Monday, July 03, 2023

OPINION PIECE Eleanor Clift > How Arizona Became Ground Zero for the Abortion-Rights Battle | Daily Beast 01 July 2023

Gov. Katie Hobbs stopped local prosecutors from treating abortion as a crime. But the fight has only just begun.

How Arizona Became Ground Zero for the Abortion Rights Battle

DESERT STORMS
A photo illustration of Governor of Arizona Katie Hobbs and Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes.

Photo Illustration by Erin O'Flynn/The Daily Beast/Getty Images

Listen to article6 minutes

Marking the first anniversary of the Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade, first-year Gov. Katie Hobbs (D-AZ) issued a far-reaching executive order that strips the state’s fifteen local county attorneys of their authority to prosecute abortion related cases. Turns out elections have consequences.

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BLOWBACK : Maricopa County Attorney Rachel Mitchell 

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The bombshell order doesn’t stop there. It directs all cases prosecutable under Arizona’s 15-week ban—which doesn’t allow exceptions for rape or incest—to be exclusively handled by the state’s attorney general, Kris Mayes, who like the governor is a pro-choice Democrat and has only been in office since January.

And there’s more. Mayes has made it clear she won’t be prosecuting women and their health providers for alleged violations of an 1864 abortion ban, or poorly written post-Roe bans.

“It’s still early days, and we don’t have any active cases right now, nothing being prosecuted,” Mayes told The Daily Beast in a phone interview. “But it’s still a very important executive order that provides certitude to Arizona women and medical providers that we are going to protect and defend the fundamental rights of Arizonans, and we’re not going to criminalize abortion in Arizona.”

The executive order has Republican state legislators fuming about the governor’s overreach of power, and vowing to retaliate by halting confirmation of her appointees. Republicans have already been slow-walking the process, and Arizona law allows political appointees to serve for up to a year without Senate confirmation, so while the stalemate is not an empty threat, it’s a threat that won’t come due for a while.

“The governor and I didn’t take this step lightly,” says Mayes, who is confident the governor’s action will survive legal challenges. “This is an extraordinary situation. The U.S. Supreme Court overturned a right we had for 50 years. Arizonans elected a Democratic governor and AG who are pro-choice, and elections have consequences. Some Republicans are unhappy about it, but this is a consequence of Dobbs (the SCOTUS decision).”

If this was a Republican governor taking authority away from local Democratic officials, “I think the ideological lines would be very different, so there is a legitimate question about state government overreach and lack of deference to local officials,” says Jack Pitney, Professor of Politics at Claremont McKenna college.

Abortion changes the equation. Whatever qualms voters might have are outweighed by their anger over the loss of Roe. “Before Dobbs, the pro-life side could frame the issue to their advantage. Since Dobbs, the framing has shifted to whether abortion should be legal at all,” a position so alarming to most Americans that support for abortion in at least some circumstances soared to 85 percent in a Gallup poll, with 69 percent saying it should be legal in the first three months, a record high.

Until the repeal of Roe, the underlying procedure was presumed legitimate, and the debate was about regulations at the margin. Arizona has a strong libertarian streak, which also works to the governor’s advantage.

“I’ve made it pretty clear that our resources should not be used to prosecute doctors and women,” says Mayes, who immediately after the Hobbs decision issued a statement aligning herself with Gov. Hobbs—who tweeted a photo of herself signing the executive order. “We are on offense, and we will not let up,” Mayes said in her statement. “That means Arizonans can seek abortions and access reproductive health care—without interference or fear of criminal prosecution.”

  • She is battling cases related to an 1864 law which bans abortion and was put in place before Arizona was a state—and before women could even vote.

Mayes’ Republican predecessor as AG advocated for that law, and Mayes is honoring (if that’s the right word) a 15-week ban on abortion voted by the legislature and upheld by the Appeals Court “with no exceptions for rape and incest, which makes it unacceptable to most Arizonans,” she says.

Abortion is center stage in a state that is pivotal to next year’s presidential election, and to the Senate majority with Sen. Kyrsten Sinema potentially running for re-election as an independent.

“There are very active, relentless forces in Arizona intent on depriving women of their fundamental right to access abortion and they’re not going to let up,” Mayes said in the phone interview.

She is relying on the state’s Constitution, written during the Teddy Roosevelt progressive era, which has an explicit privacy clause, “Article 3, Section 8,” she says. “It hasn’t been tested,” she notes, then adding that the fate of abortion care will be decided in the form of a ballot initiative as early as next year, “and Arizonans like most Americans will reject these draconian abortion bans.”

What’s happening in Arizona is the “unleashing of the unpredictability of the abortion debate across America,” says Jim Kessler with the centrist Democrat group, Third Way. “A constitutional right a year ago has been turned into a crime and you can see how that crime could be a capital crime,” he says. “Abortion is murder was the message of the pro-life movement for decades. What Katie Hobbs is doing is responding to an extremist set of laws and trying to defend women.”

One out of four pregnancies end in abortion, which means that pre-Dobbs, there were 800,000 to a million abortions a year in the United States, says Kessler. “And we’re treating these women like they’ve committed a crime when a year earlier it was a right. The Dobbs decision in an instant turned law-abiding people into criminals. Eventually, someone is going to be arrested and prosecuted for having an abortion,” he says.

It won’t be in Arizona, and if that’s the marker that Katie Hobbs and her AG put down, that puts them in the history books right where they want to be as grassroots leaders in the ongoing fight for women’s freedom."

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Alpha Match: Shouting for a Big Public Fight is Good

 

What RFK Jr. Doing Shirtless Pushups Says About the 2024 Election

IS THIS ALPHA?

Do topless “tough guys” really make for better leaders?

A photo illustration composite of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. as a buff, shirtless man flexing his muscles with a 2024 tattoo.

Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Getty

Twitter was abuzz on Sunday after video and photos of a shirtless Robert F. Kennedy Jr. doing pushups and incline bench-presses outside Venice Beach’s Gold’s Gym started popping up in social media timelines. The caption on the pushup video shared by RFK Jr., read: “Getting in shape for my debates with President Biden!”

Reactions ranged from accusations of steroid use (there’s no evidence of that, but it would be plenty ironic if true, considering his anti-vaxx stance), to fans gushing that he’s the most “jacked presidential candidate” in history, to critics mocking how little he can lift. Others suggested that the obsession with Kennedy’s alpha male status was evidence of “crypto homoeroticism” on the right (see the many photoshopped pics of a muscular Donald Trump). . ."


Super Buff RFK JR Posts WORKOUT Vid; Dares Biden To Debate Him: Rising 9,130 views Premiered 78 minutes ago #Biden #2024

 

www.vanityfair.com

From RFK Jr.’s Shirtless Workout to Elon’s Cage Match: It’s Been a Big Week for the Man Boys Spoiling for a Fight

Kenzie Bryant 
June 27, 2023
4 - 5 minutes

"Since time immemorial, men have loved to challenge each other to fights. 
  • In antiquity, they wrestled it out. 
  • In the Middle Ages, there was the joust. 
  • In the Industrial Age, we had our pistol duels. 
  • Times being remarkably online as they are now, men are challenging each other to debates. Occasionally, when, say, a Paul brother is involved, these debates still occur with fists in front of an audience, but by and large, “debate me” has become the “shall we settle this outside” of our times. 
  • It’s nice that modern men get to participate in a grand Western tradition, though also a little sad that we are in the umpteenth century of men toiling under the impression that shouting for a big, public fight is good instead of strange and small. Let’s look at some recent trends in the space of dudes challenging dudes.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the 69-year-old son of Robert F. Kennedy and vocal anti-vaxxer, who once compared having the opportunity to take a COVID-19 vaccine to living in Hitler’s Germany, is saying, “Debate me!” to President Joe Biden, while shirtless (he later apologized for the Hitler comparison). 

Well, to put a real fine point on it, he’s doing incline reps sans shirt at Gold’s Gym in Venice Beach and tweeting that it’s all in preparation for a debate with Biden that is pretty certain to never, ever happen. 
  • Why? Well, he’d like to be the next Democratic president of these United States. Why would Mr. Kennedy operate under the impression that doing push-ups with his nips out will help his chances of becoming president of these United States? As we learned from the last long-shot failson to make it into the White House, it probably doesn’t hurt to put the pec in spectacle. (For the record, said previous long-shot failson has seriously divergent views on the relative benefits of physical activity.)

Speaking of spectacle, Elon Musk recently started starting something too. The owner of Tesla and Twitter last week responded to some guy’s post about Meta reportedly creating a Twitter-like product under its banner, with another commenter suggesting a cage match with Mark Zuckerberg, Meta’s CEO. 

“I’m up for a cage match if he is lol,” Musk said. Sometimes he makes his little jokes and his reply guys say, “Yay,” and everyone else whose desk it crosses says, “It’s weird he didn’t get all this silly energy out at grade seven, but here we are I suppose.” 

  • This could have been just another day of Musk saying stuff on the internet, but then Zuck replied by posting on Instagram, which is owned by Meta, “send me location.” A spokesperson for Meta told The Verge, “The story speaks for itself,” meaning it is not just two guys shitposting at each other. Unless you believe it is. Some real, clear messaging from the owners of two of the largest messaging platforms in human existence.

The thing is, this makes a lot of sense—though maybe not in a way Elon or Zuck would like. If you, by hook or more likely by crook, reach an income that is a certain percentage of your lowest paid employee’s income, you should be automatically entered into a Hunger Games-style cage match for the benefit of everyone else’s entertainment. Listen, the fight can be on a yacht, if you like. It can be in Las Vegas, as this one is supposedly going to be. (Musk replied to Zuck’s call for a location with “Vegas Octagon.”) But you should have to commit your life to fighting other mega-elites with your fists.

Musk’s mother, Maye Musk, disagrees with the wisdom of a fight in general. She insisted in a tweet that the “fight is canceled,” and later tried to appeal to her son’s self-perception as a guy who is funny by suggesting, “A verbal fight only. Three questions each. The funniest answers win. Who agrees?”

Not me! I don’t agree, Ma Musk. Three questions isn’t going to do it. They must fight to the death. On this there can be no debate."

TODAY MARKS INDEPENDENCE DAY: The day of the liberation of Belarus from the Nazis,

3 July 1944 was the day of Soviet liberation of Minsk from the Wehrmacht during the Minsk Offensive (code-named "Bagration"). 
The decision to celebrate Independence Day on 3 July, the day of the liberation of Belarus from the Nazis, from 27 July, the day of the Declaration of Sovereignty of Belarus in breaking away from the Soviet Union, was made during a controversial national referendum held in 1996 proposed by President Alexander Lukashenko.


3 JULY 2023, 07:00

Belarus marks Independence Day

MINSK, 3 July (BelTA) – Today Belarus marks Independence Day, the main holiday of Belarusian statehood.

The decision to celebrate Independence Day on 3 July was adopted in a nationwide referendum on 24 November 1996. In the same year, President Aleksandr Lukashenko signed the decree to establish the public holiday - Independence Day of the Republic of Belarus (Republic Day). It is marked on the day Minsk was liberated from the Nazi invaders – 3 July 1944. This holiday has become a symbol of the national revival of our state.

During the Great Patriotic War Belarus was the first to bear the brunt of the Nazi war machine. Minsk came under merciless bombing and artillery bombardment on the second day of the war. The Nazi seized Minsk on 28 June. Since the very first days of the occupation Minsk fiercely fought against the enemy. 1,100 days of occupation equal 1,100 days of selfless, heroic fight against the Nazi invaders. Minsk was occupied but not conquered.

The Belarusian capital city was liberated from the Nazi invaders on 3 July 1944 as a result of the brilliant Belarusian strategic offensive operation through joint efforts of the 1st and 3rd Belarusian Fronts assisted by partisans. The day is celebrated as the day of liberation of the entire country.

Belarusians know the price of freedom. The country lost every third resident in the course of the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945.

On July 3, the Belarusian nations pays tribute to the heroism and perseverance of soldiers, the selfless struggle of the underground fighters, the great labor feat of those who raised the country from ruins, built factories, houses and schools."

There is no other date but 3 July for Belarus Independence Day no matter how badly the descendants of the Nazis abroad and their accomplices ...
БелТА · Информационное агентство БелТА · 2 days ago


On the occasion of Belarus’ official Independence Day, the people of the United States of America send their warmest wishes to the people of Belarus.

Your courage, resilience, and perseverance in pursuing a democratic, sovereign, and stable future for Belarus have inspired the world.  From behind prison walls, in the cities in which you find yourselves in exile, and within your homes in Belarus, you continue to stand up and speak out for a truly independent and democratic future for your country, where you can live free of repression and where you will be able to determine the course of your own future.

The United States commends and supports your tireless efforts to champion Belarus’ unique language, culture, and identity.  We admire your perseverance in defending human rights and fundamental freedoms.  We call for the unconditional release of all of the more than 1,500 Belarusian political prisoners, and for an end to the ongoing repression in Belarus.

The United States has stood for a democratic, independent, and sovereign Belarus for more than 30 years.  That commitment remains unwavering.

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