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After Donald Trump won the election, he was still so full of hatred, bile, and spite, that he sued the pollster Ann Selzer as well as the Des Moines Register. Selzer, who has been one of the most trusted names in polling, released a poll slightly before the election that predicted a somewhat shocking victory of Kamala Harris in Iowa. It (obviously) turned out to be very wrong, but making a wrong prediction does not violate the law.

What’s happened since reveals something more concerning: a systematic approach to gaming the legal system that goes beyond typical SLAPP suit tactics. Trump’s lawyers aren’t just trying to win—they’re trying to exploit procedural gaps to avoid accountability mechanisms specifically designed to stop this kind of litigation abuse.

The entire intent of the lawsuit was to chill speech and punish those who don’t tell Trump what he wants to hear at every moment.

Not surprisingly, the lawsuit is not going well. It was initially filed in a local state court in Polk County, Iowa, but the defendants had it removed to federal court, where the standards are even higher, and where Trump would have a much more difficult time. Generally speaking, defendants in cases like this want them in federal courts where the judges are more likely to understand the underlying issues (especially around gamesmanship by plaintiffs). In this case, it was removed to federal court on diversity grounds, which is typical when the plaintiff is from out of state.

Selzer and the Register sought to dismiss the complaint, while Trump sought to have the case sent back to the state court. He did so by (1) adding two more plaintiffs (random other politicians who live in Iowa so there was no longer diversity), and (2) making some weird procedural argument that the method of removal went against Congress’s intent. On May 23rd, the court denied Trump’s attempt to move the case back to state court, noting that the procedural argument was nonsense. And it found that Trump’s attempt to add Iowa plaintiffs to the case was a pretty transparent attempt to try to get around diversity rules to force the case back to the state court.

Trump appealed that ruling to the Eighth Circuit, but something important had happened earlier in May which it appears Trump’s lawyers only realized belatedly. On May 20th, Iowa’s governor signed the state’s first anti-SLAPP bill into law. Now, it doesn’t apply to cases filed before the law goes into effect (July 1st), but it does mean that if Trump were to, say, file a brand new lawsuit now, it would be subject to anti-SLAPP rules. This would (1) make it even easier for the case to be dismissed, while (2) likely make it so Trump would have to pay Selzer and the Register’s legal bills.

So, his lawyers are trying some more gamesmanship. Even though they’ve already appealed the district court’s ruling, and that appeal is moving forward, they have tried to voluntarily dismiss the district court case, while filing a brand new state court case with the same random extra Iowa politician plaintiffs… the day before the new anti-SLAPP law goes into effect.

Basically, they’re trying to get a do over. The district court said they couldn’t add those extra plaintiffs to avoid diversity, and even though they appealed that ruling, they still want to refile the case (with the added plaintiffs) in state court. But they had to do it before July 1st. But they had already appealed the district court’s denial of the request to remand the case back to state court, so this all appears to be pure gamesmanship.

In response, Selzer and the Des Moines Register are asking the district court to deny Trump’s attempted dismissal, noting that it’s obviously playing games to try to get around the earlier ruling rejecting the attempt to send the case back to state court, and even calling out how it’s doing this to avoid the new anti-SLAPP law.

The defendants note that once Trump filed his appeal, the district court no longer controls the case:

However, the case cannot be dismissed at the district court while appellate proceedings are ongoing. This is because “the district court is divested of jurisdiction over matters on appeal” upon the initiation of that appeal. State ex rel. Nixon v. Coeur D’Alene Tribe, 164 F.3d 1102, 1106 (8th Cir. 1999); Ahlberg v. Chrysler Corp., 481 F.3d 630, 638 (8th Cir. 2007) (finding that orders pertaining to matters pending on appeal have “no effect”).

And then, they describe how Trump is playing games to avoid the new anti-SLAPP law:

Lastly, President Trump’s Notice must be evaluated in the light of long-standing Eighth Circuit law holding that “[a] party may not dismiss simply to avoid an adverse decision or seek a more favorable forum.” Cahalan v. Rohan, 423 F.3d 815, 818 (8th Cir. 2005) (citing Hamm v. Rhone-Poulenc Rorer Pharm., Inc., 187 F.3d 941, 950 (8th Cir. 1999))

Before this Court, President Trump has lost his motion for remand, (ECF No. 65), lost his motion to stay the case, (ECF No. 70), and has a pending deadline to file a revised Amended Complaint. (Id.) And fulsome Motions to Dismiss warranting dismissal of the case in full and with prejudice are currently pending before this Court with substantial briefing. (ECF Nos. 24, 28, 33, 35, 51, 52, 57, 61.)

Furthermore, in conjunction with his improper Notice of Voluntary Dismissal, President Trump newly filed a lawsuit in the Iowa District Court for Polk County today; however, the new Petition is substantively unchanged from the President Trump’s First Amended Complaint in the present case. (See Ex. C: Petition (June 30, 2025).) The timing of this filing is significant: it is one day before Iowa’s Uniform Public Expression Protection Act (commonly known as an “antiSLAPP law”) goes into effect. See House File 472, available at https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=91&ba=HF472 (Governor’s approval of House File 472, Uniform Public Expression Protection Act on May 19, 2025), codified at Iowa Code § 652.1, et seq.; see also Iowa Code § 3.7(1) (stating that all acts “passed at regular sessions of the general assembly shall take effect on the first day of July following their passage). This new legislation would apply to President Trump’s lawsuit; therefore, President Trump’s present Notice of Voluntary Removal would effectively escape the jurisdiction of the federal courts in time to restate his claims in Iowa’s state court without being subject to Iowa’s anti-SLAPP law.

In these circumstances, this Court should rightly find that President Trump’s Notice of Voluntary Dismissal improperly seeks “to avoid [the] adverse decision[s]” of this Court—both past and future—and “a more favorable forum” in Iowa’s pre-anti-SLAPP courts. Cahalan, 423 F.3d at 818.

The timing here is almost comically transparent. Trump’s lawyers clearly realized they had a problem if they planned to file a new lawsuit once Iowa’s anti-SLAPP law was about to take effect. Their solution was to try to dismiss the federal case they’d been fighting to get back to state court, refile the exact same claims in state court, all on the last day before the new protections kicked in.

It’s a perfect illustration of how Trump approaches litigation: not as a search for justice, but as a game to be manipulated. When the rules change in ways that might hold him accountable, he doesn’t accept the new reality—he tries to find procedural workarounds to avoid them entirely.

The federal judge has already seen through one round of Trump’s transparent gamesmanship. Whether she’ll allow this latest attempt to dodge accountability will likely determine whether Ann Selzer and the Des Moines Register can finally put this vindictive lawsuit behind them, or whether they’ll be dragged through state court proceedings that should never have been allowed in the first place.


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While the GOP budget bill continues to include no limit of corrupt garbage that will kill millions of Americans (the cuts to Medicaid and rural hospitals being particularly brutal), one key component of the GOP agenda didn’t quite make the cut. Ted Cruz had proposed withholding billions of dollars in federal broadband grants for states that attempt any oversight of AI.

The proposal was one of several cut to try and get the hugely unpopular GOP bill across the finish line. As it turns out, Cruz had a tough time getting enough support for his ignorant plan, and ultimately joined 98 other Senators in a 99-1 vote shooting down the amendment (Sen. Thom Tillis was the one dissenting vote):

“Facing overwhelming opposition from both Democrats and Republicans, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) accepted defeat and joined a 99-1 vote against his own plan to punish states that regulate artificial intelligence.”

States are poised to get more than $42.5 billion dollars in broadband deployment subsidies as part of the 2021 infrastructure bill. The Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD), a key component of the bill, had taken years of collaborative work between state and federal governments. In part because we needed to remap broadband access across every county in the United States.

A lot of this money is poised (as usual) to get dumped in the laps of telecom giants, which is a major reason Cruz’s gambit failed (AT&T drove heavy opposition by longtime AT&T ally Marsha Blackburn, who initially worked with Cruz on a “compromise” offering, before that collapsed entirely). But much of this money is also poised to go to really useful fiber upgrade proposals via efforts like regional cooperatives or community-owned broadband networks.

If the bill had passed states would have been faced with choosing between funding rural broadband, or avoiding oversight of increasingly reckless AI giants keen on ignoring what’s left of U.S. labor and environmental standards. They would have definitely taken the broadband money.

Cruz and the GOP have also been busy “helping” American broadband connectivity in other ways, like his recent successful effort to kill an FCC program that helped give poor rural schoolkids access to free Wi-Fi. As well as killing a program that made broadband more affordable for low-income Americans. And the illegal dismantling of the Digital Equity Act and its protections against broadband discrimination.

So while it’s nice Ted Cruz’s latest dumb effort failed, it’s hard to be celebratory. Republicans have been taking an absolute hatchet to every last federal effort to ensure our monopoly-dominated broadband networks are affordable. They’ve also effectively killed all federal consumer protection; policies that will reverberate in negative ways for decades to come.

The budget battle followed the fairly typical Republican playbook: make your initial offer so extremist and awful that any concessions are disguised to feel like a victory. But the final GOP budget bill remains a giant and unpopular piece of shit, and one of the most corrupt and disgusting attacks on vulnerable Americans in the history of modern politics.


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When it comes to the anti-piracy efforts taken by some of the more aggressive companies out there, such as Nintendo, the most frustrating part of the whole thing for me is just how completely short-sighted those efforts tend to be. Take Nintendo’s updated EULA for its Switch consoles, for example. The updated agreement makes several changes from its previous iteration, but the most notable is that Nintendo says that if it thinks you’re doing the piracy for any reason, it can suspend all kinds of services on your console, up to and including bricking it completely. And, while the company has yet to go the bricking route so far, it has already begun suspending all online services on consoles for the use of MIG Switches, cards for Switch devices on which you can load legitimately extracted ROMs from purchased games, or pirated versions of the same.

Now, the first layer of how this is short-sighted is easy enough to see. In order to engage in copyright protectionism, Nintendo is risking long-term reputational damage by functionally ruining the consoles of customers for actions that aren’t illegal, or even immoral. Short term protection, longer term risk of everyone thinking you don’t care about your own customers.

But there’s another layer to this, as a result of these service suspensions being tied directly to the device rather than the person. And that is what this protectionism means for the secondary market for Nintendo Switches.

As spotted by Android Authoritya Reddit poster bought themselves a pre-owned Switch 2 from a Walmart store, only to find it had been previously incapacitated by Nintendo.

“I was driving between work sites and stopped at two different Walmarts,” says user Bimmytung. “At the second one I find a Mario Kart edition sitting in the case and couldn’t believe my luck.” They were informed by the Walmart staff that it was an “open box return,” so it was removed from the box to be checked over, and all looked well. The code for the packaged Mario Kart World had been scratched off already, so Walmart knocked another $50 off the price, and it all seemed like a good deal. Until they got home.

Finally after work I get a chance to set it up. Quickly realize I need the super special micro SD card and none of the ~half dozen in the house would work. Drive ten minutes to Target and get one there and pick up a few other accessories as well. Get home and go to finish the setup—quickly get Error Code 2124-4508. A quick Google search shows me I’m screwed. FML.”

Now, there are several layers of shame here to go around. Shame on Walmart for selling a device without ensuring it would work for the buyer the way it is intended to work. And shame on Nintendo for creating an anti-piracy program such that the punishments meted out are linked to hardware rather than the supposed bad-actor it seeks to punish.

But all of that aside, it should also be true that this sort of thing drives the value of a Nintendo Switch console lower than it would be otherwise. Part of the value you gain when you buy a physical thing is the ability to eventually put it on the secondary market at some point. Because of the actions that Nintendo is taking in disabling and/or bricking its own consoles, that injects a great deal of risk into the prospect of buying one on the secondary market. The value of the hardware is, by at least some measure, diminished.

But because Nintendo seems to only think about these things in the short term, the company probably doesn’t much care.

However, the more immediate issue is for those looking to pick up a Switch 2 from a reseller or previous owner, given their current scarcity at first-party sellers. There’s really no way of knowing at all if a console has been bricked when buying the device online, and this could make the resale market a complete shambles for the whole life cycle of the console. And, grimly, that’s not exactly a priority for Nintendo, given that reselling, either in store or online, gains the company nothing, and some would argue actually costs the company a sale—it’s not like it’ll be in a rush to address the problem.

Which is why I won’t be in a rush to buy a Switch 2 anytime soon. And I’m certainly in their target market, having two young children who desperately want one. Instead of the console, however, they will be getting a lesson in making smart buying decisions as a consumer.


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I need to say something that will make many of you deeply uncomfortable: your refusal to call fascism “fascism” is not sophistication—it’s complicity.

When Donald Trump posts explicit orders for “REMIGRATION” and “Mass Deportation Operations” targeting American cities because they are “the core of the Democrat Power Center,” that’s not “controversial immigration policy.” That’s mass deportation directed against political opponents. When federal troops deploy against American civilians exercising constitutional rights, that’s not “enhanced law enforcement.” That’s military occupation. When the systematic dismantling of democratic institutions gets described as “political polarization,” that’s not nuanced analysis—it’s linguistic evasion that enables the very thing it refuses to name.

The sophisticates hate this clarity. They prefer the safety of euphemism, the comfort of complexity that never quite arrives at moral judgment. They speak of “concerning developments” and “troubling trends” while democracy burns around them. They perform nuanced understanding while fascism consolidates power through their very refusal to name it.

But here’s what they don’t understand: authoritarianism thrives in ambiguity. It requires linguistic fog to operate. It depends on our unwillingness to call things by their proper names. Every euphemism is a small surrender. Every hedge is a tiny collaboration. Every refusal to speak plainly is a gift to those who profit from confusion.

Language Shapes Reality

Language shapes consciousness. When we refuse to name what we see clearly, we don’t just fail to communicate—we erode our collective capacity to think clearly, to feel appropriately, to respond effectively. We make ourselves complicit in our own moral disorientation.

George Orwell understood this when he wrote that “political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.” But he was describing propaganda techniques used by totalitarian regimes. What we face now is worse: the voluntary adoption of euphemistic language by people who should know better, who pride themselves on seeing clearly, who claim to defend democratic values.

We are doing the propagandists’ work for them.

Consider how this linguistic distortion operates in practice. When mass deportation operations targeting millions of people get called “immigration enforcement,” we’re not being diplomatic—we’re making state violence psychologically easier to accept. When systematic attacks on democratic institutions get labeled “political disagreements,” we’re not showing balance—we’re normalizing authoritarianism. When obvious lies get treated as “alternative perspectives,” we’re not being fair—we’re weaponizing false equivalence against truth itself.

The euphemism isn’t just descriptive failure—it’s moral failure. It changes how people process information, how they make decisions, how they understand their own moral obligations. When you call fascism “populism,” you’re not just using imprecise language. You’re making it easier for people to support fascism without confronting what they’re supporting.

Arendt’s Warning

Hannah Arendt spent her life studying how ordinary people enable extraordinary evil, and she identified linguistic evasion as one of the primary mechanisms. In Eichmann in Jerusalem, she showed how bureaucratic language—“evacuation,” “resettlement,” “special treatment”—allowed participants in genocide to avoid confronting the reality of what they were doing. They weren’t murdering children; they were “processing population transfers.” They weren’t operating death camps; they were managing “facilities for the final solution.”

The language didn’t just hide the reality from others—it hid it from themselves. It allowed them to participate in evil while maintaining their self-image as decent, law-abiding citizens following proper procedures.

Arendt’s insight was that evil becomes possible not primarily through active malice but through the refusal of ordinary people to see and name what’s in front of them. The “banality of evil” is fundamentally about linguistic evasion enabling moral evasion. When we stop calling violence violence, we make violence easier to commit.

This is what we’re witnessing now. The systematic training of a population to see clearly but speak obliquely, to understand precisely but describe vaguely, to recognize authoritarianism but call it something else. We have become a society of people who know exactly what’s happening but lack the linguistic courage to say so.

The Practice of Plain Naming

Consider how this evasion plays out in our current discourse:

We don’t say “Trump is implementing fascist policies.” We say “Trump’s approach raises concerns about democratic norms.”

We don’t say “Republicans are supporting mass deportation operations.” We say “There are disagreements about immigration enforcement strategies.”

We don’t say “Conservative media spreads lies designed to enable authoritarianism.” We say “Different sources present different perspectives on complex issues.”

We don’t say “MAGA supporters have chosen to enable fascism.” We say “There are legitimate grievances driving political polarization.”

Each euphemism makes the reality a little less clear, a little less urgent, a little less morally demanding. Each hedge creates space for people to avoid confronting what they’re witnessing or participating in. Each refusal to name plainly is a small act of collaboration with the forces that depend on confusion to operate.

When Trump orders ICE to conduct “Mass Deportation Operations” in cities he identifies as “the core of the Democrat Power Center,” that’s not immigration policy—it’s the use of state violence against political opponents. When he calls for “REMIGRATION” of millions of people, that’s not border security—it’s forced population transfer. When federal agents separate families and detain children, that’s not law enforcement—it’s state-sanctioned cruelty.

The defenders will say “the law is the law”—as if legality were equivalent to morality. But slavery was legal. Segregation was legal. Japanese internment was legal. Every authoritarian regime in history has operated through law, not despite it. “The law is the law” is not a moral position—it’s moral abdication disguised as principled governance.

Law without moral foundation is just organized violence. Rules without ethical grounding are just systematized cruelty. When your only defense of a policy is that it’s technically legal, you’ve already admitted it’s morally indefensible.

The Sophisticates’ Resistance

The sophisticates will tell you that such plain language is “inflammatory,” “divisive,” “unhelpful to productive dialogue.” They’ll suggest that calling fascism “fascism” alienates potential allies, shuts down conversation, makes compromise impossible.

But here’s what they’re really saying: they prefer the comfort of ambiguity to the responsibility that comes with clarity. They’d rather maintain the illusion of reasoned discourse than confront the reality that one side has abandoned reason entirely. They want to keep playing by rules that the other side has explicitly rejected.

This isn’t sophistication—it’s cowardice. It’s the intellectual’s version of appeasing authoritarianism through linguistic accommodation. It’s the belief that if we just find the right words, the right tone, the right approach, we can somehow reason with people who have chosen unreason as their governing principle.

But you cannot have productive dialogue with fascists about the merits of fascism. You cannot find common ground with people who reject the premise of shared reality. You cannot compromise with those who view compromise as weakness and good faith as stupidity.

What you can do is name what they are doing clearly enough that people understand what’s at stake and what choice they face.

The Power of Clarity

The power of plain naming is that it forces moral confrontation. It makes people choose sides. It strips away the comfortable distance that euphemism provides. It demands that people acknowledge what they’re actually supporting rather than hiding behind sanitized language.

This is why authoritarians work so hard to control language. They understand that linguistic precision is the enemy of moral confusion. That clear naming makes their projects harder to defend. That euphemism is their friend and clarity is their enemy.

They want us to call their fascism “nationalism.” Their lies “alternative facts.” Their cruelty “tough love.” Their mass deportations “border security.” Their authoritarianism “law and order.”

Every time we adopt their language, we do their work. Every time we refuse to name their actions plainly, we make those actions easier to defend, easier to rationalize, easier to continue.

When we refuse to call fascism “fascism”, we don’t make fascism less dangerous. We make ourselves less capable of recognizing and resisting it. We participate in our own disorientation. We become accomplices to our own confusion.

The Courage to Act

The courage to name things plainly is not the courage to be harsh or inflammatory. It’s the courage to accept the responsibility that comes with seeing clearly. It’s the courage to abandon the comfortable illusion of neutrality and acknowledge that some things cannot be straddled, some positions cannot be hedged, some realities cannot be euphemized away.

To say that systematic deployment of federal troops against American cities constitutes military occupation is not inflammatory—it’s accurate. To say that mass deportation operations targeting political opponents constitute fascist policy is not hyperbolic—it’s precise. To say that obvious lies designed to enable authoritarianism are lies is not divisive—it’s necessary.

The alternative to plain naming is not diplomatic nuance—it’s moral blindness. It’s the systematic erosion of our capacity to recognize authoritarianism when it appears in familiar forms, speaking familiar languages, wearing familiar clothes.

Evil depends on our unwillingness to call it evil. Fascism depends on our refusal to call it fascism. Lies depend on our treatment of them as “alternative perspectives.” State violence depends on our description of it as “tough policy choices.”

The moment we name these things plainly, we restore the moral clarity that makes effective resistance possible. We acknowledge what we’re actually facing. We accept the responsibility that comes with seeing clearly. We choose truth over comfort, accuracy over diplomacy, moral clarity over intellectual sophistication.

This is not just a linguistic choice—it’s a moral one. Every time we speak plainly about what we’re witnessing, we strike a blow against the forces that depend on confusion to operate. Every time we call fascism “fascism”, we make fascism a little harder to defend. Every time we name state violence as state violence, we make such violence a little less acceptable.

Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And Trump’s mass deportation operations are fascistic displays of state violence targeting political enemies whether we have the courage to call them that or not.

The difference is not in the reality—the difference is in our capacity to respond to reality appropriately.

Name it plainly. Not because it’s easy, but because it’s true. Not because it’s comfortable, but because comfort in the face of authoritarianism is itself a form of collaboration. Not because it’s diplomatic, but because diplomacy with fascists is enabling fascism.

The revolution is linguistic honesty. The rebellion is calling things by their proper names. The resistance is refusing to participate in the euphemistic erosion of moral clarity.

Say what you see. Name what you know. Call fascism fascism.

Every minute of every day.

Remember what’s real. Because the alternative to naming fascism clearly isn’t moderation or diplomacy—it’s surrender.

Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.


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At a time when politicians on both sides reflexively call for censorship and speech policing, it’s refreshing to see someone actually defend free speech principles—especially when it would be politically easier to cave.

That’s exactly what New York City Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani did when NBC’s Meet the Press tried to pressure him into condemning language he’s never used. Rather than take the bait, Mamdani delivered a strong defense of free speech principles. It’s a better defense of free speech than we’ve seen from most politicians lately.

What makes this particularly frustrating is that many of the Democrats attacking Mamdani should be laser-focused on the existential threat Trump poses to democracy. Instead, they’re wasting time and energy going after someone who actually accomplished what establishment Democrats claim they desperately want: activating young people who often fail to vote. Mamdani didn’t just talk about engaging young voters—he did it, handily winning the Democratic primary by mobilizing exactly the demographic Democrats say they need. His reward? A coordinated attack campaign.

The controversy stems from demands that Mamdani condemn the phrase “globalize the intifada”—language he doesn’t use but which critics insist he must denounce to prove he’s not antisemitic. It’s the kind of ridiculous purity test that marginalized politicians routinely face (but somehow, white, Christian, male politicians never do), demanding they repeatedly distance themselves from the words of others simply because they share some demographic or political similarity.

But rather than playing that game, Mamdani chose to defend the principle that government officials shouldn’t be in the business of policing speech—even speech they personally disagree with. At the same time, he used the opportunity to move from the “gotcha” kind of question to a focus on how to tackle the actual problems of racism and bigotry, beyond just focusing on specific language questions.

There’s been a lot of pressure on Mamdani to specifically criticize pro-Palestinian language used by others. And, over the weekend, he went on Meet the Press and gave, what I think, is a really strong answer to a silly gotcha question that I think others could learn from:

KRISTEN WELKER:

I want to ask you about an issue that has divided some New Yorkers in recent weeks. You were recently asked about the term “globalize the intifada,” if it makes you uncomfortable. In that moment you did not condemn the phrase. Now, just so folks understand, it’s a phrase that many people hear as a call to violence against Jews. There’s been a lot of attention on this issue, so I want to give you an opportunity to respond here and now. Do you condemn that phrase “globalize the intifada?”

ZOHRAN MAMDANI:

That’s not language that I use. The language that I use and the language that I will continue to use to lead this city is that which speaks clearly to my intent, which is an intent grounded in a belief in universal human rights. And ultimately, that’s what is the foundation of so much of my politics, the belief that freedom and justice and safety are things that, to have meaning, have to be applied to all people, and that includes Israelis and Palestinians as well.

KRISTEN WELKER:

But do you actually condemn it? I think that’s the question and the outstanding issue that a number of people, both of the Jewish faith and beyond, have. Do you condemn that phrase, “globalize the intifada,” which a lot of people hear as a call to violence against Jews?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI:

I’ve heard from many Jewish New Yorkers who have shared their concerns with me, especially in light of the horrific attacks that we saw in Washington, D.C. and in Boulder, Colorado about this moment of antisemitism in our country and in our city. And I’ve heard those fears and I’ve had those conversations. And ultimately, they are part and parcel of why, in my campaign, I’ve put forward a commitment to increase funding for anti-hate crime programming by 800%. I don’t believe that the role of the mayor is to police speech in the manner, especially of that of Donald Trump, who has put one New Yorker in jail, who’s just returned to his family, Mahmoud Khalil, for that very supposed crime of speech. Ultimately, what I think I need to show is the ability to not only talk about something but to tackle it and to make clear that there’s no room for antisemitism in this city. And we have to root out that bigotry, and ultimately we do that through the actions. And that is the mayor I will be, one that protects Jewish New Yorkers and lives up to that commitment through the work that I do.

KRISTEN WELKER:

But very quickly for the people who care about the language and who feel really concerned by that phrase, why not just condemn it?

ZOHRAN MAMDANI:

My concern is to start to walk down the line of language and making clear what language I believe is permissible or impermissible takes me into a place similar to that of the president, who is looking to do those very kinds of things, putting people in jail for writing an oped. Putting them in jail for protesting. Ultimately, it’s not language that I use. It’s language I understand there are concerns about. And what I will do is showcase my vision for this city through my words and my actions.

Note what he does here. It would be easy enough to give into the framing and make statement condemning the language. And while some will (in bad faith) argue his failure to outright condemn the language is an endorsement of it, that’s bullshit. His answer is actually very thoughtful and a good way to approach such bad faith questions.

He starts out with a direct and clear denial of using that language:

That’s not language that I use.

This immediately deflates the premise that he’s somehow responsible for words he’s never spoken.

He then immediately shifts to a more positive framing of how he views what he’s focused on in his hopes of becoming mayor: human rights for all.

The language that I use and the language that I will continue to use to lead this city is that which speaks clearly to my intent, which is an intent grounded in a belief in universal human rights. And ultimately, that’s what is the foundation of so much of my politics, the belief that freedom and justice and safety are things that, to have meaning, have to be applied to all people, and that includes Israelis and Palestinians as well.

When NBC’s Welker trots out the purity test point, demanding he condemn it, he points out that he shouldn’t be in the business of policing language, but rather is focused on actual concerns of the people he’s hoping to represent. In doing so, he makes it clear that he’s concerned about actual antisemitism and actual threats and risks, and he’s looking at what might actually help rather than policing specific language:

I’ve heard from many Jewish New Yorkers who have shared their concerns with me, especially in light of the horrific attacks that we saw in Washington, D.C. and in Boulder, Colorado about this moment of antisemitism in our country and in our city. And I’ve heard those fears and I’ve had those conversations. And ultimately, they are part and parcel of why, in my campaign, I’ve put forward a commitment to increase funding for anti-hate crime programming by 800%.

And then he pivots to a reasonable defense of free speech, not in the misleading sense the way others view it, but rather in noting that government shouldn’t be in the business of policing speech (as Trump is doing) but focusing on where the real problems of hate and bigotry show up.

I don’t believe that the role of the mayor is to police speech in the manner, especially of that of Donald Trump, who has put one New Yorker in jail, who’s just returned to his family, Mahmoud Khalil, for that very supposed crime of speech. Ultimately, what I think I need to show is the ability to not only talk about something but to tackle it and to make clear that there’s no room for antisemitism in this city. And we have to root out that bigotry, and ultimately we do that through the actions.

After Welker desperately goes back to the “but won’t you condemn the language” nonsense, he makes it clear that speaking out on specific language choices is not productive when his focus is on dealing with the actual underlying problems:

My concern is to start to walk down the line of language and making clear what language I believe is permissible or impermissible takes me into a place similar to that of the president, who is looking to do those very kinds of things, putting people in jail for writing an oped. Putting them in jail for protesting. Ultimately, it’s not language that I use. It’s language I understand there are concerns about. And what I will do is showcase my vision for this city through my words and my actions.

This final answer is particularly smart because it connects his refusal to condemn specific language to Trump’s actual authoritarian attacks on free speech. Rather than getting trapped in semantic debates about particular phrases, he’s defending the broader principle that government officials shouldn’t be arbiters of acceptable speech.

The contrast is stark: while the Trump regime is literally jailing people for their speech, critics want Mamdani to engage in the kind of speech policing that leads down that same authoritarian path. His refusal isn’t endorsement of problematic language—it’s recognition that the role of government isn’t to play word police.

This is exactly the kind of principled free speech defense we need more of, especially from Democrats who have too often been willing to compromise these principles for short-term political gain. While it would have been easy for Mamdani to simply condemn the phrase and move on, his more thoughtful approach actually serves the cause of free speech better.

The irony is that many of the same people attacking Mamdani are Democrats who claim to be defending democracy against Trump’s authoritarianism. Yet they’re demanding exactly the kind of speech policing that authoritarian governments excel at—forcing officials to take public positions on specific language as loyalty tests.

And yes, some could argue that simply condemning certain language is not the same as censoring it. It’s not. It’s stating an opinion. But there’s value in Mamdani making it clear he’d rather focus on the real underlying issues around bigotry and hatred than trying to say magic words to appease a media that would never ask similar questions of a white, Christian politician.

In an era where politicians routinely cave to demands for performative condemnations and symbolic gestures, Mamdani’s approach stands out. He’s more interested in actual solutions—like his 800% increase in anti-hate crime funding—than in playing the gotcha game that dominates political discourse.

This is what defending free speech actually looks like: not demanding the right to be an asshole without consequences, but refusing to let government officials become the arbiters of acceptable speech—and politely reframing the issue when the media insists on playing such a gotcha game. If more politicians followed Mamdani’s lead, we’d have a much healthier democratic discourse.


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Republicans are rewriting an infrastructure bill grant program to redirect billions of dollars to Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite broadband service. The claim is that this is necessary because Starlink is the perfect solution for the country’s rural broadband users and deserves this money. The reality is that Starlink continues to show that it lacks the capacity or affordability to actually accomplish the job.

Low-Earth Orbit satellite broadband services like Starlink have their uses, but will always be dealing with capacity constraints. That means higher prices, weird restrictions, and, as of November 2024, a $100 “congestion charge” for a service that’s already too expensive for many of the rural Americans who could most benefit.

It didn’t take long for that “congestion charge” to soar to $500 in some areas. Now it’s already risen as high as $750 in states like Washington as Starlink is forced to try and deter users in some markets from using the increasingly congested network:

“The change can crank up the starting price simply to own the Starlink dish on a residential plan to $1,099.”

Other parts of the country see no congestion charge, but there’s no guarantee that they won’t see one down the line as the network subscribership grows. It’s also very likely the company will increasingly have to resort to doing things like throttling higher definition videos, or engaging in other network management tricks to try and keep the service semi-reliable.

You might recall that Republicans and Elon Musk threw a hissy fit a few years ago when the Biden FCC prioritized “future-proof” fiber and higher-capacity 5G services over Starlink in previous government subsidy programs, (correctly) expressing concerns that the service lacked the capacity to provide consistently reliable speeds on the taxpayer dime.

Ever since then Republicans and Musk have been working tirelessly to “correct” this oversight, to the point where they’re now rewriting a major $45 billion infrastructure bill broadband grant program to ensure Starlink gets a massive portion of taxpayer subsidies. Many right wingers, like c-tier comedian turned podcaster and fashy-apologist Joe Rogan, act as if Starlink is akin to magic.

But the technology has been criticized for harming astronomical research and the ozone layer. Starlink customer service is largely nonexistent. It’s too expensive for the folks most in need of reliable broadband access. The nature of satellite physics and capacity means slowdowns and annoying restrictions are inevitable, and making it scale to permanently meet real-world demand is expensive and not guaranteed.

These are all things Republican Elon Musk ass kissers either don’t know, or don’t care about as they work to reward their billionaire benefactor. It will be up to their constituents to figure it out later. But money redirected to Starlink is money redirected to cheaper and better broadband alternatives, including super cheap gigabit fiber access and community-owned and operated broadband networks.

So again, Starlink is a nice step up if you’re in the middle of nowhere, lack any other connectivity options, can afford it, and don’t care about its potential environmental impact. But it shouldn’t be taking priority in terms of taxpayer subsidies. Unless, of course, you only care about kissing Elon Musk’s ass and don’t actually care about the constituents you claim to serve.


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At the beginning of this year, the Colorado state legislature introduced HB25-1097, a state law that updated the state’s disease control statutes. Eventually signed into law by the Governor in April, the bill does a whole bunch of things related to public health: repealed the state’s epidemic response committee, set a schedule for reviewing the state’s emergency plans every three years, and all sorts of things having to do with child immunization rules. Those include things like creating an official school record for immunization after doctor’s records of immunization are received, how camping organizations keep their own records for immunization for out of state campers, and so on. Mostly pretty yawn-inducing stuff.

But it also included this:

Direct the state board of health, in adopting rules establishing immunization requirements, to take into consideration, as appropriate and in addition to the recommendations of the advisory committee on immunization practices, the recommendations of the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and the American College of Physicians;

That reference to the advisory committee on immunization practices is more commonly known as the CDC’s ACIP. That would be the committee for which RFK Jr. fired all 17 members and replaced them with 8 new members, several of which are vaccine disinformation peddlers.

While this law and this provision of it largely flew under the radar, its purpose is now being shown and highlighted as a way to combat Kennedy and HHS’ nonsense. Other states need to pay attention here.

As the new Health and Human Services secretary makes unprecedented moves to undermine the current U.S. policy on vaccines, Colorado is leading the way in maintaining immunization recommendations, writing some protections into law. Colorado lawmakers saw this conflict coming and started preparing for the change, particularly to this critical national panel of doctors and vaccine experts, during this year’s legislative session.

So they passed a bill along party lines, later signed into law by the governor, which directs the state’s board of health to take into consideration recommendations from other high-profile doctors’ groups, not just the CDC panel.

“I think you could see the writing on the wall, that it was just becoming overly politicized rather than relying on actual science with this new HHS director,” said Sen. Kyle Mullica, a Thornton Democrat and an ER nurse. “We decided to protect Colorado,” said Mullica, who co-sponsored the legislation. He said Democratic lawmakers wanted to ensure “that in Colorado that we were able to rely on other science-based recommendations that potentially wouldn’t be as vulnerable to political upheaval that we’re seeing right now.”

This is a good start. Essentially, Colorado’s legislation presents something of a no-confidence vote in the CDC and HHS, choosing to open up guidance that had previously been limited to those agencies to incorporate NGOs that actually have public health and science in mind. Other states adopting similar laws would be useful both in maintaining good guidance on a state level and in highlighting yet again how much valid distrust of RFK Jr.’s leadership exists.

Ashish Jha, Biden’s COVID response coordinator and the dean of Brown University School of Public Health, highlights that this is about much more than keeping the public supplied with good scientific information. The game Kennedy is really playing isn’t one in which he makes vaccines entirely unauthorized or disappeared. Instead, he’ll just make them so expensive that few people can afford them.

ACIP’s recommendations serve as the backbone of vaccine access in the United States. When the panel endorses a vaccine, that guidance sets off a chain reaction: Insurers are required under the Affordable Care Act to cover it with no cost-sharing. Medicaid programs follow suit. Pediatricians and pharmacies stock vaccines knowing they’ll be reimbursed. And the Vaccines for Children (VFC) program, which provides free immunizations to nearly half of American children, uses ACIP recommendations to determine which vaccines are covered.

If Kennedy’s reconstituted ACIP rolls back key recommendations, as appears likely, the vaccines themselves won’t disappear — but access will erode. Insurers could stop covering them. Clinics might stop offering them. The VFC program could shrink. In effect, millions of children would lose protection against diseases such as measles, polio, meningitis and others we thought were behind us.

Kennedy might argue that he’s not taking anyone’s vaccines away, just giving people choices. But making vaccines costly and inaccessible produces the same result.

As Jha notes further in the post, laws like the Colorado law can only be step 1. Step 2 needs to be state-level regulation of insurance companies in order to ensure the Kennedy’s plan to price vaccines out of reach for most people isn’t successful.

Most important, states must ensure that recommended vaccines remain free and accessible. Legislatures and insurance regulators should require both private insurers and Medicaid programs to cover all vaccines endorsed by medical societies or state advisory boards — with no out-of-pocket costs.

This will help preserve access for millions, especially the most vulnerable.

This is by no means a perfect plan. States will vary in their coverage and their guidance. The residents in some states, particular their children, will live under worse conditions than others. Not all citizens will have the same healthcare available to them. In states where science is sneered at in the same manner as Kennedy’s HHS, some people, including children, will die.

But this is the reality in front of us. If no action is taken and this version of the CDC is allowed to convince the public that vaccines are the devil, or if vaccines are simply made too expensive to be widely adopted, the end result could be just what James Carville recently predicted.

“Bobby Kennedy is going to kill more people than any Cabinet secretary, maybe in history, with his idiotic vaccine policy,” Carville said Wednesday in an interview on Fox News Channel’s “The Will Cain Show.”

If a patchwork of state laws can stave off that nightmare from reality, so be it.


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During pandemic lockdowns, you might recall how AMC executives threw a temper tantrum because companies like Comcast/NBC began experimenting with more innovative movie release windows. AMC execs were mad because the pandemic highlighted how the 90-day gap between the time a movie appears in theaters and its streaming or DVD release was exposed as both dated and stupid.

Comcast (successfully) experimented with not only shortening the window, but eliminating it entirely. At the time, AMC Theatre CEO Adam Aron pouted incessantly, insisting that Comcast films would never again appear in AMC theaters, before ultimately having to retract the silly threat.

In the years since, AMC execs have had a lot of time to think about how they’d like to adjust to the modern film audience. One big idea was to start charging customers even more money if they wanted better seats. And more recently they’ve taken to pushing even more real-world advertisements on paying customers before the movie starts.

Even before COVID, other major theater companies, like Cinemark Theatres and Regal Cinemas, had been loading up to five minutes of ads ahead of movies. AMC had initially rejected joining the effort, correctly noting that they worried consumers would “react quite negatively to the concept.”

That was then, this is now. AMC, struggling to make as much money as it would like, has reversed course and will be adding more ads. Which is tricky because it already runs 25-30 minutes of trailers, ads, and assorted gibberish before movies begin already:

“The deal takes effect July 1, just in time for Universal’s Jurassic World Rebirth and DC Studios/Warner Bros.’ Superman. AMC is already known for its lengthy preshow time, which runs 25 to 30 minutes, so it will have to reconfigure its lineup — which includes the famous Nicole Kidman spot promoting the “magic” of moviegoing — to allow for the new ads without going over the half-hour mark.”

Annoyed customers are still going to the movies, but they’re showing up later to accommodate for all the ads. One recent industry study found that only 60 percent of moviegoers this year were in their seats when trailers started playing. In NY and LA,  42 percent of moviegoers were in their seats in time to see every trailer.

This is yet another enshittification cycle that shows no sign of relenting. To give Wall Street its expected impossibly growing quarterly returns, AMC can’t afford to actually provide things the audience wants (lower prices, smaller crowds, better quality films and food). So they’re on a path of a sort of brand cannibalization in which annoyances grow as the theater experience quality shrinks, driving annoyed users ultimately to other experiences (like piracy).

Once a company’s on this path there’s really no reversal if they want to avoid an investor revolt, so there’s simply no telling what bad idea (or eroded principle) comes next for AMC.


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The Supreme Court just discovered that nationwide injunctions are problematic. How convenient that this revelation came right as Donald Trump returned to office with plans to rule by executive fiat.

Last week’s big Supreme Court decision in Trump v. CASA was trumpeted in the media as being about birthright citizenship, even though that was only the vehicle with which to actually explore the issue of nationwide injunctions.

The ruling effectively bans (or at least greatly limits) the ability of judges to issue such nationwide or “universal” injunctions, stating that they exceed the power of a district court:

Traditionally, courts issued injunctions prohibiting executive officials from enforcing a challenged law or policy only against the plaintiffs in the lawsuit. The injunctions before us today reflect a more recent development: district courts asserting the power to prohibit enforcement of a law or policy against anyone. These injunctions—known as “universal injunctions”—likely exceed the equitable authority that Congress has granted to federal courts. We therefore grant the Government’s applications to partially stay the injunctions entered below.

Because of the issue underlying this injunction (the executive order effectively reinterpreting birthright citizenship out of the Constitution), the ruling is being interpreted through deeply partisan eyes. The six Justices who signed onto the majority opinion are those appointed by Republican Presidents, the dissent was from the three Justices appointed by Democratic Presidents.

So, the issue is absolutely partisan, but I’d argue the partisanship is more in the timing and specifics of this, rather than the actual final decision. And that’s because the MAGA/GOP world was more than happy to use such nationwide injunctions against Biden. Indeed, they regularly went forum shopping to specific judges in Texas for exactly that reason.

And, arguably, the Supreme Court decision actually leaves an out to suggest that some nationwide injunctions will still be allowed, which likely means only those against Democratic Presidents. Steve Vladeck explains:

Contra some headlines, Justice Barrett’s majority opinion doesn’t foreclose “universal” injunctions in all cases. Rather, it holds that injunctive relief that directly benefits non-plaintiffs is appropriate only when it’s necessary to ensure that the plaintiffs themselves get “complete” relief. (An illustrative example of when individual plaintiffs will need universal relief is in redistricting cases—where states often need to redraw maps on a statewide basis to redress a successful challenge by even a single plaintiff.) Put another way, if an injunction limited to the plaintiffs in that case will give those plaintiffs all the relief to which they’re entitled, nothing broader is permitted. That’s the holding, in a nutshell.

But here’s the thing: the Supreme Court’s sudden concern about nationwide injunctions rings hollow when you look at the actual data. Just last year, there was a fascinating Harvard Law Review look at nationwide injunctions, and how both sides of the traditional political divide have been using them. When Democrats are in power, Republicans rush to partisan judges to block their actions with nationwide injunctions, and when Republicans are in power, Democrats do the same.

The nationwide injunction increase appears to be a symptom, more than the disease. As Congress has become increasingly unable to function, both parties have been trying to exert greater and greater executive power. The rise in nationwide injunctions appears to mainly be in an attempt to push back on that—though in directly partisan ways, depending on who is in power.

The numbers are damning: of the 78 nationwide injunctions issued during the Trump and Biden Administrations, 93.6% were issued by judges appointed by a president of the opposing political party. That’s not coincidence; that’s weaponization.

As that HLR piece notes:

Notably, nationwide injunctions are not only increasing in frequency but also overwhelmingly issued by judges appointed by Presidents of the opposite party from the administration whose actions the judges are enjoining. Of the 78 nationwide injunctions issued during the Trump and Biden Administrations, 93.6% of injunctions were issued by judges appointed by a President of the opposing political party. Often, it is the policies that relate to politically hot-button issues or a President’s policy priorities that are enjoined: for President Obama, it was LGBTQ+ civil rights; for President Trump, it was immigration; and for President Biden, it was policies combatting the COVID-19 pandemic.

Given all that, you could see how there are actually good reasons why nationwide injunctions might be seen as a problem overall. They’re creating scenarios where not only is there political calculus likely driving some of the judicial decisions, but also it allows plaintiffs to take many shots on goal. Again, the HLR piece describes how many cases may be filed on the same issues in multiple courts, and you just need a single nationwide injunction to “win” the issue:

the asymmetrical effects of preclusion ensure that nationwide injunctions are a powerful tool for political opponents who can challenge the policy in multiple venues. Practically speaking, a successful defense against a nationwide injunction in one court is barely a win for the government at all: because that decision has no preclusive effect on new plaintiffs, other plaintiffs are free to bring the exact same lawsuit elsewhere and “[s]hop ‘til the statute drops.” All it takes is one judge siding with the plaintiffs to enjoin the challenged law. These asymmetric consequences force the federal government to engage in a game of whack-a-mole. If enough plaintiffs sue — and if they can each target the forum most likely to be hostile to the government’s action — it seems almost inevitable that the action will be nationally enjoined. A prominent example is President Biden’s COVID-19 vaccine mandates: At least four judges declined to issue nationwide injunctions against Executive Order 14,042, but ultimately one did. One judge declined to issue a nationwide injunction against Executive Order 14,043, but still the policy was enjoined nationally. The same is true for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ vaccine mandate. And at least four different judges declined to issue nationwide injunctions against President Biden’s military vaccine mandate, but, ultimately, two enjoined the policy nationally.

Given all that, there’s a reasonable argument that the Supreme Court’s ruling on nationwide injunctions isn’t inherently bad. They were problematic when Stephen Miller’s org was rushing cases to single-judge districts in Texas, and they continue to be problematic today.

But, what makes last week’s decision so overtly political is the fact that the Supreme Court waited until now to argue that such nationwide injunctions were invalid as a remedy. They’ve had many years to take on the issue and somehow never bothered to call them out until now? That’s the part that seems suspect.

And the timing is especially questionable, given that we’ve just entered the second Trump administration, where he and his regime have made it quite clear they intend to rule almost entirely through executive fiat, with little concern for what Congress does (or is unable to do). And that’s a world in which the judiciary (in theory) plays a much bigger role.

In the end, I think the issue of nationwide injunctions isn’t really an issue of “nationwide injunctions,” but rather what happened that resulted in such injunctions becoming a regularly used political weapon: (1) a massive increase in attempts to rule by executive fiat, and (2) the rise in forum shopping for judges (especially in single judge courts).

Thus, it seems like the structural reform that is better served than simply banning nationwide injunctions is making it clear that we actually do have three co-equal branches of government, rather than a “unitary executive” and also making procedural changes to limit judge shopping.

It seems quite clear that the Supreme Court made this decision for partisan reasons, given the timing, but just the fact that it didn’t do so in conjunction with a strong limit to ruling by executive fiat is equally worrisome. The two need to go hand in hand. Instead, we’re seeing the reverse. The Supreme Court seems willing to bless executive overreach… but only when the Republicans do it. When Trump violates constitutional norms, the Court finds ways to look the other way. When Democrats governed, suddenly every procedural safeguard mattered.

Separately, while some have argued that the nationwide injunction ban might not be as bad as some people fear because plaintiffs can just bring class action lawsuits instead, as Vladeck notes, this Supreme Court has also limited the ability to bring class action lawsuits:

Class actions are harder to bring, at least largely thanks to the Supreme Court—and a series of rulings from the early 2010s that ratcheted up the requirements for certifying nationwide classes. On top of that, states (and organizations like CASA) can’t be class-action plaintiffs (the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure that authorizes class-wide relief requires the plaintiffs to be persons). And even when a district court determines that certification of a nationwide class is appropriate, (1) it often takes some time for the district court to so conclude; and (2) such a ruling is itself subject to an immediate, interlocutory appeal—which can both slow down the litigation and give appellate courts an early opportunity to reject a district court’s decision to certify a nationwide class. So as with the “complete relief” question, the viability of this alternative legal procedure for blocking federal policies on a nationwide basis really depends upon just how available nationwide class actions turn out to be in practice—not just in general, but at the outset of litigation, as well.

As for judge shopping, Chief Justice Roberts had actually spoken out about the problem in the past and last year tried to implement a new rule that would make judge assignments more randomized. But judges on the Fifth Circuit and across Texas — where most of the more significant forum shopping against Biden happened — simply announced that they would ignore the rule, and Roberts effectively backed down.

Some might wonder why the Roberts Court would effectively kneecap the judiciary, of which it’s a key part. But, again, the details suggest that the CASA ruling effectively takes power away from lower courts, but gives it to the Supreme Court, in that there will be a lot more moves to try to get injunctions via the emergency or shadow docket. Vladeck again:

In other words, Kavanaugh is effectively inviting both the government and litigants challenging government policies to use the emergency docket even more—not just in cases in which there is some compelling exigency, but in any case in which there’s a need for that kind of nationwide (interim) uniformity. Depending on what happens with class actions, there could be a lot more of those very soon (e.g., if we start seeing numerous different lawsuits challenging the same policy, and those suits produce inconsistent rulings). As busy as the shadow docket has been this term, apparently, Justice Kavanaugh is cool with it being even busier. But will his colleagues agree?

But the nature of the Supreme Court’s ability to pick and choose which shadow docket issues it will—and will not—take up means that it can continue to be extremely partisan:

One of the central problems with the Court’s approach to emergency applications in recent years has been its seeming inconsistency—granting emergency relief to Republican presidents or governors in very similar contexts to those in which it denied emergency relief to Democratic presidents or governors (in two immigration cases, for instance, the Court ruled for the Biden administration at the merits stage after denying applications to stay universal injunctions against the Biden policies). Do we expect the justices to all of a sudden be consistent when it comes to their resolution of emergency applications—especially if they’re getting more of them? And without written explanations (the norm in such cases), how will we even know?

The end result then appears to be the worst of all worlds. While there are reasonable arguments against nationwide injunctions, this Supreme Court chose to do this in the worst possible way, waiting until there was an extremist Republican in power who was breaking all the norms and rules regarding checks and balances, and refusing to actually deal with the underlying issues. Then, in its place, it puts forth a system which it—the Supreme Court alone—gets to decide which presidents have executive authority, and which ones don’t.

And that, rather than the actual decision, is why this seems like it was a clearly partisan decision, which once again diminishes the legitimacy and respect for the judiciary.


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The cops certainly had fun partnering with Ring, the surveillance camera company now owned by Amazon. Ring handed out free cameras to cops, who handed out these cameras to citizens with the implicit expectation that they’d have warrantless access to camera footage whenever they wanted it.

It didn’t quite work out that way. Lots of cop shops sold their souls to Ring, only to have Ring limit their access after the company received months of negative press over its incestuous relationship with law enforcement.

Surveillance cameras are cheap and ubiquitous. Law enforcement agencies may have thought they were expanding their surveillance networks for free, but failed to realize a camera on every house means every house has a camera. And that sort of ubiquity doesn’t always work out in law enforcement’s favor, as the FBI pointed out a half-decade ago:

The document describes a 2017 incident in which FBI agents approached a New Orleans home to serve a search warrant and were caught on video. “Through the Wi-Fi doorbell system, the subject of the warrant remotely viewed the activity at his residence from another location and contacted his neighbor and landlord regarding the FBI’s presence there,” it states.

That’s the rub. Cameras installed for the purpose of protecting property from porch thieves and other miscreants are fully capable of capturing law enforcement officers in the act.

The latest spin involves ICE, because nearly everything does these days. Ring owners are utilizing Ring’s tie-in app — one that has a well-deserved reputation for enhancing bigotry — to give people in the area a head’s up on incoming raids, as Thomas Brewster reports for Forbes:

Neighbors, an app for Ring doorbell users, is typically used by people looking for lost pets or missing packages. But last week, horrified by ICE raids in and around Los Angeles, residents started using the Amazon app to alert their communities to immigration agents carrying out searches and arrests.

[…]

While social media sites and Nextdoor have been used to highlight ICE activity across the U.S. in recent days, Neighbors has been especially popular, with dozens of posts reviewed by Forbes over the last week.

Welcome to the surveillance state, surveillance statists. Here’s how it feels to be on the other side of dozens of unblinking eyes. Your movements no longer go unnoticed. And when they are noticed, there are plenty of apps capable of spreading news of your actions instantly.

Even if ICE decides it’s not going to raid people’s houses (which it might, because the likelihood of a mass arrest is much lower there), it can’t escape cameras owned and operated by members of the public. People are looking out for each other now that the government can’t be trusted to obey laws or respect rights.

Some posts had information on ICE agents near stores like Dollar Tree, McDonald’s, Starbucks and Target. Two alerted communities to ICE operation near elementary schools.

If ICE doesn’t like this extra attention, it just needs to limit itself to chasing down actual felons or people suspected of committing serious crimes. But of course it won’t do that — not with an entire administration pushing it to arrest and deport as many foreigners as possible, even if that means arresting the occasional US citizen and/or dumping migrants into foreign concentration camps for the “crime” of being undocumented.

The pushback is only going to increase. And nearly every person in the US is equipped with a camera, whether it’s guarding their front door or held in their hand as they confront this marauding gang of masked officers in unmarked vehicles who invade businesses and homes for the sole purpose of destroying lives.


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One of Elon Musk’s first “promises” upon taking over Twitter was that fighting child exploitation was “priority #1.”

He falsely implied that the former management didn’t take the issue seriously (they did) and insisted that he would make sure it was a solved problem on the platform he now owned. Of course, while he was saying this, he was also firing most of the team that worked on preventing the sharing of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) on the site. Almost every expert in the field noted that it seemed clear that Elon was almost certainly making the problem worse, not better. Some early research supported this, showing that the company was now leaving up a ton of known CSAM (the easiest kind to find and block through photo-matching tools).

A few months later, Elon’s supposed commitment to stomping out CSAM was proven laughable when he apparently personally stepped in to reinstate the account of a mindless conspiracy theorist who had posted a horrific CSAM image.

A new NBC News investigation now reveals just how spectacularly Musk has failed at his self-proclaimed “priority #1.” Not only has the CSAM problem on ExTwitter exploded beyond previous levels, but the company has now been cut off by Thorn—one of the most important providers of CSAM detection technology—after ExTwitter simply stopped paying its bills.

At the same time, Thorn, a California-based nonprofit organization that works with tech companies to provide technology that can detect and address child sexual abuse content, told NBC News that it had terminated its contract with X.

Thorn said that X stopped paying recent invoices for its work, though it declined to provide details about its deal with the company citing legal sensitivities. X said Wednesday that it was moving toward using its own technology to address the spread of child abuse material.

Let’s pause on this corporate-speak for a moment. ExTwitter claims it’s “moving toward using its own technology” to fight CSAM. That’s a fancy way of saying they fired the experts and plan to wing it with some other—likely Grok-powered— nonsense they can cobble together.

Now, to be fair, some platforms do develop effective in-house CSAM detection tools and while Thorn’s tools are widely used, some platforms have complained that the tools are limited. But these types of systems generally work best when operated by specialized third parties who can aggregate data across multiple platforms—exactly what organizations like Thorn (and Microsoft’s PhotoDNA) provide. The idea that a company currently failing to pay its bills to anti-CSAM specialists is simultaneously building superior replacement technology is, shall we say, optimistic.

The reality on the ground tells a very different story than Musk’s PR spin:

The Canadian Centre for Child Protection (C3P), an independent online CSAM watchdog group, reviewed several X accounts and hashtags flagged by NBC News that were promoting the sale of CSAM, and followed links promoted by several of the accounts. The organization said that, within minutes, it was able to identify accounts that posted images of previously identified CSAM victims who were as young as 7. It also found apparent images of CSAM in thumbnail previews populated on X and in links to Telegram channels where CSAM videos were posted. One such channel showed a video of a boy estimated to be as young as 4 being sexually assaulted. NBC News did not view or have in its possession any of the abuse material.

Lloyd Richardson, director of information technology at C3P, said the behavior being exhibited by the X users was “a bit old hat” at this point, and that X’s response “has been woefully insufficient.” “It seems to be a little bit of a game of Whac-A-Mole that goes on,” he said. “There doesn’t seem to be a particular push to really get to the root cause of the issue.”

NBC’s investigation found that Musk’s “priority #1” has become a free-for-all:

A review of many hashtags with terms known to be associated with CSAM shows that the problem is, if anything, worse than when Musk initially took over. What was previously a trickle of posts of fewer than a dozen per hour is now a torrent propelled by accounts that appear to be automated — some posting several times a minute.

Despite the continued flood of posts and sporadic bans of individual accounts, the hashtags observed by NBC News over several weeks remained open and viewable as of Wednesday. And some of the hashtags that were identified in 2023 by NBC News as hosting the child exploitation advertisements are still being used for the same purpose today.

That seems bad! Read it again: hashtags that were flagged as CSAM distribution channels in 2023 are still active and being used for the same purpose today. This isn’t the kind of mistake that happens when you’re overwhelmed by scale—this is what happens when you simply don’t give a shit.

Look, I’m usually willing to defend platforms against unfair criticism about content moderation. The scale makes perfection impossible, and edge cases are genuinely hard. But this isn’t about edge cases or the occasional mistake—this is about leaving up known, previously identified CSAM distribution channels. That’s not a content moderation failure; that’s a policy failure.

As the article also notes, ExTwitter tried to get praised for all the work it was doing with Thorn, in an effort to show how strongly it was fighting CSAM. This post from just last year looks absolutely ridiculous now that they stopped paying Thorn and the org had to cut them off.

But the real kicker comes from Thorn itself, which essentially confirms that ExTwitter was more interested in the PR value of their partnership than actually using the technology:

Pailes Halai, Thorn’s senior manager of accounts and partnerships, who oversaw the X contract, said that some of Thorn’s software was designed to address issues like those posed by the hashtag CSAM posts, but that it wasn’t clear if they ever fully implemented it.

“They took part in the beta with us last year,” he said. “So they helped us test and refine, etc, and essentially be an early adopter of the product. They then subsequently did move on to being a full customer of the product, but it’s not very clear to us at this point how and if they used it.”

So there you have it: ExTwitter signed up for anti-CSAM tools, used the partnership for good PR, then perhaps never bothered to fully implement the system, and finally stopped paying the bills entirely.

This is what “priority #1” looks like in Elon Musk’s world: lots of performative tweets, followed by firing the experts, cutting off the specialized tools, and letting the problem explode while pretending you’re building something better. I’m sure like “full self-driving” and Starships that don’t explode, the tech will be fully deployed any day now.


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Quite obviously, the Trump Administration was never going to respect the law when it came to its mass deportation plans. That much became immediately clear as ICE engaged in raid after raid of neighborhoods and businesses, searching for literally any migrant, rather than just those suspected of or convicted for violent crimes.

As soon as the planes loaded with detainees began landing in countries most of those on board weren’t from, the efficient cruelty of Trump’s anti-migrant actions was exposed. Multiple legal challenges were filed, most of them seeking little more than forcing the government to respect due process rights. As the phrase says, they’re rights, not privileges that can be unilaterally revoked just because the current administration has a hate-on for non-whites.

The administration that has always pretended to be ultra-concerned about “law and order” went rogue. Planes were put in the air after courts ordered them to remain on the ground. People exiled to foreign prisons remained caged while the Trump DOJ dodged court orders and refused to honestly answer questions about why it continued to refuse to right some of its wrongs.

Not that we needed more evidence of this administration’s hatred for the laws that stand in the way of its cruelest urges, but here’s more anyway. Erez Ruveni, a former DOJ lawyer, has filed a whistleblower complaint about the DOJ’s actions since Trump’s return to office. Via the New York Times, here’s why Ruveni is no longer employed by the DOJ:

Mr. Reuveni was a career lawyer at the department for nearly 15 years until April, when he expressed concern in federal court that the administration had mistakenly deported a migrant to a megaprison in El Salvador. Mr. Reuveni was put on administrative leave a day later and ultimately fired.

That public embarrassment of the DOJ, via an open admission that an error was made, was enough to provoke Trump’s DOJ to fire one of its few remaining honest lawyers. Those still working for the DOJ have sold their soul for a handful of future paychecks. Either that or they never had a soul to sell, like senior DOJ official Emil Bove, whose anti-law and order statements are included in Ruveni’s whistleblower report.

Bove told attendees of the March 14 meeting that President Donald Trump would soon be invoking the Alien Enemies Act and that deportations would be carried out that weekend.

[…]

“Bove then made a remark concerning the possibility that a court order would enjoin those removals before they could be effectuated. Bove stated that DOJ would need to consider telling the courts ‘f— you’ and ignore any such court order,” according to the letter.

Incredibly, Ruveni’s letter notes that he thought Bove’s heated comments would be blown off and things would return to their normal, lawful way — something that’s sort of expected at the Department of Justice. Instead, that was apparently the tipping point, not only in terms of his job, but for the DOJ as a whole.

Here’s how things went for Ruveni during the last few weeks of his DOJ career, as recounted in the complaint [PDF] released by his legal reps at the Government Accountability Project:

White House officials have publicly disparaged Mr. Reuveni to justify their refusal to comply with the Constitution and with court orders. White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller falsely stated “The only mistake that was made is a lawyer put an incorrect line in a legal filing,” and labeled Mr. Reuveni a “saboteur, a Democrat.” Referring to Mr. Reuveni, President Trump stated, “Well, the lawyer that said it was a mistake was here a long time, was not appointed by us—should not have said that should not have said that.”

What has not been reported to date are Mr. Reuveni’s attempts over the course of three weeks and affecting three separate cases to secure the government’s compliance with court orders and his resistance to the internal efforts of DOJ and White House leadership to defy them through lack of candor, deliberate delay, and disinformation. Discouraging clients from engaging in illegal conduct is an important part of the role of a lawyer. Mr. Reuveni tried to do so and was thwarted, threatened, fired, and publicly disparaged for both doing his job and telling the truth to the court.

Of course, the DOJ and the administration have no real response to these accusations. Instead, the White House has chosen to ignore everything said in the letter and act like it works for Emil Bove, rather than the other way around:

“Emil Bove is an incredibly talented legal mind and a staunch defender of the U.S. Constitution who will make an excellent circuit court judge,” the statement by White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said.

Well, at best, only part of this statement is true. I can only speculate about the Bove’s “talented mind,” but it’s inherently clear he doesn’t give a fuck about the Constitution. That much can easily be seen by his support of Trump’s Alien Enemies Act abuses and the migrant flights he ensured wouldn’t be interrupted by issued court orders. He’s not serving the public. He’s nothing more than another opportunist who has sworn his fealty to a man who sincerely believes the Oval Office is a throne room.


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Whether by dodgy Supreme Court rulingexecutive order, mindless DOGE cuts, or captured regulators, the U.S. right wing, usually in lockstep with consolidated corporate power, are making massive, historic, and potentially irreversible inroads in destroying all federal corporate oversight, labor protections, public safety provisions, environmental standards, and regulatory autonomy.

I bolded that last bit because it’s not clear the U.S. press and a huge swath of the electorate (or even many people in policy circles) have figured this out yet.

A cornerstone of this effort has been the Supreme Court. Last year’s Loper Bright ruling effectively gutted any remaining independence of expert regulators, ensuring they literally can’t do much of anything without the explicit approval of a Congress too corrupt to function (and sometimes, not even then). If they do try, they’re all but guaranteed to be drowned in legal fights with deep-pocketed corporations for years.

You can easily see the immediate impact at agencies like the FCC. From net neutrality to privacy, the regulatory agency literally can’t accomplish any efforts to protect markets or consumers without being bogged down in endless legal quagmire, quite by design.

When the agency does shake off regulatory capture and actually try to act, Trump-stocked courts quickly kill the effort (see the 5th Circuit recently vacating an AT&T fine for repeatedly lying to customers about spying on their location data). Even basic, historically bipartisan and noncontroversial efforts to do things like help school kids get online are being destroyed by authoritarian Trump zealots.

Last week it got worse, with a new Supreme Court ruling that quietly crippled regulatory independence further, ensuring agencies like the FCC are even less able to do basic aspects of their jobs. The case, McLaughlin Chiropractic Associates, Inc. v. McKesson Corp., started more than a decade ago after McKesson sent unsolicited ads by fax to class members of the suit, including McLaughlin Chiropractic.

Class action plaintiffs in the case argued that the unsolicited faxes were in violation of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), which bans unsolicited communications with consumers without giving them a chance to opt out of the communications.

While the case was stumbling through our already broken court system, the FCC (under the leadership of now cable industry lobbyist Michael Powell) issued a ruling excluding online fax services from the TCPA. It was part of a steady erosion of our already flimsy consumer protections, and part of the reason the FCC already fails utterly to keep robocallers from annoying the shit out of you.

Consumer rights experts have long pointed out that shitheads and scammers have hijacked U.S. voice networks thanks to steady, generational lobbying by debt collectors and the marketing industry, who’ve ensured that oversight no longer functions. Still, every so often, the FCC would at least try to do something about the problem within the ever-shrinking confines of their legal authority.

The McLaughlin case found its way to the Supreme Court because the District Court found that it was required to follow the new FCC order, though it disagreed with the FCC’s interpretation of the TCPA. The District Court also felt constrained by the Hobbs Act, 1950s era legislation long interpreted as barring district courts from meddling with and undermining a federal agency’s interpretation of a statute.

On June 20th, the Supreme Court sided with the District Court by a 6-3 vote. The Supreme Court ruled that “The Hobbs Act does not preclude district courts from independently assessing whether an agency’s interpretation of the relevant statute is correct.”

This is, superficially, so fucking boring I probably lost most readers paragraphs ago. But it’s important and the majority’s convoluted legalese hides a much seedier agenda. Broadband industry consultant Doug Dawson put it this way in his excellent breakdown of what this will ultimately mean for the FCC:

“This is a significant ruling because it gives more explicit power to District Courts to disagree with an administrative ruling of a federal agency. It’s likely that there is a District Court somewhere in the country that will disagree with almost any federal agency ruling, meaning that it will be that much easier to tie up every decision made by the FCC or other federal agency in court.”

Bogging any and all government oversight of corporate power in endless legal hell is, of course, the entire point. But this effort has historically been dressed up by the right wing and “free market” Libertarian folks as some kind of noble rebalancing of constitutional power. The lie is that regulators were “running amok” (a joke if you’ve watched the FCC fail to do basic things), and this somehow “fixed” it.

The route the right wing is taking to effectively lobotomize corporate oversight is brutally efficient, but it’s also ironically so meandering, dull, and jam-packed with convoluted legalese, it barely gets covered by the press. In this case, only a handful of outlets bothered to mention the June 20th ruling.

But the real world harms of this entire movement will be kind of hard for the press and public to ignore. In the case of the FCC, it most assuredly means that the FCC will have even less authority to rein in shitty telecom monopolies. America’s already shitty robocall problem (a direct result of widespread corruption), will also absolutely be getting significantly worse:

“This new ruling also has practical implications since it explicitly weakens FCC enforcement of the TCPA. Among other things, the TCPA rules are the FCC’s primary tool for its effort to restrain the use of autodialers and artificial voices used in spam messages to consumers.”

You can see similar points made in the dissenting opinions. Great stuff! Very much the good faith, blue collar populism Trump is (ignorantly) lauded for.

The FCC’s inability to police scams and fraud is only a small part of the picture. More broadly, regulators that govern every sensitive aspect of your lives — from health insurance to undercooked car automation — are finding themselves literally incapable of standing up to corporate power in the United States. That’s going to have dramatic, often deadly impacts on every last aspect of your lives.

I genuinely don’t know what it takes to get the press and public to truly comprehend what’s happening. We’re going to see a steady parade of concussive, systemic failures to systems people to take for granted everywhere you look. All because rich corporate executives and their proxy “free market innovation” think tanks wanted to dress up unbridled greed as some sort of sophisticated, academic ethos.

The last year has been a brutal, generational win for unchecked corporate power. The check is coming due, and none of it’s going to be subtle.


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This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is MrWilson with a comment on last week’s post, where I had to forego most of the Funny section due to a lack of candidates:

To be fair, it seems like there’s less and less to be laughing at, except as a gallows humor coping mechanism.

In second place, it’s Thad with a comment about Senator Bill Cassidy criticizing RFK Jr.’s ACIP appointees:

Cassidy voted to confirm RFK Jr. Fuck him and the performative buyer’s remorse he rode in on.

For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we start out with a comment from n00bdragon about ICE’s ongoing claims of a spike in assaults on agents:

I can absolutely believe assaults are up 500%. Just remember kids: When you’re lying face down on the pavement with your hands behind your back, if you breathe too quickly or too slowly or move a single muscle in any way or don’t move a muscle immediately on command or do move on command but don’t follow the correct commands that is assault.

By this logic, the more kidnappings ICE engages in the more assaults they will fall victim to. Honestly, a mere 500% increase sounds like a real lowball.

Next, it’s Heart of Dawn with a comment about the treatment of people crossing the border into the US:

This level of cruelty is going to hurt the country, all so a small group of bigoted, and hateful people can feel better about themselves.

Cities and states that depend on tourism are already feeling the pinch, and it’s going to hurt in other ways too. People aren’t going to bring innovation and investment into a country that might hit them with the door over any perceived infraction.

Fascism only ever ruins a country. It never makes one better.

Over on the funny side, things aren’t much different from last week, but we do have just enough to put together a list, though the top two comments still earned their spot with only a small handful of votes! Both come in response to our post about the Fifth Circuit blocking Louisiana’s law mandating the posting of the Ten Commandments in school. In first place, it’s MrWilson again, with a comment about the governor saying kids could simply not look at the posters:

Hey, that’s a great strategy! If you want the ten commandments to be posted wherever you go, just start imagining you see it posted, and leave everyone else alone.

Next, it’s wibblewobble with a rather specific idea for an act of protest:

RIGHT next to every poster should be “the BDSM commandments. we have 11 so we’re better”

Thou shalt obey the safe wordThings inserted into thine anus shall be clean and have no sharp bitsSpanking is optional as is butt-stuff.No biting during Oral unless the other person asks for itThou shalt not overtweak other peoples nipples unless it really gets them off….

etc

make the poster 4x bigger than the bible version…

For editor’s choice on the funny side, we start out with one last comment from MrWilson, this time in response to the question of whether the “Trump Phone” would be “gold plated, painted or only photoshopped?”:

All three in fact! It’s “gold-plated” for marketing purposes, gold-painted for legal purposes, and photoshopped for practical purposes since it doesn’t actually exist yet.

Finally, it’s Nathan F with a comment about the judge in the Abrego Garcia case recognizing that the DOJ’s evidence is obviously garbage:

I see the judge in this case ran the evidence by their five year old child.

That’s all for this week, folks!


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Five Years Ago

This week in 2020, we published our popular reference post on all the ways people are wrong about Section 230. It was needed because, as we covered in that week’s episode of the podcast, there were a whole lot of attacks on the law, most notably from some of the provisions of the overall-terrible EARN IT Act (which the Senate quickly followed up with another bill declaring all-out war on encryption). Not to be out done, Senator Brian Schatz introduced his own attack on Section 230, followed soon after by yet another attack by Senator Kelly Loeffler. But we also saw a good court ruling on 230, as a judge sided with Twitter in one of Devin Nunes’s lawsuits.

Ten Years Ago

This week in 2015, the UK High Court stripped away the short-lived private copying right at the behest of the recording industry, while UK officials were seeking to weaken the country’s freedom of information law. Russia blocked the Wayback Machine over a single page, while Wikileaks revealed that the NSA had been spying on French presidents, and we noted some interesting details about the leak. We also learned that Google had been gagged for four years from talking about fighting the DOJ Wikileaks investigation, and we looked at the ridiculous redactions the DOJ required to try to hide the details of the gag order. We also saw the filing of the first net neutrality complaint, which was both stupid and important.

Fifteen Years Ago

This week in 2010, there was a landmark legal victory when the court ruled in favor of YouTube in its dispute with Viacom, though Viacom was seriously in denial about the loss, and we wondered what the actual impact of the ruling would be. BPI seemed to be trying to set up Google for another copyright lawsuit, while new research showed yet again how weaker copyright has benefited culture and society. We wrote about how the lack of satire coverage in fair use leads to the stifling of speech, and put together a timeline of how the entertainment industry made the issue of file sharing much worse for itself.


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When you’re a huge country, and a communist one to boot, the Streisand Effect is a thing that’s just going to inevitably happen to you at times. China has definitely lived this experience. The government is the unfortunate combination of incredibly authoritarian and completely devoid of a sense of humor. The result is the serious belief that it can control everything through sheer force of will, when it very much cannot. China tried to silence Taiwan during the heights of the COVID pandemic, but it only propelled the messaging. China tried to hide its Muslim concentration camps within online maps by blanking them out, that only pointed researchers to exactly where something terrible must be hiding. China attempted a global blackout of a protest song in support of Hong Kong’s independence, but the result was the same song hitting the top of the charts for a stretch.

Authoritarians rarely learn from their own failures until they’re out of power. And, so, they continue to make the same mistakes over and over again. The government in Hong Kong, certainly at the request of Beijing, has banned a mobile game called Reversed Front: Bonfire because of its anti-government content.

Anyone who has the game downloaded on their phone risks an offense, and players who have made in-app purchases could face punishment for providing funding to developer ESC Taiwan, according to a notice from Hong Kong police. The game has since been removed from Apple and Android’s app stores in Hong Kong. It remains available in the U.S. via Apple’s App Store, and also currently has a Steam page. As of Thursday morning, Aftermath was not able to access the game on the US Google Play Store; according to Bloomberg, it was removed from the Google Play Store in May for issues unrelated to the current ban. We’ve reached out to Google for comment. (Update, 6/12/25, 7:20pm–A spokesperson for Google pointed us to an AP article noting the game was removed from the Play store “because it did not prohibit users from adopting hateful language in naming.”)

Google’s excuse for its capitulation aside (I’m not entirely sure what that “hateful language” thing even means, even after reading the AP article), far too many non-Chinese platforms are complying with attempting to disappear this game in Hong Kong. The objectionable content here is purely political, with the CCP showing once again just how thin its skin really is. And the ban essentially makes the game’s entire point perfectly.

Reversed Front: Bonfire, which released in April, has the player “pledge allegiance to Taiwan, Hong Kong, Mongolia, Tibet, Kazakhs, Uyghur, Manchuria or the Rebel Alliance of Cathaysian and Southeast Asia to overthrow the Communist regime,” according the game’s website. Or, players can choose to lead the Chinese Communist Party. This plays out in visual novel-esque storylines dispersed between simple, turn-based battle segments. Characters with different abilities and skills are unlocked with gacha mechanics.

An ESC Taiwan representative told Aftermath via email, “The content of Reversed Front: Bonfire includes various political propositions existing in East Asia today, not only self-determination and separatism but also the ideology of the Chinese Communist Party. We allow supporters of the Chinese Communist Party to defend their political views in the game, resulting in two different storylines.”

They continued, “The fact remains that while we dare to let the Chinese Communist Party express itself in the game, the Party doesn’t allow dissidents to speak out.”

But ultimately the ban hasn’t been terribly successful, as the developer of the game has claimed that interest in the game has surged since the ban in Hong Kong.

Hong Kong’s removal of the game from app stores has been a boon for Reversed Front: Bonfire, the representative said. “The Hong Kong government’s ban on Reversed Front: Bonfire indeed made millions of people, who previously didn’t know about the game, aware of its existence.”

That is certainly the case for this writer. While I’m probably not really the target audience for the game, I now know about it purely because of the Hong Kong government’s attempt to silence the game. And I don’t for one second believe that the threat of police action has somehow stamped out all instances of the game in Hong Kong either. In fact, it would not shock me at all to learn that the ban has created more interest in the game on the island than there had been before the ban.

The Streisand Effect in action, in other words. May China never really learn from its mistakes.


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This series of posts explores how we can rethink the intersection of AI, creativity, and policy. From examining outdated regulatory metaphors to questioning copyright norms and highlighting the risks of stifling innovation, each post addresses a different piece of the AI puzzle. Together, they advocate for a more balanced, forward-thinking approach that acknowledges the potential of technological evolution while safeguarding the rights of creators and ensuring AI’s development serves the broader interests of society. You can read the first post in the series here.

Let me show my age here—does anyone remember the movie Fame?

There’s a scene where Bruno Martelli, a confident student, declares, “Violins are on the way out, you don’t need strings today.” He insists that with “a keyboard and some oscillators,” orchestras have become obsolete. The teacher’s response is simple yet powerful: “The music survived.”

This scene perfectly captures a recurring theme in the history of creativity. Every time a new technology comes along, people predict the end of traditional art forms. Yet, time and again, creativity not only survives—it thrives.

Technology: A Tool for Growth, Not a Threat

Take the Gutenberg Press. When it was invented, many feared that the painstaking art of manuscript copying by monks would vanish forever. And yes, the printing press transformed how books were produced, but it didn’t destroy writing or creativity. Instead, it democratised knowledge, making literature accessible to a broader audience and sparking an explosion of new ideas and artistic expression.

Or consider photography. When the camera was invented, people thought painters were doomed. Why spend hours painting when a camera could capture the same moment in an instant? But painting didn’t vanish. Instead, it evolved—movements like Impressionism and Cubism flourished, as artists found new ways to express themselves beyond mere replication of reality.

Film didn’t kill theatre, and electric guitars didn’t kill acoustic ones. These technologies expanded the toolkit available to creators, offering new ways to explore their craft. In fact, new technologies have even created entirely new art forms. Just look at the video games industry—within fifteen years of its inception, it surpassed the century-old film industry in value, creating fresh opportunities for storytelling, artistry, and engagement.

AI: Expanding the Boundaries of Creativity

The same holds true for AI. Just like violins didn’t disappear when synthesizers came along, AI won’t replace human creativity. It will push boundaries, open up new possibilities, and allow artists and innovators to do things we couldn’t have imagined even a decade ago. But the essence of creativity—the spark of human imagination—remains indispensable.

Instead of fearing AI, we should embrace it as the latest in a long line of tools that expand human potential. AI will help creative industries thrive by providing new ways to create, innovate, and engage audiences. But the true magic—the core of creativity—will always come from the human mind.

The Music Will Play On

The lesson here is simple: creativity will survive. It always has. Every time a new tool, technology, or innovation emerges, there’s a tendency to think it spells the end for what came before. But history tells a different story—one of adaptation, evolution, and growth.

And as always, the creative industries will continue to thrive, building on the spark of human ingenuity.

Caroline De Cock is a communications and policy expert, author, and entrepreneur. She serves as Managing Director of N-square Consulting and Square-up Agency, and Head of Research at Information Labs. Caroline specializes in digital rights, policy advocacy, and strategic innovation, driven by her commitment to fostering global connectivity and positive change.


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This story was originally published by ProPublica. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.

New laws in Georgia and New Mexico are requiring harsher punishments for students — or anyone else — who make threats against schools, despite growing evidence that a similar law is ensnaring students who posed no risk to others.

ProPublica and WPLN News have documented how a 2024 Tennessee law that made threats of mass violence at school a felony has led to students being arrested based on rumors and for noncredible threats. In one case, a Hamilton County deputy arrested an autistic 13-year-old in August for saying his backpack would blow up, though the teen later said he just wanted to protect the stuffed bunny inside.

In the same county almost two months later, a deputy tracked down and arrested an 11-year-old student at a family birthday party. The child later explained he had overheard one student asking if another was going to shoot up the school tomorrow, and that he answered “yes” for him. Last month, the public charter school agreed to pay the student’s family $100,000 to settle a federal lawsuit claiming school officials wrongly reported him to police. The school also agreed to implement training on how to handle these types of incidents, including reporting only “valid” threats to police.

Tennessee requires schools to assess whether threats of mass violence are valid before expelling students. But the felony law does not hold police to the same standard, which has led to the arrests of students who had no intent to disrupt school or carry out a threat.

In Tennessee’s recent legislative session, civil and disability rights advocates unsuccessfully pushed to change the law to specify that police could arrest only students who make credible threats. They argued that very young students and students who act disruptively as a result of a disability should be excluded from felony charges.

Several Tennessee lawmakers from both parties also voiced their dissatisfaction with the school threats law during the session, citing the harm done to children who did not pose real danger. “I’m still struggling through the unintended consequences because I’m still not entirely happy with what we did before,” Sen. Kerry Roberts, a Republican, said at a committee hearing in April. “We’re still struggling to get that right.”

But Greg Mays, the deputy commissioner of the Department of Safety and Homeland Security, told a committee of lawmakers in March that in his “informed opinion,” the law was having a “deterrent effect” on students who make threats. Mays told ProPublica that the number of threats his office was tracking had decreased since the law went into effect. His office did not immediately release that number and previously denied requests for the number of threats it has tracked, calling the information “confidential.”

According to data ProPublica obtained through a records request, the number of students criminally charged is growing, not shrinking. This past school year through the end of March, the number of charges for threats of mass violence in juvenile court has jumped to 652, compared to 519 the entire previous school year, when it was classified as a misdemeanor. Both years, students were rarely found “delinquent,” which is equivalent to guilty in adult court. The youngest child charged so far this year is 6.

Rather than tempering its approach, Tennessee toughened it this year. The Legislature added another, higher-level felony to the books for anyone who “knowingly” makes a school threat against four or more people if others “reasonably” believe the threat will be carried out. Legal and disability rights advocates told lawmakers they worried the new law would result in even more confusion among police and school officials who handle threats.

Despite the outcry over increased arrests in Tennessee, two states followed its lead by passing laws that will crack down harder on hoax threats.

In New Mexico, lawmakers increased the charge for a shooting threat from a misdemeanor to a felony, in response to the wave of school threats over the previous year. To be charged with a felony, a person must “intentionally and maliciously” communicate the threat to terrorize others, cause the evacuation of a public building or prompt a police response.

Critics of the bill warned that even with the requirement to prove intent, it was written too vaguely and could harm students.

“This broad definition could criminalize what is described as ‘thought crimes’ or ‘idle threats,’ with implications for statements made by children or juveniles without a full appreciation of the consequences,” the public defenders’ office argued, according to a state analysis of an earlier, similar version of the legislation.

After a 14-year-old shot and killed four people at Apalachee High School in Georgia last September, the state’s House Speaker Jon Burns vowed to take tougher action against students who make threats.

He sponsored legislation that makes it a felony to issue a death threat against a person at a school that terrorizes people or causes an evacuation. The law, which went into effect in April, says someone can be charged either if they intend to cause such harm or if they make a threat “in reckless disregard of the risk” of that harm.

Neither Burns nor the sponsor of the New Mexico bill responded to requests for comment.

Georgia also considered a bill that would treat any 13- to 17-year-old who makes a terroristic threat at school as an adult in court. But after pushback from advocates, the bill’s author, Sen. Greg Dolezal, a Republican, removed threats from the list of offenses that could result in transfer to adult court.

During a March committee hearing, Dolezal acknowledged advocates’ concerns with the original bill language. “We recognize that there is actually a difference between people who actually commit these crimes and minors who are unwisely threatening but perhaps without an intent to ever actually follow through on it,” he said.

Other states also considered passing harsher penalties for school threats.

In Alabama, Rep. Alan Baker, a Republican, sponsored a bill that removes the requirement that a threat be “credible and imminent” to result in a criminal charge. The bill passed easily in both chambers but did not go through the final steps necessary to make it through the Legislature.

Baker said the broader version of the penalty was intended to target hoax threats that cause panic at schools. A first offense would be a misdemeanor; any threats after that would be a felony. “You’re just talking about a very disruptive type of scenario, even though it may be determined that it was just a hoax,” Baker said. “That’s why there needed to be something that would be a little bit more harsh.”

Baker told ProPublica that he plans to reintroduce the bill next session.

Pennsylvania is considering legislation that would make threats against schools a felony, regardless of credibility. The bill would also require offenders to pay restitution, including the cost of supplies and compensation for employees’ time spent responding to the threat.

In a memo last December, state Sen. Michele Brooks, a Republican, cited the “cruel and extremely depraved hoax” threats following Nashville’s Covenant School shooting as the reason for the proposal. “These calls triggered a massive emergency response, creating perilous conditions for students, teachers and public safety agencies alike,” she wrote.

The ACLU of Pennsylvania opposes the legislation, calling it a “broad expansion” of current law that could lead to “excessive” costs for children.

Pennsylvania’s Legislature adjourns at the end of December.


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Much of what we’ve written about regarding the Trump regime’s nonsensical and ridiculous immigration policies have focused on how they’re grabbing people off the streets, or disappearing them to random foreign gulags without due process. But we’ve also talked about the absolute insanity of US immigration policy as it pertains to foreigners traveling to the US on visas. And the most telling thing about recent stories involving tourists being denied entry to the US? Nobody’s surprised by them anymore—even when they involve utterly ridiculous reasons like having a satirical meme on your phone.

We’ve mentioned how the US is now scanning the social media of anyone who wants to visit, and it’s leading to plenty of ridiculous stories that seem likely to cause plenty of foreign tourists to just stay the fuck away.

In the past two weeks, two such stories have made a fair bit of news. First, Aussie writer and former Columbia student Alistair Kitchen told a story of flying from Melbourne to Los Angeles (for a layover before traveling on to New York to visit friends) where he was detained for 12 hours, pressured into revealing his phone contents, and then being shipped back to Australia… because way back when, he had written an article about Palestinian protests at Columbia.

He wrote about the ordeal in the New Yorker, and there are plenty of crazy bits, with the CBP people demanding he unlock a folder on his phone and then scrolling through his dick pics with him being perhaps the craziest part:

He was gone for a long time. I imagined him, in his office, using some new software to surface all the grimy details of my life. Though I’d deleted a lot of material related to the protests from my device, I’d kept plenty of personal content. Presumably Martinez was skimming through all of this—the embarrassing, the shameful, the sexual.

That fear was confirmed. Martinez came out and said that I needed to unlock the Hidden folder in my photo album. I told him it would be better for him if I did not. He insisted. I felt I had no choice. I did have a choice, of course: the choice of noncompliance and deportation. But by then my bravery had left me. I was afraid of this man and of the power that he represented. So instead I unlocked the folder and watched as he scrolled through all of my most personal content in front of me. We looked at a photo of my penis together.

Come to America! Land of the free! Where we detain you for no reason at the border to yell at you about your reporting (free press!), force you to reveal your secrets (no general warrants!), and gleefully scroll through your dick pics together (cruel and unusual).

As Kitchen notes, they had planned to block him from entering all along. While he had done a cursory “cleanup” of his social media before flying to the US, they apparently already had everything they needed.

They were waiting for me when I got off the plane. Officer Martinez intercepted me before I entered primary processing and took me immediately into an interrogation room in the back, where he took my phone and demanded my passcode. When I refused, I was told I would be immediately sent back home if I did not comply. I should have taken that deal and opted for the quick deportation. But in that moment, dazed from my fourteen-hour flight, I believed C.B.P. would let me into the U.S. once they realized they were dealing with a middling writer from regional Australia. So I complied.

Then began the first “interview.” The questions focussed almost entirely on my reporting about the Columbia student protests. From 2022 to 2024, I attended Columbia for an M.F.A. program, on a student visa, and when the encampment began in April of last year I began publishing daily missives to my Substack, a blog that virtually no one (except, apparently, the U.S. government) seemed to read. To Officer Martinez, the pieces were highly concerning. He asked me what I thought about “it all,” meaning the conflict on campus, as well as the conflict between Israel and Hamas. He asked my opinion of Israel, of Hamas, of the student protesters. He asked if I was friends with any Jews. He asked for my views on a one- versus a two-state solution. He asked who was at fault: Israel or Palestine. He asked what Israel should do differently. (The Department of Homeland Security, which governs the C.B.P., claims that any allegations that I’d been arrested for political beliefs are false.)

Then he asked me to name students involved in the protests. He asked which WhatsApp groups, of student protesters, I was a member of. He asked who fed me “the information” about the protests. He asked me to give up the identities of people I “worked with.”

Unfortunately for Officer Martinez, I didn’t work with anyone. I participated in the protests as an independent student journalist who one day stumbled upon tents on the lawn. My writing, all of which is now publicly available, was certainly sympathetic to the protesters and their demands, but it comprised an accurate and honest documentation of the events at Columbia. That, of course, was the problem.

That story got some attention, but not nearly the global attention that the story of a Norwegian tourist, Mads Mikkelsen, who had a somewhat similar experience. In his telling, he was denied entry due to a JD Vance meme on his mobile phone.

Mikkelsen claims that immigration officials stopped him for questioning and quizzed him “about drug trafficking, terrorist plots, and right-wing extremism,” all of which he said was “totally without reason.” He says he was placed in a holding cell.

“They took me to a room with several armed guards, where I had to hand over my shoes, mobile phone, and backpack,” he told Nordlys.

Next, Mikkelsen claims that officials threatened to imprison him or fine him $5,000 if he did not grant them access to his phone, so he did. He said that is when agents found a meme on his device that showed the vice president’s face—digitally altered to make him chubbier, bald, and cartoonish—that became popular after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited the Oval Office in February. He claimed they also signaled disapproval to a photo of him with a homemade wooden pipe.

Now, the Department of Homeland Security has denied that he was denied entry for the meme, saying it was actually because he had admitted to past drug use (apparently he admitted to having marijuana twice: once in New Mexico and once in Germany, though he pointed out it was legal in both places — though in New Mexico while it’s legal at the state level, it’s still (stupidly) illegal at the federal level):

That said, the meme (which had already gone semi-viral back in February) suddenly started appearing all over the place, with plenty of people (especially across Europe) using the meme and Mikkelsen’s story to mock both JD Vance and American immigration/visa policies.

It even went all the way up to the Irish legislature, where a politician, Ivana Bacik, held up the meme of JD Vance during questions on legislation.

Here’s the thing that should terrify anyone who gives a shit about America’s global reputation: when told that a tourist was denied entry over a JD Vance meme, nobody’s first reaction was “that’s obviously fake.” Instead, people across the globe nodded and thought “yeah, that tracks.” The fact that this story is completely believable is a damning indictment of where US immigration policy has gone. That’s not the kind of shit the US is supposed to do, and there’s no way that this isn’t damaging US tourism as these stories spread far and wide.

The thing is, as absurd as it is that Mikkelsen was turned away for either the meme or smoking a little pot, as with the Australian writer, Kitchen, the truly horrifying bit was in how they treated Mikkelsen. Lots of people are laughing about the JD Vance meme bit, but nothing Mikkelsen did could possibly deserve this kind of treatment.

He alleges that he was then strip-searched, fingerprinted, had blood samples taken, and was held for five hours before being put on a flight back to Norway.

Strip searched? Blood samples? What the fuck?

Whether Mikkelsen was actually bounced for the meme or the pot is beside the point. The real story is that when the world hears “American border agents detained a tourist over a satirical image of the Vice President,” their response isn’t disbelief—it’s dark laughter and relief that they’re not planning any trips to the US anytime soon.

That’s not the brand of a free society. That’s the brand of an authoritarian state where mocking the leadership gets you disappeared. And if that doesn’t embarrass the shit out of anyone with even a passing familiarity with what America used to claim to stand for, then we’re already further gone than these stories suggest.


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Just because a constitutional violation is easy to ignore doesn’t make it any less of a constitutional violation. And yet, that was the first defense of Louisiana’s Ten Commandments mandate offered by the governor of the state, Jeff Landry.

When asked what he would say to parents who are upset about the Ten Commandments being displayed in their child’s classroom, the governor replied: “If those posters are in school and they (parents) find them so vulgar, just tell the child not to look at it.”

That’s not an appropriate response to complaints raised about a clearly unconstitutional action by the government. It’s not a matter of “vulgarity.” It’s that no one should be forced to ignore violations of their rights just so they can attend public school.

Of course, this wasn’t the defense offered to the judge handling the inevitable lawsuit in federal court. But even the state’s better defenses were incapable of salvaging the sort of church-plus-state government action that just as inevitably ends in courtroom losses for overreaching lawmakers.

The federal court wasn’t amused by the government’s attempt to avoid judgment by getting cutesy with proposed classroom posters like this one:

Before declaring the Ten Commandments mandate “inconsistent with the history of the First Amendment and public education,” the court had this to say to Louisiana’s legal reps:

Plaintiffs do not seriously dispute that they mount a facial challenge, so, under Croft, they must prove the Act is “unconstitutional in every application” and that there is “no set of circumstances under which” the Ten Commandments could be posted in compliance with the Act that would be constitutional. Plaintiffs lament that Croft is the only Establishment Clause case in the Fifth Circuit to reach this result, but Croft remains binding precedent that this Court must follow.

AG Defendants treat this as a kill shot. They maintain that they can comply with the Establishment Clause by surrounding the Ten Commandments with nonreligious matter no matter how outlandish that material might be. That is to say, AG Defendants believe they can constantly change their iterations, leaving potential challengers like Menelaus trying to seize and hold the ever shape-shifting Proteus until Proteus eventually tires and divulges the hero’s way off the island. See HOMER, THE ODYSSEY 135.391–142.644 (Robert Fagles trans., Penguin Books, 1997). Or, phrased another way, AG Defendants would have aggrieved parents and children play an endless game of whack-a-mole, constantly having to bring new lawsuits to invalidate any conceivable poster that happens to have the Decalogue on it.

The state appealed this decision immediately. And by “immediately,” I mean pretty much before the bits on the PDF even had a chance to dry. Both the decision and the appeal hit the docket on November 12 of last year.

Nearly seven months later, we finally have a response. The Fifth Circuit Appeals Court upholds [PDF] the lower court’s decision while making some of its own very solid points about the obvious unconstitutionality of this mandate.

The state tried to argue that the plaintiffs had alleged no legal “injury” from the mandated posting of the Ten Commandments in public schools and universities. It also claimed the lower court failed to develop allegations enough to warrant its decision. The Fifth Circuit says both arguments are wrong, especially since the only supporting arguments have been cherry-picked from a handful of non-binding decisions from other courts (including the Supreme Court).

The plaintiffs have standing to sue. And the law is clearly unconstitutional. The precedent that actually matters is nearly 50 years old, something the state’s legal counsel might have pointed out before Governor Jeff Landry signed this into law.

Perhaps no better case illustrates the nature of H.B. 71’s constitutional problem than Stone v. Graham, 449 U.S. 39 (1980) (per curiam). In Stone, the Supreme Court struck down a Kentucky statute requiring that the Ten Commandments be displayed on the wall of every public classroom in the state because it had no “secular legislative purpose.”

[…]

According to Kentucky, the statute’s secular legislative purpose was reflected on the displays in a small notation below the Commandments: “The secular application of the Ten Commandments is clearly seen in its adoption as the fundamental legal code of Western Civilization and the Common Law of the United States.” The Court held that the state’s avowed purpose was a sham, and the statute was therefore unconstitutional. It explained, “[t]he pre-eminent purpose for posting the Ten Commandments on schoolroom walls is plainly religious in nature. The Ten Commandments are undeniably a sacred text in the Jewish and Christian faiths, and no legislative recitation of a supposed secular purpose can blind us to that fact.

Nearly fifty years later, Louisiana is trying the same bullshit when faced with a legal challenge.

The statute does not require that the Ten Commandments be integrated into a curriculum of study. On the contrary, under the statute’s minimum requirements, the posters must be indiscriminately displayed in every public school classroom in Louisiana regardless of class subject-matter. See La. R.S. § 17:2124(B)(1). Louisiana insists, however, that unlike Kentucky, its Legislature has a valid “secular historical and educational purpose” for displaying the Ten Commandments in classrooms, which is reflected in the statute.

[…]

Louisiana’s purported legislative purpose states:It is the Legislature’s intent to apply the decision set forth by the Supreme Court of the United States in Van Orden v. Perry, 545 U.S. 677 (2005), to continue the rich tradition [of including the Ten Commandments in the education of our children] and ensure that the students in our public schools may understand and appreciate the foundational documents of our state and national government.

This is similarly a “sham,” says the Fifth Circuit:

It is also unclear how H.B. 71 ensures that students in Louisiana public schools “understand and appreciate the foundational documents of [its] state and national government” when it makes displaying those “foundational” documents optional, and does not require that they also be printed in a large, easily readable font. La. R.S. § 17:2124(A)(9). When the Ten Commandments must be posted prominently and legibly, while the other “contextual” materials need not be visible at all, the disparity lays bare the pretext.

The injunction stays in place and the lower court’s ruling is upheld. And state lawmakers will have to take their crayons back to the drawing board if they hope to shove their preferred god down children’s throats. Better yet, the next time some dumbass bill like this gets proposed, they could apply the wisdom of Governor Landry and just decide to look at something else instead.


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The Supreme Court this morning took a chainsaw to the First Amendment on the internet, and the impact is going to be felt for decades going forward. In the FSC v. Paxton case, the Court upheld the very problematic 5th Circuit ruling that age verification online is acceptable under the First Amendment, despite multiple earlier Supreme Court rulings that said the opposite.

Justice Thomas wrote the 6-3 majority opinion, with Justice Kagan writing the dissent (joined by Sotomayor and Jackson). The practical effect: states can now force websites to collect government IDs from anyone wanting to view adult content, creating a massive chilling effect on protected speech and opening the door to much broader online speech restrictions.

Thomas accomplished this by pulling off some remarkable doctrinal sleight of hand. He ignored the Court’s own precedents in Ashcroft v. ACLU by pretending online age verification is just like checking ID at a brick-and-mortar store (it’s not), applied a weaker “intermediate scrutiny” standard instead of the “strict scrutiny” that content-based speech restrictions normally require, and—most audaciously—invented an entirely new category of “partially protected” speech that conveniently removes First Amendment protections exactly when the government wants to burden them. As Justice Kagan’s scathing dissent makes clear, this is constitutional law by result-oriented reasoning, not principled analysis.

As we’ve noted, in cases like Ashcroft v. ACLU and Brown v. EMA, the Supreme Court had long established that states couldn’t just throw around vague claims of “harmful to minors” to ignore the First Amendment, or at the very least to lower the standard of scrutiny from “strict scrutiny” to “intermediate scrutiny” (though not, as Ken Paxton hoped, all the way down to “rational basis.”).

The real danger here isn’t just Texas’s age verification law—it’s that Thomas has handed every state legislature a roadmap for circumventing the First Amendment online. His reasoning that “the internet has changed” and that intermediate scrutiny suffices for content-based restrictions will be cited in countless future cases targeting online speech. Expect age verification requirements to be attempted for social media platforms (protecting kids from “harmful” political content), for news sites (preventing minors from accessing “disturbing” coverage), and for any online speech that makes moral authorities uncomfortable.

And yes, to be clear, the majority opinion seeks to limit this just to content deemed “obscene” to avoid such problems, but it’s written so broadly as to at least open up challenges along these lines.

Thomas’s invention of “partially protected” speech, that somehow means you can burden those for which it is protected, is particularly insidious because it’s infinitely expandable. Any time the government wants to burden speech, it can simply argue that the burden is built into the right itself—making First Amendment protection vanish exactly when it’s needed most. This isn’t constitutional interpretation; it’s constitutional gerrymandering.

The conservative justices may think they’re just protecting children from pornography, but they’ve actually written a permission slip for the regulatory state to try to control online expression. The internet that emerges from this decision will look much more like the one authoritarian governments prefer: where every click requires identification, where any viewpoint can be age-gated, and where anonymity becomes a luxury only the powerful can afford. Thomas’s “starch” in constitutional standards? It just got bleached out of existence.

Texas, like many States, prohibits the distribution of sexually explicit content to children. Tex. Penal Code Ann. §43.24(b) (West 2016). But, although that prohibition may be effective against brick-and-mortar stores, it has proved challenging to enforce against online content. In an effort to address this problem, Texas enacted H. B. 1181, Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. §129B.001 et seq. (West Cum. Supp. 2024), which requires certain commercial websites that publish sexually explicit content to verify the ages of their visitors. This requirement furthers the lawful end of preventing children from accessing sexually explicit content. But, it also burdens adult visitors of these websites, who all agree have a First Amendment right to access at least some of the content that the websites publish. We granted certiorari to decide whether these burdens likely render H. B. 1181 unconstitutional under the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment. We hold that they do not. The power to require age verification is within a State’s authority to prevent children from accessing sexually explicit content. H. B. 1181 is a constitutionally permissible exercise of that authority.

There’s a lot of throat clearing in the majority opinion regarding the government’s power to block access to “obscene” material, and where it can limit access by children to sexually explicit material. That’s well-worn territory. The issue here is that with online age verification you have some very significant problems—which the Supreme Court used to recognize: the burden on adults of having to prove their age (and relinquish significant privacy in doing so) as well as the fact that the tech sucks and frequently gets stuff wrong.

But Thomas seems to act as though this is a simple extension of laws that prohibit stores from selling adult magazines to kids.

Obscenity is no exception to the widespread practice of requiring proof of age to exercise age-restricted rights. The New York statute upheld in Ginsberg required age verification: It permitted a seller who sold sexual material to a minor to raise “‘honest mistake’” as to age as an affirmative defense, but only if the seller had made “‘a reasonable bona fide attempt to ascertain the true age of [the] minor.’” 390 U. S., at 644. Most States to this day also require age verification for in-person purchases of sexual material. And, petitioners concede that an in-person age verification requirement is a “traditional sort of law” that is “almost surely” constitutional. Tr. of Oral Arg. 17.

The facts of Ginsberg illustrate why age verification, as a practical matter, is necessary for an effective prohibition on minors accessing age-inappropriate sexual content. The statute in that case prohibited the knowing sale of sexual content to a minor under the age of 17. 390 U. S., at 633. The defendant was convicted of knowingly selling a pornographic magazine to a 16-year-old. Id., at 631. But, most of the time, it is almost impossible to distinguish a 16-yearold from a 17-year-old by sight alone. Thus, had the seller in Ginsberg not had an obligation to verify the age of the purchaser, he likely could have avoided liability simply by asserting ignorance as to the purchaser’s age. Only an age-verification requirement can ensure compliance with an age-based restriction.

Thomas then claims that “The need for age verification online is even greater” and even cites Brown v. EMA (which found California’s law preventing the sale of violent video games unconstitutional) to somehow… support the argument here?

Thomas then falsely claims that the law does not regulate the speech of adults, which clearly goes against the opinion in Ashcroft.

Because H. B. 1181 simply requires proof of age to access content that is obscene to minors, it does not directly regulate the protected speech of adults…. On its face, the statute regulates only speech that is obscene to minors. That speech is unprotected to the extent the State seeks only to verify age. And, the statute can easily “be justified without reference to the [protected] content of the regulated speech,” because its apparent purpose is simply to prevent minors, who have no First Amendment right to access speech that is obscene to them, from doing so.

That’s legal fiction dressed up as statutory interpretation. Age verification requirements absolutely burden adult access to protected speech—that’s the entire point of challenging them.

The majority admits that there is some First Amendment concern here, but argues that it doesn’t require strict scrutiny… in part because that would make all age verification laws suspect, even those for brick-and-mortar stores, which Thomas uses as a kind of “gotcha” to support his argument that it’s fine online as well:

Applying the more demanding strict-scrutiny standard would call into question the validity of all age-verification requirements, even longstanding requbirements for brickand-mortar stores. But, as petitioners acknowledge, after Ginsberg, no serious question about the constitutionality of in-person age-verification requirements for obscenity to minors has arisen. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 43 (acknowledging that they “don’t know of any . . . challenge being brought” to an age-verification requirement for “brick-and-mortar stores”). Petitioners insist that their proposed rule would not call into question these “traditional” requirements, because such requirements would “almost surely satisfy” strict scrutiny. Id., at 17. They also contend that a sufficiently tailored online age-verification requirement (although not Texas’s) could satisfy strict scrutiny too. Id., at 6–8. But, if we are not to compromise “‘[t]he “starch” in our constitutional standards,’” we cannot share petitioners’ confidence.

Thomas is doing exactly what he rails against in other contexts: turning the First Amendment into a mushy balancing test instead of a clear constitutional command. The only difference here is that sexual content apparently makes him squeamish enough to abandon his usual textualist principles.

To get around the ruling in Ashcroft, he claims that COPA (the law it invalidated) was actually a ban on content harmful to minors, even as he eventually admits that COPA (like the Texas law at issue) had an age-verification requirement that would allow such content to be published. So what is the difference? The majority claims that with COPA the age-verification aspect was an affirmative defense, whereas with the Texas HB 1181 law, it’s a mandate. To me, that makes the Texas law even more of a problem and a burden, but Thomas reads it the other way:

To be sure, COPA established an age-verification defense. Id., at 662. But, because it did so only as an affirmative defense, COPA still operated as a ban on the public posting of material that is obscene to minors. See id., at 661–662 (citing 47 U. S. C. §§231(a)(1), (c)(1)). This was so because an indictment need only “alleg[e] the necessary elements of an offense”; it need not “anticipate affirmative defenses.” United States v. Sisson, 399 U. S. 267, 287–288 (1970). Under COPA, the Government thus remained free to bring criminal charges against any covered person who publicly posted speech that was obscene to minors, even if he had fully implemented compliant age-verification procedures.

While the majority opinion is written to suggest it only applies directly to “pornographic” content deemed “obscene to children,” it’s really taking an axe to the fundamental ruling in the Reno case (which tossed out most of the Communications Decency Act) and Ashcroft. Thomas claims this is okay because the internet is different now:

In the quarter century since the factual record closed in Ashcroft II, the internet has expanded exponentially. In 1999, only two out of five American households had home internet access. Dept. of Commerce, Census Bureau, Home Computers and Internet Use in the United States: Aug. 2000, p. 2 (2001). Nearly all those households used a desktop computer or laptop to connect to the internet, and most used a dial-up connection. Dept. of Commerce, Economics and Statistics Admin., A Nation Online: Entering the Broadband Age 1, 5 (2004). Connecting through dial-up came with significant limitations: Dial-up is much slower than a modern broadband connection, and because dial-up relied on the home’s phone line, many households could not use the internet and make or receive phone calls at the same time. See Inline Connection Corp. v. AOL Time Warner Inc., 302 F. Supp. 2d 307, 311 (Del. 2004). And, “video-on-demand” was largely just a notion that figures like “Bill Gates and Al Gore rhapsodize[d] about”; “most Netizens would [have] be[en] happy with a system fast enough to view static photos without waiting an age.” Kennedy 493–494.

In contrast, in 2024, 95 percent of American teens had access to a smartphone, allowing many to access the internet at almost any time and place. M. Faverio & O. Sidoti, Pew Research Center, Teens, Social Media and Technology 2024, p. 19. Ninety-three percent of teens reported using the internet several times per day, and watching videos is among their most common activities online. Id., at 4–5, 20. The content easily accessible to adolescents online includes massive libraries of pornographic videos. For instance, in 2019, Pornhub, one of the websites involved in this case, published 1.36 million hours—or over 150 years—of new content. App. 177. Many of these readily accessible videos portray men raping and physically assaulting women—a far cry from the still images that made up the bulk of online pornography in the 1990s. See N. Kristof, The Children of Pornhub, N. Y. Times, Dec. 6, 2020, p. SR4. The Court in Reno and Ashcroft II could not have conceived of these developments, much less conclusively resolve how States could address them.

The majority claims that those rulings “do not cease to be precedential simply because technology has changed so dramatically” but that they can be limited because so many people have the internet.

That argument is bonkers and dangerous. If “more people use technology now” justifies weakening constitutional protections, then every digital right is up for grabs. That line will now show up in briefings across the country as states argue that widespread internet adoption somehow diminishes the First Amendment’s force online.

It is misleading in the extreme to assume that Reno and Ashcroft II spoke to the circumstances of this case simply because they both dealt with “the internet” as it existed in the 1990s. The appropriate standard of scrutiny to apply in this case is a difficult question that no prior decision of this Court has squarely addressed.

That’s a shot across the bow of free speech online. It’s Justice Thomas saying it’s “open season” to seek to regulate speech online.

The opinion then spends a lot of time explaining why intermediate scrutiny is the right standard, and not strict scrutiny (as FSC wanted) or “rational basis” (as Texas wanted). This feels like Thomas trying to split the baby (which, I should remind you, kills the baby) and pretending to compromise. It’s not a compromise. It’s a full frontal assault on internet speech.

The dissent, by Kagan, understands this problematic result:

The majority’s opinion concluding to the contrary is, to be frank, confused. The opinion, to start with, is at war with itself. Parts suggest that the First Amendment plays no role here—that because Texas’s law works through age verification mandates, the First Amendment is beside the point. See ante, at 13–18. But even the majority eventually gives up that ghost. As, really, it must. H. B. 1181’s requirements interfere with—or, in First Amendment jargon, burden—the access adults have to protected speech: Some individuals will forgo that speech because of the need to identify themselves to a website (and maybe, from there, to the world) as a consumer of sexually explicit expression. But still, the majority proposes, that burden demands only intermediate scrutiny because it arises from an “incidental” restriction, given that Texas’s statute uses age verification to prevent minors from viewing the speech. See ante, at 13, 18–19. Except that is wrong—nothing like what we have ever understood as an incidental restraint for First Amendment purposes. Texas’s law defines speech by content and tells people entitled to view that speech that they must incur a cost to do so. That is, under our First Amendment law, a direct (not incidental) regulation of speech based on its content—which demands strict scrutiny.

Kagan takes issue with Thomas’ claim that this case is somehow different from the existing precedents:

The majority’s attempt to distinguish our four precedents saying just that rounds out the list of its errors. According to the majority, all of those decisions involved prohibiting rather than merely burdening adults’ access to obscene-forchildren speech. See ante, at 21. But that is not true. And in any event it would not matter: The First Amendment prevents making speech hard, as well as banning it outright. So on all accounts the majority’s rationale craters.

The majority is not shy about why it has adopted these special-for-the-occasion, difficult-to-decipher rules. It thinks they are needed to get to what it considers the right result: giving Texas permission to enforce its statute. See ante, at 19–21. But Texas should not receive that permission if it can achieve its goal as to minors while interfering less with the speech choices of adults. And if it cannot, then Texas’s statute would survive strict scrutiny, given the obvious importance of its goal. For that reason, the majority’s analysis is as unnecessary as it is unfaithful to the law.

The dissent also calls out the very real burdens that online age-verification creates that brick-and-mortar age verification does not. This is a point that Thomas effectively ignores:

Recall how the statute works. To enter a covered website—with all the protected speech just described—an individual must verify his age by using either a “government-issued identification” like a driver’s license or “transactional data” associated with things like a job or mortgage. §§129B.001(7), 129B.003(b)(2); see ante, at 2–3. For the would-be consumer of sexually explicit materials, that requirement is a deterrent: It imposes what our First Amendment decisions often call a “chilling effect.” E.g., Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Bonta, 594 U. S. 595, 606 (2021). It is not, contra the majority, like having to flash ID to enter a club. See ante, at 14–15. It is turning over information about yourself and your viewing habits—respecting speech many find repulsive—to a website operator, and then to . . . who knows? The operator might sell the information; the operator might be hacked or subpoenaed. We recognized the problem in a case involving sexual material on cable TV: Similar demands, we decided, would “restrict viewing by subscribers who fear for their reputations should the operator, advertently or inadvertently, disclose the list of those who wish to watch the ‘patently offensive’ channel.” Denver Area Ed. Telecommunications Consortium, Inc. v. FCC, 518 U. S. 727, 754 (1996). The internet context can only increase the fear. And the Texas law imposes costs not just on potential users, but on website operators too. They must either implement a system costing (the District Court found) at least $40,000 for every 100,000 verifications, or else pay penalties of $10,000 per day.

The dissent specifically highlights how this case was nearly identical to Ashcroft, and the majority is simply making up random reasons to pretend it’s different. Amusingly, Kagan cites Thomas’s concurrence in Ashcroft to make that point.

And the denouement: The statute the Court addressed in Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union, 542 U. S. 656 (2004), was a near-twin of Texas’s. The Child Online Protection Act (COPA) prohibited commercial entities from posting on the internet content “harmful to minors.” Id., at 661 (quoting 47 U. S. C. §231(a)(1)). And just like H. B. 1181, that statute defined the covered material by adapting the Miller obscenity test for children—thus creating a category of obscene-for-children speech. See 542 U. S., at 661– 662; supra, at 4. So too, COPA made the adoption of an age verification system crucial. It did so by providing an affirmative defense to any entity that verified age through an “adult personal identification number” or similar mechanism before granting access to the posted materials. Ashcroft, 542 U. S., at 662. So, as in H. B. 1181, if the poster verified age, no liability could attach. How, then, to analyze such a statute? The Court viewed the problem as it had in prior cases: COPA, though directed at keeping sexually explicit materials from children, “was likely to burden some speech that is protected for adults.” Id., at 665. And because of that “content-based restriction[],” the Court needed to apply strict scrutiny. Id., at 660, 665, 670. The Government thus had to show that “the proposed alternatives will not be as effective as the challenged statute.” Id., at 665. In short, Ashcroft adhered to the view that “‘the governmental interest in protecting children from harmful materials’ does not ‘justify an unnecessarily broad suppression of speech addressed to adults.’” Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Reilly, 533 U. S. 525, 581 (2001) (THOMAS, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment) (quoting Reno, 521 U. S., at 875).

Kagan then calls out how the majority ruling creates an entirely new category of First Amendment speech: “partially protected” speech.

The majority tries to escape that conclusion with a maneuver found nowhere in the world of First Amendment doctrine. It turns out, the majority says, that the First Amendment only “partially protects” the speech in question: The “speech is unprotected to the extent the State seeks only to verify age.” Ante, at 18, 29, n. 12 (emphasis deleted); see ante, at 28 (the speech is “unprotected to the extent that the State imposes only an age-verification requirement”). Meaning, the speech is unprotected to the extent that the State is imposing the very burden under review. Or said another way, the right of adults to view the speech has the burden of age verification built right in. That is convenient, if altogether circular. In the end, the majority’s analysis reduces to this: Requiring age verification does not directly burden adults’ speech rights because adults have no right to be free from the burden of age verification. Gerrymander the right to incorporate the burden, and the critical conclusion follows. If only other First Amendment cases were so easy!

As for Thomas’s argument that “the internet is different now,” well, Kagan points out that may make the facts of a case different, but should never change the level of scrutiny:

That leaves only the majority’s claim—again mistaken— that the internet has changed too much to follow our precedents’ lead. See ante, at 25–27. Of course technology has developed, both swiftly and surely. And that fact might matter (as indeed the burden/ban distinction might) to how strict scrutiny applies—and particularly to whether the State can show it has adopted the least speech-restrictive means to achieve its goal. Ashcroft explicitly recognized that point: It thought that, given the pace of technological change, the District Court might make a different decision than it had five years earlier about whether there were “less restrictive alternative[s]” to COPA. 542 U. S., at 671–672. To that extent—but to that extent only—the majority is right that Ashcroft was “self-consciously narrow and factbound.” Ante, at 26. Not, though, as to the level of scrutiny. On that question, the Court was unequivocal that because COPA was “a content-based speech restriction,” it must satisfy the strict-scrutiny test. 542 U. S., at 665; see supra, at 8–9, and n. 1. For that was a matter of basic First Amendment principle. And as this Court has understood: “Whatever the challenges of applying the Constitution to ever-advancing technology, the basic principles of the First Amendment do not vary.” Moody v. NetChoice, LLC, 603 U. S. 707, 733 (2024) (quoting Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Assn., 564 U. S. 786, 790 (2011)); see TikTok Inc. v. Garland, 604 U. S. ___, ___ (2025) (GORSUCH, J., concurring in judgment) (slip op., at 2) (“[E]ven as times and technologies change, ‘the principle of the right to free speech is always the same’” (quoting Abrams v. United States, 250 U. S. 616, 628 (1919) (Holmes, J., dissenting))).

And, as Kagan concludes, the majority is now admitting that Texas law is not the least burdensome way to reach this result, and that’s seems like a real problem for speech:

The last part of the majority’s opinion—plus some of its footnotes—shows why all this matters. In concluding that H. B. 1181 passes constitutional muster, the majority states (correctly) that under intermediate scrutiny Texas need not show it has selected the least speech-restrictive way of accomplishing its goal. See ante, at 32. Even if there were a mechanism that (1) as well or better prevented minors’ access to the covered materials and (2) imposed a lesser burden on adults’ ability to view that expression, Texas could spurn that “superior” method. Ante, at 34. Likewise, the majority—because it is applying a more forgiving standard—can ignore a host of questions about how far H. B. 1181 burdens protected expression. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 67–68. In the fine print of two footnotes, the majority declares that it has no need to explore (1) whether H. B. 1181 requires covered websites to demand age verification for all their content or only for the subset that is obscene for minors; (2) whether H. B. 1181 requires that covered speech be obscene “only to a minor (including a toddler)” or “to all minors (including 17-year-olds)”; and (3) whether H. B. 1181 permits websites to use “newer biometric methods of age verification, like face scans,” that pose fewer privacy concerns than submitting government ID and transactional data. Ante, at 17, n. 7 (emphasis in original); ante, at 34, n. 14. The majority explains that even if Texas answered each of those questions in a maximally burdensome way—requiring government ID to view speech that is protected even for children because one-third of the website’s contents are obscene for two-year-olds—H. B. 1181 can go forward. And again, that is true even if Texas has a less burdensome way of “equally or more effective[ly]” achieving its objective….

I would demand Texas show more, to ensure it is not undervaluing the interest in free expression. Texas can of course take measures to prevent minors from viewing obscene-for-children speech. But if a scheme other than H. B. 1181 can just as well accomplish that objective and better protect adults’ First Amendment freedoms, then Texas should have to adopt it (or at least demonstrate some good reason not to). A State may not care much about safeguarding adults’ access to sexually explicit speech; a State may even prefer to curtail those materials for everyone. Many reasonable people, after all, view the speech at issue here as ugly and harmful for any audience. But the First Amendment protects those sexually explicit materials, for every adult.

The only sliver of possible “good news” is that the majority opinion focuses so heavily on how intermediate scrutiny applies only because some adult content is “obscene to minors,” making it unprotected by the First Amendment, meaning that this ruling may not be as helpful to those who wish to impose age verification requirements on all social media, which would necessarily cover plenty of fully protected speech. But Thomas’s majority opinion is written in a manner that unfortunately will allow politicians around the country to relitigate those questions that had once been seen as very clear and settled law.

Kagan’s final line cuts to the heart of what Thomas’s majority has abandoned: the principle that constitutional rights don’t disappear just because the government finds the speech distasteful or because technology makes enforcement more challenging. The First Amendment was designed to protect unpopular speech—speech that makes authorities uncomfortable, speech that challenges prevailing moral views, speech that powerful people would prefer to suppress.

By creating his “partially protected” speech doctrine and blessing age verification burdens that would have been unthinkable a decade ago, Thomas has essentially told state governments: find the right procedural mechanism, and you can burden any online speech you dislike. Today it’s pornography. Tomorrow it will be political content that legislators deem “harmful to minors,” news coverage that might “disturb” children, or social media discussions that don’t align with official viewpoints.

The conservatives may have gotten their victory against online adult content, but they’ve handed every future administration—federal and state—a blueprint for dismantling digital free speech. They were so scared of nudity that they broke the Constitution. The rest of us will be living with the consequences for decades.


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In a day full of terrible Supreme Court rulings there was one bit of good news: in their FCC v. Consumers’ Research ruling, the court rejected a bid by radical right wing Republicans to destroy a popular $8 billion FCC program that connects poor and rural schools and communities to the internet.

The plaintiff in this case, Consumers’ Research, isn’t really a consumers’ group. It’s a right wing political project designed to put a veneer of pleb-friendly populism on efforts to destroy corporate oversight. The organization (which maintains a part of their website tasked with tut-scolding “woke” companies) sued the FCC claiming that the Universal Service Fund (USF) was unconstitutional.

The USF applies a small surcharge on traditional phone lines to fund broadband expansion to rural unserved locations (of which the U.S. has a lot thanks to rampant telecom monopolization and the corruption that coddles it). The program has had some problems with subsidy fraud in decades’ past, but more recently it’s been cleaned up and proven hugely beneficial for rural communities.

Consumers’ Research claimed the FCC was illegally overstepping its authority by levying the fee. The Trump-stocked Fifth Circuit, pretty radically, agreed with them last summer.

The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 (with Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch dissenting) in favor of the FCC. It’s a curious reversal of a broader (and very successful so far) Republican court trend attempting to destroy all remaining government oversight of corporate power and dismantle whatever’s left of regulatory independence. You know, for rural small town populism or whatever.

A Good Ruling, Driven By Less Ethical Motivations

Why did the right-wing Supreme Court buck its broader trend of boxing in regulatory autonomy? Largely because of the influence of telecom giants like AT&T. While the USF does genuinely fund a lot of useful broadband expansion, it also throws billions of dollars into the laps of telecom giants like AT&T, Verizon, Charter, T-Mobile, and Comcast.

These telecoms were opposed to destroying the USF for what should be obvious reasons. And there had been hints for several months that they had managed to convince several Supremes that the USF should be maintained. Though it speaks volumes that Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch thought nothing of destroying a hugely-popular program built over decades with broad bipartisan support.

But the remaining Republican majority rejected Consumers’ Research because the telecom industry has a plan underway to get much more taxpayer money in the next few years.

With traditional phone lines dying, the USF program risks running out of money. So there’s been a long-standing conversation about how to expand the contribution base so you can keep funding the program and keep connecting rural schools, libraries, and communities to the internet. This conversation, as is usually the case in the U.S. telecom policy, is being dominated by self-serving giants like AT&T.

AT&T and their friends have a proposal they’ve been planning for years: they want to have the FCC apply a new tax on streaming video services like Netflix to theoretically help fund broadband expansion.

On the surface, having tech companies help fund broadband expansion isn’t a terrible idea. The problem is that companies like AT&T have an extremely long history ripping off subsidy programs, overbilling schools, and pocketing money that was earmarked for rural communities. And Republicans have an even longer history of badly mismanaging subsidy programs and ignoring corporate subsidy fraud.

So what’s far more likely to happen is the USF gets dramatically expanded once the FCC has a working voting Republican majority, and steadily becomes a much larger and much worse-managed slush fund that dumps billions in additional money in telecom monopolies’ laps in exchange for fiber networks that are mysteriously somehow never fully deployed.

There’s an obvious a tension here between right wing and Libertarian zealots who want to destroy all federal governance, and right wing grifters who want to steal taxpayer money in new and creative ways. There’s also tension within telecom monopolies’ like AT&T’s interest to destroy all remaining FCC oversight, yet keep the FCC just functional enough to keep slathering it with billions in taxpayer dollars.

There are good faith people (including consumer groups) who support some sort of streaming tax expansion just to keep the USF alive. But in a government where the expansion will be literally written by AT&T lawyers and overseen by weird lackeys like Trump FCC boss Brendan Carr, I think assuming this will be done and enforced competently and ethically is delusional wishcasting.

Such a Netflix tax would generate untold billions in additional subsidies for telecoms, at the cost of much higher streaming prices for consumers. Which should help you understand why some members of the Republican Supreme Court suddenly and mysteriously grew an uncharacteristic conscience. Kill the USF, and you kill the opportunity to make telecom monopolies significantly wealthier in the years to come.


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Last week we noted how the Trump administration had cooked up a half-assed wireless phone company. Even calling it a phone company is generous: It’s basically a licensing agreement and a lazy coat of paint on another, half-assed MVNO effort (Patriot Mobile), which in turn just resells T-Mobile service.

A cornerstone of the supposed company was a new $500 Trump T1 phone. To pitch the phone, the press release had a badly photoshopped rendition of what the so-far-nonexistent phone would look like (curiously missing a camera flash), peppered with claims the phone would be “proudly designed and built in the United States.”

As we noted at the time, it would likely be just weeks before people realized the “made in America” claims weren’t true. And it sounds like we didn’t even have to wait that long. The Verge noticed that all of the “made in America” claims have been stripped from the Trump website, replaced with far-more vague language about how the phone is ambiguously infused with American sentiment:

“The T1’s new tagline is “Premium Performance. Proudly American.” Its website says the device is “designed with American values in mind” and there are “American hands behind every device.” Under Key Features, the first thing listed is “American-Proud Design.” None of this indicates, well, anything. It certainly doesn’t say the device is made in the USA, or even designed in the USA. There are just… some hands. In America.”

Trump Mobile folks are still trying to claim the phone will be made in America. At least until press reports in another month or two indicating that’s clearly not true. Again. The Verge notes that the screen size has gotten smaller in the website description, and they eliminated listing RAM specifications for some reason.

Trump operates at a fourth-grade reading level and genuinely believes his ignorant tariff plan will somehow magically force all manufacturing back to the United States. But as countless journalists and analysts have dissected, it would be literally impossible to manufacture an affordable phone in the United States without resorting to slave labor and ignoring all labor and environmental law.

Which is to say the weird Trump zealots might actually believe (or have been told) this is a real thing that they’re capable of, but it’s simply never happening. Still, the Trump boys have been pouring it on thick, with Eric Trump going on TV to claim that not only will the Trump phone be made in the USA, but all company support would be USA based as well:

“You’re not calling up call centers in Bangladesh − do it right out of St. Louis, Missouri, and you’re going to have phones that are made right here in the United States of America,” [Eric said]. He added Trump Mobile is “going to revolutionize cell phones, mobile calling” as it will fully operate in the U.S.

“I really believe we’re gonna have one of the great kind of tech platforms as part of the Trump Organization of any company in the world,” he added.

This is really all just lazy performance art for very dim people.

In many ways a lazily branded mobile phone MVNO hyping a so-far-nonexistent phone pretending to be American made is a perfect encapsulation of the “Trump experience.” Just complete pointless artifice from start to finish, with a singular function: hollow grift in the golden age of corruption.


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Well, RFK Jr.’s reconstructed Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), just concluded its first day of meetings in Atlanta. This was over the objection of GOP Senator Bill Cassidy, who confirmed RFK Jr. to his appointment but called for a delay to ACIP’s meeting after Kennedy terminated all 17 panel members weeks ago and replaced them with 8 hand-picked members that have been described as unqualified for the role, as anti-vaxxers, or both. ACIP is really important, as the group’s guidance has typically been adopted by doctors when it comes to immunization schedules for Americans and by policy makers when it comes to standards for what health insurance providers must cover.

Most everyone expected ACIP’s meeting to be filled with vaccine skepticism, misinformation, and a departure from the scientific approach the panel has previously taken. Unfortunately, it’s so, so much worse.

Let’s start with the simple fact that only 7 members of the panel met, because one of them withdrew from the position over conflicts of interest, the very thing RFK Jr. said was the reason for disbanding the previous 17 member ACIP.

A member of the health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr’s newly overhauled federal vaccine advisory panel withdrew after a conflict of interest review, a spokesperson has told the Guardian. Dr Michael Ross, who was involved in multiple private healthcare companies, withdrew after review of his financial holdings.

“Yesterday, Dr Michael Ross decided to withdraw from serving on ACIP during the financial holdings review,” a spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said. “The sacrifice to serve on ACIP varies from member to member, and we appreciate Dr Ross’s willingness to go through this rigorous process.”

What was the conflict of interest, you ask? Well, that should be easy enough to answer. See, Trump and Kennedy put together a whole webpage on the CDC.gov site with the sole purpose of making public any declared conflicts of interests by ACIP members made since the year of our lord 2,000. In the overview section of the page, it is made clear the webpage was created to “improve transparency about member conflicts of interest.”

None of Kennedy’s hand-picked ACIP members, including that of Dr. Ross, appear anywhere on that page. Transparency for thee, it seems, but not for he (Kennedy).

But if you thought such a black mark on the first day of meetings for ACIP would have dampened their anti-medicine spirit, you would be wrong. Everyone expected this blighted-version of ACIP to attack specific vaccines that were slated for discussion, namely the next round of flu vaccines due to the use of thimerosal to preserve multi-dose vials of the adult version of the shots, as well as RSV vaccines for children. And, while those attacks certainly did come from some panel members, ACIP thankfully ultimately voted to approve both vaccines for adults and children, with the caveat being that only single-dose shots should be given to children, which would be free of thimerosal.

But those specifics were overshadowed by the announcement that ACIP was going to globally review for assessment all vaccination schedules for both children and adults.

A federal vaccine panel entirely hand-selected by health secretary and anti-vaccine activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. gathered for its first meeting Wednesday—and immediately announced that it would re-evaluate the entire childhood vaccination schedule, as well as the one for adults.

“In addition to studying and evaluating individual vaccines, it is important to evaluate the cumulative effect of the recommended vaccine schedule,” Kulldorff said. “This includes interaction effects between different vaccines, the total number of vaccines, cumulative amounts of vaccine ingredients, and the relative timing of different vaccines.”

This has already been studied. Extensively. As Ars notes, it’s all baked into the testing process for vaccines. During trials or testing, the vaccines are given along with the cumulative other vaccines that Kulldorff is talking about. Real world, real people stuff.

Not to mention all the other quackery that went on.

During the full-day meeting, the seven new members listened to CDC experts review data on COVID-19 vaccines and RSV vaccines and monoclonal antibodies. In the discussions, ACIP member Retsef Levi—who is an expert in operations management—made a puzzling critique that the CDC’s method for evaluating COVID-19 vaccine efficacy analysis didn’t account for “alternative” explanations like “the vaccine is actually making you more vulnerable for multiple viruses.”

Meanwhile, ACIP member Robert Malone—who has claimed to have invented mRNA vaccines and is proud to be called an “anti-vaxxer”—spread false misinformation that certain lots of COVID-19 vaccines were dangerous. ACIP member Vicky Pebsworth—a nurse who is on the board of an anti-vaccine organization—said she was “very concerned” that the CDC’s safety monitoring systems were not capturing all of the adverse events from vaccines and said the committee should have access to “data that we probably wouldn’t ordinarily have.” A CDC subject matter expert noted that there are published studies showing that the CDC’s safety monitoring systems capture a large majority of adverse events.

This is going to go precisely as you expect, for the most part, and exactly as Kennedy has willed it. That was the whole point of his hostile takeover of ACIP and his inputting a group of people ideologically aligned with his agenda. And it’s going to result in less immunization of the public, especially in children.

And that will lead, I’m sorry to say, to the filling of tiny little coffins.


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Ctrl-Alt-Speech is a weekly podcast about the latest news in online speech, from Mike Masnick and Everything in Moderation‘s Ben Whitelaw.

Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Pocket Casts, YouTube, or your podcast app of choice — or go straight to the RSS feed.

In this week’s roundup of the latest news in online speech, content moderation and internet regulation, Ben is joined by guest host Bridget Todd, a technology and culture writer, speaker and trainer and host of two great podcasts, There are No Girls on the Internet and IRL: Online Life is Real Life. Together, they cover:

AI Models And Parents Don’t Understand ‘Let Him Cook’ (404 Media)Trial reveals flaws in tech intended to enforce Australian social media ban for under-16s (The Guardian)Inside /r/SGExams: Meet the young volunteers behind 1 of S’pore’s largest online forums for students (Straits Times)The people who clean up your TikTok feed are starting to fight back (Rest of World)Man with real-life girlfriend and child proposes to AI chatbot after programming it to flirt: ‘I think this is actual love (New York Post)

This episode is brought to you with financial support from the Future of Online Trust & Safety Fund.


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