[Daily Kos Morning Roundup](
A morning roundup of worthy pundit and news reads, brought to you by Daily Kos. [Click here to read the full web version.]( - [Ukraine war wonât give Poland a free pass on democracy]( Ukraine war wonât give Poland a free pass on democracy, Marta Prochwicz-Jazowska, POLITICO Europe
As a guarantor of Polandâs security, Washington is in a great position to remind its ally of the need to improve the quality of its democracy. And the Biden administration has continued to raise its concerns over media freedom, judicial independence and respect for minority rights in the country. After all, good friends and allies should hold each other accountable to the values that underpin their relationship. On this front, last weekâs presidential visit was also deftly handled. [...] ...Biden made a point in his speech to address and praise Poland as a whole â not just the government or one party over another. Describing the country as âone of our great allies,â he thanked President Duda, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, Warsawâs Mayor RafaÅ Kazimierz Trzaskowski and âall the former ministers and presidents, as well as mayors and Polish political leaders from across the country.â Biden also made a point of meeting with both ministers and representatives of the opposition. And Duda himself reciprocated by emphasizing bipartisanship and calling for a meeting of the countryâs National Security Council on the first anniversary of the Ukraine war â the council comprises figures from across the political spectrum.
- [Disney Loses Control Of Special District to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis]( Disney Loses Control Of Special District to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Winston Cho, The Hollywood Reporter
Under the law, effective immediately, DeSantis has the authority to appoint every member of the special tax districtâs five-member governing body subject to approval by the state Senate. At the news conference, DeSantis said Florida attorney Martin Garcia will serve as chairman. The board will include Brian Aungst Jr., a lawyer and son of a former Republican mayor of one of Floridaâs largest cities, Christian Ziegler Bridget Ziegler, a conservative school board member and wife of the Florida Republican party chairman, Ron Peri, CEO of The Gathering USA Ministry, and attorney Michael Sasso, he added. Still, Disney gets to keep most of the perks thatâs allowed the company to self-govern the land on its sprawling theme park resort for over 50 years. It retains almost all of its debt obligations and exemptions from a host of regulations, taxes and fees in addition to powers allowing it to act much like its own government, including the issuance of bonds and the ability to provide infrastructure services on its land. Disney didnât immediately respond to requests for comment. The feud between Florida lawmakers and Disney started when the company pushed back on the Parental Rights in Education Law, which prohibits instruction on gender sexuality through the third grade. Disney initially stayed silent on the legislation, but later opposed it under pressure from employees.
- [Murdoch Acknowledges Fox News Hosts Endorsed Election Fraud Falsehoods]( Murdoch Acknowledges Fox News Hosts Endorsed Election Fraud Falsehoods, Jeremy W. Peters and Katie Robertson, The New York Times
Mr. Murdochâs remarks, which he made last month as part of Dominionâs $1.6 billion defamation lawsuit against Fox, added to the evidence that Dominion has accumulated as it tries to prove its central allegation: The people running the countryâs most popular news network knew Mr. Trumpâs claims of voter fraud in the 2020 election were false but broadcast them anyway in a reckless pursuit of ratings and profit. [...] The new documents and a similar batch released this month provide a dramatic account from inside the network, depicting a frantic scramble as Fox tried to woo back its large conservative audience after ratings collapsed in the wake of Mr. Trumpâs loss. Fox had been the first network to call Arizona for Joseph R. Biden on election night â essentially declaring him the next president. When Mr. Trump refused to concede and started attacking Fox as disloyal and dishonest, viewers began to change the channel. The filings also revealed that top executives and on-air hosts had reacted with incredulity bordering on contempt to various fictitious allegations about Dominion. These included unsubstantiated rumors â repeatedly uttered by guests and hosts of Fox programs â that its voting machines could run a secret algorithm that switched votes from one candidate to another, and that the company was founded in Venezuela to help that countryâs longtime leader, Hugo Chávez, fix elections.
- [The âbiggest beneficiaryâ weighs in A China expert assesses Beijingâs âpeace planâ for Russia and Ukraine]( The âbiggest beneficiaryâ weighs in A China expert assesses Beijingâs âpeace planâ for Russia and Ukraine, Pyotr Sapozhnikov, Meduza
âChina regularly publishes so-called âwhite booksâ [manifestos outlining Beijingâs official position] on foreign policy issues, and theyâre always very extensive, vague, and âin support of everything good and against everything bad.â Donât expect the peace manifesto to have a serious effect on the war or to give China any kind of new role in this conflict,â he told Meduza. [...] So why would Beijing put out a peace plan at all? According to Umarov, the documentâs publication is likely a reaction to media reports that China is supplying Russia with dual-use goods and even planning to sell lethal weapons. Even though the war has virtually no downsides for China, he said, Beijing doesnât want to look like a Russian ally. âThis is a question of image,â he told Meduza. âChina doesnât want to be viewed as a junior partner who follows Moscowâs lead.â [...] âBeijing wants to delay its inevitable conflict with the U.S. It will be in a much better position if this confrontation happens not right now because of the war with Ukraine but sometime later â in 20â30 years â when China will be much better prepared,â he said.
- [Bad news: Daily Kos revenue is down, and we might not be able to do all we do. Good news: You are a big part of the solution, and small donors have never let us down. Donate $5 TODAY.]( - [Conspiracy Theorizing Goes Off the Rails]( Conspiracy Theorizing Goes Off the Rails, Paul Krugman, The New York Times
Train derailments are actually fairly common, but you can see how this one might become a political issue. After all, the Obama administration tried to improve rail safety, for example by requiring superior modern brakes on high-hazard trains, and then the Trump administration reversed these regulations. As it happens, these regulations probably wouldnât have prevented the Ohio derailment, because they were too narrow to have covered this particular train. Still, the events in East Palestine would seem, on the face of it, to strengthen the progressive case for stronger regulation of industry and hurt the conservative case against regulation. Instead, however, the right is on the attack, claiming that blame for the disaster in Ohio rests on the Biden administration, which it says doesnât care about or is even actively hostile to white people. This is vile. Itâs also amazing. As far as I can tell, right-wing commentators have just invented a whole new class of conspiracy theory, one that doesnât even try to explain how the alleged conspiracy is supposed to work. [...] ...the conspiracy theorizing about the Ohio derailment takes it to a whole other level. When Tucker Carlson suggests that this happened because East Palestine is a rural white community, with another Fox News host going so far as to say that the Biden administration is âspilling toxic chemicals on poor white people,â how is this even supposed to have worked? How did Biden officials engineer a derailment by a private-sector train company, running on privately owned track, which lobbied against stronger safety regulations?
- [A massive 7.8 magnitude earthquake has devastated Turkey and Syria: Donate to humanitarian efforts assisting survivors that are in need during this horrific time.]( - [Scott Adams and the right-wing insistence on White victimhood]( Scott Adams and the right-wing insistence on White victimhood, Philip Bump, The Washington Post
Tracking Adamsâs evolution alongside the online right is fascinating. He supported Donald Trumpâs efforts to goad the left, if not every aspect of his presidency. In the past few years, his politics have been more Tucker-Carlson-ish, rejecting government and other institutions as hobbled, moronic or nefarious. Adams enjoys presenting himself as smarter and more clever than everyone else, leading him to couch controversial statements with belated winks in the manner of Twitter owner Elon Musk (who rushed to support Adams in the wake of the new controversy). What makes the situation with Adams interesting, though, isn't that it's unique. Quite the opposite. He (like Trump and Musk) has been able to tread further into controversy thanks to celebrity and power. Years of pushing boundaries only to see them stretch to accommodate him (as with the introduction of the first Black Dilbert character last year â who, true to Adams's worldview, identified as White) simply reinforced his own self-confidence and led him to push harder. There are rewards for this on the right. Donald Trump Jr. has gone from minding a real estate empire to creating a lib-baiting one. You can get attention and praise and go viral online with successfully-structured efforts to make Democrats mad. By offering evidence that the political right is correct and the political left toxic and deluded, you can generate attention capital, one of the most important currencies in right-wing politics.
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