow Bashar al-Assad. Instead, the intervention spawned the Caliphate. The U.S. ended up bombing the very forces they had armed, becoming Assad’s de facto air force.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine, like the attacks of 9/11, is a self-fulfilling prophecy. Putin, like everyone else they target, only understands force. We can, they assure us, militarily bend Russia to our will.

“It is true that acting firmly in 2008 or 2014 would have meant risking conflict,” Robert Kagan wrote in the latest issue of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine, lamenting our refusal to militarily confront Russia earlier. “But Washington is risking conflict now; Russia’s ambitions have created an inherently dangerous situation. It is better for the United States to risk confrontation with belligerent powers when they are in the early stages of ambition and expansion, not after they have already consolidated substantial gains. Russia may possess a fearful nuclear arsenal, but the risk of Moscow using it is not higher now than it would have been in 2008 or 2014, if the West had intervened then. And it has always been extraordinarily small: Putin was never going to obtain his objectives by destroying himself and his country, along with much of the rest of the world.”

In short, don’t worry about going to war with Russia, Putin won’t use the bomb.

I do not know if these people are stupid or cynical or both. They are lavishly funded by the war industry. They are never dropped from the networks for their repeated idiocy. They rotate in and out of power, parked in places like the Council on Foreign Relations or the Brookings Institution, before being called back into government. They are as welcome in the Obama or Biden White House as the Bush White House. The Cold War, for them, never ended. The world remains binary, us and them, good and evil. They are never held accountable. When one military intervention goes up in flames, they are ready to promote the next. These Dr. Strangeloves, if we don’t stop them, will terminate life as we know it on the planet.

Read more on the conflict in Ukraine and its ripple effects:

Young White House aide was go-between from Giuliani to Trump during coup campaign

During the frantic period between the 2020 election and the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the U.S. Capitol, a young White House aide named Garrett Ziegler served as a conduit of information from a network of teams led by lawyers Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell to President Trump, as the operatives generated unfounded and specious claims in an attempt to delegitimize the 2020 presidential election.

Ziegler has spoken openly about using his pass to let attorney Sidney Powell and former national security adviser Michael Flynn into the White House for a Dec. 18, 2020, meeting with Trump and contributing to a report authored by his boss, trade adviser Peter Navarro, that was used to undermine confidence in the election. But Raw Story has confirmed that Ziegler played a much more significant role than has been previously understood. Working directly with a team that reported to Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal lawyer, Ziegler helped create a seamless information chain that was mobilized in the effort to overturn the election.

As previously reported, Ziegler let Powell and Flynn into the White House for an impromptu meeting with Trump, in which the trio reportedly urged the president to invoke the National Emergencies Act so that he could use the National Guard to seize ballots and appoint Powell as a special counsel to investigate the election. Patrick Byrne, the former Overstock.com CEO, has said that he contacted Ziegler to arrange the meeting. The visit caught chief of staff Mark Meadows and White House counsel Pat Cipollone by surprise, according to Ziegler, and Ziegler’s visitor access privileges were subsequently revoked.

RELATED: “Trump knew exactly what was going on”: Inside the thinking of the Jan. 6 committee

The following day, Trump tweeted a link to the report authored by Navarro produced in collaboration with Ziegler, while calling his supporters to come to Washington on Jan. 6 for a “wild rally.”

Ziegler also said he attempted to arrange a separate meeting between Powell and Trump, Raw Story has found.

“I walked Sidney over to the residence one night to try to get the president a binder full of evidence,” Ziegler asserted in a YouTube interview after he had left the White House. Powell was blocked from meeting with the president, he said, contending that Trump’s more cautious staff prevented the president from taking bolder action.

Ziegler disclosed on his Telegram channel last month that he received an invitation to speak with the staff and members of the House Jan. 6 Committee. The House cited Navarro, Ziegler’s former boss, for criminal contempt for defying subpoenas from the select committee and referred him to the Department of Justice for prosecution on April 6.

While gathering information and drafting the Navarro report, Ziegler worked with a research team that reported to Giuliani, according to Giuliani associate Michael Trimarco. A Long Island businessman with a background in finance and tech, Trimarco told far-right conspiracy theorist Ann Vandersteel in a recent video that he had been helping Giuliani analyze the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop in October 2020, and then hastily switched over to researching alleged election fraud after the election.


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The Westin hotel in Arlington, Virginia, served as the initial hub for the teams collecting affidavits to support the legal challenges, Raw Story has found. Those teams promoted a fount of specious claims that would fuel the violent effort to prevent Congress from certifying the election. Byrne said in a video posted earlier this year that Trimarco “rented some rooms” for Powell “and a few other people” at the Westin. The video was removed from Byrne’s channel on the alternative video streaming platform Rumble, but a copy was republished by the news site One News Page, crediting Rumble as the original source.

“All of this would have fallen apart on that side of the river had it not been for [Trimarco] showing up and not just with a credit card, but trying to provide some adult supervision,” Byrne said. “He’s a real champion, and the MAGA crowd should know that when push came to shove, this fellow came up out of nowhere and was very valuable in helping corral all these forces and keep things from just spinning apart in the early days.”

In mid-November 2020, Powell, Flynn and Byrne decamped from the Westin to the Tomotley Plantation in South Carolina at the invitation of defamation attorney Lin Wood in mid-November. The team led by Powell and Flynn at Tomotley received widespread coverage. Less attention has been focused on a second team that stayed behind. Ziegler was a frequent presence at the Westin, which he dubbed the “cyber-patriots,” Trimarco said.

The team at the Westin “did have access to Garrett at the White House, they did get tours, and they did work with Garrett extensively,” Trimarco told Vandersteel. “I know he did — and he was working diligently with these folks to get as much information as quickly as we could into the right hands.”

By Nov. 15, 2020, Ziegler and other aides started helping Peter Navarro compile reports meant to cast doubt on the outcome of the election. “Our job,” he said, “was to get the first draft.”

Following in the footsteps of his older cousin Ron Ziegler, onetime press secretary for President Richard Nixon, Garrett Ziegler landed an internship at the White House as a college student in 2017. He joined the staff of the White House Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy under Navarro two years later. Prior to the election, Ziegler said he worked on reports touting “the Trump economic record” in sectors like mining and manufacturing in swing states. Beginning around Nov. 15 — roughly the same time Powell moved her team from the Westin to the Tomotley Plantation — Ziegler said he and three other aides started helping Navarro compile reports casting doubt on the outcome of the election.

“We prepared — Peter gave direction,” Ziegler told David Clements, a former New Mexico State University professor who has amassed a large following on Telegram among election deniers and anti-vaccine adherents. “He laid it out, what his vision was. And our job was to get the first draft.”

In his account of his time working on the Giuliani election team at the Westin, Trimarco told Vandersteel he was impressed by Ziegler’s energy and found him to be mature beyond his years.

“I mean, this guy — talk about people really working 24/7,” Trimarco said. “He would come around at 11, midnight, 1, after he’s done at the White House, to get information. I saw him come by one or two times. But he was working with a few key people on our team to get the information.”

In the tangled web of relationships among the operatives working to overturn the election at the Westin, Tomotley and across the country, Trimarco was responsible for making sure crucial information reached Giuliani.

“If you wanted to get information from Sidney’s camp, at least at the very beginning, over to Rudy’s, you’d come through me,” Trimarco said. “That was the reason I was at a lot of these meetings — to get information over to Rudy, because he represented the president, for real. And we weren’t physically in the same location.”

While the “cyber-patriots” team was headquartered at the Westin, according to Trimarco, Giuliani has said he was working out of the Trump Hotel around the time of the election and then moved to the Mandarin Oriental Hotel. Shortly after Christmas, Giuliani said he moved to the Willard Hotel. Giuliani’s statements about his whereabouts during the period he was challenging the election on Trump’s behalf come from a deposition for a defamation lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems employee Eric Coomer.

Giuliani did not respond to multiple emails and voicemails to his lawyers seeking comment.

Ziegler was working so closely with the team at the Westin that information often reached Trump before it reached him, Trimarco said.

“Ironically, a lot of the stuff that got back to Rudy didn’t end up coming through me,” Trimarco told Vandersteel. “Because once that connection was made, Garrett would give it to Peter, and Peter would give it to the president, and then it would circle back to Rudy.”

Ziegler told Raw Story he would respond to questions for comment, but didn’t send responses by press time.

Trimarco comes from a politically connected family in New York. His involvement in politics long predates the effort to overturn the 2020 election. During a New York state court trial to decide a complaint brought by Trimarco against his former business partners, witnesses testified that Trimarco took part in a meeting with then-Rep. Steve Israel, D-N.Y., in 2002 to discuss a venture that would theoretically capture and store biometric data to properly identify passengers at Long Island’s MacArthur Airport. Trimarco’s former partners accused him of failing to talk about their business during the meeting and instead promoting a business owned by his family.

Trimarco claimed in his March interview with Vandersteel that “the feds are coming after me” related to a matter involving Cambridge Analytica — the British consulting firm that used Facebook data to micro-target voters to the advantage of the Trump campaign in 2016. He further asserted that Giuliani was representing him in the matter. It is unclear exactly what Trimarco’s relationship to Cambridge Analytica is, but a Fast Company story linked Cambridge Analytica to members of the Ergen family, who own Dish Network, and court records indicate that Trimarco was involved in marketing and distribution work for Dish Network in 2010.

In 2018, Trimarco sued Dish Network scion Chase Ergen, and he was represented by a New York City lawyer named Howard Kleinhendler.

Trimarco told Vandersteel that he was analyzing the contents of Hunter Biden’s laptop for Giuliani in October 2020. Kleinhendler allowed him to come by his law office to print out pages from the device. The effort to mine the laptop for information that could damage the Biden campaign pivoted to generating baseless election fraud theories once it became apparent Trump was going to lose.

“When everything went south after election night and Howard was on the phone with me right away — ‘How can I help? Can I work on this? I want to help the cause,'” Trimarco recalled. The next day, Trimarco said Kleinhendler showed up at the Westin ready to go to work. Kleinhendler went on to file an election suit as Sidney Powell’s co-counsel in Arizona, and currently represents Powell in defamation suits brought by Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic.

Despite multiple attempts, Kleinhendler could not be reached for comment.

In his interview with Vandersteel, Trimarco recalled a meeting that took place at the Westin shortly after the election that included Kleinhendler and Powell. Two other men who attended the meeting — retired Army Col. Phil Waldron and Texas businessman Russell Ramsland — explained “their theories on how the system was hacked,” Trimarco said.

Ziegler maintains that during his time in the White House he was outspoken in his advocacy for Trump to take bold action to prevent the transfer of power to Joe Biden.

In December 2020, Ziegler still held out hope that Trump would follow Navarro’s advice and “quote-unquote cross the Rubicon. … But he didn’t do that.”

“I was telling whoever would listen to me in the White House: ‘Let’s just go look at the ballots. We don’t have to do it. Have the National Guard in Georgia do it,'” Ziegler told an interviewer, outlining a proposal similar to the one Powell, Flynn and Byrne pitched to Trump at the White House meeting.

In late December 2020, Ziegler said he was “still holding out hope that some of the advice my boss was giving [Trump] that we needed to do something about this would actually get done, that he would quote-unquote cross the Rubicon…. But he didn’t do that.”

By then, the ceaseless drumbeat of unfounded claims that the vote had been electronically altered by foreign powers had come to be accepted as truth by Trump’s supporters. Outraged by what they considered treason by lawmakers, state officials and judges who thwarted the president’s attempt to cling to power, they took matters into their own hands. On Jan. 6, 2021, the pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol and forced Congress to delay certification of the electoral vote. The vote was ultimately certified and Biden was confirmed as the next president.

Read more on Donald Trump’s attempted coup:

COVID’s pre-existing condition: Pandemic has been devastating for the poor

As we head into the Easter and Passover holidays, the horrific images coming out of Ukraine, along with images of Will Smith slapping Chris Rock, have pushed the ongoing pandemic off the “breaking news” page. Just days away from blowing past the threshold of one million deaths in the U.S., the social media analytics that now inform news judgments have moved on to other, more profitable topics.

There is little media appetite to double back and look in depth at the pre-existing social conditions that set the stage for the COVID mass death event, in which poor people of color died at an exponentially higher rate than wealthier whites, both in my home state of New Jersey and throughout the country. The Democrats who control Congress could not even muster the moral coverage to raise the $7.25 federal minimum wage nor continue the expanded Child Tax Credit, which briefly lifted millions of children out of poverty.

Last week, the Rev. William J. Barber’s Poor People’s Campaign released the first-of-its-kind comprehensive study of COVID deaths in over 3,000 U.S. counties that plugged in the intersectionality of poverty, income, race and geography. The research is part of the campaign’s national organizing drive culminating in the June 18 Poor People’s and Low Wage Workers’ Assembly and Moral March on Washington.

RELATED: Rev. William J. Barber II: America is now at the “most critical time, between life and death”

“The findings we will hear today are shameful and will shock us, because, as a nation, we do not talk about poverty,” Barber told reporters April 4 at a press conference at the National Press Club.

Yet in the pandemic, we will hear that there have been two, three, four, five times the deaths in poorer communities as in richer ones…. We encourage everyone here to walk through the data after this conference and take the time to see what has been so far unseen. The findings are so contrary to a nation that claims first and foremost to establish justice, and certainly contrary to the call of God to care for the least of these.

Remember, this unnecessary death happened while we gave corporations $2 trillion to keep them alive and the richest Americans saw their wealth soar. It’s a gross example of what Naomi Klein has called the “shock doctrine,” when the wealthy exploit tragedy to increase their own profits while poor people suffer. This report shows that a poverty-producing and sustaining system was also a death-dealing system. Within this analysis, we can see that it did not need to be this way, if only we were honest about poverty and systemic racism, and the systems of violence that allowed this tragedy.

The Poor People’s white paper was co-authored by renowned economist Jeffrey Sachs with the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network and was released the same day as a deeply disturbing analysis released by the United Way of Northern New Jersey and its research arm United for ALICE, which found that 63% of New Jersey’s Black children and 60% of the state’s Hispanic children were living in “financial hardship” before the pandemic.

Out of New Jersey’s 1.9 million children, 41% live in families below the ALICE survival threshold (see definition below) and almost 60% of those are “rent-burdened,” paying 35% of their income for shelter. One in four have no access to high-speed internet, while almost one in three are not getting food stamps (SNAP benefits).

The New Jersey data was part of a comprehensive state by state United Way analysis entitled “Children in Financial Hardship” that looked at children living below the official federal poverty level and households earning above that but who struggle week to week to cover the essential expenses like rent, utilities, food and child care. Back in 2009, United Way researchers started tracking these families they dubbed ALICE, which stands for “asset limited, income constrained but employed.”


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Nationally, the United Way found nearly half of the children in the U.S. lived in households that were “experiencing financial hardship,” with 16% below the federal poverty level, while 33% were above that threshold, yet still struggling to cover the basics. While ALICE families are evident in every demographic, the racial disparities are stark. Nationally, 70% of Black children and 68% of Hispanic children are living below the ALICE threshold, as compared to 36% of white children.

In raw numbers, out of the 72 million children in the country, 36 million live below the ALICE threshold, which includes 12 million below the official federal poverty level.

Follow-up analysis by the United Way in the midst of the pandemic showed that once COVID hit, these struggling families saw thing go from bad to worse.

In the fall of 2021, half of New Jersey families below the ALICE threshold reported that their children “sometimes or often” didn’t have enough to eat.

“COVID-19 hit ALICE families so much harder than others because they struggle to build savings yet often don’t qualify for financial assistance,” said ALICE Project national director Stephanie Hoopes. According to the project’s research, half of New Jersey families below the ALICE threshold reported in the fall of 2021 that their children “sometimes or often” didn’t have enough to eat, as compared to 32% of those with higher incomes.

In addition to food insecurity, children in ALICE households were more likely to be subject to “interrupted learning and skipping preventative health care,” according to Hoopes.

The gap between the prevailing wage for certain jobs like cashier or home health care aide and the actual cost of living looms even larger in a period of high inflation, like the one we are currently experiencing. For instance, 79% of children who have a parent who works as a cashier — a job that pays a median wage of $11.37 an hour — are in an ALICE household. Back in 2019, ALICE researchers found that for economic stability in New Jersey, a single wage earner would need to get $22 an hour, while a family of four would need to bring in $55 an hour.

Gov. Phil Murphy made raising the state’s minimum wage a top priority. This year it went up to $13 an hour and is scheduled to hit $15 by 2024. There are cut-outs for seasonal, agricultural, small businesses and tipped workers.

The ongoing pandemic has continued to roil the labor market where employers complain they can’t find enough workers. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, last year wages grew by 4.5%, the biggest spike since 1983. But when inflation is factored in, workers continued to lose ground.

“The earning power of working people has been held in check for decades, and there are structural reasons for it,” Sachs told InsiderNJ. “Of course, we have had the weakening of unions — the busting of unions — and the move to the digital economy has been another aspect. Gig work has been part of it, and then there’s the tax policies that have pushed so much money to the top.”

Sachs observed that the U.S. does not have a social safety net for working Americans, like those ALICE households, many of whom are essential workers. This cohort often lacks the basic benefits that used to be provided as part of the social contract between employees and employer.

“So we have tens of millions of people in the precariat economy that are just vulnerable to whatever is going to happen next because our political system is so plutocratic, rotten and nasty,” said Sachs. “The millionaires in Congress, like Sen. Joe Manchin, who represents West Virginia, one of the poorest places in the country, has instincts and politics that has him siding with the gazillionaires.”

America lacks a social safety net for working families, said Jeffrey Sachs, “because our country is uniquely mean at the top. Rich people are mean.”

Sachs points out that social safety net programs like subsidized universal pre-K or child care, which are widely accepted in Canada and other Western democracies, could lift up many ALICE families. Yet they are stymied in Beltway debates, he said, “because our country is uniquely mean at the top. Rich people are mean. They don’t want a small amount of help to go to poor women who are trying to raise kids, even in a pandemic, and even with a massive increase of wealth at the top.”

Perhaps for wealthy Washington policy makers it’s hard to put a face on these tragic data points of deprivation.

Almost 20 years ago, I grabbed one of the last seats at the funeral of 7-year-old Faheem Williams at the Emmanuel Church of Christ in Newark. His body had been found in a plastic storage bin in a home in Newark in January of 2003. He had died after a fall in Irvington several months earlier and his family had not sought medical attention.

Sen. Frank Lautenberg, Gov. James McGreevey and Newark Mayor Sharpe James all spoke to the packed congregation. For a few weeks, the specific cruelty of how the 7-year-old was treated and the failures of New Jersey’s Division of Youth and Family Services made national headlines.

“It was one of New Jersey’s most gruesome child abuse cases, a 7-year-old boy’s mummified body stuffed into a plastic container only a few feet from where his two starving brothers were kept in a locked basement with a bucket for a toilet,” reported the New York Times at the time. “The family had been investigated for child abuse or neglect 10 times over as many years, but a caseworker overwhelmed by 107 other cases failed to follow up on a report several months before the boys’ discovery that they were being beaten and burned.”

I have kept the laminated mass card with Faheem’s picture on it that the Star Ledger reported made him look “pensive.” I think he knew something: Everything in his life was amiss. I have held on to his card to remind me that every news story I do is about actual people.

At the time, I was covering the case for WNYC. I was struck by the cruel irony that his funeral was so well attended, yet at the times that had mattered most in his short life, he was very much alone.

Read more on the human costs of the pandemic:

As other countries rebound, falling US life expectancy shows failures of COVID response

Just over a month into year three of the Covid-19 pandemic, research revealed Thursday that life expectancy in the United States declined again in 2021—which followed a well-documented drop in 2020 and contrasted a recovery trend in other high-income countries.

The paper, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, shows that U.S. life expectancy fell from 78.86 years in 2019 to 76.99 years in 2020 and 76.60 years in 2021, a net loss of 2.26 years.

The study comes as progressives in Congress continue to fight for Medicare for All legislation to replace the U.S. for-profit healthcare system—one in which 112 million adults struggle to afford care, according to Gallup and West Health.

The research also comes just days after a Poor People’s Campaign analysis exposed how the public health crisis was twice as deadly in poor counties as in wealthy ones and “exacerbated preexisting social and economic disparities that have long festered in the U.S.”

Johns Hopkins University’s case tracker reported that as of Thursday afternoon, Covid-19 had claimed 984,571 lives across the United States, or nearly 16% of the more than six million deaths globally.

Dr. Steven Woolf, co-author of the new study and director emeritus of the Center on Society and Health at Virginia Commonwealth University, said in a statement that “we already knew that the U.S. experienced historic losses in life expectancy in 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic. What wasn’t clear is what happened in 2021.”

“Early in 2021, knowing an excellent vaccine was being distributed, I was hopeful that the U.S. could recover some of its historic losses,” said Woolf. “But I began to worry more when I saw what happened as the year unfolded.”

“Even so, as a scientist, until I saw the data it remained an open question how U.S. life expectancy for that year would be affected,” he added. “It was shocking to see that U.S. life expectancy, rather than having rebounded, had dropped even further.”

In addition to examining the United States, the researchers looked at life expectancy over the past two years in 19 “peer countries,” and found a smaller drop between 2019 and 2020—an average of 0.57 years—followed by an average 0.28-year increase from 2020 to 2021.

“While other high-income countries saw their life expectancy increase in 2021, recovering about half of their losses, U.S. life expectancy continued to fall,” Woolf said. “This speaks volumes about the life consequences of how the U.S. handled the pandemic.”

Taking aim at policymakers who opposed efforts to curb the spread of the virus, the expert added that “in a country where the U.S. Constitution and 10th Amendment grant public health authority to the states, I believe the U.S. catastrophe speaks volumes about the policies and behaviors of U.S. governors—at least some of them. A highly effective vaccine was available in 2021 that made Covid-19 deaths almost completely preventable.”

Woolf highlighted that while the Delta and Omicron variants significantly contributed to the death toll in the United States, those mutations also impacted other countries that saw life expectancy rates rebound last year.

“Deaths from these variants occurred almost entirely among unvaccinated people,” he said. “What happened in the U.S. is less about the variants than the levels of resistance to vaccination and the public’s rejection of practices, such as masking and mandates, to reduce viral transmission.”

Noting high rates of heart disease and obesity as well as inequities in access to healthcare in the United States, lead author and University of Colorado Boulder sociology professor Ryan Masters said that “those same factors made the U.S. more vulnerable than other countries to the mortality consequences of Covid-19.”

The study states that “over the two-year period between 2019 and 2021, U.S. Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black populations experienced the largest losses in life expectancy, reflecting the legacy of systemic racism and inadequacies in the U.S. handling of the pandemic.”

Woolf said that “sadly, it was not a surprise to see the disproportionate impact on people of color. Our research had shown that previously. But there was an interesting plot twist in 2021: the only decrease in life expectancy occurred in white people. Life expectancy in the Black population even increased.”

“Despite that increase,” he pointed out, “life expectancy in the Black population remains far lower than in other groups, but the disproportionate impact on white people holds clues to what happened in 2021.”

Co-author Laudan Aron, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute, told “The Washington Post”, “It’s hard to imagine that willingness to be vaccinated is not a piece of that puzzle.”

“The life expectancy gap between the United States and its peer income countries is now over five years, which is an incredible gap,” she said. “Death and life expectancy? That’s the ultimate marker of what it means to live in a country.”

Some members of Congress believe that the pandemic demonstrates the necessity of establishing a national program that treats healthcare as a basic human right and reaches communities that have been disproportionately excluded from and mistreated under the existing profit-driven system.

Last month, during the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Reform’s first Medicare for All hearing since the pandemic began, Rep. Cori Bush (D-Mo.) declared that “this policy will save lives, I want to make that clear.”

“I hope this hearing will be one more step forward in our commitment to ensuring everyone in this country, and particularly our Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities, have the medical care they need to thrive,” she said.

The day after the House event, Senate Budget Committee Chair Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)—a longtime Medicare for All advocate—announced that his panel will hold a similar hearing in early May.

On social media Friday, Warren Gunnels, Sanders’ staff director, noted the new paper and said that he “can’t stop thinking about how many lives could have been saved if Congress passed Bernie’s bill to require Medicare to pay all of the healthcare bills of the uninsured and under-insured during the pandemic—which was fully paid for by a one-time 60% wealth tax on 700 billionaires.”

The new research comes after a March study published in the journal “Population and Development Review”, which found that “global life expectancy appears to have declined by 0.92 years between 2019 and 2020 and by another 0.72 years between 2020 and 2021.”

That paper—by Patrick Heuveline of the California Center for Population Research at the University of California, Los Angeles—concludes:

“Changes in life expectancy between 2019 and 2020 in America, Europe, and a few other countries have received copious attention. Results presented here confirm several key takeaways from previous analyses such as the large mortality impact of the pandemic (1) in the United States relative to other high-income nations in Western Europe, (2) in Russia relative to the rest of Europe, and foremost, (3) in some Central and South American nations. Using end-of-2021 reports of deaths attributed to Covid-19 and modeling their relationship to excess deaths, preliminary estimates were also presented for changes in life expectancy in 2021. These results suggest a growing gap between, on the one hand, Western European nations and, on the other hand, the United States, where life expectancy continued to decline, and even more so, Russia, where it is expected to decline more in 2021 than in 2020.”

Writing about Heuveline’s findings Thursday for “World Socialist Web Site”, Evan Blake and Benjamin Mateus made the case that “unlike previous pandemics, every aspect of the Covid-19 pandemic was both foreseeable and preventable, as documented by dozens of scholarly papers, books, and even films released just since the start of the 21st century.”

“At every step of the way, the financial oligarchy and its political representatives ensured that profits were prioritized over human lives and well-being,” they added. “To put it succinctly, the decline in life expectancy is a concrete health measurement of the policies of social murder, whose monetary values can be appraised by the coinciding rise in stock market indices.”

Distraught over orders to investigate trans kids’ families, Texas child welfare workers resign

Morgan Davis, a transgender man, joined Texas’ child welfare agency as an investigator to be the advocate he never had growing up.

Less than a year later, one of the first cases under Gov. Greg Abbott‘s order to investigate parents of transgender children landed on his desk.

His supervisors in the Travis County office of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services offered to reassign the case, but maybe, he thought, he was the right person for the job.

“If somebody was going to do it, I’m glad it was me,” Davis said.

He hoped it would be reassuring to the family to see a transgender man at the helm of the investigation. But the family’s lawyer didn’t see it that way.

“She said, ‘I know your intentions are good. But by walking in that door, as a representative for the state, you are saying in a sense that you condone this, that you agree with it,'” Davis said.

“It hit me like a thunderbolt. It’s true,” he said. “By me being there, for even a split second, a child could think they’ve done something wrong.”

Davis resigned shortly after. Since the directive went into effect, each member of his four-person unit has put in their notice as well.

While the attorney general’s office has gone to great lengths to defend the governor’s directive in court, the agency responsible for carrying out the investigations has been roiled by resistance and resignations as employees struggle with ethical questions they’ve never faced before.

More than half a dozen child abuse investigators told The Texas Tribune that they either have resigned or are actively job hunting as a result of the directive.

A spokesperson for DFPS declined to comment on the resignations or answer specific questions, citing pending litigation.

The employees, most of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect their jobs, said they feel conflicted — unwilling to undertake what they see as discriminatory investigations and critical of the agency’s internal response to requests for guidance, but haunted by what a mass exodus of experienced child abuse investigators would mean for the state’s most vulnerable children.

“Things are already slipping through the cracks. … We will see investigations that get closed where intervention could have occurred,” one supervisor said. “And children will die in Texas.”

A “heartbreaking” investigation

From the moment he got the case, Davis felt the conflict acutely. He joined DFPS to help children facing abuse and neglect, not children receiving medical care under the direction of a doctor — medical care that made such a difference in his own life.

Gender-affirming care is endorsed by all the major medical associations as the proper treatment for gender dysphoria, the distress someone can feel when their assigned sex doesn’t align with their gender identity. While many young people focus on social transition — dressing differently or using different pronouns — some are prescribed puberty blockers, which are reversible, or hormone therapy.

[What is gender-affirming medical care for transgender children? Here’s what you need to know.]

Davis felt the directive was an unnecessary overreach — he knew firsthand the care and caution that doctors take when prescribing treatments for gender dysphoria.

Even the person who made the child abuse report didn’t seem to agree with the directive: Davis said they were sobbing on the phone, distraught that they were reporting the family, but the person was mandated by law to report child abuse and feared the consequences of not making a report.

“[They] said to me, ‘Just promise me you’ll be kind,'” Davis remembered.

When he visited the family, the house was clean, the pantry was well stocked and the kids were healthy, happy and well loved. He tried to be as reassuring as possible, reiterating again and again what a good job the parents were doing raising their children in a safe and loving way.

But the family was clearly terrified, he said.

“It was just heartbreaking to me, to everyone, to see what we were doing, to see what we had become,” Davis said.

After that, Davis said he couldn’t keep working for an agency that would target families this way. Last week, he put in his notice; he is going to keep working until mid-May to wrap up as many of his open cases as he can to help minimize the burden on his colleagues.

But even though Davis told his supervisor there was no evidence of abuse, the investigation into that child’s family will remain open, likely long after he’s left, while the state continues to fight in court for the right to investigate parents just like those.

Inside the agency

Employees at the Travis County DFPS office say they found out about Abbott’s directive the same way most people did — on the news. They were shocked and devastated to see their agency become politicized, several said.

When they got an invitation to an emergency staff meeting the next day, many of them hoped they’d be told the agency wouldn’t be following the governor’s directive.

Instead, they received confirmation that they would now be required to open investigations into reports of parents who provide gender-affirming care to their children. They were instructed to treat these cases very differently than others.

According to a meeting agenda reviewed by the Tribune, supervisors were told that they needed to notify their chain of command when they received one of these cases (“as we know these can be difficult,” the agenda read) and that the agency’s general counsel would be working on guidelines to determine how to rule on these cases.

Several employees say they were told to mark all the cases under Abbott’s directive as sensitive, a rare designation usually reserved for cases in which DFPS employees are personally involved.

They were also instructed not to communicate about these cases in writing, a directive that struck the employees as unusual, unethical and risky.

“We document … as relentlessly as we do because it’s a way to make sure there’s individual responsibility for actions that are taken that can be tracked back to who made the decision,” said one Travis County child protective investigations supervisor. “I could be held responsible for a decision made in my case that I didn’t make, but I have no way to defend myself.”

Investigators and supervisors said they don’t typically investigate cases if the only allegation is that a parent is giving their child medication prescribed by a doctor. Instead, those cases are ruled out without a formal investigation and designated “priority none.”

In fact, they said, the agency usually gets involved in cases with the opposite problem: parents who won’t or don’t give their child prescribed medications.

But supervisors at the emergency staff meeting say they were told cases in which parents were providing medically prescribed gender-affirming care to their children could not be marked priority none and had to be investigated.

“This is literally a direct contradiction of the policy … because we are telling parents we understand that a doctor … is telling you to do this, but we don’t like it,” said one senior-level supervisor.

When people on the call pointed out that these cases would not meet the standards for physical abuse or medical neglect as laid out in the Texas Family Code, they were told that policy would be generated to match the directives, according to several employees who were in the meeting.

One senior-level supervisor said the response seemed to be, “basically, do it now and policy will catch up later, and everything will be fine.”

For a lot of employees, the special requirements on these cases have put them in an untenable situation.

“We already have such a high level of responsibility that our ethics can’t be called into question,” said another senior-level supervisor who is still employed by the agency. “We have the ability to remove people’s children. We have to be able to pass muster at every level. [This] has dramatically affected the trust that I have in this department as a whole.”

Many DFPS employees say they feel caught in a tug of war between their ethics and their obligations. They say they don’t want to be foot soldiers following Attorney General Ken Paxton and Abbott into this latest culture war, but they need their jobs and they worry about what will happen to vulnerable children if they leave.

Many of those who have stayed have been engaging in small acts of resistance to the directive. Last week, DFPS workers from several offices signed on to an amicus brief condemning the order. Several Travis County staff members wore T-shirts one day proclaiming their support for trans kids; others have added subtle rainbows to their office decor.

DFPS supervisor Randa Mulanax decided to quit the agency shortly before testifying at a court hearing where a judge paused Gov. Greg Abbott’s order to launch child abuse investigations against families who provide gender-affirming care to their transgender children. “I knew that saying something internally wasn’t going to do anything.” Mulanax said. 

Resignations and resistance

A week after the directive came out, the American Civil Liberties Union and Lambda Legal filed a lawsuit on behalf of a DFPS employee, identified only as Jane Doe, who was under investigation for child abuse for providing gender-affirming care to her 16-year-old daughter.

At the hearing, a lawyer for the state said DFPS was not going to investigate “every trans youth or every young person undergoing these kinds of treatments and procedures.”

The directive was intended to convey “not that gender-affirming treatments are necessarily or per se abusive, but that these treatments, like virtually any other implement, could be used by somebody to harm a child,” said assistant attorney general Ryan Kercher.

Watching the hearing, Travis County investigators were confused. In the emergency meeting after Abbott announced the directive, they say regional leadership told them the exact opposite — they had to investigate these cases, even if there was no evidence that these medications were being forced on a child or otherwise used as a form of abuse.

A judge granted a temporary restraining order, halting the investigation into that family, and scheduled a hearing to consider a statewide pause to the governor’s directive.

Soon after, DFPS supervisor Randa Mulanax put in her resignation at the Travis County office. She’d reached out to the ACLU to see how she could help block this directive from being implemented and agreed to testify at the next hearing.

On the stand, she told the judge that the cases being investigated under Abbott’s directive are treated differently than others, and that the ethical conundrum those cases had sparked left her no choice but to resign. The judge granted a temporary statewide injunction that day, blocking these investigations from continuing until a full trial in July.

Paxton has asked the Texas Supreme Court to intervene and allow the investigations to continue while the case proceeds through the courts. After several days of confusion, supervisors said they were told the cases are “on pause” — they remain open, but investigative activities are currently suspended.

The injunction also stops DFPS from investigating new reports of child abuse based solely on allegations that a parent provided gender-affirming care to a child.

When Mulanax returned to the office after testifying, she said her office door was covered in thank-you notes and her email inbox was overflowing with gratitude from families, lawyers and fellow DFPS employees.

Mulanax said she felt proud that she’d contributed to blocking the directive but was wracked with guilt over what her resignation would mean for an already overburdened department.

“I understood that things were going to get worse with me leaving,” she said. “I’m leaving cases behind that have been reassigned two or three times and bounced around from supervisor to supervisor. But do I trade in my ethics and my morality?”

The state’s child welfare agency has long struggled to recruit and retain qualified staff. It’s a grueling job, made more difficult in recent years as the agency scrambles to try to comply with the terms of a decadelong federal lawsuit.

The state is still dealing with a crisis of foster children without permanent placement who sleep in state offices, often for weeks at a time. DFPS employees take shifts supervising these kids; supervisors, who are salaried, do not get paid overtime for that work.

And that’s in addition to their existing, often overwhelming job duties investigating some of the most heartbreaking, challenging cases of abuse and neglect.

Several employees said investigators at the Travis County office are often getting assigned five to seven new cases a week — more than double what they say is recommended as best practice — on top of an already teetering pile of open cases.

“It’s a very scary time here right now,” one senior-level supervisor said. “You never know what you’re going to come into the next day, if someone else is going to leave and you’re going to have another 20 cases to reassign, or you’re going to have to cover another unit because their supervisor left.”

And employees say they know better than anyone the potential consequences of overloaded investigators.

“They’re letting so many years of experience walk out that door,” said a senior-level supervisor. “And the ones who will leave are the ones who stand their ground and do the right thing. Once all those good staff leave, who will be left?”

Many DFPS employees say they feel caught in a tug of war between their ethics and their obligations. 

Few answers available

On a Tuesday in mid-March, a few days after Mulanax testified, hundreds of child welfare investigative supervisors and managers from across the state logged in to a video conference call, eager to get some answers from the department’s leadership.

Several managers said they were surprised to see that DFPS Commissioner Jaime Masters wasn’t in attendance.

Instead, Associate Commissioner Rich Richman took the lead. He started by saying the meeting was not going to be “an ass-chewing,” according to several people who attended, and then launched into a criticism of the handling of a separate scandal the agency was facing in connection to allegations of sex trafficking at a state-licensed foster facility in Bastrop.

Abbott’s directive was not the focus of the call, as they’d been hoping, employees who were on the call said.

“We had a whole statewide meeting on something that has literally nothing to do with us instead of the thing that is directly affecting our everyday life,” one supervisor said.

Richman did not address Mulanax’s testimony or the injunction in the gender-affirming care cases. Instead, several people on the call said, he briefly reminded staff that they were to be “neutral fact-finders” in these and all investigations.

When Richman opened up the floor to questions and comments, the staff unloaded, according to chat logs reviewed by the Tribune. They demanded answers on when they were going to be getting more guidance on how to handle cases of gender-affirming care and issued dire warnings about the flood of resignations on the horizon.

“You are losing so many tenured staff and wisdom because this job is just not manageable anymore,” one supervisor wrote.

Another said DFPS leaders “are so out of touch with what your agency does.”

They also aired long-standing gripes about salaries, overtime pay and working conditions.

“As supervisors, we are out here working 60 to 80 hours a week to be supportive of our staff and to keep their heads above water and feel supported,” one supervisor wrote. “We are worn but pushing through, because we love what we do, but not getting overtime or compensation becomes exhausting and discouraging.”

Most of the questions, including those about gender-affirming care cases, went unanswered.

Richman did respond to the money question: According to several people on the call, he encouraged employees to remember they were there for the children, not the money.

“It was also very upsetting because we’ve looked at the salaries of all those higher-ups,” said Mulanax. “It’s pretty, pretty easy to say it’s not about the money when you’re sitting high and tight on over $100,000 a year and you’re not working all this overtime.”

Richman, who was hired in September, earns $150,000 a year.

Evoking children’s welfare felt particularly disingenuous, several people said, when they’d been loudly challenging whether the governor’s directive was really in children’s best interest, to no response.

The meeting was scheduled for 90 minutes, but just before the hour mark, Richman brought it to an end. He said he’d print out the questions in the chat and follow up with employees directly via email. No one who spoke to the Tribune has received a response.

Later that day, the department hosted a similar meeting for lower-level investigators. But this time, the chat function was turned off.

For LGBTQ mental health support, call the Trevor Project’s 24/7 toll-free support line at 866-488-7386. You can also reach a trained crisis counselor through the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline by calling 800-273-8255 or texting 741741.

We can’t wait to welcome you in person and online to the 2022 Texas Tribune Festival, our multiday celebration of big, bold ideas about politics, public policy and the day’s news — all taking place just steps away from the Texas Capitol from Sept. 22-24. When tickets go on sale in May, Tribune members will save big. Donate to join or renew today.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at https://www.texastribune.org/2022/04/11/texas-trans-child-abuse-investigations/.

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

Economist Robert Reich: Despite growing wages, workers are still “being shafted” by corporate greed

The early 2020s have brought some disturbing headlines, including 6.1. million deaths worldwide from the COVID-19 pandemic (according to Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore), Ukraine suffering Europe’s worst military crisis since World War 2, and an increasingly radicalized Republican Party that has more in common with Hungary’s Viktor Orbán and Russia’s Vladimir Putin than it does with traditional Reagan/Goldwater conservatism. But there is some good news as well: unemployment in the United States, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), fell to 3.6% in March — which is the lowest U.S. unemployment in more than half a century.

Liberal economist Robert Reich, in an op-ed/listicle published by The Guardian on April 10, notes that “the American economy is rebounding nicely from recession.” However, Reich warns that the U.S. is also seeing a “growing imbalance of economic power” that is “is bad for most Americans and for the economy as a whole.” And Reich, who served as secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton during the 1990s, argues that President Joe Biden will pay a price politically if he doesn’t address this “imbalance.”

“As America slouches toward the midterm elections,” Reich explains, “you need an economic message that celebrates your accomplishments to date — job creation and higher wages — yet also takes aim at the major abuses of economic power that remain in the system, fueling inflation and widening inequality.”

Reich goes on to list ten “indisputable facts” that need to be “center stage” for Biden and other Democrats. The first is that “corporate profits are at a 70-year high, yet corporations are raising their prices.” And the others range from corporations “passing…. costs on to consumers in the form of higher prices” to corporations having “little or no competition” to “two-thirds of all American industries” becoming “more concentrated.”

The economist observes, “This concentration gives corporations the power to raise prices because it makes it easy for them to informally coordinate price increases with the handful of other companies in their same industry — without risking the possibility of losing customers, who have no other choice.”

Other economic trends on Reich’s list range from corporations “using” their “near-record profits to boost share prices by buying back a record amount of their own shares of stock” to U.S. workers “barely” having “a wage increase in 40 years, adjusted for inflation” to “wealthy Americas…. now paying a lower tax rate than the working class.”

Also on Reich’s list: “Income and wealth are being redistributed upward from average working people, many of whom live from paycheck to paycheck, to CEOs and shareholders, including the wealthiest people in America.”

Even with low unemployment, Reich laments, U.S. workers are getting a raw deal.

“You have a critical opportunity to reframe the national conversation as it should be framed — around these worsening abuses of economic power by large corporations and the super-rich,” Reich writes. “Republicans have left themselves vulnerable because they have no response to this. They believe their ‘culture wars’ will distract the public from what’s going on. This is not and should not be a partisan issue. Average working Americans, many of whom voted for Trump in 2016 and 2020, are being shafted.”

Earth’s oceans are teeming with mysterious viruses, new study finds

Earth’s oceans are often called the last frontier, a nod to how unexplored the depths of the seas are. Indeed, it is estimated that 91 percent of all ocean life remains undiscovered. Yet beyond harboring mere animal and plant life, the ocean is also, curiously, a reservoir of viruses. Thousands and thousands of them.

As a recent study in the academic journal Science details, an international team of researchers picked up and analyzed tens of thousands of ocean water samples from all over the planet, discovering thousands of hitherto unknown RNA viruses. Along with DNA viruses, RNA viruses are one of two classes of viruses whose ranks include the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19. Scientists know far less about RNA viruses (which use RNA molecules for their genetic material) than DNA viruses (which, accordingly, use DNA for their genetic material). As such, a group of researchers led by Ohio State University microbiologist Matthew Sullivan decided to scoop up as many as they could from the ocean. 

Subsequently, the researchers discovered at least 5,000 RNA virus species that scientists did not previously know about. Indeed, there are so many new viruses that scientists are not just creating new names for individual species; they are contemplating doubling the number of phyla (a classification just short of “kingdom”) from the existing five to a whopping ten. In order for this to officially happen, the scientists have to propose a request for formalization by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV), which they are already preparing. In addition, they hope to propose the creation of at least 11 new classes of RNA viruses. 

RELATED: Far from evil, viruses have driven — and even helped — human evolution

“There’s so much new diversity here – and an entire phylum, the Taraviricota, were found all over the oceans, which suggests they’re ecologically important,” Sullivan explained in a statement. The term Taraviricota refers to the phylum scientists wish to create for their most abundant collection of newly-discovered species.

Sullivan added, “RNA viruses are clearly important in our world, but we usually only study a tiny slice of them – the few hundred that harm humans, plants and animals. We wanted to systematically study them on a very big scale and explore an environment no one had looked at deeply, and we got lucky because virtually every species was new, and many were really new.”


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In the study, the scientists emphasized that their discovery is about more than simply increasing the quantity of known RNA viruses.

“This is not just a numbers game,” the scientists write. “The authors also found a missing link in RNA virus evolution [the aforementioned Taraviricota] and discovered new phyla that dominate in the oceans and might infect mitochondria.” They also discovered a phylum they have dubbed Arctiviricota, which they describe as “widespread and dominant in the oceans. These efforts provide foundational knowledge critical to integrating RNA viruses into ecological and epidemiological models.” 

Although viruses are often thought of as being inherently sinister, their role in nature is actually far more complex. Literally speaking, a virus is nothing more than a protein shell surrounding genetic material like DNA or RNA. They are only able to replicate inside living cells, where they divert the host’s genetic material so that it will create more copies of the virus. In order to do this, they will add their own gene sequences to the original genetic material as necessary, a bit like a burglar leaving tools from the theft behind at the crime scene. This so-called “junk DNA” is known as endogenous viral elements (EVEs), and they comprise roughly 8 percent of the human genome. Most of this junk DNA is even believed to serve biological functions, although scientists are not yet clear on what those are.

Indeed, the human body is home to 380 trillion viruses, more than 12 times as many as there are cells in our entire being. This ecosystem of viruses is known as the “virome” and, like much else involving virology, very little is known about the exact role they play in human health. It is believed that just as there are benign bacteria in the body which prey upon pathogens (or microorganisms that can harm humans), there are likely viruses that perform the same role. Certainly most of them are benign since, otherwise, we would all be dead.

For more Salon articles about viruses:

David Mamet says teachers are “inclined to pedophilia,” perpetuating right-wing grooming rhetoric

David Mamet, the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright behind “Glengarry Glen Ross” and  “Oleanna,” is now at the center of controversy after a Sunday appearance on Mark Levin’s Fox News show “Life, Liberty & Levin.” 

During a discussion on the recent passage of Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill – which prohibits public school teachers from organizing classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity – Mamet tells Levin, “If there’s no community control of the schools, what we have is kids being not only indoctrinated, but groomed in a very real sense by people who are, whether they know it or not, sexual predators. Are they abusing the kids physically? No, I don’t think so. But they’re abusing them mentally.

“This has always been the problem with education, is that teachers are inclined, particularly men because men are predators, to pedophilia,” Mamet added. This claim quickly made rounds on social media after Madeline Peltz of Media Matters for America shared a snippet of the segment on Twitter.

“And that’s why there were strict community strictures about it, thank God,” Mamet continues. “And this started to break down when the schools said, ‘You know what? We have to teach the kids about sex. Why? Because what if they don’t do it at home?'”

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

Incidentally, Mamet’s play “Oleanna” features a college professor who’s denied tenure when a female student accuses him of sexual harassment.

Although Mamet’s own mother was a teacher, the playwright is now spouting the familiar right-wing rhetoric about eductors or liberal grooming, which would set up opponents of the “Don’t Say Gay” bill as sounding as if they’re pro-pediphilia. As Salon’s Amanda Marcotte writes, the end goal of such is more violence.

Mamet’s comments garnered the expected backlash. Journalist Mark Harris tweeted, “At a time of increasing threats to gay people, David Mamet has chosen to ally himself with the purveyors of a vicious, ugly slander that will endanger teachers and LGBT Americans. It’s inexcusable.”

“Y’all are discovering the right wing radicalization of David Mamet today but he’s been on the decline for over a decade now,” wrote The Daily Beast columnist Wajahat Ali.

Mamet is currently on a media tour to promote his new book “Recessional: The Death of Free Speech and the Cost of a Free Lunch” and discuss the recent revival of his play “American Buffalo,” Mamet, and generally trash the left on right-wing media platforms.

Last week, Mamet spoke with controversial commentator Joe Rogan on his podcast “The Joe Rogan Experience,” in which the pair bashed California’s liberal policies, COVID-19 protocols and other “woke ideologies.” Mamet later went on to equate “the left” with some sort of “death cult.”


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“This is a magnificent country we live in and to see it go to shit in front of my eyes . . . [at least] half the country said, ‘You know what? No. I’m not ready to die yet. I’m not going to submit to the death cult. I don’t worship the sun. I don’t think the sun is trying to kill us,'” he said.

Mamet also appeared on a recent episode of “Real Time With Bill Maher,” where he  attempted to clarify a statement in his book, which alleges that Joe Biden stole the 2020 election.

“I misspoke on Page 2, so I would ask everybody who reads the book to skip Page 2,” he said simply.

Additionally, Mamet’s conservative beliefs were further outlined in an April opinion piece for the Wall Street Journal that praises him as being non-conformist when it comes to science and the left. The article revisits the playwright’s 2008 essay, titled “Why I Am No Longer a ‘Brain-Dead Liberal,” for the Village Voice.

“Woke signaling, blind compliance with public-health authoritarianism, deference to theater critics and tyrannical city officials — Mr. Mamet doesn’t play along,” the WSJ article concludes.

Of course, he’s currently spouting everything the far-right is saying, so in truth he’s falling right in line and conforming with the fearmongerers.

More stories you might like:

8 best substitutes for brownies if you’re out of eggs (or not using them)

Since shifting to “weekday veganism,” I’ve been introduced to the wild and wonderful world of accidentally vegan items, from Cap’n Crunch Peanut Butter Crunch and Thomas Blueberry Bagels to loads of instant ramen options. Excitingly, Duncan Hines brownie mix is also free of any animal products (in spite of not advertising itself as such).

That makes it the perfect base for a simple vegan weeknight treat once you select a substitute for the three eggs called for on the box. How do you do that? Well, you have a plethora of options, ranging from mashed black beans to store-bought egg substitutes like Just Egg. Here are 8 of the best: 

1 Aquafaba

Aquafaba sounds like a fancy specialty ingredient, but the truth is . . . it’s probably sitting in your pantry right now! Aquafaba is the thick liquid that is the result of cooking chickpeas; it’s the “water” that is often drained from canned chickpeas. Thanks to its density and ability to be “whipped” to a stiff peak, it’s actually a solid egg replacement.

The general rule of thumb is that 2 to 3 tablespoons of aquafaba is the equivalent of a single egg. Thus, you may need to pop open a couple cans of chickpeas to get the right amount. Don’t toss those chickpeas, though! Save them to make this delicious (and vegan) creamy pasta dinner

Related: This one-pot chickpea pasta has the most craveable “creamy” sauce

2 Mashed black beans 

The idea of mixing black beans into brownie mix may raise a few eyebrows, but the result is a shockingly moist and dense brownie. The ratio is simple: Blend a single can of undrained black beans until creamy and completely smooth. Add those, plus the recommended water, to the boxed mix in the place of both eggs and oil. Bake according to the box directions — and prepare to be surprised! 

3 Applesauce 

For every egg called for on a boxed brownie mix, you can substitute 2 tablespoons of applesauce. In addition to totally nailing the desired texture, applesauce gives the brownies a really subtle fruity sweetness and a pleasant cinnamon kick. 

4 Mashed banana

Have a couple of bananas in your kitchen that are on their way out? Instead of making banana bread, use one mashed banana as a substitute for a single egg in your boxed brownie mix. Baked bananas take on a gorgeous caramelized flavor, especially when mixed with chocolate.  

5 Store-bought egg replacers 

Store-bought egg replacers like Just Egg, Ener-G or Bob’s Red Mill Egg Replacer work as egg replacements in baking with various degrees of success. Some (like Bob’s Red Mill) work great in items that have a dryer crumb, like certain types of bread, but make boxed brownies a little too crumbly. Just Egg, however, works really well — especially if you add an extra 1/2 tablespoon of oil to the brownie batter. 


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6 Silken tofu 

I love using silken tofu in vegan desserts like dark chocolate pudding or as the base of a vegan cream cheese icing. That said, it’s hit-or-miss as an egg substitute — but there are a few ways to set yourself up for success. Many recipes recommend using 1/4 cup of silken tofu as a substitute for a whole egg. I prefer using 3 tablespoons of silken tofu blended until slightly frothy with 1 tablespoon of water and a tiny splash of vanilla. This keeps the resulting mix a little lighter and distributes the tofu more evenly throughout the batter. 

7 Dairy-free yogurt 

Dairy-free yogurt has the double benefit of both being really easy to substitute for eggs — use 2 tablespoons of yogurt per whole egg — as well as serving as an opportunity to add a little additional flavor to brownies. Coconut milk yogurt is one of my personal favorites to add a little tropical flavor to basic boxed brownies. If you’re feeling a little extra, a sprinkle of dried and shredded coconut would be a delicious addition to the batter, as well. 

8 Ground flax seed 

I once bought a bag of flax seeds because I’d heard they were healthy. They sat in my pantry, occasionally seeing the light of day when I made smoothies or salads, but it took a very long time to make a dent in that bag. That is, until I learned I could grind them in a spice or coffee mill, mix them with water and add them to boxed brownie mix as an egg replacement. Blend 1 tablespoon of ground flaxseed with 3 tablespoons of water until a thick, almost jelly-like substance forms. This can be used to replace a single whole egg. 

More stories about all things vegan: 

GOP-appointed judge overrules independent panel to block Democrat from crucial Senate race

A Republican judge ruled on Sunday that Abby Finkenauer, a Democrat seeking to represent the state in the U.S. Senate, will no longer appear on Iowa’s primary ballot, overruling a previous state decision that ensured her name would appear. 

Finkenauer called the ruling a “massive gift to Washington Republicans,” saying that it “overrules both the Republican secretary of state’s office and the bipartisan panel, ignores decades of precedent, interferes in the electoral process, and makes a mockery of our democracy.”

The ruling stems from a lawsuit brought by two Republicans – Kim Schmett and Leanne Pellett – who alleged that the Democratic candidate did not meet the signature quota required to qualify on the ballot, according to The Des Moines Register. 

Last month, a state committee found that she did meet this requirement, noting that similar issues have deferred to “substantial compliance” (i.e., when someone fails to fully complete a but has met the necessary criteria for it to be considered valid). 

But the two defendants argued that three of Finkenauer’s signatures were completely invalid because the dates on them were incorrect. (One voter wrote in zip code instead of the date; the other left the date blank.) 

RELATED: There’s another 29-year-old going to Congress: She also kicked Donald Trump’s butt

Affirming Schmett and Pellett’s suit, Polk County District Judge Scott Beattie wrote that the court takes “no joy in this conclusion” because it “should not be in the position to make a difference in an election.”


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“However, this Court’s job is to sit as a referee and apply the law without passion or prejudice,” the judge added. “It is required to rule without consideration of the politics of the day.”

Beattie, who was appointed by Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds, specifically argued that in Finkenauer’s case, “substantial compliance” did not apply. 

“The statute requires ‘the date of signing.’ None of these signatories included even part of the date of the signature,” the judge said. “If the individual had put ‘2/1’ but omitted the year, the Court could agree that there was ‘substantial compliance’ with the date. However, none of the signatories did that here. They either put nothing in the blank for the date or put information that was not the date of the signature.”

Finkenauer, 33, has pledged to challenge the ruling. “We are confident that we have met every requirement to be on the ballot,” she said, “and we will not stop fighting back against this meritless attack that seeks to silence the voices of tens of thousands of Iowans.”

A hearing before the state Supreme Court is scheduled for Wednesday.

RELATED: Trump’s tariffs may doom Republican incumbents in the heartland

If put back on the ballot, Finkenauer, a former U.S. representative, would have a shot at replacing Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa. The primary, which is set for June 7, requires that all names on the ballot be confirmed April 15, meaning that the clock is ticking for her appeal

“The Simpsons” joins Hollywood in highlighting deaf characters – but it still feels like pandering

Last week, Variety announced that the long-running series “The Simpsons” had made history recently with Sunday’s episode titled “The Sound of Bleeding Gums,” which features a deaf voice actor. 

Is it historic? The first animated program in general to feature a deaf actor may have been the children’s series, “Madagascar: A Little Wild” which highlights the “sign-over” talents of deaf actor Shaylee Mansfield long before the FOX show. “Madagascar: A Little Wild” also modeled an animated character on Mansfield. This is the first time “The Simpsons” has included a deaf actor (John Autry II) whose character on the show speaks orally and signs briefly, a language which presented a particular challenge according to the show creators.

American Sign Language (ASL), which the character of Monk utilizes along with orally speaking, uses fingers, hands, body motions and facial expressions. Actor Troy Kotsur, who this year became the first deaf performer to win an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, spoke in his moving acceptance speech about the challenges his signing father had in communicating after experiencing a car accident which left him paralyzed and unable to sign.

“The Simpsons” characters have always been animated with only four fingers on each hand. The show gets around this so-called issue in communicating by only including a few lines of ASL. 

From “The Simpsons” to “CODA,” why are deaf characters seemingly having a moment right now? Is this the jump forward some audiences believe, or are we standing still—still!—when it comes to accurate and interesting stories of disability?

Related: Is “CODA” the “Green Book” of films about deaf people?

In “The Simpsons” episode, jazz enthusiast and saxophone player Lisa realizes the late Bleeding Gums Murphy, her favorite jazz musician, is having his music used for lottery commercials, without the permission of his estate and without compensation. In the course of her research into the issue, she discovers the musician has a son, Monk (Autry II). Monk is now grown and has been profoundly deaf since birth. 

Fired up in only the way that idealist Lisa can be, she decides her mission is to restore the musical rights to Monk, giving him enough money to afford a cochlear implant, a device that will allow him to hear some. 

These deaf roles are played by deaf actors, a casting that seems obvious but would have been inconceivable only a few short years ago.

Through most of the episode, Monk only reads lips, a difficult experience (I do it; it gives me a headache at the end of most days) which is fallible. But the only time the character says he struggles is when reading the lips of a music industry guy with a bushy/concealing mustache.

Along with casting Autry II, who is compelling and real, “The Simpsons” episode features the talents of deaf performers Eli Steele (the brother of the episode’s writer Loni Steele Sosthand; Monk was partially based on him), Kaylee Arellano, Ian Mayorga and Hazel Lopez.

“The Simpsons” is far from the only show to veer recently into deaf stories. From “Sweet Magnolias” to “Ginny & Georgia,” multiple shows from the last few years have included a deaf character.  A new Peacock series “Killing It,” starring Craig Robinson, features actor Stephanie Nogueras, who is deaf and signs in the show.

It shouldn’t be revolutionary, but it is, that these deaf roles are played by deaf actors, a casting that seems obvious but would have been inconceivable only a few short years ago (the original French film “CODA” was adapted from, for example, featured no deaf actors in the deaf or any roles). That’s a big, necessary step, but Hollywood continues to take steps backward in many other ways. 

One way is the utilizing of deaf characters for only minor roles, like a sprinkling of marginalization, one for which Hollywood pats itself on the back as a job well done: or, done well enough. “Springfield is continuing to diversify its population of animated characters,” Yahoo! News wrote about “The Simpsons” episode (but there’s no sign that Monk is going to be recurring). A repeated criticism rightfully lobbed at the HBO series “And Just Like That” is that by simply introducing a cornucopia of marginalized characters with little to no development, the show “throws characters and issues at the wall like spaghetti, hoping something is done and will stick.”

Stories will never make strides until they’re actually created by the people whose community is being mined for content.

Deaf characters function the same way in many shows at the moment, like “Sweet Magnolias” where a deaf character appears in one scene only — and exists solely as a showcase for a main (non-disabled) character’s goodness. Look how sensitive he is! He has a deaf friend! He can even communicate (badly) with her!

One of the main criticisms of “CODA” is just that — the movie isn’t about deaf people at all. They’re not the heroes. It’s the story of a hearing girl, seen through an abled lens where the deaf characters operate like props, taking a backseat to what was billed as their own story.

It’s not, perhaps in part because it was not directed or written by a deaf or Hard of Hearing creator, as “The Simpsons” episode was not. Though deaf-adjacent is a good start, stories will never make strides until they’re actually created by the people whose community is being mined for content.

Hollywood loves to reward itself for the bare minimum, and deafness may be the first disability to be rising in onscreen representation in part because deafness is often invisible. “You can’t tell,” is something non-disabled people say all the time when they find out about my deafness, thinking they’re congratulating me. 

The Disney+ show “Hawkeye” seems radical, in part because one of the Hard of Hearing characters (Jeremy Renner’s Clint) physically deals with his hearing aid. The viewer sees it, both in his ear and in his hands when he takes it out. 

We care about deaf stories when they have tidy endings.

“The Simpsons” also animates hearing aids and a cochlear implant. But not all deaf people wear them (or want to, even if they can afford to) and most often onscreen deafness is represented without.

Deafness is a safe disability to show onscreen. It’s palatable for abled people to tolerate and easier than say, a character in a wheelchair (perhaps why the disabled main character on “Station Eleven,” a wheelchair user in the book, was minimalized in the HBO series, his wheelchair changed to a cane). 

But easy stories aren’t always the best, and stories created for the comfort of a non-disabled audience usually have the self-satisfied ring of inspiration, like “CODA” does. That’s not what being disabled is and that’s also not an interesting, true or new story to tell. 


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We care about deaf stories when they have tidy endings, as “The Simpsons” episode unfortunately does, endings that make abled people feel better. Despite the strengths of Monk’s character, the episode’s ending feels tacked-on and panders to a non-disabled audience, where a disabled character is “fixed.” A much more radical storyline would be to end “The Simpsons” a few scenes earlier. “I was happy until a little girl came and told me I wasn’t,” Monk, who heads a nonprofit and has a community and a life he says he loves, tells Lisa. “Please stop helping me.”

“I’m not anyone’s cause,” Monk says. “I enjoy who I am.” That’s one of the lessons Hollywood still needs to learn.

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