Author Archives: Mary Turck

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About Mary Turck

News Day, written by Mary Turck, analyzes, summarizes, links to, and comments on reports from news media around the world, with particular attention to immigration, education, and journalism. Fragments, also written by Mary Turck, has fiction, poetry and some creative non-fiction. Mary Turck edited TC Daily Planet, www.tcdailyplanet.net, from 2007-2014, and edited the award-winning Connection to the Americas and AMERICAS.ORG, in its pre-2008 version. She is also a recovering attorney and the author of many books for young people (and a few for adults), mostly focusing on historical and social issues.

ICYMI: U.S. billionaires, low taxes, TikTok, and more

I wasn’t sure whether the rates in this meme were accurate, but it turns out they are either exact or very close. The United States has a lower tax rate (37 percent), and many loopholes that further shelter billionaires from taxes. 

A couple of reports document what my dad always knew: the most wealthy and powerful corporations and individuals still get rich off all the rest of us. Robert Reich sums it up on BlueSky:

5 years of exec pay: 

Tesla: $2.5 billion 

T-Mobile: $675 million 

Netflix: $652 million 

Ford: $355 million 

5 years of federal income taxes paid: 

Tesla: $0 ($1M refund) 

T-Mobile: $0 ($80M refund) 

Netflix: $236 million 

Ford: $121 million 

Anyone else see the problem here?

Reich’s quick summary comes from “More for Them, Less for Us: Corporations That Pay Their Executives More Than Uncle Sam,” a detailed study published in March 2024 by the Institute for Policy Studies. In the bullet-pointed summary of its findings:

  • 35 major U.S. corporations — including famous names like Ford, Netflix and Tesla — paid less in federal income taxes between 2018 and 2022 than they paid their top five executives. All 35 were cumulatively profitable over that five-year span.
  • Among these 35 corporations, the total compensation reported for named executive officers over this five-year period was $9.5 billion. Their combined federal income tax bills came to a negative $1.8 billion — that is, rather than paying taxes, they received refunds.
  • An additional 29 profitable corporations paid their top executives more than they paid in federal income taxes in at least two of the five years of the study period.
  • 18 corporations in the study — despite reporting net profits over the five-year span — paid $0 in federal income taxes. Actually, except in one case, all paid less than zero because they got refunds. These 18 corporations that paid $0 in federal income taxes found the resources to lavish their executives with a cumulative $5.3 billion in pay packages.
  • The 64 firms in the study posted cumulative pre-tax domestic profits of $657 billion between 2018 to 2022, yet paid an average effective federal tax rate of just 2.8% (the statutory rate is 21%) while paying their executives over $15 billion.
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ICYMI: U.S. Guns for Mexican Cartels; Republican Hate Candidate; Cyber Attacks from Russia and BlackCat

U.S. Guns for Mexican Cartels U.S. Customs and Border Protection caught 1,171 guns being illegally smuggled into Mexico in 2023—but that’s only a small fraction of the number of U.S. guns arming Mexican drug cartels. Mexican officials seize thousands of guns inside the country at crime scenes every year. The vast majority of those guns come from the United States

“Data from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives indicates that between 2017 and 2022, nearly 124,000 guns were recovered at crime scenes in Mexico and subsequently traced. Sixty-eight percent of those guns — more than 83,000 — came from the United States.”  

The cartels get guns from the United States and then send fentanyl into the United States.  Commercial traffic and returning U.S. citizens are by far the largest sources of smuggled fentanyl. Republican refusal to approve increased funding for Customs and Border Protection helps. NBC reports:

“Customs and Border Protection has spent millions on the most up-to-date high-tech scanners to spot fentanylcrossing the southern U.S. border, but many scanners are sitting in warehouses unused because Congress hasn’t appropriated funds to install them, acting CBP Commissioner Troy Miller told NBC News. …

“Officers in Nogales have found fentanyl hidden inside crates of Coca-Cola, where bottles are painted black to look like liquid, sawed in half and filled with fentanyl pills; they’ve confiscated millions in fentanyl pills stuffed inside the water barrel of a commercial bus bathroom; they’ve even found fentanyl in cars carrying young children in the back in car seats. More than 95% of fentanyl seized at the border, Miller said, is actually brought into the U.S. in personal vehicles. …

“The money to install the screeners was in the supplemental funding request Republicans blocked.” 

Republican Hate Candidate in North Carolina  The Republican nominee for governor in North Carolina is Mark Robinson, who is arguably even more unhinged than Donald Trump. Robinson is a Holocaust denier, who has also called Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. a communist, called LGBTQ+ people “filth”, and said the country would be better if women had never been allowed to vote. 

He’s running against Democrat Josh Stein, currently the state attorney general. The election is predicted to be close. Over at Public Media, Josh Legum details Robinson’s background and the way that corporations are funding his campaign by contributing to the Republican Governors Association: 

“Tuesday night, shortly after Robinson was declared the winner of the Republican gubernatorial primary, the Republican Governors Association posted their congratulations and said, ‘[W]e look forward to supporting him in the general election.’

“The RGA has plenty of resources because, unlike many political entities, it can accept unlimited amounts of money from corporations. This is not money that comes from corporate PACs, but funds that are transferred directly from corporate treasuries. 

“Many of the nation’s most prominent corporations have donated 6-figure sums to the RGA — money that can and will be used to help Robinson’s win.  Major corporate donors to the RGA in 2023 included Microsoft ($400,000), Alphabet (Google’s parent company) ($378,000), CVS ($300,000), Pfizer ($300,000), Amazon ($275,000), Coca-Cola ($259,287), Deloitte ($151,000), and DoorDash ($125,000).”

Long story made short: ANY contribution to the national Republican party will support hate-mongers and fascists. There’s no way to avoid it, because haters have taken over the entire party apparatus. 

 The Russians Are Coming: TechCrunch reports an ongoing attack on Microsoft by Russian hacker Midnight Blizzard, which “is believed to be a hacking group working for Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service, known by its Russian initials, SVR.”

Microsoft’s corporate blog acknowledges:

“As we shared, on January 19, the security team detected this attack on our corporate email systems and immediately activated our response process. The Microsoft Threat Intelligence investigation identified the threat actor as Midnight Blizzard, the Russian state-sponsored actor also known as NOBELIUM.  …

“In recent weeks, we have seen evidence that Midnight Blizzard is using information initially exfiltrated from our corporate email systems to gain, or attempt to gain, unauthorized access.” 

And More Cyber Attacks: Meanwhile, the two-week-old cyberattack on UnitedHealth and its subsidiary ChangeHealthcare that disrupted U.S. pharmacies has expanded to target all of health care. From the New York Times:

“The hacking shut down the nation’s biggest health care payment system, causing financial chaos that affected a broad spectrum ranging from large hospitals to single-doctor practices. …

“An urgent care chain in Ohio may be forced to stop paying rent and other bills to cover salaries. In Florida, a cancer center is racing to find money for chemotherapy drugs to avoid delaying critical treatments for its patients. And in Pennsylvania, a primary care doctor is slashing expenses and pooling all of her cash — including her personal bank stash — in the hopes of staying afloat for the next two months. …

“But on March 1, a bitcoin address connected to the alleged hackers, a group known as AlphV or BlackCat, received a $22 million transaction that some security firms say was probably a ransom payment made by United to the group, according to a news article in Wired. …

“The same entity that was said to be responsible for the cyberattack on Colonial Pipeline, a pipeline from Texas to New York that carried 45 percent of the East Coast’s fuel supplies, in 2021 is thought to be behind the Change assault.”

Not sure when health care payments and systems will be functioning normally again, but this hack clearly highlights the danger of corporate health care consolidation into only a few major players.  

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ICYMI: Russians, Pharmacies, Elections; IRS and Millionaires; Toxic Sludge; Nurses at Risk

A few important stories from the week’s news–just in case you missed them.

The Russians are coming after your prescriptions—and your vote. 

UnitedHealth owns Change Health. Change Health and CoverMyMeds route most insurance claims from most pharmacies. So when Russian-speaking ransomware ring known as Black Cat or AlphV hacked Change Health (and other medical facilities) on February 21, pharmacies and patients across the country saw snarls, delays, and denials of coverage. UnitedHealth “estimated that more than 90 percent of the nation’s 70,000-plus pharmacies have had to alter how they process electronic claims” because of the hack. 

While UnitedHealth tried to downplay the impact on patients, people around the country told stories of being denied coverage and required to pay full price for their prescriptions.  

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ICYMI: Aleksei Navalny: “Here we need an elephant — a hot, fried elephant;” Nex Matters; more

Aleksei Navalny died at the age of 47, days after appearing in court. His crime: opposing Putin. Navalny had survived multiple attacks and poisoning, including a near-fatal 2020 poisoning. Even after extended treatment for that attempt on his life, he returned to Russia in 2021. Putin imprisoned him immediately, eventually transferring him to a cold, isolated prison north of the Arctic Circle. In that prison, he was repeatedly confined to a 7×10-foot, unheated punishment cell. He died in that punishment cell, “after a walk,” according to authorities. The New York Times published Navalny’s description of those “walks:” 

“In a letter from prison last month, Mr. Navalny described how he could walk a total of 11 steps from one end of the open-air space to the other, noting that the coldest it had been so far on one of his walks was -26 Fahrenheit.

“’Even at this temperature, you can walk for more than half an hour, so long as you have time to grow a new nose, ears and fingers,’ he wrote. ‘There are few things as invigorating as a walk in Yamal at 6:30 in the morning. And what a wonderful fresh breeze blows into the yard, despite the concrete enclosure, wow!’

“While walking there on a recent day, he said he was freezing and thinking about how Leonardo DiCaprio climbed into a dead horse to escape the cold in the wilderness survival movie ‘The Revenant.’ A dead horse would freeze in that part of Russia within 15 minutes, Mr. Navalny surmised.

“’Here we need an elephant — a hot, fried elephant,’ he said.”

After initially refusing to release Navalny’s body to his mother for burial and threatening to bury him inside the prison in an anonymous grave if she did not consent to a secret burial, officials finally agreed to release his body.

Read Navalny’s obituary here and his 2021 interview from prison here

Nex Matters

Nex Benedict was a 16-year-old high school sophomore in Oklahoma. Loved and supported at home, they were bullied at school because they were non-binary. Then the bullying escalated to a physical fight in a school bathroom, leaving Nex “badly beaten with bruises over their face and eyes, and with scratches on the back of their head.” The school suspended Nex, but not their attackers. The next day, Nex collapsed and died. 

Local police insist that the beating was not the cause of Nex’s death, though without evidence. The coroner’s report has not been released.

Bullying extends far beyond the students who attacked Nex. Popular Information reports: 

“Oklahoma’s top education official, Superintendent Ryan Walters (R), has instituted a number of policies targeting trans and LGBTQ+ students. … 

“Walters is not the only Oklahoma official elected official targeting LGBTQ people. According to a report by the ACLU, members of the Oklahoma legislature have introduced 54 anti-LGBTQ bills in 2024, the most of any state. …

“Walters has also enlisted the help of right-wing extremist Chaya Raichik. Raichik runs the X account Libs of TikTok, which routinely promotes anti-LGBTQ rhetoric to its 2.8 million followers. Raichik’s posts have, on numerous occasions, inspired violent threats, including bomb threats to schools and children’s hospitals across the country.” 

“[Raichik]  does not have a professional background in education and has never worked as a librarian. She is a former real estate agent based in New York, and does not even live in Oklahoma.” 

Before her appointment, Raichik repeatedly targeted schools, students, and teachers in Oklahoma and elsewhere, with her posts followed by bomb threats, harassment, and firings.  

Judge Frees Right Wing Terrorist 

A right-wing federal judge in California dismissed criminal charges against a right-wing white nationalist who organized violence at protests and attacked a police officer.  In doing so, U.S. District Judge Cormac J. Carney wrote that ““There seems to be little doubt that Defendants, or at least some members of RAM, engaged in criminal violence.” But, he claimed, the government “selectively prosecuted” right-wing terrorists and did not prosecute left-wing protesters. 

This was the second time that Robert Rundo was charged—after the same judge dismissed the 2018 indictment, Rundo fled the country and posted photos of himself traveling around Europe. He was eventually extradited from Romania after the federal appeals court reinstated the indictment.

The Los Angeles Times reported

“The federal indictment against Rundo alleged he and other defendants recruited new members to the organization, coordinated training in hand-to-hand combat, and traveled to political rallies to attack protesters at events across the state.

“The indictment alleged that various members participated in attacks at political rallies in Huntington Beach on March 25, 2017; in Berkeley on April 15, 2017; and in San Bernardino on June 10, 2017. Afterward, they allegedly trained for future events and celebrated by posting photos online of RAM members assaulting people.

“Rundo was accused not just of organizing the violent confrontations, but also of attacking protesters and police officers.”

Nursing Home Strike

Nancy Poll worked as a Certified Nursing Assistant and a scheduler in a rural MN nursing home. Writing in the Minnesota Reformer, she eloquently describes chronic short-staffing and too-low pay:

“Picture this: you’ve been rushing around all morning to get your nursing home residents bathed, dressed, and ready for breakfast, and you receive an alert that there’s an emergency in the next hall. You must assist, but that means you’ll have to cut short your time with Mr. Larsen, who enjoys recounting the plays from the Vikings game the night before, and skip checking in with Ms. Peterson to see how she’s doing with her daily crossword puzzle.

“This is the third time this week you’ve been pulled away to help cover a staffing gap. You feel heartsick, disempowered, and pulled in a thousand directions. Your residents crave connection and a routine. But you and the other workers at your nursing home are stretched thin, and one absence or challenge sets off a cascade of problems that affects the quality of care you and your coworkers are able to provide.”

More than 600 unionized workers at seven Twin Cities nursing homes voted to authorize a one-day strike on March 5. They want $25 an hour, more affordable health insurance, a pension and higher staffing levels. Why?

[MN Reformer] “’Last year I worked 23 straight days. And unsurprisingly, I ended up tearing my biceps,’ said Teresa Brees, a nursing home worker at The Estates of Roseville. ‘I know so many nursing home workers who face stress and injury because of overwork and understaffing.’ …

“Nursing home workers suffer the highest rates of workplace injuries and illnesses of any industry — more than three times the rate of the labor force as a whole, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.”

The nursing homes affected by the strike vote are Saint Therese of New Hope, Estates of Roseville, Estates of Fridley, Estates of Excelsior, Villas at Robbinsdale, Cedars at St. Louis Park, and Cerenity Senior Care Humboldt in St. Paul. But they could be anywhere. Short-staffing, low pay, and under-appreciation are endemic in nursing homes across Minnesota and the entire country. 

Part-time Work

Sure, there are jobs available. Many employers struggle to find workers. But a big part of the problem is created by employers who deliberately keep workers on irregular part-time schedules, with hours low enough to avoid paying benefits, including health insurance. Adelle Waldman, a writer who worked at a big box store in 2018, writes about the problems faced by involuntarily part-time workers. As of December, more than four million U.S. workers were involuntarily part-time: wanting full-time work, but only able to find part-time. That means even when companies—like Target, WalMart, TJ Max, Starbucks—pay $17 or $18 an hour, most of their workers still may be below poverty level because they do not have anything near full-time work. 

“The unpredictability of the hours made life difficult for my co-workers — as much as, if not more than, the low pay did. On receiving a paycheck for a good week’s work, when they’d worked 39 hours, should they use the money to pay down debt? Or should they hold on to it in case the following week they were scheduled for only four hours and didn’t have enough for food? …

“Many of my co-workers didn’t have cars; with such unstable pay, they couldn’t secure auto loans. Nor could they count on holding on to the health insurance that part-time workers could receive if they met a minimum threshold of hours per week. While I was at the store, one co-worker lost his health insurance because he didn’t meet the threshold — but not because the store didn’t have the work. Even as his requests for more hours were denied, the store continued to hire additional part-time and seasonal workers.” 

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ICYMI: Transgender care, losing farms, and more

Transgender Care

An in-depth summary of research and physician interviews focuses on medical care for transgender youth. That care is individualized, though it often includes hormone blockers at puberty. Surgery for youth is vanishingly rare. Medical care for transgender youth has been around for sixty years, involves teams of experts and months of mental health assessments, and is well-documented. Hormone blockers delay puberty. If hormone blockers are stopped, then puberty begins. While news coverage and propaganda often focus on people who have “detransitioned” or changed their minds about gender affirming care, the incidence of regret for such care is around one percent—far lower than the rate of regret for knee surgery (17.1 percent) or hip surgery (4.8 percent.)  

Losing Farms

The Guardian reports on the 2022 USDA agricultural census that shows continuing loss of farms, and increasing size of factory farms. Corporate factory farms also get most of the federal subsidies.

“Large farms – which includes mega operations with hundreds of thousands of acres – account for only 4% of the total number of farms, but control two-thirds of US agricultural land. The largest – with sales of $5m or more – accounted for fewer than 1% of all farms but 42% of all sales. …

“Government payments to farmers skyrocketed 17% since the last ag census to $10.4bn – thanks in large part to Covid era subsidies, which boosted income for some farmers to record levels between 2020 and 2022. But the number of farms receiving taxpayer subsidies fell dramatically by 25%, and it was the larger, wealthier – not struggling small farms – that benefited most. Farms with the highest sales (at least $50,000) received 64% of the total subsidies – despite accounting for only 11% of the beneficiaries. The smallest farms account for almost half (48%) of those that got some financial assistance, but only 4% of the total money.”

The Minnesota Reformer has the data showing that Minnesota is also losing farms and farmers to the consolidation and factory farm model.

Biden’s Age

A Trump-appointed lawyer who served in high positions in the Trump administration could not find any reason to prosecute President Biden for inadvertently retaining some classified papers—and then promptly returning them when his staff discovered he had done so. So the prosecutor issued a 300+ page report that included slurs about Biden’s age and forgetfulness. 

In “but Hillary’s emails” style, the major media trumpeted the ungrounded attack on Biden’s fitness. Instead of focusing on the substance of the report, newspapers that give Trump a free pass on his mental and physical (un)fitness, published a blizzard of articles highlighting the Hur attack on Biden–81 articles in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and Washington Post in just four days. Judd Legum analyzes the coverage and contrasting (lack of) coverage of Trump in Popular Information

“On February 10, the New York Times explored the question of why voters seemed so much more worried about Biden than Trump, even though they are around the same age. …

“The article says the disparate treatment by voters reflects ‘profound differences… in how they are perceived by the American public.’ It does not mention that the perceptions of the two men by the public are shaped by media coverage.”

NATO Alliance

Trump’s rejection of NATO has nothing to do with paying dues: there are no NATO dues. His bombast and bluster inviting Russia to attack our allies is all about putting his allegiance to Putin above his allegiance to NATO—and above defense of the United States itself. 

Heather Cox Richardson has a good analysis

“National security specialist Tom Nichols of The Atlantic expressed starkly just what this means: ‘The leader of one of America’s two major political parties has just signaled to the Kremlin that if elected, he would not only refuse to defend Europe, but he would gladly support Vladimir Putin during World War III and even encourage him to do as he pleases to America’s allies.’ Former NATO supreme commander Wesley Clark called Trump’s comments ‘treasonous.’”

Even staunch conservative Republicans cannot swallow this treason pill:

“Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) weighed in on the issue during debate [on the Ukraine aid bill]: ‘This is not a stalemate. This guy [Putin] is on life support… He will not survive if NATO gets stronger.’ If the bill does not pass, Tillis said, ‘You will see the alliance that is supporting Ukraine crumble.’ For his part, Tillis wanted no part of that future: ‘I am not going to be on that page in history.’” 

Twitter/X and Misinformation

Social media accounts hold bi-weekly meetings to share information on fake accounts, and disinformation. Twitter/X stopped attending those meetings and leaves disinformation running rampant, including blue-check accounts that are actually AI or run by hostile governments. 

This Washington Post report details not only the Twitter/X slide into allowing disinformation, but also a court order that prevents the federal government from warning social media companies about disinformation campaigns, as well as tech companies’ reduction in staff assigned to monitoring mis- and disinformation.

“The result has been that accounts spreading disinformation that the other social media companies took down remain active on X. That allows the disinformation to be spread from there, including back to the other platforms.

“’Anyone trying to run a disinformation campaign is going to do it across multiple mainstream platforms,’ said Yael Eisenstat, a senior fellow at the nonprofit Cybersecurity for Democracy. ‘With foreign influence, we are less protected than we were in 2020.’

“The last X representative to attend one of the information sharing sessions was Ireland-based expert Aaron Rodericks, said the people familiar with the meetings, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal matters. Rodericks was suspended from X after liking posts critical of Musk and is suing him and the company. Before that, Twitter’s representative was its safety chief, Yoel Roth, who resigned not long after Musk’s takeover and had to flee his home after Musk wrongly implied that he was soft on pedophiles. …

“Most troubling to some researchers, out of 123 accounts that Meta called out in May, August and December for participating in deceptive China-based campaigns, all but eight remain on X.”

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ICYMI: Clothes for Goblins, Right-Wing Nuts, Wage Theft, and more 

Illustration from Judd Legum’s Popular Information article

Clothe the Goblins! 

Judd Legum reports that the Moms for Liberty campaign to make books decent for children has led to Florida teachers drawing clothes on picture book illustrations—such as adding underpants to cartoon child in Maurice Sendak’s In the Night Kitchen and covering a goblin’s butt in Unicorns Are The Worst. Other consequences of the group’s pressure were more serious:  outright removal of hundreds of books from school library shelves and death threats to school board members who resisted. 

Right-Wing Nuts

White Christian nationalists are literally up in arms about fears of a “great replacement” of white people by not-white immigrants. A Tennessee man who planned an attack with explosives and sniper rifles was arrested by the FBI before he could get to the border. A few others were arrested near the border with guns, cannabis, and “a white powdery substance.” 

Getting serious about wage theft

While wage theft is getting more ink in newspapers and a little more attention from lawmakers and enforcers, it’s still not getting punished. 

In Minnesota, Attorney General Keith Ellison is going after employers who steal money from their employees by making them pay up. He’s suing to get a big dairy farm in Stearns County to pay up three million dollars they stole from employees by shorting hours, not paying overtime, illegal deductions from paychecks, and even threatening and physically assaulting employees. 

But shouldn’t they also be prosecuted as criminals? If some kid shoplifts repeatedly, they get a criminal conviction and, if they steal enough or often enough, they go to jail. 

Why isn’t Ellison prosecuting them criminally? Well—that’s the job of county attorneys, not the attorney general. the attorney general can only prosecute if the county attorneys as them to step in.  If local authorities don’t want to be bothered prosecuting employers, the thieves get away without punishment. Minnesota’s wage theft law provides for criminal punishment, but according to the Minnesota Reformer’s reporting, “In the past four years, wage theft charges have been brought by prosecutors just five times.” 

MN Reformer’s Patrick Coolican writes

“A $3 million heist of a Minneapolis bank would make national news, whereas when the attorney general alleges a company stole $3 million from its workers, it doesn’t even make the front page of the Star Tribune

“That’s because we have two justice systems in this country: One for people who knock over a liquor store and come away with a few hundred dollars, and an entirely different one for people who steal millions from their own workers.” 

 Want to know more about the District of Columbia Circuit Court ruling that Trump is not immune from prosecution?

Here’s a link to the 57-page decision. The good parts start at page 20, after the lengthy discussion of jurisdiction. I particularly like these paragraphs (p. 40):

“We cannot accept former President Trump’s claim that a President has unbounded authority to commit crimes that would neutralize the most fundamental check on executive power — the recognition and implementation of election results. Nor can we sanction his apparent contention that the Executive has carte blanche to violate the rights of individual citizens to vote and to have their votes count. 

“At bottom, former President Trump’s stance would collapse our system of separated powers by placing the President beyond the reach of all three Branches. Presidential immunity against federal indictment would mean that, as to the President, the Congress could not legislate, the Executive could not prosecute and the Judiciary could not review. We cannot accept that the office of the Presidency places its former occupants above the law for all time thereafter.”

Unsafe at Any Speed?

One year after the East Palestine freight train derailment released toxic chemicals, driving residents from their homes, none of the promised safety regulations have been passed. Massive lobbying of Congress by the railroad industry blocked even the minimal requirement to have more than one person staffing miles-long trains. Meanwhile, 2023 saw even more derailments than 2022. 

Quick Takes

Parker Molloy has a long article stuffed with absolutely on-point anecdotes that show why Context is For Trying to Understand Reality, Not Winning Arguments. That’s the Problem.

Cory Doctorow’s fascinating description of How I got scammed (05 Feb 2024) is an important cautionary tale for even those of us who think we are sophisticated users of today’s technology.  

Paul Pfeiffer’s The Giving Tree or a Sharing Garden? offers a scathing take-down of the popular children’s book, a meditation on retirement, and a call to action for sustainability. Quite a lot to pack into a single blog post! 

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Today’s Letter to the White House

I’ve been corresponding regularly with the President. Or at least I have been writing to him and getting form emails indicating that my message has been received. I know that means next to nothing. My email has been sorted into the giant pile of yes and no and is now one more entry in the ongoing tally. That’s next to nothing, but it’s not nothing at all.

My messages are short and non-comprehensive. I know that the most attention they will receive is being sorted into a pile of yes or no on any given policy, so I do not devote a lot of time to research and argument.

With that in mind, here’s today’s message to the White House. I encourage you to write, too.

This headline in today’s New York Times: “With Israel signaling an offensive into Rafah, Netanyahu said it would require removing civilians.”

Mr. President — Israel has ordered civilians to move south. Then to move farther south. Rafah, as far south as you can get, was supposed to be safe. Now Rafah is under attack. This is unconscionable.

Every government has a duty to protect civilians in war time. Including Israel. Including the United States.

YOU can protect civilians by cutting off military aid and public approval of Israel’s war in Gaza. Do it. Now.

Mary Turck

And it did not take long to get the computerized form message back:

February 9, 2024
 Thank you for contacting the Biden-Harris Administration. 
 
President Biden and Vice President Harris value every opportunity to engage with the American people, and the Administration is grateful for your outreach. Our country faces many challenges, and messages like yours help us better understand how the Biden-Harris Administration can serve American families. 

We take careful note of the suggestions, thoughts, questions, and stories we receive, and we’re working hard to ensure you receive an appropriate response. Sincerely,The Office of Presidential Correspondence

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ICYMI: Most racist legislator of the week and more

I read far too much news every week, and if you are reading this, you probably do, too. But did you see these stories from the past week? 

First, in Oklahoma, Republican state representative JJ Humphrey introduced an “anti-terrorism” bill that classifies all Hispanics as terrorists. The Guardian has the story:

“In addition to ‘a member of a criminal street gang’ and someone who ‘has been convicted of a gang-related offense’, the bill defines a terrorist as ‘any person who is of Hispanic descent living within the state of Oklahoma’.”

Humphrey’s non-apology:

“He said: ‘I apologize for using the word Hispanic, but I was not wrong. Again, these are Hispanic. Reality is they are Hispanic. There’s nothing to be ashamed with.’

“Humphrey said he will go back to the bill and amend the language from ‘Hispanic’ to ‘undocumented here illegally, or something like that’.”

Another under-the-radar story comes from Public Notice, which details Elon Musk’s attempt to overturn the National Labor Relations Board. The article delves into the decision to file this case in Texas, and its subsequent removal to California. But the really important part is here:

“The reason Musk wants to be in Texas is because of a Fifth Circuit decision in a 2022 case called Jarkesy v. SEC in which a three-judge panel ruled that [Administrative Law Judges] are unconstitutional.

“The court reasoned that: (1) it’s illegal for Congress to delegate too much power to civil servants, unanswerable to the voters; and (2) that agencies’ use of ALJs violates the Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial. This position would have been unthinkable 15 years ago, but now that Republicans have a vise grip on the Supreme Court, they’ve decided that the judiciary needs to grab all the power it can. Just this week, the Court heard oral arguments in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, a case which threatens to hamstring the executive branch and allow courts to substitute their own judgment for that of federal agencies at will. …

“Essentially, SpaceX says that because the ALJs enjoy civil service protections and can’t be fired by the president as political appointees, and because the NLRB’s procedures don’t allow for a jury trial, the enforcement action against SpaceX is illegal under Jarkesy.

“And in case it’s not clear, if Musk succeeds, the NLRB will have no way to enforce labor laws that guarantee citizens the right to collective action.” 

Then there’s the Ouray County Plaindealer in Ouray, Colorado. The newspaper had the guts to publish a story about rape at the police chief’s house. Not that anyone got to read the story: hundreds of copies of the newspaper were stolen from all of the newspaper vending machines in town, reports HuffPost

“’It’s pretty clear that someone didn’t want the community to read the news this week,’ McIntyre wrote [in an email to readers]. ‘I’ll leave it up to you to draw your own conclusions on which story they didn’t want you to read.’

“The front-page headline on the January 18-24 edition of the paper in question reads, ‘Girl: Rapes occurred at chief’s house.’

The story, authored by McIntyre, relays the horrific allegations of a 17-year-old girl who says she was repeatedly raped while at a party with the police chief’s stepson and two other individuals in May 2023.”

Finally, two important stories about crime and inflation also flew mostly under the radar. 

Crime fell both nationally and in Minnesota in 2023. Jeff Asher has a good analysis of the national figures, and the Minnesota Reformer has us covered locally

“Crime in Minnesota was down across the board in 2023, according to preliminary data released by the Department of Public Safety.

“Statewide, relative to 2022:

  • Homicide was down 5%
  • Car thefts were down 8%, and carjackings 38%
  • Larceny, or theft, decreased by about 15%
  • Rape fell by 20%

“Many major crime categories, like robbery, burglary, larceny and sexual assault, are now running lower than they did prior to the pandemic. Others, like homicide, aggravated assault and motor vehicle theft, remain well above pre-pandemic levels despite recent declines.”

Inflation is down, and that has been widely reported though not as widely believed. The under-reported news is that corporate profits are the biggest driver of recent inflation:

“The report, compiled by the progressive Groundwork Collaborative thinktank, found corporate profits accounted for about 53% of inflation during last year’s second and third quarters. Profits drove just 11% of price growth in the 40 years prior to the pandemic, according to the report. …

“Since pandemic inflation spiked in 2021, a high-stakes debate has played out about its sources. Many progressive economists pointed to corporate profits – or “greedflation” – and supply chain issues as a driver of high prices, while their more conservative counterparts singled out government stimulus cash and high wages.

“The report’s authors scoured corporate earnings calls and found executives bragging to shareholders about keeping prices high and widening profit margins as input costs come down.” 

That’s it for this week–now I can close those tabs and clear my browser.

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I Am Only One, But Still I Am One: Reflections on January 6

Three years ago, Trump and his mob tried to destroy democracy and the rule of law. They failed. They are still trying. We still need to keep resisting. 

That means resisting the lies of the deluded right-wing minority. Trump has never had the support of a majority of the country. Even when he became president, he had only minority support. He lost the popular vote in 2016, with Hillary Clinton getting almost 2.9 million more voters than Trump had. Yes—he won in the electoral college and became president with a minority of votes cast in the election. In 2020, Trump lost to President Joe Biden by an even larger margin: more than 7 million votes. This time he also lost in the electoral college, by a vote of 306 to 232. 

A large majority of people in this country support the rule of law, equal treatment for all races, religions and ethnicities, a woman’s right to choose, asylum for people fleeing persecution, welcome for Dreamers, protection for trans children, equal rights for LGBT people … the list goes on. The loud minority threatens because they are loud, because they lie, and because they (some of them, at least) even come to believe their own lies. 

Their loud and repeated lies endanger the rest of us, too. They flood social media with lies and slime, promoting a cynicism that says all politicians are crooks and liars, facts are unknowable, and all opinions are equal. That cynicism leads to a rejection of civic involvement and political participation at the very time we need it most. 

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Stop Military Aid to Israel

Egregious human rights violations of human rights and rules of war by Israel continue, day after day, supported by U.S. military aid. The United States must stop supporting the slaughter that already has killed more than 19,000 people in Gaza and displaced more than 80 percent of the entire population. Our continued military assistance to Israel makes us complicit in ongoing war crimes.  

Senator Bernie Sanders has begun one process that could halt U.S. military aid. I’m writing to urge my Senators to support that initiative and to vote outright to end military aid to Israel. 

After the horrific terrorist attack by Hamas on October 7, Israel’s counter-attack on Hamas was expected and its self-defense justified. The extreme and continuing violations of human rights and rules of war are not excused by self-defense. There are lines that may never be crossed. 

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