Thursday, May 28, 2026

Origin Story: Global Dumping Ground

Many years ago, I gave a speech about the “Circle of Poison” in North Carolina. It was one of many such speeches I gave all over the world.

After the speech, a member of the audience approached me and asked to speak confidentially. “It’s not just hazardous pesticides that are being exported to poor countries,” said this informant.

“You should check out the export of hazardous waste.”

During our brief conversation, I ascertained that this person was a state official with direct evidence of the problem.

I didn’t take any notes, and the source left without giving me any contact information. They just wanted to plant the idea.

When I returned home from that trip, I put together a small team to look into the allegations that U.S. companies were shipping hazardous waste abroad.

And that was the origin of the Center for Investigative Reporting’s many-faceted “Global Dumping Ground” investigations.

First we broke the story in The Nation. Then we established a major investigative project that eventually led to a PBS documentary with Bill Moyers, a book, and more articles.

There were awards and impacts and continuing exposes but nowhere was that original tipster acknowledged — until now.

HEADLINES:

  • Trump says no one will control Strait of Hormuz (Al Jazeera)

  • U.S. and Iran Trade Strikes, Further Threatening Negotiations (NYT)

  • US justice department launches criminal investigation into Trump accuser E Jean Carroll (BBC)

  • Cornyn’s Defeat Fuels Tensions With President Trump in Senate G.O.P. (NYT)

  • They’re All Ken Paxton Now (Mother Jones)

  • Trump is getting the Republican Party that he wants. But can he win in the midterms? (AP)

  • Biden sues Justice Department to stop release of audio from interviews (NBC)

  • New Fed report warns of ‘remarkable’ increase in households skipping meals due to food costs (CNN)

  • Stephen Colbert gets the last laugh on CBS (Salon)

  • ICE detainees are dying by suicide at an ‘alarming’ rate, an AP investigation finds (AP)

  • Trump’s green card memo kicked off a holiday weekend of panic (BI)

  • Trump’s effort to redraw electoral maps ahead of November’s midterm elections ran into resistance this week from Senate Republicans in South Carolina and a panel of three federal judges in Alabama. Twelve South Carolina Republicans joined Democrats in voting against eliminating the state’s lone Black-majority House district, citing political and logistical concerns. The judges in Alabama ruled that the Republican-backed plan “intentionally discriminated based on race.” [HuffPost]

  • Kennedy’s Push to Curb Antidepressants Has Shaken Psychiatry (NYT)

  • These popular household fruits are coated with the most pesticides and forever chemicals (Independent)

  • Trump Administration to Send Americans Exposed to Ebola to Kenya (NYT)

  • A senior Ukrainian commander sees an imminent 'turning point' in war with Russia (Reuters)

  • Russia just passed a law allowing its central bank to down drones (CNBC)

  • Russia pressures U.S., Ukraine’s allies to flee Kyiv, threatening ‘systematic strikes’ (NBC)

  • Israel and Hezbollah clash along a strategic Lebanese river (AP)

  • Japan’s Point of No Return (Foreign Affairs)

  • This big university system is embracing AI. Students and faculty aren’t all on board (NPR)

  • Pete Hegseth Shaking With Rage After Imagining Plus-Sized Astronaut (Onion)

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Kickers

A year ago, I had some advice for Trump, the reality TV star, as he pondered whether to start a war with Iran, by way of a writing lesson:

When writing a screenplay, you use a three-act format. One description of this type of narrative structure is as follows.

Act One: You introduce the characters and set the scene. Let’s say there’s a monkey and a tiger in a meadow near a forest. The tiger chases the monkey through the meadow, almost catching him at the end of act one.

Act Two: Lots of action. The monkey barely escapes the tiger through various maneuvers until he is cornered near a very tall tree. By the end of the act, the monkey has climbed up the tree with no visible means of escape as the tiger circles below.

Act Three: Using his wiles, the monkey tricks the tiger into looking away while he scampers down the tree and into the forest. A wild chase ensues with the monkey barely eluding capture again and again. Finally, at the far edge of the forest, the tiger forces the monkey up an impossibly tall tree, one we can’t imagine the monkey ever getting down from. 

Now you’ve reached to the conclusion. You have to resolve this story somehow.

I sometimes use this example with students to make a simple point — you better know how the story will wrap up before you begin to write it.

Cut to Trump. If he was going to bomb Iran, he damn well better know how he would end that war before he started it.

Otherwise he will end up with one more story with a bad ending.

HEADLINES:

  • Trump’s War Is Staggering to an Incoherent Defeat (Atlantic)

  • US launches new strikes on Iran, targeting missile sites and boats (BBC)

  • Tehran labels US attacks ‘gross violation’, says it is prepared to respond (Al Jazeera)

  • Iran Warns of Retaliation After U.S. Strikes (WSJ)

  • The energy shock is not over yet (FT)

  • South Carolina Senate Does Not Act on New Midterm Map, Defying Trump (NYT)

  • Federal court blocks Alabama’s midterm gerrymandering plan, a blow for Republicans (Politico)

  • Thomas, Alito Dissent as Supreme Court Blocks Florida From Suing California (Newsweek)

  • Paxton Routs Cornyn in Senate G.O.P. Runoff With Trump’s Backing (NYT)

  • America’s ugliest primary? Texas Republican infighting could hand Senate seat to Democrat (Guardian)

  • Democrats feud over stock trading as they sharpen anti-corruption case against Trump (AP)

  • Trump’s advanced age and threats to his life serve as reminders of his own mortality (CNN)

  • American journalist charged with serving as unregistered agent for China (Politico)

  • Trump administration proposes NDAs for all federal workers (WP)

  • Russia tells Marco Rubio U.S. citizens should leave Kyiv ahead of ‘systematic’ strikes on Ukrainian capital (CNBC)

  • Ukraine’s latest defense against Russian missiles: Making them miss (Politico)

  • Evacuation zone shrinks after ‘worst-case scenario’ of Southern California chemical tank explosion averted, officials say (ABC)

  • The Great Depopulation (Atlantic)

  • Ebola patients flee health facilities amid attacks. (Reuters)

  • New Ebola Vaccine Reportedly Nearing Clinical Trials (Forbes)

  • 6 things a neurologist does to keep his brain healthy (WP)

  • Why science is becoming less innovative (Economist)

  • Elon Musk is losing the culture war — he just doesn’t know it yet (MS Now)

  • Iran’s national soccer team will sleep in Mexico and travel to the US on the days of its three World Cup matchesafter Washington declined to host the squad for the tournament, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said. (Reuters)

  • AI Agents Plunged the Tech World Into Chaos. Here’s Exactly How That Happened (Wired)

  • ‘You can’t control everything’: the rise in plastic surgeons asked to create ‘AI face’ (Guardian)

  • These Robots Are Making Meals for a Nonprofit in San Francisco’s Tenderloin (Wired)

  • Anthropic aligns with Vatican over White House as Pope Leo stokes AI fears (WP)

  • Artificial Intelligence Floods Court Dockets with Home-Brewed Lawsuits (NYT)

  • &R Block Location Mistaken For ‘Backrooms’ Fan Event (Onion)

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

The Pope and (A)I

It’s unusual when I choose what the Pope says to be the  top story on my list of headlines, but Pope Leo’s comments on AI are a worthy exception to that rule.

The Pope showed that he understands the risks as well as the positive potential of AI in his statement. If I am reading him right, he’s recommending the kind of intelligent regulation of the risks that can evolve along with the technology, and consistent with our understanding of that evolution.

You might call it the beginning of a “regulatory dance.”

It won’t do to simply ban AI or to set it free like Section 230 did with the Internet. The preferred approach would be more like that we’ve achieved with nuclear technology, which is not been perfect but largely effective at preventing the worst outcomes.

I can identify with this on a personal level as it is similar to how my medical team is trying to help me manage my own chronic illness. As the illness progresses, our strategy evolves, seeking to keep it in check, one dance move at a time.

A benefit of this strategy is that I can keep on dancing, i.e., sorting the news and writing essays like this one.☺️

HEADLINES:

Monday, May 25, 2026

First Off the Press


In his memoir, “Like a Rolling Stone,” Jann Wenner has a chapter called “The Scoop of the Seventies” devoted to the articles Howard Kohn and I wrote in 1975 about Patty Hearst and the SLA.

Part One of that series was called “The Inside Story.”

For most of the many months that story was in process, it was a secret known only to a very small group of us. We were uncertain when we would publish it, partly because Patty Hearst and her kidnappers-turned-colleagues were still underground, and we didn’t want to inadvertently be responsible for getting them caught or killed.

(Remember that all the rest of the group had died in a fiery shootout with the LAPD.)

As fate would have it, the FBI located and arrested Hearst and the others on a Thursday in September and publication of our article was set for the following Monday. All hell would be breaking loose upon publication because Jann had arranged for NBC’s Today show to cover the release exclusively, with the rest of the media invited to the office for what would prove to be a raucous press conference Monday morning.

Security around the release was tight; Jann hired Pinkerton’s to guard all the issues of the magazine except one.

The entire staff of the magazine was secluded at a resort near Big Sur for the long weekend while Howard and I stayed in San Francisco to tape our interview with NBC before we headed south to join the rest.

Finally, late Saturday afternoon, in Jann’s words, “Howard and David made it down…brandishing a copy of the new issue that no one had seen yet.”

A photo of that copy of the magazine we brandished that night is at the top of this post, with the words handwritten by Jann up top “Do Not Leave This Lay Around — David.”

So that’s the story. It turns 51 come September.

HEADLINES:

 

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Last Goodbyes

There’s a line from an old country song that sticks with me: “The last goodbye’s the hardest one to say.” 

Yes, it’s hard to say goodbye to the people you love, so that line came to mind again Saturday when the time came to say my last goodbye to my sister, Kathy, who died recently at the age of 76.

A memorial service was held for her at her church in the small town in Michigan where she lived. I watched by courtesy of a YouTube video.

My youngest sister Carole delivered this remembrance:

“There were four of us siblings growing up and since Kathy was closest to me in age, I don’t remember a time when I didn’t look up to her. She was beautiful, with dark brown hair and eyes that could change from blue to green to gray, depending on what she wore and her mood.

“We were a close family, and many of Kathy’s favorite activities can be traced to our upbringing.

“Our mother loved words and language. She encouraged us to read and relentlessly corrected our grammar. Kathy and I shared a bedroom, and she often read to me before we went to sleep. Kathy loved fiction in many forms, and poetry, too.

“Our dad loved singing, and music was a major joy in Kathy’s life. She sang in our church choir with dad and me, and in the high school choir, and in the choir in this church for many years. Kathy loved old Broadway musicals, folksingers, and rock and roll. She also loved the traditional and new church music that celebrates Christmas and Easter.

“Kathy was an expert at many crafts, most notably knitting and sewing. She was a patient sewing instructor who helped others master computer-driven sewing techniques. She loved jewel tones, and both in her crafting and her clothing she was drawn to deep, rich blues, greens and purples.

“Kathy was an RN and worked as a neonatal intensive care nurse at Sparrow Hospital. Those little ones required constant observation and care, and her sensitivity and focus allowed so many to grow and thrive.

“Kathy’s three children, their spouses and her grandson were so dear to her. She cherished the time spent caring for Desmond when he was a baby.

“Over the years, Kathy had many health challenges. After the doctors concluded she had lupus, she developed a sensitivity to light that limited her time outside. She managed to still enjoy the outdoors through the big picture windows at her home. Watching the deer, birds, and squirrels (and her dog Milo chasing those squirrels) was a favorite pastime. This time of year, she would have been buying seeds to plant her lettuce and tomatoes, and filling the hummingbird feeder with nectar.

“Kathy had an eye for detail. This made her an excellent proofreader when she worked for Rolling Stone, and it was one reason she was so good at nursing and at crafting. When she had cataract surgery, she chose to optimize her near sighted vision, so that she could see to knit and sew, since she didn’t mind wearing glasses for distance. She’s the only person (aside from their older sister) who could always tell my identical twin grandsons apart.

“She had a good sense of humor, too. On her birthday one year, our mom and dad made dinner for her family, and dad made a big deal about how he had cooked this meal for her, which was touching since he rarely cooked. Turns out she had trouble cutting it, because he served her a fake rubber steak!

“A few months later, for Dad’s birthday in November, Kathy got her revenge. She brought out a cake, and went on about it being a new recipe that she hoped would taste good. Dad started trying to cut it, only to discover that she had covered a kitchen sponge with icing!

“So they were even.

“Telling these stories makes me miss her even more. Daughter, sister, wife, mother, grandmother, friend, Kathy lives on in our hearts and our memories.”


HEADLINES:

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Stillness and Motion

AAA reports that 39 million Americans are going on roadtrips this holiday weekend, which reminds me of my youth. We’d always go camping, a tradition several of my family members are carrying on as they enjoy trips of their own.

Gas prices are high, which reminds me of my father’s habit of always keeping a running total of fillups. He’d make a notation of how many gallons at what price and the mpg per fillup based on the odometer reading. He’d ask me to do those calculations in my head, and I did so.

I continued with that tradition for a while as an adult, but let it slip away as my life became more complicated.

Holding onto things as opposed to letting them go is much on my mind these days. I’ve been sorting through some of my possessions, discarding stuff I no longer need, and preserving the rest.

Unlike the 39 million others, I am not on the move this weekend. I’m stationary, watching the world spin around me and wishing that just for a moment everything could stay put.

But that is not the way of the world, which I, finally, must concede as well.

***

The resignation of Tulsi Gabbard from Trump’s cabinet makes almost complete the disappearance of women from top positions in his administration.

Her departure formalizes what was already the case — that she was out of the loop of those close to Trump as he continues to wage foreign policy from his gut. 

No one close to Trump will challenge him on that. But we, as a people, must.

HEADLINES:

 

Friday, May 22, 2026

Genius Loves Company


By legend, Albert Einstein was a lone genius, coming up with ideas and concepts nobody else thought of. But according to a revealing article called “Not a Lone Genius” by CalTech professor Diana Kormos-Buchwald, the truth is more complicated. She based her article on The Collected Papers of Albert Einsteina 16-volume series of books co-edited by numerous scholars.

“He was not the genius working in an attic with a pen and paper,” she says. “Einstein may not have been working with large teams, but he was deeply embedded in the science community. Colleagues gave him advice and encouragement, but also criticized his work. And he, in turn, was instrumental in guiding and challenging others.”

The article notes that Einstein developed his special theory of relativity in 1905 with help from his college friend Michele Besso and his first wife, Mileva Marić.

He later perfected his general theory of relativity in 1915 with help from both Besso and another college friend, mathematician Marcel Grossmann.

Perhaps most illustrative of all was his involvement in experiments with younger physicists to test the structure of radiation and matter, and ultimately the development of the ground-breaking field of quantum mechanics. When approached by one of his young colleagues about being listed as a co-author on an important paper on that topic, Einstein demurred:

“I just don’t know whether I should count as a co-author since after all you did all the work...”

Einstein was a tinkerer and inventor of gadgets, including a patented refrigerating system. And he was an original thinker, who indeed came up with brilliant ideas. But perhaps his true genius was as a synthesizer, a collaborator, and a mentor of younger people.

And there might be a lesson in that for the rest of us.

(I published an earlier version of this in 2021.)

HEADLINES: