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Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Muslims in America- a series published in The Conversation

The Conversation is publishing a series of articles, available on the website or as six emails delivered every other day, written by Senior Religion and Ethics Editor Kalpana Jain.

Over the past few years, Jain has commissioned dozens of articles about Islam, written by academics. These articles draw from that archive and have been checked for accuracy by religion scholars.

Historians believe Muslims first arrived in the U.S. in the 17th century.

This essay echo was published in The Conversation written by Kaplana Jain, a senior religion and ethics editor.
For much of my childhood in India, the sound of the adhan* – the Muslim call to prayer broadcast from the minaret of a mosque – was what I heard upon waking each morning.

In the shared religious life of my small hometown, we celebrated the festivals of Eid with our Muslim neighbors and they joined us at the time of Diwali, a holiday primarily celebrated by Hindus, Sikhs and Jains. Religious education happened quite informally in these day-to-day interactions.

In my new home in the United States, I learned that not many Americans have the opportunity for such daily interactions. 

A 2017 Pew study found that less than half of the American population personally knows someone who is a Muslim.

This unfamiliarity can often lead to Islam being viewed as a foreign religion – and can even lead to Islamophobia.

Former President Donald Trump said in a March 2016 media interview, “Islam hates us.” This comment and others by the former president, scholars found, quickly led to an increase in hate crimes against Muslims. Trump also signed an executive order banning nationals from seven Muslim-majority nations, further stoking anti-Muslim sentiments. The ban was overturned by President Joe Biden within the first few hours of his taking office.

As an editor of the religion and ethics desk at The Conversation, I have tried to improve the understanding Islam and its long history in the United States, with the help of articles from our scholars.

For example, historian Denise A. Spellberg of the University of Texas at Austin wrote a piece exploring how Muslims first arrived in large numbers to North America as enslaved people during the 17th century

Muslims constituted as much as 30% of the enslaved West African population of British America, though that number is hard to verify. Nonetheless, their presence in the U.S. was so notable that Thomas Jefferson bought a Quran as a 22-year-old law student in Williamsburg, Virginia, 11 years before he drafted the Declaration of Independence. For Jefferson, Muslims were very much part of the United States.

In that same spirit of acceptance and discovery, The Conversation brings you a series of six articles that will explain Islam, and its diversity and try to clear common misconceptions.

We will explore the history of American Muslims and gain a deeper understanding about their faith.

This article was reviewed for accuracy by Ken Chitwood, a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Berlin Graduate School of Muslim Cultures & Societies at Freie Universität Berlin. He is also a journalist-fellow at the University of Southern California’s Center for Religion and Civic Culture.

*The adhan, or call to prayer, is a collection of phrases sung or recited harmoniously by a muezzin, calling the Muslim faithful to the five daily prayers (salāt) the times of which are determined by the sun, and, therefore, change daily and vary depending on location.

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Monday, August 30, 2021

Hypocrisy at National Religious Broadcasters - NRB needs to focus on its mission

Evangelicals who wrongly support anti-vaxxers, even though they may be reticent in the discussion about the COVID vaccine, are contributing to the preventable deaths of thousands of their own followers, who all claim to be Christians! #WWWTP? Hypocrisy cubed!

“I believe in this vaccine because I don’t want to see anyone else die of COVID," said Dan Darling. 

NRB
spokesman Dan Darling fired after pro-vaccine statements on MSNBC, ‘Morning Joe’.

Daniel Darling, senior vice president of communications for the National Religious Broadcasters, was fired Friday (Aug. 27) after refusing to say his pro-vaccine statements, made on Morning Joe, were mistaken.
Echo report published in RNS by Bob Smietana

(Religion News Service: RNS) — The spokesman for a major evangelical nonprofit was fired for promoting vaccines on the MSNBC “Morning Joe” cable news show, Religion News Service has learned.

Daniel Darling, senior vice president of communications for the National Religious Broadcasters, was fired Friday (Aug. 27) after refusing to admit his pro-vaccine statements were mistaken, according to a source authorized to speak for Darling.

His firing comes at a time when Americans face a new surge of COVID-19 infections due to the highly contagious Delta variant even as protesters and politicians resist mask mandates or other preventive measures.

During a broadcast on Aug. 2, Darling, an evangelical pastor and author, told host Joe Scarborough about how his faith motivated him to get a COVID-19 vaccine. Darling described the vaccines as an amazing feat of discovery by scientists, some of whom share his Christian faith.

Darling said he was proud to be vaccinated.

“I believe in this vaccine because I don’t want to see anyone else die of COVID. Our family has lost too many close friends and relatives to COVID, including an uncle, a beloved church member and our piano teacher,” Darling told Joe Scarborough.

He expressed similar views in a recent USA Today opinion piece.

Earlier this week, leaders at NRB, an international association of Christian communicators with 1,100 member organizations, told Darling his statements violated the organization’s policy of remaining neutral about COVID-19 vaccines. According to the source, Darling was given two options — sign a statement admitting he had been insubordinate or be fired.

When he refused to sign a statement, Darling was fired and given no severance, the source told RNS.

Troy Miller, CEO of NRB, confirmed Darling was no longer with the organization. He did not respond to a question about the role Darling’s statements about vaccines played in his departure.

“Dan is an excellent communicator and a great friend. I wish him God’s best in all his future endeavors,” Miller told RNS in an email.


In a statement reported by Ruth Graham of the New York Times, Darling said that he was “sad and disappointed that my time at NRB has come to a close.”

“I am grieved that the issues that divide our country are dividing Christians,” he said in the statement, adding that he intended to devote himself to “unifying believers around the truth of the Gospel.”

While on “Morning Joe,” Darling said his Christian faith played a key role in his decision to be vaccinated — saying the Bible’s command to love our neighbors informed that decision. The vaccine, he said, helps protect our neighbors from the spread of COVID-19.

Darling also expressed sympathy for those who are hesitant to be vaccinated, seeing it as part of a larger breakdown of trust in American culture.

“When trust goes down,” he said on the show, “belief in conspiracies goes up.”


White evangelical Christians and Hispanic Protestants are among the faith groups most likely to be hesitant or refuse to get the COVID-19 vaccines, according to a recent survey from the Public Religion Research Institute. That study found vaccine hesitancy dropped among many faith groups from March 2021 to June 2021.

Still, 1 in 4 white evangelicals said they refuse to get a vaccine, while an additional 1 in 5 was hesitant, according to PRRI.

Darling criticized those who try to shame people who are vaccine-hesitant or who rejoice when someone who was unvaccinated becomes ill with COVID. Neither of those approaches is helpful, he said on the show.

He also encouraged his fellow evangelicals to consider following his example.

“I do encourage folks to talk to their doctor and really consider it, just because we just don’t want to see anyone else unnecessarily die of this lethal virus,” he said.

In a statement posted on social media, Miller stated that no employee at NRB had ever been terminated for their views on COVID-19 vaccines and that staff had been directed that NRB “stays neutral” about vaccines.

Miller also denied Darling had been fired. Instead, Miller said in his statement that Darling had been offered “a path to another position that would have provided a significant salary and full benefits.”

“He turned that offer down and chose to depart NRB,” Miller said the statement.

However, RNS has confirmed that the letter detailing Darling’s firing specifically cited his appearance on “Morning Joe” and Darling’s statements about vaccines as violations of the “stay neutral” directive.

“The employee is being terminated for willful insubordination,” the letter stated.

Founded in 1944, the NRB “works to protect the free speech rights of our members by advocating those rights in governmental, corporate, and media sectors, and works to foster excellence, integrity, and accountability in our membership by providing networking, educational, ministry, and relational opportunities,” according to its website.

The organization recently emerged from a period of fiscal distress, after operating with a series of significant budget deficits from 2012, to 2018, according to financial disclosures filed with the Internal Revenue Service. In the fiscal year 2018, the NRB had nearly $300,000 more in liabilities than assets. In 2019 and 2020, the organization had more revenue than expenses.

In the past, NRB’s CEO Miller has touted the benefits of vaccines in emails promoting the NRB’s annual convention, which draws thousands of attendees and features a massive exhibition space.

In December 2020, Miller announced that the dates for the convention, originally set for March 2020 in Grapevine, Texas, had been pushed back three months due to the ongoing pandemic. The change in dates, he said, was prompted in part by vaccines, which would help make it possible for the convention to be a “valuable and safe experience for all who attend.

“With the additional time, increased effectiveness of treatments, and widespread availability of COVID-19 vaccines, June will be much closer to a full return to normal,” he wrote.

Then in May, he announced that vaccines would allow the conference to be held with fewer restrictions, again mentioning the benefit of vaccines.

“Today, I’m excited to share that the Gaylord Texan has updated their mask policy in line with CDC guidelines — vaccinated guests no longer need to wear masks during NRB 2021!” he wrote.

News of Darling’s firing was met with anger and disappointment on social media.

“Words fail,” tweeted author and attorney David French of the Dispatch. “Dan was abruptly fired by a large Evangelical ministry for going on television and sharing why he got vaccinated in the midst of a deadly pandemic.”

“This is insanity,” tweeted ethicist and theologian Russell Moore, Darling’s former boss at the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Convention (ERLC).

Darling, an ordained minister and author of a number of books, including “A Way with Words” and “The Dignity Revolution,” joined the NRB in April of 2020, following six years at the ERLC.

Darling still believes in the mission of the NRB and his statements about vaccines, his authorized source told RNS.

In his August USA Today editorial, Darling said vaccines save lives and encouraged his fellow Christians to consider being vaccinated before more lives are lost.

“There are not many things in the world today that are worthy of our trust, but I sincerely believe the COVID-19 vaccine is one of them,” he wrote. “As a Christian and an American, I was proud to get it.”

A previous version of the story reported that a source said Darling was asked to recant his statements. After publication, the source told RNS that Darling refused to sign a document saying his pro-vaccine statements were insubordinate. The story has been updated with a statement from Darling.

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Sunday, August 29, 2021

Republican virus! Contaminated by stupidity!

This echo opinion letter was published in the Journal Inquirer a Connecticut newspaper:

For a whole year former #TFG Donald Trump was holding back the truth and spreading misinformation. Thanks to all the false conspiracy theories he and some conservative Republicans were spreading, it may well have cost over 500,000 lives. Trump has the blood of those lives on him. That happened on his watch. (Genocide!)

Vaccines are here and saving lives, as are masks. Unfortunately, a majority of Republicans and misguided citizens chose not to do either, so the pandemic is raging once again.

Children who can’t get vaccinated are falling ill and ending up in intensive-care units. The majority of the cases are occurring in Florida right now, where (stupid!) Governor Ron DeSantis is standing fast against mask mandates in schools, where the virus will spread. He is threatening to withhold salaries and possibly firing people for implementing mask mandates against his wishes.

DeSantis is a direct disciple of Trump, so this is not surprising but it is disgusting.

Doctors decide what is medically right for a child and masks work to keep children safe and alive. Does DeSantis truly not want that?

Nobody has the right to drive drunk and kill someone. And no governor has the right to not allow safety measure to keep kids alive.

These Republican governors will have the blood of children on their hands.

Return sanity to the Republican Party. Enough is enough

From Marcy Klein, Manchester Connecticut

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Saturday, August 28, 2021

Anti-vaxxers put innocent people at risk of exposure to illness and death

Echo opinion letter published in the Connecticut News Times
“Stupid is as stupid does,” a Forrest Gump quote is appropriate when speaking about the reluctance of some people (anti-vaxxers) to obtain the COVID vaccination:

#SIASD hits the nail right on the head. The COVID vaccine provides us with the ability to squash this epidemic by stopping the spread and also protecting the children who are unable to get the shot due to their age.

People who are not taking the vaccine, are increasing the risk of illness and death to themselves but also provides the virus a chance to circulate.

The time has come where we will need to mandate the vaccine for all health care employees, and federal, state and municipal employees, and require the proof of vaccination in order to dine out, or attend sports or entertainment events. Anyone not providing the proof should be denied entry because they are not only risking their lives but the lives of others, to those who say this is too much, stay home!


Get the shot or stay home.

Edward S. Marczyszak, Seymour Connecticut

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Friday, August 27, 2021

Get vaccinated! COVID vaccinations are safe and effective!

"For a large proportion of those still holding out getting vaccinated, they will simply have to do so of their own volition. It is up to all of us, from officials and health experts to neighbors and community members, to communicate clearly to these folks how important getting vaccinated is."

Vaccinations are the only way out of COVID fight

Echo opinion published in The Berkshire Eagle news.

https://www.berkshireeagle.com/opinion/editorials/our-opinion-vaccinations-are-the-only-way-out-of-covid-fight/article_577355ba-f6cd-11eb-8db0-0b538d3dc05e.html#:~:text=%E2%80%9CI%E2%80%99m%20admitting%20young,to%20do%20so.


“Young and healthy people are admitted to the hospital with very serious COVID infections. One of the last things they do before they’re intubated is beg me for the vaccine. I hold their hand and tell them that I’m sorry, but it’s too late.”

That harrowing account was written by Dr. Brytney Cobia, a hospitalist in Birmingham, Alabama., who, like many doctors, sees first-hand what damage the coronavirus can still do as the nation’s COVID vaccination push continues to stall. The unfortunate reality is that there is a critical mass of Americans who are dead-set on not getting the vaccine and cannot be convinced otherwise. Those still sitting on the fence, however, whichever way they might lean, should heed the testimony of medical professionals like Dr. Cobia and countless others across the county: Get vaccinated to protect you and your loved ones from preventable suffering, before it may be too late to do so.

Much as we all want it to be, this pandemic is not over. Over the past week, the U.S. saw a seven-day average of 95,000 new reported COVID-19 cases daily, including 100,000 new cases in a single day. This six-month high was the sort of grim milestone we hoped to leave behind after vaccines became the best available weapon in the protracted battle with the novel coronavirus.

Unsurprisingly, this alarming trend is driven by surges in regions with the lowest vaccination rates. As the more-transmissible delta variant of the virus runs rampant, half of the nation’s new cases and hospitalizations over the last week occurred in just seven states — Florida, Texas, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi — that account for less than a quarter of the national population.

A point that should have gone without saying all along now bears repeating: The path to victory over this pandemic runs through vaccinations safely leading us to herd immunity. So long as vaccination numbers continue to stall, more infectious variants will continue to compound along with preventable human suffering and the sort of disruption to our lives that proved so traumatic over the last year and a half.

This deadly and highly contagious respiratory virus knows no boundaries of state or ideology. New cases are growing far faster in states with more vaccine hesitancy, but even regions like ours with comparably higher vaccination rates are not immune from this resurgence of a deadly viral enemy. Massachusetts’ vaccination rate is second in the nation behind only Vermont. Here in Berkshire County, our vaccination rate — just above 60 percent — is similar to the commonwealth’s. This might be better than Florida, but it’s also well below what public health experts predict would be necessary for herd immunity.

This has been made painfully obvious by recent Bay State outbreaks, from Provincetown to North Adams. In the latter case, a Berkshire nursing and rehabilitation facility has recently seen more than half of residents test positive for COVID-19, including six residents that required hospitalization.

With cases on the rise, authorities at the local, state and federal levels are rightly urging caution and updating recommendations on masking and distancing to reflect the heightened risk level. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week updated Berkshire County’s transmission rate to “substantial,” one level below the highest.

From tens of thousands of clinical trials to millions of real-world applications, the COVID vaccines freely available to Americans have proven remarkably safe and effective. And while the delta variant of the virus is more contagious and more likely to spur breakthrough infections among the vaccinated, the inoculated are still significantly better protected against this and other mutated versions of the virus than those who have not received their shots. No vaccine is 100 percent effective, and the available COVID vaccines are no exception, but there’s no doubt that vaccinations are the best way to lessen breakthrough cases and curb COVID. Yet there remains a worryingly high number of vaccine skeptics despite the fact that it is clearly the safest and effective way to defend oneself and one’s family against a pandemic that has claimed hundreds of thousands of Americans and millions more worldwide. Some people in a lower-risk demographic for severe disease from COVID still believe that the risk to them is miniscule, and therefore they needn’t get vaccinated.

First, it’s plainly false that anyone — even healthy, young people — are immune to this virus or the serious threat it poses. If the dramatic accounts like those of the aforementioned Alabama hospitalist are not convincing enough, then perhaps note the evidence piling up about long-haul COVID symptoms among even low-risk populations.


Second, and more importantly, the simple reality is that forgoing vaccination unnecessarily invites greater potential for real suffering not just on oneself but on one’s community and loved ones. More vaccinations mean less serious disease and less spread. Stalling vaccinations means more spread, more serious disease and the emergence of more dangerous variants as long as we continue to give the coronavirus a foothold. It also slows reaching herd immunity, a goal meant to protect those who can’t get vaccinated for legitimate medical reasons (e.g., children under 12, those with relevant allergies) and those who are more vulnerable to respiratory viruses even when vaccinated (e.g., the elderly, those with compromised immune systems).


The debate over how to increase vaccination numbers has led to discussions about mandates. Vaccine mandates make sense in certain contexts. Berkshire Health Systems, for instance, announced Friday that all employees must be vaccinated for COVID-19 by Oct. 1. That will include Berkshire Medical Center workers as well as those in facilities run by BHS, such as North Adams Commons. More widespread mandates, however, have the potential to backfire by telegraphing the wrong message to some who remain skeptical of COVID vaccines. Telling people they must get vaccinated might push some still on the fence in the wrong direction.

For a large proportion of those still holding out getting vaccinated, they will simply have to do so of their own volition. It is up to all of us, from officials and health experts to neighbors and community members, to communicate clearly to these folks how important getting vaccinated is.

To those people: The Americans seriously sickened and sometimes killed by breakthrough infections are not just numbers; they are our countrymen, our neighbors and our family members — and it could be you as well. No one is being asked to storm a beach or take a bullet to combat this virus — they’re being asked to get a free vaccine that improves their own health outcomes. To not do so is a dereliction of self-care and the most simple yet important patriotic duty imaginable.

As the rise in case counts continues, so too will talk about implementing policies we all desperately wanted to leave behind: masking, distancing, restrictions on certain businesses, gathering limits. The difference between last year and now, though, is that we have a remarkably effective COVID-fighting weapon that, if utilized collectively, would likely make all those other trying measures unnecessary.

Fortunately, it’s quite easy to wield that weapon against this malingering viral foe — if we take it up. Please, if you haven’t already done so, get vaccinated so that we might protect ourselves and one another from needless suffering. 


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COVID pandemic, medical history and public-health

"...we have no historical precedent for the moment we’re in now," echo essay published in The Atlantic by Howard Markel.
 
As a medical historian, I have never been busier.  #COVIDHistory
What can we learn about future pandemics? 
Modern Medical history is written in real time.

Over the past 20 months, journalists and policy makers have reached out in an effort to understand what past infectious diseases might teach us about this one. These exchanges almost always end with questions about how this pandemic is similar to the influenza pandemic of 1918–19, which, until COVID-19, was the worst pandemic in human history.

The truth is we have no historical precedent for the moment we’re in now. We need to stop thinking back to 1918, as a guide for how to act in the present and to start thinking forward from 2021, as a guide to how to act in the future. 

"History will not help us now", Howard Markel.

COVID19 is the pandemic I will be studying and teaching to the next generation of doctors and public-health students.

Some similarities exist between now and 1918—the economic costs of quarantine and the fears that each virus inspired worldwide, for example. And before the Delta variant came along, when everyone was looking forward to a “hot vax summer,” traveling again, and returning to the office, I’d hoped that we might be heading to normalcy, and perhaps even to a boom similar to that of the 1920s. The influenza epidemic (along with the close of World War I) contributed to Warren G. Harding’s 1920, presidential-campaign slogan, “normal times and a return to normalcy.” Harding presided over what F. Scott Fitzgerald famously named the Jazz Age, a time when, as Fitzgerald wrote in The Crack-Up, “the uncertainties of 1919 were over—there seemed to be little doubt about what was going to happen—America was going on the greatest, gaudiest spree in history and there was going to be plenty to tell about it.”

But the past few weeks have robbed me of that thought. I cannot seriously believe that, in our socially damaged and ideologically splintered world, we have a chance at a new Roaring ’20s, a renaissance of culture and lucre.

The differences between the pandemics outweigh the similarities. In terms of raw numbers, COVID-19 has sickened more people than the 1918–19 influenza pandemic did, even though demographic purists might object and ask to account for the smaller global population in 1918 and the relative youth of many of the influenza’s victims. Influenza appears to have killed approximately 500,000 to 650,000 Americans; the estimates of deaths worldwide begin at about 20 million but go as high as 100 million. 

As of August 18, 2021, the recorded global caseload of COVID-19 was more than 208 million, the recorded death rate in the U.S. was more than 623,000, and at least 4.3 million worldwide have died.

Such startling statistics come as the more contagious Delta variant continues to fan an inferno that has never stopped consuming oxygen. In other words, this pandemic is far from over. In all of recorded history, the world hasn’t really halted as abruptly as it did for most of us during the past year or so. In 1918, social-distancing orders were adopted for far shorter periods of time (on average, about 10 weeks), compared with our year-and-a-half-long coronavirus endurance test. And finally, our distrust of one another seems unparalleled, as masks and vaccines have become more about political choices than public-health concerns.
Let's learn about the real time history of COVID to protect future generations from deadly pandemics.

Over the past two decades, I have written several books and hundreds of scholarly papers on how pandemics create fear of the unknown. I’ve studied this fear, and yet even I have fallen prey to it during the pandemic. Recently, I took a walk around my neighborhood. I made sure to wear a face mask, even though I was immunized with the Pfizer vaccine in January. I slowed my gait to stay six feet away from other pedestrians, many of whom I knew and who were trying to do the same for me. Looking at people headed in my direction, I could sense their fear of invisible virions that I may or may not have expelled from my lungs. And then I was alarmed to realize that I was thinking ill of them. What if they were those people who refused to be vaccinated but, nonetheless, refused to wear a face mask?

For the past 75 years, the wealthier nations of the world have enjoyed a reprieve from most infectious diseases—largely thanks to robust mass-vaccination and public-health programs. 

Nevertheless, in this century alone, we have already experienced six contagious crises (SARS in 2003; H1N5 avian influenza in 2005–06; H1N1 influenza in 2009; MERS in 2012; Ebola in 2014; and COVID-19). Our post-COVID-19 world—if we ever get there—will likely feature successive, emerging, and reemerging infectious threats. 

Extreme climate change may bring about a whole new microbial world rife with threats to the human population. 

Rapid international jet travel, a growing anti-vaxxer movement, antibiotic resistance, and zoonotic jumps of viruses from one species to another only accelerate this danger.

To manage that future, I won’t look to our past; I’ll look to how we handle our present. We must learn to innovate, plan, and test evidence-based pandemic protocols; develop and resupply stockpiles of protective gear, intensive-care devices, medications, and vaccines; and fund basic infectious-disease research

We must also insist that our leaders demand transparent communication and disease surveillance among all nations as new threats develop around the world.

Citizens, too, have a responsibility to tell their leaders they want sound, science-based public-health policies to protect them.

Most of us are happy to pay taxes supporting our local fire department even if the odds of our own home burning down are small. In the event of such a disaster, we have confidence that the firefighters will come to extinguish the blaze before it is too late. 

In fact, the same federal financial support must be applied to funding our public-health agencies and for our citizens who are experiencing food, housing, or income insecurity.

What keeps me awake at night is the real risk that our flummoxed leaders will forget about the very issues that got us into this mess in the first place. They will move on to other projects and plans. Such purposeful amnesia only helps to set us up for another pandemic—a tragedy of Himalayan proportions, not 
to mention a definite threat to our collective health. The coronavirus pandemic is setting a new benchmark, one we’ll be studying to help us navigate the next one.

Howard Markel, is a professor at the University of Michigan. He is the author of the forthcoming book, The Secret of Life: Rosalind Franklin, James Watson, Francis Crick, and the Discovery of DNA’s Double Helix.

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Thursday, August 26, 2021

Helping Afghan refugees via faith based organizations and NGOs

This article provides website links to help people who want to donate to the Afghan relief efforts or for volunteers who want to help in other ways.
Here's how you can help people fleeing violence in Afghanistan

NGO's - non-governmental organization (NGO), as its name suggests, exists independently from government oversight, though it may receive government funding. Their missions tend to be broader in scope and more global, supporting health initiatives and crises, education, economics, infrastructure, women and children’s rights and social problems around the world. One NGO with operations in Afghanistan is the International Rescue Committee
How to help Afghans arriving in the US after fleeing the Taliban
Echo report published in Religion News Service by Emily McFarlan Miller.

Also, this report published in Courier Post*, in south New Jersey: "Catholic Charities USA has a link on its national website for donations specifically for Afghan refugees and says, Y'our gift supports our agencies as they welcome vulnerable Afghan refugees resettling through the Special Immigrant Visa Program. They helped the U.S. military for 20 years and now it is our opportunity to help them and their families. Services include legal assistance, translation, childcare and other essential services'.”

Catholic Charities, which operates worldwide and in South Jersey, typically works with refugees, asylum seekers and immigrants as they acclimate to life in the U.S. It was not immediately known whether they planned to assist Afghan refugees locally.
 

Here are a few important other faith-based organizations working with Afghans both overseas and arriving in the U.S. and some ways you can help them.

(Religion News Service - RNS) — As the United States planned its military withdrawal from Afghanistan, faith-based refugee resettlement organizations led calls for the evacuation of Afghan allies whose lives may be endangered by the country’s new Taliban regime.

Now, as the U.S. continues its evacuations of American citizens and Afghans who have worked for the U.S. over the past 20 years, those organizations are leading efforts to help Afghans settle into the country.

And many Americans are looking for ways to help their new neighbors.

“We are overwhelmed at the support of our community! We have never seen this scale of love, generosity and support in World Relief’s history,” said James Misner, senior vice president of strategic engagement for World Relief, one of the nine agencies contracted with the U.S. government to resettle refugees in the country.

“In recent years refugees and immigrants have been politicized. Right now there is broad base and bipartisan support to help our Afghan allies — get them out and get them here.”

Here are a few of the faith-based organizations working with Afghans both overseas and arriving in the U.S. and some ways you can help them.

Bethany Christian Services

Bethany Christian Services, based in Grand Rapids, Michigan, has welcomed and supported more than 250 Afghan refugees since 2001, mostly in western Michigan and eastern Pennsylvania, according to its website.

Churches or individuals in its resettlement areas (including Grand Rapids, Holland and Kalamazoo in Michigan or Philadelphia, Allentown and Lancaster in Pennsylvania) can contact their local Bethany offices to co-sponsor a newly arrived Afghan family and help them settle into their new homes. Volunteers also can assemble welcome baskets, which can include:
  • Kitchen tools and utensils
  • Hygiene items
  • Sheets and blankets
  • School supplies
  • Gift cards to places such as Walmart or Target
  • A personal note welcoming refugees to their new home
Anyone can make a financial donation to help Bethany provide those needed items to refugees on its website.


Church World Service,  is another agency working in partnership with the U.S. government to resettle refugees, has welcomed more than 7,000 Afghan Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) recipients and their families since 2009, according to its website.

CWS has issued an emergency appeal to support Afghans now arriving in the U.S., asking for $700,000, in financial support to offer transportation, food and other emergency support and up to $450,000 in in-kind housing support.

Monetary donations can be made online or mailed to Church World Service, P.O. Box 968, Elkhart, IN 46515 (designated to Protect Our Afghan Allies). Those interested in sponsoring a family arriving in their community or providing in-kind support — including landlords able to rent housing to new arrivals — can fill out a form online or email refugeewelcome@cwsglobal.org.

CWS has also compiled sample messages urging lawmakers to protect Afghans seeking safety on its website that can be shared on social media or sent to lawmakers.

Episcopal Migration Ministries

The refugee resettlement and migration ministry of the Episcopal Church, is another one of the agencies working in partnership with the U.S. government to resettle Afghan allies.

Its greatest need is housing assistance, and it is accepting financial donations for housing and other basic needs both online and by mail at DFMS-Protestant Episcopal Church US, P.O. Box 958983, St. Louis, MO 63195 (designated to Episcopal Migration Ministries and Afghan allies).

Individuals and congregations can also fill out a form online for more information about volunteer opportunities through one of Episcopal Migration Ministry’s partners across the country, attend an informational webinar at 1 p.m. Eastern on Friday (Aug. 27) or use the Episcopal Church’s online tool to easily email their senators and representatives to continue advocating for evacuating and resettling Afghan refugees.

HIAS

Founded as the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, is another agency working in partnership with the U.S. government to resettle refugees, has also identified housing as its greatest need.

Those able to provide temporary or permanent housing or to support Afghan families in their communities in another way can fill out a form on the HIAS website or reach out to one of its partners across the country. It is also working with Airbnb to connect displaced Afghans with people who have space to share.

The organization has created an email form to contact the White House and sample email texts for contacting lawmakers for those who want to advocate for continued evacuations from Afghanistan.

And those who want to contribute money to help provide food, housing assistance, job training, gender-based violence counseling and other critical goods and services can donate on HIAS’ website.

Islamic Relief USA

Islamic Relief USA has been offering humanitarian aid in Afghanistan for 20 years, according to its website.

Its staff in Afghanistan has identified Kabul, Balkh, Herat and Nangarhar provinces as areas in need of immediate support. It is distributing water storage units and hygiene kits for displaced families; food; essential items such as cooking pots, utensils, pots, soaps and detergents, solar-powered lamps and towels; and family-sized emergency tents.

It is accepting financial donations to support those efforts on its website.

Jewish Family and Community Services of Pittsburgh

Jewish Family and Community Services of Pittsburgh is working with several local groups to prepare for Afghan refugees, according to local news reports.

Pittsburgh is one of the cities receiving an influx of Afghans arriving in the U.S. with SIVs, according to JFCS, and the organization has set up a United Way fund to help them build new lives in the country. It also is looking for donations of furniture, gift cards, groceries and other needs for specific families on its website, as well as volunteers to help families with transportation, apartment set-up and mentorship.

Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service

Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, another agency working in partnership with the U.S. government to resettle refugees, has compiled a number of resources on its website for those looking for more information about the situation in Afghanistan.

For those interested in getting involved, LIRS is calling for volunteers to help support Afghans arriving in the U.S. by offering airport pickups and apartment set-ups and by bringing meals to individuals and families. Sign up on the LIRS website to help Afghans currently arriving in Seattle and Tacoma in Washington; Houston and Fort Worth in Texas; and the Washington, D.C.-Virginia-Maryland area or to be placed on a standby list should they arrive in other locations.

LIRS is also collecting financial contributions for its Neighbors in Need: Afghan Allies Fund, which provides food, housing assistance, clothing and other basic supplies for newly arrived Afghans.

And it has set up an online tool that allows users to easily email their senators and representatives, as well as the White House, to express support for continued evacuations and other protections for Afghan allies.

World Relief

World Relief has shared information about the situation in Afghanistan, as well as ways to volunteer, advocate and give on its website.

Those wishing to join World Relief’s global network of over 95,000 volunteers can reach out to the office nearest them. Specifically, offices receiving a large number of Afghans, including Sacramento, California, need donations of furniture and other household items to prepare apartments, families willing to open their homes temporarily until housing is available and landlords willing to rent apartments to Afghans arriving without a credit history.

Those interested in advocating can email lawmakers through World Relief’s website, urging them to “expand and expedite life-saving refugee protections for Afghans fleeing violence and persecution.”

Those able to give can make a one-time or monthly donation online or purchase items on World Relief’s Amazon wishlist.

*The Courier Post also shared that The American Legion Post 372, in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, is accepting donations towards the Joint Base effort, which will assist military members and Afghan refugees. Items requested are bottled water, energy drinks, snacks (nuts, trail mix, beef jerky), instant coffee, diapers, baby wipes, travel-size toothbrushes and toothpaste, and more. Items can be dropped off at the American Legion Post 372,1532 Martin Ave., Cherry Hill from noon to 9 p.m.

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Dateline COVID19 pandemic

The Coronavirus Pandemic- echo report by Caroline Mimbs Nyce published in The Atlantic


COVID-19 is not going away.
The virus that causes it is on track to become endemic, like the ones that cause the common cold.
You’ll probably encounter it at some point, if you haven’t already.
That doesn’t mean you should stop taking precautions. We can still buy ourselves time—time to vaccinate more people and avoid deadly hospital surges. But the virus will be part of our lives in the long term.
Why COVID19 virus outbreak is so bad published in VOX
The Florida surge is a microcosm of a summer gone wrong.

“We need to prepare people that [the current wave of cases is] not going to come down to zero,” one psychologist warned my colleague Sarah Zhang.

The virus itself could still get worse. “Delta could continue to ratchet up its rate of spread, or it could be ousted by another super-infectious variant,” our staff writer Katherine J. Wu warns. “There is no playbook for evolution.”

Global inequities could worsen as the virus transitions to endemicity. “The human and economic costs of new diseases are borne by all, but unequally,” the historian Kyle Harper reminds us.

But eventually, the coronavirus will become a less worrisome part of life. “When everyone has some immunity, a COVID-19 diagnosis becomes as routine as diagnosis of strep or flu,” Sarah Zhang reports.

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Wednesday, August 25, 2021

An interesting history review about Jewish resistance to Fascism

An echo essay published in the History News Network by Giles Tremlett, a contributing editor to the Guardian and Fellow of the Cañada Blanch Centre, London School of Economics. 

Mr. Tremlett has lived in and written about Spain for over twenty years, and is the author of Catherine of Aragon, Ghosts of Spain, and Isabella of Castile, winner of the 2018, Elizabeth Longford Prize. His newest book, The International Brigades: Fascism, Freedom and the Spanish Civil War, will be published this week by Bloomsbury.
The Holocaust claimed six million Jewish lives. The Second World War, provoked by the same fascist regimes who slaughtered Jews, killed a further 70 million civilians and soldiers, including 405,000 Americans. Fascism was the 20th century’s greatest trauma.

It seems obvious, then, that both the first Jews and the first Americans to take up arms and risk their lives to halt fascism’s spread must go down in history as heroes, with their story widely taught.

Sadly, that is not the case. The honor of being “first armed resisters” to fascism goes to the men and women of the International Brigades, a remarkable volunteer army of 35,0000 people from 85 of today’s countries who travelled to Spain in 1936 to defend its democracy against the fascist-backed rebels of future dictator General Francisco Franco.

At least one in seven volunteers were Jews, making up a force of 5,000 men and women. They provide an alternative narrative to any claim that Jews were late to respond to the threat of the coming Holocaust.

Some 2,800 volunteers were Americans, with up to a third of them Jews and at least eighty African Americans also travelling to Spain (including, in this non-segregated unit, the first African American to command white American troops, Oliver Law). None, however, appear in the imaginary pantheon of American national heroes. And while Israel now honors them, they are also not well-known amongst Jews globally. The reasons for that are simple. Most were political radicals, many were communists and few were Zionists.

The Spanish Civil War was a first success for armed fascist expansionism and a testing ground for the forces, weapons and tactics of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime in Germany and Benito Mussolini’s Italian fascism. Franco relied heavily on them for troops, airmen and weapons, while the United States and other democracies embraced a form of appeasement known as “non-intervention,” which only served to embolden Hitler. In fact, many historians see the war in Spain as the opening battle of World War II, which started just five months after Franco declared victory in April 1939 and began a 36-year dictatorship.

The first Jews to join that resistance had travelled to the eastern Spanish city of Barcelona for another remarkable event – the People’s Olympiad. This was an alternative Olympic Games organized as a rival to the forthcoming Nazi showcase of the official Berlin Olympic in August 1936, which would be spoiled for Hitler as proof of the Aryan race’s natural supremacy by the legendary African American athlete Jesse Owens (1913-1980).
Jesse Owens, the American track and field athlete won four gold medals at the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games. His long jump world record stood for 25 years.

While Hitler had already enacted the 1935, Nuremberg Laws, declaring Jews non-citizens, the People’s Olympiad specifically welcomed them as “a nation.” It also boasted the faces of Black and Asian athletes on posters, just as the International Brigades would later put African American officers in charge of white American troops for the first time in history. It is difficult to express quite how remarkable this was for the times. Few countries outside the Soviet Union, indeed, explicitly backed racial equality or internationalism in the 1930s and even there it was more policy than practice. Spain, however, was governed by an elected left-wing coalition, the Popular Front, much like neighboring France.

Spanish fascists and their reactionary allies in the military, church and landed classes, found that intolerable. On the day the Olympiad was to start, they launched a failed coup which – with the crucial help of Hitler and Mussolini – became a civil war.

Hungarian athlete Abrasha Krasnowieski and the exiled Polish soccer player Emmanuel Mink were amongst a handful of Jews who, instead of fleeing, immediately joined the workers militia units formed to stop the coup. They were the first of thousands of foreign volunteers who flooded into Spain over the coming months, many joining the International Brigades when these were set up three months later. Abraham Chakin, the American team’s wrestling coach, returned the following year and died fighting.

Over time, so many Jews enlisted that Yiddish became a language for passing on orders between people from disparate parts of Europe and the Americas. Sephardic Jews, meanwhile, found themselves working as translators, since their Ladino language was close to Spanish. "I am fighting against those who establish an Inquisition, like that of their ideological ancestors several centuries ago." US volunteer Chaim Katz explained, comparing Franco to the Spanish monarchs who had expelled the Sephardic Jews in 1492.

A separate Jewish unit, the Botwin company, was eventually formed – which published its own Yiddish newspaper. "All Jewish volunteers understand the importance of the mission they have to fulfil as chosen fighters of the Jewish people," it declared.

"The International Brigades became the vehicle through which Jews could offer the first organized armed resistance to European fascism," one of them, the American historian Albert Prago, observed later. But did they consciously travel to Spain as Jews, or as something else?

The International Brigades were organized by Comintern, the Communist International based in Moscow, but operated as a “popular front” force welcoming (in theory) any antifascist. Half of the volunteers were communists. Scholars disagree over how many Jews consciously identified as "Jewish fighters", rather than as atheist internationalists, but the two things are not contradictory. “I took up arms against the persecutors of my people—the Jews—and my class—the Oppressed,” Katz explained.

A letter I discovered in Amsterdam's International Institute of Social History archive while writing The International Brigades: Fascism, Freedom and the Spanish Civil War (published in August by Bloomsbury) expresses the ideological divide between more traditional Jews and those who had embraced left-wing internationalism, while also finding common ground. 

In fact, the letter I found was written by 23-year-old Belgian communist Piet Akkerman (who had changed his name from Israel) to his conservative mother, Bluma.

While a "gulf" divided her faith from his atheism, he said, "there is one trait that I have developed clearly; that Jewish stubbornness when it comes to holding on to an idea." 

Workers and Jews, Akkerman argued, shared a history of oppression. "Have not 99 per cent of the pogroms in the world been organized to distract attention from the misery of the people by provoking hatred towards the Jews, while those who are really responsible, the authors of misery, laugh in secret because instead of attacking their power, people slaughter the Jews?" he wrote.
Piet ended his letter by begging Bluma not to cry and telling her that "your son tries to be a man who both thinks and acts humanely." Both he and his brother Emiel, another volunteer, were killed. Their partners - Vera Luftig and Lya Berger – later volunteered as nurses, along with a dozen women from their Jewish youth group in Belgium.

Piet's letter fits what scholar Jaff Schatz has called "the moral affirmativeness, longing for justice, and universalist ethos shared by the Marxist vision and Jewish tradition".

Between one and two thousand Jewish volunteers died in Spain, while others ended up as prisoners of war, including those in a group sneered at by a Francoist officer as "those Americans, with their Jews, and Negroes and democracy". They eventually lost their war, and Franco ruled as dictator until 1975.

Britain, the United States and other democracies had pursued a policy of non-intervention in Spain - appeasing Hitler and Mussolini while trying to stop their own citizens from volunteering. 

Unfortunately, Hitler was emboldened by that and invaded Poland, starting World War Two, soon after Franco's victory. Jewish International Brigade veterans often found themselves fighting in resistance movements and partisan armies across Europe. Vera Luftig, for example, played a key role in the Soviet Union's Red Orchestra espionage ring.

At Auschwitz and Buchenwald, Brigades veterans led the camp resistance groups that fought with their guards in the final days and hours before liberation.

For many years, Jewish history overlooked the brigaders. The Cold War narrative turned them into suspect allies of Soviet communism, while in Israel they were scorned for fighting a foreign war rather than (in the case of 250 volunteers who travelled from Palestine) staying home to fight against the Arab Revolt of 1936 to 1939.

Over time, however, that image has changed. Brigaders were mostly not Zionists, but Israel came to recognize that, in their fight, they had been defending all other Jews. At the same time, some veterans emigrated to Israel, finding greater acceptance there than in, say, communist Poland, which persecuted them after the Six Day war in 1967.

Final acceptance came from President Chaim Herzog (himself a former major-general) in 1986. "At the time of the Spanish Civil War there were 55 million people alive who would soon die during the Second World War. There were also six million of our brethren still alive in Europe who did not yet realize that a sword was poised over their necks. But there were people who realized just what a fascist victory in Spain would mean," he said.

"In the name of the people of Israel, the principal victims of the Nazis and Fascists, I hereby pay homage to the honour and glory of all those volunteer fighters who used their bodies as a dam against a wave of evil." Those words are inscribed on a monument to them in Barcelona, along with praise for "Jewish heroes" and their "glorious sacrifice" from former International Brigades Chief Commissar Luigi Longo.

The American volunteers found difficulty enlisting to fight in World War Two, since the army mistrusted them as political radicals. (Some volunteers, like Hollywood Ten member Alvah Bessie, would eventually be targeted and jailed by the House Un-American Activities Committee).

Exceptions included Irving Goff, an American Jewish volunteer and guerilla fighter, who was among those who joined the CIA’s predecessor, General “Wild Bill" Donovan’s Office of Strategic Services (OSS), as a specialist in behind-the-lines missions. Edward Carter, one of the few Black Americans allowed to serve as a frontline infantryman, was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor.

The future Yale and Harvard professor classical studies Bernard Knox also served in the OSS. Amongst his tasks was to liaise with European partisan groups, many of them communist, that were led by former International Brigaders. When he was quizzed about his numerous medals from European armies during his Yale interview to study a PHD after the war, Knox was shocked to be told that he had been “a premature antifascist.”

How, he wondered, could anyone be a “premature” anti-fascist? “Could there be anything such as a premature antidote to a poison? A premature antiseptic? A premature antitoxin? A premature anti-racist?" he wrote later. "If you were not premature, what sort of anti-fascist were you supposed to be?”

*Fascism is a form of far-right, authoritarian ultranationalism characterized by dictatorial power, forcible suppression of opposition, and strong regimentation of society and of the economy, which came to prominence in early 20th-century Europe.

Maine Writer post script:  Does the definition of Fascism bring to mine images of January 6, 2021, in Washington DC?

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Does Maricopa Arizona have a common root in the phrase "mea culpa"?

Former Guy is barking like a junk yard dog about bogus election fraud because he and the Republicans lost the 2020, election. Throughout a daunting process of trying to prove the unprovable, i.e., #StopTheSteal, the Arizona Maricopa County recount debacle is the most absurd of excercises.  (I am not a linguist, but I relate the name "Maricopa" with the Latin phrase "mea culpa", meaning "I am wrong".)  If my name association is correct, the name "Maricopa", sure fits with the expensive, failed Arizona Republican recount.

Maricopa: An expensive and embarrassing #TFG cult mistake!

This echo opinion by Michelle Cottle published in The New York Times describes the absurdity of the Maricopa recount debacle: 

Monday was supposed to be a banner day for #TFG Donald Trump and the MAGAverse. After multiple delays, legal challenges and public controversies, the results of the third — and hopefully final — review of the presidential voting in Maricopa County, Ariz., was scheduled for delivery to its Republican sponsors in the State Senate. At long last, the proof of mass election fraud would be laid out for all to see! Mr. Trump would be vindicated! Maybe even reinstated!

At least, that’s what MAGA die-hards hunkered down in their bunkers of disinformation were hoping. Most everyone else — including plenty of Arizona officials from both parties — just wanted this gong show to end.

Alas, it was not to be. On Monday, the Republican president of the State Senate, Karen Fann, announced that the Cyber Ninjas, the Florida-based firm overseeing the recount, had not yet completed a full draft report after all. It seems the firm’s chief executive and two other members of the “audit team” had come down with Covid-19. Also, the State Senate had only just received images of the ballot envelopes from Maricopa County, which still needed to be analyzed for inclusion in the final report.

And so the spectacle grinds on.

The clown-car chaos in Arizona is a near-perfect distillation of what #TFG Trump has done to the Republican Party, as well as much of the broader public. On what feels like a daily basis, he beats the drum about a stolen election, setting a tuneful lie that many Republican voters still dance to as the party mandarins look on, in either active support or silence. The political ramifications of this disinformation will be on display in Arizona’s U.S. Senate race next year, as well as those elsewhere, as independents and moderates assess if this is the party they want to reward.

But there’s another cost that should worry all of us: the integrity of election audits, which are important and are necessary. While many secretaries of state are now pushing for new standards for such audits, the Arizona recount stands as an object lesson about the embarrassing damage to democracy that one party can inflict when led by a sore loser who still manages to scare people.

For those who have blissfully forgotten the Arizona back story: #TFG Trump was mad about narrowly losing the state to Joe Biden. He was madder still when two recounts of vote-rich Maricopa County confirmed his loser status. 

Desperate to appease him and his devoted cult base, a gaggle of Republican state senators arranged for yet another review, this one run according to their preferences and overseen by private contractors of their choosing. The result has been a poisonous, partisan P.R. stunt so poorly executed that it makes the hunt for a new “Jeopardy!” host look smooth by comparison.

From the jump, it was clear that Arizona’s Republican lawmakers weren’t interested in putting together a serious audit. Ms. Fann tapped the Cyber Ninjas to run the show, despite the firm’s total lack of auditing experience — and despite it not submitting a formal proposal. How did this happen? It may have helped that the firm’s chief executive, Doug Logan, had tweeted his support of some of the wackier election-fraud conspiracy theories. (Venezuela? Really?)

The Republican lawmakers arranged for state taxpayers to foot part of the bill — an outrage in itself. But the Cyber Ninjas also gathered millions in private funding from Trump supporters. These include the former chief executive of Overstock.com, himself another spreader of election-fraud manure; a nonprofit group led by the former Trump administration official and QAnon flirt Michael Flynn; and a nonprofit founded by a host on the MAGA-tastic One America News Network.
As for the ballot counting process, the word “squirrelly” doesn’t begin to cover it. Among other absurdities, the ballots were examined for secret watermarks and for bamboo fibers, a nod to the conspiracy theory that fake ballots had been shipped over from Asia. And forget careful screening of workers for political bias. 

Among those hired was the former state lawmaker Anthony Kern, a “stop the steal” crusader who was photographed on the steps of the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 riot. (After a reporter posted a picture on Twitter of Mr. Kern at a counting table, the ex-lawmaker was removed over concerns about “optics.”)

In an independent evaluation of the process, Barry Burden, the head of the Elections Research Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Trey Grayson, a former Republican secretary of state in Kentucky, detailed the review’s many “maladies.” 

“They include processing errors caused by a lack of basic knowledge, partisan biases of the people conducting the audit, and inconsistencies of procedures that undermine the reliability of the review and any conclusions they may draw. In particular, the operation lacks the consistency, attention to detail and transparency that are requirements for credible and reliable election reviews.”

Even some Republican officials have had enough. In May, the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors, a Republican-dominated body, accused state lawmakers of having “rented out the once good name of the Arizona State Senate” to “grifters.”

Last week, the Maricopa County recorder, a Republican, issued a long prebuttal to the Ninjas’ expected report, lamenting that the process had been an unnecessary disaster, that its results could not be trusted and that it was time for his party to “move forward.”

If only.


Some of the costs of the recount are easier to calculate than others. Because of concerns that the security of its voting machines had been compromised during the review, Maricopa County decertified the equipment. Last week, county officials demanded that the State Senate shell out $2.8 million for the purchase of new machines. Ms. Fann promptly pooh-poohed the request, but if the Senate doesn’t officially respond within 60 days, the county can sue.

However the Arizona odyssey ends, officials who care about restoring faith in the electoral system should take steps to prevent such nonsense from spreading. The Republicans’ recount was never going to change the outcome of the 2020 race. But it did become a model for Trump dead-enders across the nation — a beacon of obduracy.

At its summer conference this month, the National Association of Secretaries of State overwhelmingly recommended establishing concrete guidelines for postelection audits. Among other measures, they advised states to adopt timelines for audits, to ensure that area election officials remain central to the process and to rely only on state or federally accredited test labs. Outside contractors, they urged, should be used sparingly and operate under intensive oversight.

Having observed the slow-rolling Arizona debacle, states would be well served to install guard rails sooner rather than later. If there’s one thing the Trump years taught the nation, it’s that you cannot simply rely on public officials to operate in good faith or abide by widely accepted norms.

Serious, well-run audits play an important role in safeguarding the integrity of elections. What Arizona’s Republican senators arranged, by contrast, is what you’d get if you crossed a clown pageant with a QAnon convention and made the whole thing open bar. The whole mess would be entertaining, if it weren’t so destructive.

Michelle Cottle is a member of The New York Times editorial board.

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