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In Poland, Liberalism Takes Yet Another Hit

To the surprise of commentators both in Poland and abroad, prime minister Donald Tusk’s candidate, the highly educated, internationally respected liberal Rafał Trzaskowski, did not become Poland’s next president.

A former member of the European Parliament (MEP), cabinet minister, mayor of Warsaw, and deputy leader of the Civic Platform (PO), Trzaskowski embodied everything Western elites have celebrated in the region since 1989. He represents technocratic competence, transatlantic credentials, and an unshakeable faith in liberal democracy.

His opponent, Karol Nawrocki, was largely treated as a meme throughout the campaign. Head of the state-run Institute of National Remembrance, Nawrocki has spent years pushing an obsessive anti-communist agenda, often celebrating far-right resistance groups from Poland’s interwar and postwar history. But this wasn’t just about historical revisionism: Nawrocki also carried a deeply checkered personal past — alleged 1990s ties to the Gdańsk mafia, links to football hooligan groups, and involvement in illegal retaking of apartments. . .

Anyway: chain-taking snus through televised debates, Nawrocki looked like the antithesis of the clean liberal professional class Trzaskowski represented. And yet, he won the election — barely, but decisively. This wasn’t just a defeat of one campaign; it trashed the idea of post-1989 Central Europe’s long march toward liberal progress.

Despite Trzaskowski’s wider campaign machine and backing from public media, the liberal camp was unable to convince the electorate. Jarosław Kaczyński’s national-conservative Law and Justice (PiS) put forward a catastrophically bad candidate — and still triumphed. That fact alone shows how far liberalism has collapsed in the region.

It’s hard to see how this will be reversed. Even hopeful signs for centrists like the victory of the pro-EU conservative Nicușor Dan in Romania can’t hide the broader regional trend: Hungary, Slovakia, and Serbia are sliding further into authoritarianism, and Russia’s shadow looms ever larger. Over 20 percent of Polish voters in the first round backed candidates with clear or coded pro-Putinist positions.

So, who is Karol Nawrocki? He is a local historian-turned-political fixer, a former director of Gdańsk’s World War II museum, and the president of Institute of National Remembrance since 2021. He stands for everything liberal elites despise: vulgarity, cronyism, and reactionary nostalgia. He doesn’t even try to mask it. His slogan? “Poland first. Poles first.” His persona? A self-made man, of “flesh and blood,” promising to speak for the people. In a final debate, fearing a narrow loss to Trzaskowski, he quoted the Books of Chronicles.

He still won. And he won largely because Trzaskowski lost the campaign all by himself.

The failures of the liberal coalition were manifold. Tusk’s team had campaigned on restoring democracy and rule of law, and yet, within months of taking power in October 2023, their administration was mired in scandals — the kind not so discussed in the English-speaking press but known about in Poland. Investigative journalists like Szymon Jadczak (of Wirtualna Polska, one of the country’s leading news portals) reported that the public prosecutor’s office was concealing files related to key figures like pro-Tusk politician (and ex-fascist political activist) Roman Giertych. State-owned (or state-related, like Akcja Demokracja) foundations dodged questions about how they distributed public money. Reports on election interference were withheld under legal technicalities. Even the new public broadcaster, built to replace the previous PiS government’s propaganda machine, pushed partisan fake news instead of independent journalism.

For a coalition that won on promises of legality and transparency, this was devastating. In private, government-aligned academics justified these lapses with philosophical acrobatics, citing Giorgio Agamben’s theory of the “state of exception.” The message?

Law can be suspended in order to save democracy.

But no reform — neither Tusk’s neoliberal promise of “absolute deregulation” nor deeper economic shifts — materialized. The “shock therapy 2.0” that some business-friendly liberals envisioned simply never happened. In the end, voters who had expected radical change got little more than rhetoric.

Unsurprisingly, within a year of Tusk’s premiership, his disapproval ratings rivaled those of PiS’s Mateusz Morawiecki at the height of the COVID-19 crisis.

In that context, even a candidate like Nawrocki could win. And with his victory, the post-1989 liberal dream of Central Europe may finally have run its course.

In trying to understand the unexpected victory of Nawrocki in Poland’s 2025 presidential election, it is essential to begin — as always — with class. The shock expressed across liberal and international media obscures what is, from a historical materialist perspective, entirely predictable: that a liberal regime unable to deliver material gains to the popular classes will, sooner or later, collapse under the weight of its own contradictions. And in this vacuum, the far right — promising order, identity, and a false sense of national community — thrives.

As I’ve noted before (including in Jacobin), Polish public opinion research does not track class in a consistent or structural way. There are no standard variables to directly capture class position — particularly when class must be defined in terms of education and identity (more: style of life in general) and not just relation to the means of production. But we can still infer patterns from occupational categories and education data — and the latest Ipsos exit poll for TVN24 provides an unusually clear picture.

The data show a stark class gradient. Among voters with only a primary education, Nawrocki won a staggering 73.4 percent. Even in the vocational-educated group, he held a commanding 68.3 percent. Support for Trzaskowski only begins to climb among those with post-secondary education — he reached near parity in that cohort — and it is only among the university-educated that he truly led, with 62.6 percent. The pattern is familiar: the higher the level of formal education, the more likely one is to support the liberal candidate. The lower the level of schooling, the more decisive the turn toward the authoritarian right.

The occupational breakdown tells a similar story. Nawrocki triumphed among farmers (84.6 percent) and manual laborers (68.4 percent). He led even among the unemployed (64.7 percent) and pensioners (50.5 percent). In contrast, Trzaskowski fared better among the urban middle classes: professionals, managers, and students. Interestingly, even among small business owners, a group liberals often hope to woo, Nawrocki won with 57.1 percent. This signals the real base of his support — not the “working class” in any simple sense, but the fragmented lower middle classes, those whose relative status is under threat and who feel excluded from the liberal order.

Some Polish left intellectuals, nostalgic for a “people’s politics,” have cheered Nawrocki’s win as a democratic correction. This stems from the fact that Kaczyński’s party uses populist, anti-elitist language (in a similar vein, parts of the reactionary left in Eastern Europe feel a certain nostalgia. . . for Donald Trump). This is a strong argument for avoiding the kind of liberals — especially those who remember the transition period of the 1990s, which they helped to shape — who often openly disdain the “common people.”

But this is an illusion. What we are seeing is not an upsurge of popular power but the political expression of petty bourgeois resentment. The votes that gave Nawrocki the presidency came not from organized labor or collective working-class agency, but from atomized individuals in the countryside, from threatened property owners, and from those whose mobility has stalled in the neoliberal order.

This is a classic pattern in authoritarian breakthroughs. When the small bourgeoisie sees no viable path for upward mobility within the liberal capitalist structure — and when it is denied real economic participation by an entrenched elite — it turns to the Right. In this sense, Nawrocki’s victory mirrors dynamics we’ve seen elsewhere — like in the case of Muslim Brotherhood’s Egypt, as Gilbert Achcar described. It is not so much a revolt of the masses as a panic of the provincial class fractions — those “left behind” not by socialism, but by a liberalism that never delivered.

Ultimately, this was not a campaign about issues or visions. Nawrocki ran as a symbol — a man of the people, a brawler, a nationalist who scorned “elites.” His slogan, “Poland first, Poles first,” struck a chord with many of those feeling dispossessed. Trzaskowski, for all his technocratic credentials, seemed to represent only continuity — and for many, continuity meant stagnation. His campaign was marred by scandals, hypocrisy, and a cynical use of legal technicalities to block public scrutiny. Voters who had been promised a restoration of “the rule of law” after the PiS years instead witnessed the same opacity, the same evasion — only with new faces.

By the time of the second round, the Tusk government had already lost much of its legitimacy. Its reforms had stalled; its promises had withered. The liberal dream of European constitutionalism, of governance by civility and consensus, had been tested — and failed. The result: a backlash, driven not by fascist masses, but by classes whose loyalty to liberal democracy was always contingent.

In a striking illustration of Poland’s shift toward international far-right currents, Nawrocki’s victory was cheered well beyond the country itself. Trump celebrated the outcome with a tweet proclaiming, “Congratulations Poland, you picked a WINNER!”

Tellingly of his ideal reference points, the night the results were announced, Nawrocki invoked a Biblical passage from 2 Chronicles 7:14.

As it goes in the King James Version: “If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.”

For many devout Christians, this declaration bordered on blasphemy, yet it struck a chord among far-right leaders across the region, who have warmly congratulated him.

This outcome not only reflects internal disagreements within Polish politics but also signals a broader regional phenomenon. With parliamentary elections scheduled in the Czech Republic this fall, leading indications suggest that a far-right, petty-bourgeois movement under Andrej Babiš is poised to triumph there as well, according to both polls and prevailing social attitudes. Such developments underscore a deeper crisis within the post-1989 liberal order, which — unable to deliver substantive economic and social benefits to the disenfranchised — finds itself increasingly undermined by radical alternatives.

Great Job Krzysztof Katkowski & the Team @ Jacobin Source link for sharing this story.

The Myth of Trumpian Deterrence

Soldiers of Ukraine’s 30th Prince Konstanty Ostrogski Mechanized Brigade fire a missile from a BM-21 Grad multiple rocket launcher at the positions of Russian troops on June 3, 2025. (Photo by Viacheslav Madiievskyi/Ukrinform/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

EVER SINCE DONALD TRUMP RETURNED to the White House, the darnedest thing has been happening in Ukraine. Every day or so, Trump says Russia wouldn’t have attacked Ukraine if he were president. And every time he says it, Russia attacks Ukraine.

You might have thought that by now, Trump would stop saying it, since Russia’s continuing onslaught makes a mockery of his boasts. But he’s no more fazed by this falsification than he is by the evidence that he lost the 2020 election. He just keeps repeating his story.

In March, Trump proposed a 30-day ceasefire. Ukraine accepted the proposal, but Russia didn’t. Russian forces pushed into eastern Ukraine, and on April 13, Russia fired missiles into Sumy, a Ukrainian city, killing at least 34 civilians and injuring more than 100.

When reporters asked Trump about the missile strike, he excused it as “a mistake” and said the war had started only because Vladimir Putin “had so little respect for [Joe] Biden.” “If I were president,” said Trump, “that war would have never started.”

The next day, Trump claimed that in his first term, he had deterred Putin from invading Ukraine. “I told him, ‘Don’t do it,’” said Trump. But now that Trump was back in office, Putin seemed strangely undeterred. While Trump was touting his magical ability to rein in Putin, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov repeated that Russia wouldn’t accept Trump’s ceasefire plan. Meanwhile, along the front, Russian troops continued their assaults on Ukraine.

On April 17, Trump bragged again that he had deterred Russia in his first term. “I spoke to President Putin about it a lot,” said Trump. “There’s no way he would’ve ever gone in if I were president.”

The next day, Russia fired missiles into Kharkiv, killing a civilian and injuring more than 100 others. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky proposed a moratorium on strikes against civilian targets. Putin rejected it.

On April 22, in an interview with Time, Trump was pressed about a promise he had made in his 2024 campaign. “You said you would end the war in Ukraine on Day One,” the interviewer reminded him. Trump dismissed the quote. “I said that as an exaggeration,” he scoffed. “Obviously, people know that when I said that, it was said in jest.” But he repeated that the war “would have never happened if I was president.”

Again, Putin defied him. A day after the Time interview, Russia launched a missile and drone barrage against Kyiv, hitting five neighborhoods and killing a dozen people.

Trump, in response, tried to do what he claimed to have done in his first term: talk Putin out of further aggression. “Vladimir, STOP!” he wrote on Truth Social. “Lets [sic] get the Peace Deal DONE!” Despite Russia’s persistent bombardment, Trump insisted that Putin wanted peace:

Reporter: This proposal that you put on the table, it’s a 30-day ceasefire proposal. Your national security team presented it to both Ukraine and Russia. Two months ago, Ukraine agreed to that ceasefire proposal immediately. Russia has not. And my question is: Is Russia the obstacle to peace. . . .

Trump: I don’t think so. I think that they both want peace right now.

Again, Trump said the war “would have never happened if I were president,” since Putin “understood that I would not be happy” if Russia were to attack Ukraine. The next day, April 25, Trump announced, “Work on the overall Peace Deal between Russia and Ukraine is going smoothly.” He added, “They are very close to a deal. . . . Most of the major points are agreed to.”

No such deal materialized. Four days later, as Russian forces continued to advance, another Putin mouthpiece—Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy chair of the Russian Security Council—declared that the only acceptable outcome of the war was the destruction of Ukraine’s government.

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In an interview on April 29, Trump assured ABC’s Terry Moran, “Because of me, I do believe that he’s [Putin] willing to stop the fighting.” Moran was incredulous: “You think Vladimir Putin wants peace?” Trump stood by his man: “I think he does, yes. I think he does.”

On May 2, Trump told NBC’s Kristen Welker that his magic chemistry with Putin was already working. “If I didn’t get involved, they [Russia] would be fighting right now for all of Ukraine,” said Trump. “If it weren’t me, they would keep going.”

But Russia did keep going. From one town to another, its troops continued to advance.

On May 6, a reporter asked Trump “what type of progress” his overtures to Putin had achieved. “A lot,” said Trump. “I think Russia wanted to take all of Ukraine, and they’ve stopped.”

They hadn’t stopped. Again, Trump proposed an unconditional ceasefire. And again, the Kremlin rejected it, insisting on impossible conditions.

Trump responded by welcoming Russia’s demands and shifting the burden to Ukraine. “President Putin of Russia doesn’t want to have a Cease Fire Agreement with Ukraine, but rather wants to meet on Thursday, in Turkey, to negotiate a possible end to the BLOODBATH,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Ukraine should agree to this, IMMEDIATELY.”

Trump refused to punish Russia. On May 12, a reporter asked him whether he would impose “sanctions on Russia if Putin doesn’t agree with the 30-day ceasefire.” Trump reaffirmed his faith in Putin’s regime: “I have a feeling they’re going to agree. I do. I have a feeling.”

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They didn’t. Zelensky offered to meet with Putin in Istanbul, but Putin spurned the invitation. Again, Trump made excuses for Putin. “Nothing’s going to happen until Putin and I get together,” Trump told reporters. “And obviously, he wasn’t going to go.”

On May 16, Fox News host Bret Baier reminded Trump: “You said, ‘Stop bombing.’ He [Putin] hasn’t stopped bombing. He’s not at the table.” But Trump—with the same delusional confidence he routinely expresses about massive fraud in the 2020 election—insisted, “He is at the table.” Throughout the interview, Trump tried to shift blame to Zelensky.

The next day, Russia launched its biggest drone attack of the three-year war.

On May 19, Trump had a two-hour phone call with Putin. “The tone and spirit of the conversation were excellent,” Trump declared on Truth Social. As a result, he promised, “Russia and Ukraine will immediately start negotiations toward a Ceasefire.”

The ceasefire didn’t happen. Instead, last week, Russia launched more than 300 drones and missiles into Ukraine, killing more civilians.

By this point, it was clear that Trump’s boasts about deterring Putin were empty. “He doesn’t seem willing to do anything that you want him to do,” a reporter told Trump. “Do you still believe that, that he wouldn’t have launched the war?”

Trump clung to his intertwined myths: “If I were president—if the election weren’t rigged—you wouldn’t have had the war.”

THE SADDEST THING about Trump’s Ukraine delusion is that he really could have deterred Putin from extending or escalating the war. But that would have required action, not braggadocio. At every turn, Trump refused to antagonize the dictator he thought was his friend.

Last Wednesday, after another barrage of Russian missiles and drones, a reporter asked Trump, “What stopped you from imposing new sanctions on Russia?” Trump answered that peace might be at hand. “If I think I’m close to getting a deal,” he explained, “I don’t want to screw it up by doing that.”

Then, on Friday, Fox News reporter Peter Doocy tried to ask Trump about the challenges of dealing with “a very stubborn Vladimir Putin.” Trump, offended that Putin was being singled out, interrupted the question. “And Zelensky,” Trump added. “Very stubborn Zelensky, too.”

What Trump doesn’t understand is that the world’s crises and tragedies—the war in Ukraine, the war in Gaza, the October 2023 massacre in Israel, the plight of Afghans abandoned by the United States—aren’t a stage for his ego. He treats these scenes of suffering as opportunities to promote himself, by crowing that if he had been president, they never would have happened. He doesn’t understand that being president is a job, and the job is to alleviate crises, not exploit them.

Putin recognizes that this is how Trump thinks. He knows that the American president, while yapping that the war never would have happened on his watch, won’t lift a finger against the aggressor.

And that’s why the war goes on.

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Great Job Will Saletan & the Team @ The Bulwark Source link for sharing this story.

Trump Wants to Cut Tribal College Funding by Nearly 90%, Putting Them at Risk of Closing

The Trump administration has proposed cutting funding for tribal colleges and universities by nearly 90%, a move that would likely shut down most or all of the institutions created to serve students disadvantaged by the nation’s historic mistreatment of Indigenous communities.

The proposal is included in the budget request from the Department of the Interior to Congress, which was released publicly on Monday. The document mentions only the two federally controlled tribal colleges — Haskell Indian Nations University and Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute — but notes the request for postsecondary programs will drop from more than $182 million this year to just over $22 million for 2026.

If Congress supports the administration’s proposal, it would devastate the nation’s 37 tribal colleges and universities, said Ahniwake Rose, president and CEO of the American Indian Higher Education Consortium, which represents the colleges in Washington, D.C.

“The numbers that are being proposed would close the tribal colleges,” Rose told ProPublica. “They would not be able to sustain.”

ProPublica found last year that Congress was underfunding tribal colleges by a quarter-billion dollars per year. The Bureau of Indian Education, tasked with requesting funding for the institutions, had never asked lawmakers to fully fund the institutions at the levels called for in the law, ProPublica found.

But rather than remedy the problem, the Trump administration’s budget would devastate the colleges, tribal education leaders said.

The Bureau of Indian Education, which administers federal funding for tribal colleges, and the Department of the Interior, the bureau’s parent agency, declined to answer questions.

Rose said she and other college leaders had not been warned of the proposed cuts nor consulted during the budgeting process. Federal officials had not reached out to the colleges by the end of the day Monday.

The proposal comes as the Trump administration has outlined a host of funding cuts related to the federal government’s trust and treaty obligations to tribes. The Coalition for Tribal Sovereignty said last month that the administration’s proposed discretionary spending for the benefit of Native Americans would fall to its lowest point in more than 15 years, which it viewed as “an effort to permanently impact trust and treaty obligations to Tribal Nations.”

Congress passed legislation in 1978 committing to fund the tribal college system and promising inflation-adjusted appropriations based on the number of students enrolled in federally recognized tribes. But those appropriations have consistently lagged far behind inflation.

The colleges have managed, despite the meager funds, to preserve Indigenous languages, conduct high-level research and train local residents in nursing, meat processing and other professions and trades. But with virtually no money available for infrastructure or construction, the schools have been forced to navigate broken water pipes, sewage leaks, crumbling roofs and other problems that have compounded the financial shortcomings.

Tribal college leaders said they were stunned by the proposed cuts to their already insufficient funding and had more questions than answers.

“I’m shivering in my boots,” said Manoj Patil, president of Little Priest Tribal College in Nebraska. “This would basically be a knife in the chest. It’s a dagger, and I don’t know how we can survive these types of cuts.”

Congress will have the final say on the budget, noted Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, the ranking Democrat on the House Subcommittee on Indian and Insular Affairs, whose New Mexico district includes three tribal colleges. Tribal colleges “are lifelines in Indian Country,” Leger Fernández said in a statement. “They provide higher education rooted in language, culture and community. These cuts would rob Native students of opportunity and violate our trust responsibilities.”

Other members of the House and Senate Indian Affairs committees did not immediately respond to questions from ProPublica. The White House also did not respond to a request for more information.

Monday’s budget release was the latest in a string of bad financial news for tribal colleges since President Donald Trump began his second term. The administration suspended Department of Agriculture grants that funded scholarships and research, and tribal college presidents spent the past week trying to fend off deep cuts to the Pell Grant program for low-income students. The vast majority of tribal college students rely on Pell funding to attend school.

Tribal colleges contend their funding is protected by treaties and the federal trust responsibility, a legal obligation requiring the United States to protect Indigenous education, resources, rights and assets. And they note that the institutions are economic engines in some of North America’s poorest areas, providing jobs, training and social services in often remote locations.

“It doesn’t make sense for them to (approve the cuts) when they’re relying on us to train the workforce,” said Dawn Frank, president of Oglala Lakota College in South Dakota. “We’re really relying on our senators and representatives to live up to their treaty and trust obligation.”

But others noted they have spent years meeting with federal representatives to emphasize the importance of tribal colleges to their communities and have been disappointed by the chronic underfunding.

“It is a bit disheartening to feel like our voice is not being heard,” said Chris Caldwell, president of College of Menominee Nation in Wisconsin. “They don’t hear our message.”

Great Job by Matt Krupnick for ProPublica & the Team @ ProPublica Source link for sharing this story.

Kyren Lacy’s Death at 24 Sheds Light on Black Male Suicide Crisis

Kyren Lacy was a 6-foot-2 Southeastern Conference football player with a broad, if often absent, smile, a love for Buffalo Wild Wings and lemonade.

Some sports analysts even predicted that the Louisiana State University senior might go to a National Football League team as early as the second round of the draft this year. 

Instead, Lacy died by suicide at 24 and was buried on the final day of the NFL draft. The reason why a young person would end their life was, for a few weeks, the subject of rampant speculation, mostly on social media, websites, and podcasts that cater to Black audiences and the sports obsessed. 

Lacy had talked with friends for years about wanting into the NFL and the league pay that would eliminate his family’s financial worries, friends said. Then, in his final months, a tangle of events appeared to endanger that. 

Speculation about the reasons Lacy ended his life, experts say, is common but not productive or sensitive to family members left behind. Also, there is rarely a single reason, said Janelle R. Goodwill, who has spent the past decade studying Black mental health and suicide prevention.

Janelle R. Goodwill is a psychologist and assistant professor at the University of Chicago who’s research focuses the mental health experiences of Black Americans, suicide prevention and mental health promotion. (Erielle Bakkum Photography)

“People aren’t experiencing just one thing in a vacuum,” Goodwill said. 

Across the population, the list of experiences and conditions that put people at greater risk of suicide is long but for young adults also includes impulsivity — a hallmark of the still developing human brain — and access to guns. In 2023, 55% of all suicides involved a firearm.

The uncertainty about what led Lacy to end his life in many ways reflects a growing phenomenon. In the past five years, Black boys and young men are increasingly dying by suicide. During that time, Black male death by suicide grew almost 22%, the second-largest suicide rate increase in the country. 

Although researchers have struggled to pinpoint a reason for the increase, some of their findings suggest that for Black men and boys, concerns and stressors related to their futures, difficulties expressing distress and seeking help; narrow, even dehumanizing notions of masculinity, life meaning and success all may play some role. A 2023 study published in the Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities examined why Black adults age 18 to 30 have considered suicide. The most common reasons subjects reported varied by gender. Black men most frequently reported feeling hopeless about the future.

“It didn’t specify the source of hopelessness,” said Goodwill, a psychologist at the University of Chicago whose research focuses on the mental health of Black Americans, suicide prevention and mental health promotion. “But that is what I am focusing on now, trying to really understand.”

“What happened?” to Kyren Lacy

Kyren Lacy poses for a portrait during media day held at LSU in June 2024. (LSU Athletics/University Images via Getty Images)

In his final season, Lacy tied for the SEC lead for most touchdowns by a receiver. Off the field, Lacy had two younger brothers, a mother, a girlfriend, and a Dodge Charger for which he often expressed love. And when he graduated from LSU in December with a degree in sport management, he posed for all the usual cap and gown pictures with each of his parents. 

But, the final months of Lacy’s life were, objectively, challenging. 

On Dec. 17, two days before graduation, Lacy was involved in a fatal car crash in Lafourche Parish, Louisiana. It took the life of Herman Hall, 78. Police said that Lacy had been speeding and crossed the centerline in a no-passing zone, causing other vehicles to crash, then failed to stop or render aid. 

Lacy turned himself in to authorities on Jan. 12. He was arrested; booked on charges that included negligent homicide, felony hit-and-run and reckless operation of a vehicle in connection with the December crash; then released on $151,000 bond. Lacy’s lawyers disputed state police allegations that Lacy had caused the crash and failed to stop, insisting that both would be disproven in court.

Some LSU fans defended Lacy on social media as an innocent man or a 24-year-old who made a terrible mistake. Others described Lacy as an entitled killer and prison bound. 

By February, the NFL revoked Lacy’s invitation to the NFL scouting combine, a 4-day event that allows NFL scouts to evaluate draft prospects’ skills. On March 26, Lacy participated in LSU’s Pro Day, where NFL staff observe players in action and the details of their performance and body are posted online for all to see. 

On April 12 in Houston, where Lacy’s mother lives, Lacy got into an argument with a relative, according to the Harris County Sheriff’s Office. The argument escalated then moved outside where police said Lacy fired a weapon into the ground then drove off. 

Worried, the relative called the police. Harris County officials described briefly following Lacy in what was not a high speed chase. Then Lacy’s car crashed. Inside, officers found Lacy with a fatal gunshot wound. 

A hearing in his negligent homicide case was scheduled for the following week.

Lacy’s parents, girlfriend, coaches, lawyers and agent did not respond to requests for comment. Several have issued statements, including Lacy’s father, Kenny Lacy.

“Young parents, start talking to your kids at a very early age and make sure they are confident and comfortable confiding in you,” the elder Lacy wrote on Facebook the day after his son died. “Don’t be cool with ‘I’m Alright, or I’m good’ when you know deep down something isn’t right. Mental Health is real, and for the most part, it’s invisible, don’t ignore the signs, even if they may seem small.”

Black deaths undercounted, mischaracterized

It’s an alarming warning, much like the nation’s suicide data. Perhaps even more alarming: death by suicide is often undercounted or mischaracterized. 

When Michael Curtis, a California native, moved to Georgia for graduate school, he found himself near a large number of rural communities with significant Black populations. Curtis and his research collaborators found that in these rural places, 1 in 3 Black men had recently experienced suicidal thoughts.

Michael Curtis is an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota’s College of Education and Human Development who researches Black American health and well-being, the developmental consequences of stigma and discrimination, mental health care accessibility, and other issues. (Courtesy of Michael Curtis)

Growing up in rural communities with large Black populations today often means living in a community where all sorts of resources — including jobs and opportunities — are scarce, Curtis said. In these environments, it can be difficult to have healthy, trusting relationships of any kind, the study found. 

By young adulthood, that mistrust can lead to feelings of isolation, which can prompt thoughts of suicide. And those who face more adverse childhood experiences than others were most likely to struggle, said Curtis, who is today a therapist and assistant professor at the University of Minnesota’s College of Education and Human Development. 

The communities Curtis researched are much like Lacy’s hometown, Thibodaux, Louisiana,  population 15,626, where the U.S. Census Bureau estimated in 2023 that 22% live in poverty. 

In Curtis’ practice — he specializes in treating boys and young men, many of them Black — there is another issue that often arises. It, too, echoes in what is known about Lacy’s life.

“A lot of them are being told that their bodies — either through sports or through manual labor — are the only things that they have to offer,” Curtis said. “For many men who seem to have a talent for sports, from near birth, they’re being told that they are going to be professional athletes one day.” 

Curtis treated one young man who had made it to the NFL but played a year before an injury forced him out. The man had pivoted into mentoring and coaching, and was distressed by the number of parents describing their 8-year-olds as destined for professional sports and a means to escape poverty or simply retire. Others are surrounded by people who only want to talk to them about their performance or a statistically unlikely pro sports career that, if it happens, is usually over by the time they’re 35.  

Top-level athletes face pressure  

Inside the world of Division I college sports, student athletes also face tremendous amounts of pressure to perform and demands on their time and bodies to practice, travel and play. 

There is pressure to say and do things that appeal to fans and coaches who control their scholarships, any possible future in pro sports and, now, companies and advertisers who control access to name, image and likeness (commonly known as NIL) dollars. The latter gives student athletes the possibility of collecting a fraction of the billions made from college sports but, thus far, only a few have managed substantial income, said N. Jeremi Duru, a lawyer and professor at American University’s Washington College of law and a leading expert in legal matters in sports. 

Some students, particularly student athletes of color, also face a complicated mix of admiration, jealousy, bigotry, and constant high performance expectations. In a December 2023 survey of 23,272 student athletes, the National Collegiate Athletic Association found that the share who reported feeling anxious, sad, or overwhelmed had improved since 2020, but indicators of student athlete distress remained “relatively high.” The highest rates of mental health struggle were reported by athletes of color, women, and LGBTQ student athletes.


Read More: Racism Pervades College Sports. It’s Taking an Alarming Toll on Athletes


On April 12, NFL wide receiver Malik Nabers was napping when a stream of buzzing sounds from his silenced phone notifications woke him, Nabers recounted on a sports podcast.

The texts were notes of condolence. Lacy was dead.


On YouTube: LSU Teammate Kyren Lacy hypes up Jayden Daniels and Malik Nabers after being drafted in Round 1


Nabers, drafted by the New York Giants in 2024, and Lacy were both sons of Louisiana and raised primarily by their mothers. While they were teammates at LSU, the two often worked out together and remained good friends.

Lacy was going through a tough time. Nabers knew that. But 10 hours before his death, Lacy had seemed OK.

“This was like the first person close to me that I’ve lost,” Nabers said on the podcast.

If you are facing mental health struggles, emotional distress, alcohol or drug use concerns, dial 988. Counselors are available free of charge, nationwide, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. 

Great Job Janell Ross & the Team @ Capital B News Source link for sharing this story.

‘Remember the Ladies’: Attacks on Gender Equity Remain a Core Feature of Surging Authoritarianism

From abortion bans to anti-trans policies, attacks on gender freedom are not fringe—they’re foundational to the new authoritarian agenda.

(Leon Neal / Getty Images)

In the whirling, swirling hellscape of illegality and cruelty that is the current American political scene, it’s hard to keep track of all the individuals and groups demonized, deported and derided by an administration seemingly motivated by a Machiavellian desire for power that might make Machiavelli himself blush with shame. In the midst of an apocalyptic news cycle, one targeted segment of the population seems to be fading from view: women.

Yet we now live in a country led by a man convicted of sexual assault, filled with a Cabinet and policy-making apparatus that—at my last count—had at least a dozen of his inner circle credibly accused of sexual harassment, domestic violence or assault.

One of the first acts of the administration was to issue Executive Order 14168, titled, with no hint of irony, “Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government.” What Trump refers to as “gender ideology” is the core of feminism: that gender is a social construction riven through with relations of power and dominance, and that because it is socially produced—much like our concept of “race”—how we live it personally and engage with it politically is changeable.

As feminist foremother Simone de Beauvoir so cogently put it, “One is not born but rather becomes, a woman.” (Or a man, for that matter.)

Like so much else in the upside-down world of Trumpland, where violent insurrectionists are innocent victims and no-nothing anti-science conspiracists are in charge of that science, the avatars of violent masculinity are now claiming to “defend” women. Women do not need “defending.” We need—as Ruth Bader Ginsburg (riffing off abolitionist and suffragist Sarah Grimke), famously said—for men “to take their feet off of our necks.”

The demise of Roe in the 2022 Dobbs decision and the subsequent collapse of the right to bodily autonomy (for women and others capable of gestating) in dozens of states and counting, was exactly the opposite. It was the reassertion that women’s necks, and indeed entire bodies, were not theirs in the first place.

Add to that the explicit call for women to be baby machines, from people like Vice President Vance and rabid baby daddy and neo-eugenicist Elon Musk, and musings by transportation secretary Sean Duffy on tying funding to high birthrates. The Gilead-esque intentions of this administration should be apparent to all. 

Indeed, they are screaming it from their manly rooftops: Go back! Back to the home, back to secondary status, back to being objects and not subjects. Back to sexual assault chalked up to boys being boys. 

The attacks on trans people (particularly trans women, because … women) and nonbinary people is in part an attempt to rein in gender freedom and possibility in the name of a resurgent patriarchal structure that is dependent on both women’s disempowerment and a forced insistence on a gender binary ruled by biological difference and masculine prerogative. 

The phenomenon of ‘women’s issues’ is a familiar one… being shunted off to the side or minimized … as if being forced to bear a child against your will weren’t both economic and intimate.

But somehow, the media and punditocracy seem to have forgotten all this and to be spending more time on Trump’s demolition of the economy than on the ongoing attack on women’s ability to live freely and control their own bodies.

Perusing the past weeks of news headlines in major outlets, too little time is spent detailing and analyzing the attacks on reproductive healthcare access and women’s rights—such as abortion bans and limits, fetal personhood laws, pronatalist edicts, and the gutting of resources for clinics, shelters and services for women and families. 

News cycles do of course come and go, and it makes some sense that the recent deportations and attacks on university autonomy—which so blatantly flout the law—should be front and center. But the phenomenon of “women’s issues” (which is already a framing that narrows such a core part of human thriving such as bodily autonomy) being shunted off to the side or minimized is a familiar one, often invoked by both the left and right as “cultural” or “social” issues that are sidenotes to the “real” issues of the economy … as if being forced to bear a child against your will weren’t both economic and intimate.

A recent piece in The Washington Post exemplified this rendering of reproductive justice as secondary: “Most Democrats … consider it essential for the party to expand beyond that cultural issue.” Even when reproductive rights are covered, a Reuters Institute study found that 68 percent of abortion-related articles used a passive voice.

It would be wrong, therefore, to say that the fall of Roe was the first shot across the bow, because that displaces the harm done to women as a conduit to supposedly more important or serious harms. 

Attacks on gender equity—from the undermining of reproductive access, to the policing of speech about gender, to attacks on those who live outside the gender binary, or fiscal cutbacks on women’s health initiatives—remain a core feature of this assault on civil rights and citizenship. Yet they have become buried under the everyday fire alarms of surging authoritarianism.

But reasserting patriarchal power is key to the new authoritarianism, as it has been for those leaders Trump admires such as Orban and Putin. It might be a sign of how all this is connected when a Fox News “reporter” declared Trump’s tariffs to be “manly” and designed to fix a “crisis in masculinity.”

Let us not, as Abigail Adams wrote so many years ago, forget the ladies.

(Corbis via Getty Images)

In 1776, witty Adams penned an oft-quoted letter to her husband John, then a member of the Continental Congress and working with, yes the other men, to draft the Declaration of Independence. 

“I long,” she wrote, “to hear that you have declared an independency. And by the way, in the new code of laws which I suppose it will be necessary for you to make, I desire you would remember the ladies, and be more generous and favourable to them than your ancestors.” 

Perhaps knowing he would, alas, ignore these mild pleas for a modicum of equality in the new nation, she added a bit more forcefully, “Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of the husbands. Remember, all men would be tyrants if they could.” 

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Daily Show for June 03, 2025

Democracy Now! 2025-06-03 Tuesday

  • Headlines for June 03, 2025
  • "Panic, Terror, Chaos, Trauma": SCOTUS Ruling Lets Trump Strip Protections for 500K+ Immigrants
  • ICE Raids on Restaurants, Farmworkers, Students Spark Community Resistance Across Country
  • "Detention Facilitates Deportation": Trump's Budget Bill Would Massively Increase ICE Jail Capacity
  • Palantir: Peter Thiel's Data-Mining Firm Helps DOGE Build Master Database to Surveil, Track Immigrants

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Russia-Ukraine Direct Talks Fail to Reach Cease-Fire Deal

Welcome back to World Brief, where we’re looking at another round of Russia-Ukraine peace talks, an attack on U.S. supporters of Israeli hostages, and a volcanic eruption in Italy.


Kyiv Secures Military Victory

Russia and Ukraine held a second round of direct talks in Istanbul on Monday, just one day after Kyiv launched one of its most ambitious large-scale drone attacks against Moscow since the full-scale war began in February 2022. Although the meeting lasted barely an hour and resulted in no major breakthroughs, holding negotiations after such a major military campaign was, in itself, a victory, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.

Welcome back to World Brief, where we’re looking at another round of Russia-Ukraine peace talks, an attack on U.S. supporters of Israeli hostages, and a volcanic eruption in Italy.


Kyiv Secures Military Victory

Russia and Ukraine held a second round of direct talks in Istanbul on Monday, just one day after Kyiv launched one of its most ambitious large-scale drone attacks against Moscow since the full-scale war began in February 2022. Although the meeting lasted barely an hour and resulted in no major breakthroughs, holding negotiations after such a major military campaign was, in itself, a victory, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.

Ukraine’s surprise drone attack on Sunday damaged or destroyed more than 40 long-range bomber planes—including some nuclear-capable aircraft—located deep inside Russian territory, spanning across the Arctic, Siberia, and the Far East, according to Ukraine’s Security Service. Code-named “Spider’s Web,” the operation took more than a year and a half to organize and took out 34 percent of Russia’s strategic cruise missile carriers. With Kyiv smuggling 117 aerial drones across enemy lines and positioning them near four Russian airbases, Moscow’s defenses had virtually no time to prepare for the assault.

According to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, the operation’s military setbacks, which Kyiv expects to cost the Kremlin around $7 billion, should help force Moscow to the negotiating table. “Without pressure, [Russian President Vladimir] Putin will just keep playing games with everyone who wants this war to end,” Zelensky said.

Monday’s talks did secure a few small successes. Each side agreed to release more prisoners of war, with those severely injured and younger people to be prioritized. Russia and Ukraine also agreed to each return the bodies of 6,000 dead soldiers, and Kyiv has requested the release of some 339 children who it says were kidnapped by Russian forces during the fighting; the lead Russian negotiator, Vladimir Medinsky, maintains that these children were “saved,” not stolen.

However, a cease-fire deal remains elusive. The Russian delegation presented a memorandum on Monday outlining its terms for ending the conflict. According to Russian state media, the document demands that Ukraine withdraw its forces from four partly Russian-occupied regions, halt its military mobilization, freeze Western weapons deliveries, end martial law to allow for new elections, abandon its bid to join NATO, recognize Russian as the country’s official language alongside Ukrainian, and ban any third-party countries from stationing their militaries on its soil.

Ukraine’s delegation said it needs a week to review the document before it can respond. Yet Kyiv and its Western allies have repeatedly ruled out similar concessions in the past.

“If Russia turns the Istanbul meeting into an empty talk, there must be a new level of pressure, new sanctions, and not just from Europe,” Zelensky said.

U.S. President Donald Trump has so far declined to put new sanctions on Russia, saying last week that he does not want to jeopardize peace talks, but he suggested that such penalties may come if he decides that Putin is not serious about ending the war.

Ukraine has proposed holding further direct dialogues sometime between June 20 and June 30. But Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustem Umerov maintains that the only way that the war can be resolved is if Zelensky and Putin meet face-to-face. No such meeting has yet been agreed to.


Today’s Most Read


The World This Week

Tuesday, June 3: Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni hosts French President Emmanuel Macron and Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico, separately.

South Korea holds an early presidential election.

Wednesday, June 4: Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs are set to double to 50 percent.

Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko concludes a three-day trip to China.

The United Kingdom and Germany convene a meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group.

Thursday, June 5: Trump hosts German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.

Burundi holds parliamentary elections.

Friday, June 6: Argentine President Javier Milei begins a two-day trip to Italy.

Meloni hosts European Council President António Costa.

Saturday, June 7: Macron begins a two-day trip to Monaco.


What We’re Following

Antisemitic attack. Eight people in Boulder, Colorado, were injured on Sunday when a man hurled what the FBI described as “a makeshift flamethrower” at a group that was demonstrating to raise awareness about Israeli hostages in Gaza. The suspect, a 45-year-old Egyptian national whom the U.S. Department of Homeland Security said is in the United States on an expired tourist visa, allegedly yelled “Free Palestine” when he targeted participants of the Run for Their Lives campaign, which seeks to free the remaining 58 hostages being held by Hamas in Gaza, of whom 20 are believed to still be alive.

“This attack was aimed against peaceful people who wished to express their solidarity with the hostages held by Hamas, simply because they were Jews,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Monday. The FBI is investigating the incident as a terrorist act, and on Monday, the suspect was charged with a federal hate crime.

Reports of antisemitism around the world have skyrocketed since Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel and Israel’s ensuing war in Gaza. The United States alone recorded more than 9,000 antisemitic incidents in 2024. Notably, Sunday’s attack occurred less than a week after another man allegedly yelled “free, free Palestine” and “I did it for Gaza” after fatally shooting two Israeli Embassy staff members as they left an event at the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington.

Lava flows. A volcanic eruption at Sicily’s Mount Etna on Monday left tourists fleeing for cover. Authorities said the eruption was confined to Etna’s summit, which has since been closed off to visitors as a precaution, and added that it presents no danger to the local population. One tour company told CNN that it had 40 people on the volcano’s slopes when Etna blew; authorities say all visitors were safely evacuated.

This was Mount Etna’s 14th eruptive phase in recent months, making it the most active volcano in Europe. According to Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology, part of the volcano’s southeast crater collapsed, triggering hot lava and pyroclastic flows several kilometers high. Pyroclastic flows are composed of a dangerous combination of ash, rock, and gas.

Following the eruption, Catania-Fontanarossa Airport raised its threat level for airline traffic, though no immediate interruptions were reported, and locals reported tremors across several nearby towns.

Right-wing win. Poland’s conservative opposition secured a narrow victory in Sunday’s presidential election runoff. Nationalist candidate Karol Nawrocki won 50.9 percent of the vote, defeating ruling coalition candidate Rafal Trzaskowski and delivering a heavy blow to Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s political ambitions. On Monday, Tusk said that he plans to ask parliament to hold a vote of confidence in the near future.

Tusk was hoping to solidify power against outgoing President Andrzej Duda, who has blocked Tusk from repealing controversial judicial reforms that the prime minister claims erode the courts’ independence. With Nawrocki as president, this legislation is expected to remain in place. As a close ally of Trump, Nawrocki has also pledged to ensure economic and social policies that favor Poles over people of other nationalities, including refugees from Ukraine, as well as protect Poland’s sovereignty by curbing what he calls excessive interference from Brussels.

Nawrocki will take office on Aug. 6. His win demonstrates a rise in right-wing appeal across Central and Eastern Europe at a time when NATO and Russia are battling for ideological dominance in the region.


Odds and Ends

Indian customs officials discovered a few extra passengers trying to enter Mumbai without a passport on Sunday. According to local authorities, an Indian national flying from Thailand was detained for attempting to smuggle dozens of venomous snakes and five Asian leaf turtles into the city. Although seizures of gold, cash, and drugs are not uncommon for staff at Mumbai’s international airport, finding scaled or amphibious friends certainly is.

#RussiaUkraine #Direct #Talks #Fail #Reach #CeaseFire #Deal

Thanks to the Team @ World Brief – Foreign Policy Source link & Great Job Alexandra Sharp

Elon Musk Trashes Trump’s Budget

Sarah Longwell breaks down the dramatic breakup between Elon Musk and Donald Trump and how this clash could fracture the MAGA coalition and reshape Republican politics.

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Trump’s FEMA Boss Just Learned About Hurricane Season?

Tim Miller joins MSNBC’s Chris Jansing Reports to break down the looming chaos at FEMA under Trump’s latest hire and the Trump administration’s concerning pattern of appointing inexperienced and incompetent leaders to crucial roles.

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Bannon Can’t Spin This! Calls For Lindsey Graham To Be Arrested!

As Russian bombs rained down on Ukraine, Senator Lindsey Graham was on the ground, delivering tough talk and photo ops. His visit, timed with one of the war’s heaviest bombardments, raised eyebrows for Bannon, who wants him to stay out of the US.

Is THIS the man behind world’s most daring military op? Ex-DJ ‘secret agent’ to go down in history for $7bn ‘web’ blitz

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