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Month: October 2021

The Marjorie Greening of America

A new GOP star is born:

Idaho’s rogue Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin doesn’t like having to explain her actions. When a CNN reporter asked her Friday to explain why she was “undermining” her boss by issuing a rogue ban on vaccine mandates, she shot back, “I’m not going to talk anymore to an activist.” Gov. Brad Little was out of state on official business this week when McGeachin sneakily issued an executive order banning COVID vaccine mandates in schools. It was the third time McGeachin, who reportedly intends to run for governor, double-crossed her boss while he was out of town; she previously imposed a state-wide mask ban and mobilized National Guard troops to go to the Mexico border.

“What do you say to your critics who say this is absurd?” the reporter asked McGeachin Friday. “Again, you’re being an activist,” she said, adding she’s not anti-vax but is anti-mandate. The reporter pointed out there are no vaccine mandates in Idaho. “Interview’s over,” she said as she stormed off.

I think she’s 2024 VP material, don’t you?

What a gal:

In February 2019, McGeachin posted a photo on her Facebook page of her posing in front of her Idaho State Capitol door with two members of the 3 Percenters, an anti-government militia movement group. The men wore shirts promoting Todd Engel, who was sentenced to prison in connection with the Bundy standoff fatal encounter with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF). For the caption, she wrote “Sending love to Todd Engel from the Idaho Capital and ‘getting to know’ the new Senate Pages.” McGeachin faced public criticism for the photo and quickly deleted it. In a subsequent statement, McGeachin described the men as “two Second Amendment supporters who were here to support Todd Engel, an Idahoan who was treated unjustly by the court system,” and said that she deleted the post after “a few people had begun erroneously assigning sinister motives which are contrary to my true character.” The Idaho Falls Post Register editorial board criticized McGeachin for embracing the 3 Percenters and militia movement.

In 2021, McGeachin convened an “education indoctrination task force” co-chaired by fellow Republican Priscilla Giddings. The committee was premised on the notion that “the scourge of critical race theory, socialism, communism, and Marxism” was “infiltrating” the Idaho school and college system. Committee members discussed proposals to abolish the Idaho State Board of Education. Idaho teachers described McGeachin’s committee as a McCarthyist attack on teachers and a distraction from the challenges faced by Idaho’s education system in reality.The Idaho Statesman editorial board described the effort as “a manufactured witch hunt” driven by the “far-right fringe of Idaho’s politics.”

In August 2021, a state judge fined McGeachin $750 for violating the Idaho Public Records Act by failing to turn over documents requested by the Idaho Press Club. The judge found that McGeachin acted “in bad faith” and that “It appears to the court that respondent would stop at nothing, no matter how misguided, to shield public records from the public.”

She is a dedicated Trump cultist, a Trump delegate to the 2016 RNC and vice chair of his campaign in Idaho in 2020. Let’s just say that I’m pretty sure if Trump asked her to overturn the election she wouldn’t hesitate.

Big hands, Big crowd

JONATHAN KARL, ABC NEWS CHIEF WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): While the Capitol was invaded by his supporters, Donald Trump remained out of sight at the White House.

Establishing what exactly he was doing is a central goal of the January 6 investigation in the House. The committee has demanded a mountain of confidential documents related to what Trump, his top aides and members of his family were up to during the riot.

On Friday, President Biden ordered the National Archives to turn over a batch of those documents. While presidents of both parties have long fought to protect executive privilege, which allows a president to keep deliberations with aides confidential, Biden’s White House counsel said, in this case: “President Biden has determined that an assertion of executive privilege is not in the best interests of the United States.”

JEN PSAKI, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY: He believes it to be of the utmost importance for both Congress and the American people to have a complete understanding of the events of that day to prevent them from happening again.

KARL: Trump is vowing to fight in court, asserting the documents must remain confidential and issuing an angry statement against what he called a fake investigation.

ABC’s Jonathan Karl has a book coming out that he says has new information about what went on in the White House during the insurrection:

For my upcoming book “Betrayal: The Final Act of the Trump Show,” I spoke to several people who were in contact with Trump during the riot. Trump, the sources say, was watching TV in his private dining room.

He liked what he saw.

He boasted about the size of the crowd, and he argued with aides who wanted him to call in his supporters to stop the rioting.

He liked what he saw. I don’t doubt it. But I’ll be interested to see what evidence Karl brings that backs that up.

This is how I’ve always assumed Trump saw that crowd. He was proud, happy, excited by it. It showed how much they loved him and how they were taking matters into their own hands to overturn the election. That was his last coup strategy — violent overthrow. Obviously, he didn’t think through how that was going to end but he doesn’t do that. As he’s always said: when things don’t go as he wants them to he’ll just figure it out, he always has.

This time it didn’t go his way and he couldn’t make it work. Now, I suspect he’s glad of it. He can run again as a restoration leader and by the time it happens, people will have forgotten the worst atrocities, presumably the pandemic will be over and the Democrats will have cleaned up most of his messes. It’s all good.

Anyway, there’s more:

After the riot had been under way for some two hours, Trump finally agreed to make a video statement. In that message, he reluctantly agreed to ask his supporters to go home, but he also praised them.

DONALD TRUMP, FORMER PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: We love you. You’re very special.

KARL: In “Betrayal,” I revealed that an aide who was present for the video recording told me: “Trump had to tape the message several times before they got it right. And in earlier rejected versions, Trump neglected to tell supporters to leave the Capitol.”

Those video outtakes are precisely the kind of thing that could help the committee establish Trump’s state of mind during the riot.

Video outtakes? Oh yeah. I don’t know if they exist or whether the January 6th commission can get its hand on them but it would be very interesting to see.

Here’s another looney tunes detail, and it’s one I haven’t heard already:

In an excerpt from the soon-to-be-released Betrayal by ABC News’s Jonathan Karl, which was shared on Sunday’s edition of This Week, the former president was said to be “intrigued” by the theory – which was presented to him by Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark, who Trump wanted to install as acting attorney general.

“[Clark] believed that wireless thermostats made in China for Google by a company called Nest Labs might have been used to manipulate voting machines in Georgia,” Karl wrote. “The idea was nuts, but it intrigued Trump, who asked Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe to look into it.”

Gee, I wonder why the Pentagon leaders’ hair was on fire during this period. This is the kind of batshit crazy nonsense Trump was listening to.

…They’re going to rape their lives away.”

This has the all the hallmarks of the Westboro Baptists anti-gay protests. In this case they are evil people evoking their God to hurt little children and cancer patients. It’s grotesque in the extreme:

Shiva Bagheri was holding a sign reading “Keep America Free” with her left hand as she pointed with her right hand at a woman who was walking with a young boy in a procession to mark National Walk to School Day last week.

“He’s going to be traumatized because you put that mask on him and you don’t tell him to breathe through it,” Bagheri can be heard saying in a video of the encounter outside a Beverly Hills school.

The woman quickened her pace and sought to just continue on. But Bagheri was not done using her freedom of speech to berate the woman with a lie.

“You’re traumatizing him!” Bagheri said.

The woman reached a limit. She turned back to Bagheri.

“That’s my choice,” the woman said. “You better respect my choice, too.”

“No, no, you’re propagandizing, you’re not being told the truth,” Bagheri replied.

The boy bowed his head and clapped both hands over his ears. As the woman swept him up in her arms, he turned his head away from Bagheri.

“You’re scaring your kid by yelling,” Bagheri said, exhibiting simultaneous delusion and denial.

Bagheri kept at it as she neared the school entrance and stood with a dozen fellow protesters. Also present were a number of uniformed Beverly Hills cops who had apparently decided they could do nothing to stop what now became unacceptable.

“You should choose what goes on your children’s face and in your children’s body,” Bagheri called out to the parents and kids.

She then actually said, “This is rape. This is rape. They’re trying to rape our children with this poison….”

Bagheri, who later told The Daily Beast that her child attends the school, is a familiar figure from numerous other viral videos of anti-mask, anti-vaccine protests she says she organized as part of a divine mission.

“From God,” she told The Daily Beast.

Even before she began shouting about rape to schoolchildren, Bagheri had become notorious, having been sentenced to community service for illegal “freedom” rallies and caught on video punching a cancer patient at one of her protests.

After the harassment outside Hawthorne Elementary School on Wednesday, one can only wonder: What in God’s name is next?

Bagheri says her alleged activism began after she and her daughter contracted COVID-19 in February 2020. Her child only experienced one manifest symptom—“My daughter threw up all over my car,” she said—but Bagheri’s heart raced and her sense of taste was altered.

“My heart was like BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!” she recalled. “To this day, I’ve got a metallic taste to my food I never had before. It’s bizarre.”

Just as bizarre: The experience did not convince Bagheri of the seriousness of COVID. Instead, the dog-walker and dance instructor began her own investigation of the virus.

“I did a lot of research,” she said.

Bagheri already held a Trumpian view of the media and ascribed to various conspiracy theories involving the CIA and mass brainwashing. She now entered an online realm peopled by self-proclaimed experts who declared that the pandemic was a scam and that mask mandates were an assault on freedom itself and it was all part of some huge conspiracy involving Big Pharma and the CIA.

In June 2020, she began holding regular “Beverly Hills Freedom” rallies. The first few were at Burger Lounge. She then moved them to the park that features the iconic Beverly Hills sign. The city came to view the events as an annoyance and she received three misdemeanor summons for organizing gatherings without a permit and eventually entered into a plea deal where she received 20 days community service and pledged not to organize any other gatherings without a permit.

She also led flash mobs into businesses that require masks in keeping with city and state health orders. Several patrons in a Beverly Boulevard supermarket reported feeling terrorized after she stampeded through with a barefaced group.

“The masks do nothing!” Bagheri declared at the market, wearing a red MAGA hat. “That’s why you can wear anything! I don’t wear underwear over my face! I’ll pull off my underwear right now and put them over my face.”

This past June, Bagheri was a lead protester outside Cedars-Sinai Breast Health Services because, like any cancer clinic, it requires masks. Somebody reached out to push away a megaphone through which Bagheri was amplifying untruths. Bagheri started after the person and a cancer patient named Kate Burns tried to block Bagheri with her shoulder. Bagheri says she was only reacting to being assaulted and defending herself when she punched Burns. Burns was also hit with bear spray produced by another protester.

“Yep—I am the cancer patient—maced and hit twice in my surgery scar… this IS the bad place ,” Burns later tweeted.

https://twitter.com/Katerqburns/status/1418475389878358020?s=20

I don’t know why she wasn’t charged with assault. But hey, I guess these people have “rights” that others don’t have, obviously.

But please, let’s talk about how AWFUL it was that poor Senator Krysten Sinema was followed into a bathroom and asked some questions about her voting record.

Bagheri has expanded her original anti-mask protests to now include COVID vaccines, but says she is not against other immunizations that she and her child have received.

“It’s only this one,” she said.

Her haranguing of parents and children outside Hawthorne Elementary seemed to mark a new frontier in her frenzied efforts to stop people from doing the very things that can stop the pandemic and save lives. It came as schools have become a flashpoint for the increasingly unhinged COVID denialists.

The video shows an unleashed puppy scampering in front of Bagheri with a youngster in pursuit. A uniformed cop in a white motorcycle helmet turned and reflexively stepped in to assist, but then stopped. No reflex prompted him to interfere as Bagheri continued on, untempered by the metallic COVID taste still in her mouth.

“…They’re going to rape their lives away.”


[…]

She clearly doesn’t have anything else to do what with her dance instructor and dog-walker career supposedly being derailed by COVID. It would be interesting to know how she can afford to spend all of her time being a screaming freak on the sidewalk:

Bagheri is almost certain to continue her protests, which have become a focus of her life. She was previously a dance and fitness instructor and a dog-walker, but the pandemic all but ended that.

“I’ve been cleaning toilets lately,” she told The Daily Beast.

Asked about the child she frightened outside Hawthorne Elementary, Bagheri said it was all the mother’s fault. Never mind that the video shows the mother had been peacefully walking hand in hand with her son when Bagheri pointed at her from a crowd of protesters and aggressively accused her of traumatizing the boy. Never mind that it caused him to clamp his hands over his ears before his mother protectively swept him up in her arms.

“She was the one freaking out,” Bagheri insisted. “I was more calm than she was. She was yelling and freaking out. She was scaring her kid..”

Bagheri then complained that some of the parents at Hawthorne called her a murderer.

“I don’t know a single person who died of COVID,” she said. “If I’m a murderer, I should know who I murdered. That’s how sick this is.”

Bagheri thereby proved herself so sick that she can dismiss more than 700,000 deaths from COVID in America alone, with many more sure to come, in part because of misinformation of the kind she spreads. She can cite freedom of speech when spreading lies on picket signs. But she is not free to use social media to spread potentially deadly falsehoods.

Facebook made that clear with a notice she received on Thursday, coincidentally or not the day after the bullying of moms and kids outside Hawthorne:

Shiva Bagheri

We suspended your account

ON OCT 7, 2021

Some of your previous posts or comments didn’t follow our Community Standards. Your account isn’t visible to people on Facebook and you can’t use it.

She told The Daily Beast that she figures she is permanently banned.

“I know it was just a matter of time there,” she said.

She reported that some of her fellow protesters are growing weary.

“They get discouraged,” she said.

But not her. Bagheri says she is determined to keep on protesting even as thousands more will die unnecessarily because they shun masks and vaccines.

This is an egomaniac who is loving the attention she gets for being a monster. But then she’s hardly the only one, is she?

He’s not done with us yet

Aaron Rupar has a new substack that you can subscribe to here. His twitter coverage of Trump is unparalleled and the analysis in the newsletter is excellent. He covered trump’s rally last night and addresses the issue of whether or not it’s newsworthy to cover Trump now that he isn’t president.

Let’s just say that he’s not going away and burying your head in the sand and pretending he is no longer relevant is a mistake. He is extremely relevant. He is the undisputed leader of the Republican party and they are formidable. Forgetting that is one of the left’s biggest weaknesses.

Here’s a piece of what he had to say:

Two days after Trump went on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show and echoed the racist opening line of his first presidential campaign by accusing Haitian migrants of spreading AIDS, top Iowa Republicans provided the latest demonstration Saturday of how Trump’s hold over the party remains absolute, with Gov. Kim Reynolds, Sen. Chuck Grassley, and Reps. Mariannette Miller-Meeks and Ashley Hinson introducing him before his rally in Des Moines.

Grassley’s night encapsulated the corner Republicans have backed themselves into. Before the rally, Iowa’s senior senator went on Newsmax and turned reality on its head, arguing that Trump actually worked to thwart the January 6 insurrection (nevermind that tape of Trump pressuring a Georgia official to “find” votes for him) and as such is the victim of another witch hunt.

Grassley was later invited onstage by Trump during the rally to receive an endorsement — the 88-year-old recently announced he’s running for another term in the Senate — and offered an extremely cynical rationale for accepting it.

“If I didn’t accept the endorsement of a person that’s got 91 percent of the Republican voters in Iowa, I wouldn’t be too smart,” Grassley said.

Rupar astutely points out:

In the Q&A that launched Public Notice, political scientist Brian Klaas told me he doesn’t think America will survive another Trump presidency. That’s debatable, but what isn’t is that Republicans not only continue to refuse every opportunity to put some distance between themselves and the man who earlier this year tried to intimidate Congress against certifying his election loss, but are eager to take the stage with him when he comes to their communities.

You may be done with Trump — and believe me, I get it — but Trumpism is not done with us.

Don’t look away, people. The consequences could be catastrophic.

What’s in the bill?

This piece by Peter Drier at TPM talks about the inane insistence that Democrats are in disarray simply because a small handful in the House and two divas in the Senate are holding the entire Biden agenda hostage. All of what he says is true. The Democrats are actually in lockstep except for a few outliers who are gumming up the works.

But I thought this was an excellent recitation of what is contained in that agenda and it’s important that we remind ourselves of what’s at stake in all this:

Soon after Biden took office in January, he, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer agreed to draft two bills that reflected key parts of the president’s campaign promises. One involved a $1 trillion (over ten years) public-works infrastructure plan, about $550 billion of which would be new spending not previously allocated by Congress. The other focused on expanding the nation’s social safety net and addressing climate change, and would cost $3.5 trillion over ten years — though that figure is misleadingly high, as explained below.

In August, the Senate approved a $1 trillion physical infrastructure plan to rebuild roads, replace water pipes that have toxic lead, expand broadband internet, shore up coastlines against climate change, modernize the electric grid, protect public utility systems from cyber attacks, pay for new public transportation, and upgrade airports and railroads. Speaker Pelosi has postponed a vote on that bill; Biden, Schumer and Pelosi have all insisted that both bills should move in unison.

The safety net and climate change plan is stuck primarily because Manchin and Sinema won’t go along. Manchin has demanded that at least $2 trillion be lopped off Biden’s plan, which would result in a $1.5 trillion bill — an amount that Rep. Cori Bush (D-MO) dismissed as “crumbs.” Sinema won’t even say what her ideal figure is.

The Build Back Better plan would expand Medicare and, for the first time, provide dental, vision, and hearing coverage to the 60 million elderly and disabled Americans who rely on it. It would expand health care for roughly four million low-income people in the states (most of which are run by Republicans) that have refused to expand Medicaid on their own. The provision to expand the Child Tax Credit to $300 a month per child under six and $250 a month per child age 6 to 17 would cut child poverty by half, according to some estimates. The Biden plan would also offer free public pre-kindergarten and two years of free community college and provides 12 weeks of paid family and medical leave, which would guarantee that all Americans have the time to care for themselves and their families and loved ones.

The plan also includes provisions to deal with climate change and cut greenhouse gas emissions, including a clean-electricity program designed to significantly reduce fossil fuel emissions from U.S. power plants by 2035. It would invest billions of dollars to build 500,000 electric-vehicle charging stations and update the electrical grid to make it more effective during extreme weather events.

The Republicans and the handful of Democratic dissenters typically describe the plan as “massive,” “big government,” and “unprecedented.”

In fact, the plan would only amount to roughly 1.5% of the country’s gross domestic product. This is a smaller increase than that of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal (which included Social Security and unemployment insurance) and President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society programs (which included Medicare and Medicaid).

Even the $3.5 trillion figure is misleading. It would stretch over ten years, a fact that many news reports ignore or downplay. One expert estimated that the total cost is less than three dollars (actually $2.88) a day.

Moreover, the $3.5 trillion would be offset by $2.9 trillion in new revenue, according to recent estimates. So the actual cost is just $0.6 trillion.

To pay for the plan, Biden proposed raising the corporate tax rate from 21 percent to 26.5 percent on companies’ annual income over $5 million. He’s also proposed restoring the top tax rate to 39.6 percent on individuals earning more than $400,000 — or $450,000 for couples — plus a 3 percent surtax on wealthier Americans with adjusted income over $5 million a year. As such, the plan would partially reverse the trillions that the Trump administration and the Republican Congress gave away to the wealthy and big business in tax cuts through their signature legislative achievement of the Trump era. Moreover, Biden’s plan would reduce federal taxes for eight out of 10 households.

Imagine if the Democrats get this through. Imagine the material improvement in people’s lives and the positive progress we will make in securing the planet’s future. ( If we don’t do the latter, the lives of our grandchildren will be immeasurably worse in ways I don’t even want to contemplate. )

Drier goes on to point out that if the small faction of self-serving “moderates” are able to destroy this agenda, the Democrats will have to go to the voters with nothing to show for their majority and many of them will lose their House seats while Manchin and Sinema will be pariah’s in the new minority to which they will have ensured the Democrats are consigned.

And he implores the press to accurately portray what is happening:

If Biden’s bill doesn’t make it through Congress, don’t blame “the Democrats.” Blame every Republican, and the tiny faction of Democrats, who have put their personal ambitions over the public good.

Let’s just say I’m not holding my breath.

Umbrella man, false flag

Somehow this doesn’t surprise me:

A masked, umbrella-wielding man accused of helping incite riots and looting in the aftermath of George Floyd’s police-involved death has been identified as a member of a white supremacist group that aimed to stir racial tensions amid largely peaceful Black Lives Matter protests, according to police.

The 32-year-old, dubbed “Umbrella Man,” was captured in a viral video back in May wearing a black hooded outfit and a black gas mask as he smashed store windows with a sledgehammer and encouraged people to steal, according to a search warrant affidavit filed in court this week.

His actions quickly led to the first of several arson fires that police say transformed peaceful protests into local danger zones, the affidavit said. He’s also accused of spray painting the words “free s— for everyone zone” on the doors of an AutoZone before he allegedly smashed in the windows. The store was broken into and set on fire shortly after, the affidavit said.

“This was the first fire that set off a string of fires and looting throughout the precinct and the rest of the city,” Erika Christensen, a Minneapolis Police Department arson investigator, wrote in a search warrant affidavit filed in court this week. “Until the actions of … ‘Umbrella Man,’ the protests had been relatively peaceful.”

“The actions of this person created an atmosphere of hostility and tension. Your affiant believes that this individual’s sole aim was to incite violence,” she added.

Investigators said the suspect is associated with the Aryan Cowboys, which the warrant describes as a “known prison gang out of Minnesota and Kentucky.” The Anti-Defamation League lists the Aryan Cowboys as a white supremacist prison and street gang, although the group’s Facebook page claims it doesn’t care “about a person’s color.”

No charges had been filed as of Wednesday afternoon. The investigation is ongoing.

Christensen, the arson investigator, said police identified the suspect after an emailed tip last week. The tipster described the man as someone who “wanted to sow discord and racial unrest by breaking out the windows and writing what he did on the double red doors.”

Police did not reveal exactly how they corroborated the tip, but they said the man also was present during “an incident in Stillwater Minnesota where a Muslim woman was racially harassed by a group of motorcycle club members wearing Aryan Cowboy leather vests.”

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey warned residents of the possibility that white supremacists could be trying take advantage of increased racial tensions, but those claims were never proven.

“In the last few days, both our city and state law enforcement capacities have been overwhelmed by simple math — an overwhelming ratio of rioters that even our unified effort has been unable to push back,” Frey tweeted on May 30 as the state deployed the National Guard to help calm the streets. “We are now confronting white supremacists, members of organized crime, out of state instigators, and possibly even foreign actors [seeking] to destroy and destabilize our city and our region.

He was right but Trump and Bill Barr insisted Antifa was responsible for all the violence and wanted to send in the military. A whole lot of people believed it.

This guy want the only one:

MINNEAPOLIS — A Texas man who claims to be a member of the “boogaloo bois,” a far-right anti-government group intent on starting a second civil war, is facing a riot charge, federal prosecutors said Friday, alleging that the man opened fire on Minneapolis’s 3rd Precinct police station in an attempt to stir up civil unrest during the May protests over George Floyd’s death.

According to a federal criminal complaint filed Monday and made public Friday, Ivan Harrison Hunter, a 26-year-old from Boerne, Tex., traveled to Minneapolis after Floyd’s death and was captured on surveillance video May 28 firing 13 rounds from an AK-47 into the precinct building as it was overtaken by protesters. According to the complaint, Hunter fired his gun and shouted, “Justice for Floyd!”

He pled guilty just a couple of weeks ago.

How many others were there, do you suppose?

16 tons of Frosted Flakes

Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union (BCTGM) members, about 1400 of them, are on strike at Kellogg’s cereal factories in Michigan, Tennessee, Nebraska and Pennsylvania after contract talks broke down over the company offshoring jobs (The Guardian, emphasis mine):

Trevor Bidelman, president of BCTGM Local3G and a fourth-generation employee at the Kellogg’s plant in Battle Creek, Michigan, explained workers are on strike against a proposed two-tier system for current and new employees proposed by Kellogg’s. Bidelman said Kellogg’s wants to not offer pensions to new employees, remove cost of living provisions, and make changes in holiday pay and vacations.

“We’re fighting for our future,” said Bidelman. “We made it very clear from the onset of negotiations that this was not something we’ll be able to accept.”

Shortly before the strike, Kellogg’s announced plans to cut 212 jobs at the Battle Creek, Michigan, plant over the next two years, including 174 positions represented by the union. The plant currently employs about 390 workers. Kellogg’s cited plans to streamline efforts and relocate cereal production to other facilities in North America as reasons for the job cuts.

“This is after just one year ago, we were hailed as heroes, as we worked through the pandemic, seven days a week, 16 hours a day. Now apparently, we are no longer heroes. Very quickly you can go from hero to zero,” added Bidelman. “We don’t have weekends, really. We just work seven days a week, sometimes 100 to 130 days in a row. For 28 days the machines run then rest three days for cleaning. They don’t even treat us as well as they do their machinery.”

The union took issue with Kellogg’s threatening to outsource jobs from the US to Mexico if workers refuse to accept their proposals.

Seriously, watch this:

“They want to complain about what our wage is, and they want to talk about what our wage is,” says one worker. “Well, if you didn’t make me work every single Saturday and Sunday, if you didn’t make me work every single holiday, my annual income wouldn’t be at these levels that you wanna spread around like it’s a bad thing.” 

“It’s like a death of 1,000 cuts. They’re slowly eliminating jobs out of the Lancaster plant,” said Kerry Williams, who works in processing maintenance at the Lancaster, Pennsylvania, facility. “We had to work through this Covid for the last two years and they’ve just shown disrespect for the union name. They even want to remove our union logo from the cardboard cereal box.”

Will Bunch writes at The Philadelphia Inquirer:

“It’s all about corporate greed,” Kerry Williams, the president of Local 374G of the BCTWGM union at the Lancaster plant, told me this week, echoing the most common refrain on the picket line. “They’ve been paying their shareholders and bonuses to their top executives.” But now the men and women on the assembly line want their fair share — just like Kellogg’s CEO, Steven Cahillane, who made $11.6 million in 2020, or the shareholders boosted by a major stock buyback.

If a large, old-fashioned labor strike — nationwide, some 1,400 union members have walked out at four main Kellogg’s cereal plants — feels like a nostalgic oddity, it won’t feel that way for long. Experts say the food-industry icon is on the cutting edge of what they’re calling a “strike wave” that will hit America this fall. The Guardian reported that week that planned work stoppages — from other traditional factories to hospitals, college campuses, and even Hollywood — could number tens of thousands before autumn is done.

On the West Coast, as many as 35,000 nurses or other unionized staffers for the health-care giant Kaiser Permanente are either already on strike or planning walkouts, burned out by the long-running COVID-19 crisis and now insulted by lowball wage increases proposed by the company. In Hollywood, a whopping 60,000 workers are threatening what would be the first major strike against the film industry since World War II, with union members seeking more pay after longer workdays and what they say were unsafe working conditions during the pandemic. The recent roundup by the Guardian pointed to a score of other planned work stoppages, from transit and public works employees to John Deere factory workers to university grad students.

The pandemic’s isolation and shutdowns, for those who stayed home, and the relentless grind of risking one’s life for a paycheck has, Bunch writes, “caused millions of Americans to rethink their fundamental relationship with work.” But “artificial persons” employing them are not prone to self-reflection.

It was probably inevitable that this new take-this-job-and-shove-it mentality would make its way into those labor unions that have survived the shrinkage of the latter 20th century. The upside-down condition of the job market has fed-up workers more inclined to fight back and call their bosses on their threats (like moving more work to Mexico, as Kellogg has suggested). The fact that so many employers are desperate for help in 2021 has given workers who choose to strike a potential safety net that didn’t exist a generation ago.

COVID-19 is not the only plague around. Economic inequality fits the definition in what is widely memed as “late capitalism.” (The Atlantic‘s Annie Lowrey offers an explainer.) But it is not only economic inequality at issue. As unions lost ground, the balance of power between employers and employees has shifted for decades in the direction of the investor/employer class, as the testimony of Kellogg’s employees makes clear.

Bunch adds that “legacy” union members earn an average of $35.26 an hour (and more with overtime). That is pretty good pay, and “a measure of what unions once accomplished.” But the Kellogg’s strike is, in our “stupendously individualist culture,” about more. It is a refreshing sign of solidarity among workers with those coming up behind them that the power imbalance fostered by metastasized capitalism needs serious readjustment.

You don’t have to be the Red Army Choir to see that.

Showing ’em how it’s done

Anderson Clayton chairs the Democratic committee in Person County, North Carolina. (Photo via her Twitter feed.)

Not everything is going to hell far too quickly and right before your eyes.

Democrats in rural places tend to keep the brand at arm’s length. The Washington Times last week spotlighted Democrats who despite that reflex are running as Democrats. Being the Washington Times, the paper frames advocacy for Medicare-for-All and living wages as “policies that historically tend to turn off rural communities.” But a reminder: Bernie Sanders defeated Hillary Clinton in the 2016 primary in what is now Rep. Madison Cawthorn’s rural North Carolina district. Sanders also won West Virginia by 15 points and most of the Great Plains states.

There is a reason (unmentioned) that the Washington Times interviewed my friend Anderson Clayton, 23, chair of the Democratic Party in Person County, North Carolina.

I spoke by phone with Clayton in August. She a high-energy fast-talker. I came away convinced I could charge my Tesla off her. If I had a Tesla. Since then she raised money to support several high school interns and for get-out-the-vote operations. Clayton was also elected president of the state’s Association of Democratic County Chairs.

Rural Person County (population 39,000) sits on the Virginia border north of Durham. Clayton returned home to Roxboro (IIRC) after organizing last year in Iowa and Wisconsin for Elizabeth Warren and in Kentucky for Amy McGrath. Person County voted for Donald Trump last November by 60%, three points higher than 2016. City of Roxboro precincts narrowly voted for Joe Biden by 2 points.

Last week, Clayton helped Roxboro elect its first-ever majority-minority city council, including its first two Black women. She told the Washington Times that she’s accepting of “anyone and everyone that’s willing to meet with me and who will hear out my message …  new jobs, economic opportunity, new job training.” When she finds them, regardless of party, she said, “I go after [them.]”

The woman is not shy.

Part of the reason Democrats fail to get traction in rural America is failure to be loud and proud about what they stand for. Another is that many Democratic committees have all the institutional vigor of a mid-20th-century men’s fraternal organization. What’s needed is not just more younger activists, but more “legacy Democrats” willing to stand aside and let them take the reins.

That “You can’t believe in something you’ve never seen” is one reason Democratic rural counties underperform. They don’t know what they don’t know, and it’s not their fault. The big campaigns don’t set up out there. There are no role models for vigorous organizing, too few like Clayton to bring those big-campaign skills to them. And no one teaches it. Almost no one.

What’s happening with the variants?

Salon’s Nicole Karlis got some answers. I’m not sure if it’s reassuring or not:

In September, news broke that a new coronavirus mutation — the mu variant, formally known as B.1.621 — could potentially evade vaccine-induced immunity.

“This variant has a constellation of mutations that suggests that it would evade certain antibodies, not only monoclonal antibodies, but vaccine- and convalescent serum-induced antibodies,” President Joe Biden’s COVID-19 adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci told reporters in September. “But there isn’t a lot of clinical data to suggest that. It is mostly laboratory in-vitro data.”

At the time, the idea of a vaccine-resistant variant sent a shockwave of fear through the world. The dreaded delta variant was already known to be more resistant to vaccines than the original SARS-CoV-2 virus. Could mu, which was first discovered in Colombia, be worse than delta? Indeed, mu appeared to have specific mutations that have been associated with resistance to immunity, as well a mutation known as P681H that has been linked to accelerated transmission.

Now, nearly a month later — long after the World Health Organization dubbed the mu variant one “of interest” that needed to be monitored — data from outbreak.info shows the mu variant hasn’t been detected in the U.S., nor anywhere in the world, since September 21, 2021.

Does that mean the mu is no longer a threat? The short answer is: probably. But Joseph Fauver, an associate research scientist at the Yale School of Public Health, wouldn’t go as far as saying it’s been “eradicated,” as some news outlets have reported either.

“To say it was ‘eradicated’ would imply that we, humans, went out of our way to make that happen … but as far as mu or B.1.621 longer being around, yeah, I would totally buy that,” Fauver said.

Fauver clarified: “What actually happened was that it was effectively out competed by delta.”

A similar trend has been observed with the alpha variant, or B.1.1.7, which was first found in the United Kingdom. According to outbreak.info, a multi-institution coronavirus public health database which collects genomic data from the GISAID Initiative, B.1.1.7 was last detected in the U.S. on September 17, 2021. It was last detected anywhere in the world on September 21, 2021.

As Fauver explained, these dates are derived from the last known genetic detection of each variant in random samples from patients. Because not every COVID-19 case is sampled and DNA tested, there is no way to know with absolute certainty if these variants are indeed still circulating — especially when COVID-19 positive case rates are as high as they are in the United States.

But as weeks go by, the delta variant continues to be the dominant strain worldwide.

Delta’s dominance over the other strains may be a blessing in disguise. Indeed, delta is spreading 50% faster than alpha and is 50% more contagious than previous variants. Yet mu certainly had its own set of troubling mutations.

“Mu contains a suite of mutations that are very concerning,” Fauver said. “Mutations that have been found in a lot of other variants of concerns, specifically in the Spike gene and receptor-binding domain, also by a variety of studies, look to be slightly more immuno-evasive than some of the other variants of concern.”

Fauver added: “If it would not be for delta it may have been much more concerning and it could have gotten to a lot higher frequencies.”

If that’s the case, why did the delta variant win out?

“Million dollar question,” Fauver said. “I can confidently say that delta is more transmissible, but exactly as to why, I think the jury’s still out and there’s still more science to be done.” Fauver speculated it could have to do with something happening at a molecular level. 

If the variants that made up the first part of the pandemic essentially die off, and delta is the dominant one worldwide, does that mean delta is the variant we can expect to stay around long-term? Not yet. That’s because RNA viruses like SARS-CoV-2 are always mutating. While viruses are technically not alive, it is their nature to mutate and evolve as they infect hosts’ cells and replicate.

In fact, the delta variant has already mutated— just not in a way that’s been significant to humans. In general, the rate at which mutations happen depend on the virus.

“Viruses replicate and survive and pass their genes to the next generation just by making more copies of themselves,” said Sasan Amini, founder and CEO of Clear Labs, a private genomics company. “This replication process is not a perfect process, meaning that while you’re going through the replication process errors will be introduced. But these errors are actually being corrected and the result of that actually ends up creating copies that are almost identical to each other.”

Many mutations get eliminated in the process of natural selection, Amini said, but sometimes mutants get a competitive advantage— like delta.

“Those mutants actually end up replicating faster, being more infectious, and end up over time becoming the more prevalent part of the population,” Amini said. “And that is pretty much what happened.”

Amini said some of delta’s mutations are similar to mu, but not all. This is all to say that it’s possible that delta could mutate into something different.

“Whatever is defined as delta today is not going to be pretty much the only SARS-CoV-2 that you will see in future,” Amini said. “And as a result of that actually means that it is very essential for any government entity, public health entity, all of the public health response, to surveil and sequence emerging and also existing versions of SARS-CoV-2.”

Does this mean an even worse iteration of delta awaits? Fauver said he’s not in the “prediction business,” but said that a lot of mutations seen in variants of concern are shared. They have, he said, the same “repertoire.”

“Is there some new suite of mutations out there, waiting to be found, to make the virus even worse? I have no idea,” he said. “Delta is really transmissible, it is a really bad virus, and I hope it doesn’t really get any worse than this.”

It;s obvious that COVID is going to be with us in one way or another forever. I guess we have to hope that Delta is worst it’s going to get. It certainly will be better if everyone in the world would/could get vaccinated. But that seems like a distant dream at the moment. The best we can do is keep up with the vaccines and try to keep ourselves as safe as possible.