July 14, 2025

Supreme Court allows mass layoffs at Education Department

NBC News -   The Supreme Court allowed the Trump administration to move ahead with plans to carry out mass layoffs at the Department of Education that were blocked by a federal judge.  The conservative-majority court, without any explanation, granted an emergency application from the administration that blocks the federal judge's ruling. The court's three liberal members objected, with Justice Sonia Sotomayor writing a blistering dissenting opinion.

 

Trump's big bad bill hits women

 New Republic - Trump’s megabill hits women at a time when culture-warring conservatives are more openly pushing to force more women to stay at home with their kids—and arguing that if they’re going to go to school at all, they should do it for their MRS degree. The bill is the latest win for Republicans who are trying to peel away women’s agency at every level by making it harder for women to have economic stability and reproductive freedom. It contains hits to reproductive care funding (though a judge has temporarily blocked this part of the law from going into effect), deep cuts to SNAP benefits and Medicaid that will affect caretakers of all ages, and measures that make it harder for kids to get free school meals.

On top of that, the immigration crackdown funded by the bill is damaging for many immigrant women and their kids. It also poses long-term economic risks to the financial security of women in general. The removal of immigrants will hurt the job market and make the economy worse, economic experts say. If the Trump administration were to actually meet its goal of deporting 4 million immigrants over four years, it would eliminate half a million childcare jobs.

 

Ecology

 These are the most and least polluted national parks in the U.S.

Climate Change Degrades Nutritional Value of Crops

EcoWatch - Climate change is bad for food production in more ways than one. Aside from stress from extreme heat, drought and flooding, climate change is also decreasing the nutrient value in crops, according to a new study.

The preliminary research, presented this week at the Society for Experimental Biology’s Annual Conference Antwerp 2025, has revealed that higher temperatures and increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere are leading to lower nutritional value for crops, especially for leafy greens. The findings build upon previous studies that have considered how a warming world could impact crop yields.

“Our work looks beyond quantity to the quality of what we eat,” said Jiata Ugwah Ekele, doctorate student at Liverpool John Moores University in the UK, as reported by ScienceDaily.

Ekele and her research team grew leafy crops, such as spinach, kale, and arugula, in labs with climate controls to mimic projected warming and greenhouse gas emission scenarios in the UK. 

 

 

How others help us

Sam Smith – As our national engagement with democracy and decency fades thanks in no small part to the action and views of the most distorted presidency in our history, it is worth looking for places where people are still doing things right.

For example, I suspect part of our problem is the result of smaller families than in the past. I grew up in a family of six children and so learned early in life that not everyone agreed with me and that just arguing about things didn’t help much. It was finding what you shared that really mattered.

Lately, it has struck me that another underrated blessing is living in a small town. I now live in one in Maine with a population of 8000 and I am repeatedly reminded of how different it is than what I see on TV about our national leaders and their policies and statements.

I can’t think of anything about my town that has outraged me as have the policies and verbiage of our national leaders. And this is not a new experience.

For over four decades I lived in DC covering both national and local news and it was the local that often really drove my efforts and my appreciation for that of others. In fact, in attempting to come up with the names of national figures who contributed to my energy, direction and values, I could only come up with a handful while the count of those worth admiring in the ‘hoods was substantial.

In fact, one of my earliest publications was the Capitol East Gazette – a local newspaper about the neighborhood near the US  Capitol that not only was a mostly ignored community but back in the 1960s had a substantial black population. 

One of the things I learned in local Washington was that blacks and whites could find things in common. For example, when I was in my twenties, I took part in a one day boycott of DC Transit to protest a fare increase. I drove 77 people to their destination and then wrote a piece about it. Which is how I got involved in civil rights and became friends with another guy in his 20s who had organized the boycott: Marion Barry.

Increasingly, as time went on, I learned the numerous ways that community, rather than just power, produces change. We ordinary citizens can do it without the direction of the powerful.  We have civil rights, labor unions, environmental action and women’s achievements thanks in no small part to the work of the ordinary. And I found, even though I was a rare church goer, that my activist friends included quite a few ministers and others involved in a church.

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Tariffs

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Amy Klobuchar  -
This New York Times Sunday headline says it all in just a few words. Businesses and customers in other countries will find new suppliers. They just won't be in our country or employ our workers. Major long term economic shift against U.S.

NPR - EU-U.S. trade is worth around a trillion dollars a year. This could be upended if 30% tariffs go into effect. Retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods were scheduled to take effect today, but have been suspended in hopes of reaching a trade deal by the end of the month...


Trump's war on PBS & NPR

 NY Times -   Congress is expected to vote by the deadline on Friday on a White House proposal, known as a rescission package. It would pull back more than $500 million per year in federal funding that is set to go to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the government-backed company that supports public radio and TV stations across the country. Last week, President Trump urged legislators to support the cuts, and threatened to withhold his support for any Republican lawmakers who oppose the proposal.

If the package passes, the federal funding for public media will dry up beginning in October. NPR and PBS would survive — they get a small percentage of their funding from the federal government. But the cuts would force many local stations to sharply reduce their programming and operations. Many public broadcasters receive more than 50 percent of their budgets from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

The cuts could even be a death sentence for some stations, which have survived several attempts to choke off funding over the decades.

Meanwhile. . .

Hear the Beatles first concert in the US  

Independent, UK Speaking to DAZN reporter Emily Austin on Sunday (13 July) following his appearance on the pitch after Chelsea’s Club World Cup win at the MetLife stadium, the US president discussed the difference between the British and American terms for the popular game.

“They call it football, we call it soccer. I’m not sure if that change can be made very easily,” he said. After Ms Austin asked Mr Trump if he could issue an executive order so only the word football is used, the US president chuckled as he replied: “I think we could do that.”

Kristina Janciova, Quora During his senior year at L.C. Humes High School in 1953, Elvis [Presley's] history teacher was Mildred Scrivener. She was also his homeroom teacher. One day, Elvis was caught eating an apple in her class. This was against the school rules, which said no eating outside the cafeteria. But Mrs. Scrivener didn’t scold Elvis for eating in class, nor did she stop him from finishing the apple. She knew that Elvis came from a very poor family and probably didn’t have enough money to buy lunch. She couldn’t bring herself to stop him, even though he was breaking the rules.  The next day, Mrs. Scrivener found a bright red apple on her desk. She immediately understood that it was Elvis’ way of saying thank you.

NY Times - Paul Bugas, who directed operations at a secret doomsday bunker, hidden beneath an opulent resort in West Virginia and intended to shelter members of Congress in the event of a Cold War-era nuclear attack, died on July 1 in Richmond, Va. He was 96...The shelter, roughly the size of an average Walmart store, was constructed between the late 1950s and 1962, the year of the Cuban missile crisis, the 13-day standoff between the United States and the Soviet Union over the presence of nuclear-armed Soviet missiles 90 miles off the coast of Florida.

Heat: Millions told not to drink coffee

Newsweek -  Millions of Americans were told to cut out coffee as heat-related warnings took effect across 11 states on Monday, and the National Weather Service  predicted "dangerously hot conditions" in some parts of the U.S. The NWS advised avoiding drinking alcohol and caffeine, which can speed up dehydration. Instead, it suggested drinking plenty of water or electrolyte-filled sports drinks, using sunscreen, and wearing light-colored, loose-fitting clothing.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), extreme heat can lead to heat-related illnesses, especially in older adults, young children and those with chronic medical conditions.

Symptoms may include heavy sweating, muscle cramps, dizziness and nausea. The CDC says more than 700 people die each year in the U.S. because of extreme heat.

Polling

Newsweek  

  • Trump's net approval rating stands at -6.7 percent, with 44.7 percent of Americans approving and 51.4 percent disapproving, per Silver Bulletin.
  • No major shifts have occurred in weekly polling averages, including those from YouGov and The Economist
  • Gallup reports just 35 percent of Americans approve of Trump's immigration policies, with 62 percent disapproving—a net rating of -27, the worst of his second term.

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America's new concentration camps

New Republic -  Think about $45 billion for detention camps. Alligator Alcatraz is expected to cost $450 million a year. Right now, a reported 5,000 detainees are being held there. The Trump administration says the new $45 billion will pay for 100,000 beds. So that’s 20 more Alligator Alcatrazes out around the country. But it’s probably even going to be worse than that, because the state of Florida, not the federal government, is footing the bill for that center. If the Trump administration can convince other states to do the same, or pay part of the freight, we’re looking at essentially a string of concentration camps across the United States...

Forty-five billion will build a lot of stuff. As a point of comparison: In 2023, the United States budgeted $12.8 billion to build new affordable housing. We’re about to spend nearly four times on detention centers what we spend on housing.

Trump hits the reverse button on history

 Peter Baker, NY Times -  On matters big and small, Mr. Trump has hit the rewind button. At the broadest level, he has endeavored to reverse the globalization and internationalism that have defined U.S. leadership around the globe since World War II, under presidents of both parties. But even at a more prosaic level, it has become evident that Mr. Trump, 79, the oldest president ever inaugurated, simply prefers things the way he remembers them from his youth, or even before that.

He has made clear that he wants to return to an era when “Cats” was the big hit on Broadway, not “Hamilton”; when military facilities were named after Confederate generals, not gay rights leaders; when coal was king and there were no windmills; when straws were plastic, not paper; when toilets flushed more powerfully; when there weren’t so many immigrants; when police officers weren’t discouraged from being rough on suspects; when diversity was not a goal in hiring or college admissions or much of anything else.

Just last month, Mr. Trump suggested going back to calling the Pentagon chief the “secretary of war,” a title retired in 1947, rather than secretary of defense, a term he dismissed as “politically correct.” Just this month, he again talked about reopening Alcatraz, the famed island prison in San Francisco Bay that was closed in 1963. Just last weekend, he said the Washington Commanders football team should not have dropped the name Redskins, which it did in 2020 amid heightened awareness of racial sensitivities.

Mr. Trump suggests that he is on a mission to halt what he considers the degradation of America by “radical left lunatics” and return the country to better times. “We’ve seen some of our political system attempting to overthrow the timeless American principles and other pillars of our liberty, and replace them with some of the most noxious ideas in human history, ideas that have been proven false,” he said earlier this month.   MORE

Things to remember about Donald Trump

Wikipedia - According to a review of state and federal court files conducted by USA Today in 2018, Trump and his businesses had been involved in more than 4,000 state and federal legal actions. While he has not filed for personal bankruptcy, his over-leveraged hotel and casino businesses in Atlantic City and New York filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection six times between 1991 and 2009. They continued to operate while the banks restructured debt and reduced his shares in the properties.During the 1980s, more than 70 banks had lent Trump $4 billion. After his corporate bankruptcies of the early 1990s, most major banks, with the exception of Deutsche Bank, declined to lend to him.  After the January 6 Capitol attack, the bank decided not to do business with him or his affiliated company in the future.

Legal issues 

See also: Personal and business legal affairs of Donald Trump and Legal affairs of the first Donald Trump presidency

In 2019, journalist E. Jean Carroll accused Trump of raping her in the 1990s and sued him for defamation over his denial. Carroll sued him again in 2022 for battery and more defamation. He was found liable for sexual abuse and defamation and ordered to pay $5 million in one case and $83.3 million in the other. In 2022, New York filed a civil lawsuit against Trump accusing him of inflating the Trump Organization's value to gain an advantage with lenders and banks. He was found liable and ordered to pay $350 million plus interest.[421]Classified intelligence material found during search of Mar-a-Lago

In connection with Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election and his involvement in the January 6 attack, in December 2022 the U.S. House committee on the attack recommended criminal charges against him for obstructing an official proceeding, conspiracy to defraud the United States, and inciting or assisting an insurrection. In August 2023, a grand jury in Fulton County, Georgia, indicted him on 13 charges, including racketeering, for his efforts to subvert the 2020 election in the state. 

In January 2022, the National Archives and Records Administration retrieved 15 boxes of documents Trump had taken to Mar-a-Lago after leaving the White House, some of which were classified In the ensuing Justice Department investigation, officials retrieved more classified documents from his lawyers.  On August 8, 2022, FBI agents searched Mar-a-Lago for illegally held documents, including those in breach of the Espionage Act, collecting 11 sets of classified documents, some marked top secret. A federal grand jury constituted by Special Counsel Jack Smith indicted Trump in June 2023 on 31 counts of "willfully retaining national defense information" under the Espionage Act, among other charges.Trump pleaded not guilty.\In July 2024, judge Aileen Cannon dismissed the case, ruling Smith's appointment as special prosecutor was unconstitutional. 

In May 2024, Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts of falsifying business records.[432] The case stemmed from evidence that he booked Michael Cohen's hush-money payments to adult film actress Stormy Daniels as business expenses to cover up his alleged 2006–2007 affair with Daniels during the 2016 election. On January 10, 2025, the judge gave Trump a no-penalty sentence known as an unconditional discharge, saying that punitive requirements would have interfered with presidential immunity.After his reelection, the 2020 election obstruction case and the classified documents case were dismissed without prejudice due to Justice Department policy against prosecuting sitting presidents.

For more information these cases, go to Donald Trump in Wikipedia 

There have been more than 400 lawsuits brought against the Trump administration this year.

 

Bondi fires her personal ethics chief

Bloomberg Law -   Attorney General Pam Bondi has fired her personal ethics adviser, removing the Justice Department’s top official responsible for counseling the most senior political appointees, according to two people familiar with the move.

Joseph Tirrell, a career attorney who’d spent nearly 20 years at the department, received a termination letter from Bondi July 11 that didn’t state a reason for his immediate removal from federal service. Similar to notices the Trump administration has sent to dozens of other DOJ civil servants, Bondi cited Article II of the Constitution, which concerns presidential powers, the sources said.

Tirrell headed the DOJ’s ethics office. His portfolio included reviewing and approving financial disclosures, recusals, waivers to conflicts of interest, and advice on travel and gifts for Bondi, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, FBI Director Kash Patel, and other DOJ leaders.

He also oversaw a team of ethics staffers that provide guidance to employees in all the department’s litigating offices, law enforcement agencies, and other branches.

Reached by email Sunday, Tirrell declined to comment. He posted the termination letter on LinkedIn on Monday morning.

A DOJ spokesman declined to comment.

Tirrell’s removal is separate—but potentially related—to the roughly 20 employees involved in Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigations, according to numerous media reports, were also fired July 11.

Tirrell advised Smith’s office on ethics matters during his criminal prosecutions of President Donald Trump, said the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity to share a sensitive personnel matter. That includes Tirrell approving Smith’s receipt of $140,000 in pro bono legal fees from Covington & Burling that he disclosed upon concluding his investigation.

Tirrell served six years as an officer in the US Navy before graduating law school from Michigan State University. He joined the FBI in 2006 before transferring to the Justice Department in 2018.

“I look forward to finding ways to continue in my personal calling of service to my country,” Tirrell said in his LinkedIn post Monday. “I encouraged anyone who is reading this to do the same.”

His ouster comes several months after Bondi removed or reassigned other career DOJ officials in charge of internal checks on the conduct of the department’s workforce. That includes, Bradley Weinsheimer, an associate deputy attorney general who made final calls on Tirrell’s ethics decisions—and Jeffrey Ragsdale, who led the professional responsibility office that investigated attorney misconduct.

The departure last month of DOJ’s longtime Inspector General Michael Horowitz also raised concerns about internal oversight going forward.

Trump dismissed in February the head of the Office of Government Ethics, an independent agency that would regularly consult with Tirrell’s team on conflicts and disclosures of political appointees.

Critics have said Bondi has politicized DOJ to advance White House priorities without regard for law enforcement standards.


Immigration

MSNBC - For the past 50 years, Gallup has measured Americans’ preferred rate of immigration based on three options: “should immigration be kept at its present level, increased or decreased?”

Last year, 55% of Americans said that immigration rates should be decreased. Now, that number has dropped down to 30%, the same as it was in 2021, when those rates began to climb. Another 38% of Americans think it should be kept at the same level, up from 26% last year, and 26% think it should be increased — a 10-point jump from the same time in 2024.

The shift seen among Republicans and independents is particularly noteworthy, as Gallup analyst Lydia Saad wrote:

With illegal immigration levels down dramatically and refugee programs suspended, the desire for less immigration has fallen among all party groups, but it is most pronounced among Republicans, down 40 percentage points over the past year to 48%. Among independents, this sentiment is down 21 points to 30%, and among Democrats, down 12 points to 16%. Republicans are the only group still showing at least plurality support for reducing immigration. Independents are most likely to favor maintaining current levels, while a plurality of Democrats favor increasing it.

At the same time, a record-high 79% of Americans now say that immigration is good for the country, compared to a record-low 17% who say otherwise. Accordingly, we’re also seeing a broader shift in support away from enforcement policies against undocumented immigrants and toward a pathway to citizenship for them. This poll showed 78% of all people surveyed supporting the latter, an 8-point jump. But crucially, there’s now a majority of support among self-identified Republicans (59%!) for a pathway to citizenship.

 NBC News - People being held in Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centers in at least seven states are complaining of hunger, food shortages and spoiled food, detainees and immigration advocates say. Some detainees have gotten sick and others have lost weight, they say....

The problems with food come amid overcrowding at ICE facilities tied to the Trump administration’s push to quickly ramp up immigration arrests. While capacity data isn’t publicly available for every ICE detention facility, nationwide figures on the availability of beds show a system beyond its overall capacity. As of mid-June, ICE was detaining nearly 60,000 people, almost 45% above the capacity provided for by Congress. More

The Guardian- Most of the more than 2.6 million farm workers in the US are Hispanic, non-citizen immigrants. Around 40% of US farm workers are estimated to be undocumented.

Last month, the Trump administration called for Ice arrest quotas of 3,000 per day, up from 1,000. Following criticism of the raids, Trump claimed that changes were coming to how raids were conducted in agriculture, hospitality and food service, though a directive issued by Ice to stop targeting such sites was reversed.

Trump recently claimed the administration is looking into legislation to defer immigration enforcement on farms to farmers. “Farmers, look, they know better. They work with them for years,” he said at a rally in Iowa on 3 July. The US president is “clearly” trying to give corporate leaders “as close to slavery … that he can give to them,” claimed Rosalinda Guillen, a farm worker from Washington, community organizer and founder of the non-profit Community to Community.

COVID

 Axios -  Cases of COVID-19 are on the rise or likely rising across half of the U.S., including much of the South as well as on the West Coast, according to a weekly update from the CDC.  The data suggests another summer of illness could be in the offing as more people lose protection from vaccination, natural immunity wanes and the virus keeps mutating...

  •  COVID-19 cases are growing in 25 states, including Florida, Texas, California and Ohio, per the CDC. They're likely growing in more than a dozen others.

New Medicaid rules add problems to states

Axios - The new Medicaid work rules in President Trump's tax-and-spending law put states on a tight timetable for setting up systems to notify millions of recipients about the requirements — and to track if they're complying.

Previous efforts to set work rules in Georgia and Arkansas showed it could be a messy and expensive process that generally relies on outside vendors to set up the necessary infrastructure.

  • Georgia spent nearly $100 million but in two years only enrolled a fraction of those eligible at a cost of $13,000 per enrollee.

The new law starting in 2027 will require states to condition Medicaid eligibility for able-bodied adults on working, volunteering or doing other qualifying activities for at least 80 hours per month.

  • States have to verify recipients' eligibility monthly and do redeterminations at least twice a year. The new law provides $200 million to states for implementation.
  • The technical requirements, and the compressed time frame for rolling out the rules, will likely leave many states scrambling or applying for extensions, Medicaid experts say...More

 

What's poisoning American children?

 Health & Wellness -  Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has released a comprehensive report highlighting an alarming increase in chronic diseases among American children, identifying poor diet, environmental toxins, lack of physical activity, and overmedicalization as the primary culprits.

  • Kennedy’s report identifies ultra-processed foods, which make up 70% of the average American child’s diet, as a major contributor to chronic disease
  • Environmental chemical exposure from heavy metals, pesticides, and microplastics is cited as another significant factor
  • Decreased physical activity and increased screen time (with nearly 50% of teens reporting being “constantly online”) are linked to rising health problems
  • One in five American children are currently on prescription medications, raising concerns about overmedicalization

 

July 13, 2025

Queen Victoria: a big fan of drugs

Queen Victoria
Via Alexander Bassano/Spencer Arnold—Getty Images

 Time -  Queen Victoria was a huge fan of drugs. That’s probably not what you’d expect from a stodgy old queen, but that’s a popular misconception. People tend to think of Queen Victoria as being super old, but in reality, she was only 18 when she ascended the throne, and she routinely enjoyed using a wide variety of pharmaceuticals.

Opium was one of her favorites—but she didn’t smoke it in a pipe. In 19th-century Britain, the more fashionable way to ingest opium was to drink it in the form of laudanum. This heady one-two punch of opium and alcohol was widely used to knock out pain or discomfort, whatever the cause. It was sort of like aspirin before there was aspirin—respectable doctors even recommended it for toddlers who were teething. Queen Victoria drank a big swig of laudanum every morning, believing it was the perfect way for a royal teenager to start her day

Cocaine was another of her darlings. It wasn’t illegal; it was brand-new, and Europeans were just starting to experiment with it. There were plenty of fun and exciting ways to consume cocaine back in the 1800s, but Queen Victoria’s personal preferences were chewing gum and wine. Cocaine chewing gum was perfect for soothing toothaches and sore gums from horrendous 19th-century British dentistry, plus it gave the chewer a powerful blast of self-confidence, which was great if you were a young, inexperienced queen trying hard to project a strong, assertive image.

 

National parks

Time - While there are 63 national parks, the NPS, in total, manages 433 sites across more than 85 million acres. The locations amassed a record 331 million visitors last year. In 2023, visitors spending in communities near these sites resulted in a $55.6 billion benefit to the nation’s economy and supported over 400,000 jobs, according to the NPS.

Trump showed some support for national parks during his first term, signing the Great American Outdoors Act, which dedicated up to $1.9 billion per year for five years to fund deferred maintenance projects identified by the NPS and other parks departments...

Advocates are now noting a sharper turn in Trump’s second term, voicing concerns over budget cuts, environmental protections rollbacks, and more. Trump’s eagerness to change Alcatraz Island, a designated national park, and reopen it as a functional prison is also causing alarm.


 

 The Case for Living an Average Life

Ukraine

Simon Tisdall, The Guardian - Ukrainian heroism amid horror has become so familiar, it’s almost taken for granted. But as Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, escalates the war, raining nightly terror on Kyiv and other cities using record waves of armed drones, as US support and peace efforts falter, and as Ukraine’s overstretched frontline soldiers face exhaustion, such complacency looks increasingly misplaced. A no longer hypothetical question becomes ever more real and urgent: what if Ukraine falls?

Answer: Ukraine’s collapse, if it happens, would amount to an epic western strategic failure matching or exceeding the Afghanistan and Iraq calamities. The negative ramifications for Europe, Britain, the transatlantic alliance and international law are truly daunting. That thought alone should concentrate minds.

It has been evident since the dying days of 2023, when its counteroffensive stalled, that Ukraine is not winning. For most of this year, Russian forces have inexorably inched forward in Donetsk and other eastern killing grounds, regardless of cost. Estimated Russian casualties recently surpassed 1 million, dead and wounded. Still they keep coming. While there has been no big Russian breakthrough, for Ukraine’s pinned-down, under-supplied defenders the war is now a daily existential struggle. That they manage to keep going at all is astonishing.

 

Courts

NY Times - Many Americans in positions of power, including corporate executives and members of Congress, seem too afraid of President Trump to stand up to his anti-democratic behavior. Federal judges have shown themselves to be exceptions. “Judges from across the ideological spectrum are ruling against administration policies at remarkable rates,” said Adam Bonica, a political scientist at Stanford University.

These rulings have halted Mr. Trump’s vengeful attempts to destroy law firms, forestalled some of his budget cuts and kept him from deporting additional immigrants. Yes, the Supreme Court has often been more deferential to the president. Still, it has let stand many lower-court rulings and has itself constrained Mr. Trump in some cases.We’ve compiled quotations from judges’ recent rulings and bench comments. 

Judge orders Trump administration to stop immigration arrests without probable cause in Southern California


 This round of budget cuts in Medicaid far exceeds any other cut the United States has made in its social safety net. The approximately $1 trillion reduction, over 10 year... Previously, the most draconian cuts came with President Ronald Reagan’s 1981 tax law. But they were far smaller — $12 billion over 10 years .... The Trump law will remove more than 11 million people from the rolls, compared with about three million under the Reagan cuts. Other noteworthy reductions to the social safety net, such as the Clinton-era welfare reform, were even smaller.....

A number of studies suggest that removing one million people from the rolls for one year could result in about 1,000 additional deaths. It follows that removing more than 11 million people for a decade would probably result in more than 100,000 deaths. Because this figure fails to take account of the degradation of service to those who remain eligible — fewer rides to the hospital, less social support — it could well be an underestimate.

Texas type flooding to be more common

 New Yorker -  What can be said, and quite definitively, is that, in a warming world, flooding of the sort that occurred in Texas will be more common. The hotter the air, the more moisture it can hold. This is a recipe for fiercer downpours, and, indeed, a trend toward more intense rainfall has already been documented across the United States. 

According to the Fifth National Climate Assessment, published in 2023, the amount of rain falling on so-called “extreme precipitation days” has, during the past several decades, increased by twenty per cent in the region that includes Texas, by almost half in the Midwest, and by a staggering sixty per cent in the Northeast. “Climate change is forcing a reexamination of our concepts of rare events,” the report noted. A study released this week by a group of European researchers concluded that the Kerr County floods bear the fingerprints of warming. “Natural variability alone cannot explain the changes in precipitation associated with this very exceptional meteorological condition,” the researchers wrote. 

Sick children among victims of Trump's big bill

 New Yorker - During the pandemic, the federal government required states to automatically reënroll people in CHIP and Medicaid. But the requirement ended in 2023. After that, Texas set about disenrolling poor children from benefits with such cold vigor that the Biden Administration’s Department of Health and Human Services threatened to take action. According to a joint investigation by ProPublica and the Texas Tribune, more than two million Texans, most of them children and most of them eligible for Medicaid or CHIP, lost their coverage.

Stupid Trump stuff

New Republic -  “I want to thank you for your leadership,” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told Trump. “Several times, the day after the Texas flooding, you and Melania were on the phone with me, and I want to thank you for that.

MSNBC -  The Department of Justice has opened criminal investigations into two longtime targets of Trump's ire. That mere existence of criminal probes helps the president accomplish his goal of undermining former FBI Director James Comey and former CIA Director John Brennan, who previously looked into his troubling ties to Russia, writes Zeeshan Aleem. It also suggests that anyone who raises questions about Trump's conduct in the future could be punished similarly, no matter how flimsy the evidence. That's bad for democracy, of course, but it could even rewrite history. More. 

MSNBC -  One of Trump's latest trade threats — a 50% tariff on imports from Brazil — feels more personal than others. In a letter to Brazil's president, Trump said that he was imposing the massive spike partly because of the country's trial of former President Jair Bolsonaro on charges of attempting to illegally overturn the 2022 election, writes Hayes Brown. Though Trump has been on a tariff tear lately, the missive was far more aggressive in tone than many of the others sent this week, which might be attributed to his closeness to the polarizing Bolsonaro. More.