The Commentariat -- June 1, 2021
Marie: If you missed it, see also yesterday's Scam Alert at the top of the May 31 page. Plus: I wrote to a friend about the scam because I thought it was so odd. Apparently not. She wrote back, "The Gift Card scam is a multi-million dollar scam, that tends to target the elderly. Some people have lost their life's savings. Another one is that someone you are related to or know is in jail, stranded somewhere or in some kind of trouble (like jail) and needs you to wire them money."
Calvin Woodward of the AP: "President Joe Biden honored America's war dead at Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day by laying a wreath at the hallowed burial ground and extolling the sacrifices of the fallen for the pursuit of democracy, 'the soul of America.' Biden invoked the iconic battles of history and joined them to the present as he implored Americans to rise above the divisions straining the union, which he described in stark terms. The president was joined Monday by first lady Jill Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff in a somber ceremony at the Virginia cemetery's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, which is dedicated to deceased service members whose remains have not been identified. His face tight with emotion, Biden walked up to the wreath, cupping it in his hands in silent reflection, then making the sign of the cross. His eyes were wet." ~~~
The soul of America is animated by the perennial battle between our worse instincts, which we've seen of late, and our better angels. Between 'me first' and 'we the people.' Between greed and generosity, cruelty and kindness, captivity and freedom.... Democracy itself is in peril, here at home and around the world. What we do now, what we do now, how we honor the memory of the fallen, will determine whether democracy will long endure. -- Joe Biden, Memorial Day address ~~~
~~~ Kathryn Watson of CBS News: "President Biden said how America honors the memory of its fallen service members 'will determine whether democracy will long endure' in a Memorial Day address at Arlington National Cemetery.... Mr. Biden emphasized America is an 'idea' dependent on a commitment to freedom and justice in each generation." ~~~
David Lynch of the Washington Post: "Finance ministers from Group of Seven nations meeting in London on Friday are expected to back President Biden's call for a global minimum tax on corporate profits, giving him an early win in a grueling diplomatic campaign that is just beginning. The new minimum tax, one half of a two-pronged global reform effort, is designed to halt a cycle of corporate tax-cutting that has sapped government revenue around the globe. As part of a package deal, negotiators are also wrestling with European demands to tax American technology giants such as Google and Facebook, which earn substantial revenue in countries where they have little physical presence. Biden catalyzed the global tax debate this month by lowering to 15 percent from 21 percent his proposed worldwide minimum. If he can secure agreement from the world's leading democracies -- en route to a broader global consensus later this year -- it could eventually produce the most significant global tax shift in decades."
What I Saw at the QAnon "Conference." David Gilbert of Vice: "QAnon's biggest celebrities threw a three-day conference in Dallas over the weekend -- and it did not disappoint. Whether you wanted to hear a former US Army general [-- Michael Flynn --] calling for a military coup or Roger Stone's social media advisor [Jason Sullivan] calling for Hillary Clinton's execution, there was something for everyone.... A sitting Congressman [-- Louie Gohmert (R-Texas --] appeared on stage and literally embraced QAnon influencers. Dozens of members of a shadowy militia provided protection -- some with their own pugs in tow. And then there was Kraken-lawyer Sidney Powell trying to sing the national anthem."
Seth Borenstein of the AP: "More than one-third of the world's heat deaths each year are due directly to global warming, according to the latest study to calculate the human cost of climate change. But scientists say that's only a sliver of climate's overall toll -- even more people die from other extreme weather amplified by global warming such as storms, flooding and drought -- and the heat death numbers will grow exponentially with rising temperatures. Dozens of researchers who looked at heat deaths in 732 cities around the globe from 1991 to 2018 calculated that 37% were caused by higher temperatures from human-caused warming, according to a study Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change."
The Pandemic, Ctd.
The New York Times' live updates of Covid-19 developments Tuesday are here.
I Ain't Working Here No More. Micheline Maynard in a Washington Post op-ed: "... upward of 1 million [open jobs in the restaurant business] are going begging, leading to a bitter debate over the reasons. Business owners point to the extra $300 a week in jobless benefits that are part of the American Rescue Plan for a covid-ravaged economy.... People forget that restaurants were scrambling to find workers long before the pandemic.... But what if a substantial number of those not going back to restaurant work simply realized ... that working in many restaurants ... is kind of awful?... [Many laid-off restaurants workers] find themselves welcome in ... many places where, unlike many restaurants, the pay and hours may be steadier and even come with benefits."
The New York Times' live updates of Covid-19 developments Monday are here. (Also linked yesterday.)
Beyond the Beltway
Oklahoma. DeNeen Brown of the Washington Post: "On the 100th anniversary of the 1921 Tulsa race massacre, survivors and descendants gathered Monday at Standpipe Hill, where Black World War I veterans fought fiercely in a battle to hold off a White mob descending on the all-Black neighborhood of Greenwood.... Tulsa spent much of the past century denying and dismissing the racial terror that unfolded here. Now the city is finally acknowledging the history and its lasting scars, even as it resists calls for reparations for the survivors and descendants. Over the past three days, crowds of Black and White people have flocked to Greenwood for peaceful demonstrations, parades, concerts and panel discussions about the race massacre. Hundreds were expected to gather late Monday evening for a candlelight vigil, and President Biden is scheduled to visit Tulsa on Tuesday, when the city resumes excavation of a mass grave in Oaklawn Cemetery that may be connected to the rampage." An AP story is here. ~~~
~~~ Eugene Robinson of the Washington Post: "... the burning of 'Black Wall Street' in Tulsa a century ago ... was part of a long and shameful pattern in which White mobs used murderous violence to erase African American prosperity.... It happened in two dozen cities across the country in 1919, during what came to be known as the 'Red Summer.'... Perhaps the worst of the 1919 riots was in Chicago.... Whites rioted and set fires throughout heavily African American neighborhoods on the city's South Side. In the end, 38 people were killed and more than 500 injured, most of them Black.... The aftermath of the riots saw the codification of Jim Crow laws and the intensification of unwritten practices such as redlining, intended to keep Black Americans 'in their place.'... There are those who deny that anything called 'systemic racism' is a feature of the American landscape. They should be aware that history tells a very different story."
Texas. Hey, U.S. Senate: The Eyes of Texas Are upon You. Amy Gardner of the Washington Post: "Texas Democrats who defeated a Republican effort to pass a suite of new voting restrictions with a dramatic, late-night walkout from the state House chamber on Sunday have a message for President Biden and his allies in Congress: If we can protect voting rights, you can too. The surprise move by roughly 60 Democratic lawmakers headed off the expected passage of S.B. 7, a voting measure that would have been one of the most stringent in the nation, denying Republicans a required quorum and forcing them to abruptly adjourn without taking a vote. The coordinated walkout just after 10:30 p.m. Central time jolted the national debate about voting rights, putting the spotlight on Democratic-backed federal legislation that has been stalled in the Senate all spring, even as state Republicans move to enact new voting rules.... Much of the pressure to secure voting rights nationally falls primarily on ... Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.) and Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.)...." ~~~
~~~ King Greg. Patrick Svitek of the Texas Tribune: &"Gov. Greg Abbott said Monday he would veto the section of the state budget that funds the Legislature hours after a Democratic walkout killed his priority elections bill. 'No pay for those who abandon their responsibilities,' Abbott said in a tweet. 'Stay tuned.'... 'This would eliminate the branch of government that represents the people and basically create a monarchy,' state Rep. Donna Howard of Austin tweeted."
Way Beyond
Russia. Vladimir Isachenkov of the AP: "Russia's military will form 20 new units in the country's west this year to counter what it claims is a growing threat from NATO, the defense minister [Sergei Shoigu] said Monday.... He added the military units in Western Russia have commissioned about 2,000 new pieces of weaponry this year."