Categories
Politics

Marking 9/11, Biden Remembers the ‘Treasured Lives Stolen From Us’

WASHINGTON – Twenty-one years after the September 11 attacks, President Biden vowed never to forget “the precious lives that were stolen from us” as he honored the victims of the worst terrorist attack in American history with a somber wreath-laying ceremony in the pouring rain at Pentagon.

“I know for all those who have lost someone, 21 years is both a lifetime and no time at all,” Mr. Biden said in a speech after the ceremony on Sunday. “It’s good to remember. These memories help us heal. But they can also open up the pain and take us back to the moment when the grief was so raw.”

Members of the Biden administration fanned out over memorials at the sites of the three attacks — Shanksville, Pennsylvania, the Pentagon and lower Manhattan — to pay tribute to rescue workers and families of the nearly 3,000 victims who continue to mourn lost memories. experiences and ties. Mr. Biden also celebrated the anniversary by encouraging Americans to defend the nation’s democratic system, returning to a message that the country’s institutions are under threat from forces of domestic extremism.

“It’s not enough to stand up for democracy once a year or once in a while,” Biden said. “It’s something we have to do every day. So this is not only a day to remember, but also a day of renewal and determination for every single American.”

To begin his remarks, Mr. Biden recalled part of a message sent by Queen Elizabeth II, who died last week, in the wake of the attacks: “She strongly reminded us: ‘Sorrow is the price we pay for love.'”

The President’s speech came just over a year after Mr. Biden ended the two-decade war in Afghanistan that the United States began in response to the September 11 attacks. While Mr. Biden has defended the decision to withdraw American troops from the country, the chaotic and random nature of the withdrawal is also one of the darkest moments of Mr. Biden’s presidency.

When the Afghan government collapsed in August 2021, a bomb attack outside Kabul airport killed up to 170 Afghans and 13 American soldiers. The United States has taken in tens of thousands of Afghans supporting US troops in the country, although many others hoping to immigrate stayed abroad even after Mr Biden promised they would have a home in the country.

Mr Biden said Sunday his government remains committed to holding those responsible for the attacks accountable, citing the killing of al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawari in a CIA drone strike last month. “Our commitment to preventing another attack in the United States does not end,” Biden said.

The First Lady, Jill Biden, commemorated the day with a visit to Shanksville and recalled the grief as she realized her sister Bonny Jacobs, a flight attendant, may have lost colleagues in the attack.

“When I got to her house, I realized I was right. Not only had she lost colleagues; she had lost friends,” said Dr. biden “As we learned more about that dark day, she also felt proud of what happened here – proud that it was other flight attendants and passengers on United Flight 93 who fought back, who helped damage the plane.” to prevent claiming countless lives the capital of our nation.”

The scene in front of the memorial in New York followed a familiar pattern. Vice President Kamala Harris and Mayor Eric Adams stood by as family members carried photos of their loved ones, while others carried American flags or roses. There were flashes of recognition and hugs between people who saw each other once a year. As the honor guard entered and the national anthem was sung, attendees who had captured pictures of their loved ones held them up.

There were moments of silence at 8:46 a.m. when Flight 11 hit the North Tower of the World Trade Center and at 9:03 a.m. when Flight 175 hit the South Tower. Reading the names of the victims brought both tears and fond memories.

David Albert was 13 when his father, Jon Leslie Albert, vice president of information technology at Marsh & McLennan Cos. Inc., died in the terrorist attack. He read the names of his father and other victims. The feeling of loss remains even after 21 years, said Mr. Albert.

“The reality is that I, along with countless other children who have lost their parents, have missed countless memories, moments and conversations,” he said. “While the grief eases somewhat over time, my father’s permanent absence is as felt today as it ever was.”

Anthoula Katsimatides, 50, an actress and trustee of the 9/11 Memorial and Museum, lost her brother John Katsimatides, 31, a bond broker at Cantor Fitzgerald.

“As time goes by, it’s easier for people to forget about it or put it on hold,” she said. Ms Katsimatides said the goal of the annual commemoration is to “teach younger generations” to avoid a similar tragedy in the future.

“They need to know, they need to be educated,” Ms Katsimatides said. “And then it will be their job to take the torch and pass it on.”

Zolan Kanno-Youngs reported from Washington and Jeffery C. Mays from New York.

Categories
World News

how they bought into it, what their lives are like

Bitcoin miner Zack Pettit skating on his work break at the SCATE Ventures mining facility in Dallesport, Washington.

SCATE Ventures Inc.

Nick Sears was 17 years old when he helped build a bitcoin mining farm in Dallesport, Washington. He was 18 when he was legally allowed to buy bitcoin for the first time. And now, at 19, Sears has doubled down on his life as a bitcoin miner, saying “no” to college and “yes” to living in a room inside a data center that houses 4,500 whirling ASICs. 

“My room is sound-locked,” said Sears of the acoustic retrofitting of his living quarters. “So I can’t hear the machines when I close my door, but they are definitely noisy if I have my door open.”

The machines generate about 80 decibels of noise apiece — but Sears says he likes being as close to the action as possible. It also beats making the half hour commute each way from his parents’ house in White Salmon. 

The 19 year-old has spent pretty much every single day for the last two years teaching himself the nuances of how mining machines work – and crucially, how to fix them. He believes his education in soldering and electronics is worth a whole lot more to him than a university degree. 

“I don’t think about going to college at all, just pursuing further knowledge in the repairs of the miners,” continued Sears.

CNBC spoke with multiple miners for this story. Many explained that the allure of mining comes from being able to tangibly grasp the power of bitcoin. 

“If you’ve been to any of these data centers, the first thing you’ll notice is just how vast and how impressive they are. They’re huge,” said explained Thomas Heller, chief business officer for Compass Mining, which works with Sears’ employer, SCATE Ventures. 

“There’s so much noise, and there’s so much heat. There’s just so much action going on. It is quite cool to walk into a data center for  the first time that’s mining bitcoin, because you can really connect the intangible aspects of bitcoin as a currency, with the physical nature of these machines consuming power and doing these calculations.” 

Bitcoin miner Nick Sears lives on-site at the SCATE Ventures mining farm in Dallesport, Washington.

SCATE Ventures Inc.

A day in the life of a miner

Mining for bitcoin isn’t a glamorous job.

“When we first got here, we were setting up racks, creating the network infrastructure for the internet, and we essentially had to wire everything,” he said. 

Once the physical infrastructure was up and running, Sears got into more of a rhythm. He’s now up at 7 A.M. everyday and works from eight to four. He remains on site afterwards, just in case of an emergency, and there is a technician who works night shifts so that Sears can get some sleep.

But beyond the hours, there is no typical work day for Sears. 

“That’s the cool thing about this job – I don’t have a set routine that I do everyday,” he said. “Every morning, I find what needs to be fixed.” 

Some days, that means Sears repairs walls and other physical infrastructure. “If we have to repair a camera, maybe I’m fixing a cable.”

But the biggest part of the job is monitoring and managing every one of those 4,500 Bitmain and Whatsminer ASICs to ensure they are running 24 hours a day, seven days a week. If even one of those machines goes offline, or is only running at partial capacity, the SCATE Ventures mine loses money.

That’s because when someone is mining for bitcoin, what they are actually doing is lending their computing power to the bitcoin network. The more machines you have online, the better your chances at winning bitcoin.

Rig under inspection at the SCATE Ventures mining farm in Dallesport, Washington.

SCATE Ventures Inc.

Roughly every ten minutes, 6.25 bitcoins are created. In order to mint these new tokens, a global pool of miners are all contributing their computing power to running a hashing algorithm. But these miners aren’t working in a vacuum. They’re competing against each other to see who can unlock each batch of new bitcoin first. 

So the stakes are high for Sears. Being diligent and knowing how to triage issues across the entire facility is critical to success.

Some mining sites use more sophisticated software to monitor the machines, which includes checking the temperature of each hashboard within the individual miners. 

But most important for Sears is just figuring out which of his machines aren’t functioning at full capacity. 

“Every day, you find the machines that have stopped hashing, then you remove them from the rack, and you troubleshoot,” he explained. “You’ve got to find the problem with the machines. You’ve got to find out why it went offline.”

It could be a power outage, which would affect all the machines, or it could be a network outage which could impact all of the machines or just some. 

“Sometimes they just need a power cycle or a reboot,” he said.

But the hardware fix isn’t always as simple as that. 

“It could be that the fan on the individual machine that is used for cooling is broken, or maybe it’s the power supply that needs to be repaired or replaced,” explained Heller.

“It could be the hashboards themselves,” continued Heller. “Each hashboard has lots of individual chips, and those are the chips doing the calculations. I think with a Bitmain machine, if more than four chips on a single hashboard are broken, the whole hashboard will switch off. So instead of hashing at about 100%, you’re only hashing at two-thirds or one-third.” 

Seasonal changes in the weather add a whole other layer of complexity. 

Lead technician Nick Sears repairs hardware at the SCATE Ventures Inc. mining farm in Dallesport, Washington.

SCATE Ventures Inc.

Storms can lead to power outages or other disruptions. Heller says that in the summer, the machines can also overheat, especially at the farms which have upgraded to using more powerful units over the course of the last two years. 

SCATE’s mine in Washington seems to have found a way around this problem by using its own immersion cooling technology, which involves submerging bitcoin miners in a non-conductive fluid to dissipate heat, rather than relying on fans. 

Training up and getting paid

Sears may not need a diploma to mine, but taking online training courses run by Chinese engineers who work for Bitmain has gone a long way toward helping him repair specialized mining equipment.

Last month, Sears and another employee completed a virtual class through Bitmain to learn how to work on the ASIC chips on hashboards, as well as the power supplies of the S17s, one of the most popular machines now used to mint bitcoin. 

“I have a certification of maintenance repair, so lately, I’ve just been perfecting my skills in that category,” explained Sears. “It certifies my knowledge and gives me access to buy supplies and material directly through Bitmain.”

Lead technician Nick Sears at the SCATE Ventures Inc. mining farm in Dallesport, Washington.

SCATE Ventures Inc.

Next, he hopes to attend an in-person class in Atlanta, Georgia, to learn more about soldering. “The hard part is learning how to solder and disassemble a circuit board,” said Sears.

Sears’ boss, Scott Bennett, is big on giving his team access to the resources they need to get better at their jobs. 

Bennett, CEO of SCATE Ventures, is a self-taught miner who started his business in his parents’ garage back in 2017, just before the last crypto “winter,” when prices of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies plunged. Similar to Sears, Bennett once lived at one of his data centers – only he opted for an on-site camper, rather than a room inside the facility itself. 

It helped that he lives within minutes of some of the cheapest power in the world. 

“All of our facilities are 100% hydro powered,” said Bennett. 

The mining facility where Sears works is next to the Columbia River and directly adjacent the Dalles Dam. “We love that source of power. It’s cheap, renewable, and very abundant,” he said.

As for employee pay, Sears says that he makes $54,000 a year, plus full health insurance, which is paid for by the company. 

Bennett also runs some mining machines exclusively for his employees. That amounts to about .02 BTC quarterly, which by today’s price equates to a $788 bonus every three months to Sears. 

“With all the miners in China going offline, the difficulty rate has been changing, so the rewards are higher,” said Sears. “The last time we got a little bit more than we did the previous time, which is cool by me.”

The SCATE Ventures mining farm runs on hydropower generated by the Dalles Dam.

SCATE Ventures Inc.

Mining remotely

It is also possible to become a crypto miner without physically handling any mining equipment at all.

Adam Gitzes decided in early 2021 that he really wanted to mine for bitcoin. After his wife vetoed the idea of installing equipment in their home, he began to look for alternatives.

Gitzes discovered Compass Mining, which allows customers to buy mining machines for between $5,800 and $11,700, then locates them in partner data centers and takes care of the physical logistics.

“I bought the machines on the website, Compass managed the logistics, delivering the machines to three different data centers in North America,” said Gitzes, who explained he spent 1.1 bitcoin — about $60,000 at the time of purchase — on them.

“Compass also configured them the way that I asked.”

So a typical day in the life of a miner like Gitzes consists of waking up and checking online to see how much bitcoin his machines mined overnight and to ensure that none of his units are down.

Inside the SCATE Ventures mining farm in Dallesport, Washington.

SCATE Ventures Inc.

Gitzes owns six machines that he says are on the “higher end.” When China expelled all its miners, Gitzes says it doubled the amount of money that his machines generate daily. 

After paying the mining pool fee of 1.25%, Gitzes’ miners generate about .0055 bitcoin a day, or $216 at today’s prices. Daily electricity costs are about $30, so he’s pulling in roughly $186 a day, or just shy of $5,700 every month. At that rate, he’ll recoup his investment in about 11 months, assuming no major fluctuations in energy or bitcoin prices.

Gitzes was so impressed by the Compass business model that he quit his job at Amazon to join the team in March. “The mission to decentralize mining and make it so that everyone can participate is something that I find really important,” said Gitzes.

The SCATE Ventures mining farm is in Dallesport, Washington.

SCATE Ventures Inc.

Categories
Politics

LeBron James advisor exhausted from Me Too, Black Lives Matter

NBA player LeBron James and former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in Los Angeles, California.

Chelsea Lauren | FilmMagic | Getty Images

Longtime white advisor to black NBA superstar LeBron James was caught on tape telling an ESPN white reporter, “I’m exhausted. I have nothing left between Me Too and Black Lives Matter, ”revealed a report on Sunday.

Communications expert Adam Mendelsohn’s outspoken comments – referring to catchphrases used for the movements aimed at reducing sexual violence against women and police murders and brutality against blacks – came during a taped phone call he made last summer with the NBA Reporter Rachel. from ESPN had Nichols, the New York Times reported.

Mendelsohn apologized for these specific comments in an email to CNBC after being asked about them on Sunday.

Nichols, who is white, had complained to Mendelsohn during that July 2020 call about a black reporter, Maria Taylor, getting the pre-game NBA final hosting spot from her sports cable TV network had, a spot Nichols expected her to, The Times reported.

Nichols on this tape implied that Taylor received this gig to the detriment of Nichols because Taylor is black – and because ESPN was under pressure to have more racial diversity in its lineup of on-air talent.

In his initial comments on the Black Lives Matter and Me Too statements, Mendelsohn told CNBC, “I made a stupid, negligent comment rooted in privilege and I am truly sorry.”

“I shouldn’t have said it or even thought it,” Mendelsohn said in an email.

“I am working to support these movements and I know that the people affected by these problems are never exhausted or left with nothing. I must continue to review my privilege and work to be a better ally.”

Nichols apparently did not know that the conversation was being recorded by a video camera broadcasting images and audio from her hotel room at a resort in Walt Disney World, Florida. Walt Disney Company is the majority owner of ESPN.

The video from the camera she used to appear on the network’s shows was fed into ESPN’s control room in Bristol, Connecticut. A tape of the call later circulated within ESPN and was leaked.

Mendelsohn has been an advisor to James for over ten years. Last year he co-founded James’ Black Vote Promotion Group More Than A Vote and is a senior advisor to the group.

The More Than a Vote website notes that the group was launched “amid the protests against Black Lives Matter following the murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. Our goal: energy, education and protection of black voters. “

Taylor joined More Than a Vote last summer and recorded videos as a member of the group supporting the group’s efforts.

Mendelsohn is also a Senior Advisor at the private equity firm TPG, where he previously worked as Managing Director for Global Communications. Previously, he was Deputy Chief of Staff to then California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.

The Times reported that the video of the call lasted more than 20 minutes, with “continuous talk”. The newspaper only put two audio snippets online, which together last 2 minutes and 47 seconds.

Anthony Davis # 3 of the Los Angeles Lakers, LeBron James # 23 of the Los Angeles Lakers and Quinn Cook # 28 of the Los Angeles Lakers kneel down during the National Anthem with VOTE shirts before the start of the game against the Denver Nuggets in Game Three of the Western Conference Finals during the 2020 NBA Playoffs at the AdventHealth Arena at the ESPN Wide World Of Sports Complex on September 22, 2020 in Lake Buena Vista, Florida.

Mike Ehrmann | Getty Images Sports | Getty Images

The Times article stated that “many employees were outraged when they saw the video” because they believed that Nichols “reflected a common criticism used by white workers in many workplaces of non-white colleagues Denigrate – that Taylor was only offered the job of hosting because of her race, not because she was the best person for the job. “

And The Times reported that ESPN staff had also said Nichols made Taylor’s job difficult because Taylor had to deal with Mendelsohn to get interviews with people in professional basketball.

CNBC policy

Read more about CNBC’s political coverage:

Last May, The Times reported, the stars of ESPN’s “NBA Countdown” discussed whether they would refuse to appear in protest against changes to production they believed were made in Nichols’s favor .

These changes included Nichols becoming the game’s main reporter, which in turn resulted in three colored side reporters being given fewer tasks.

The bomb report comes weeks before Taylor’s contract with ESPN expires.

The New York Post reported last week that Taylor turned down a contract proposal last year that would have increased her current annual salary from $ 1 million to nearly $ 5 million a year. Taylor reportedly held out after significantly more money.

The Post also reported that ESPN’s current offering to Taylor is valued at $ 2-3 million per year. The lower amount reflects a move by the network to cut salaries across the board, according to The Post.

Nichols called Mendelsohn on July 13, 2020 to request an interview with James and another Lakers player, Anthony Davis, who is another client of James’ agent, Rich Paul. Mendelsohn is also an adviser to Black Paul.

Nichols also took the time on the same call to ask Mendelsohn’s advice on how to deal with the situation at ESPN, and was denied the assignment, which went to Taylor.

“I wish Maria Taylor all the success in the world – she reports on football, she reports on basketball,” said Nichols during the phone call with Mendelsohn, whose audio was posted online by The Times.

“If you have to give her more to do because you are feeling pressure because of your shitty long-term record in terms of diversity – which, by the way, I know personally from the female side – then just do it. Just find it somewhere else. You won’t find it from me or take my thing away. “

She also noted that the assignment to moderate coverage of the NBA finals “is written in my contract,” the newspaper reported.

After Nichols said she was planning to wait for ESPN’s next move, Mendelsohn paused, then said, “I don’t know. I am exhausted. I have nothing left between Me Too and Black Lives Matter. “

Nichols laughed at that, as the tape reveals.

Mendelsohn then suggested to Nichols that the situation be so that ESPN played two women, Nichols and Taylor, against each other.

“About the fact that it is just so very white men that they turn two women against each other to compete for the one point that they dangle over them,” said Mendelsohn.

“A broader discussion of all the points that should be considered.”

Nichols then said on the tape, “There’s not just one place at the table for a minority of the version we’re trying to try this week.”

Mendelsohn replied, “If you think about it, this is exactly the problem we’ve been talking about for a long time, which is white men – it’s an example of the one black person on the boardroom … you don’t? Not having a black woman in a prominent position and feeling, OK, all the work is done. “

“And you certainly can’t say, ‘Okay, we have a white woman, we have a woman in a critical place, and now that we’re going to put a black woman in the same place,” he said.

“The question is, what other seats do white men sit in?”

The Times reported that he told the paper for its article, “I will share what I believed then and what I still believe to be true. Maria [Taylor] earned and earned the position, and Rachel [Nichols] must respect it. “

“Maria deserved it because of her job, and ESPN realized that, like many people and companies in America, she needs to change on purpose,” said Mendelsohn.

“Just because Maria got the job doesn’t mean Rachel shouldn’t get what she deserves. Rachel and Maria shouldn’t be forced into a zero-sum game by ESPN, and Rachel had to challenge them. “

The Times reported that Mendelsohn did not answer follow-up questions about the taped call.

In his statement to CNBC, Mendelsohn said, “I’ll reiterate what I believe advised Rachel on the call and told the Times. Maria deserved and deserved the position and Rachel had to respect her. If Rachel wanted to challenge ESPN, she needed” to focus on their overall culture. “

ESPN has declined to say if an employee has been disciplined in connection with the case.

The Times reported that the only known person known to have been punished was a black digital video producer who was suspended for two weeks without pay after telling ESPN Human Resources that they were sending the video to Taylor had sent.

Josh Krulewitz, spokesman for ESPN, declined to speak to CNBC, but cited statements he had given the Times for its article.

“A diverse group of executives thoroughly and fairly examined all facts related to the incident and then handled the situation appropriately,” said Krulewitz.

“We pride ourselves on the coverage we continue to produce and our focus will continue to be on Maria, Rachel and the rest of the talented team that collectively serve NBA fans.”

Krulewitz also told the newspaper that ESPN emphasizes diversity, inclusion and equity, and that the company “arguably has the most diverse talented professionals in the sports media business, including those behind the scenes”.

Categories
Politics

Black Lives Matter leaders met with Biden White Home officers on police reform

Protesters gather near the White House before a group attempted to tear down the statue of Andrew Jackson in Lafayette Square on June 22, 2020 in Washington, DC.

Drew Angerer | Getty Images

Black Lives Matter leaders met with members of President Joe Biden’s team as the White House and lawmakers negotiated the details of a possible police reform deal.

In a statement first broadcast to CNBC, Black Lives Matter said the leaders recently met with White House officials to discuss their agenda. The activist group is not satisfied with what has happened since the discussion, namely with proposals to give police departments more money.

“Black Lives Matter executives met with White House officials earlier this year to discuss our policy agenda, and while we appreciate the opportunity to speak with them, we are surprised by their lack of progress on issues that are black-minded People, the same communities, matter. ” who supported Biden-Harris so much in last year’s election, “the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation told CNBC in an email on Tuesday.

It is unclear when the meeting took place or which officials from both sides attended the meeting. Politico reported in May that the BLM had yet to meet with the Biden White House. The Washington Post reported late last year that Patrisse Cullors, a co-founder of Black Lives Matter, wrote a letter to Biden and Kamala Harris about a possible meeting.

Black Lives Matter press representatives responded to requests for additional comments. The White House has not responded to requests for comment.

Rep. Karen Bass, D-Calif., One of the lawmakers working on police reform, told NBC News that the negotiations had encountered some obstacles due to power struggles between law enforcement groups.

“I worry that it might prevent us from coming to an agreement. And you know what a really sad statement I think about the profession that they would actually prevent reforms and refuse to modernize,” she said.

The meeting and its aftermath suggest that Black Lives Matter and the Biden team are heading for a stalemate. It’s also a sign that Black Lives Matter may not have as much impact at the Biden White House as the group hoped.

Black Lives Matter, created after George Zimmerman was acquitted in 2013 in the murder of the unarmed black teen Trayvon Martin, is calling for a reduction in police spending. For years the group has inspired and organized large protests against brutality against blacks.

Last year, Black Lives Matter’s group and motto gained popularity and relevance after police murdered George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and other black Americans as protests erupted across the country.

Biden won the 2020 election with the overwhelming support of black voters.

The president recently said that states could raise $ 350 billion in stimulus funds to bolster police forces. Biden has also announced a series of measures his government is taking to curb the rise in crime and gun violence.

This didn’t go well with Black Lives Matter or activists calling for the defunding of police departments.

“And now we see the president arguing for increased spending on the police force instead of investing in housing, education, climate protection and health care,” Black Lives Matter said in a statement to CNBC. “This is no time to go back to the dangerous scare days of the 1990s when more police officers were deployed in our neighborhoods rather than services that improve lives and keep black communities safe.”

Categories
Health

Black Lives Are Shorter in Chicago. My Household’s Historical past Reveals Why.

In Englewood, about 60 percent of residents have a high school diploma or equivalent or less, and 57 percent of households earn less than $ 25,000 a year. Streeterville, on the other side of Chicago’s Abyss, has a median income of $ 125,000. The vast majority of residents have at least a university degree; 44 percent have a master’s degree or higher. And predictably, Englewood has long taken an uneven burden of disease. It is among the highest death rates in the city from heart disease and diabetes, as well as child mortality and children with elevated blood levels, according to the Chicago Department of Public Health. These differences all lead to this irrefutable race gap in the lifespan.

“It is very clear that geography affects life expectancy most,” said Dr. Judith L. Singleton, a medical and cultural anthropologist at Northwestern University who is conducting an ongoing study of life expectancy inequality in Chicago neighborhoods. Her father came to Chicago from New Orleans in the 1930s and settled in Bronzeville. In 1960 her parents bought a house in the far south. 40 years after her mother died, her father moved out of his home for good because of the lack of services, including nearby grocery stores, and he feared for his safety. “If you live in a resource-rich, higher-income neighborhood, your chances of living longer are better – and the opposite is true if your community is resource-limited,” she said. “Something is wrong here.”

In the past there has been a damned explanation for why poor communities suffer from crumbling conditions and a lack of services: not that something is wrong that needs fixing, but that something is wrong with the people and the community itself. It’s their fault; They did this to themselves by not eating properly, avoiding medical care, and being uneducated. Almost every time former President Donald Trump opened his mouth to talk about black communities in Detroit, Baltimore, Atlanta and, yes, Chicago, he reiterated the underlying assumption that black communities in America were solely for their own problems are responsible. In 2019, Trump’s former attorney Michael Cohen claimed during an affidavit before Congress that his boss had characterized Black Chicago with contempt and guilt: “While we were once driving through a struggling neighborhood in Chicago,” Trump commented that only blacks could live Gone. “In 2018, the American Values ​​Survey found that 45 percent of white Americans believe that socioeconomic disparities are really due to not trying hard enough – and that blacks might be as well off as they are Whites when they try harder.

What really happened was more sinister. On the south side of Chicago, a pattern of deliberate, government-sanctioned action systematically extracted wealth from the black neighborhoods, eroding the health of generations of people, making them live sick and die young.

Like mine, Dr. Eric E. Whitaker made a route north from Mississippi to the south side of Chicago. I met Whitaker, a doctor and former director of the Illinois Department of Public Health, in 1991 while serving as a health communications scholar at what is now the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. He studied medicine at the University of Chicago’s Pritzker School of Medicine and took a year off to do his Masters in Public Health. After we became friends, we discovered that his maternal grandparents owned a three-story building around the corner of our family home on South Vernon Avenue.

He remembers the area as a thriving mixed income neighborhood, a place of comfort, full of life and energy, even though all that remains of his grandparents’ building is a memory and a heap of rubble. “What I remember about my grandparents’ house was the vitality,” said Whitaker, who met his close friend Barack Obama the year he was at Harvard when Obama was at Harvard Law School. “There would be people on porches, children playing in the street. It was ambitious. Now you drive through towns like Englewood and see empty lot after empty lot after empty lot. Every now and then I take my kids with me to see where dad is from. When I show them the vacant lot where Grandma’s house used to be, they think: Wow, that’s sad. “

But what Whitaker and I remember with a warm glimmer wasn’t the whole story. Even as our relatives began their hopeful new lives in the 1930s, the government-sanctioned practice of redlining emerged in response to enforcing segregation, lowering land and property values, and sowing divestment and decay for more than 30 years.

Categories
Health

When Sufferers Select to Finish Their Lives

Ms. Rehm said her goal is that no patient should suffer the outrage that her husband experienced at the end of his life. She described his death as “excruciating to bear testimony,” although the lack of food and water is usually quite bearable for the patient after about two days.

Dr. Jessica Nutik Zitter, a palliative care practitioner at Highland Hospital in Oakland, Calif., Said in an interview, “The concept of medical euthanasia is gaining acceptance, but it takes time for people to become familiar with it. Doctors are trained to keep adding technology to patient care regardless of outcome, and technology withdrawal is an abomination for what we are taught. “

As a result, doctors can convince dying patients and their families to accept treatments “that lead to terrible suffering,” said Dr. Zitter, author of the book “Extreme Measures: Finding a Better Way to the End of Life”. In their experience, fear of losing control is the number one reason patients seek medical attention when they die. However, when they have access to good palliative care, this fear often disappears.

A third of patients eligible for medical assistance in dying are not consuming the lifelong medications they are given, she said, explaining that after the option, they regain a sense of autonomy and are no longer afraid of losing control . In a study of 3,368 lethal drug prescriptions drafted under Oregon and Washington state laws, the most common reasons for seeking medical help in dying were loss of autonomy (87.4 percent). Impairment of quality of life (86.1 percent) and loss of dignity (68.6 percent).

Of course, many doctors view medical assistance in dying as contrary to their education, religious beliefs, or philosophy of life. Dr. Joanne Lynn, a non-supporter geriatrician in Washington, DC, said the focus should be on better care for people who are very sick, disabled, or the elderly.

“We should resist medical assistance in dying until we can offer people who have opted for medically assisted death a real choice of well-supported, meaningful, and comfortable life,” said Dr. Lynn. “There is currently no strong pressure on decency in long-term care. It is not a real choice when a person’s alternative is to live in misery or to impoverish the family. “

Barbara Coombs Lee, president emeritus of Compassion & Choices, a Portland, Oregon nonprofit that seeks to expand options for the end of life, said: “The core principle of medical assistance in dying is empowerment for someone who is terminally ill . “

Categories
Politics

Blinken Proposes a Overseas Coverage Not ‘Disconnected From Our Each day Lives’

WASHINGTON – Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken used his first major address on Wednesday to rally a constituency for President Biden’s foreign policy at a time when Americans are focused on the coronavirus pandemic, the economy and other domestic issues .

The 28-minute speech, delivered in a largely empty State Department reception room, was intended to demonstrate that the most pressing issues of diplomacy were matters that directly affect Americans.

From defending democracy to fighting climate change to managing the nation’s relations with China – “the greatest geopolitical test of the 21st century,” he said – Blinken outlined eight foreign policy priorities for the Biden government. He said they have to be faced both domestically and abroad, “or we’ll be left behind.”

Mr Blinken’s remarks were a companion to the White House’s release of what is known as the Interim National Security Strategic Guidance, a 24-page document intended to serve as the first foreign policy blueprint until administrative officials come up with their first official national security strategy, a Congressional strategy, which is required Report to be released by each White House later this year.

Briefing reporters of the document, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said the guidelines are based on the idea that the United States must be able to compete for “great powers” at the same time as rival powers such as China and Russia are being defended against cross-border threats such as pandemics, climate change and terrorism.

The key to this, Sullivan said, was rebuilding the American economy, democracy and alliances to operate “from a position of strength” worldwide.

Neither Mr Blinken nor Mr Sullivan made any new political announcements. And while the guidance document was intended for government officials, Mr Blinken attempted to connect with average Americans in a speech he would have given to an audience well beyond the Beltway without pandemic restrictions.

“I know that foreign policy sometimes feels disconnected from our daily lives,” said Blinken. “It’s either just about major threats like pandemics, terrorism, or it disappears from view.”

“Those of us who engage in foreign policy have not always done a good job of relating it to the needs and aspirations of the American people,” Blinken said. As a result, he said, “Americans have asked tough but fair questions about what we do, how we lead – in fact, whether we should lead at all.”

(His immediate predecessor, Mike Pompeo, frequently lectured in the U.S. to students, factory workers, and religious groups – though critics noted that he also selected venues and audiences that may be related to his suspected future political aspirations.)

Although Mr Blinken said several countries – including Russia, Iran and North Korea – presented serious challenges, he made it clear that China was America’s main competitor.

Repeating Mr. Biden’s campaign promise to alternate between competitive, collaborative and potentially confrontational positions on China on various issues, he said strong alliances are the best way to balance Beijing. “Where we withdrew, China filled in,” said Blinken.

But he offered few details, a vagueness that warned some former State Department officials that adapting to Beijing’s global influence would require expensive diplomatic and development efforts.

“We cannot confront China cheaply,” said Brett Bruen, former professional diplomat and White House official in the Obama administration.

Mr Pompeo had routinely singled out China during the Trump administration, calling it a rampant human rights abuser whose communist leaders had invaded foreign territories and were unable to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

Mr. Blinken repeatedly drew contrasts with the previous administration and President Donald J. Trump’s bombastic “America First” approach. “Real strength isn’t noise or bullying,” he said.

On immigration, Mr. Blinken said the government would continue to secure US borders but also pursue a “just decent solution” to the plight of the thousands of desperate Central Americans trying to enter the United States.

He also noted the deep rifts that have occurred in American politics and helped spark the January 6th uprising at the Capitol. “There is no question that our democracy is fragile,” he said.

However, Mr Blinken also acknowledged that previous administrations – including the Obama presidency in which he served – had failed ordinary Americans at times.

On Free Trade, “We haven’t done enough to understand who would be negatively affected and what it would take to adequately offset their pain or enforce agreements already on the books and help more workers and small businesses to fully benefit of them, ”he said.

Some liberal critics see Mr Blinken as too supportive of previous military interventions, admitting that “we need to remember what we have learned about the limits of violence in order to build lasting peace” – particularly in Afghanistan and the near by East.

“The day after a major military intervention is always more difficult than we imagined,” he said.

Categories
Business

Some Teenagers Volunteer for Covid Vaccine Trials to Get Their Lives Again

“And I also thought it was important that people of different ages and races be represented,” added Audrey, who, like her brother, is Asian. (Her mother Rachel, a nurse researcher who volunteered to try a vaccination, asked that their last names be withheld for privacy reasons.)

Overall, the teenage studies may be less different because the adult study results showed no discernible difference in results by race. And because the adult studies have been so successful, up to two-thirds of teenagers may be offered the actual vaccine instead of a placebo.

Pfizer, whose study is fully enrolled, expects results from its studies for children ages 12-15 years old in the first quarter of this year to be submitted to the Food and Drug Administration for review. Moderna is still recruiting teenagers for its studies. The data is expected to be available this summer. Other companies expect to begin studies for teenagers soon. Shortly thereafter, researchers will open studies for children ages 5 and up, most likely at more modest doses.

As in any medical study, investigators are indifferent to discussing risks and benefits. Instead of teaching young subjects, Dr. Campbell, whose clinic will be conducting a Moderna study for younger children, puts her in conversation.

“Do you remember your tetanus shot? Tell me about it, ”he might say. And then: “So it’s similar and how is it different.” He wants to make sure that the teen is actively involved in the decision-making process. “We always say, ‘Don’t do this for your parents. ‘”

Dr. Sarah Hasan, senior recruiter for DM Clinical Research who oversees the Houston Fights Covid campaign and most of the city’s vaccine studies, said the educational sessions for teenagers and adults are quite different. She has more fun with the teenagers.

“Usually adults scan the form, ask a few questions, and they’re done,” she said. “But kids ask a lot more questions than adults and actually listen, which is pretty nice.”

Categories
Politics

Trump’s Fraud Claims Died in Court docket, however the Fable of Stolen Elections Lives On

Die unbegründeten und verzweifelten Behauptungen von Präsident Trump über eine gestohlene Wahl in den letzten sieben Wochen – die aggressivste Förderung des „Wahlbetrugs“ in der amerikanischen Geschichte – konnten vor Gericht in sieben Bundesstaaten keine Wirkung entfalten oder den erlittenen Verlust annähernd rückgängig machen an Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Aber die Bemühungen haben zu mindestens einem unerwarteten und völlig anderen Ergebnis geführt: Eine gründliche Entlarvung der Art von Wahlbetrug behauptet, die Republikaner hätten verwendet, um das Stimmrecht für den größten Teil des jungen Jahrhunderts zurückzudrängen.

Herr Trump und seine Verbündeten haben eine Reihe von Tropen und Canards ausprobiert, die den Republikanern ähnlich sind, um Gesetze zu rechtfertigen, die in vielen Fällen die Abstimmung für Schwarze und Hispanics überproportional erschwerten , die Demokraten weitgehend unterstützen.

Ihre Behauptungen, dass Tausende von Menschen durch die Annahme anderer Identitäten in Wahllokalen „doppelt gewählt“ hätten, stimmten mit denen überein, die zuvor als Grund für die Einführung strenger neuer Gesetze zur Identifizierung von Wählern angeführt wurden.

Ihre Behauptung, dass eine große Anzahl von Nicht-Bürgern illegale Stimmen für Herrn Biden abgegeben habe, stimmte mit den Behauptungen überein, die Republikaner erhoben haben, um für strenge neue Anforderungen an den „Nachweis der Staatsbürgerschaft“ für die Wählerregistrierung einzutreten.

Und ihre Geschichten über eine große Anzahl von Betrügern, die im Namen von „toten Wählern“ Stimmzettel abgeben, ähnelten denen, mit denen mehrere Staaten aggressive „Säuberungen“ von Abstimmungslisten durchgeführt haben, bei denen Zehntausende von Registrierungen fälschlicherweise zur Kündigung vorgesehen waren.

Nachdem Herr Trump und seine Verbündeten rund 60 Klagen eingereicht und sogar einen finanziellen Anreiz für Informationen über Betrug geboten hatten, konnten sie keinen Fall einer illegalen Abstimmung im Namen ihres Gegners endgültig nachweisen vor Gericht – kein einziger Fall eines undokumentierten Einwanderers, der einen Stimmzettel abgibt, keine doppelte Abstimmung der Bürger oder glaubwürdige Beweise dafür, dass Legionen der stimmberechtigten Toten Herrn Biden einen Sieg bescherten, der nicht ihm gehörte.

“Es sollte wirklich einen Todesstoß in diese Erzählung bringen, die sich mit Behauptungen über Wahlbetrug befasst, die einfach nie begründet wurden”, sagte Kristen Clarke, die Präsidentin des Nationalen Anwaltsausschusses für Bürgerrechte, einer gemeinnützigen Rechtsgruppe und ein ehemaliger Anwalt des Justizministeriums, dessen Arbeit Abstimmungsfälle umfasste. “Sie haben sich selbst vor Gericht gestellt und sind gescheitert.”

Es gibt jedoch keine Anzeichen dafür, dass diese Niederlagen vor Gericht den Verlauf der laufenden Bemühungen zur Einschränkung der Stimmabgabe ändern werden, die seit den umstrittenen Wahlen von 2000 für die konservative Politik von zentraler Bedeutung sind. Dies fiel mit der zunehmenden Besorgnis der Partei zusammen, dass der demografische Wandel die Demokraten in der Bevölkerung begünstigen würde Abstimmung.

Die falschen Vorstellungen haben in Mr. Trumps Twitter- und Facebook-Feeds weitergelebt. im Fernsehprogramm von Fox News, Newsmax und One America News Network; und in Anhörungen im Staatshaus, in denen republikanische Führer auf der Grundlage der zurückgewiesenen Anschuldigungen über restriktivere Wahlgesetze nachgedacht haben.

In Georgien haben republikanische Gesetzgeber bereits die Verschärfung der staatlichen Regeln für die Briefwahl und die Identifizierung der Wähler erörtert. In Pennsylvania erwägen republikanische Gesetzgeber, Schritte rückgängig zu machen, die die Abstimmung in Abwesenheit erleichtert hatten, und ihre Kollegen in Wisconsin erwägen ebenfalls strengere Beschränkungen für die Briefwahl sowie für die vorzeitige Abstimmung.

Wenn überhaupt, hat Präsident Trump der Bewegung, den Zugang zu Stimmzetteln zu beschränken, neue Impulse gegeben und ist gleichzeitig der einzigartige, charismatische Führer geworden, den er nie hatte.

Nachdem er geradezu erklärt hatte, dass ein hohes Wahlniveau schlecht für die Republikaner sei, überzeugte er seine Basis davon, dass das Wahlsystem von Betrug verfault ist, und betrachtete diese Fiktion als ein Grundprinzip der Partei. Mehrere kürzlich durchgeführte Umfragen haben gezeigt, dass die Mehrheit der Republikaner die Wahlen für betrügerisch hält, obwohl Wahlbeamte im ganzen Land berichten, dass sie überraschend verlaufen sind Selbst bei einer Pandemie reibungslos, mit außergewöhnlich hoher Wahlbeteiligung und ohne Anzeichen von Betrug, abgesehen von dem üblichen Zertrümmern von schlechten Schauspielern oder Fehlern von gut gemeinten Wählern.

In den letzten anderthalb Monaten der Gerichtsurteile wurden Wahlbetrugsvorwürfe immer wieder als unzureichend oder glaubwürdig zurückgewiesen, häufig von von Republikanern ernannten Richtern.

Herr Trump und seine Verbündeten haben argumentiert, dass die 59 Verluste, die sie in 60 seit dem Wahltag eingereichten Klagen erlitten haben, auf Verfahrensentscheidungen beruhten, und sich darüber beschwert, dass die Richter sich geweigert haben, die Einzelheiten der Vorwürfe zu prüfen, mit denen sie versucht haben, eine Wahl zu stürzen. Herr Biden gewann mit 7 Millionen Stimmen (und mit 74 im Wahlkollegium).

Laut einer Analyse der New York Times haben sie jedoch in mehr als zwei Dritteln ihrer Fälle nicht einmal offiziell Betrug behauptet und stattdessen argumentiert, dass lokale Beamte von den Wahlkodizes abgewichen seien, die Wahlen nicht ordnungsgemäß verwaltet hätten oder dass die am Wahltag geltenden Regeln nicht eingehalten worden seien waren selbst illegal.

In dem Einzelfall, in dem Herr Trump gewann, forderte seine Kampagne eine staatlich angeordnete Fristverlängerung in Pennsylvania für die Vorlage eines Personalausweises für per Post versandte Stimmzettel heraus, was sich auf eine geringe Anzahl von Stimmen auswirkte.

In fast einem Dutzend Fällen hatten ihre Betrugsvorwürfe tatsächlich ihre Tage vor Gericht und brachen unter Kontrolle immer wieder zusammen.

Trotz des endgültigen Charakters dieser Entscheidungen bestand die Antwort der Republikaner darin, an den Betrugsfiktionen des Präsidenten festzuhalten.

Die Republikaner im Kongress haben sie ebenfalls befördert, da Herr Trump Senatoren und Mitglieder des Repräsentantenhauses dazu drängt, die Ergebnisse des Wahlkollegiums bei einer angeblichen Verfahrensabstimmung abzulehnen, um Herrn Bidens klaren Sieg über den Präsidenten am 6. Januar zu bestätigen.

In einer Anhörung des Senats am 16. Dezember beispielsweise wiederholte Senator James Lankford aus Oklahoma eine Reihe von Behauptungen der Trump-Kampagne wegen illegaler Wahlen in Nevada.

“42.000 Menschen in Nevada haben Ihrer Arbeit zufolge mehr als einmal gewählt”, sagte Lankford während der Befragung eines Anwalts der Trump-Kampagne, Jesse Binnall. Herr Lankford wiederholte die Behauptungen der Trump-Kampagne, dass Tote, Einwohner außerhalb des Bundesstaates und Nicht-Staatsbürger in Nevada in beträchtlicher Zahl illegale Stimmzettel abgegeben hätten. Die Kampagne hatte diese Anschuldigungen auf Analysen gestützt, die Abstimmungslisten mit Aufzeichnungen aus kommerziellen und staatlichen Quellen abgleichen.

Der Prozessrichter im Fall Nevada hatte die Klage jedoch fast zwei Wochen zuvor abgewiesen und diese Analysen als nicht stichhaltig und nicht überzeugend zurückgewiesen. Er erklärte, die Kampagne habe „unter keinem Beweisstandard bewiesen, dass illegale Stimmen abgegeben und gezählt wurden“.

Solch ein sogenannter “Listenabgleich”, auf den sich Staaten verlassen, um ihre Liste ungültiger Wähler zu reduzieren, erfordert sorgfältige Arbeit von langjährigen Experten. Es ist leicht schlecht zu machen. Es waren schlecht konzipierte oder schlecht durchgeführte Datenanalysen, die Georgia und Texas kürzlich dazu veranlassten, Zehntausende gültiger Registrierungen zu Unrecht zu eliminieren und den Kurs erst umzukehren, nachdem Stimmrechtsgruppen und andere auf die Fehler aufmerksam gemacht hatten.

Konservative haben solche Datenanalysen auch verwendet, um im Laufe der Jahre wilde Behauptungen über Wahlbetrug aufzustellen, und sind häufig vor Gericht auf Stolpersteine ​​gestoßen, da sich herausstellte, dass sie stark fehlerhaft oder falsch waren.

Dieses Muster hielt auch in der diesjährigen Flut von Pro-Trump-Klagen an.

Zum Beispiel haben die Republikaner bei der Verbreitung ihrer Fälle im ganzen Land auf Datenanalysen eines Cybersecurity-Managers und eines einmaligen texanischen Kongresskandidaten namens Russell J. Ramsland Jr. verwiesen. In einem seiner Berichte wurde behauptet, dass verschiedene Bezirke in Michigan Stimmenzahlen hatten, die über ihrer Bevölkerung lagen , was bedeutet, dass ihre Gesamtzahl mit illegalen Stimmzetteln aufgefüllt wurde; Es stellte sich heraus, dass sich die fraglichen Grafschaften in Minnesota befanden, nicht in Michigan.

Ebenso wurden mehrere spezifische Anschuldigungen, dass Menschen illegal Stimmzettel im Namen von Toten abgegeben haben, aus einer amateurhaften Datenanalyse geboren, die sich später als fehlerhaft erwies.

In einem Bundesfall, den die Trump-Kampagne mit sich brachte, um die Zertifizierung der Ergebnisse in Michigan zu verzögern, war die spezifische Erwähnung eines von einem toten Wähler abgegebenen Stimmzettels falsch: Durch die Registrierung des Toten wurde keine Stimme abgegeben. Vielmehr stimmte ein Mann mit genau demselben Namen legal ab. (Mr. Trumps Team zog diesen Fall aus der Akte, als Michigan sich der Zertifizierung näherte.)

Dies ist ein häufiges Problem bei Behauptungen über „tote Wähler“, „Doppelwähler“ und „nichtstaatliche“ Wähler. Blinde Vergleiche offizieller Daten führen häufig dazu, dass „falsch positive Ergebnisse“ zwei Personen mit demselben Namen wie dieselbe Person behandeln.

In Georgien versuchen Anwälte des Außenministers, dass das Gericht eine „Experten“ -Analyse ablehnt, in der festgestellt wird, dass das Gewinnergebnis von Herrn Biden mehr als 10.000 Stimmzettel von toten Bürgern enthielt. Der staatliche Experte in diesem Fall, der MIT-Politikwissenschaftler Charles Stewart III, kam zu dem Schluss, dass die Trump-Kampagne nur “die unauffällige Tatsache zu identifizieren schien, dass einige Georgier, die gewählt haben, den Namen und das Geburtsjahr einer anderen Person teilen, die gestorben ist” Staatsanwälte sagen es. In mehreren anderen Fällen erwiesen sich die „toten Wähler“, in deren Namen die Trump-Kampagne sagte, dass Stimmzettel abgegeben wurden, als sehr lebendig.

In der vergangenen Woche haben die Behörden in Pennsylvania eine Festnahme aufgrund einer Anschuldigung vorgenommen, die die Trump-Kampagne erstmals im November erhoben hatte. Die Staatsanwaltschaft von Delaware County sagte, ein Mann namens Bruce Bartman habe im Namen seiner verstorbenen Mutter eine Briefwahl abgegeben – für Mr. Trump. Der Anwalt von Herrn Bartman sagte, Herr Bartman habe dies als fehlgeleitete „Form des Protests“ getan, und der örtliche Staatsanwalt sagte, es sei nichts weiter als „ein Beweis dafür, dass eine Person Wahlbetrug begangen hat“.

Herr Trump und seine Verbündeten haben auch Wahlbeamte selbst angegriffen. In einer neuen Variante der Mythologie des Wahlbetrugs haben sie behauptet, die Beamten hätten sich entweder an fantastischen Betrugsprogrammen beteiligt oder seien bereit, daran teilzunehmen. In mehreren Staaten wurden solche Anschuldigungen von Richtern kurzerhand zurückgewiesen.

In Arizona reichten die Republikaner eine Bundesklage ein, in der sie behaupteten, sowohl Wahlhelfer als auch demokratische Beamte, die die Wahlen überwachen, hätten eine beliebige Anzahl betrügerischer Aktivitäten “aufrechterhalten” können. Die Richterin Diane J. Humetewa, eine vom ehemaligen Präsidenten Barack Obama ernannte Richterin, wies die Klage ab und sagte, dass „diese Anspielungen die Standards für Betrugsvorwürfe nicht erfüllen“.

In Michigan wurde Richter Timothy M. Kenny, ein Staatsrichter, gebeten, die Behauptung zu prüfen, dass Wahlbeamte Menschen zur Stimmabgabe „gecoacht“ hätten – eine Behauptung, die laut Richter bei der Entlassung ohne einen Ort, ein Datum oder eine andere relevante Aussage aufgestellt wurde Einzelheiten.

Nur wenige Betrugsvorwürfe aus der Trump-Ära haben sich in konservativen Medien so gut durchgesetzt wie solche, die computergestützte Abstimmungssysteme beinhalten, die angeblich Trump-Stimmen auf Biden-Stimmen „umstellen“.

Eine der wildesten dieser Behauptungen war die Anschuldigung, dass Beamte in mindestens vier Bundesstaaten von Dominion Voting Systems erstellte Stimmzettel verwendet haben, um Hunderttausende, wenn nicht Millionen Stimmen von Herrn Trump an Herrn Biden abzugeben.

Diese unwahrscheinliche Verschwörung wurde in vier Klagen von Sidney Powell, einem ehemaligen Anwalt für die Trump-Kampagne, am ausführlichsten ausgestrahlt.

Ihre persönliche Bilanz ähnelt der aller anderen gescheiterten republikanischen Wahlbetrugsklagen. Trotz der Widerlegung durch Richter und Wahlbeamte im ganzen Land wurde ihre Erzählung in den rechten Medien immer wieder wiederholt, um sicherzustellen, dass der Begriff des umfassenden Betrugs ungehindert an Bedeutung gewinnt.

Ein Richter in Phoenix nannte Frau Powells Beschwerde “ohne plausible Anschuldigungen”. Eine Richterin in Michigan schrieb, dass Frau Powells Überzeugung, dass Wahlmaschinen das Wahlergebnis veränderten, „eine Verschmelzung von Theorien, Vermutungen und Spekulationen“ sei.

Die gründlichste Entlarvung von Frau Powells Verschwörungen erfolgte letzte Woche in einem blasigen Brief von Dominion, in dem die Integrität seiner Maschinen bestätigt wurde, der in unabhängigen Audits überprüft wurde. Das Unternehmen forderte sie auf, ihre Aussagen zurückzuziehen, und beschuldigte sie, sich auf eine „rücksichtslose Desinformationskampagne“ einzulassen.

Dominion gab an, dass es auch rechtliche Schritte gegen Rudolph W. Giuliani, der die rechtlichen Bemühungen von Herrn Trump nach der Wahl angeführt hat, und mehrere prominente konservative Medienvertreter überlegte.

Während sie ihren Betrugsmythos auf nationaler Ebene weiter vorantreibt, hat Frau Powell ihre Argumente vor den Obersten Gerichtshof gebracht und dabei engen Kontakt zu Herrn Trump gehalten, der sich persönlich im Weißen Haus getroffen hat.

Die Stadt Detroit beantragt Sanktionen gegen Frau Powell, und die Generalstaatsanwältin von Michigan, Dana Nessel, sagt, sie erwäge dies auch wegen „absichtlicher Falschdarstellungen“ in den rechtlichen Unterlagen von Frau Powell.

Trotz alledem lebt die Handlung weiter, sogar an Heiligabend, als sich Herr Trump die Zeit nahm, auf Twitter zu schreiben: „VOTER BETRUG IST KEINE VERSPRECHUNGSTHEORIE.“