[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.]( - [Why Memphis Is Different](: Why Memphis Is Different, Juliette Kayyem, The Atlantic
By the time protesters were chanting in the streets, the five officers who had beaten Nichols, a 29-year-old Black man, had already been charged with second-degree murder. By the time the video footage of the attack was released, the anger and dismay had already been predicted; law-enforcement and political leaders had issued statements preparing the public for some of the worst police violence this nation has seen. The Memphis police chief likened Nicholsâs beating to that of Rodney King in 1991. These officials were right: The footage was brutal, at times unbearable, with Nichols appearing not to resist the officers as they repeatedly struck him. All of this reveals the sad fact that, because of the sheer number of times Americans have now confronted videos of police officers killing Black citizens, public officials have gotten better at managing the shock. This observation is not meant to minimize the police violence on display in the Memphis videos and so many before, but to acknowledge how important it is to mitigate the harm that such violence can cause even beyond the misconduct itself. As we have seen too many times, when videos reveal police violence or verdicts fail to bring officers to justice, the result is often more violence, including clashes between civilians and police. The Rodney King verdict in 1992, in which four Los Angeles police officers were acquitted for a beating that aired on television, led to the L.A. riots. During those days of unrest, 63 people died from violence related to what had started out as peaceful protests. The deaths of Michael Brown, George Floyd, and others also sparked violence in the streetsâeach side with its own narrative of who had initiated itâin addition to large, peaceful demonstrations. Our nation has been through this so many times before. The release of the Nichols footage suggests that a combination of factors can help prevent police-civilian clashes, though it might be too soon to say. First, there was the quick firing of the five police officers involved, even before criminal charges were filed, and before the videos were made public. This rarely happens, but it is the correct response when the facts are impossible to defend. Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland also made a commitment to examine the cityâs SCORPION squad, its supposedly elite street-crime unit to which the police officers involved in Nicholsâs beating were assigned. On Friday, just before the release of the footage, Strickland went further and said the unit would be âinactiveâ for the foreseeable future. - [Tyre Nichols should still be alive. Donate $3 to help Memphis, TN grapple with this senseless death and organize to end police terror.]( - [Two Key Things to Know About This Confusing Economy]( Two Key Things to Know About This Confusing Economy, John Cassidy, The New Yorker
The world economy is still emerging from an unprecedented pandemic, Europe is experiencing its biggest war since 1945, and many countries have been recording inflation rates not seen in thirty years, so itâs hardly surprising that the economic picture is blurred. Since the coronavirus started to spread, in 2020, some long-standing economic relationships have broken down. Other, new trends have emerged, and they could turn out to be temporary. But, in looking through this haze of conflicting data, two things stand out. The first is that, while higher inflation has raised the cost of living significantly in the past couple of years, the U.S. economy has made an impressive recovery from the pandemic in terms of output and jobs. On Thursday, the Department of Commerce reported that inflation-adjusted G.D.P. rose at an annualized rate of 2.9 per cent in the third quarter of last year. In 2022 as a whole, growth came in at 2.1 per cent, down from a bumper 5.9 per cent in 2021, but still well above the average growth rate from 2001 to 2020, which was about 1.7 per cent. If one considers G.D.P. levels rather than growth rates, the economy is now almost back on the trend line that it was on before the pandemic. And the unemployment rate, at 3.5 per cent, is back to its pre-pandemic February, 2020 level, which was the lowest level in half a century. These outcomes are much better than many economists and policymakers had expected during 2020. In fact, as the Washington Postâs Heather Long pointed out, to ârecover all jobs and output in basically 2 years is remarkable.â [...] The second point that stands out is that, despite higher-than-expected G.D.P. growth at the end of last year, many signs now hint that the economy is slowing sharply, and that if the Federal Reserve sticks to its policy of raising interest rates it will likely bring about the recession it wants to avoid. Beyond the headline figure of 2.9 per cent, the G.D.P. report contained some worrying signs. Companies building up inventories that they havenât sold yet accounted for about half of the fourth-quarter G.D.P. growth, and foreign trade for another fifth. Final domestic salesâthe stuff and services that Americans actually boughtâexpanded by just 0.8 per cent on an annualized basis. - [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.]( - [The Responsibility of Watching](: The Responsibility of Watching, A.O. Scott, New York Times
A delicate ethical line separates witness â an active, morally engaged state of attention â from the more passive, less demanding condition of spectatorship. The spectacle of violence has a way of turning even sensitive souls into gawkers and voyeurs. Violence, very much including the actions of the police, is a fixture of popular culture, and has been since long before the invention of video. For much of human history, public executions have been a form of entertainment. The history of lynching in the United States is in part a history of public spectacle, in which the mutilation and murder of Black men brought out white crowds to stare, cheer and take photographs. Iâm not saying that looking at the video of Mr. Nicholsâs beating is equivalent to joining in one of those crowds, but rather that Black suffering in America has often been either relegated to invisibility or subjected to exploitation and commodification. That is the dilemma that Ms. Wells and others in her position have faced, even as she challenges the public to acknowledge her sonâs full humanity. We donât automatically recoil from violence. We can just as easily respond with indifference, morbid fascination â or worse. Images are powerful, but not powerful enough to compensate for a societyâs failures of decency or judgment, or to overcome its commitment to denying truths that should be self-evident. Mr. Nicholsâs case canât help but recall the police beating of Rodney King in Los Angeles in 1991, captured on video by a neighbor. The officers in that case were acquitted, and unrest swept the city. - [Tyre Nicholsâs Death Is Americaâs Shame]( Tyre Nicholsâs Death Is Americaâs Shame, Charles Blow, New York Times
After the killing of George Floyd in 2020 and the historic summer of protest that followed, police killings of American citizens didnât decrease; they increased. What fell away were the evanescent allies, poll-chasing politicians and cooped-up Covid kids who had used the protests as an opportunity to congregate. [,,.] America should be ashamed. It abandoned the issue of police reform. After Covid lockdowns eased and people were once again gathered for things other than protest, their priorities snapped back to a noninterventionist normality. Their cabin-fever racial consciousness was like some kind of delirium, an outgrowth of end-of-the-world ideations. As the world reopened, elections approached and crime and inflation rose in tandem, interest in police reform and protecting Black lives from police violence melted away like ice cubes on a summer sidewalk. And with it, America was taught some horrendous lessons that do more harm to the quest for equality than the protests did to promote it. - [Bidenâs Justice Department Finally Stands Up to Out-of-Control Texas Judges](: Bidenâs Justice Department Finally Stands Up to Out-of-Control Texas Judges Mark Joseph Sterm, Slate
As soon as President Joe Biden entered the White House, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton launched an unprecedented campaign of obstruction to block his agenda in the courts. Paxton took advantage of a quirkâreally, a loopholeâin the federal judiciary: A state can pick the specific judge who will oversee its case by filing in a small division where only one judge sits. Using this strategy, Paxton has positioned his cases before a rotating cast of the same conservative judges, most of them nominated by Donald Trump. They have dutifully played their role in this pantomime of litigation, issuing an unending series of sweeping injunctions that block Biden administration policies nationwide for months or years. On Thursday, the administration finally said: enough. In response to yet another Texas lawsuit exploiting this loophole, Bidenâs Justice Department called out Paxtonâand, implicitly, the judges playing along with his scheme. The DOJ highlighted Texasâ âblatantâ and shameless âjudge-shopping,â urging a transfer to another court âin the interests of justice.â Naturally, Trump-nominated Judge Drew Tipton is unlikely to oblige; that is, after all, why Paxton hand-picked him for this lawsuit. But the DOJâs filing marks a new phase of battle against Republicansâ judicial gamesmanship: The Justice Department is playing hardball in the lower courts, forcing compromised judges to address their own complicity in a cynical partisan chicanery. [...] For nearly two years, the Justice Department largely held its tongue about this abuse of the system. Over the past few months, however, its tone shifted. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogarâs invective against nationwide injunctions at the Supreme Court in December was inflected with a criticism of states shopping cases to âone single district judge in a forum of their choosing.â And in October, the DOJ fought back when Oklahoma filed a complaint in Texas about a prisoner in Louisianaâeven though the case had literally no connection to Texas. There, the DOJ filed a motion to transfer for the obvious reason that no party had any business litigating in the state. (The judge ultimately skirted the issue by denying jurisdiction.) - [The Doomsday Clock is closer to midnight than it has ever been]( A time of unprecedented danger: It is 90 seconds to midnight. Science and Security Board, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
This year, the Science and Security Board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists moves the hands of the Doomsday Clock forward, largely (though not exclusively) because of the mounting dangers of the war in Ukraine. The Clock now stands at 90 seconds to midnightâthe closest to global catastrophe it has ever been. The war in Ukraine may enter a second horrifying year, with both sides convinced they can win. Ukraineâs sovereignty and broader European security arrangements that have largely held since the end of World War II are at stake. Also, Russiaâs war on Ukraine has raised profound questions about how states interact, eroding norms of international conduct that underpin successful responses to a variety of global risks. And worst of all, Russiaâs thinly veiled threats to use nuclear weapons remind the world that escalation of the conflictâby accident, intention, or miscalculationâis a terrible risk. The possibility that the conflict could spin out of anyoneâs control remains high. ICYMI: Major stories from the past week you won't want to miss: - [âIâm sorryâ: March for Life attendee is stumped into silence by one question about the Bible]( - [We now know how Diamond of 'Diamond & Silk' died]( - [McCarthy turns into snarling jackass over questions about Santos. More of that, please!]( Want even more Daily Kos? Check out our podcasts: - [The Brief: A one-hour weekly political conversation hosted by Markos Moulitsas and Kerry Eleveld]( - [The Downballot: Daily Kos' podcast devoted to downballot elections. New episodes every Thursday]( 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](, [Twitter](, and [Instagram](. Thanks for all you do,
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