Thursday, June 26, 2025

Reading archive 2025-06-26

House GOP holdouts threaten revolt over Trump and Senate’s tax bill: The Senate has overhauled President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill, sparking serious concerns over federal spending and Medicaid in the House. - "But those holdouts have been through this saga before — and folded."

Zohran Mamdani’s victory is bad for New York and the Democratic Party: New York cannot take its greatness for granted. Mismanagement can ruin it. - "A massive minimum wage would depress low-skilled employment. His rent freeze would reduce the housing supply and decrease its quality. Cutting bus fares would leave a transit funding hole that, unless somehow filled, would erode service. Meanwhile, the grocery business operates on thin margins, and his plan for city-run stores would likely lead to fewer options, poor service and shortages, as privately-run stores closed rather than try to compete with city-subsidized shops."

Where each D.C. Council member stands on the Commanders RFK stadium deal: At least seven lawmakers are needed for Mayor Muriel E. Bowser’s RFK stadium deal with the team to proceed.

This Pride Month, the Backlash Has Officially Arrived: Young LGBTQ people are facing the prospect of losing rights they thought they’d never have to worry about.

America’s Incarceration Rate Is About to Fall Off a Cliff: Long sentences and recidivism kept prison populations high for decades, but prisons are now starting to empty. - "As the snake digests the pig year after year, the American prison system is simply not going to have enough inmates to justify its continued size or staggering costs. Some states that are contemplating expanding their prison capacity will be wasting their money their facilities will be overbuilt and underused. By 2035, the overall imprisonment rate could be as low as 200 per 100,000 people. States should instead be tearing down their most deteriorated and inhumane correctional facilities, confident that they will not need the space.

...

"The simplest available policy to accelerate the decarceration trend is to stop building prisons except in cases where a smaller, modern facility is replacing a larger, decaying institution. Though it will be nonintuitive to many reformers, particularly on the left, opposition to any such new facilities being private should be dropped. The principal political barrier to closing half-full prisons is the power of public-sector unions."

‘Everybody Knows Khamenei’s Days Are Numbered’: A well-placed group of Iranian insiders considers a future without the supreme leader.

The Trojan Horse Will Come for Us Too: The wars in Ukraine and the Middle East offer Americans a glimpse into the battles of the future—and a warning.

Why Won’t Zohran Mamdani Denounce a Dangerous Slogan?: The New York mayoral candidate’s defense of “Globalize the intifada” is very telling. - "The ambiguity of the slogan is not a point in its defense but a point against it. The dual meanings allow the movement to contain both peaceful and militant wings, without the former having to take responsibility for the latter."

What Chris Murphy Learned From the New Right: The standard-issue Northeast progressive wants to take the Democratic Party down a populist path.

Latinos Vote Differently Under Threat Voters who care most about economic issues will still coalesce as an ethnic bloc if their community is attacked.

Extreme Violence Without Genocide The plight of white South Africans is part of a much larger problem. - "Afrikaner farmers suffer, in this context, from what might be called the Willie Sutton problem. Why rob and assault them? Because that's where the money is. In rural areas, farmers have expensive motors and other agricultural equipment, and sometimes stashes of cash to pay workers."

Brace Yourself for Watery Mayo and Spiky Ice Cream: MAHA is coming for emulsifiers.

Why Isn’t Russia Defending Iran?: Backing the most anti-Western Middle Eastern power was convenient until it wasn’t.

The Magic Realism of Zohran Mamdani: The socialist New York mayoral candidate’s proposals don’t hold up to serious scrutiny. Will that matter?

The Tesla Brain Drain: The future of the struggling car company rests on Elon Musk more than ever before.

A Provocative Argument About What Creates Serial Killers: In her new book, Murderland, Caroline Fraser argues that the rise of these criminals has deep roots in the release of industrial waste. - "The author lays much of the blame at the feet of two Gilded Age families: the Rockefellers and the Guggenheims. The Rockefellers made their money in oil, and the Guggenheims in mining; they would later both own (and fight for control of) the profitable American Smelting and Refining Company, later known as ASARCO. ASARCO ended up all over the country, but Tacoma proved particularly attractive for its potential access to minerals. For nearly a century, a smokestack hundreds of feet high shot lead and arsenic into the sky."

Inside the Democratic Rupture That Undermined Kamala Harris’s Presidential Hopes: In the weeks before Election Day, it seemed like the candidate had two campaigns.

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Reading archive 2025-06-25

Abandoned by Trump, a farmer and a migrant search for a better future

As Trump shuts out migrants, Spain opens its doors and fuels economic growth: Defying the anti-immigrant trend in the U.S., Spain is reaping economic benefits by granting citizenship to tens of thousands of newly-arrived workers.

Was this Revolutionary War hero America’s first openly gay general?: The LGBTQ veterans who put rainbow ribbons near Baron von Steuben’s statue in D.C. think so.

RIP, MAHA: Robert F. Kennedy promised to improve nutrition and reduce environmental toxins. How’s that going? - "Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s “Make America Healthy Again” agenda has a simple premise: Americans don’t need more access to medical care. Instead, the best way to improve our country’s health is through better nutrition and exposure to fewer environmental toxins. 

"Alas, as was evident from the health and human services secretary’s congressional testimony Tuesday about the administration’s budget requests, his boss is currently A) taking away nutritional assistance and B) expanding use of environmental toxins."

Trump administration is preparing to challenge budget law, U.S. officials say: Internal dissent among federal employees is coming to the surface as President Donald Trump’s budget chief aims to rebalance spending authority.

The RFK megaproject promises just empty gloom. Let’s try this instead.: Rather than an expensive megaproject, D.C. should focus on an organic approach to city-building. - "If football stadiums drove economic activity, Landover would be at least an above-average suburban destination for shopping and entertainment. Instead, the old Landover Mall site decays behind chain-link fencing roughly a mile from Northwest Stadium, the Commanders’ current home. Alternatively, if football stadiums made cities interesting and engaging, the Ravens’ M&T Bank Stadium would link together bustling neighborhoods. Instead, its gloomy emptiness extends across the adjacent blocks except on a handful of days each year."

Kevin Durant’s lonely basketball journey trudges on to the next stop: NBA stars can become hometown heroes forever. Then there’s Kevin Durant.

As an oncologist, here’s what I wish people knew about endocrine disruptors: What to know about everyday exposures to BPA, PFAS and phthalates.

D.C. elected these noncitizens to office. Congress could oust them.: Three green-card holders have nonpartisan, unpaid positions in D.C.’s Advisory Neighborhood Commissions. That could soon change.

Trump’s tax bill has become a battlefield for tobacco giants: Tobacco firms have spent millions of dollars in a fight over a tax rebate for cigarette importers in Republicans’ massive tax and spending package.

A Jeep drove onto the National Mall, weaving around a summer crowd U.S. Park Police said the driver was later arrested. No injuries were reported.

How Israel deceived the United States about its nuclear weapons program: Israel is attacking Iran’s nuclear sites, but Tehran’s secret path was blazed by the Israelis.

Bees are collapsing in the U.S. A key to their secrets might vanish.: The top federal lab on native bees is set to close under President Trump’s budget. - "Native bees pollinate an estimated 80 percent of flowering plants around the world, and understanding the pollinators’ behavior helps us sustain the production of our food."

No one has made fusion power viable yet. Why is Big Tech investing billions?: Breakthroughs in fusion have triggered a frenzied race to harness a clean energy source that has eluded scientists for decades.

Brazil's soy farmers raze Amazon rainforest despite deforestation pact

The plan to vaccinate all Americans, despite RFK Jr.: The effort comes as the Trump administration has replaced members of the key federal vaccine advisory panel.

Maryland driver sued by D.C. over 414 unpaid traffic tickets: Soon, it could be easier for D.C. to seize drivers’ cars over dangerous driving caught on camera.

D.C. attorney general alleges violence intervention nonprofit misused funds: Attorney General Brian L. Schwalb filed a lawsuit alleging Women in H.E.E.L.S. Inc. improperly diverted money to a personal account. The group’s founder called the allegations “misleading.”

D.C. lawmaker walks back cuts to violence prevention agency after criticism: Brooke Pinto had proposed dissolving the mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement, leaving a program in the attorney general’s office as the sole home for violence interruption.






Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Reading archive 2025-06-18

Bill Cassidy Blew It The senator failed America on vaccines.

The Democratic Party Slides Into Irrelevance: Why aren’t these boom times for America’s opposition party?

Hear the different ways EVs are reinventing the sound of a car

These centrist women on a group chat are leading Democrats in 2025: Abigail Spanberger, Mikie Sherrill and Elissa Slotkin, who ascended during President Donald Trump’s first term in 2018, are playing major roles for their party this year, in governor’s races and beyond.

I was worried about Trump’s Army parade — until I saw it For the army, this was mission accomplished.

D.C. mayor pushes youth curfew as council advances public safety bills: The D.C. Council also debated a separate public safety bill introduced by Brooke Pinto (D-Ward 2) that would permanently expand pretrial detention and relax college credit requirements for police officers.

The entire D.C. bus network is changing June 29. Here’s what to know.: Hundreds of stops are disappearing, routes are being added and eliminated, and every route name will change.

The Jumping Frenchmen of Maine

Florida attorney general held in civil contempt over immigration law: A federal judge ruled that James Uthmeier violated an order halting the enforcement of a law, which makes it a crime for adults living in the U.S. illegally to enter Florida.

Industry leaders plead with White House on relief from raids after setback: The calls for a reprieve come after the Trump administration reversed a pause on immigration actions at farms, meatpacking plants, hotels and restaurants.

The Curse of Ayn Rand’s Heir: Leonard Peikoff dedicated his life to promoting the author’s vision of freedom and self-determination. But at what cost?

The Perilous Spread of the Wellness Craze: A new book reveals how health-care inequality fueled the spread of anti-science conspiracy theories.

It’s the End of the World (And It’s Their Fault): The tech bros have ascended to movie-villain status.

The Nobel Prize Winner Who Thinks We Have the Universe All Wrong: Cosmologists are fighting over everything. - "If dark energy continues to fade, as the DESI results suggest is happening, it may indeed go all the way to zero, and then turn negative. Instead of repelling galaxies, a negative dark energy would bring them together into a hot, dense singularity, much like the one that existed during the Big Bang. This could perhaps be part of some larger eternal cycle of creation and re-creation. Or maybe not. The point is that the deep future of the universe is wide open."

The Secret History of Trump’s Private Cellphone: “Who’s calling?” the president asks as he answers call after call from numbers he doesn’t know.

Ukraine’s Warning to the World’s Other Military Forces: Expensive planes, tanks, and ships can be destroyed on the cheap.

MAHA Has a Pizza Problem: Functionally banning school pizza is a tough sell.

Baby Boomers’ Luck Is Running Out: After a lifetime of good fortune, the generation has become vulnerable at exactly the wrong moment.

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Reading archive 2025-06-17

Minnesota shooting suspect went from youthful evangelizer to far-right zealot: Residents in Vance Boelter’s hometown are struggling to reconcile what they knew of him with the killing of a Minnesota state lawmaker and her husband.

Minnesota senator confronts colleague for ‘terrible’ post on shooting: In a post on Sunday, Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah), appeared to blame the killings on the political left. Sen. Tina Smith sought him out to chat.

Senate overhauls Trump’s tax bill, setting up brawl with the House: The chamber suggests cuts to the child tax credit and SALT and is more heavy-handed on cuts to Medicaid than the legislation the House passed in May.

Trump officials reverse guidance exempting farms, hotels from immigration raids: ICE agents have been told to continue conducting enforcement operations at agricultural businesses despite concerns about negative effects on the food industry.

Russia fears Israel’s conflict with Iran could cost it another Mideast ally: When Israel first started bombing Iran, many in Russia saw it as an opportunity, drawing support and attention away from Ukraine.

How long will it take for U.S. gas prices to react to Middle East conflict?: Gas prices are on their way up, but the impact has been modest. That could change.

Trash sucks: A Norwegian city uses vacuum tubes to whisk waste away: Bergen, Norway, has been building one of the world’s most advanced trash systems in its 955-year-old city center.

It looks like a golf cart, maxes out at 25 mph and could be your next city car: Electric low-speed vehicles, already popular in Europe and Asia, could offer a transportation compromise between full-sized cars and e-bikes.

How to live well for less: Hacks for new grads and the rest of your life: New tools make it even easier to save money and live lighter on the planet. Here’s a roundup.

‘This War Is Not Helping Us’: Members of Iran’s opposition want change, and fear for their lives.

Putin Isn’t Actually Enjoying This Trump is turning out to be a liability for the Kremlin.

Israel's U.S.-Backed Aggression Reaches Its Iraq-War Moment: If Oct. 7 was Israel's Sept. 11, now it's at the phase of making an unsupportable WMD claim to launch the war it's long wanted. But we say no to war with Iran

Friday, June 13, 2025

Reading archive 2025-06-13

Secret Russian Intelligence Document Shows Deep Suspicion of China: Russia’s spy hunters are increasingly worried about China’s espionage, even as the two countries grow closer.

Southern Baptists to Vote on Effort to Overturn Same-Sex Marriage: Motivated by their success in reversing Roe v. Wade, conservative Christian activists have a new target in Obergefell v. Hodges. They see early signs of promise. [ed. note: the voted overwhelmingly to do just that]

Former DOGE engineer says federal waste and fraud were 'relatively nonexistent'

D.C. pest control company exposed people to toxic chemicals, lawsuit says: The D.C. attorney general’s office also alleges the company operated without and submitted fake licensing credentials.

Deputy U.S. marshal shoots man near convention center in downtown D.C.: The wounded man was in surgery Thursday, according to authorities, who said the deputy “perceived a threat” before firing. The incident is under investigation.

Florida farmers now plowing over perfectly good tomatoes as Trump’s tariff policies cause prices to plummet

Why Chinese Fans Are Hiring Detectives for a Dead Kenyan Lion: When their favorite wild lion was killed, a tight-knit group of Chinese fans half a world away launched a global campaign for justice — via billboards in New York to private investigators in Kenya. [ed. note: left unmentioned is that the campaigns were in New York City and London because nothing of the sort is allowed in China]

D.C. is removing bike lane barriers for the first time, calling them ugly: Local officials say they spent hundreds of hours on a project that was unraveled in a few days.

Teen convicted in D.C. killing is not receiving court-ordered therapy: A judge last year ruled that the girl, 16, should be placed in a long-term treatment facility, but so far the city’s youth agency has not complied, her lawyer says.