[Daily Kos Morning Roundup](
[Abbreviated Pundit Roundup]( is a long-running series published every morning that collects essential political discussion and analysis around the internet. - [Supreme Court to hear cases on veteransâ benefits, pet food and visas next term]( The Supreme Court on Monday added cases to its calendar for the term beginning in October that deal with veteransâ benefits, civil liability, immigration visas and pet food consumed by a dog named Clinton and a cat named Sassie. In a case that could have significant implications for those who serve in the military, the Supreme Court will weigh a matter involving two veterans who argue they were improperly denied medical benefits for treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder related to their service. [...] In a second case, the high court will parse the scope of a federal law that allows plaintiffs to recover civil damages when they suffer economic harm. Commercial truck driver Douglas J. Horn sued the manufacturer of a hemp-derived CBD product, which he took for pain, after he was fired from his job for testing positive for THC, the active ingredient in marijuana. Horn claims the company marketed its product as THC-free.
- [Big Tech companies are gobbling up the ad revenue that once supported news outlets like us. Please support our work with a $5 monthly recurring donation.]( - [Trump Is Flirting With Quack Economics]( I wish people would stop calling Donald Trump a populist. He has, after all, never demonstrated any inclination to help working Americans, and his economic policies really didnât help â his 2017 tax cut, in particular, was a giveaway to the wealthy. But his behavior during the Covid-19 pandemic showed that heâs as addicted to magical thinking and denial of reality as any petty strongman or dictator, which makes it all too likely that he might preside over the type of problems that result when policies are based on quack economics. Now, destructive economic policy isnât the thing that alarms me the most about Trumpâs potential return to power. Prospects for retaliation against his political opponents, huge detention camps for undocumented immigrants and more loom much larger in my mind. Still, it does seem worth noting that even as Republicans denounce President Biden for the inflation that occurred on his watch, Trumpâs advisers have been floating policy ideas that could be far more inflationary than anything that has happened so far. Itâs true that inflation surged in 2021 and 2022 before subsiding, and thereâs a vigorous debate about how much of a role Bidenâs economic policies played. Iâm skeptical, among other things because inflation in the United States since the beginning of the Covid pandemic has closely tracked with that of other advanced economies. Whatâs notable, however, is what the Biden administration didnât do when the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates to fight inflation. There was a clear risk that rate hikes would cause a politically disastrous recession, although this hasnât happened so far. But Biden and company didnât pressure the Fed to hold off; they respected the Fedâs independence, letting it do what it thought was necessary to bring inflation under control. Does anyone imagine that Trump â who in 2019 insisted that the Fed should cut interest rates to zero or below â would have exercised comparable restraint?
- [Trump, Weinstein, and the court of public opinion]( Fast-forward six years, and the Weinstein and Trump stories are adjacent again. Last week, New Yorkâs highest court overturned a rape conviction that prosecutors in the state obtained against Weinstein in 2020. (He has also been convicted in California, and is likely to remain behind bars for now.) The decision came down as Trump himself was in court in New York, over âhush moneyâ payments that Michael Cohen, his fixer, paid to the adult-film star Stormy Daniels in the run-up to the 2016 election to silence her claims of an affair. âI canât describe how surreal it is to learn this news while waiting for Donald Trump to walk into the courtroom and sit down in the exact spot Harvey Weinstein was when he was convicted and sentenced to 23 years in prison,â Molly Crane-Newman, a courts reporter at the New York Daily News, wrote on X. More than just being adjacent, the latest Weinstein and Trump stories are connectedâor at least, they might be. Weinsteinâs conviction was thrown out on essentially procedural grounds after the court ruled that the judge in his trial erred in allowing testimony that established a pattern of alleged abuse on Weinsteinâs part but went beyond the comparatively narrow legal case at issue. As The New Yorkerâs Ronan Farrow, who was among the reporters to break open the Weinstein scandal back in 2017, wrote last week, the judge in Trumpâs hush money case has also allowed testimony that establishes a pattern of conduct beyond the precise charges. That case, Farrow writes, could now be drawn âinto the thicket of legal questionsâ that felled the Weinstein verdict. As Farrow and others have noted, the two situations are not identical: the judge in the Trump case has been relatively cautious, not least in limiting jurorsâ exposure to claims of sexual misconduct against Trump. Still, there are other links between the two stories that transcend their legal similarities and renewed adjacency in the news cycle. Both centrally involve the news media, albeit in very different ways; if textbook accountability reporting set the stage for Weinsteinâs convictions, in the Trump trial, journalism of a much grubbier nature has been central to establishing the very pattern of conduct that is essential context for the Daniels payoff. And if, as I wrote following Weinsteinâs conviction in 2020, that story illuminated the messy relationship between the court of public opinion and actual courtâa conclusion that, if anything, has only been reinforced by last weekâs reversalâit would perhaps be an understatement to draw a similar conclusion about Trumpâs legal cases, not only in New York, but across the map.
- [Dozens occupy Hamilton Hall as pro-Palestinian protests spread across campus]( Dozens of protesters occupied Hamilton Hall in the early hours of Tuesday morning, moving metal gates to barricade the doors, blocking entrances with wooden tables and chairs, and zip-tying doors shut. As the window of the rightmost door of Hamilton broke, dozens more protesters formed a human barricade directly outside the Hamilton doors. Protesters sealed Hamilton while hundreds more flooded over to the front of the building. Some began a smaller picket on the walkway near the Hamilton statue in front of the human barricade, chanting, âFrom the river to the sea, Palestine will be freeâ and âPalestine will live forever.â By 12:49 a.m., the crowd outside Hamilton had increased to hundreds of individuals. [...] The occupation came nearly two weeks after University President Minouche Shafik authorized the New York Police Department to sweep the âGaza Solidarity Encampmentâ on April 18, leading to the largest mass arrest on campus since 1968, when the NYPD arrested over 80 people inside of occupied Hamilton Hall and over 700 students total.
- [EU to investigate Meta over election misinformation before June polls]( It is understood the European Commission is concerned that Metaâs moderation system is not robust enough to counterbalance the potential proliferation of fake news and attempts to suppress voting. The Financial Times reported that officials were particularly worried about the way Metaâs platforms were handling Russiaâs efforts to undermine upcoming European elections, although it was expected to stop short of citing the Kremlin in proceedings. Reports suggest that the commission is particularly concerned over Metaâs plan to discontinue CrowdTangle, a public insights tool that allows real-time disinformation researchers, journalists and others across the EU to monitor the spread of fake news and attempts to suppress voting.
- [Read the morning news on Daily Kos while sipping your coffee out of our Daily Kos mug. Click here to get one now!]( - [Americansâ Views of Technology Companies]( Since 2020, more Americans â particularly Democrats â believe social media companies wield too much political power. Roughly eight-in-ten Americans (78%) say these companies have too much power and influence in politics today, according to a new Pew Research Center survey of 10,133 U.S. adults conducted Feb. 7-11, 2024. This is up from 72%in 2020. Another 16% say these sites have the right amount of political influence, while only 4% think they donât have enough power. [...] Americans are far more likely to say social media has a negative rather than positive impact on the country. Roughly two-thirds (64%) think social media has a mostly negative effect on the way things are going in the country today. Only 10% describe social media as having a mostly positive impact on the country. And about a quarter say these sites have neither a positive nor a negative effect. Want to write your own stories? [Log in]( or [sign up]( to post articles and comments on Daily Kos, the nation's largest progressive community. Follow Daily Kos on [Facebook](, [Threads](, and [Instagram](. Thanks for all you do,
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