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Month: January 2024

Ninety Seconds

Today’s Lineup

We are ninety seconds from midnight, abortion bans are killing pregnant people, the junk science of hair analysis leads to false convictions, companies steal wages from their workers, we must ask if Republicans denounce political violence, why the world is betting against American democracy, the threats created by disinformation, the $6 trillion difference between the parties, Sam Mewis transitions from soccer icon to editor-in-chief, and the size of the U.S. increased last month.

#1

Photo of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists setting the Doomsday Clock to 90 seconds to midnight in January 2024
2024 Doomsday Clock Announcement // Hastings Group Media

A moment of historic danger: It is still 90 seconds to midnight (Science and Security Board, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists)

The members of the Science and Security Board have been deeply worried about the deteriorating state of the world. That is why we set the Doomsday Clock at two minutes to midnight in 2019 and at 100 seconds to midnight in 2022. Last year, we expressed our heightened concern by moving the Clock to 90 seconds to midnight—the closest to global catastrophe it has ever been—in large part because of Russian threats to use nuclear weapons in the war in Ukraine.

Today, we once again set the Doomsday Clock at 90 seconds to midnight because humanity continues to face an unprecedented level of danger. Our decision should not be taken as a sign that the international security situation has eased. Instead, leaders and citizens around the world should take this statement as a stark warning and respond urgently, as if today were the most dangerous moment in modern history. Because it may well be. 

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists—an organization founded by Albert Einstein, J. Robert Oppenheimer, and other University of Chicago scientists who helped develop the first atomic weapons—has a Science and Security Board that resets the Doomsday Clock each year to call attention to how vulnerable we are to a global catastrophe caused by human-made technologies. The clock has been moved 25 times since its debut in 1947—with the furthest from midnight coming at 17 minutes in 1991 with the end of the Cold War. I think we should be alarmed that the Doomsday Clock is now set closer to midnight than it was at any point during that conflict. We are seeing the world’s most significant nuclear powers (the United States, Russia, and China) possibly entering a three-way nuclear arms race. The impacts of the climate emergency continue to intensify. Artificial intelligence advances create various potential dangers—including its use to create disinformation to impact elections, autonomous military weapons, and biological threats. The current international political situation does not make me optimistic about improvements in 2024. But we should be aware of the stakes of being so close to midnight, especially in countries having elections this year.

 

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#2

How to Report Post-Dobbs Deaths (Jessica Valenti, Abortion, Every Day)

The New Yorker published a heart-breaking piece about Yeniifer Alvarez-Estrada Glick, a 29 year-old woman who died a few weeks after Roe was overturned. In the headline, the magazine asks, “Did An Abortion Ban Cost a Young Texas Woman Her Life?” 

The answer, without a doubt, is yes. So why is it so hard to say so? 

Anyone who works in the abortion rights world knows that bans have killed multiple people since Roe was overturned. The public hasn’t heard their stories, though, because families understandably don’t want their loved ones’ lives and deaths picked apart by reporters and anti-abortion activists. 

It’s only a matter of time, for example, before Republicans and conservative groups claim that Yeni’s death had nothing to do with Texas’ abortion ban. They’ll point to how the young woman could be inconsistent taking her hypertension medication, or the time she missed an appointment with a maternal fetal medicine specialist. They will find a way to blame her.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Valenti has regularly made this point since the six Supreme Court liars Justices overturned Roe. We must not allow Republicans to shift the blame for these deaths from their policies to the victims or healthcare workers. Forced-birth advocates worked for fifty years to get this result. Republican policies have created what are, in effect, death panels for women. They need to own what they have done—and what they plan to do. And I am relieved that President Biden and Vice President Harris are starting to emphasize what’s at stake during the 2024 election.  

Screenshot of a Rachel Bitecofer tweet with a photo of the six Supreme Court Justices with the caption: “Anytime someone tells you Republicans won’t pass a national abortion ban, remind them these Republicans swore under oath that Roe was settled law.”
Screenshot from X/Twitter

#3

How the Junk Science of Hair Analysis Keeps People Behind Bars (Rene Ebersole, Mother Jones)

In courtrooms across America, “scientific evidence” used to imprison people for heinous crimes has been increasingly discredited. Blood-spatter patterns, arson analysis, bite-mark comparisons, even some fingerprint evidence have all turned out to be unreliable.

A quarter of the 3,439 exonerations tracked by the National Registry of Exonerations involved false or misleading forensic evidence.

But these exonerations are only the tip of the iceberg, some experts say. Many more people remain incarcerated despite questions about the forensic analysis of evidence used against them. Cases are not automatically reopened when a field of forensics is questioned or even discredited. That’s true of hair analysis, which has been under scrutiny for decades: Government studies have found that in hundreds of cases, hair analysts from the Federal Bureau of Investigation exaggerated their findings in reports and court testimony. 

A new report by the exoneration registry found 129 cases in which people were falsely convicted at least partly because of flawed hair analysis and testimony. Fifteen of the defendants were sentenced to die. Exonerees lost almost 2,000 years of their lives in prison and cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. And there may be many more people behind bars who were convicted because of bad hair evidence.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Think about the ramifications of the statistics included in the last quoted paragraph from this story—129 false convictions, with 15 including death sentences. This story focuses on how Gerald Delane Murray is struggling to be exonerated three decades after his conviction despite the case against him crumbling. The National Academy of Sciences has warned there is “no scientific support” for using hair comparisons without DNA. Yet courts continue to make it difficult for people convicted based on this junk science to appeal and seek exonerations. Far too many judges and prosecutors believe that defending a conviction is more important than seeking the truth. We must do more to help people seek exoneration upon discovering new evidence or when there are updates to scientific understanding.

#4

The fleecing of America’s hourly workers (Judd Legum and Tesnim Zekeria)

More than 200,000 workers across the country are owed $163.3 million in back pay, according to a website maintained by the Department of Labor (DOL). This is money companies have paid after they were found liable for wage theft violations — like withholding tips from workers — but has not been claimed. Workers who believe they are owed wages can check the DOL website, Worker Owed Wages. Other forms of wage theft include pressuring workers to work off-the-clock, cutting lunch breaks short, deliberately paying below the minimum wage, and failing to pay overtime.

Currently, the largest amount of unclaimed back wages is in food services. More than 36,000 food service workers have yet to claim wages that they are owed, USA Today reports. DOL data reveals that since 2020, investigators have recovered more than $130 million in back wages in the industry. In November 2023, officials ordered Plaza Azteca, an East Coast restaurant chain, to pay “$11.4 million in back wages and liquidated damages for more than 1,000 employees.” According to the DOL, the restaurant was aware of its “legal obligation to pay workers minimum wage and overtime…and yet, willfully disregarded federal law.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I’ve previously covered how the retail industry created a media frenzy about crime by lying about the number of thefts in their businesses. But there hasn’t been enough coverage of a crime we know happens every day: the theft of wages from workers. Our governments do not have the inspectors or administrative capacity to provide punishments to companies or timely relief to workers. Few states even make wage theft a criminal offense—it’s often a crime subject to minor civil penalties. Abuses of the arbitration process make it so challenging for workers to recover their stolen wages that few even try. The federal and state governments should do more to change this dynamic and protect workers. The owners, executives, and managers should face serious criminal penalties for stealing from their workers. Stealing is stealing. 

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#5

Reporters should ask Republicans if they renounce political violence (Dan Froomkin, Press Watch)

President Biden spoke out against violence in his first major campaign speech last week: “I’ll say what Donald Trump won’t. Political violence is never, ever acceptable in the United States political system. Never, never, never. It has no place in a democracy. None,” he said.

But that’s hardly going to persuade people on the right.

“Democrats can rail about political violence all they want, but the only way to tamp it down is for Republican leaders to speak out,” Alex Theodoridis, a political science professor at UMass Amherst, said at a Kettering Foundation event on political violence on Tuesday. “They need to hear from elites on their own side that political violence is not OK.”

The absence of that message, Theodoridis said, is a “permission slip” for those “who might engage in criminal and violent behavior.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Where do Republicans stand on the use of threats of violence against their political adversaries? Trump refuses to denounce the idea—and has directly warned of bedlam if he does not get his way. This should be a campaign issue. We need to hear whether Republicans condone these threats. We know that the fear of what Trump supporters might do kept Representatives and Senators from voting against Trump during his second impeachment. Local elected officials are resigning from their positions because they cannot handle the stress created by harassment and threats of violence. I am grateful that President Biden was so clear in rejecting violence. Reporters should ask every elected official where they stand—and an interview should end if the politician refuses to denounce it. 

#6

Why the World Is Betting Against American Democracy (Nahal Toosi, Politico)

When I asked the European ambassador to talk to me about America’s deepening partisan divide, I expected a polite brushoff at best. Foreign diplomats are usually loath to discuss domestic U.S. politics.

Instead, the ambassador unloaded for an hour, warning that America’s poisonous politics are hurting its security, its economy, its friends and its standing as a pillar of democracy and global stability.

The U.S. is a “fat buffalo trying to take a nap” as hungry wolves approach, the envoy mused. “I can hear those Champagne bottle corks popping in Moscow — like it’s Christmas every fucking day.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

The world is looking skeptically at the United States. Can we really blame it? It’s not just that Donald Trump could become president again. Yeah, that’s a problem! But global diplomats have also noticed (among other issues) that the United States cannot keep its commitment to provide aid to Ukraine, has a Republican majority in the House of Representatives more likely to kick out its Speaker than pass a budget, and has a broken confirmation process for ambassadors and other officials. They also expressed concern to Toosi about how moral or national security arguments no longer seem to work with MAGA politicians. How can other countries trust the United States with long-term agreements under these circumstances?

#7

Disinformation poses an unprecedented threat in 2024 — and the U.S. is less ready than ever (Brandy Zadrozny, NBC News)

Disinformation poses an unprecedented threat to democracy in the United States in 2024, according to researchers, technologists and political scientists. 

As the presidential election approaches, experts warn that a convergence of events at home and abroad, on traditional and social media — and amid an environment of rising authoritarianism, deep distrust, and political and social unrest — makes the dangers from propaganda, falsehoods and conspiracy theories more dire than ever.

The U.S. presidential election comes during a historic year, with billions of people voting in other elections in more than 50 countries, including in Europe, India, Mexico and South Africa. And it comes at a time of ideal circumstances for disinformation and the people who spread it. 

An increasing number of voters have proven susceptible to disinformation from former President Donald Trump and his allies; artificial intelligence technology is ubiquitous; social media companies have slashed efforts to rein in misinformation on their platforms; and attacks on the work and reputation of academics tracking disinformation have chilled research.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Gulp. And as Zadrozny explains, there are no easy solutions to the problem. Local news outlets are laying off staff or closing. Social media companies like X/Twitter, Meta/Facebook, YouTube, and TikTok are cutting back from enforcing their trust and safety policies. Technology is making disinformation easier to create (one of the reasons, as Zadronzny writes, that “a World Economic Forum survey named misinformation and disinformation from AI as the top global risk over the next two years — ahead of climate change and war.” But these threats also exist at the local level—as we have seen with attacks against election administrators and school boards. I believe we will all need to make an effort to call out disinformation as soon as we see it. We don’t have to convince every voter, but we must do what we can to keep persuadable friends, family, and colleagues from falling for what is coming. 

#8

$6 Trillion in Taxes Are at Stake in This Year’s Elections (Richard Rubin, Wall Street Journal)

There isn’t a dime’s worth of a difference between the political parties. The chasm is more like $6 trillion. 

The winners of November’s presidential and congressional elections will quickly face decisions on extending tax cuts scheduled to expire after 2025. President Biden and Republicans support starkly different tax plans.

Republicans generally want to extend all expiring tax cuts from the 2017 law former President Donald Trump signed. The price tag: $4 trillion over a decade.

Biden proposed extending Trump’s tax cuts for households making under $400,000 annually but said the rest should expire. Beyond that, he would raise taxes further on top earners and corporations. That plan, including tax increases the president hasn’t fully detailed, would generate more than $2 trillion beyond current forecasts.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Anyone who claims to be a fiscal conservative or to give a damn about the rising national debt needs to be clear that they oppose extending the Trump tax cuts. I’d love it if we could also go back to the George W. Bush tax cuts that eliminated trillions of projected surpluses. I also wish Biden set a lower floor than $400,000 a year for reversing the tax cuts. But, sigh, I get the political considerations at play in this election year. Let’s be clear, though—we have over 40 years of experience showing that tax cuts do not increase revenues (which even Ronald Reagan demonstrated he understood when he signed a tax increase into law just one year after his famous 1981 tax cuts). Fiscal responsibility is incompatible with tax cuts when the economy is growing.

#9

She Was the World’s Best Player. Now She Won’t Play Soccer Again. (Rachel Bachman, Wall Street Journal)

It was the kind of contact that happens in every soccer game. Playing in a friendly, U.S. midfielder Sam Mewis stretched her right leg toward the ball, an opponent slid to tackle her, and their knees collided. As the months stretched on from that Nov. 12, 2017, game against Canada, however, the damage Mewis’s knee suffered that day eventually would end one of the most quietly spectacular careers in American soccer. 

Mewis, who was named the top player in the world during the Americans’ triumphant 2019 Women’s World Cup, announced her retirement from the game on Friday. She is 31 years old. 

She’s already started her next career: serving as editor in chief of women’s soccer coverage for the Men In Blazers Media Network. There, she’ll build an operation that Roger Bennett, the network’s co-founder, hopes will equal the size of the network’s men’s soccer coverage by the end of 2025.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Sam Mewis’ excellence on the pitch often seemed to fly under the radar. She won everywhere she played: winning a national championship with UCLA, three NWSL titles, an FA Cup with Manchester City, and that 2019 Women’s World Cup title. But recovering from that knee injury became more difficult. I’m not alone in thinking that her inability to play in the 2023 World Cup explains a bunch about the USWNT’s underperformance in that tournament. Like many soccer fans, I was able to experience Mewis in a different environment during that World Cup as I listened to her co-host live streams and podcasts with Men in Blazers’ co-founder Roger Bennett. They were lively and fun conversations, despite starting so early in the morning (given the time zone differences between New Zealand and Australia). So I was looking forward to seeing what she would do when her playing career was over—but I was hoping it wouldn’t be this soon. I am glad Mewis has this opportunity to make this smooth transition at the end of her playing career. And I am excited to see what she will do with Bennett on the Men in Blazers network to increase the coverage of women’s soccer.  

The Closer

The United States grew in size by a million square kilometers last month. “America is larger than it was yesterday,” said Mead Treadwell, a former Alaska lieutenant governor and former chair of the U.S. Arctic Research Commission. “It’s not quite the Louisiana Purchase. It’s not quite the purchase of Alaska, but the new area of land and subsurface resources under the land controlled by the United States is two Californias larger.” (Liz Ruskin, Alaska Public Radio)

Quick Pitches

Post-Game Comments

Today’s Thought from my Readwise collection:

“It’s thrilling to be extremely polite to rude strangers.” (Kevin Kelly, Excellent Advice for Living)

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Biden For Democracy

Today’s Lineup

President Biden campaigns in defense of democracy, the Trump supporters who believe he’s been chosen by God to rule, the toxic mix of Christian Nationalism and authoritarianism, what a dictator on day one could do with executive orders, our health care system fails people with difficult to determine ailments, forced-birth advocates are criminalizing pregnancy outcomes, the failed promise of police body cameras, how freedom feels for a man exonerated after 48 years of false imprisonment, we are different from previous generations of humans, and how those QR codes work.

President Joe Biden delivers remarks at a podium to supporters while standing in front of an American flag.
President Joe Biden speaks in Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, on January 5, 2024 (Photo from @JoeBiden/Threads)

#1

Remarks by President Biden on the Third Anniversary of the January 6th Attack and Defending the Sacred Cause of American Democracy (President Joe Biden, White House Briefing Room)

In trying to rewrite the facts of January 6th, Trump is trying to steal history the same way he tried to steal the election. But he — we knew the truth because we saw it with our own eyes. It wasn’t like something — a story being told. It was on television repeatedly. We saw it with our own eyes. 

Trump’s mob wasn’t a peaceful protest. It was a violent assault. They were insurrectionists, not patriots. They weren’t there to uphold the Constitution; they were there to destroy the Constitution.

Trump won’t do what an American president must do. He refuses to denounce political violence. 

So, hear me clearly. I’ll say what Donald Trump won’t. Political violence is never, ever acceptable in the United States political system — never, never, never. It has no place in a democracy. None. (Applause.)

You can’t be pro-insurrectionist and pro-American. 

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

This! This! A million times this! Thank you, President Biden, for laying out the stakes of the 2024 election so clearly. This speech was outstanding—and sadly necessary. After a few days of widespread agreement about what happened on January 6, 2021, Republicans have been trying to rewrite that day’s history since former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy made his trip to bend the knee to the former president at his Mar-a-Lago resort. House Republican Conference Chairwoman Elise Stefanik continued these efforts over the weekend on Meet the Press, where she talked about the “January 6 hostages” and refused to promise to accept the results of the 2024 election. So let’s be clear: our democracy barely survived the attack on the Capitol on January 6, 2021, and Donald Trump and his supporters are focused on finishing the job this time around. I hope you’ll take the time to watch President Biden’s speech if you missed it. Here’s a recording from C-SPAN.

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#2

Many Trump supporters believe God has chosen him to rule (The Economist)

For years scholars have tried to explain why conservative Christians so avidly support Donald Trump, a man who is more intimately acquainted with the seven deadly sins than the contents of the Bible. Some chalk it up to Mr Trump’s conservative policies. (He appointed the judges who gave back to the states the power to ban abortion.) Others think they share Mr Trump’s nostalgia for America’s past—an era when white Christians dominated the country. Yet another factor may also have played a role: the belief that Mr Trump was anointed by God to lead the country.

In 2016 a self-styled prophet named Lance Wallnau had a vision: the next president would be a latter-day Cyrus, the Persian emperor who, though not Jewish, was chosen by God to free the Jews from captivity. Mr Wallnau proclaimed Mr Trump, then a Republican candidate, the Cyrus of his dreams. The message was, even though he is not evangelical, “Trump is sent by God to deliver conservative Christians back from cultural exile,” says Matthew Taylor of the Institute for Islamic, Christian and Jewish Studies in Maryland.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Insurrectionist Donald Trump’s hold on evangelical Christians has been one of the most important dynamics of our politics since the former president descended from the golden escalator and announced his 2016 campaign for president. The Economist explains how Trump has managed to keep so many conservative Christians as enthusiastic supporters by looking into the teachings of the New Apostolic Reformation. The group’s followers were key leaders of the January 6, 2021, insurrection against the lawful government of the United States. As the article explains, “Many protesters brandished flags emblazoned with the words “An Appeal to Heaven”, the apostles’ rallying cry for a Christian conquest of America.” We should also be aware that Speaker of the House Mike Johnson has displayed that flag outside his Congressional office. I don’t think that’s a coincidence.

#3

The Only Thing More Dangerous Than Authoritarianism (Tim Alberta, The Atlantic)

The crisis at hand is not simply that Christ’s message has been corroded, but that his Church has been radicalized. The state-ordered closings of sanctuaries during COVID-19, the conspiracy-fueled objections to Joe Biden’s victory in 2020, the misinformation around vaccines and educational curricula—these and other culture-war flash points have accelerated notions of imminent Armageddon inside American Christendom. A community that has always felt misunderstood now feels marginalized, ostracized, even persecuted. This feeling is not relegated to the fringes of evangelicalism. In fact, this fear—that Christianity is in the crosshairs of the government, that an evil plot to topple America’s Judeo-Christian heritage hinges on silencing believers and subjugating the Church—now animates the religious right in ways that threaten the very foundations of our democracy.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

It is impossible to understand the authoritarian turn in the Republican party without grappling with the rise of Christian nationalism within the party. Alberta has regularly raised this alarm from the perspective of a believer. He explains how a 50-year effort of “weaponizing the Gospel to win elections” has been accelerated by Trump, the COVID-19 pandemic, and immigration. History warns us about how dangerous the mix of authoritarianism and religious fanaticism can be. Will we listen?

#4

Dictator On Day One: The Executive Orders That Trump Would Issue From The Start (Josh Kovensky, Talking Points Memo)

On his first days in office, Trump is planning on issuing orders which would end birthright citizenship, give himself the authority to fire tens of thousands of federal civil servants, and force federal bureaucrats to obey culture war dictates.

Through executive action, Trump plans to proclaim extreme new interpretations of baseline provisions of the Constitution, dramatically expanding the reach of presidential authority while upturning principles of law and American society, like birthright citizenship, that for decades have been taken for granted. Many of the proposed orders are likely to spark court fights, setting up legal battles over bedrock issues destined for a 6-3 conservative Supreme Court.

Other proposed day-one orders lean into the culture wars with real-world consequences, like one which would bar federal agencies from running programs supporting gender-transition education.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

We are fortunate that Trump and his supporters are being so transparent about their intentions. We know how many people a second Trump administration plans to harm. Despite our frustrations, we must do whatever we can to prevent this outcome. As Reed Galen wrote in response to Democratic campaign staffers writing yet another anonymous protest memo“There are also no “moral victories” in politics. It’s a binary outcome. A candidate wins or loses. The continuation of democracy, the American experiment, and America itself depends on ensuring Donald Trump never returns to the White House.” I wish the 2024 election was about something else. I wish ten more Republican Senators had voted to convict Trump during his second Impeachment trial and made clear he was ineligible to run again. I wish death treats from MAGA supporters didn’t keep Republican leaders from endorsing Trump this time around. But my wishes don’t change our reality. 

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#5

My Unraveling: I had my health. I had a job. And then, abruptly, I didn’t. (Tom Scocca, Intelligencer)

Maybe, the cardiologist said, eyeing my scrawny limbs and loose clothes, I should consider checking into a hospital. Just so I could get all my testing coordinated in one place.

It was only a thought, one that dissipated as I sought out second opinions. The medical-mystery column doesn’t usually dwell on how slowly the inquiry goes in our fractured health-care system. How the highly recommended pulmonologist doesn’t return the first phone call and only has an opening five months away, and how the major-medical center does have an appointment but isn’t in network with the major-medical insurer. How the chest X-ray is over by the East River and the breathing booth is in the West 160s and the phlebotomist is by Columbia, and how each one has its own online portal for billing and results.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Tom Scocca writes about how an unknown illness, COVID, and our horrifying employer-based health insurance system combined in a Kafkaesque fashion. We see, once again, how getting someone healthy is not our society’s priority. Having an unknown illness is stressful enough. But how are people supposed to focus on recovering given the financial strains and other stresses created by navigating a health insurance system designed to deny us care?

#6

The Year in Abortion: Criminalization (Jessica Valenti, Abortion, Every Day)

Let’s be clear: Republicans aren’t interested in stopping abortions or saving ‘babies’—they simply want to hurt those who would see women be free. The punishment has always been the point.

And despite assurances that they have no interest in targeting abortion patients, the GOP worked overtime this year to ensure that women who have the temerity to decide their own lives and futures be punished for it.

A Nebraska teenager who self-managed her abortion. An Ohio woman prosecuted for flushing her miscarriage. Story after story this year proved just how much the GOP plans to make examples of the most marginalized among us.

But criminalization in 2023 went far beyond individual punishment—the broader goal is to stop us from helping each other in a moment when help is needed most. There were bills to ban pro-choice websites, local ordinances that made lending someone money or sharing information about abortion illegal—even a law in Idaho that would punish professors with prison time for “promoting” abortion.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

We should be clear about what forced-birth judges and politicians have been doing across the country since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. While their rhetoric often downplays their desire to criminalize pregnancy outcomes, their decisions and legislation tell a straightforward story. Republican politicians continue to propose outrageous laws in the hopes that voters will normalize their ideas. That’s why we need to be quite clear about the realistic ramifications of what forced-birth advocates propose. Jessica Valenti’s Abortion, Every Day newsletter is an essential resource to see how these efforts build upon each other. I hope voters will continue to reject these policies as long as we have the opportunity to do so. 

#7

The Failed Promise of Police Body Cameras (Eric Umansky, The New York Times and ProPublica)

When body-worn cameras were introduced a decade ago, they seemed to hold the promise of a revolution. Once police officers knew they were being filmed, surely they would think twice about engaging in misconduct. And if they crossed the line, they would be held accountable: The public, no longer having to rely on official accounts, would know about wrongdoing. Police and civilian oversight agencies would be able to use footage to punish officers and improve training. In an outlay that would ultimately cost hundreds of millions of dollars, the technology represented the largest new investment in policing in a generation.

Yet without deeper changes, it was a fix bound to fall far short of those hopes. In every city, the police ostensibly report to mayors and other elected officials. But in practice, they have been given wide latitude to run their departments as they wish and to police — and protect — themselves. And so as policymakers rushed to equip the police with cameras, they often failed to grapple with a fundamental question: Who would control the footage? Instead, they defaulted to leaving police departments, including New York’s, with the power to decide what is recorded, who can see it and when. In turn, departments across the country have routinely delayed releasing footage, released only partial or redacted video or refused to release it at all. They have frequently failed to discipline or fire officers when body cameras document abuse and have kept footage from the agencies charged with investigating police misconduct.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I do not believe any institution can oversee its own actions effectively. The police are particularly ineffective at it, repeatedly choosing to protect its members instead of the public. As this investigation examines, police departments frequently withhold body camera footage—even in cases of police violence and misconduct. Politicians have rewarded this bad conduct, and these dynamics have led to civilian injuries, deaths, and wrongful convictions. Law enforcement agencies should no longer be given the benefit of the doubt when it comes to requirements to be more transparent.

#8

Glynn Simmons: Freedom ‘exhilarating’ for man exonerated after 48 years (Madeline Halpert, BBC News)

Mr Simmons was released from prison in July 2023. In December he was declared innocent in the 1974 murder of Carolyn Sue Rogers. His is the longest known wrongful conviction in the US.

His sentence was vacated after a district court found that prosecutors had not turned over all evidence to defence lawyers, including that a witness had identified other suspects.

He was 22 when he and a co-defendant, Don Roberts, were convicted and sentenced to death in 1975, a punishment that was later reduced to life in prison.

Mr Simmons spoke to the BBC this week about his newfound freedom, his current battle with Stage 4 cancer and the hope that carried him through 48 years behind bars.

“Being innocent, it helps you to keep your faith,” he said. “I would be lying if I said I didn’t lose my faith, lots of times. But it’s like a rubber band – you expand and you return.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Speaking of law enforcement misconduct, I am glad that Glynn Simmons is enjoying his freedom after 48 years of wrongful imprisonment. Yes: 48 years. But his case highlights the need to ensure wrongfully convicted people can access the resources required to appeal their convictions—especially when prosecutor or police misconduct is uncovered or scientific advances expose new possibilities for examining evidence. But some radical conservatives, like Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares, have taken resources that were dedicated to helping the wrongfully convicted and transferred them to use on culture war issues. Voters should check that impulse. We also should do more to compensate people who have been wrongfully imprisoned. Oklahoma, for example, has a maximum compensation of $175,000—and it could take years before Simmons sees a dime. A goal of our criminal justice system should be accuracy—not fighting to keep wrongful convictions in place. 

#9

We are different from all other humans in history (Brian Klaas, The Garden of Forking Paths)

I recently visited my family in the US and managed to defeat transatlantic jet lag in one night—a small miracle. But as I patted myself on the back for my unusual sleeping prowess, I considered an astonishing fact: in the history of humanity, just three and a half generations of human beings have been able to experience jet lag.

The phenomenon was only identified in 1931. Before that, it wasn’t possible for a human to travel far enough fast enough to knock their internal circadian rhythms out of sync. Our technological prowess created a novel biological experience that was impossible for roughly 9,497 out of the 9,500 or so generations of Homo sapiens.

We, the modern humans who are alive today, are unique.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

It is remarkable how much has changed so quickly for our species. In 1914, it would take someone up to 40 days to reach some of the remote places on the planet from London. Now? It takes 36 hours. As Klass explains, “The furthest reaches of inaccessible terrain on our planet are now far easier to reach from London than were most places in Western Europe a century ago.” (Klass includes maps demonstrating this transition.) Klass discusses how this change—and other advancements like our global communications networks and how often children are now teaching older generations essential skills—have impacted how humans interact. It was great to take some time away from current news to consider how much we take advantage of today would have been impossible to imagine just three or four generations ago. 

The Closer

person holding white and black card
Photo by Albert Hu on Unsplash

The Quick Response code, known as the QR code, has become more ubiquitous since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. But how do they work? Dan Hollick takes a deep dive into what those black dots and white spaces mean and how they work to transmit information. They have come a long way since the Japanese company Denso Wave created them in 1994 to track automobile parts inventory. 

Post-Game Comments

Today’s Thought from my Readwise collection:

“If the American Republic falls, democracy as the leading political system in the world falls. If democracy falls, the peace and security of the global order falls. No one will escape the consequences.” (Stephen Marche, The Next Civil War)

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