Press "Enter" to skip to content

Month: April 2024

Nuclear War: A Terrifying Scenario

Here’s what I’ve found interesting: a book explores a nuclear war scenario that could happen today, Arizona exposes what Republicans want for women across the country, Biden should do a primetime address on abortion, Trump asks advisors for battle plans against Mexico, MAGA ties eclipses to conspiracies, what really matters in the 2024 election, understanding the digital threats pregnant people face post-Roe, prosecutors who frame innocent people deserve tougher punishments, five reasons journalists accept being lied to, and sharing the best of Grant Wahl.

Cover artwork for Nuclear War: A Scenario by Annie Jacobsen

#1

Nuclear War: A Scenario (Annie Jacobsen, Dutton Books)

Since the early 1950s, the United States government has spent trillions of dollars preparing to fight a nuclear war, while also refining protocols meant to keep the U.S. government functioning after hundreds of millions of Americans become casualties of an apocalyptic-scale nuclear holocaust.

This scenario—of what the moments after an inbound nuclear missile launch could look like—is based on facts sourced from exclusive interviews with presidential advisors, cabinet members, nuclear weapons engineers, scientists, soldiers, airmen, special operators, Secret Service, emergency management experts, intelligence analysts, civil servants, and others who have worked on these macabre scenarios over decades.

Because the plans for General Nuclear War are among the most classified secrets held by the U.S. government, this book, and the scenario it postulates, takes the reader up to the razor’s edge of what can legally be known. Declassified documents—obfuscated for decades—fill in the details with terrifying clarity. Because the Pentagon is a top target for a strike by America’s nuclear-armed enemies, in the scenario that follows, Washington, D.C., gets hit first—with a 1-megaton thermonuclear bomb. “A Bolt out of the Blue attack against D.C. is what everyone in D.C. fears most,” says former assistant secretary of defense for nuclear, chemical, and biological defense programs Andrew Weber. “Bolt out of the Blue” is how U.S. Nuclear Command and Control refers to an “unwarned large [nuclear] attack.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

This is one of the most terrifying books I have read—and I urge everyone to join me in witnessing its terror. Jacobsen masterfully describes, minute by minute, what would happen once the United States detects a nuclear weapons launch.

The bottom line: in the realistic scenario Jacobsen outlines, it would only take around 72 minutes from the launch of the first ICBM for civilization to end. And, yeah, it could happen today.

I fear that many people do not see a nuclear war as a likely scenario in 2024. But the increased likelihood of a nuclear exchange is one of the reasons the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has set its Doomsday Clock to 90 seconds to midnight for the past two years. That’s the closest the clock has been set to doomsday since its creation in 1947.

Jacobsen explains how a nuclear war will progress to armageddon once the principle of deterrence has failed. The incentives to use the weapons before they are destroyed overcome any inclination to wait and see or to prevent damage once early warning systems detect the first launches.

The United States, China, and Russia are spending more on nuclear weapons. Other nations, like North Korea, are expanding their capabilities. Iran could have nuclear weapons quickly if its leaders decide to take the last steps made possible by former President Donald Trump’s decision to scuttle the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.

Legendary Entertainment has optioned the book for a possible movie adaptation. I hope it happens. Our generations could use a The Day After-type of wake-up call.

Things I Find Interesting is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider joining for free or helping buy me some coffee to drink while I write by becoming a paid subscriber.

#2

Arizona’s Zombie Abortion Ban Is Back. It’s Every State’s Future If Trump Wins. (Dahlia Lithwick and Mark Joseph Stern, Slate)

The next time someone tells you they really worry about abortion rights, but that President Biden is just too old, please gently remind them that Joe Biden is not, in fact 160. That is the age of the law that will soon be sending abortion providers to prison in Arizona if they attempt to assist a victim of rape or incest. If edgy modernity is truly your thing, be afraid of Republican judges who are at war with modernity itself; they will gladly welcome the assistance of pro-choice voters whose apathy facilitates the rollback of women’s equal citizenship. And it’s now abundantly clear that we’re not rolling back the tape to the 1970s or to the 1920s. The project is to set your clocks back to the time when women didn’t even matter enough to have a vote.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Since Republican elected officials know they can’t win at the ballot box, reviving zombie laws banning reproductive health care through the judicial and regulatory processes is now a top forced-birth priority. What the Arizona Supreme Court did is just a first step in this process. If former President Donald Trump wins, he won’t need Congress to create a national ban—yes, even in blue states. The Comstock Act can do the work, and it could also extend to contraception. It will be easier to fight back if Biden is still in the White House. General elections are not about ideological perfection. They are binary choices, and I hope voters prioritize harm reduction if they can’t get excited about re-electing Biden.

#3

Biden should do a primetime address on abortion (Marisa Kabas, The Handbasket)

Despite being given an absolute slam dunk, homerun, touchdown of an electoral issue—as proven by numerous other elections—Biden has yet to definitively own it in a way that feels commensurate with its seriousness. The practicing Catholic president still treats abortion like a relative he was forced to invite to the party. And that needs to change.

Now is the time for Biden to put aside any personal misgivings and focus on the greater good. Now is the time for Biden to draw clear lines that say: “In a second Biden term, abortion will be legal in as much as the country as possible. In a second Trump term, it will be illegal for millions of Americans.” 

The best part about this approach, for Biden at least, is that he doesn’t actually have to modulate his personal views at all. He’ll be able to distinguish himself from Trump just by stating facts backed up by history. Trump has no such history to fall onto, and quite the contrary: Despite his Wednesday assurances that he wouldn’t sign a national abortion ban, no one in their right mind believes him. Abortion access is as safe with Trump as it would be with the ghost of Phyllis Schlafly.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I agree. I want President Biden to be clear about what is at stake. It’s obvious this issue makes him uncomfortable, but that is nothing compared to the lives being placed in jeopardy by Republican abortion bans. As Kabas explains, Donald Trump is doing everything he can to confuse voters about what he will do on this issue if he wins this November. Trump is trying to be a moderate. It would be political malfeasance for Biden and the Democrats to let him get away with that misdirection. Vice President Kamala Harris has done a great job traveling the country talking about these issues, and it should continue to be a priority for her election efforts. But the president needs to lead—especially since voters have demonstrated they are ready to follow on this issue.

#4

Trump Asks Advisers for ‘Battle Plans’ to ‘Attack Mexico’ if Reelected (Asawin Suebsaeng, Adam Rawnsley, Rolling Stone)

“‘Attacking Mexico,’ or whatever you’d like to call it, is something that President Trump has said he wants ‘battle plans’ drawn for,” says one of the sources. “He’s complained about missed opportunities of his first term, and there are a lot of people around him who want fewer missed opportunities in a second Trump presidency.”

Trump lieutenants have briefed him on several options that include unilateral military strikes and troop deployments on a sovereign U.S. partner and neighbor, the sources say. One such proposal that Trump has been briefed on this year is an October white paper from the Center for Renewing America, an increasingly influential think tank staffed largely by Trumpist wonks, MAGA loyalists, and veterans of his administration.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I think the fact that a presumptive party nominee for president is openly discussing plans to conduct unilateral military operations in an allied country should be a bigger deal. And it isn’t just Trump—many leading Republicans have also declared that Trump made a huge mistake by not forcing some kind of military action in Mexico during his first term. They want to try again. We are fortunate they are warning us of their intentions.

Thank you for reading Things I Find Interesting. This post is public so feel free to share it with your family and friends.

#5

In MAGA World, Everything Happens for a Reason (Brian Klaas, The Atlantic)

A bridge was felled by a tragic error. Earth’s tectonic plates moved slightly underneath New Jersey. And on Monday, for four minutes, the sun went dark. These are mystifying events with rational explanations. Unfortunately, the MAGA movement has discovered its own hidden truth: that lying to people, coddling mass delusions, and insisting that political enemies are part of a secret plot is an effective strategy that converts ordinary supporters into zealous disciples. The only effective way to break the spell and bring people back to reality will be to disprove their most important prophecy, which takes place at the polls in November.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

The impact of this conspiracy theory dynamic continues to grow more intense. Is it the Biden Administration’s nefarious activities? Is God sending a message? Surely, these weird events are more than a mere coincidence. Klaas explains why it is so hard to counter these theories. After all, evolution gave us brains that try to create patterns, and we love a good story. When everything around us must be a part of a battle between good and evil, people want to believe they are fighting a villain and have the particular information required to be in the good group. Understanding these dynamics helps explain a bunch of what we see in today’s politics.

#6

This is pretty much all that matters (Craig Calcaterra, Cup of Coffee)

There is a view held by some that maybe we need everything to come crashing down in order to, eventually, achieve real progress. That the Democratic Party — which, contrary to Harwood’s words above, is really a center-right party with liberal social tendencies — cannot be reformed or coaxed into taking a more progressive path so only through some Great Reckoning or even via its destruction will we truly have a chance to improve the conditions of existence. I understand that sentiment and, as someone with a degree in political philosophy, I understand its theoretical and historical basis. Yet as a matter of American politics in the year 2024, I reject it as an utter fantasy held only by those who either (a) do not understand political realities and how our system would actually react to such a thing; (b) do not understand history; or (c) would not be the ones who truly suffered if such a thing came to pass and thus desire such an outcome from a place of profound privilege, whether or not they consciously appreciate it.

If Trump wins, the Democratic Party is not gonna see the democratic-socialist light, reject the things we want them to reject, and reform as some sort of progressive vanguard. It’s going to do what parties pushed to the brink of destruction have always done: rebrand and continue doing most of what it has always done but doing its best to co-opt the most popular ideas of the party which destroyed it. In our “Punish Biden” hypothetical, in 21st century America as it actually exists, a reformed-via-electoral-apocalypse Democratic Party would move further to the right and would abandon its most contentious positions and convictions which, by modern political definition, are those positions and convictions which are best-calculated to help or protect the most vulnerable among us. The only lesson our society would realistically choose to learn from Trump prevailing over a humbled and punished Biden is “we need to move to the right and stop supporting things which upset the people who put Trump in office.”

None of this is meant to tell you how to vote. All of us have a bright line issue or two on which we cannot and will not compromise and if Biden has crossed some line in that regard which makes it philosophically or morally untenable for you to support him, I respect that. But if that is the case, or if you are simply displeased with Biden and have notions of lodging a protest vote or not voting at all, I feel it is incumbent on you to explain, with at least a little actual detail, how the consequences of him losing in November are preferable to the alternative. How his losing would make any single thing better either in the short or long term and how it would not make things worse.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Cup of Coffee is one of my favorite newsletters because Calcaterra doesn’t just give me recaps of the previous day’s baseball games and news. That’s why I started following him online years ago. I love them! But what hooked me as a subscriber is what happens after he finishes with the baseball talk and shifts to other subjects. I frequently find his non-baseball analysis incredibly engaging since, despite living in Ohio, he approaches public policy from a skosh to my left. His point here is critical to understand as we enter the general election portion of the 2024 campaign. I heard similar accelerationist arguments from people in 2000 and 2016. But eight years of George W. Bush and four years of Donald Trump didn’t get us any closer to a socialist nirvana (we can start by taking a look at who is on the Supreme Court). General elections are not about our feelings. They are binary choices about where we are headed as a nation. I believe our priority should be doing whatever we can with our ballot to reduce the chances vulnerable people will be harmed.

#7

Two Years Post-Roe: A Better Understanding of Digital Threats (Daly Barnett, Electronic Frontier Foundation)

It’s been a long two years since the Dobbs decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. Between May 2022 when the Supreme Court accidentally leaked the draft memo and the following June when the case was decided, there was a mad scramble to figure out what the impacts would be. Besides the obvious perils of stripping away half the country’s right to reproductive healthcare, digital surveillance and mass data collection caused a flurry of concerns

Although many activists fighting for reproductive justice had been operating under assumptions of little to no legal protections for some time, the Dobbs decision was for most a sudden and scary revelation. Everyone implicated in that moment somewhat understood the stark difference between pre-Roe 1973 and post-Roe 2022; living under the most sophisticated surveillance apparatus in human history presents a vastly different landscape of threats. Since 2022, some suspicions have been confirmed, new threats have emerged, and overall our risk assessment has grown smarter. Below, we cover the most pressing digital dangers facing people seeking reproductive care, and ways to combat them.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Understanding how the data our computers and phones generate is vital since red-state extremists are seeking to criminalize not just receiving reproductive health care services but also helping someone access them. A forced-birth District Attorney can weaponize a person’s Google search history or the direct messages a relative or friend sends to a person facing a healthcare crisis. Data brokers can share license plate information that could lead to investigations about why a person parked their out-of-state vehicle near a reproductive healthcare center. This article explains these dangers and offers suggestions for how people can protect themselves.

#8

Kansas prosecutor who framed innocent man surrenders law license, will soon be disbarred (Peggy Lowe, KCUR Public Radio)

Terra Morehead, a longtime county and federal prosecutor who helped police frame at least one innocent man, has agreed to surrender her law license and faces disbarment.

Morehead, who became notorious for skirting legal protections for defendants, agreed to surrender her license as part of an agreement with the Kansas Board for Discipline of Attorneys. She is awaiting disbarment from the Kansas Supreme Court, according to court filings.

The documents also show that Morehead, who retired from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Kansas last August, was the subject of a federal investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice. The result of that probe is unknown.

Morehead’s conduct came under scrutiny during the exoneration of Lamonte McIntyre, who was convicted in 1994 of a double homicide when he was 17.

McIntyre was freed in 2017 after Wyandotte County District Attorney Mark Dupree said his conviction was a “manifest injustice” and a judge dropped the case. McIntyre sued and was awarded $12.5 million in 2022 by the Unified Government of Kansas City, Kansas, and Wyandotte County for the wrongful conviction.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

A person who falsely accuses another of a crime has committed a terrible act. We should have high expectations that prosecutors will not engage in such injustices and abuse the trust we grant them. So, a prosecutor misusing his or her authority to help convict an innocent person must face more significant consequences than retirement and disbarment. What prosecutor Terra Morehead did to Lamonte McIntyre should outrage all of us. She can’t only face a relative slap on the wrist.

#9

5 reasons journalists accept being lied to (Mark Jacob, Stop the Presses)

Journalists don’t punish liars enough.

Occasionally they push back on live TV, creating a few awkward moments, but by and large, they let liars state their lies and move on. Sometimes the journalists correct the lie later after their audience has absorbed the disinformation. It’s like pouring water on the ashes long after the fire is out.

Confrontation is hard for people – even for journalists. If they make their guests look bad, the guests might never come back on the show. Their press aides might stop providing anonymous quotes or tidbits of information that make the journalists look like they have the inside scoop. 

For this reason and others, some journalists accept being lied to, and consider it a part of their job. They don’t get offended – or at least not offended enough to fight back. They become part of a cynical system. And they come up with all kinds of rationalizations for their failure to vigorously defend the truth.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I’ve previously argued that interviews of any elected official should begin with one question: is Joe Biden the duly elected president of the United States? The interview should end if the answer is anything besides “Yes.” If a person is going to lie about this fact, what else can we trust? I also think that journalists should expose any anonymous source if it turns out they used that protection to lie. Journalists should not accept being the conduit through which politicians launder their deceptions. Jacob, who agrees that journalists don’t punish liars enough, explains why they fail to hold them accountable. It is useful to understand these dynamics—even if they frustrate me daily. 

Quick Pitches

  • Coming in June: The Best of Grant Wahl (Céline Gounder, Fútbol with Grant Wahl)
    Grant Wahl died while covering the 2022 Men’s World Cup. He was one of my favorite writers and, for a long while, one of the few American journalists who took men’s and women’s soccer seriously. Gounder, his widow, announced this collection of Wahl’s best writing. I am glad we get to celebrate his legacy.
  • Elon Musk’s Worst Predictions and Broken Promises of the Past 15 Years (Matt Novak, Gizmodo)
    Yeah, he was not doing well even before he destroyed my favorite social network.
  • Inside the meetings that officially moved the A’s from Oakland to Sacramento (Tim Keown, ESPN)
    I’m glad Oakland leaders finally told A’s owner John Fisher to get lost. I wish MLB owners would let one of the several Bay Area billionaires buy the team from him. We can add this travesty to Commissioner Rob Manfred’s legacy of failure. Perhaps we could get someone who actually enjoys the sport to succeed him at the end of his final term?
  • 17 astounding scientific mysteries that researchers can’t yet solve (Brian Resnick, Vox)
    I take comfort in understanding that our scientists are still working to figure out some fundamental questions.
  • 5.25-inch floppy disks expected to help run San Francisco trains until 2030 (Scharon Harding, Ars Technica)
    I remember starting my days a few decades ago by patiently trying to load information off of this kind of floppy disk.
  • Chocolate Might Never Be the Same (Yasmin Tayag, The Atlantic)
    There have been three consecutive years of poor cocoa harvests in West Africa. Thanks to environmental challenges, some of which are connected to the climate emergency, this shortage may become the new normal.

The Closer

Craig Calcaterra, whom I quoted in today’s lineup, shared an image at the top of one of his recent newsletters that hit a bit close to home. I guess it’s time to get those 10,000 steps.

Post-Game Comments

Today’s Thought from my Readwise collection:

“Sport is agony. We agree to suffer endlessly in exchange for the mere possibility of sublime rapture. Sometimes we even get it.”—Joe Posnanski, Why We Love Baseball

Thank you for reading Things I Find Interesting. This post is public so feel free to share it.

Thank you for reading my newsletter. Let me know what you think about what you’ve read. Send me things you’ve found interesting! You can email me at craigcheslog@substack.com. 

Please help me spread the word about this newsletter by sharing this post via email or on the social media network of your choice. And if you haven’t already, please consider signing up for a free or paid subscription. 

A President for Life?

Today’s Lineup

Here’s what I’ve found interesting: an attack on presidential term limits, Trump’s abortion announcement doesn’t mean shit, the envoy courting the global far right, pro-Russia propaganda in the House, why the media normalizes Trump, facial recognition technology jeopardizes the right to protest, the government isn’t prepared for another insurrection, drone swarms, and a reminder that this isn’t the first time women’s sports has proven popular on television.

Screenshot of @RealDonaldTrump Instagram reel from December 13, 2023 (https://www.instagram.com/realdonaldtrump/reel/C0z-UEVsa37/)

#1

Project 2025 reveals its goal: Trump as president for life (Lisa Needham, Public Notice)

Project 2025, the Republican plan to functionally annihilate not just the federal government but democracy as well if Trump wins in November, is an unceasing parade of horrors.

Banning the abortion pill nationwide? Check. Rolling back protections for LGBTQ people? Check. Deporting literally millions of undocumented immigrants? Check. But amid each objectively horrible aim is an even more more insidious one: abolishing the 22nd Amendment, which limits presidents to two terms. It’s an unvarnished, right-out-in-the-open plan to keep Trump in office well past 2028. 

It’s not as if this is genuinely unexpected. By July 2019, Trump had “joked” at least six times about being president for life. Floating that as a possibility, as Peter Tonguette did last week over at The American Conservative, is a great opportunity to show fealty to a candidate who values loyalty over all else. 

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I believe we are fortunate that the former president and his supporters are being so explicit about their plans for a second Trump term. It would be easier to claim that people like me are being alarmist if they relied instead on dog whistles, winks, and nods. That said, I suspect this article is only the opening bid in this conversation. Are you willing to bet that this MAGA Supreme Court—one that has already demonstrated a willingness to work around the plain language of the 14th Amendment—wouldn’t figure out an innovative way to re-interpret the 22nd Amendment? I’m hoping our country doesn’t take that risk.

Things I Find Interesting is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider joining for free or helping buy me some coffee to drink while I write by becoming a paid subscriber.

#2

Trump’s Abortion Announcement: It doesn’t mean shit (Jessica Valenti, Abortion, Every Day)

The thing that’s most important to know is that this ‘announcement’ doesn’t mean shit—at least, not in terms of how dangerous another Trump presidency would be. Conservatives’ abortion plan for a second Trump administration has never been reliant on a national ban, because they know they might not be able to get the votes. Instead, the focus is on using control of the FDA and the DOJ to implement backdoor bans.

By replacing the head of the FDA, a Trump administration would rescind approval of mifepristone, one of the two medications used to end a pregnancy. With the DOJ, they’d ensure that the Comstock Act, the 19th century zombie law that makes it illegal to ship ‘obscene’ materials, would be used to stop the mailing of abortion medication or supplies. (That’s not a political prediction, by the way—it’s a plan conservatives have explicitly laid out in Project 2025.)

As Jonathan Mitchell, the architect of the Texas abortion ban and a powerful anti-choice activist, said in February, “We don’t need a federal ban when we have Comstock on the books…There’s a smorgasbord of options.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

When Donald Trump doesn’t claim credit for overturning Roe v. Wade, he tries to confuse voters about what his election would mean for reproductive healthcare rights. He seems to understand how politically toxic strict abortion bans have proven in the past two elections. Valenti explains why we shouldn’t fall for Trumpian misdirection. The substance of Trump’s position is not moderate—even if far too many reporters are falling for his rhetoric. We are fortunate that so many Republicans and forced-birth advocates are talking so much about using control of the FDA and resurrecting the 1873 Comstock Act to make a nationwide ban happen regardless of who controls Congress. Democrats must explain to voters how Trump can use Executive actions to make a ban happen. This needs to be a major focus of the campaign. The filibuster won’t save the blue states from a Trump Department of Justice enforcing the Comstock Act and a Trump Food and Drug Administration withdrawing its approval of abortion medication.  

#3

‘Building an authoritarian axis’: the Trump ‘envoy’ courting the global far right (Robert Tait, The Guardian)

For Donald Trump, he is “my envoy”, the man apparently anointed as the former US president’s roving ambassador while he plots a return to the White House.

To critics, he is seen as “an online pest” and “a national disgrace” – and most importantly, the dark embodiment of what foreign policy in a second Trump administration would look like.

Meet Richard Grenell, vocal tribune of Trump’s America First credo on the international stage and the man hotly tipped to become secretary of state if the presumed Republican nominee beats Joe Biden in November’s presidential election.

A senior executive in the rightwing Newsmax cable channel, Grenell, 57, has crafted a persona as the archetypal Trump man, keen and ever-ready to troll liberals, allies and foreign statesmen in public forums and social media.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

As Robert Tait explains in this article, Richard Grenell is traveling the world and meddling in the nation’s foreign policy on Trump’s behalf. He is sowing confusion among U.S. diplomats. He is making our allies question our national commitments. He is empowering far-right politicians. And, as Joe Cirincione explains, “It looks as though Grenell is trying to build up a developing authoritarian network of rightwing leaders to form this authoritarian axis that Trump might govern by – ranging from Putin to [Viktor] Orbán [prime minister of Hungary] to Erdoğan. All these are anti-democratic forces and use the simple playbook of using democracy to overthrow democracy.” Yeah, I think that’s a result we should strive to avoid. 

#4

Top Republican warns pro-Russia messages are echoed ‘on the House floor’ (Yvonne Wingett Sanchez and Abigail Hauslohner, The Washington Post)

Rep. Michael R. Turner (R-Ohio), who chairs the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, said Sunday that it was “absolutely true” that some Republican members of Congress were repeating Russian propaganda about the invasion of Ukraine instigated by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Turner did not specify which members he was referring to, but he said he agreed with House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Michael McCaul (R-Tex.), who said in an interview with Puck News last week that Russian propaganda had “infected a good chunk of my party’s base” and suggested that conservative media was to blame.

When asked on Sunday, Turner said he agreed with McCaul’s sentiments.

“We see directly coming from Russia attempts to mask communications that are anti-Ukraine and pro-Russia messages — some of which we even hear being uttered on the House floor,” Turner said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Yes, you read that correctly. The Republican Chairs of the House Intelligence and Foreign Affairs Committees are now on the record stating that some of their colleagues—and conservative media outlets—are pushing Russian propaganda. Um, it seems like this claim should be a bigger deal? Republican leaders should be asked to provide the American people with more details. Republicans opposing the Ukrainian aid bill’s passage should be asked to explain whether they are sharing Russian propaganda. We must not sweep this under the political rug. Also of note: the Washington Post’s Catherine Belton and Joseph Menn reveal in this story newly discovered Kremlin documents that explain how Russian trolls are seeking to influence Republican House members and right-wing media outlets. It’s working.

Thank you for reading Things I Find Interesting. This post is public so feel free to share it with your family and friends.

#5

Why is the Press Making Trump Seem More Normal? (Dan Pfeiffer, The Message Box)

Yes, a presidential candidate [Donald Trump] just accused the sitting President of the United States of delivering the State of the Union address while high on cocaine. I’m guessing that unless you listened to the Friday episode of Pod Save America, most of you are learning this information for the first time. And it’s not because you aren’t avid consumers of news. It’s because the traditional political media decided to ignore this outlandish accusation from a clearly deranged and dishonest man (and the next potential President of the United States). The press is aware of the interview. Hewitt is not a MAGA content creator who operates in the dark corners of the internet. He is — bizarrely and unfortunately — a member of the Washington establishment in good standing. The reporters who cover Trump listened to the interview and many wrote stories about his comments on Israel and Gaza, but they made an editorial decision to bury Trump’s insane accusations.

Clearly, Donald Trump accusing Biden of being a cokehead is not the biggest issue in the election. But I think the incident reveals how the press’s coverage of Trump ends up advantaging him and making Biden’s road to reelection that much steeper.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

So yeah, that happened. Why isn’t Trump’s outrageous claim a bigger story? Pfeiffer helpfully explains some of the dynamics at play. Trump’s constant outrageous statements and Bannonian ability to “flood the zone with shit” have created an environment where reporters downplay his insanity in misguided attempts to appear objective. This is one of the reasons I agree with Rachel Leingang’s recent Guardian analysis that calls on people to watch an entire Trump speech to understand what kind of president he would be in a potential second term. As Leingang writes, “Watching a Trump speech in full better shows what it’s like inside his head: a smorgasbord of falsehoods, personal and professional vendettas, frequent comparisons to other famous people, a couple of handfuls of simple policy ideas, and a lot of non sequiturs that veer into barely intelligible stories.” 

#6

The changing face of protest. Mass protests used to offer a degree of safety in numbers. Facial recognition technology changes the equation. (Darren Loucaides, Rest of World)

Authorities are often secretive about their use of facial recognition at protests. Often, the people arrested are not told whether the technology has played a role in their detention, even if they suspect it. Over six months, Rest of World spoke to researchers, activists, and people targeted by facial recognition systems around the world to track how this technology is upending protest as we know it. We found evidence of facial recognition tools being used at major protests worldwide, often in a way that clashes with civil liberties. The context may vary by location, but the overall outcome is shared: Facial recognition technology is making the act of protest riskier than ever, putting demonstrators at greater risk of persecution, exacerbating the targeting of minority groups, and changing the way people express dissent. 

Combined with a rise in authoritarianism in many countries, some activists and civil groups even fear that the increased use of facial recognition could mean an end to protest as we know it. “I don’t see [almost] any protest anywhere,” Shivangi Narayan, a sociologist in India who studies digital policing, told Rest of World. “Even a person like me who’s working on government surveillance and policing — I’m wary of who I’m talking to.”

Now, if she knows there will be CCTV surveillance at a particular location, Narayan avoids the area, or covers her face.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

Polling data suggests that many people support law enforcement’s use of facial recognition technology. This article examines how quickly authorities use facial recognition for preventative detention or to disrupt protest movements. This story opens with a person detained by Russian police while entering the transit system to ensure she does not go to a protest. We also learn how governments are targeting minorities and trying to use emotion detection to determine whether a protest could turn violent. I suspect the bar on that determination will be quite low to allow the police to act quickly. Our political leaders should be doing more now to regulate facial recognition technology before it leads to law enforcement harassment here. Unfortunately, with a few state exceptions, governments in the United States have demonstrated an inability to address technology’s negative impacts on our society in a timely fashion.

#7

The Government Isn’t Ready for the Violence Trump Might Unleash (Juliette Kayyem, The Atlantic)

Trump could well prevail, polls suggest, but the former president is already making plans to undermine the result should he lose. In 2021, his refusal to admit defeat led to a bloody riot at the Capitol. As a candidate for reelection, Biden has every reason to warn voters about his Republican opponent’s dangerous assault on democratic norms. But as the president of the United States, Biden should also be pushing executive-branch agencies to protect the casting and counting of votes against violent interference and to ward off attempts to interfere with the certification of November’s outcome. He is obliged, in other words, to make sure that, regardless of whether he or Trump wins, the victor will be able to take office peacefully.

The January 6th Committee is best remembered for its damning account of what happened that day, and of the forces that led up to those events. But the committee’s report points to some of the preparations that urgently need to be made. The panel highlighted gaps among federal agencies in their protocols for sharing intelligence about extremism and other domestic threats to our democracy.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

One of my pet peeves is our federal government’s repeated failure to enact fixes to critical problems uncovered after catastrophic events. A few of you know that I can talk for hours about our national inability to implement the Continuity of Government Commission’s recommendations after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. To this day, the United States would not be able to convene the House of Representatives for up to four months if there were a mass casualty event involving its members. (While it is possible to appoint replacement Senators, the Constitution currently only permits special elections to fill House vacancies.) There have been TWO (!) commission reports making recommendations to ensure the Continuity of Congress since September 11, 2001. (Here’s the most recent report, updated to address issues that arose during the pandemic and the 2020 election.) Anyway, let’s return to the subject at hand: since Donald Trump broke the tradition of peaceful transfers of power in 2021, we can no longer assume that these moments will pass without incident. Complacency is no longer an option. So, I would like to see the Biden Administration take public action to implement the recommendations to protect the electoral vote count and inauguration in 2025. The clock is ticking—and the danger is rising. Perhaps a sense of urgency is in order here?

#8

Drone Swarms Are About to Change the Balance of Military Power (Elliot Ackerman and James Stavridis, Wall Street Journal)

The Shahed-model drone that killed three U.S. service members at a remote base in Jordan on Jan. 28 cost around $20,000. It was part of a family of drones built by Shahed Aviation Industries Research Center, an Iranian company run by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. A thousand miles away and three days later, on the night of Jan. 31 into the morning of Feb. 1, unmanned maritime drones deployed by Ukraine’s secretive Unit 13 sunk the $70 million Russian warship Ivanovets in the Black Sea. And for the past several months, Houthi proxies have shut down billions of dollars of trade through the Gulf of Aden through similarly inexpensive drone attacks on maritime shipping. Drones have become suddenly ubiquitous on the battlefield—but we are only at the dawn of this new age in warfare.

This would not be the first time that a low-cost technology and a new conception of warfare combined to supplant high-cost technologies based on old ways. History is littered with similar stories.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I recently finished reading Kim Stanley Robinson’s 2020 book, The Ministry for the Future. The novel takes place in the near future, as the world finally addresses the climate emergency after a series of mass casualty events. One of the book’s plot points examines how the innovative use of drones could put an end to carbon-intensive industries after governments prove too slow to address the challenge. As one example, the novel imagines how an organization could use swarms of drones to force numerous commercial and private airplanes to crash. After this Crash Day, people aren’t willing to purchase tickets to fly, and carbon-free transportation—like airships—becomes a necessity. Anyway, I think we are going to see drones used in remarkable and not-so-obvious ways over the next few years. Drone technology could transform warfare, especially if it could be connected to artificial intelligence. I am sure our military-industrial complex will not be thrilled to see some of their expensive items become obsolete as a result. 

#9

The check-in: It could have always been this way (Lindsay Gibbs, Power Plays)

As I wrote last year, the first NCAA women’s title game in 1982, which saw Louisiana Tech defeat Cheyney State, earned a “7.3 rating and 22 Nielsen share at noon on Sunday, March 28,” per Jack Bogaczyk of the Roanoke Times. For comparison, in 1983, CBS averaged a 7.2 rating for the NBA and a 5.2 rating for NCAA regular-season men’s games.

A staggering 11.84 million people tuned in for the 1983 championship game between USC and Louisiana Tech, according to Sports Media Watch. This was the national television debut of Cheryl Miller and the Women of Troy. In 1986, 11.22 million viewers tuned in to watch the final game of Miller’s college career, USC’s loss to Texas in the final. 

Yes, Clark and Angel Reese are magnetic, groundbreaking forces of nature on and off the court, but you cannot have the conversation about transcendent talents and personalities in women’s college basketball without Miller.

WHY I FIND IT INTERESTING: 

I am thrilled to see the increased interest in women’s sports over the past few years. The NCAA Women’s Basketball Championship Game on Sunday afternoon had a higher rating than the Men’s final on Monday night. We have witnessed record television ratings, paid attendances, and professional franchise values for women’s basketball, soccer, ice hockey, volleyball, and other sports. It is about time—but it didn’t have to take this long. I was glad to see Gibbs remind people that this is not the first time women’s sports generated higher ratings than men’s contests. But, as Gibbs explains, media executives and advertisers didn’t take advantage of the moment. I hope we don’t see the same mistake this time around.

Quick Pitches

  • How to spot a manipulated image (Richard Gray, BBC)
    We all need to learn ways to identify misinformation.
  • The urban legend that won’t die on this deadly Bay Area highway (Susana Guerrero, Madilynne Medina, SFGate)
    As someone who has traveled Niles Canyon Road, I can see how the ”ghost girl” urban legend could persist. Anyway, drive it with caution.
  • People Are Confused Why “Jeff” Is On A List Of Nuclear Superpowers (James Felton, IFL Science)
    When a data mishap and an acronym may make you wonder why a friend has as many nuclear weapons as North Korea.
  • A faster spinning Earth may cause timekeepers to subtract a second from world clocks (Seth Borenstein, Associated Press)At least this change shouldn’t be as annoying as springing forward each year.
  • White House directs NASA to create time standard for the moon (Joey Roulette and Will Dunham, Reuters)Clocks move at a different rate on the moon because of the different gravitational forces. So this is something we do need to work out before we go there regularly.
  • ‘Wi-Fi’ Doesn’t Mean What You Think It Means (Matt Novak, Gizmodo)
    When marketing wins in unexpected ways.

Post-Game Comments

Today’s Thought from my Readwise collection:

“To be clear, concluding in brief: there is enough for all. So there should be no more people living in poverty. And there should be no more billionaires. Enough should be a human right, a floor below which no one can fall; also a ceiling above which no one can rise. Enough is as good as a feast—or better. Arranging this situation is left as an exercise for the reader.”—Kim Stanley Robinson, The Ministry for the Future

Thank you for reading Things I Find Interesting. This post is public so feel free to share it.

Thank you for reading my newsletter. Let me know what you think about what you’ve read. Send me things you’ve found interesting! You can email me at craigcheslog@substack.com. 

Please help me spread the word about this newsletter by sharing this post via email or on the social media network of your choice. And if you haven’t already, please consider signing up for a free or paid subscription.