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Niall Ferguson Joins The Free Press. Plus. . . Oliver Wiseman

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Niall Ferguson. (Photo by Henning Kaiser/picture alliance via Getty Images)

On today’s Front Page from The Free Press: Steven Pinker on Honestly; Modi tries to jail one of India’s most famous writers; the transgressive brilliance of Lana Del Rey’s ‘Ultraviolence’; Chuck Schumer’s cookout gaffe; and more. 

But first, here’s Bari: 

I couldn’t wait for today to arrive. Because today I get to tell you that The Free Press is getting a new columnist in historian Niall Ferguson

Niall’s résumé is a little much. He has two degrees from Oxford and has taught there as well as at Cambridge, NYU, the London School of Economics, and Harvard. He’s now a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution Stanford. 

Given the present state of many of those institutions, you might dismiss Niall as an establishment hack who shapes history to serve the acceptable narrative.

That isn’t Niall. Unlike so many of the excellent sheep that enjoy tenure in academe, Niall thinks for himself, a quality you can see on display in any one of his 16 books (and counting), including The Pity of War: Explaining World War I; Kissinger 1923–1968: The Idealist (part one of a two-part biography); The Square and the Tower; and, most recently, Doom: The Politics of Catastrophe

For this incredible body of work, King Charles just knighted Niall a few days ago.

In recent years, Niall has been one of the most thoughtful and intellectually honest voices in the cultural battle that has engulfed America’s most storied institutions—including academia. In an epochal essay he published this past December in The Free Press, “The Treason of the Intellectuals,” he argued that “American academia has gone in the opposite political direction—leftward instead of rightward—but has ended up in much the same place” as German academia pre–World War II. “The question is whether we—unlike the Germans—can do something about it.”

Niall is doing something. He is one of the founders of the new University of Austin, where I sit on the board alongside him and where, this fall, we will welcome the university’s first class. 

Oh, and did I mention that he’s married to Ayaan Hirsi Ali? In journalism we call that burying the lede.

In the early days of The Free Press, I put together a fantasy roster. Niall was at the top of it. The fact that he’s making us his new home—we’ll be publishing him bimonthly—is a dream. 

So without further ado, we give you Niall Ferguson:

The witty phrase “late Soviet America” was coined by the Princeton historian Harold James back in 2020. It has only become more apposite since then as the cold war we’re in—the second one—heats up.

I first pointed out that we’re in Cold War II back in 2018. In articles for The New York Times and National Review, I tried to show how the People’s Republic of China now occupies the space vacated by the Soviet Union when it collapsed in 1991. 

This view is less controversial now than it was then. China is clearly not only an ideological rival, firmly committed to Marxism-Leninism and one-party rule. It’s also a technological competitor—the only one the U.S. confronts in fields such as artificial intelligence and quantum computing. It’s a military rival, with a navy that is already larger than ours and a nuclear arsenal that is catching up fast. And it’s a geopolitical rival, asserting itself not only in the Indo-Pacific but also through proxies in Eastern Europe and elsewhere.

But it only recently struck me that in this new Cold War, we—and not the Chinese—might be the Soviets.

Read on . . .

Also in today’s Free Press, Madeleine Rowley reports on the arrival of identity politics in one of the many places where you’d hope it’d be absent: the drugstore. “Our role is to aid in providing people safe and appropriate use of medication for all people,” one pharmacist tells her. “This feels like indoctrination.”

Mandatory ideological training has now come to the drugstore. In California, pharmacists and pharmacy technicians, in order to keep their license, must study the latest in gender identity, colonialism, and white privilege. Such “cultural competency” courses are required by a state law that went into effect this year.

When the bill was introduced, Democratic Assemblyman Christopher Ward, the lead sponsor, said that the continuing education class would help “ensure pharmacists are looking out for the well-being of LGBTQ+ individuals.” 

Like many licensed professionals, pharmacists are required to take continuing education courses, usually with titles like “Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disorder (COPD)” and “Trimming Trends: Unveiling the Latest in Weight Management Guidelines.” Though this new training requires only an hour of the pharmacist’s time every two years, it’s another demonstration of compelling people to passively accept dubious assertions and assumptions, or risk losing their livelihoods.

One such course, titled Caring for All: The Pharmacy Professional’s Role in LGBTQ+ Health and Equity comes from the California Pharmacists Association (CPhA). The outline, obtained by The Free Press, features many charts that are hard to square with the duties of a pharmacist. There is a chart illustrating many “systems of oppression.” These include “sexism,” “cis-sexism,” “heterosexism,” and “adultism.” 

Another chart describes “effects of colonialism and colonization on pre-colonial ways of being.” It states: “Racism creates race: otherness and whiteness.” Some of the pre-colonial ways of being pharmacists are taught include “two-spirit,” the term used by Native Americans to describe someone who has “both a masculine and feminine spirit.”

Keep reading for more on the reeducation of California pharmacists.

In its annual report, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute sounds the alarm on the “significant” growth of China’s nuclear arsenal, and the deployment of warheads on missiles—a first for Beijing during peacetime. Meanwhile, Tehran is ramping up its nuclear program in a series of moves the U.S. calls “nuclear escalations.” I’m no foreign policy expert—we leave that to Niall Ferguson now—but this does not strike me as a positive development. (SIPRI/AP)

Biden and Trump have reportedly agreed on the rules and format for next week’s presidential debate, which is being hosted by CNN in Atlanta. There will be no audience, no notes, and no help from aides allowed. To prevent the interruptions that made the 2020 debates unwatchable, one candidate’s mic will be muted when the other candidate is speaking. But there is no talk of the one feature all Americans really want: mandatory drug tests for both candidates. (NewsNation

The House has passed a bill that will automatically register young men for the draft. C.J. Ciaramella reports that the Selective Service provision “is part of an enduring bipartisan effort to keep the framework for military conscription in place, even though the draft ended in 1975.” Yes, Gen Z can be annoying, but this seems a little unfair. (Reason

Did Joe Biden freeze on stage at a Democratic fundraiser in L.A. this weekend? When the New York Post suggested as much, White House press secretary Andrew Bates pushed back, saying that “Rupert Murdoch’s sad little super PAC, the New York Post, is back to disrespecting its readers & itself once again.” We say: the flack doth protest too much. (New York Post)

If Team Biden is on the defensive because of his age, they’re on the attack in a new ad called “Character Matters” that goes after Trump over his legal woes. “This election is between a convicted criminal who’s only out for himself, and a president who’s fighting for your family,” says the voiceover. The spot is the centerpiece of a $50 million advertising blitz, a reminder that the president’s campaign has plenty of money to spend and sees personal comparisons between Biden and Trump as one of their strongest arguments. (YouTube)

Reuters recently reported that the Pentagon ran a disinformation campaign against the Chinese Covid vaccine. “We weren’t looking at this from a public health perspective,” said a senior military officer involved in the program. “We were looking at how we could drag China through the mud.” A canny act of information warfare or a grossly irresponsible weaponization of public health? The latter, argues Alex Tabbarok. (Marginal Revolution

Not everything needs to be a hot take. Here’s a very cold, but very true take, from the writer Henry Oliver: Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare. To believe otherwise, he writes, “you have to believe six impossible things before breakfast.” (The Common Reader

The latest use case for AI is to play a montage of family pictures over a pop song to chill out call center workers on the verge of breaking down after being berated by exasperated customers. Endearing! (Blood in the Machine

Should you buy your teen something called Bum Bum Cream? The Brazilian brand’s “firming” creams and perfume mists have taken off among adolescents. (NYT

 Is Gen Z turning to mediums and astrology to trade stocks? Seems that way. “What’s astrology? It’s like predicting something based off of past events that like something else is going to happen,” says one TikToker. “That’s all trading is.” The S&P vibe hasn’t been this weird since the sun was in Gemini. (Business Insider

Steven Pinker: Why Smart People Believe Stupid Things 

In the latest episode of Honestly, Michael Moynihan talks to the Harvard professor and cognitive psychologist Steven Pinker

Pinker is the author of nine books including Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress and Rationality: What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters. He approaches his work with a kind of data-driven optimism about the world that has set him apart from the chorus of doomer voices we hear so much from in our public discourse. 

Today, Michael talks to him about why smart people believe stupid things; the psychology of conspiracy theories; free speech and academic freedom; why democracy and enlightenment values are contrary to human nature; the moral panic around AI; and much more.

Watch their conversation in full below or listen wherever you get your podcasts

We think it’s important to admit when we get something wrong and yesterday, we did. In a powerful story on the rise of “grandfamilies” in West Virginia, we misstated that a majority of kids in West Virginia, and in Lincoln County, are being raised by their grandparents. This was based on a misreading of Census data. In fact, it is a majority of grandparents living with their grandchildren who are also responsible for their care. The Free Press regrets the error—and appreciates the eagle-eyed reader who spotted it. 

→ Doctor whistleblower faces ten years: Eithan Haim, the young Texas surgeon who revealed that Texas Children’s Hospital was secretly performing gender transitions on minors after the hospital declared it had stopped these procedures, was in federal court Monday for his arraignment, where he entered a “not guilty” plea to the U.S. Department of Justice’s charges against him. 

For blowing the whistle on procedures being done on minors that are now illegal in Texas, Haim is facing up to ten years in prison. The four-count indictment alleges that Haim obtained patient information “under false pretenses and with intent to cause malicious harm to TCH.” Haim, who provided evidence about the continuing gender transition treatments to conservative journalist Christopher Rufo, redacted patients’ names to protect their privacy. 

He says that there indeed was malicious harm taking place at Texas Children’s—the largest children’s hospital in the country—but the harm was to the vulnerable patients being given life-altering and unproven treatments for their gender distress. “As I’ve maintained from the very beginning, I’ve done nothing wrong,” Haim told me. “As doctors we make an oath to do no harm. What the DOJ is doing is criminalizing that very oath.” 

He acknowledged that he’s scared. “I risk losing everything,” he said. “Mostly I’m scared because I might miss the birth of my first child. But it’s scarier thinking about what kind of country we’re going to live in if this is allowed to stand.” (The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Texas did not respond to a request for comment.) 

Haim is raising money for his legal defense at this GiveSendGo account. Read our original story about him here. —Emily Yoffe 

A glaring omission in Biden’s sexual violence fact sheet: On Monday, the Biden administration released a “fact sheet” about what it’s doing to combat “conflict-related sexual violence,” calling it a “top priority.” 

Among other things, the White House has assigned conflict-related sexual violence its own acronym, CRSV, which appears to be a subset of GBV, or gender-based violence. But acronyms aside, the fact sheet notes that sexual violence has been weaponized in many countries: Ukraine, the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Iraq, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, and Sri Lanka.

It even noted that “GBV is used as a tactic by terrorist groups.”

But it failed to mention the terrorist group (Hamas) that recently employed a great deal of CRSV against a country (Israel). Apparently, no one in the administration thought this recent and shocking instance of CRSV was worth bringing up. This includes, presumably, the vice president, who, the fact sheet reports, “spent her career as a prosecutor working to protect women and girls from violence.”

Question for President Biden: Will the new Dignity in Documentation Initiative—which is funded by $10 million from the State Department and is meant to “provide support for survivor- and civil society–led efforts to investigate and document CRSV”—include the many Israeli women and girls who were raped and murdered on October 7, 2023? —Peter Savodnik 

Schumer’s Father’s Day listeria: Once upon a time, your willingness to grab a beer with the candidate could win them the election. That’s presumably why New York Senator Chuck Schumer posed in front of his barbecue, proudly wielding a spatula against a backdrop of burgers and dogs.

Except, the only thing getting grilled was him: after the internet saw his raw patty, topped with a slab of cold cheese—a food safety faux pas if there ever was one—he deleted the post. 

If you still want to have a drink with the New York senator, so be it—we hear he’s a great conversationalist. But please, for your own safety, duck out when you see him grabbing the charcoal. — Evan Gardner

→ Modi goes after India’s most famous dissident: The great novelist Arundhati Roy could soon go to jail over a 14-year-old speech. Last week, Delhi’s lieutenant governor VK Saxena gave the police the green light to charge her under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act—which is supposed to be aimed at terrorists—over “anti-India” comments made in 2010. The Act permits detention without trial.

Roy has long been politically fearless. Her 1997 novel The God of Small Things, for which she received the Booker Prize in the West, earned her charges of obscenity in her home state of Kerala. Since then, she has become as well-known for her activism as her fiction in India—speaking up for lower castes, and challenging Hindu nationalist bigwigs.

The charge against Roy relates to a speech in which she frankly discussed the disputed region of Jammu and Kashmir, half of which is ruled by India, and the other by its next-door nemesis Pakistan. But this de facto reality is obstinately denied by India’s nationalist bureaucrats—causing newspapers and textbooks to pretend the whole region belongs to India.

In her speech, Roy had the temerity to point out that Jammu and Kashmir had never been an “integral part of India.” More controversial still, she argued that the Indian state treated its part of Jammu and Kashmir as if it were a colony. (Just days before her speech, over 100 protesters had been killed in the region by Indian police.) Hindu nationalists promptly launched into splenetic rants about her “anti-India” views. 

That Modi is digging up such an old affront has less to do with Roy’s views in 2010 than Modi’s in 2024. It comes at a moment when India is still reeling from a surprise election result. Having frozen the bank accounts of its rivals and locked up two opposition chief ministers, the incumbent Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), led by Narendra Modi, had expected to win 400 of the 543 seats. Instead, it won a mere 240. The result was widely hailed as a victory for Indian democracy; Modi, his critics said, had been cut down to size. Yet as the intimidation of India’s star dissident shows, the celebrations may have been premature. — Pratinav Anil

Reader recommendations will be back tomorrow (send your suggestions to thefrontpage@thefp.com). But today we’re bringing you one recommendation, courtesy of my colleague, Free Press reporter River Page. Here’s River making the case for Ultraviolence, the Lana Del Rey album released ten years ago this month:

The most politically incorrect pop album made its way into the world 10 years ago. And if you haven’t yet memorized Lana Del Rey’s Ultraviolence—I first listened at eighteen and know it front to back—today’s as good a time as ever to start.

Ultraviolence is about the dark side of love and the allure of bad men, something she’s sung about since—but never as honestly. In the age of female empowerment anthems and vengeful breakup songs (Ms. Swift, please come to the stage), while Beyoncé was standing in arenas with the word FEMINISM projected behind her, Lana Del Rey dared to croon, He hit me and it felt like a kiss

It felt radical then. Today, Ultraviolence feels impossible. Even if the album had been released three years later, it would have been taken as a declaration of war against the #MeToo movement. Lana sings about the feeling of having “Fucked My Way Up to the Top,” and, in “Money Power Glory”: “I wanna take you for all that you got.” But that was a decade ago. In 2022 she started omitting “He hit me and it felt like a kiss” in live performances, telling a reporter she “regrets” using the line. She shouldn’t.

Oliver Wiseman is a writer and editor for The Free Press. Follow him on X @ollywiseman

To support The Free Press, become a paid subscriber today: 

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And if you’re enjoying The Front Page, consider forwarding it to someone else you think might like it. 

The Free Press earns a commission from any purchases made through Bookshop.org links in this article.

 

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Supreme power grab Judd Legum

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For thirty years, federal law has required commercial fishing boats to include a trained observer to ensure the vessel does not engage in overfishing or other prohibited practices. The law specifies that certain classes of boats pay the costs of their own monitors. But, it is silent on herring boats. For many years, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) picked up the cost of the monitors for herring boats. 

In 2020, however, the federal government began to run out of money for the monitoring program, and the Trump administration started requiring herring boats to share the costs of the federal monitors, which is about $700 per day. The herring boat operators sued, saying that the NOAA had exceeded its authority. 

The Biden administration soon reversed the regulation and reimbursed 100% of the costs incurred by the herring boat operators under the Trump-era rule. Nevertheless, the case, Loper Bright Enterprises v. Gina Raimondo, made it all the way to the Supreme Court. There were simple, narrow ways to resolve the case:

1. The Supreme Court could have found that the case was moot because the herring boat operators had been fully reimbursed, and the rule had been reversed.

2. The Supreme Court could have found that charging the herring boat operators for federal monitors violated the clear language of the statute, which specified which types of boats could be charged. 

Instead, on Friday, the Supreme Court used the case as a pretext for overturning a landmark decision, Chevron, that has been a cornerstone of federal regulation since 1984. This has been a longstanding priority for right-wing ideologues seeking to dismantle regulations protecting the environment, curbing abuses in financial markets, and ensuring the safety of consumers. 

Why Chevron matters

Under amendments to the Clean Air Act passed in the 1970s, companies that modified or constructed a “stationary source” of air pollution were required to obtain permits. But a key question was left unanswered. What counts as one “source”? Is it an entire industrial complex? Or is it each individual source of air pollution within the complex?

The Reagan administration’s EPA issued a rule allowing companies to consider a grouping of industrial sources of pollution as a single stationary source. This allowed companies to create new sources of air pollution within a “bubble” as long as it was offset by reductions in admissions — or the decommissioning — of another source. The Reagan administration’s interpretation would make the process of reducing air pollution slower because companies could create new sources of air pollution without going through the permitting process. 

An environmental group, the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), sued, arguing that the EPA’s interpretation of the statute was impermissible. The case, known as Chevron v. NRDC, reached the Supreme Court in 1984. 

In Chevron, the Supreme Court unanimously decided that when a statute contains an ambiguity, courts should defer to the judgment of the federal agency in resolving the ambiguity, as long as the agency’s action is “reasonable.” The Supreme Court found that the EPA acted reasonably and upheld its interpretation of the Clean Air Act. 

Over the next 40 years, the Chevron decision has been cited over 18,000 times by federal courts. As the Chevron decision itself illustrates, it is not a particularly ideological decision. But Chevron deference is a critical tool that allows the government to address important and complex problems. 

For example, in 1987, Congress, through the National Parks Overflights Act, directed the Department of the Interior, in coordination with the Federal Aviation Administration, to “provide for substantial restoration of the natural quiet and experience.” As Justice Kagan noted in her dissent in Loper Bright, the law left some important questions unresolved: “How much noise is consistent with “the natural quiet”? And how much of the park, for how many hours a day, must be that quiet for the “substantial restoration” requirement to be met?” Under Chevron, federal courts defer to the expertise of the people at the Department of the Interior who understand the nature of the park and what it would take to restore “natural quiet” — as long as the decisions made by the Department of the Interior were “reasonable.” 

Other questions are even more technical. Kagan cites the Public Health Service Act’s requirement that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulates “biological products,” including “proteins.” A recent lawsuit challenged the FDA’s determination that an “alpha amino acid polymer” is considered a “protein.” Chevron recognizes that the FDA has the expertise to make these kinds of determinations, not the courts. 

Further, federal agencies like the FDA are accountable to the administration, which can be replaced by voters. Federal judges, on the other hand, receive lifetime appointments.

“A rule of judicial humility gives way to a rule of judicial hubris”

In Loper Bright, Chief Justice Roberts, writing for the majority, casts aside 40 years of judicial precedent. “Chevron is overruled,” Roberts declares.

This is fundamentally a power grab. Instead of deferring to the expertise of agencies to implement statutes in the face of inevitable ambiguities, the Supreme Court has empowered itself, and other federal courts, to do the job. “Chevron’s presumption is misguided because agencies have no special competence in resolving statutory ambiguities,” according to the majority. “Courts do.”

As a practical matter, it empowers any federal judge — including hundreds appointed by Trump — to strike down regulations by asserting that an agency misinterpreted a statutory ambiguity. Chevron itself is neutral because it protects the statutory interpretations of liberal and conservative administrations. But if your goal is to dismantle as many regulations as possible, getting rid of Chevron makes your task much easier. 

The decision to overturn Chevron is particularly remarkable because it was based on a statutory interpretation. Roberts found that Chevron deference was actually prohibited by the Administrative Procedure Act, a law passed 80 years ago. But if Congress wanted to empower the courts, not agencies, to resolve statutory ambiguities, it could have passed a law repealing Chevron at any time between 1984 and today. But Congress chose not to do so. But the Supreme Court decided to award itself this power anyway. 

The farce of Supreme Court nomination hearings

The decision to overturn Chevron was formally made on Friday. But the writing has been on the wall since former president Donald Trump appointed three Supreme Court Justices who were part of the ideological campaign to kill Chevron. Trump’s nominees were all asked about Chevron during their confirmation hearings, and all deliberately gave the impression that they would respect Chevron as precedent. 

Chevron “is a precedent of the Supreme Court entitled to respect under the doctrine of stare decisis,” Justice Barrett said in response to written questions. Barrett refused to elaborate in any detail, claiming it “would not be appropriate for me to offer an opinion on abstract legal issues or hypotheticals.”

“As a Supreme Court Justice, if you were to make this decision to overturn Chevron, would you consider the implications on all of the cases in the U.S., and the rules and the uncertainty that it would create?” Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) asked Justice Neil Gorsuch during his confirmation hearing. “Goodness, Senator, yes,” Gorsuch replied. Klobuchar asked Gorsuch about a previous opinion he wrote as a circuit court judge that criticized Chevron. Gorsuch insisted that he had not “prejudge[d]” the case and would “come at it with as open a mind as a man can muster.” He then signed onto a ruling that stated Chevron was wrong from the moment the decision was issued. 

Justice Kavanaugh wrote a Harvard Law Review article in 2016 harshly criticizing Chevron. But during his confirmation process, he insisted that he respected Chevron as precedent. “Chevron is a precedent of the Supreme Court entitled to the respect due under the

law of precedent,” Kavanaugh wrote in response to written questions. “As I explained at the hearing, I have applied the Chevron doctrine in many D.C. Circuit cases over the last 12 years.” Kavanaugh then signed onto the majority opinion overturning Chevron, which cited his law review article. 

 

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Will He? Or Won’t He? Plus. . . Oliver Wiseman

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(Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

On today’s Front Page from The Free Press, Joe Nocera on how Anthony Fauci went from hero to zero, the Democrats pay the price for DEI, France’s rightward turn, and much more. But first, the latest on the president.  

I hope some of you have looked up from the news over the past seventy-two hours. I haven’t. All screen-time limits have been out the window since Thursday’s debate. My eyes are bleeding and show no signs of stopping.

Since the moment Trump and Biden walked off that stage—or in Biden’s case, was escorted off by a wife who later, somehow, made matters worse when she praised him for answering every question—American politics has been stuck in limbo.

Will he? Or won’t he?

Every hour brings a new development. Obama backed Biden, posting that “bad debate nights happen.” Okay, Biden’s in! He’s definitely in. Then half of the The New York Times editorial page roster, as well as the paper itself in an editorial, called on Biden to quit. Okay, Biden’s out! Only a matter of time before he makes the announcement.

For those of you who have lives and better things to do other than doomscroll all weekend, a quick recap of what’s gone down as of press time:

Thirty minutes into the debate, when it was clear Biden was bombing, the first spin dropped: he has a cold.

On Friday, Biden managed to deliver prepared remarks, read from a teleprompter in front of a fired-up crowd of supporters—and this was supposed to be a sign that all was well and Thursday night was just a blip. Bob Woodward said it wasn’t a blip but a “political H-bomb.” 

Meanwhile, in the Hamptons on Saturday, Biden reportedly needed a teleprompter for five-minute remarks at a rich guy’s house. 

In a report on “the two Bidens,” White House aides explained to Axios’s Alex Thompson that from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. the president is “dependably engaged.” (Good thing the job of the president only requires the hours of a dentist.) 

The Biden campaign issued a memo citing snap polls immediately after the debate that suggested no major changes in public opinion. The memo also cautioned that “if we do see changes in polling in the coming weeks, it will not be the first time that overblown media narratives have driven temporary dips in the polls.” (Never mind that most polls and models show that Biden is already losing the race. And never mind the poll published Sunday that shows a jump in the percentage of voters who do not think Biden is mentally or physically fit for the job of president to 72 percent.) 

The Biden campaign sent a fundraising email that included a chart showing that Biden leads other Democrats in head-to-head matchups against Trump. (The extraordinary thing about this is not that it shows Biden outperforming various untested Democrats, but that Biden’s team decided to include it in a fundraising email at all.) 

The media pile-on continued throughout the weekend with everyone from the Times, the house organ of the Democratic Party, to The New Yorker (ditto), to The Economist adding to the chorus of voices calling for Biden to step down. (“It is sad to go to pieces like this, but we all have to do it,” wrote New Yorker editor David Remnick. Ouch.) 

And here’s a taste of the enthusiasm from Democrats sticking by Biden. The best David Axelrod could muster was to post on X: “Unless the @POTUS, himself, decides to quit—which he won’t—that issue is settled. The discussion that is going on now was timely a year ago, when few wanted to have it. It’s largely irrelevant today.” 

Democratic congressman Ro Khanna defended the president by comparing the leader of the free world to the fictional boxer Rocky Balboa: “Rocky wasn’t the most eloquent in speech. But he was a fighter.” Is this supposed to make us feel better? 

By Sunday, Biden had spun through his fundraisers and made it to Camp David for a prearranged family meeting, complete with a photoshoot with Annie Leibovitz for Vogue. Biden was reportedly eager for ideas from family and advisers on how to proceed and is mulling an interview or press conference to address the age issue head on. 

According to some accounts, the strongest voices urging Biden to stay the course are his son Hunter, who “wants Americans to see the version of his father that he knows—scrappy and in command of the facts—rather than the stumbling, aging president Americans saw on Thursday night.” The family blames Biden’s top advisers for the mess and are calling for heads to roll. 

Amid all the furious spin, some 300 million Americans are wondering: who will be on the ballot come November? Who is running the country right now

We don’t know the answer to either. 

Is this all too negative? To use the Bidenworld parlance, are Democrats who want Biden to drop out just the “bedwetting brigade”? On Friday, Olivia Reingold headed to New York City’s Stonewall Inn, where Biden commemorated a new monument celebrating gay pride, and got another perspective: that the president’s superfans are standing by him after Thursday’s disaster. 

Are they right to keep calm and carry on? Or do those inside the Biden bubble have a hearing problem? Here’s Olivia’s dispatch from “Inside the Biden Bubble.” 

On the record, everyone important in the Democratic Party is behind Joe Biden. Privately, it’s a very different story. 

Peter Savodnik spent the weekend speaking to more than 20 Democratic activists, strategists, and donors who are panicked and plotting in the event that Joe Biden announces he isn’t seeking re-election.

“Secretly, most of the donors are worried sick and would like to see someone else on the ticket,” a Democratic fundraiser told The Free Press. “They’re not going to speak against him publicly, but they’re very worried—they’re sending specific suggestions about who should replace him.”

Read on . . .

I’m allowing myself one more plug for a response to Niall Ferguson’s conversation-driving Free Press essay on why “We’re All Soviets Now.” And only because it’s from the Grey Lady’s always-interesting conservative-in-residence, Ross Douthat. His takeaway: conservatives should be optimists, not doomers. (New York Times

And for more cheeriness about the United States—we need it right now—here are six charts from Bruce Mehlman that will have you yelling, “America, fuck yeah!” (Age of Disruption

Foreign officials knew from their meetings with the president what the White House has been trying to hide—and what we all saw on Thursday night. “The reading in Europe is that this has been an unmitigated disaster.” (WSJ)   

“At night, I prayed I wouldn’t survive to the next day.” A Ukrainian describes life as a prisoner of war in Russia. (Spiegel International

In the latest evidence that nothing is safe from attack in the culture wars, a scheme funded by the universally beloved Dolly Parton to give free books to kids has been attacked as “white saviorism.” (The Telegraph)  

There are lots of lessons for the far left from Jamaal Bowman’s primary defeat last Wednesday, argues Michael Powell. Whether they’ll bother to learn them is another matter. (The Atlantic)

Top hospitals are offering Long Covid clinics. After studying these programs for a new paper, Vinay Prasad suspects they are little more than scams. (Substack

Kanye West, the prolific rapper turned prolific antisemite was spotted in Russia this past weekend, where he reportedly shopped, checked out the Red Square, and celebrated the birthday of his fashion designer friend. (Times of Israel)

Almost half a decade after the start of the pandemic, just 6 percent of federal workers are working full-time in their offices and 30 percent are fully remote. Some government agencies are using just 10 percent of their office space. (Washington Post)

Kinky Friedman, the satirical musician, author, and onetime Texas gubernatorial candidate, died last week at 79. (Variety) If you want to unplug from the current news cycle, I recommend Matt Labash’s 2006 profile of Friedman on the campaign trail.

Up next, Joe Nocera reads Anthony Fauci’s new memoir—and is struck by the gap between the public health bureaucrat who got everything right back in the 1980s and the man who flubbed it when Covid hit in 2020. 

In his new memoir, On Call, Anthony Fauci devotes tremendous energy and space to his role during the AIDS crisis—with good reason. Despite having spent, at that point, more than a decade as a government health bureaucrat, the 44-year-old scientist could see that the federal government wasn’t devoting enough resources to AIDS research, and that the hurdles required to get a new drug approved made little sense when so many young gay men were dying without access to drugs that just might help them stay alive. 

Fauci successfully fought for more research dollars, and he also helped tear down those hurdles so that AIDS patients could try drugs even though they didn’t have the final stamp of approval from the Food and Drug Administration. He portrays himself as a hero in his book—and he was.

Fauci also devotes tremendous energy and space to his role during the Covid crisis. By then, he was 79 years old, with 52 years in government, including the last 36 as the head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. He was the government’s chief scientific voice during the pandemic, and he again portrays himself as a hero of the crisis in his book.

But this time he absolutely was not. In fact, his role in the crisis is a big reason why public health officials are now held in such low esteem.

The man who tackled the AIDS crisis was very different from the man who advised presidents—and the country—about Covid-19. The country would have been far better served during the pandemic with the man I’ve come to think of as “AIDS Fauci” rather than “Covid Fauci.” Read on for the full tale of two Faucis. 

→ Biden Democrats hobbled by DEI: Over the weekend, Spectator columnist Melissa Chen posted on X that “one of the major reasons the Democrats are in this bind is because of DEI.” She argued that the diversity, equity, and inclusion craze, with its emphasis on identity over capability, is what forced Biden’s team to pick Kamala Harris as his running mate four years ago. “Instead of being responsive to the desires of ordinary people,” Chen writes, “Biden unnecessarily hamstrung himself—and the rest of the country—by announcing the criteria that his VP will be a BIPOC woman. Yes, this was 2020 when everybody was trying to outperform everybody else on how anti-racist they were. Crazy times.” As a result, “we ended up with an inauthentic word salad VP whom no one likes. And the Dems are finding themselves paying the price for not bothering to listen to the people. The stakes are high for the choice of who gets to occupy the highest office in the land. They used DEI to pick a VP, and they eschewed the normal primary process which allows feedback from voters. What we got was a sanitized, highly managed political process, where the candidate of choice was foisted upon us.” Her comments echo that of Free Press columnist Kat Rosenfield, who predicted back in May that this would happen. Sadly for the Dems, the polls suggest that 59-year-old Harris has an even slimmer chance of beating Donald Trump than Joe Biden. “Buckle up,” Chen concludes in her post, “it’s going to be a wild ride till November.”

→ France goes right: Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally party won 34 percent of the vote in the first round of France’s parliamentary elections yesterday. For weeks, polls had predicted Emmanuel Macron’s centrist bloc would be surpassed by the radical right and left—and that is exactly what early projections suggest happened. The far-left New Popular Front won 28 percent of the vote and Macron’s Ensemble bloc came third with 20 percent. This outcome is exactly the result the philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy feared when he wrote in The Free Press last week that “we urgently need a union of principled democrats of the left, the right, and the center.” France will vote again this Sunday: in districts where no candidate secured 50 percent in the first round, any candidate who won more than 12.5 percent goes to the second vote. And so the week ahead will involve horse trading and unpredictable three-way votes before we learn how many seats Le Pen’s party really gets, and whether Macron and the far right will have to find a way to share power. 

Oliver Wiseman is a writer and editor for The Free Press. Follow him on X @ollywiseman

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June 30, 2024 Heather Cox Richardson

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In addition to his comments about Russia in Ukraine, Trump said something else in Thursday’s CNN presentation that should be called out for its embrace of one of the darkest moments in U.S. history. 

In response to a question about what the presidential candidates would say to a Black voter disappointed with racial progress in the United States, President Joe Biden pointed out that, while there was still far to go, more Black businesses were started under his administration than at any other time in U.S. history, that black unemployment is at a historic low, and that the administration has relieved student debt, invested in historically Black colleges and universities, and is working to provide for childcare costs, all issues that affect Black Americans. 

In contrast, Trump said: “As sure as you’re sitting there, the fact is that his big kill on the Black people is the millions of people that he’s allowed to come in through the border. They’re taking Black jobs now and it could be 18. It could be 19 and even 20 million people. They’re taking Black jobs and they’re taking Hispanic jobs and you haven’t seen it yet, but you’re going to see something that’s going to be the worst in our history.” 

Trump was obviously falling back on the point he had prepared to rely on in this election: that immigration is destroying our country. He exaggerated the numbers of incoming migrants and warned that there is worse to come.

But what jumped out is his phrase: “They’re taking Black jobs and they’re taking Hispanic jobs.” 

In U.S. history it has been commonplace for political leaders to try to garner power by warning their voters that some minority group is coming for their jobs. In the 1840s, Know-Nothings in Boston warned native-born voters about Irish immigrants; in 1862 and 1864, Democrats tried to whip up support by warning Irish immigrants that after Republicans fought to end enslavement, Black Americans would move north and take their jobs. In the 1870s, Californian Denis Kearney of the Workingman’s Party drew voters to his standard by warning that Chinese immigrants were taking their jobs and insisted: “The Chinese Must Go!” 

And those were just the early days.

But while they are related, there is a key difference between these racist appeals and the racism that Trump exhibited on Thursday. Politicians have often tried to get votes by warning that outsiders would draw from a pool of jobs that potential voters wanted themselves. Trump’s comments the other night drew on that racism but reached back much further to the idea that there are certain jobs that are “Black” or “Hispanic.”

This is not a new idea in the United States. 

“In all social systems there must be a class to do the menial duties, to perform the drudgery of life,” South Carolina senator James Henry Hammond told his colleagues in 1858. “That is, a class requiring but a low order of intellect and but little skill. Its requisites are vigor, docility, fidelity. Such a class you must have, or you would not have that other class which leads progress, civilization, and refinement. It constitutes the very mud-sill of society and of political government; and you might as well attempt to build a house in the air, as to build either the one or the other, except on this mud-sill.” 

Capital produced by the labor of mudsills would concentrate in the hands of the upper class, who would use it efficiently and intelligently to develop society. Their guidance elevated those weak-minded but strong-muscled people in the mudsill class, who were “happy, content, unaspiring, and utterly incapable, from intellectual weakness, ever to give us any trouble by their aspirations.”

Southern leaders were smart enough to have designated a different race as their society’s mudsills, Hammond said, but in the North the “whole hireling class of manual laborers and ‘operatives,’ as you call them, are essentially slaves.” This created a political problem for northerners, for the majority of the population made up that lower class. “If they knew the tremendous secret, that the ballot-box is stronger than ‘an army with banners,’ and could combine, where would you be?” Hammond asked his colleagues who insisted that all people were created equal. “Your society would be reconstructed, your government overthrown, your property divided.” 

The only true way to look at the world was to understand that some people were better than others and had the right and maybe the duty, to rule. “I repudiate, as ridiculously absurd, that much-lauded but nowhere accredited dogma of Mr. Jefferson, that ‘all men are born equal’” Hammond wrote, and it was on this theory that some people are better than others that southern enslavers based their proposed new nation. 

“Our new government is founded…upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery subordination to the superior race is his natural and normal condition. This, our new government, is the first, in the history of the world, based upon this great physical, philosophical and moral truth,” Alexander Stephens, vice president of the Confederacy, told supporters. 

Not everyone agreed. For his part, rising politician Abraham Lincoln stood on the Declaration of Independence. Months after Hammond’s speech, Lincoln addressed German immigrants in Chicago. Arguments that some races are “inferior,” he said, would “rub out the sentiment of liberty in the country, and…transform this Government into a government of some other form.” The idea that it is beneficial for some people to be dominated by others, he said, is the argument “that kings have made for enslaving the people in all ages of the world…. Turn in whatever way you will—whether it come from the mouth of a King, an excuse for enslaving the people of his country, or from the mouth of men of one race as a reason for enslaving the men of another race, it is all the same old serpent.” 

According to the mudsill theory, he said the following year, “a blind horse upon a tread-mill, is a perfect illustration of what a laborer should be—all the better for being blind, that he could not tread out of place, or kick understandingly. According to that theory, the education of laborers, is not only useless, but pernicious, and dangerous.” He disagreed. “[T]here is not, of necessity, any such thing as the free hired laborer being fixed to that condition for life.”

He went on to tie the mudsill theory to the larger principles of the United States. “I should like to know if taking this old Declaration of Independence, which declares that all men are equal upon principle and making exceptions to it, where will it stop,” he said. “If that declaration is not the truth, let us get the Statute book, in which we find it and tear it out!” To cries of “No, no,” he concluded to cheers: “Let us stick to it then. Let us stand firmly by it.” 

One hundred and sixty-six years later, Black and Hispanic social media users have answered Trump’s statement about “Black jobs” and “Hispanic jobs” with photos of themselves in highly skilled professional positions. But while they did so with good humor, they were illustrating for the modern world the principle Lincoln articulated: in the United States there should be no such thing as “Black jobs” or “Hispanic jobs.” 

Such a construction directly contradicts the principles of the Declaration of Independence and ignores the victory of the United States in the Civil War. Anyone who sees the world through such a lens is on the wrong side of history. 

Notes:

https://www.cnn.com/2024/06/27/politics/read-biden-trump-debate-rush-transcript/index.html

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