.

“As an adjudicated insurrectionist, Trump is an illegitimate president according to Section 3 of the 14th Amendment, and therefore every official act as president will be illegitimate.”

–Mike Zonta, co-editor of OccupySF.net

The 14th Amendment states: “No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any state legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any state, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.”

Call your Congressperson and your U.S. Senators at (202) 224-3121

‘Trump Is Trying to End Our Democracy’: Alarm as President Attacks Elections Ahead of Midterms

President Donald Trump

US President Donald Trump addresses the nation from the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC on July 16, 2026. 

(Photo by Saul Loeb/Pool/ AFP via Getty Images)

“He’s reviving conspiracy theories about mail voting, pushing voter suppression, and laying the groundwork for an unprecedented federal takeover of our elections.”

Jake Johnson

Jul 17, 2026 (CommonDreams.org)

Four months out from the critical November midterms, President Donald Trump delivered a primetime address on Thursday night attempting to sow doubt about the integrity of US elections, repeating well-worn lies about the 2020 contest that he lost and claiming to have uncovered a sprawling Chinese plot to meddle in the voting process.

Trump, who has said his administration should “take over” US elections that are currently run by states, asserted in his speech that the American voting system was “left vulnerable to being rigged and stolen” by his political enemies and accused China of “illicit acquisition of 220 million US voter files” in an effort to undermine him. Trump’s speech coincided with the declassification of intelligence purportedly revealing China’s “sinister” scheme to disrupt US elections as well as attempts by “members of the Deep State” to “suppress and downplay” the scheme.

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Experts and critics of the president said his speech cherrypicked intelligence agency findings to concoct a false, self-serving narrative about the vulnerability of US elections and the need for legislation such as the SAVE America Act, a voter suppression bill that Trump has obsessively worked to push through Congress.

Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.), a senior member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, said in a statement that Trump “selectively declassified intelligence to try to rewrite the history of an election he lost.”

“Even his own document release does not support his claim that the 2020 election was stolen. It confirms what we’ve long known: Foreign adversaries targeted our democracy, but there is no evidence they changed a single vote or altered the casting or counting of ballots,” said Krishnamoorthi. “President Trump lost the 2020 election fair and square. If he cared about election security, he wouldn’t be putting unqualified political loyalists in charge of our intelligence agencies or weakening the agencies responsible for protecting our elections from foreign threats.”

“Instead,” Krishnamoorthi added, “he’s reviving conspiracy theories about mail voting, pushing voter suppression, and laying the groundwork for an unprecedented federal takeover of our elections—all while ignoring the real challenges facing American families.”

During his speech, Trump lashed out at major TV news networks for declining to broadcast his speech live and in full, accusing media outlets of being “part of the plot” and calling for the “revocation” of NBC and ABC’s broadcast licenses.

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) called Trump’s threat “insane.”

“At a time when millions of Americans are finding it harder to pay for groceries, housing, and healthcare, when the climate crisis is causing record heatwaves and forest fires, Donald Trump felt it appropriate tonight to spew conspiracy theories about the 2020 election,” said Sanders. “Pathetically, in true authoritarian fashion, he even threatened to revoke the licenses of ABC and NBC because they would not cover his speech.”

“All of us, regardless of our political views, must stand together against this dangerous president who is seeking to undermine our Constitution and our basic freedoms,” Sanders added.

“Trump is laying the groundwork to dismantle our elections, overturn results he does not like, cancel the will of the people, and hold onto power by any means necessary.”

Trump’s address cited “raw intelligence” that he said shows an attempt by China “to manufacture illegal ballots” for former President Joe Biden. The president claimed, without evidence, that the intelligence was maliciously “buried by rogue bureaucrats.”

But, as The Washington Post observed, “raw intelligence reports are often wrong, incomplete, or contradictory, and spy agencies rely on judgments by expert analysts to vet and piece together the information to make conclusions with different levels of confidence.”

“Officials in 2020 disagreed about whether China wanted Trump to lose and about whether Beijing took any steps to undermine him—a controversy noted in a declassified 2021 report. That report described consensus on the conclusion that neither China nor any other foreign actors had tampered with any votes,” the Post noted. “The hundreds of pages of documents released online by the White House during Trump’s speech did not appear to support Trump’s contention that China interfered in the 2020 election to try to defeat him or that US intelligence officials deliberately hid information about Beijing’s intentions from him.”

Robert Weissman, co-president of the advocacy group Public Citizen, characterized Trump’s speech as an attempt to divert public attention from his administration’s “catastrophic policy failures and plummeting approval ratings.”

“Trump is waging an illegal, unconstitutional, and utterly pointless war that continues to put American and Iranian lives in jeopardy and drive up gas prices. Corporations are setting prices out of reach for people being paid too little,” said Weissman. “Trump rammed through tax cuts for the rich, paid for by cutting healthcare and food assistance for millions and millions of people. An out-of-control paramilitary force is kidnapping people off our streets and killing them at shocking rates. Trump’s delusional rantings tonight are a transparent effort to distract from these realities.”

Living United for Change in Arizona, a pro-democracy organization, warned that “Trump is trying to end our democracy in front of our very eyes.”

“Tonight Donald Trump stood before the nation and attempted to rewrite history, erase the will of the voters, and prepare the country for his next assault on American democracy,” the group said. “We must call this what it is. Donald Trump is laying the groundwork to dismantle our elections, overturn results he does not like, cancel the will of the people, and hold onto power by any means necessary.”

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

Jake Johnson

Jake Johnson is a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams.

Full Bio >

Here are the 10 ways Trump shot himself in the foot last night.

Donald Trump’s speech to the nation was not only bashed as a “sore loser” rehash, it proved the opposite of what he hoped to prove.

Miles Taylor Jul 17∙Preview

Donald Trump commandeered primetime last night to make the case that the 2020 election was stolen from him. Instead, he declassified the receipts proving it wasn’t.

I have to say that yesterday evening’s speech was one of the more remarkable instances of presidential “blowback” we have ever seen. Again and again, the president made sweeping claims and pointed Americans to data, documents, and a public record that proved the literal opposite of what he was saying. Trump shot himself in the foot repeatedly without realizing it.

In a roughly 30-minute address from the East Room (which major networks didn’t carry live), the president unveiled a trove of newly declassified intelligence documents that he claimed would expose a vast foreign plot against him and a “Deep State” conspiracy to bury it. What the documents actually show when you read them, in the government’s own words, is that the plot was minor, that the bigger foreign operation was run for him rather than against him, and that the national security professionals he spent the evening demonizing are the reason the 2020 election stayed secure.

Rarely has a president worked so hard to disprove his own case without even understanding how. Indeed, he handed his critics the evidence file. I’m going to walk you through what I wrote down last night as the TEN biggest claims that he tried to make… and how he proved the opposite.

ONE, Trump tried to prove that China “fought like hell” to steal the 2020 election. I really want you to key in on those words. He told the nation that Beijing “fought like hell” to meddle in the vote, citing what he described as long-suppressed intelligence about their plot to undermine the presidential election and Trump himself. He even read aloud from what he described as CIA documents showing Beijing would “leverage all domestic and foreign elements that were opposed to the US president” to reduce his vote count.

Instead, he released documents admitting China’s efforts were “low-level.” The assessment from the National Intelligence Officer for Cyber and the Director for Election Threat Analysis (now posted on the White House’s own website) says Beijing took “low-level, exploratory steps” to shape voter perceptions, and notes that even this was a minority view: it “differs from the IC’s judgment that Beijing has considered but not deployed influence efforts to affect the Presidential election.” The analysts assigned themselves “low-to-medium confidence.” The documents further assess that China deliberately avoided its “most aggressive options” because Beijing “wants to minimize the risk of blowback.” Whoever wrote his “fought like hell” remarks in the speech was hoping no one would go read the actual documents.

TWO, Trump implied that China stole data that could’ve affected the outcome. The centerpiece was his allegation of a Chinese hack of more than 200 million U.S. voter records, which the president portrayed as a smash-and-grab on American democracy itself, full of insinuation that this data represented the keys to the kingdom electorally.

His own documents show much of that data came from public websites… and that the Chinese apparently didn’t do anything with it. To be clear, this data was not the ballots themselves but the lists of people who are registered to vote, their addresses, etc. One of the declassified records states that voter registration information was downloaded from “U.S. commercial websites,” e.g. data brokers, the same type of “people search” websites you can go sign up for right now. This is the internet’s digital white pages. As election officials were quick to point out last night, voter rolls are largely public records in most states. If a foreign actor unlawfully scrapes that data, it’s unlawful, but it doesn’t touch a single ballot, a single tabulator, or a single result. The same document adds that the data from Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Michigan, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island “was downloaded by a Chinese actor on 14 January 2022.” Check that date again. January 2022. Fourteen months after Joe Biden won. And what did the Chinese do with this data to “upend” our elections? One of the declassified documents said Chinese officials conducted “public opinion analysis.”

THREE, Trump said the “Deep State” hid the Chinese plot from him. He cast himself as the last to know, as if personnel in the national security community deliberately tried to keep the information from him. He claimed outright that the “Deep State” intelligence community never informed the White House or Congress about this bombshell information.

The record shows he was briefed on Chinese meddling as far back as 2018 and even spoke about it publicly. The documents the White House released are the briefings. They were produced by his own administration’s analysts, during his own presidency, and delivered to his own White House. Even if the president didn’t actually read them, his team did. And I can personally attest that he was verbally briefed on the threats. Because I was one of the briefers. In fact, Trump was so taken with what we told him about foreign meddling that he made a speech about it to the United Nations. Unfortunately, he refused to talk about the countries we told him were interfering in elections to help his candidacy (Russia) and only wanted to warn about the countries that might not want to see him re-elected (China). What’s more, one of the main classified assessments underpinning Trump’s arguments last night — that he was kept in the dark by the spy community — was delivered to the president and congressional leadership on January 7, 2021, while Trump still occupied the Oval Office.

FOUR, Trump attempted to stitch the disparate facts together to prove his candidacy was hurt by the interference. The framing of the evening was Trump-as-victim, showing that he was a president besieged by hostile powers and betrayed by his own government.

He revealed documents showing foreign actors actually worked to boost his candidacy, undermine his rival, and may have had help from inside Trump’s own movement. The most damning material in the release concerns Russia, not China. A National Intelligence Council product describes Putin and senior Russian officials personally “overseeing efforts by proxies” (including sanctioned agents) to “orchestrate a high-profile corruption scandal implicating former Vice President Biden and the Democratic Party at the peak of the 2020 US presidential campaign.” Their stated aim: “to defeat the former Vice President and ensure the President’s victory.” The documents note these narratives were advanced through “U.S. officials and other prominent persons,” through “documentary film releases via US and Ukrainian media outlets,” and that “U.S. persons are key to propagating these narratives.” Another assessment states flatly that “Kremlin-linked actors are also seeking to boost President Trump’s candidacy on social media.” In other words, Trump declassified proof that the Kremlin ran a pro-Trump influence operation using American amplifiers that was far more significant in scope than any Chinese efforts.

FIVE, Trump went further and claimed that the “Deep State” not only hid all of this from him, but they hid it from the American people. It was a cover-up, he said, of catastrophic proportions. The documents, he insisted, had been hidden from him and from the American people.

The intelligence community published a public assessment five years ago, and last night’s “bombshells” were already included in it. On March 16, 2021, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence publicly released its declassified assessmentForeign Threats to the 2020 US Federal Elections. It disclosed Russia’s pro-Trump influence operation, Iran’s anti-Trump efforts, and the debate over China’s intentions, including the minority view Trump now brandishes as suppressed truth. Multiple documents in last night’s release explicitly reference it. Nothing Trump “revealed” differs in substance from what the American people were told in 2021. Trump’s team learned the hard way last night that you cannot expose a “cover-up” by basically linking to a press release that’s been sitting on the internet for half a decade.

SIX, Trump tried to make Americans believe voting in this country is not safe. Election security, he warned, “falls catastrophically short.” He claimed the newly released documents reveal “shocking vulnerabilities in our election infrastructure” and warned that American voting systems are at risk of being “rigged and stolen.”

His own documents say the opposite in bold print. One declassified assessment states that vote tabulation systems “would be difficult to manipulate on a wide enough scale to compromise election results,” noting the systems “are not connected to the Internet.” The March 2021 assessment’s very first key judgment found “no indications that any foreign actor attempted to alter any technical aspect of the voting process” — registration, ballot casting, tabulation, or reporting. So Trump held a primetime address to terrify voters about their election systems and then quietly linked to documents that certified those systems as sound.

SEVEN, Trump directed officials to investigate people inside the U.S. government who supposedly enabled these plots by hiding them from view. He threatened that heads would roll and that his administration would pursue prosecutions.

The material he released shows that the U.S. government “Deep State” successfully protected the elections — including Trump’s own campaign effort. If anyone owes anyone a thank-you note, Trump should be writing to the career intelligence officers who spent 2020 tracking and countering plots aimed at his campaign, Biden’s campaign, and the election writ large. Instead, the president publicly trashed them. But page by page, the documents he declassified show quite clearly how the U.S. government became aware of foreign interference and proactively kept it at bay. Indeed, the people Trump was excoriating were the very same people who discovered the plots against him and Biden, tracked them in real time, warned policymakers (including Trump), and briefed the public. China, Russia, and Iran all wanted to meddle, yet there is still no evidence a single vote was changed. That’s the opposite of a scandal; it’s a success story.

EIGTH, Trump warned about systemic “corruption” inside the U.S. government. He seemed to suggest that it was more than just a handful of individuals who were responsible for the claims he made last night.

The president inadvertently highlighted how all the election protection structures — that worked to protect democracy in 2020 — are being dismantled by him in 2026. Every page declassified last night exists because America built a serious election-defense architecture after 2016, including FBI election task forces, DHS infrastructure monitoring, ODNI fusion cells, and more. One of the major ironies of Trump’s speech is that he brought a spotlight back to the fact that he’s dismantled each of them. His team shut down the FBI election task force. His team has been breaking up the main DHS election defense agency. His team is in the process of gutting ODNI. And just last week, he purged the bipartisan Election Assistance Commission — the federal agency that helps states secure their voting systems. Put another way, the systemic “corruption” is being carried out by Trump himself, who is trying to cover the U.S. government’s eyes and ears to future election interference.

NINE, Trump tried to use the speech to justify the SAVE America Act. The speech was a primetime lobbying pitch for the stalled voter-ID bill he has made his singular legislative obsession, refusing to sign other legislation until it reaches his desk. He declared that the only reason anyone could oppose the bill is an intention to “cheat.

But nothing in his own evidence has anything to do with voter ID. Not one document described a threat that a photo ID at a polling place would have stopped. The foreign influence operations, data scraping, and social media manipulation he described have nothing to do with voter ID. If Congress took the president’s evidence seriously, it would restore funding to the election-protection systems his administration is tearing down. That mismatch gave away the whole game last night. The SAVE America Act was never about the threat; rather, the threat was conjured to sell the bill, albeit very unconvincingly.

TEN, Trump hoped the night would suggest he was the rightful winner in 2020. That was the emotional core of the speech, and it’s the wound he cannot stop reopening, to the dismay of Republicans on Capitol Hill.

Instead, he reminded the world that he’s a sore loser, and he re-upped evidence about who actually tried to corrupt the 2020 election. By dragging the country back to 2020, Trump resurfaced the criminal allegations he’d rather bury. The recorded phone call pressuring Georgia’s secretary of state to “find” 11,780 votes; his own Attorney General, Bill Barr, telling investigators the stolen-election claims were baseless; the dozens of courts that threw out his challenges; the fake electors scheme; January 6th. The most extensive, best-documented attempt to interfere with the 2020 election wasn’t run from Beijing or Moscow. It was run from the White House by the man who stood in the East Room last night, six years later, still litigating his loss on national television. Social media was flooded with those examples before, during, and after Trump’s speech. It was as bad of a “self own” as you could manufacture.

Trump wanted last night to be the opening argument for overturning the past and pre-litigating the future, a predicate for crying foul in November. What he delivered was a confession dressed up poorly as an exposé. He showed us that the foreign plots against him were minor and defeated, and he reminded us that the big one was run on his behalf… that the “Deep State” saved the election… and that the loudest election saboteur of 2020 was the man at the podium.

Donald Trump aimed for vindication last night. But he shot himself in both feet.

Your friend, in defiance,

Miles Taylor

AI Abundance, Part 5: Meaning Beyond Work 

Posted on July 17, 2026 by Ellen Brown (ellenbrown.com)

Image by ScheerPost.com.

Discussions of artificial intelligence typically begin with the question, What happens when the machines take our jobs? For thousands of years, work has been the means by which we fed our families, earned our place in society, and gave structure to our lives. We have come to equate paid employment with identity.

That presumption may soon be obsolete.

When Elon Musk proposed replacing Universal Basic Income with what he calls a Universal High Income—a level of income sufficient for everyone to live comfortably while intelligent machines produce much of the goods and services society requires—critics warned that people would become lazy. They would stop pursuing college degrees, stop starting businesses, stop inventing, stop contributing. Without jobs, it was argued, life itself would lose meaning and purpose.

Interestingly, humanity’s oldest written history begins with the premise that the purpose of humans is to work. The earliest known writing was impressed into clay tablets in ancient Sumer more than five thousand years ago. The Sumerian Atrahasis tablets tell of sky-deities called Annunaki, cast in modern “ancient architect” scenarios as extraterrestrial engineers. The heavy labor required to maintain life on earth was delegated to junior gods called Igigi, who finally grew weary of the arduous work, laid down their tools and rebelled.

The remedy was to create a new being to carry their burden. This was done by genetic manipulation to upgrade the highest life form found here, creating the human species. Whether we read that as history, allegory, or mythology, its underlying message is that humanity was conceived as a labor force – and human civilization begins with a control system to manage the laborers. 

The first writing was not poetry or philosophy. It was accounting: grain tallies, labor quotas, rations, obligations. Most of the original cuneiform tablets were administrative records. What began as an exchange system evolved into a money system to control work and the workers performing it. For nearly six thousand years, human worth has been measured by our productivity. We deserve food and shelter because we worked for it. 

In many respects, life is still organized around compulsory labor. Writing was devised to organize it. Accounting on clay tablets predated the use of coins, managed by temple priests as intermediaries for the gods. The temple evolved into private banks, with bankers intermediating commerce.

In the 1930s, British economist and philosopher John Maynard Keynes predicted that by the end of the twentieth century, technological advancement would reduce the work-week to just fifteen hours. So why is the forty-hour work week still the norm? It has been argued that our current economic structure uses “busyness” as a form of social containment. By tethering survival to forty hours of corporate or administrative labor, the system ensures that the majority of human creative power is spent serving institutional interests rather than personal or community liberation.

That may be why modern life feels increasingly saturated with what anthropologist David Graeber termed Bullshit Jobs in a book of that name—pointless administrative tasks that serve little social purpose, but that keep people too exhausted to pursue their own interests. He argued that the rise of “fake” work is a political device to keep people from having the free time to organize or rebel. But if artificial intelligence takes over the majority of production, that changes the meaning of work.

From Scarcity to Abundance

For centuries, scarcity shaped human behavior. Scarcity taught people to guard, to compete, to fear loss. But abundance changes the emotional landscape. What happens if we are simply handed what we need to survive? Skeptics say people will stop working and learning, that society will collapse into idleness, that life will lose meaning without jobs. But pilot studies of Universal Basic Income (UBI) programs involving unconditional cash transfers to recipients show otherwise. 

UBI studies from around the world have shown positive results from UBI payments, including higher employment, lower crime, better mental health, higher graduation rates, and little evidence of a retreat from productive activity. Relieved of the constant anxiety of maintaining survival, participants typically pursue education, care for family members, search for better jobs, or start businesses they would not have dared to take on if failure meant destitution. It seems that necessity is not the only mother of invention.  

Granted, the payout in most U.S. studies was a marginal $500 or $600 per month, only enough to provide a safety net for basic food and shelter. Plenty of motivation was left to add income for the finer things in life. Studies of the effects of a Universal High Income of $50,000 or more per year have not been done. But many people who are no longer working for pay, either because they are retired or because they have an inheritance or investments to live on, volunteer their time for socially beneficial causes.

Parents devote extraordinary energy to raising children without receiving a paycheck. Volunteers spend countless hours building community organizations. Amateur musicians practice difficult instruments for years with little expectation of financial reward. Scientists have pursued questions that fascinated them long before the result was likely to be commercially valuable. Thousands of programmers worked without pay to develop Linux open source software, and editors work for free to produce Wikipedia, just for reputation, community and the satisfaction of solving hard problems. These activities are not work for wages, but they are work that is quite meaningful to the people engaged in them.

The Enlightenment: Largely the Legacy of the Leisure Class

The intellectual triumphs of the European Enlightenment—the era that birthed modern science, political liberty, and the social contract—were primarily the domain of a wealthy leisure class, or of talent that was financially backed by institutional support (church, courts, universities) or personal patronage.

Sociologist Thorstein Veblen laid out this thesis in The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899). He argued that scholarly pursuit functioned as a form of “conspicuous leisure”—a way to demonstrate financial strength by engaging in activities that were “unproductive” in the immediate economic sense. To spend decades debating the nature of sovereignty or the movement of the stars required a measure of “unearned increment” or rent extraction. Examples included:

Francis Bacon (1561–1626): As Lord Chancellor and a member of the high nobility, Bacon’s scientific methodology was fueled by the resources of the state and inherited status.

Robert Boyle (1627–1691): The father of modern chemistry was the son of the “Great Earl of Cork,” then the wealthiest man in the British Isles. His work was conducted as a “gentleman scientist” with no need for professional employment.

Antoine Lavoisier (1743–1794): Lavoisier funded the world’s most advanced chemical laboratory through his role as a “Tax Farmer” for the French crown—a position of pure financial extraction.

For those not born into the elite, intellectual survival usually required “aristocratic patronage.” John Locke’s influential work was made possible by his residency and support from the Earl of Shaftesbury, while Thomas Hobbes was a lifelong dependent of the Cavendish family. This system ensured that even “revolutionary” ideas were filtered through the lens of those who benefited most from the existing social hierarchy.

The irony is that the very thinkers who theorized about “universal human rights” and “liberty” did so from a position of security provided by the systems of land-rent and debt-extraction they were analyzing. To create truly universal “liberty” requires a secure income for all.

Non-compulsory Education

For over a century, schools have functioned as labor factories, designed to produce compliant workers for industrial economies. If labor is no longer the center of life, education must change as well. AI already performs memorization and standardized tasks better than humans, relieving us of the need to perfect those skills ourselves. But that does not mean there is nothing left to learn. Studies of “Self-Directed Education” or “Unschooling” suggest that children are biologically wired to learn, and that removing the coercion of traditional schooling leads not to ignorance but to highly motivated, specialized learners. Self-directed education produces young adults who retain their curiosity and creativity, develop emotional intelligence, and pursue mastery for its own sake. 

2013/2014 survey of 75 unschooled adults conducted by educational psychologists Peter Gray and Gina Riley found that 83% went on to some form of higher education. Despite not having a high school diploma, they reported little trouble getting into college, often using portfolios, interviews, or community college credits to bridge the gap. A high percentage of unschoolers pursued careers in the creative arts or became entrepreneurs. The researchers reported that unschooling helped them develop the self-reliance and out-of-the-box thinking required for these fields.

South African study found that while “unschooled” students may have followed non-traditional paths, they often achieved high levels of professional success, particularly in creative and entrepreneurial fields. Intrinsic curiosity replaced extrinsic rewards (grades or job requirements) as the primary driver for learning. 

Research on children who learn to read through unschooling shows wide variance in when they start (anywhere from age 4 to 14), but once they decide they want to read, they often reach grade-level proficiency in a matter of months rather than years because they are personally invested. Proponents argue that traditional schooling actually stifles learning by making it a chore. 

The Sudbury Valley School model (founded in 1968) is a radical form of democratic education based on the belief that children are naturally curious and capable of managing their own learning. In a Sudbury school, there are no grades or required classes. Instead, students of all ages (5–18) mix freely and decide for themselves how to spend their time. Long-term studies of graduates show that they overwhelmingly transition successfully into higher education and careers, often citing the school’s emphasis on responsibility, self-direction, and democratic participation as the primary drivers of their adult success.

Self-directed learning doesn’t require an independent income, but the point is that the drive to learn and to apply that education to useful pursuits is an inherent human trait, in both children and adults. It’s something we want to do and will do, whether or not an employer requires it.

Self-actualization and Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

American psychologist Abraham Maslow conceptualized the needs or goals that motivate human behavior in a clinical review in 1943. He argued that once physiological and safety needs are met, humans naturally move toward “Self-actualization” – the realization of personal potential and pursuit of creative activities. In his later years, Maslow added a level above self-actualization called “Self-transcendence”, where people focus on goals outside themselves (altruism, community and caregiving).

That natural evolution can be applied not just to individuals but to civilizations. As AI and robotics free us from the self-centered needs of survival, we can awaken to our larger purposes of collective actualization and harmonious progress.   

Escaping the Welfare Trap

That’s the promise of AI – that it can free up our time so that we can escape the meaningless “busyness” of paid labor and pursue goals more meaningful to ourselves. But the same digital tools have a darker side. Catherine Austin Fitts and other critics warn that AI could become the ultimate “digital panopticon”—a weapon of entrapment by which programmable money and algorithmic surveillance create a modern “golden cage” in which the right to receive “welfare” is tied to political compliance. The UBI thus becomes a tool of coercion.

The same technology, however, offers tools to avoid that trap. Decentralized, neutral identity systems and zero-knowledge proofs allow people to establish that they are unique humans without revealing personal data. Zero-knowledge proofs are a cryptographic method by which one party can prove to another that a statement is true without revealing any additional information. A neutral protocol is one in which the rules are transparent, fixed, and cannot discriminate against specific users. By using “Smart Contracts” on a blockchain, the distribution of UHI becomes automated. The code only checks if the user has a valid, unique identity proof. It cannot check the user’s political party, criminal record or social behavior (unless explicitly part of the code). A government-issued digital currency could also be generated using the privacy-protected, peer-to-peer models of Project Hamilton and the ECASH bill, as detailed in Part 3 of this series.

Those are political decisions, dependent on a democratic system governed by and for the people. Mandating that these tools be incorporated into any government payments system can ensure that UHI remains a right of existence rather than a reward for obedience. 

If AI can handle production, it removes the original justification for compulsory labor. The choice is whether we use AI to automate our enslavement or to finally automate our exit from the Sumerian story, transforming ourselves from a managed labor force into a self-directed, creative civilization.

Rewriting the Human Story 

For six thousand years, humanity has lived inside the Sumerian story: we were created to work for external masters. But AI has brought us to the point where labor no longer must be our master. AI abundance is not the end of work but the beginning of choice, and choice is the beginning of meaning.

Our first choice must be to insist on a democratic government run in the public interest, and a financial system that supports independent endeavor. Freeing humanity from compulsory labor can then provide the freedom for us to develop more fully as human beings.

Some people will create art. Some will teach. Some will explore science, history, biology, or engineering. Some will build communities. Families may simply become more present with each other. For the first time in history, large numbers of people may have the time and stability to ask the deeper questions about the meaning of life and the unique purpose of their own lives.

In the new story that emerges, we can see ourselves not as laborers but as musicians. We can make beautiful music together, but we need the other instruments. An orchestra is beautiful because each instrument contributes its unique voice to a larger harmony. The promise of AI is to free us from compulsory labor so that we can explore our own unique gifts and discover the music only we can play. 

____________________________

This article was first posted as an original to ScheerPost.com. Ellen Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public Banking Institute, and author of thirteen books including Web of DebtThe Public Bank Solution, and Banking on the People: Democratizing Money in the Digital Age. Her 600+ blog articles are posted at EllenBrown.com.

Can Prime Minister Burnham succeed?

KUTTNER ON TAP

July 17, 2026 (Prospect.org)

There is a great deal riding on his success, and not just for Britain.On Monday, Andy Burnham becomes prime minister of Britain almost by acclamation. The former mayor of Greater Manchester won a by-election to the House of Commons on June 18 in a swing seat by an impressive margin of 54.8 percent to 34.5 percent. This was in a district where the right-wing Reform UK party had won a majority of votes for local council seats only a month before. At that point, Burnham became inevitable.

Last week, 349 of 403 Labour MPs lined up to nominate Burnham as party leader to succeed the feckless Keir Starmer. Nobody else even ran against him.

In his three terms as mayor since 2017, Burnham succeeded in making Manchester a rare success story amid Britain’s stagnant economy. The GDP growth rate for the city has been running at 3.1 percent a year, far better than any other city in England’s depressed north and more than double that of the U.K. as a whole. Manchester was on an upswing before Burnham, but he built on the success.

In a Labour Party long beset by disabling schisms and plain bad luck, Burnham has been a force for rare unity—a likable man of the practical left. When he takes office, Burnham will literally be the world’s only national leader who is a competent progressive with a governing majority in the national parliament. One has to wish him success.

Yet the press coverage of Burnham’s rise has been depressingly cynical, even by British standards. Some of the commentary suggests that Burnham is a simple opportunist, trying to be all things to all people. This joke has been widely repeated: “A Blairite, a Brownite, and a Corbynite walk into a bar. The barman says, ‘Hello, Mr. Burnham.’”

But that’s too cynical. Burnham was never an ally of the far-left former party leader Jeremy Corbyn—whom Burnham ran against for party leader in 2016. And he has long been a critic of the neoliberalism of Tony Blair. Ideologically, he’s closest to former center-left prime minister Gordon Brown, but Burnham is more progressive and more effective politically.

That said, Burnham’s challenges are real. Many commentators conclude from the appalling history of seven failed prime ministers in ten years that Britain is simply ungovernable. Tom Clark, in a thoughtful piece in The Guardian, wrote that “the simple class divide of postwar society has been replaced by a variety of deep, overlaying cleavages: cultural divides like Brexit, values divides such as Gaza, and generational divides between older homeowners and younger tenants.”

Fragmented public opinion has translated into a fragmented party system. The U.K’.s once-stable two-party system has given way to five parties and potentially even more. In addition to Labour and the Tories, there are the Liberal Democrats, Nigel Farage’s far-right Reform UK, and the Greens.

Thanks to Britain’s first-past-the-post system of elections, the top two parties get far more seats in the House of Commons than their popular voting support, and smaller parties get almost nothing. In the 2024 general election, Labour won just 33.7 percent of the national vote yet ended up with 411 out of 650 seats. Conversely, Tory Margaret Thatcher never won a majority of the popular vote but ruled for nearly 12 years with ample majorities in the Commons.

But the obvious reform—proportional representation—would lead to an even more fragmented Parliament and weak coalition governments. If Burnham can have a successful three years as prime minister between now and August 2029, the deadline for the next general election, Labour will keep its governing majority.
The massive challenge is the British economy. Here, Burnham will have to thread several needles. He has proposed to take his Manchester model of business-friendly socialism national. His signature policy of deprivatizing the bus system, adding more trams and buses and reducing fares, is immensely popular.

The national counterpart is to bring several failed privatized enterprises back under more efficient public control. He will need to invest more money in the National Health Service, in social housing, and in economic development.

Burnham has sought to neutralize a potentially hostile bond market by indicating that he will retain the Starmer fiscal policy of very low deficits. But that means that he will have to increase taxes on income from capital or there will be no new money for his new investment projects.

Even if Burnham’s policies are smart and successful, they will take many years to affect the economic circumstances of ordinary people. And export-dependent Britain will face the undertow of a deteriorating global economy. An accommodation with Europe that probably stops short of a full reversal of Brexit will help.

One possible early blunder: Leaks last week from Burnham allies indicated that he would pass over progressive Ed Miliband, the leading candidate for finance minister, in favor of the more centrist Shabana Mahmood, the current home secretary. This was initially greeted by relief from London’s bankers, but then expressions of incredulity since Mahmood has zero experience in finance. Burnham has since backpedaled, saying that no decisions have been made.

Like any national leader, Burnham will make mistakes, but he is better equipped by temperament and political skill than any of Britain’s recent failed leaders of either party. It would be welcome to see a practical progressive actually succeed.
Robert Kuttner
Co-Editor, Co-Founder

We Are Demanding Maine’s Attorney General Commit: If the Investigation Shows Probable Cause, the ICE Agent Who Killed Johan Durán Guerrero, Faces A York County Grand Jury.

His findings are due no later than January 9. The Legislature that elects him votes December 2. Two questions he can answer today, yes or no.

Christopher Armitage Jul 16, 2026

One office investigates each use of deadly force by law enforcement in Maine, and the same office decides homicide charges: the Attorney General’s. Its findings on the July 13 killing in Biddeford are due by January 9, 2027. A civilian who fired the same shots could expect handcuffs the same morning, not a six month deadline for a report.

WGME reported that since the office began these investigations in 1990, it has not determined that an officer’s use of deadly force was unjustified. Not once.

Maine’s Legislature elects the Attorney General. The Legislature chosen this November votes on that office on December 2, five weeks before those findings are due.

A federal immigration agent fired multiple rounds into a sedan at a Biddeford intersection on the morning of July 13, killing Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero, a 26 year old delivery driver who, per Senator Angus King and Representative Chellie Pingree, was not the target of the warrant the agents were executing. A photograph of the car shows four bullet defects in the windshield. The agents wore no body cameras, and the Attorney General’s Office confirmed that no body or dash camera footage depicts the use of force. ICE stated that the agent fired “fearing for public safety” as the vehicle attempted to flee, and a witness with a direct view reported hearing the driver say “I tried to stop.”

I sent the letter below to Attorney General Aaron Frey. It asks for two commitments rather than a conclusion, with a written answer requested by September 1, and I will publish whatever the office says, in full. The classification rule is stated now, in advance: yes counts as yes. “We follow the facts,” “we cannot comment on a pending investigation,” and “we take this seriously” count as no answer, and I will report them as no answer.

Instructions for putting the same question to your own attorney general, before your state needs them, are at the end.

The letter, in full:

July 16, 2026

Hon. Aaron M. Frey Attorney General, State of Maine 6 State House Station Augusta, ME 04333

Re: The July 13, 2026 use of deadly force in Biddeford resulting in the death of Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero; request for two public commitments

Dear Attorney General Frey,

I write as a journalist and publisher. I am the founder of The Existentialist Republic, a civic affairs publication. I am writing about the killing of Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero on July 13, 2026, at the intersection of Pool Street and Hill Street in Biddeford. I am aware that your office opened its investigation that day under 5 M.R.S. section 200-A, that the FBI is assisting, and that findings are due within 180 days under 5 M.R.S. section 200-K, with any extension capped at 270 days. I do not ask the office to prejudge the evidence, and I do not ask about the agent’s identity, which the office can establish through its own process.

I ask the office to state two things publicly.

First, that the office will apply the same deadly force standard to this federal agent that it applies to a Biddeford police officer or a Maine State Police trooper: the justification provisions of 17-A M.R.S. sections 107 and 108, the constitutional requirements of Tennessee v. Garner and Graham v. Connor, and the totality of the circumstances analysis required by Barnes v. Felix.

Second, that if the completed investigation establishes probable cause under Maine law, the office will present the case to the York County grand jury.

I make the second request because the public record already raises a serious question under 17-A M.R.S. section 203(1)(A), which applies when a person recklessly, or with criminal negligence, causes the death of another human being. Published reporting describes four bullet defects in the sedan’s windshield, an absence of body or dash camera footage of the use of force, conflicting accounts of whether the shots preceded or followed the ramming of the vehicle, a Department of Homeland Security use of force policy that generally prohibits firing at moving vehicles, and statements by members of Maine’s congressional delegation that the driver was not the target of the operation. Whether the completed record establishes probable cause is for the office to determine. Whether established probable cause will be presented to a grand jury is a question of the office’s intentions, and it can be answered now.

I am aware that a charged federal agent may transfer a state prosecution to federal court and assert immunity there. Under Mesa v. California, that transfer changes the forum; the office remains the prosecutor and Maine law continues to govern. I raise this only to make clear that the answer to my second request is not controlled by federal officials.

I also ask the office to confirm that third party video from residential and commercial cameras near the intersection has been collected or preserved, since consumer camera systems overwrite stored footage on short cycles.

I request a written response by September 1, 2026. I am publishing this letter, and I am inviting readers, including Maine residents, to put the same questions to the office and to their own legislators in their own words. I will publish the office’s response in full.

Respectfully,

Christopher Armitage

Founder and Publisher, The Existentialist Republic


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If you live in Maine, call the Attorney General’s Office at 207-626-8800, or write to 6 State House Station, Augusta, ME 04333. Then tell your state representative and state senator to ask the same question. They elect the Attorney General on December 2. Find them at legislature.maine.gov.

To replicate this in your own state: find who charges homicide where you live, which in most states is the elected county or district prosecutor, and in a few states, Maine among them, a statewide office. Send the question in writing to that office and to your state attorney general, whom you can find at naag.org: if a federal agent uses deadly force here and the completed investigation establishes probable cause of a state crime, will your office charge the agent the way it would charge anyone else? State the classification rule in the same message, so a non answer counts as an answer. If any official tells you federal agents are immune from state charges, that claim has been false since 1932, when the Supreme Court wrote in Colorado v. Symes that federal officers and employees are “not, merely because they are such, granted immunity from prosecution in state courts.” In May, Hennepin County filed state criminal charges against an ICE agent in Minnesota. In January, ten locally elected prosecutors formed the Project for the Fight Against Federal Overreach to support exactly these prosecutions. The Department of Homeland Security’s own policy generally prohibits firing at moving vehicles in your state the same as in Maine. And a president cannot pardon a state conviction.

Wherever you live, reply to this email or leave a comment with the answer you receive, the date, and the words the office used. I will report back on what offices say and on what they refuse to say.

The call takes thirty seconds: “My name is [name], I live in [town]. I am calling about the July 13 shooting in Biddeford. I am not asking the office to prejudge anything. I have a question that takes a yes or a no. If the completed investigation establishes probable cause under Maine law, will the office present the case to the York County grand jury? Please record my call and the answer.”

After Killings, Homan Says There Will Be ‘More Bloodshed’ Unless Dems ‘Shut Their Mouth’ About ICE

Border Czar Tom Homan Speaks To Press At The White House

White House border czar Tom Homan speaks to members of the media outside the West Wing of the White House on June 22, 2026 in Washington, DC

 (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

“They are blaming the opposition for people being killed by their police.”

Stephen Prager

Jul 16, 2026 (CommonDreams.org)

As Democrats demand investigations and accountability after a pair of fatal shootings by immigration agents, the White House border czar, Tom Homan, issued an ominous warning on Wednesday: Shut your mouth or the “bloodshed” will continue.

Since July 7, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have shot and killed two men—Lorenzo Salgado Araujo in Texas and Johan Sebastián Guerrero in Maine.

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Trump Demands ICE Restart Traffic Stops That Were Paused After Latest Two Killings

Trump Demands ICE Restart Traffic Stops That Were Paused After Latest Two Killings

The killings, which are part of a broader rash of violent behavior by immigration agencies, briefly led DHS to suspend the use of traffic stops by agents, before President Donald Trump ordered them to continue.

Meanwhile, Democratic lawmakers have promised to launch investigations and congressional hearings. Some have threatened to withhold funding for the agency unless reforms, like body camera requirements, are enacted, while others have called for the agency to be defunded or abolished.

Homan, a senior adviser to Trump tasked with coordinating immigration enforcement across agencies, took to Fox News on Wednesday night to address this heightened scrutiny.

Just one day before, Homan had defended the decision to temporarily halt vehicle stops, saying there should be a “short-term review to make sure ICE agents are safe and doing the right thing.”

But following Trump’s orders, he reversed course entirely the next day and rejected the idea that anything about the agency’s tactics needed reevaluation.

He told host Laura Ingraham, “President Trump was clear, this policy is not going away.”

Instead of trigger-happy agents, he said that anti-ICE “rhetoric” from Democrats was to blame for the recent killings.

“It all goes back to the Dems who want to continually attack ICE and tell people to evade them and tell people don’t comply, tell people to resist, and tell people ICE isn’t a real law enforcement agency,” Homan said.

“You and I talked about this a year-and-a-half ago, Laura,” he continued. “I said, if the hateful rhetoric didn’t stop, there would be bloodshed.”

“I’m saying it right now,” Homan said. “There’s still going to be more bloodshed unless they shut their mouth and let ICE enforce the laws that they enacted.”

DHS has acknowledged that neither of the men who have been shot in recent weeks was the target of the ICE operations that led to their deaths.

A witness reported that Guerrero shouted, “I tried to stop” after being shot by an agent while his vehicle moved forward slowly.

ICE’s use-of-force rules state that agents should only use deadly force if they believe an individual poses an imminent threat to an agent or someone else, not simply because they are fleeing arrest.

DHS claimed that Salgado attempted to “weaponize” his vehicle, but that claim has been undercut by video evidence and eyewitness accounts.

The agency said in a statement that Guerrero “attempted to flee the scene and, fearing for public safety, an officer discharged his weapon,” a justification that has not been used for previous shootings.

Many Democratic lawmakers, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY), have provided information about individuals’ rights when dealing with immigration agents—including the right not to answer the door without a judicial warrant, the right to decline a search or to sign documents, or the right to record law enforcement.

But Homan did not reference any particular case in which they encouraged those facing detention to “resist” by fleeing or attacking agents.

Several Democratic members of Congress, including Reps. Jimmy Gomez (Calif.), Jason Crow (Colo.), and Ilhan Omar (Minn.), among others, have published “Know Your Rights” documents explicitly warning people not to run away or resist arrest.

Agents have frequently faced criticism that they are not, in fact, “enforcing the law” as Homan claimed, but defying it by conducting indiscriminate arrests without warrants, using excessive violence, detaining legal residents and US citizens, and engaging in racial profiling.

Homan’s remarks were widely seen as a deflection of blame from immigration agents and as a way to intimidate critics into silence.

“They are blaming the opposition for people being killed by their police,” said Alex Nowrasteh, the senior vice president of policy at the libertarian Cato Institute.

USA Today columnist Chris Brennan said Homan was “threaten[ing] more governmental violence… unless Americans stop engaging in speech protected by the First Amendment.”

Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) called it “extremely irresponsible and dangerous language from the Trump administration’s top immigration official.”

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

Stephen Prager

Stephen Prager is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

Full Bio >

US Gov Report Details ‘Robust’ Ties Between Climate Crisis and Big Oil

Philadelphia Swelters Amid East Coast Heatwave

Eduardo Velev cools off in the spray of a fire hydrant during a heatwave on July 1, 2018 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 

(Photo by Jessica Kourkounis/Getty Images)

“The next time your community is hit by a heatwave or flash flood, lay some blame with Big Oil. This report is yet another sign that we need to break away from this dangerous, polluting industry,” one scientist said.

Olivia Rosane

Jul 16, 2026 (CommonDreams.org)

A landmark report released by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on Thursday concludes that the science of linking individual extreme weather events to fossil fuel-driven climate change has advanced considerably in the past decade, findings that bolster the efforts of communities to hold oil and gas companies accountable for climate damages.

The report follows on the heels of deadly heatwaves in Europe and the US that were both deemed to be “virtually impossible” without the climate emergency.

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“The new report makes clear that the science linking ever-worsening extreme weather events to climate change is rigorous and sound,” John Fleming, a senior scientist at the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute, said in a statement. “The next time your community is hit by a heatwave or flash flood, lay some blame with Big Oil. This report is yet another sign that we need to break away from this dangerous, polluting industry.”

The report from the National Academies, or NASEM builds on a 2016 report on the same subject and tracks the progress made since then in linking specific extreme weather events such as hurricanes or heatwaves to human-caused global warming—a field known as extreme event attribution (EEA). It found that a combination of improvements in tools, datasets, and methods had made such attributions increasingly reliable, especially for events clearly related to rising average temperatures such as heatwaves, cold spells, and heavy rainfall.

“The science is clear: The extreme heat killing thousands of people in the Northern Hemisphere this summer is neither an unpredictable event nor an accident—it is the result of corporate crime.”

“Significant progress has been made over the last decade, with major advancements in methods and modeling that allow for more robust assessments of extreme events,” James Hurrell, who chaired the report committee and serves as the Scott presidential chair of Environmental Science and Engineering at Colorado State University, said in a statement.

EEA could still improve when it comes to analyzing the climate footprint on smaller-scale weather events like thunderstorms and tornadoes, as well as attributing events in parts of the Global South where climate data is less available.

Hurrell continued: “The field still faces challenges, and addressing them is necessary to fully realize the value of attribution science. We hope our recommendations will guide those efforts.”

Unaffiliated climate scientists and environmental advocates welcomed the report’s findings.

“The robust conclusions that have been reached by the mainstream climate research community betray the dismissive claims that continue to be made by fossil fuel industry groups, right-wing think tanks, and Republican operatives who feel threatened by the scientific progress in this particular area,” wrote climate scientist and University of Pennsylvania professor Michael Mann. “They have long understood… that Americans will increasingly demand meaningful policy action on climate as they come to understand the profound role that fossil fuel burning is playing in the worsening climate crisis.”

Mann continued: “Nothing connects the dots better that the increasingly dangerous, damaging, and deadly climate change-fueled extreme weather events. As an aside, I could see and smell the hazardous wildfire smoke that blanketed the northeastern US while on vacation with my family in New Hampshire this week. Increasingly, Americans are connecting the dots between our reliance on fossil fuels and the hazards we face, whether its costly and dangerous wars of choice in far-flung lands like Iran, or the threat of increasingly extreme weather events.”

Carly Phillips, a senior scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) who has co-authored attribution studies, said in a statement: “Attribution science confirms what billions of people around the world have experienced firsthand—deadly events like extreme heatwaves are occurring more often and tropical cyclones are more intense due to climate change. Despite efforts by the fossil fuel industry and its cronies to intimidate panelists and misrepresent the research, the academies’ report affirms the scientific consensus: Attribution science is based on rigorous peer-reviewed methods and provides critical information about how climate change is driving increases in the frequency or severity of extreme events.”

The report is notable not only for its findings but for their context. It’s publication comes amid the Trump administration’s aggressive climate denial, including the Environmental Protection Agency’s repealing of the so-called “endangerment finding” connecting carbon dioxide emissions to climate and public health harms.

At the same time, the fossil fuel industry and its right-wing political allies are scrambling to find a way out of the increasing number of lawsuits attempting to hold them accountable for the harms caused by the climate crisis. This has included pushing bills in the House of Representatives and Senate that would grant the industry immunity from any lawsuits over damages caused by the use of their products.

Both the fossil fuel industry and climate justice advocates see the NASEM report as a potential weapon in the fight over climate liability. Argus Insight, an opposition research firm co-founded by former Trump staffers that has a history of working to undermine climate lawsuits, sent at least nine records requests to public universities where NASEM report authors work, as Politico reported ahead of its release.

Andrew Dessler, a professor of atmospheric sciences at Texas A&M University, advised that journalists covering the NASEM report “not frame any story as ‘Can we believe extreme event attribution research?’ The actual story is: Fossil fuel interests are wetting their pants about this and will do anything to try to stop it.”

Yet climate justice advocates argue that the report gives the advantage to communities over the industry.

“For decades, Big Oil knowingly poisoned our atmosphere and deceived the public about the impacts of burning fossil fuels—all the while lining executives’ pockets as communities continue to suffer from extreme heat, floods, and fires,” Stephanie Brancaforte, climate accountability campaign director with Public Citizen’s Climate Program, said in a statement.

Brancaforte added: “The science is clear: The extreme heat killing thousands of people in the Northern Hemisphere this summer is neither an unpredictable event nor an accident—it is the result of corporate crime. With the backing of the National Academies, survivors of climate catastrophes now have strong evidence to pursue justice against fossil fuel polluters to pay for the devastation they have unleashed.”

Cassidy DiPaola, communications director for the Make Polluters Pay campaign, said: “The National Academies just gave courts, cities, and communities something they’ve long needed: the full weight of the country’s most authoritative scientific body behind attribution science. It affirms what researchers and international bodies like the IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] have long recognized—that we can say, with real confidence, which extreme weather events were made worse by fossil fuel pollution, and how much damage that pollution caused.”

DiPaola continued: “The fossil fuel industry understands exactly what this means. That’s why they’ve spent years trying to discredit attribution science as a field, and why they and their allies in Congress and state legislatures are racing right now to pass liability shield laws. They can’t out-argue hundreds of peer-reviewed studies backed by the country’s most respected scientific institution, so instead they’re trying to make the law immune to the science. They know this research doesn’t just describe a hotter world, but draws a line from their products to specific floods, heatwaves, and deaths, and from there to who should pay for the damage.”

“Attribution science now underpins how cities plan for disaster, how insurers price risk, how public health officials prepare for heat deaths, and how courts weigh accountability,” she concluded. “The only people with an interest in pretending otherwise are the ones being asked to pay for the damage they caused.”

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

Olivia Rosane

Olivia Rosane is the opinion editor and a staff writer for Common Dreams.

Full Bio >

John Maynard Keynes on money

(Image from Goodreads.com)

Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren by John Maynard Keynes

“When the accumulation of wealth is no longer of high social importance, there will be great changes in the code of morals. We shall be able to rid ourselves of many of the pseudo-moral principles which have hag-ridden us for two hundred years, by which we have exalted some of the most distasteful of human qualities into the position of the highest virtues. We shall be able to afford to dare to assess the money-motive at its true value. The love of money as a possession — as distinguished from the love of money as a means to the enjoyments and realities of life — will be recognized for what it is, a somewhat disgusting morbidity, one of those semi-criminal, semi-pathological propensities which one hands over with a shudder to the specialists in mental disease.”
― John Maynard Keynes, Economic Possibilities for Our Grandchildren

John Maynard Keynes, 1st Baron Keynes, was an English economist whose writings are considered the basis for the school of thought known as Keynesian economics, as well as its various offshoots. Originally trained in mathematics, he built on and refined earlier work on the causes of business cycles. Wikipedia

Born June 5, 1883, Cambridge, United Kingdom

Died April 21, 1946 (age 62 years)

Keynes in 1929

Biden’s ‘Soul Of The Nation’ Address

NBC News Sep 1, 2022 Biden calls out threats to democracy in ‘soul of the nation’ address During his prime-time address on the “soul of the nation”, President Joe Biden called out former President Donald Trump and “MAGA Republicans”, saying that they “represent an extremism that threatens the very foundations of our republic”, adding that “MAGA Republicans” are “destroying American democracy”.

Rising Momentum for Another Progressive Champion

A sleeper race in Arizona could see community organizer Kai Newkirk upset Rep. Greg Stanton in a House race in the Phoenix area.

David Dayenby David Dayen July 15, 2026 (Prospect.org)

Kai Newkirk at an anti-ICE protest
Kai Newkirk, now a candidate for Congress in Arizona’s Fourth Congressional District, is a longtime activist and organizer. Credit: Courtesy Kai Newkirk for Congress

Two weeks ago, Rep. Greg Stanton (D-AZ) put out a poll showing him leading the July 21 Democratic primary in Arizona’s Fourth Congressional District, located in and around Phoenix, by 33 points, while carrying a massive 70 percent favorability rating. Normally, incumbents with that kind of lead wouldn’t bother putting a poll like that out; we have to surmise it was meant to either calm supporters or scare off opponents from investing money in his opponent’s campaign.

Rep. Greg Stanton (D-AZ).
Rep. Greg Stanton (D-AZ). Credit: U.S. Congress

Stanton’s supporters were apparently not calmed. A week after the poll release, an affiliate of Leading the Future, one of the main electoral PACs funded by the artificial intelligence industry, sunk $227,000 into television and streaming advertising and text messaging on Stanton’s behalf. The outside expenditure isn’t enormous, but it is curious: Why are AI oligarchs defending an incumbent who is blowing out his opponent?

Maybe it’s because Stanton’s lead isn’t so secure. A more recent survey taken last week by A Fight Worth Having, a backer of his opponent, democratic socialist Kai Newkirk, shows the race narrowing to single digits. Stanton leads Newkirk 46-38, but among those who have yet to vote, about half the electorate, Newkirk leads 41-30 with 17 percent undecided. If the undecideds break for Newkirk, another Democratic incumbent could fall in what has already been a historic primary season.

More from David Dayen

Newkirk, a longtime activist and organizer, only got into the race four months ago, inspired by a deepening sense of outrage at the inadequacy of Stanton’s responses to Donald Trump’s extremism and the genocide in Gaza. As co-chair of the Arizona Democratic Party’s Progressive Council, Newkirk said they had tried to push Stanton on Gaza, including by sending a delegation to his office. But Stanton, despite making a conditional call for a cease-fire, continued to vote for military aid to Israel without conditions, voted to sanction the International Criminal Court for its charges against Israeli leaders, and criticized Joe Biden for briefly stopping the shipment of 2,000-pound bombs.

“And then, when Trump returns to office, he voted for the Laken Riley Act,” Newkirk said, referring to the immigration legislation that has helped to facilitate mass detention and deportation. “He just wasn’t showing up to push back against Trump in this seizure of authoritarian power … it was a cascade of things where I felt, as a sense of emergency and injustice and moral travesty is intensifying, that there was too much cost to having a corporate Democrat not fighting but enabling and facilitating it.”

That decision led someone who has spent a career running campaign finance reform groups like Democracy Spring, which engaged in nonviolent civil disobedience to call attention to the need to get money out of politics, to have to raise money himself for an election campaign. He has only raised $151,000 over the cycle as of June 30, but when we talked last week, he said the campaign had just had its best fundraising day. “Our job is to bring to people’s attention the big gap between the decisions Stanton has made and where Democrats stand,” he said. That includes social media and digital organization, with volunteer door-knocking that Newkirk believes is working. “My experience on the doors and what our people have seen, it tells me that it’s right there to be seized.”

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Stanton has raised over $2 million this cycle, with less than 5 percent coming from small donors under $200, according to Open Secrets. Over $600,000 of his campaign haul comes from corporate PACs like UnitedHealth, Cigna, Humana, SpaceX, Walmart, Amazon, Google, Fox Corporation, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Clear Channel, AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, McKesson, UPS, body camera makers Axon, Waste Management, Boeing, State Farm Insurance, Medtronic, Visa, Home Depot, Tenet and Elevance Healthcare, Delta, JetBlue, and Southwest Airlines, the Norfolk Southern, Union Pacific, and BNSF railways, weapons manufacturers RTX, L3Harris, General Dynamics, and Honeywell, as well as several banking trade groups, the American Hospital Association, and a bunch more. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee also contributed $6,000 directly. Newkirk, adding in AIPAC donors who have also contributed to Stanton, calls AIPAC Stanton’s top contributor.

That relates to an exceedingly unusual circumstance that Newkirk personally experienced. “Several weeks ago, I and others started getting these texts saying, ‘Do you have a minute to talk about U.S.-Israel relationship?’” Newkirk told me. “It seemed like an AI chatbot.” The texts, which provided pro-Israel messaging on behalf of “Friends for Peace” and cast doubt on atrocities in Gaza, were associated with an organization called Clock Tower X run by former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale, whose political firm has $9 million in direct contracts with the state of Israel. They’ve been circulating since last year, but Newkirk said they appear to show up more in primaries where Israel is a major issue.

“You’d think it’s a fable but it’s true,” he said. “It’s a foreign government—not AIPAC but Israel—intervening in our politics to mold public opinion.”

Newkirk filed a formal complaint with the Arizona attorney general’s office over Israel’s election interference. He hadn’t heard back as of last week. The office did not respond to the Prospect’s request for a status update.

Despite an odd incident where the Arizona Young Democrats canceled their endorsement of Newkirk over “concerning patterns of behavior,” apparently based on a ten-year-old article that was retracted two years ago by the author and rejected by other youth organizations, the latest poll shows that Newkirk has some momentum, with attention in independent media. Meanwhile, Stanton hasn’t really made his presence felt, hoping that his name recognition and superior fundraising will carry him to victory.

Stanton has skipped debate appearances in the district and has done no town halls. Newkirk says Stanton’s events are very controlled. His campaign office is listed as a UPS mailbox. Newkirk did track Stanton down recently at a lightly publicized event around health care. “I asked him about health care in Gaza and asked if he would commit to renounce AIPAC funding, end military support for Israel, and denounce election interference,” Newkirk said. “He didn’t answer and was hustled out of the room.”

Yet when it came time for an outside super PAC to boost Stanton, it was not AIPAC’s that did the job, but an artificial intelligence–funded PAC. Newkirk has rallied opposition to an AI data center project in Ahwatukee, a city in the district. And his general platform involves progressive taxation and public provision of goods (including an innovative proposal around price caps on a basket of essential goods that was used to great effect in Mexico) to rebalance the relationship between the wealthy and everybody else.

“Political and economic power are becoming more concentrated and leading to deepening inequality,” Newkirk said. “We’ve got to break the grip of oligarchs on our democracy and move toward a shared prosperity … If we break from corporate power and make government a tool to deliver for working-class people, there’s no limit to what’s possible.”

Stanton’s campaign did not respond to multiple questions for this article.

A victory for Newkirk would show that Stanton’s sleepwalking on threats from Trump carried over into sleepwalking in his own race. Newkirk believes that the fight against Trump should be seen as existential. “We have to prove, like when FDR was fighting fascism, that democracy can change people’s lives for the better.”

UPDATE: This story has been updated to better reflect the timing of a retracted hit piece about Kai Newkirk.

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David Dayen

David Dayen
Executive Editor

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David Dayen

ddayen@prospect.org

David Dayen is the executive editor of The American Prospect. He is the author of Monopolized: Life in the Age of Corporate Power and Chain of Title: How Three Ordinary Americans Uncovered Wall Street’s Great Foreclosure Fraud. He co-hosts the podcast Organized Money with Matt Stoller. He can be reached on Signal at ddayen.90. More by David Dayen