Monthly Archives: February 2021

Reporters Committee to expand work with law school clinics in 2021 – Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

Posted: February 4, 2021 at 6:45 pm

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press will continue to expand its work with law school clinics across the country in 2021 with the support of three generous grants from the Legal Clinic Fund, Lodestar Foundation and First Look Medias Press Freedom Defense Fund. The investments will support the Reporters Committees work with legal clinics nationwide, including those that are members of the Free Expression Legal Network. The Reporters Committee launched the Free Expression Legal Network in 2019 in partnership with the Yale Media Freedom and Information Access Clinic to promote collaboration among law school clinics, help law students gain important hands-on experience representing journalists and connect potential news media clients with legal support.

We are grateful for the support of the Legal Clinic Fund, Lodestar Foundation and Press Freedom Defense Fund as we continue to bring together the efforts of numerous law school clinics to provide newsgatherers of all types with pro bono legal support, said Bruce Brown, executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. There is a tremendous opportunity to grow the capacity of these clinics to support journalists and news organizations, especially at the local level, in overcoming legal challenges they may face while working to bring important information to their communities.

A $200,000 grant from the Legal Clinic Fund a collaborative effort to support the growth and sustainability of legal clinics across the U.S. that seek to advance and defend First Amendment rights, media freedom, and transparency in their communities and nationally has enabled the Reporters Committee to hire a full-time clinical legal fellow to work with its attorneys who direct the University of Virginia School of Laws First Amendment Clinic. The UVA clinic offers hands-on experience to law students in free speech and press freedom cases, primarily for local news organizations. The Legal Clinic Fund is supported by the Abrams Foundation, Democracy Fund, Heising-Simons Foundation and The Klarman Family Foundation. The Miami Foundation serves as its fiscal sponsor.

The Legal Clinic Fund was established to help create a new legal backbone for local journalists all across the country, and we are glad to partner with the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and UVA in that mission, said Joshua Stearns, director of the Public Square Program at Democracy Fund. Ensuring local journalists have access to the legal support they need is critical to defending our free press and its role in our democracy.

In addition, the Lodestar Foundation made a $50,000 challenge grant to support the Reporters Committees day-to-day administration of the Free Expression Legal Network, building upon its initial investments beginning in 2017 that were instrumental in realizing the vision for the network and launching it two years later. This additional grant will help ensure that journalists and documentary filmmakers can continue to access the legal resources and representation they need through a Reporters Committee attorney, law school clinic or a pro bono local counsel at a law firm, and encourage others to provide funding to support this work.

The Press Freedom Defense Fund met the Lodestar Foundations challenge grant with a $50,000 gift that will also support these efforts. Both investments will enable the Reporters Committee to expand upon the strong foundation of the Free Expression Legal Network and grow the learning opportunities and resources available to collaborating clinics.

Journalism has been under attack, especially independent and local newsrooms who do not have access to the vital legal guidance they need when it comes to reporting information that is in the public interest, said David Bralow, legal director for the Press Freedom Defense Fund. Our Fund exists for this very reason, to support those who are unjustly threatened in pursuit of a free press and open society. Were proud to support the Reporters Committee and Free Expression Legal Network with this grant, and we remain dedicated to our work in engaging valuable legal clinics nationwide to help support the journalists who could benefit from their counsel.

The Reporters Committee regularly files friend-of-the-court briefs and its attorneys represent journalists and news organizations pro bono in court cases that involve First Amendment freedoms, the newsgathering rights of journalists and access to public information. Stay up-to-date on our work by signing up for our monthly newsletter and following us on Twitter or Instagram.

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Shot in the arm for banking reform – Economic Times

Posted: at 6:45 pm

The budget proposals to strengthen public sector banks (PSBs) are welcome. On the one hand, they seek to relieve banks of their bad loan burden by setting up an asset reconstruction company (ARC) and transferring the non-performing assets (NPAs) to the ARC. On the other, it proposes to augment bank capital, eroded by provisioning against bad loans. One route to recapitalise the banks is for the government to put in more capital. Another is to bring in fresh investors and bring the governments stake below 50%, that is, privatise the banks in question. This is a welcome strategy. Banks would not lend, unless freed of their NPA burden. And retaining ownership of some banks in the public sector and focusing on capital infusion to make them strong, while letting others be owned and controlled by non-State operators, would make them more robust as well.

Raising capital from the public will give the government more fiscal room, reduce the taxpayer burden to recapitalise banks, allow PSBs the freedom to go outside the trail of vigilance and fix their own remuneration plans. Not unexpectedly, bank unions want a rollback of the privatisation plan. The government must engage with the unions. An essential requirement is to improve the regulation and supervision framework that would make the nature of ownership inconsequential for the working of the bank. Raising equity capital from the public is a superior option to burdening the taxpayer for recapitalising banks. Preferential allotment of shares to bank employees could smoothen the transition. Global capital is available now in plenty, and cheap. Strengthening supervision, and internal systems, especially risk management, will inspire investor confidence to draw the capital needed.

But PSBs need to overhaul their current decision-making structure and culture. Market-linked remuneration must replace current, repressed salaries. Fintech and a bond market should keep banks on their toes. Senior bankers pay must be tiered, with larger components linked to medium- and long-term performance, subject to clawback.

This piece appeared as an editorial opinion in the print edition of The Economic Times.

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Dick Polman: Starved for some good news? Listen to the new secretary of state – pressherald.com

Posted: at 6:45 pm

Its so lamentably easy to stew with the ongoing gush of bad news.

Punxsutawney Phil has fled to his hidey hole after glimpsing six more weeks of vaccine chaos. The insurrectionist in exile has hired two new lawyers one of whom refused to prosecute Bill Cosby, the other was slated to defend Jeffrey Epstein. Moderate Senate Republicans, who suddenly care about fiscal conservatism again, want to give suffering Americans one-third of the COVID relief money proposed by President Biden. House Republicans seem to be fine with a member who thinks that Jewish space lasers cause wildfires and that a plane never hit the Pentagon on 9/11. All this and more, the usual detritus of our era. But believe it or not, Ive found some good news!

Lest we forget, the electorate laid waste to the autocratic MAGA grifters and replaced them with credentialed people who actually embrace enduring American values. The new secretary of state, Antony Blinken, is Exhibit A. Im still marveling at what he told the press corps on his very first day:

President Biden said that he wants truth and transparency back in the White House briefing room, that fully applies in this room as wellI know were not always going to see eye to eye, thats not the point of the enterprise. Sometimes well be frustrating to you. I imagine there are a few times when youll be frustrating to us. But thats to be expected. Thats exactly, in some ways, the point. But you can count on me, you can count on us, to treat all of you with the immense respect you deserve and to give you what you need to do the jobs that youre doing that are so important to our country and to our democracyIts an adventure. I am really, really glad that were in it together. Welcome back to the press room. This is your press room.

Pinch me now.

I suppose we shouldnt applaud when an American official defends freedom of the press, but it sure beats enemy of the people. Its a step up from Mike Pompeo, the back-bench House Republican hack who failed upwards all the way to the State Department, where he trashed the truth and shredded our moral authority worldwide.

Here at home, were locked in a battle between democracy and incipient grassroots fascism. Ultimately, its a battle between truth (the lifeblood of democratic self-governance) and lies (the toys of fascists). If lying wins, we will lose our national soul, perhaps forever.

Blinken plays a key role in that battle. A secretary of states core nonpartisan mission is to tout American values around the world and press freedom is crucial to that mission. Blinken, by dint of his instincts and experience, understands that America has no business preaching to other nations about freedom unless it sets an example for all to see.

Pompeo, who lashed out at reporters who dared ask him about the impeachable acts of his boss, abolished regular press briefings and assailed journalists as unhinged, never seemed to grasp the State Departments mission.

One priceless moment came in 2019, when Trump decreed in a tweet that North Korea was no longer a nuclear threat. Shortly thereafter, Pompeo appeared on Jake Tappers CNN show.

Tapper asked: Do you think North Korea remains a nuclear threat?

Pompeo: Yes.

Tapper: But the president said he doesnt.

Pompeo: Thats not what he said.

Tapper: He tweeted, Theres no longer a nuclear threat from Korea. Thats just a direct quote.

And how embarrassing it was, for a secretary of state, to be lectured by an interviewer in Kazakhstan.

One year ago, on the eve of a trip to that country, Pompeo had unleashed an F-bomb tirade on an NPR reporter whod sought to ask him inconvenient questions, and had thrown another NPR reporter off his plane. His foreign interviewer brought up the NPR incidents and asked him: What kind of message (about America) does it send to countries like Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Belarus, whose governments routinely suppress press freedom?

Pompeos answer: Its a perfect message.

Suffice it to say that, on the eve of Antony Blinkens welcome ascent, the worlds supposedly top democracy was no longer a champion of press freedom. According to the international rankings posted by Reporters Without Borders, America is currently 45th in the world trailing nations like Botswana, Latvia, Lithuania, and Namibia.

As Blinken said, This is a critical moment for protecting and defending democracy, including right here at home. Theres not a moment to lose.

Dick Polman, a veteran national political columnist based in Philadelphia and a Writer in Residence at the University of Pennsylvania, writes at DickPolman.net. Email him at[emailprotected]

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Nonprofit had ‘overdue discussions’ on growing state health contracts – The Detroit News

Posted: at 6:45 pm

Lansing The leader of a nonprofit whose work for the statehealth department has ballooned during the COVID-19 pandemic said the group has had "long overdue discussions" about imposing stricter requirements for contracts involving the state.

Michigan Public Health Institute CEO Renee Branch Canady appeared before a House Appropriations subcommittee Wednesday, telling lawmakers that she started having conversations on the matter with Elizabeth Hertel of the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services prior to Hertel's becoming the department's director on Jan. 22.

The nonprofit, which was created through a state law to assist the state with public health research, disclosed $166 million in funded projects for this fiscal year, up 93% from $86 million in projects two years earlier. The Detroit News reported last week on concerns about the group's close ties to the department and the fact it falls outside transparency and bidding protocols government agencies face.

Renee Branch Canady, chief executive officer of the Michigan Public Health Institute, speaks to Michigan House members during a subcommittee hearing on Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2021.(Photo: Michigan House TV screenshot)

This is not like private sector business," Canady said of the nonprofit Wednesday. "Although its public health and we often have to move expediently, we dont cut corners to move expediently."

Canady acknowledged that the organization's budget had grown during the pandemic and that 90% of its funding flows from the state. But she said the institute isnot a "pass through" for the department.

Canady and Hertel recently discussed shifting some information technology contracts back in-house to the state and limiting the number of employees contracted through MPHI to work at the state health department, Canady said.The discussion was "long overdue," she said.

"The vast majority of MPHI terminations are terminated because the department has been able to convert the position to acivil service position, which is the ideal," Canady said.

MPHI's growing budget has prompted worries about the accountability of those dollars. The nonprofit's employees have grown from roughly 300 to 900 in recent years. During a recent Attorney General's office investigation into a contract involving MPHI, a state procurement officer said the health department "often used MPHI to avoid oversight."

But Canady and Hertel disagreed, noting a large chunk of the federal funds flowing through the agency had strict use and reporting requirements.

Republican lawmakers pressed Canady for more information on MPHI's role in the health department's functions.

Rep. Mary Whiteford, R-Casco Township, chairwoman of the House Appropriations Health and Human Services Subcommittee, noted that state employees told theAttorney General's office representatives that MPHI was used to get contracts executed more quickly.

Canady said she wasn't sure how the department decides which contracts would be managed by the institute.

Rep. Rep. Ann Bollin, R-Brighton Township, questioned whether MPHI was subject to the Freedom of Information Act, the law that requires government agencies to make records available on request.

Canady replied that her understanding is the institute is not subject to FOIA, but she added that the organization is transparent.

When all state departments were placed on a hiring freeze during the pandemic last year, MPHIcontinued hiring because it is not under the same civil service rules, Canady also told lawmakers.

The nonprofit hires hundreds of contract employees to work within the state's 14,000-employee Department of Health and Human Services. The agency'semployees can drive state-owned vehicles and members of the state health department are on the governing board of MPHI.

The institute gained the spotlight last year when state officials used it to establish a nearly $200,000contract with a Democratic-linked groupas the state sought to ramp up its contact-tracing efforts at the peak of the pandemic. The contract was eventually canceled amid media scrutiny.

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Amended bill to limit solitary confinement heads to Senate floor | The Henrico Citizen – Henrico Citizen

Posted: at 6:45 pm

David Smith remembers dancing to music in his head and having conversations with television shows during 16 months in solitary confinement at Norfolk City Jail.

Your mind plays tricks on you, Smith said. There was a slow disconnect with reality. I didnt recognize the pain that was happening in me, nor did I have the emotional strength to fight back, institutionally.

Smith is no longer an inmate, but his goal is to end the torture that he said Virginia inmates have endured while sitting in solitary confinement. Smith served a three-year sentence after pleading guilty to 10 counts of possession of child poronography in 2013. Now Smith works with the Virginia Coalition on Solitary Confinement to lead the charge for legislative change.

Sen. Joseph D. Morrissey, D-Richmond, introduced Senate Bill 1301, to prohibit solitary confinement in adult and juvenile correctional facilities. The Senate Appropriations and Finance Committee voted 12-4 Wednesday to advance the bill with amendments.

The amended bill would allow inmates to be held in solitary confinement for 48 consecutive hours, but that can be extended to allow for an investigation to be completed. Isolated, or solitary, confinement is defined in the bill as being confined in a cell alone or with another inmate for more than 20 hours a day for an adult and 17 hours a day for a juvenile.

The Virginia Department of Corrections would still be allowed to use solitary confinement in three circumstances: if an inmate is a threat to themself or others, during a facility-wide lockdown or for an inmates own protection.

The bill originally proposed that inmates receive medical evaluations within 8 hours of being placed in solitary confinement. The department would need to hire additional registered nurses, physicians, psychologists, psychiatrists and cognitive counselors to complete the evaluations.

Without amendments, Morrissey said the fiscal impact report determined the bill would have cost at least $23 million to implement. After consulting with Corrections, Morrissey also eliminated the original requirement that some inmates be offered at least three hours of activities intended to promote personal development.

Theres nothing currently preventing Corrections from placing inmates in isolated confinement for long periods of time, according to Morrissey.

Studies show that solitary confinement begins to have debilitating mental and physical effects in as few as 10 days being isolated and exacerbated for those individuals already suffering from a mental illness, Morrissey said during the committee meeting.

The General Assembly passed a bill in 2019 that required the department to release statistics of who is in restrictive housing, the departments name for solitary confinement.

Vishal Agraharkar, a senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia, said thousands of Virginia inmates have been affected by solitary confinement over the last couple of years.

In the last couple of years, around 7,000 and 6,500 people have cycled around some form of restrictive housing department wide, which showed a real need for the bill, Agraharkar said.

Jerry Fitz, corrections operations administrator and legislative liaison for the Virginia Department of Corrections, said during a bill committee hearing that the number of Virginia inmates in solitary confinement decreased by 60% from January 2016 to June 2020.

Thats roughly 908 individuals less than when the study started in 2016, Fitz said.

Agraharkar represented Nicolas Reyes, an inmate who spent more than 12 years in solitary confinement at Red Onion State Prison in Southwest Virginia. The ACLU filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of Reyes that ended in a settlement in January. As a part of the settlement, the department agreed to create a language access policy to ensure those with limited English skills are provided access to facilities, programs and services.

In the long run, if you make sure that people are being kept in solitary for as little time as possible and you work toward eliminating it all together, youre going to see savings in terms of mental health costs, Agraharkar said. Public safety will be helped as well by making sure were not putting people in conditions that are extremely harmful long term to their mental health.

Agraharkar added that in the first half of 2020 the Virginia Department of Corrections spent over $1 million on just two lawsuits related to solitary confinement that the ACLU of Virginia obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request. He also said it costs two to three times more to construct a prison thats designed to hold people in solitary confinement than one designed for a general population.

Solitary confinement has significant cost in addition to all the harm that it does to people that are essentially tortured on the inside, Agraharkar said.

The bill isnt the first attempt at banning solitary confinement in the commonwealth. Del. Patrick Hope, D-Arlington, introduced House Bill 795 in 2018, but it was left in a subcommittee. The committee didnt pass the bill in 2018 because they didnt think it could be funded after looking at the fiscal impact statement, Agraharkar said.

Morrissey said he thought the bills would make less work for the department and not more.

Intuitively it would strike me that if were eliminating solitary confinement, then were eliminating the necessity for DOC corrections officers to monitor the doings of somebody in solitary confinement, Morrissey said. I think it would be less work, but thats just an intuitive analysis.

Smith said his lawyers told him solitary confinement would be the best alternative for his safety. Then he quickly realized how detrimental it was to his mental and physical health. Smith said hes read letters from inmates serving time in solitary confinement and they inspire him to push for change.

I didnt fight on the inside, so Im sure as hell going to fight now, Smith said. We cant let them be silent, weve got to amplify those voices to show whats going on.

The bill heads to the Senate. If passed, the bill would take effect in July 2022.

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Opinion/Porter: School voucher program could be used for field trips to Europe – Seacoastonline.com

Posted: at 6:45 pm

Rep. Marjorie Porter| Portsmouth Herald

When the results of the election in November became clear, giving Republicans the control over the NH House, the NH Senate, the Executive Council, and the Governors office, I had a feeling I was going be experiencing a lot of deja-vu.

I was right. With total control, my colleagues from across the aisle got right to work, filing bills to bring back all their old favorites.

I admit to going into my files to look for articles I had written before that I could simply dust off and use again. I found many. Guns in Reps Hall? Check. Cutting business taxes? Check again. So-called Right to Work? Constitutional amendments to ban income and sales taxes? School vouchers? Check, check, and (Oh boy!) check again.

I decided to go with the last one.

Back in 2017, when Republicans last controlled things, the Senate passed SB 193, a bill creating an educational voucher system in the state. It worked like this. A scholarship program would be set up for families that wanted to send their children to private, religious, or home schools. The program would be funded by the states education trust fund, which is in turn funded by our taxes. It would be administered by a privately-run scholarship granting organization.

Parents could apply for a scholarship. Once approved, the state would send the money to the scholarship granting organization. The organization kept a percentage and sent the balance on to the school of choice on behalf of the parents.

Cleverly calling the scholarships education freedom accounts, the hope was this would be an end run around the constitutional ban on using tax dollars to fund religious education.

There were income limits and other restrictions on who was eligible to receive a scholarship, and caps on the numbers each year, but in the end the bill died a not-so-quiet death after coming out of the House Finance committee with recommendation for more study.

Why? Because Finance had determined the program, even with all the restrictions and caps, would end up costing local property taxpayers$99 millionover 10 years. They could not condone the downshifting.

Fast forward to 2021, and this years HB 20 the voucher bill on steroids.

HB 20 has been described as the most expansive voucher program in the country. Gone are the income limits, caps, and restrictions. In fact, it is estimated 95% of all K-12 students in New Hampshire would be eligibleeven those currently in private schools. Families earning $40,000 or $400,000 or moreall are eligible.

Red flags are popping up all over the place with this bill, serious ones including constitutionality, but I am going to focus only on the financial today.

Scholarship amounts are based on the adequacy aid given per NH public school student, minus the fees the private scholarship granting organization charges. The bill says that fee can be as high as 10%.

Currently, the base amount of aid is $3,786, but it varies and can go as high as $8,458. If a student is in public school, that money goes to the school district. Under this bill, if the student leaves public school, the money goes with them. The Departmentof Education estimates the net decrease to the local school for each departing student would be $4,603. If 10 students leave a district, the loss to the district will be $46,030, although fixed costs to run the school will not change. Local taxpayers will make up that difference. (We saw the harm done when school enrollment dropped due to the pandemic this year. Hillsboro-Deering enrollment went down 60 or so students, and the loss to the district in state and federal aid was more than $500,000.)

The argument is the program wont cost the state any money because the adequacy aid will simply be going to the scholarship program instead of the public school.

The state does not grant adequacy aid to students attending private or home schools. But under the provisions of this bill, students currently enrolled in private schools, and most likely homeschools, will also be eligible for scholarships.

So, heres some math. According to the NH Dept. of Education, there are currently 16,294 students enrolled in private schools in NH, and 6,110 students being home schooled. Assuming they each would apply for scholarships (and why wouldnt they?) and each received just the base aid amount, the cost to the state education trust fund would be$84,821,544,money that is not currently being spent.

Add that to the money needed to fund public school kids who might apply, and the total amount is daunting.

It is not clear where that money will come from, as we are already facing a school funding crisis. Business taxes are one of the main sources of revenue for the education trust fund, but the governor is calling for business tax cuts.

As alarming as these figures are, of even greater concern is the virtual lack of public oversight of all this money. The private scholarship organization has control over not only who is granted aid, but also what educational programs and expenses are approved. It must only provide an annual report that it creates and perform limited random audits of scholarship accounts. And according to a report from Reaching Higher NH,There is no stated provision where the scholarship organization must complete a comprehensive financial audit, submit proof or records of fiscal management, or any other oversight to ensure that the organization, or families, are using public funds for their stated purpose. *

Those of you who have attended school district and town meetings over the years and are used to overseeing how our every tax dollar is being spent, certainly must see the folly in this. Tax dollars given to a private organization with no oversight, to be spent as they see fit. What could possibly go wrong?

And finally, the list of education-related expenses the voucher dollars can be used for is long and ambiguous, and includes any educational expense recommended by the scholarship organization and approved by the DOE. Like, say, field trips.

So, heres a scenario you might like to consider. A wealthy family, homeschooling their seven children, could apply for and receive a grant totaling $23,851 after fees, and take their family on a wonderful field trip to Europe on the taxpayers dime.

All the top Republican leadership in the NH House and Senate are co-sponsors of this bill. Theyve even named it after the late Speaker Hinch, to honor him. I understand the Governor is on board, along with the education commissioner.

Andall this timetheyve been telling us THEY are the fiscally conservative party. Go figure.

Democrat Majorie Porter of Hillsborough has beena member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives since 2010. This column is published via InDepthNH.org. The views expressed are those of the writer.

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Fact check: South Dakota governor ignores poor health numbers to claim state’s pandemic performance has been ‘better than virtually every other state’…

Posted: at 6:45 pm

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem claimed in a Fox News interview on Tuesday that, thanks to her states unique approach to the coronavirus pandemic, they got through it better than virtually every other state.

Noem, a Republican who has opposed mask mandates and many pandemic-related restrictions, delivered the boast after Fox host Laura Ingraham favorably compared South Dakotas health and economic performance to that of more strict and Democratic-run New York. Ingraham then asked Noem why the media has targeted her for criticism.

Noem said, You know, Laura, I really think its about control. They have used, for the last year, fear to control people. Noem continued that since the science made clear it was impossible to completely stop the virus, only to slow it down and protect vulnerable people, she decided to allow people to be flexible to take care of their families and still put food on the table.

That was a unique approach that, for our people, really worked well. We did have tragedies, and we did have losses, but we also got through it better than virtually every other state. And I think the media hates that, Noem said. Because it really is a testimony to what Republicans believe in, what conservatives believe in.

Facts First: Noems claim that South Dakota got through it better than virtually every other state is false with regard to public health: South Dakota has had the second-most coronavirus cases per capita and is in a tie with Connecticut for the sixth-most coronavirus deaths per capita, according to Johns Hopkins University data as of Thursday.

It is true that South Dakota has done better than virtually every other state on a key economic measure its 3.0% seasonally adjusted December unemployment rate was tied for best in the country but Noem didnt specify on Fox that this is what she was talking about.

Also, of course, no state is actually through with the pandemic. While Covid-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths are all on the decline in the US, they are declining from record levels. On Wednesday, South Dakota reported three new coronavirus deaths, 209 new cases, and a total of 133 people currently hospitalized with the virus.

Noems comments dismayed Dr. Nancy Babbitt, a primary care physician in Rapid City, South Dakota. Babbitt told CNN that it is painful from a doctors point of view to see the governor celebrate her economy-focused decisions without explaining that those decisions caused real pain and suffering from additional infections and additional deaths.

Noem supported some limited pandemic restrictions in 2020. But she has generally been a vocal opponent of restrictions and mandates, earning national media attention and sparking some speculation about the possibility of a run for president in 2024 by advocating for freedom and personal responsibility.

Noem has also endorsed large gatherings without social distancing. South Dakotas fall coronavirus crisis came after the annual, massive Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in August, which Noem supported holding during the pandemic.

South Dakota had experienced 12,280 coronavirus cases per 100,000 people as of Thursday, per Johns Hopkins data which means about 1 in 8 state residents were known to have had the virus. (As in other states and countries, the true number may be substantially higher.) North Dakota, at 12,851 cases per 100,000 people, was the only state with a worse per-capita figure; New York which is far more densely populated and which experienced its first big outbreak when less was known about the virus was at 7,423 cases per 100,000 people.

South Dakota had experienced 201 coronavirus deaths per 100,000 people as of Thursday which means about 1 in 500 people in the state were known to have died from the virus. Only New Jersey (244 deaths per 100,000 people), New York (227), Massachusetts (213), Mississippi (208) and Rhode Island (207) had done worse by this measure.

South Dakota had relatively few cases and deaths in the first half of 2020, when some other states, including New York, were already mired in a crisis. But South Dakota then had a massive fall outbreak, with new cases peaking in November and new deaths in early December.

Noem spokesman Ian Fury pointed out to CNN that South Dakota experienced its pandemic peak in the fall and has since seen a major improvement in its numbers, while the situations in other states have gotten worse since the fall. Given the difference in the timing of each states outbreak, Fury said, its hard to do an apples-to-apples comparison at this point.

Fair enough its absolutely possible that South Dakotas performance relative to other states will look somewhat better in, say, three months or six months. But theres just no good argument now that South Dakota has gotten through the pandemic better, from a health perspective, than virtually any other state.

So what was Noem boasting about on Fox? Fury said the governors comments were about not only public health but about the state economy and budget.

Fury cited the low state unemployment rate that actually declined in 2020, the fact that the state has a fiscal surplus while some states that imposed stricter restrictions are experiencing fiscal struggles, and the fact that South Dakota is seeing an influx of residents from other states.

Fury also mentioned that South Dakota has so far been a national leader in the speed with which it has vaccinated residents for the virus, a fact President Joe Bidens administration has acknowledged.

Still, Noem did not explain on Fox that she was talking specifically about how South Dakota has done well by financial measures or in its pace of vaccination. She simply made a general declaration that South Dakota has done better than virtually any other state in getting through the pandemic. Thats a highly incomplete account of the states story.

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Bravos The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Was a Parallel Surprise – The Ringer

Posted: at 6:44 pm

Unlike so many of her peers in the keeping-up-appearances business, Jen Shah loves to talk about just how much help she requires to function. In December 2019, a day before she was scheduled to report for her first day of shooting the debut season of the Bravo reality series The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City, I was running around at home with my 20 assistants, she tells me over the phone a year later, only mildly exaggerating. My housekeeper from New York flew in, literally flew in, and was helping organize my closet. She fell off a ladder and had to go to the hospital within, like, two hours of arriving in Utah. So, that was crazy. My assistants were scrambling to hire closet organizers because she got hurt and sprained her ankle!

Anyone who has watched Shah in Real Housewives can likely envision every part of that story with ease: the closet necessitating a ladder, the platoon improvising on the fly, Shahs sunny retelling of something a little bit sus. (Never a dull moment! is how she sums up that day.) A bombastic mother of two who describes herself as a fabulous, successful businesswoman, Shah wears extra-strappy stiletto heels in the wet winter snow, commissions Tongan dancers for someone elses birthday party, and refers to her husband, a former lawyer and current assistant on the Utah Utes football staff, as Coach Shah as if she were a defensive back suiting up for the big game. She has people who do her makeup, restock her tampons, and fill her furry fanny pack with snacks for a day on the bunny slopes.

She hurls drinks and throws hands and has never met a lovely gathering that isnt worth storming away from, in furs and in tears. She is, in other words, an instant classic caricature in the sprawling Real Housewives canon: outlandish in a somehow earnest way, prone to escalating tense situations, rocking her shamelessness as if it were a bold lip. And living in a reserved place like Utahwhere the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints physically and culturally looms, and such demonstrative personal volatility is broadly frowned upon and the domestic is considered divineShah tends to stand out.

Which is why one of her assistants, Shah tells me, is specifically tasked with being the homemaker; her duties include things like baking cookies and putting out pumpkins when seasonally appropriate. There have been times, Shah says, when she harbored some guilt about such outsourcing. She mostly places these feelings in the past tenseCoach Shah gave her a pep talk, which helpedbut its hard for anyone, even her, to remain impervious to the conspicuous efforts of some of her neighbors.

Especially here in Utah, Shah explains, Ive got every frickin mommy blogger out here cooking, baking, sewing the Halloween costumes. Im like, OK, Im a big piece of shit!

While I cant quite relate to the whole closet-ladder/hospital saga, on this topic I tell her I know exactly how she feels. I may not live in Salt Lake City, but I do live on the internet. And so for more than a decade Ive absorbed and observed, with ever-shifting ratios of envy to eye rolls, the content from some of these online women to whom Shah refers: the many outwardly serene, creative, and ambitious once-bloggers-now-influencers located in (or proudly from) Utah who are forever out there tending to their homes, their littles, their corporate sponsorships, their obliques, and often their faith with an air of lucrative, well-lit, DIY competence.

Im not alone: An essay by Emily Matchar titled Why I Cant Stop Reading Mormon Housewife Blogs ran in Salon a full 10 years ago. In 2017, Allure correspondent Alice Gregory went to Utah to figure out Why So Many of Your Favorite Beauty Personalities Are Mormon. When Bravos reality pooh-bah Andy Cohen announced in the fall of 2019 that the newest Real Housewives franchise would be filmed in Salt Lake City, local culture writer Meg Walter reacted by musing: If the term influencer wasnt born here, it was certainly made prominent by the fashion and mommy bloggers with their OOTDs, room reveals, and sponsored posts. Really weve all been watching The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City play out on Instagram for the last 10 years.

But as the actual first season of Real Housewives of Salt Lake City aired over the past three months through its finale on Wednesday night, it featured none of these frickin mommy bloggersto borrow a term of artmuch to my initial surprise. This is a reaction that Cohen seemed to be going for: In 2019, he told BravoCon audiences that I think youre gonna be really surprised, intrigued, and titillated by the group of women we have chosen. Shahs fellow castmates include a tequila slinger, a definitely-not-a-swinger, and a woman married to her step-grandfather at her late grandmothers (disputed?!) request. Far from being a look inside the lives of active Latter-day Saint women, the series follows characters who are either unaffiliated with the church or distanced from it in some way. Im neither moved to envy these women nor even to roll my eyes at them, really; Im just here to enjoy them.

This seasons Real Housewives may appear to have little in common with some of their fellow niche-famous local moms. They may be more openly willing to engage in a little light apostasy for our viewing pleasure. But they are also in some sense performing their own wildcat version of what so many real housewives in and of Utah have been doing, often with the churchs encouragement, for years: finding new, innovative ways to document and distribute their stories and selves to the world, skeptics be damned.

Were inundated with images of perfect Instagram squares of beautiful women who seem to really be killing it as moms and homemakers and craft people and volunteers and fashionistas and working out, says Heather Gay, another Real Housewife, in a phone conversation, and I mean, its inspiring, but its also intimidating. These perfect Instagram squares have websites with names like Mint Arrow and Barefoot Blonde. They have children called Arrow and Samson. Some give shout-outs to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints right there in their social media bios. Some are sisters, like Emily Jackson (age 32; four children; 399,000 Instagram followers) and Rachel Parcell (just turned 30; three kids; parlayed a blog called Pink Peonies that she started in 2010 to chronicle her wedding planning into more than a million followers on Instagram and a clothing line at Nordstrom). Those two, along with their two other sisters, were once referred to as the Mormon Kardashians by their friend, Queer Eye for the Straight Guys Tan France.

Even the women who arent currently Utah-basedArizona and SoCal are popular satellite hubs among themmaintain significant ties to the Beehive State: They grew up there, or they went to Brigham Young University, or they got married in the Mormon Temple in downtown SLC, or they first established their online presence specifically to give life updates from afar to their large families back home. Here we go well see how long this lasts Naomi Davis wrote in 2007 under the first blurry-imaged post on her blog, then titled Rockstar Diaries. Thirteen years and five children later, she has nearly half a million followers on Insta.

Utah and Mormons still have a really outsized influence on the mamasphere, Kathryn Jezer-Morton, a writer and PhD candidate at Concordia whose research focuses on the evolution of mommy blogs from the confessional to the monetized, tells me over FaceTime. This can be linked to both the churchs past and its present: Before there were bloggers, there were scrapbookers, she says, a practice that was highly encouraged within the ancestry-obsessed faith. Mormons documented their families really assiduously. Blogging was a natural extension of that forte. And from the churchs perspective, an e-diaspora of internet-savvy young people getting engaged and married and pregnant and pregnant and pregnant made for some pretty attractive and high-engagement social media outreach about LDS living. (The churchs official website even has tips for how to best share online.)

Gay says it wasnt that long agoa couple of years, maybethat she used to rule over her three daughters digital feeds like a paranoid tyrant. I used to guard their Instagram, Gay says, like it was a personal billboard of their morality, their character, and my parenting. That last part was key. Gays hypersensitivity, as she terms it, stemmed from not wanting to be judgedby her friends and her frenemies and her family and the parishioners shed grown up alongside in the LDS church in and around her native Utahover the level of virtue in her daughters selfies. I had a rule, like, if I saw them with their tongue out, they lose their phone for a week, she tells me.

Things have changed ever so slightly since then. Gay is now someone whose life is a personal billboard, viewable by anyone. She co-owns a business called Beauty Lab + Laser that has its own 15-Minute Botox Parking spots, the mission statement all the best and no BS!, and promotional T-shirts that say LIFE IS SHORT. BUY THE LIPS. The same woman who once patrolled her kids phones with nervous discretion now says things like: Id fuck a grandpa, big deal! with a winsome shrug on TV screens worldwide.

Raised, educated, married, and divorced in the LDS church, Gay is now in the midst of blazing a new trail, as she says in her Real Housewives opening credits tagline. (She hasnt totally rejected the faith; in the Real Housewives finale she is characterized as a non-practicing Mormon.) This is a process that involves incrementally distancing herself from some of her most elemental beliefsparticularly, she says, the ones surrounding her roles and responsibilities as a wife and mother. Sometimes this means speaking up, and sometimes it means staying mum. This summer, when one of Gays teenagers posted a photo of herself that would have been immediately ixnayed in the past, I had to rock myself to sleep not to shame her and make her take it down, Gay says, and rock she did. Its something Im trying to work on as a mom, she says. It feels like, OK, Im not Mormon anymore. These are the kinds of words that are music to a reality producers ears.

Since the inception of Real Housewives of Orange County in 2006, Cohens reality series has featured dozens of women, from New Jersey to Beverly Hills, who flaunt great fortunes of murky provenance and/or possess personalities that are by turns lavish, comedic, and abrasive. Cohen first and foremost tends to seek out idiosyncratic locations with a vibe all their ownMiami, Jersey, Dallas. But what feels new and different about Salt Lake City is the extent to which that tried-and-true Real Housewives formula attempts to create dissonance with the common perception of the local culture, rather than amplify them up to 11. (If its extremist polygamy youre looking for, in other words, you wont find it here; check out this British documentary.)

We developed a show at Bravo years ago that was not a Housewives that was set with a lot of Mormons and wound up falling through, Cohen told People in September. (Bravo declined to share further information with me about that project.) So Im really glad weve got some active Mormons, weve got some lapsed Mormons, but Mormonism is a character and through line in the show.

Gay is not the only Real Housewife whose relationship with the church falls somewhere between the nonexistent and the fraught. Some of the six women practice different faiths: Meredith Marks is Jewish, while Mary Cosby leads the Pentecostal congregation that she says she inherited from her grandmother on the condition she marry her step-grandfather, as one does. Others are former members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Shah says she converted to her husbands religion of Islam once he informed her about her former religions history of racism, both in doctrine and practice, while Whitney Rose left the Church when she got unofficially excommunicated over an extramarital relationship with an executive at the multilevel-marketing business where she worked. (Reader, she married him.)

Lisa Barlow, who grew up in New York before attending BYU at the same time as Gay, may be the lone satisfied LDS member of the bunch. She calls herself Jewish by heritage, Mormon by choice, drinks the obligatory Big Gulps of Diet Coke, and has said her conversion began when a missionary knocked on her familys door back in New York. Yet she confidently maintains an interpretation of LDS scripture that is as bespoke as her tailoring. She owns a tequila company and describes herself as Mormon 2.0, which she explained to US Weekly means Im not checking all the boxes, and I dont really fit in that square. Of her parenting style toward her 16- and 8-year-old sons, she says that what she lacks in domestic command she makes up for in entrepreneurial spirit. Listen, I may not be great at making hot dogs, she tells viewers, but one thing I am good at is inspiring my children to build things. (By things, she is specifically referring to their new family project: a line of turmeric-containing mens grooming products called Fresh Wolf.)

Real Housewives of Salt Lake City may relish its drone shots of Temple Square and its choir-of-angels soundtrack, but there is no talk of family home evenings or LDS missions. Instead, there have been decidedly non-worship-like settings, ranging from a speakeasy-themed event to a hip-hop golf party featuring a twerk/worm dance-off to a trance state is the bomb hypnosis sesh in a creepy Las Vegas mansion. (Shah stormed out of all three.)

There was season-long drama involving, at various times, a double amputation; a dozen surgeries to remove odor glands; the phrase hospital smell; a diss comparing a couture gown to a Christmas tree; and lots of long, glittering nails pointed in the direction of heavily made-up faces. At a Met Galathemed luncheon attended only by the Housewives, Cosby narrated the history of the drink they were offered as they arrived via a sad red carpet. Youre drinking Dom Perignon 2003, she said. In 2003 there was a heat wave; 5,600 people died, and it made the best grapes of all time. Everyone gets the water-into-wine parable they deserve.

In the winter of 2007, a 79-year-old elder in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints stood before a room of college kids and encouraged them to blog. Dialogue and inquiry among Mormon thinkers was already thriving online, and had been for years. There was the co-ed consortium of early-to-mid-aughts online writers, some of whom originally met on America Online, who referred to themselves en masse as The Bloggernacle. There were the young, enthusiastic women like Davis and Stephanie Nielson of NieNie Dialogues who had already fired up their less dialectic and more diaristic Blogspots. But Elder M. Russell Ballard sought youthful reinforcements. We all have interesting stories that have influenced our identity, he told students at a Brigham Young University satellite campus in Hawaii in a speech titled Using New Media to Support the Work of the Church. Sharing those stories is a nonthreatening way to talk to others. Apostles are the original influencers, when you think about it.

At the time, the church was in the midst of weathering an intense period of national scrutiny. Leaders sought, as ever, to better differentiate themselves from the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (FLDS), the extremist and polygamist movement that had been formally cast out of the mainstream church a century ago but whose reputation remained both stubbornly attached and also constantly in the news. Jon Krakauers 2003 book Under the Banner of Heaven told a horrifying story of how faith can curdle into zealotry and even murder. The HBO show Big Love about contemporary polygamists premiered in 2006, the same year Warren Jeffs, the real-life abusive leader of the FLDS church, was arrested. Mitt Romneys presidential campaign drew renewed scrutiny toward his religion. We are living in a world saturated with all kinds of voices, Ballard told the students in 2007. Now, more than ever, we have a major responsibility as Latter-day Saints to define ourselves instead of letting others define us.

It wasnt the first or last time the church had faced a reputational challenge by encouraging the production of wholesome storytelling content. One yearslong promotional effort called Im a Mormon sought to combat misconceptions about members of the church, prompting New Yorker writer Rollo Romig to reminisce in 2012 about a series of PSA spots that had run on TV throughout his childhood in the 70s and 80s for the same reason. That award-winning campaign, which was called Homefront, consisted of small, sorta-cryptic vignettes of domestic life and low-stakes moral reckoning. Romig quoted a Homefront producer who discussed the success of the effort. In surveys conducted before the spots began airing, respondents had been asked what came to mind when they heard the word Mormon. The Mormon Tabernacle Choir, the Osmonds, polygamists, racists, the producer told Romig. Those were the top four answers. After seven, eight, nine years of Homefront airing, when you asked the same question, the no. 1 answer was always family.

It was this kind of outcome, just on a slightly smaller screen, that Ballard sought with his remarks. Most of you already know, he said, that if you have access to the internet you can start a blog in minutes and begin sharing what you know to be true. Of course, as any fan of reality television can tell you, what someone thinks they know to be true can be a dynamic and disputed thing indeed. If the rise of the connected internet enabled the devout to more efficiently spread their good word, it also gave a platform to the doubters.

Over the years, something of an arms race has ensued. In response to recurring criticisms about the LDS church and faith that were cropping up on late-90s Mormon forums on AOL, for example, a group of posters created the Foundation for Apologetic Information Research, or FAIR, to more formally clap back. (The organization still exists as FairMormon today.) One of the earliest and most influential personal blogs of the Y2K era, called Dooce, was written not by a gentle Latter-day Saint but rather by a salty Salt Laker named Heather Armstrong who was more than happy to discuss how shed bolted from the LDS church immediately upon graduating from BYU. In 2005, a tech-forward and ultimately controversial church member named John Dehlin, who had left his job at Microsoft in Seattle to move to Salt Lake City, launched a still-running podcast called Mormon Stories in which he interviews peopleso many peoplewho are in the midst of critically assessing their faith and their relationship to the church. In 2018, Dehlin was formally excommunicated for breaking with church doctrine and, according to a letter explaining the decision, for having spread these teachings widely via the internet to hundreds of people in the past.

These days, depending on where you click around online, you can find multiple rabbit holes of testimonials, struggle, humor, and support at sites like /r/exmormon on Reddit, where people gather to vent about the TBMs (True Believing Mormons) in their lives but also to commiserate about the clueless questions and jokes they still get about their upbringing from people outside the faitha.k.a. nevermos. (There are also subreddits for both /r/mormon and /r/latterdaysaints, but they have only a fraction of subscribers.) You can also trip over the disturbing wasp nest that is #DezNat, short for Deseret Nation, an amorphous and alarming hashtag where trad dogma meets edgelord sensibilities and religious memes. (Dehlin and Jeremy Runnells, another vocal church critic, are two frequent targets.) You can feel soothed by the smooth beauty of Parcells and Jacksons influencer content, or you can be one of those commenters who consistently harangue them about how on earth they can fit their temple garments under those tight-fitting clothes. And you can stream, and then discuss, those kooky gals on Real Housewives of Salt Lake City. The program may feel like a novelty act, but that doesnt mean it lacks a plot.

If you listened to an hour of Mormon Stories a day, Dehlin tells me in a phone call about the podcast that ultimately got him kicked out of the church, it would take you five years to conquer. While not everyone who Dehlin interviews on the podcast plans to leave the faith altogether, what they pretty much all have in common is that they are very much questioning aspects of what theyve been taught about the church. Gay tells me that the first time she heard about Dehlins podcast, not too long ago in the grand scheme of things, she was warned by her Beauty Lab business partner Dre Nord that she might not be ready to listen to it just yet. After all, shed grown up being taught to absolutely not look at anything critical, anything ex-Mormon, she says. Like, that was worse than porn. Once that got in, you could never unsee it.

Over the past two months, however, Gay and Nord have made three appearances on Dehlins show, fleshing out their parochial and at times problematic upbringings and giving voice to their ongoing existential doubts. And just as Gay hadnt expected to ever find herself on Mormon Stories, Dehlin tells me that two things surprised him when he watched a little Real Housewives.

The first was recognizing someone hed known growing up in Texas in the 1980s. I played basketball against Justin Rose, he tells me, talking about Whitneys husband. He was kind of a bad boy, you know, by Mormon standards. I remember him liking rap. (Roses older brother, David, was cocaptain of the University of Houstons famous Phi Slama Jama basketball team, playing alongside Clyde Drexler and Hakeem Olajuwon, before coaching at BYU for decades.) But beyond the unexpected connections, what threw off Dehlin the most was that the show, while outwardly absurd and occasionally shocking (despite his excommunication, Dehlin says, my sensibilities are still very, very Mormon), nevertheless managed to highlight a number of meaningful issues and topics that he finds relevant to LDS life and sees all the time in his work.

I kept a Google Doc, he says, and scans his list. Alcohol. Swinging. (I have close friends, very close friends that swing.) Substance abuse. (The story line involving Whitney Rose helping her father battle drug addiction was one of the seasons most resonant.) Superficiality. Faith. Marital conflict. (I could spend every hour of every day counseling married couples.) Polygamy. Porn. (In one episode, when Barlow jokingly pop-quizzes her teen son on the most important tenets of the church, the teen says: Thou shalt not smoke, thou shalt not do anything bad. When his mom asks whats considered bad, his response is: Looking at porn.) They really have hit a lot of the big ones, Dehlin says.

These same topics occasionally surfaced in the Mormon blogosphere too, though it was more rare to see them. Natalie Lovin, an early LDS blogger who went by the name of Nat the Fat Rat, ultimately split with her husband and left the church, posting all the while, though she eventually faded from the influencer circuit. Corrine Stokoe, who runs Mint Arrow, very publicly shared her husbands struggles with a pornography addiction. There have been heartbreaks and roadblocks shared around the blogosphere and on the Gram, for sure. But by and large, the vibes on most LDS influencers feeds tend toward the positive.

Which is understandable! And yet, for TV purposes, not exactly propulsive. Essentially, theyre running catalogs, Meg Walter, who lives in Utah and recaps and podcasts about Real Housewives, says about the parenting, fashion, and fitness influencers in her midst. I dont think its fair to expect them to be showing us their real lives when theyre running a business. Kathryn Jezer-Morton compares the pressures on some of the influencers and momtrepreneurs she has studied to those of a 1950s housewife, jacked up: Not only is it a ton of work to keep up the always-pleasant exterior, but many readers, whole forums full of em, are eager to locate cracks in the foundation. People are always then trying to catch you in a lie, Jezer-Morton says. And youre kind of vulnerable to accusations of fakery, whichof course its fake! (In the FAQ on Daviss website, one of the listed questions is: Is Life Really That Perfect? In the answer, Davis writes: a saying i love, comparison is the thief of joy, has never rung truer than in the blogging world.) In 2019, Armstrong reminisced to Vox about how things had changed since she first began blogging two decades ago at Dooce: Being an influencer today means sharing picture-perfect moments, and that is not what I signed up for.

There isnt much at all thats picture-perfect about Real Housewives of Salt Lake City, thankfully. (Really sweaty is how Jezer-Morton describes it, with genuine respect in her voice.) For Bravo characters, the institutional mandate is not about being immaculate, which is freeing in some ways and harrowing in others. The institutional mandate is less Pink Peonies, more Jen Shah, whose voice over the phone when we speak grows faster and more agitated in the exact same way it does on the show, an ascending spiral of accusations and affront. Her target is, blessedly, not me, but some of the women shes encountered in Utah who wont tell her whether or where they get their work done.

And theyre like, Oh no, I didnt do anything, she says, and I can hear her shaking her head, maybe even pointing a manicured finger into the air. You just pulled a Kylie Jenner! she says. You woke up this morning with a whole new face! You know, I have eyes here! Viewers do too, and theres something particularly watchable about programming that acknowledges the doubts and indulges in the drama of its characters in a similarly straightforward way. All that sweat and mess is the point.

Like all thriving ecosystems, Real Housewives is an iterative environment. Disruptive newcomers are occasionally introduced to the fray. Poisonous flowers are plucked. Some beings thrive in the shade; others wilt if they arent constantly in the light. While Cohen has confirmed that the Salt Lake City series will be back for a second season, its always possible that the cast might be shaken up on the margins.

Cosby appeared less and less in the show over the course of the 13-episode season, drawing speculation that she (and her Imelda Marcosesque closets) might wind up phased out altogether. Or perhaps another character will feel so irreparably insulted over the course of the upcoming three (!) reunion installments that theyll flounce. Maybe fashionista and tech wife Angie Harrington, a once-rumored Season 1 cast member who ultimately appeared for about 10 unmemorable seconds in Episode 12, will get more future air time. (One thing is for certain: Its unlikely well see auxiliary friend of character Sara McArthur Pierce again after photos of her at the Capitol building riot on January 6 led Rose to publicly denounce her on Instagram.)

And in my dreams, the clouds and the brands will align and well get a real-life frickin mommy blogger, and a look into what it actually, logistically takes to be a modern LDS tastemaker tasked with appearing professionally and perpetually blessed. For now, we have women like Gay, who in many ways may be a more interesting version of all of those things: a divorced mom navigating life with three daughters, a dogged business owner who built her image-based company in large part through Instagram, a woman whose search for higher meaning in this life and the next is as complicated as it is sincere. Her personal Mormon story may not be the one that the LDS church wants someone to be telling, but its illuminating to hear.

Influence, like Andy Cohen, works in mysterious ways. When I ask what switch flipped to make Gay start questioning the churchs teachings, she mentions the Hulu adaptation of The Handmaids Tale. As she watched the series and listened to the wealthy caste of fundamentalist women talking about how glad they were not to have jobs so they could tend to their homes and gardens, she realized she could hear herself in their words. When youre resonating with the villains, she says, you take a really good, hard look at what you believe.

I tell Gay I have a tangential TV rec: Mrs. America, whose real-life character Phyllis Schlafly was part of the inspiration for The Handmaids Tales Serena. Gay tells me that shes seen it, and that she was particularly taken aback by one moment. Blink and youll miss it, but theres a scene in which a Schlafly ally named Georgia Peterson of Salt Lake City brings a bus full of women to a convention to join the fight against womens lib. Georgia Peterson was in my congregation, Gay says urgently. She went to church with me. I named my daughter Georgia after herwell, she influenced it. She wore a hat to church on Sunday. She was this amazing, trailblazing politician woman. I didnt see that she was all of those things but for the wrong side. Sometimes the stories you thought you knew best are newly illuminated by another perspective.

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Bravos The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Was a Parallel Surprise - The Ringer

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Review: A Dowry of Blood by ST Gibson – The Nerd Daily

Posted: at 6:44 pm

A Dowry of Blood is a sumptuous novel by S. T. Gibson, who asks us to raise an intoxicating glass to the vampires carnal nature and drink deep. Though it implies that that most famous vampire, Dracula, is one of its central cast, the true protagonist is Constanta, his vampire offspring and bride. Bram Stokers Dracula featured three such brides, nameless seductresses to terrify his Victorian audience; Gibson gives these brides voices and histories, turning them from objects of desire to characters with wills and desires of their own.

A lot of writers give endless thought to the logistics of vampirism: the who and where of killing, of moving around, of the laws the limit or enhance the vampiric life. Not so here. Constanta and her lovers never seem to fear discovery or vengeful mortals, or feel hemmed in by their nocturnal lifestyle. They kill with abandon, travel freely, interact easily with whatever humans they so choose. External forces rarely do more than displace them; only forces internal to their shifting relationships challenge and threaten them.

Most vampire novels are extremely grounded in places and times, especially romanticised ones. Anne Rice set a precedent for seduction-by-location with her Parisian revels and New Orleans mansions, growing sensuality from the ground up. Dowry of Blood eschews the heavy historicity in favour of a vague, lovely sweep across Europe, differentiating between Vienna and Venice only in the broadest of terms.

This may have baroque overtones, but its essentially an Impressionist book, painting with delicate dabs here and there, and then with sweeping, broad lines elsewhere. Time and place blur, faces emerge from the colourful palette of feeling rather than outward form. Its a breathlessly emotional book, furious and horny and delighted, and always a bit mad. And anyway, who cares about painstaking detail when there are such bright colours to paint with? Red, of course being primary among them.

Though Gibson can occasionally stray toward the purple with her prose, its more in a first novel sort of way. Shes just so excited for and by her characters that its hard to critique any little instances of faux pas. Theyre elegant, savage, and above all, grandiose. She doesnt tie them to the minutia of time or place because they are so very out of time and place, creatures who defy mortalityand conventional morality.

I think it would be perfectly natural if Constanta were to struggle with polygamy or being in a polycule, but I also think its perfectly reasonable that she doesnt. She slaughters humans like rabbits; even for an erstwhile churchgoer like her, whats an open marriage to the toll of her dead? Her casual embrace of non-monogamy is refreshing, and I like very much that Gibson did away with the hand-wringing. Rice already did the tormented vampire, and the unrepentant one. We already knowoh, do we knowvampires under threat from hunters or from their own guilt. Here we see the vampire at home, at rest. Their natural habitat is luxury, and it turns out their natural inclination is to form groups, albeit rather dangerous ones.

Im not only talking about the incestuous undertones of calling lovers sister and father and so on. This book is also about power dynamics and abuse of those dynamics. The unnamed father wields his power with a veneer of elegance, but hes really a common variety opportunist and manipulator. We feast on the ruins of empire, he declares with a grand flourish, forgetting that it makes him a scavenger, not a sovereign.

This definitely seems like a book produced in 2020, not just because of descriptions of plague (theyre not overwhelming, dont be deterred) but because of descriptions of a megalomaniacal narcissist who wants control at the cost of everyone elses life and joy. There is a passage late in the book that really hit the nail on the head about the thousand violations of abuse, the ones that go unremarked as they grind you down or make you finally rise up.

In a strange and not-so-strange way this book is ultimately about the queer found family and about the bonds that grow in spite of and because of trauma. Gibson doesnt belabour the backdrop because it is backdrop: the real drama and gorgeousness comes from the characters and their deadly, deliriously lovely desires.

A Dowry of Blood is available from Amazon, Book Depository, and other good book retailers, like your local bookstore.

Synopsis | Goodreads

A lyrical and dreamy reimagining of Draculas brides, A DOWRY OF BLOOD is a story of desire, obsession, and emancipation.

Saved from the brink of death by a mysterious stranger, Constanta is transformed from a medieval peasant into a bride fit for an undying king. But when Dracula draws a cunning aristocrat and a starving artist into his web of passion and deceit, Constanta realizes that her beloved is capable of terrible things. Finding comfort in the arms of her rival consorts, she begins to unravel their husbands dark secrets.

With the lives of everyone she loves on the line, Constanta will have to choose between her own freedom and her love for her husband. But bonds forged by blood can only be broken by death.

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Review: A Dowry of Blood by ST Gibson - The Nerd Daily

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Canada puts Proud Boys on terror list, cites active security threat – Reuters

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OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada named the far-right Proud Boys a terrorist entity on Wednesday, saying it posed an active security threat and played a pivotal role in last months attack on the U.S. Capitol that left five people dead.

Although the Proud Boys have never mounted an attack in Canada, Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said domestic intelligence forces had become increasingly worried about the group.

There has been a serious and concerning escalation of violence - not just rhetoric but activity and planning - and that is why we have responded as we have today, he told a news conference. He did not give details.

The groups assets can now be frozen by banks and financial institutions, and it is a crime for Canadians to knowingly deal with assets of a listed entity. Anyone belonging to the group can be blocked from entering Canada.

The groups founder, Gavin McInnes, is Canadian who lives in the United States.

U.S. authorities have charged several members of the Proud Boys in connection with the Jan 6. attack in Washington.

Ottawa added 12 other groups to its list of terrorist entities - three neo-Nazi groups, eight organizations described as affiliates to al Qaeda and Daesh (Islamic State), as well as Hizbul Mujahideen, a Kashmiri group.

Blair said Canadian intelligence agencies had been working for months and in some cases years to gather evidence needed to list the groups.

Canada will not tolerate ideological, religious or politically motivated acts of violence, said Blair.

Founded in 2016, the Proud Boys began as an organization protesting political correctness and perceived constraints on masculinity in the United States and Canada, and grew into a group that embraced street fighting.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump, asked last September whether he would denounce white supremacists and militia groups, called on the Proud Boys to stand back and stand by.

The listing will likely have a bit of a polarizing response on Proud Boys members, said Jessica Davis, a former senior intelligence analyst with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service spy agency.

For some individuals this may have a dampening effect ... However, there are probably some hard-core members who will be further radicalized by this, said Davis, president of Insight Threat Intelligence.

It is tough to say how many Proud Boys members there are in Canada, said Evan Balgord, executive director of the Anti-Hate Network of Canada.

Before the announcement there were about eight chapters, he said by phone. I would expect theyre pretty much done for here ... under that name, theyre done.

The group itself does not hold major financial assets, as far as Balgord knows.

The move underscored constitutional concerns about a Canadian governments ability to designate a group as a terrorist entity, said Leah West, a national security professor at Ottawas Carleton University and former lawyer with the Canadian justice department.

Designations are impossible to challenge beforehand and difficult to address afterward, especially given lawyers may be reluctant to provide counsel to members of a terrorist group, she said by phone.

Additional reporting by David Ljunggren in Ottawa and Anna Mehler Paperny in Toronto; Editing by Franklin Paul, Sonya Hepinstall and David Gregorio

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Canada puts Proud Boys on terror list, cites active security threat - Reuters

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