‘Our state is not a prison camp!’ North Dakota GOP passes bill making mask mandates illegal

Stephan:  North Dakota, a state controlled by Republicans because a majority of the state voters are Republicans, is a classic example of willful ignorance as a social trend. Masks, social distancing, vaccines? Not me, not ever. This seems to be that state's mindset. It proves you just can't reach people who choose to live in a fantasy world. It also means this pandemic is going to drag on far longer than it needs to and more people are going to die than need to.
A notably stupid and willfully ignorant North Dakota resident

Mask-hating North Dakota Republicans this week passed a bill that would make mask mandates in their state illegal.

Local news station KFYR-TV reports that North Dakota House of Representatives moved to ban implementing mask mandates, no matter how severe future pandemics might be.

“Our state is not a prison camp!” Republican North Dakota State Rep. Jeff Hoverson fumed arguing in support of the legislation.

According to the Bismarck Tribune, Republican Gov. Doug Burgum implemented a mask mandate last November in an effort to contain surging COVID-19 hospitalizations in his state.

The governor has since dropped the mask mandate now that hospitalizations have fallen significantly from their peak, but that apparently isn’t good enough for Republican hardliners in the state who want to make sure the governor never does anything to protect public health again.

The bill, which passed by a slim margin of 50 to 44, now heads to the North Dakota State Senate.

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The Redistricting Landscape, 2021–22

Stephan:  This is one of the most important articles I will publish this year. We, in the United States, have reached a crossroads. We have one party, the Democrats who may be flawed by occasional bouts of human greed, stupidity, and incompetence, as all political parties experience, but that remains deeply committed to democracy. And another party, the Republicans, who have become a White supremacy christofascist anti-democratic cult defined by its corruption, incompetence -- just look at Texas -- outright criminality, and committed to destroying our democracy. How our future is going to go as a country is largely going to be determined by the coming redistricting of congressional districts This is the best article I have read on this subject, and I urge you to read it, and make it clear to your local leaders that you are committed to the protection of democracy, and that everyone regardless of race, gender, or wealth should not only be allowed to vote but that we should make it easy to do so, and we should encourage every voter to understand the importance of doing so.

Under the best of circumstances, the redrawing of legislative and congressional districts every 10 years is a fraught and abuse-prone process. But the next round of redistricting in 2021 and 2022 will be the most challenging in recent history. Even before the Covid-19 pandemic, intense fights over representation and fair maps were all but certain in many states due to rapid demographic change and a weakening of the legal framework governing redistricting. Invariably, communities of color would bear much of the brunt, facing outright discrimination in some places and being used as a convenient tool for achieving unfair partisan advantage in others.

Covid-19, however, has further upended the redistricting cycle by delaying the release of data needed by states to draw maps, and in turn delaying redistricting.

This report looks at the upcoming redistricting cycle through the lens of four factors that will influence outcomes in each state: who controls map drawing; changes in the legal rules governing redistricting over the last decade; pressures from population and demographic shifts over the same period; and the potential impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on […]

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Why Republicans are keeping Trump’s Big Lie alive

Stephan:  Democracies only work when everyone agrees that democracy is the road they choose to travel. We are now facing a situation where that is no longer the case. The only thing that is going to change this is the American voters voting en masse and making it clear by their choices that they want democracy. Texas made a different choice and you can see what has happened there.
Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett, and Donald Trump
Credit: Salon/Getty

Donald Trump may be spending his post-presidency golfing at Mar-a -Lago but he remains front and center in the hearts and minds of millions of Republican voters, as evidenced by the 46% who said in a new Suffolk University/ USA Today poll released over the weekend that they would join a Trump Party if he decided to split off from the GOP. A whopping 80% of Republican respondents said they support punishing any Republicans in Congress who voted for Trump’s impeachment. He is still their Dear Leader even in exile. 

So the GOP still has a Trump problem. If it loses 20-30% of its voters, it will prove difficult to win any elections whether it’s called the Trump Patriot Party or the plain old GOP. That is because the polarization that powers the extreme right-wing under Trump depends upon having every last self-identified Republican vote their way. There are no more crossovers when it comes to Donald Trump.

This is the dilemma now Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., finds himself trying to navigate as he […]

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Child poverty in the U.S. could be slashed by monthly payments to parents – an idea proved in other rich countries and proposed by a prominent Republican decades ago

Stephan:  The United States has a shameful record of child poverty and hunger. One in 8 minor children in the country faced hunger and food scarcity in 2020. We like to talk about American exceptionalism, but we lack the courage to really define where we are exceptional, child poverty and hunger being an example of exceptionalism one rarely hears mentioned. There are solutions, but we seem to lack the compassion to implement them.

Which former president pitched a Family Assistance Plan to the American people that would have provided many families with children a monthly stipend?

It may surprise you that it came in 1969 from Richard Nixon, a Republican who embraced cultural conservativism.

The House of Representatives twice passed his unprecedented plan to strengthen the safety net before it stalled in the Senate. Fifty years later, Congress and the nation are again debating a major boost in government support for families with children.

As a scholar who studies poverty and inequality, I have been contemplating that chapter in U.S. history while following recent proposals from President Joe Biden and other Democrats, and Sen. Mitt Romney – a Republican – to help cover the costs of raising children.

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While the success of one of these measures or something similar is not assured, I believe that, thanks to the pandemic, there’s a good a chance the United States will finally begin building the foundation that Nixon called for and that families still need.

An outlier

The U.S. has long been an outlier in its […]

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5% have had a near-death experience — and they say it made life worth living

Stephan:  I have known, liked, and respected Bruce Greyson for decades and along with other friends, Ray Moody, Pim Van Lommel and others, he has produced the impeccable data which has taken the idea of the soul out of religion and placed it in science providing the factual research upon which our understanding of the continuity of consciousness is based. Once you add that to the reincarnation work begun by Ian Stevenson, and continued for a second generation by Jim Tucker you begin to realize that an eternal part of you existed before you incarnated and will continue after you are physically dead, and that you will have to deal with the choices you made in this life in the next. It changes your perspective radically.
Credit: Shutterstock

About fifty years ago, Dr. Bruce Greyson was eating pasta in the hospital cafeteria when his beeper went off. Startled, he dropped his fork and left a drop of spaghetti sauce on his tie. 

Greyson, a psychiatrist, was urgently needed in the ER to treat a college student who had overdosed. With no time to change his dirty tie, he grabbed a white lab coat and buttoned it up to hide the stain. 

In the ER, he found the student unconscious on a gurney, her breathing slow but regular. He called her name — “Holly” — and tried to rouse her. But she didn’t stir. 

Greyson left Holly and met her roommate, Susan, at the end of the hall in the lounge. Unbuttoning his coat, he sat down and asked Susan to recount everything that had happened. 

The next morning, Greyson returned to work at the hospital. Though Holly was awake, she was also groggy, her eyes closed. 

Greyson leaned in. 

“Holly, I’m Dr. Greyson,” he said. 

Holly stirred. 

“I remember you from last night,” she mumbled. 

Greyson was confused. 

“I didn’t know you could see me,” he […]

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