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Commentary: Catholic-heavy Supreme Court moves right as the church moves left

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With his nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to replace the retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy, President Donald Trump has succeeded in doing for the judicial branch what he has often failed or neglected to do in his administration: acting efficiently and with minimal controversy to promote conservative principles.

In doing so, the president has also driven the ideology of the Catholics on the court further to the right. Kavanaugh, who early in his career was a law clerk for Kennedy, is a more doctrinaire conservative and is more heavily and outwardly invested in his Catholic identity than his mentor.

Perhaps unintentionally, Trump has exacerbated the already heightened angst (or excitement, depending on who’s being asked) about the institution’s ever more conservative Catholic majority.

For those who aren’t keeping score: Among those nominated by a Republican president, Justices Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, John Roberts and Samuel Alito are all Catholic. Fellow conservative Neil Gorsuch was raised Catholic but has more recently attended an Episcopal church. Liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor, appointed by President Barack Obama, is also Catholic.

Kavanaugh’s rise to the high court is welcome news for the religious right of whatever denomination and a relief to social conservatives who have been put off by Trump’s obnoxious speech and behavior but nevertheless supported him in hopes that he would shape the federal judiciary to their liking.

Once wary of Catholics, conservative Protestants have worked with Catholics on shared priorities for decades. They now see the learned jurists of the Catholic right as indispensable allies. With their elite credentials and intellectual grounding, the Republican justices represent a large, sometimes controversial, corps of legal minds the evangelical tradition has not produced on its own.

One of the judges on the Catholics’ deep bench is Amy Coney Barrett, who was reportedly in the running for the seat now offered to Kavanaugh. A former Notre Dame law professor, she became a heroine to religious conservatives when Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., at Barrett’s confirmation hearing for a circuit court judgeship last fall, questioned her impartiality as a judge, saying, “The dogma lives loudly within you.”

This gaffe was a rallying cry for conservatives enthralled with the notion that devout, orthodox religious people are systematically excluded from positions of elite influence, particularly positions of legal authority.

Many social conservatives hoped Trump would nominate Barrett to the high court, even though she has been a judge for only seven months, if only to “trigger the libs”: A Catholic woman joining the Catholic men in overturning Roe v. Wade against the other female justices’ dissents would have been a sweet victory for the right.

This triumph of conservative Catholicism on the court has a dark lining, however, in the increasingly deep political split within American Catholicism. Though always a matter of debate, Catholic politicians’ and even judges’ conformity to party platforms is causing especially tense discussion right now. This spring, at a conference on Catholicism and politics in an age of division held at Loyola University-Chicago, San Diego Bishop Robert McElroy challenged Catholic political thinkers to take up social causes beyond the church’s opposition to abortion rights.

At Georgetown University last month, Catholic leaders from across the spectrum met to discuss polarization in the church. Archbishop Jose Gomez of Los Angeles, while known as a fierce defender of immigrants’ rights, called abortion “the most important social justice issue facing the church,” according to America magazine’s account of the conference.

Some of the division is being driven by Pope Francis and his appointed cardinals and bishops, who have shifted the emphasis of Catholic politics to social justice concerns, speaking out on the environment and gun violence, even redefining immigration policies recently as a “life” issue. In June, McElroy told a group of Catholic priests that Francis rejects “a notion of law which can be blind to the uniqueness of concrete human situations, human suffering and human limitation.”

Amid this leftward drift, the Catholic Supreme Court has shown evident disregard for workers, the environment and voting rights, taking positions that directly oppose Catholic social teaching.

Of course, the justices decide on matters of law, not theology. Those of us attuned to the role of religion in public life may ultimately concede that in matters of law, faith is not as consequential as we are inclined to think.

But it will be important to note how the Jesuit-educated Kavanaugh’s background influences his perspectives on the rights of labor and migrants, the needs of the poor and disadvantaged, and the problems inherent in America’s excessive confidence in individualism and capitalism.

Jacob Lupfer, a frequent commentator on religion and politics, is a writer and consultant in Baltimore. The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily represent those of Religion News Service.


Carmelo Anthony reportedly talking to Rockets, Heat as he gets set to leave Thunder

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The Thunder want to help Carmelo Anthony find a new home. To that end, the team is reportedly allowing the veteran forward to speak with other teams ahead of his expected departure from Oklahoma City.

According to ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, those teams include the Rockets and Heat. He reported Tuesday that among the Houston officials who met with Anthony was coach Mike D’Antoni, who has said in the past that the forward undermined him when they were both with the Knicks.

However, The Post reported Monday that, according to multiple sources, D’Antoni “would be fine with Anthony coming to Houston.” Anthony has a close friend on the Rockets in Chris Paul, as he does with the Heat, in Dwyane Wade. In addition, another potential suitor for Anthony, the Lakers, also features the lure of playing alongside a close friend in LeBron James.

First, though, Anthony must be moved off the Thunder, either by trade or by being released. The latter option could be exercised by Oklahoma City if it decides to stretch the remainder of his contract, one season at $27.9 million, over the next three years, thereby gaining some short-term salary-cap relief.

That could be enticing, considering the Rockets are over the cap and staring at a massive luxury-tax bill from the NBA. However, they may also opt to swap Anthony for players on longer deals who they deem more useful, with a trading partner possibly eyeing the cap space his contract expiration would offer in 2019, when there could be several big-name free agents on the market.

While Anthony has a no-trade clause, he waived it to be dealt from the Knicks to the Thunder last summer, and The Oklahoman reported Tuesday that he is set to again waive it to facilitate a move elsewhere. However, Anthony will do so with “the understanding that if he’s not sent to a team he approves, it’ll buy him out and make him a free agent,” the newspaper wrote.

In that scenario, once Anthony is available, the Rockets would reportedly be ready to pounce. Houston, which has lost forwards Trevor Ariza and Luc Mbah a Moute in free agency, is “determined” to sign Anthony if and when he hits the market, Wojnarowski tweeted Monday.

Anthony, 34, offers almost none of the defensive skills Ariza and Mbah a Moute brought to the table, but even on the downslope of his career, the 10-time All-Star promises greater scoring punch. In his lone season in Oklahoma City, Anthony averaged 16.2 points and set a career high with 169 3-point field goals on .357 shooting beyond the arc. And in a positive sign for what would be his likely role in the Rockets’ offense, he shot .372 on catch-and-shoot 3-point attempts (per NBA.com).

The role assigned to Anthony last season, which became increasingly limited as the Thunder wound through a first-round playoff loss to the Jazz, was not taken by him as a positive development. Claiming afterward that he had no interest in “sacrificing” for a “bench role,” Anthony said, “I think everybody knows that I’ve sacrificed kind of damn near everything.”

“Family, moving here by myself, sacrificed my game for the sake of the team, and was willing to sacrifice anything and everything in order for this situation to work out,” he continued at the time. “So it’s something I really have to think about, if I really want to be this type of player, finish out my career as this type of player, knowing that I have so much left in the tank and I bring so much to the game of basketball.”

D’Antoni had previously clashed with Anthony over his role with the Knicks, as the coach wanted him to shift from small forward to power forward. Anthony won that power struggle, only to eventually embrace the position change as the entire league, with the Warriors leading the way, emphasized small-ball lineups.

The new outlook on his fit should help smooth the way for a new relationship between D’Antoni and Anthony, should the latter wind up in Houston. Wojnarowski wrote Tuesday that, in their meeting, “D’Antoni made it clear to Anthony that he thinks the circumstances together would be far different in Houston, and welcomed the idea of coaching Anthony again.”

It remains to be seen if that happens or how well it works out, but it’s evident that all sides are welcoming the idea of Anthony spending this season on a team other than the Thunder.

Kevin Knox gives Knicks fans hope with summer league showing

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Las Vegas • Some New York Knicks fans already are reconsidering their feelings about first-round pick Kevin Knox.

The No. 9 selection out of Kentucky was booed by some Knicks fans on draft night, but the 18-year-old is already showing great potential. He ended pool play as the No. 3 scorer in the Las Vegas summer league with 23.3 points per game, and he averaged seven rebounds per contest. Social media is abuzz with Knicks fans hoping the 6-foot-9 forward is the right player to team up with Kristaps Porzingis and help the Knicks return to glory.

Knox had 29 points and nine rebounds Tuesday in a loss to the Los Angeles Lakers. He made 5 of 7 3-pointers against the Lakers after struggling from deep in the first two games in Las Vegas. He scored 16 points during a 30-3 Knicks run that gave New York its only lead early in the fourth quarter.

He’ll be in action again Thursday when the Knicks play the Boston Celtics in tournament action.

Knox has shown a little something different in each game in Las Vegas. In a loss to Utah on Sunday, he only made 5 of 15 shots but he went 7 of 8 from the line and had two steals. Before that, he had 22 points on 8 of 20 shooting and grabbed eight rebounds in a win over Atlanta on Saturday.

Knox showed the potential to be a big-time scorer as a college freshman. He averaged 15.6 points and was the leading scorer for a Kentucky squad that reached the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament.

He’s not the only rookie from Kentucky making things happen in Las Vegas.

• Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the 11th overall pick, is averaging 19.7 points and shooting 45 percent for the Los Angeles Clippers.

• Hamidou Diallo, a second-round pick, is averaging 9.3 points per game while shooting 53 percent for the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Wednesday’s summaries:

Clippers 89, Wizards 74 • Reggie Upshaw scored 24 points and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander added 17 points and six assists to help Los Angeles defeat Washington in their opening tournament game.

Jerome Robinson scored 15 points and Angel Delgado added 14 for the Clippers.

Devin Robinson had 26 points and 11 rebounds and Aaron Harrison added 12 points for the Wizards.

The Clippers dominated most of the game. They led 31-15 at the end of the first quarter and took their largest lead of 28 points late in the third quarter. Washington cut its deficit to 10 in the fourth quarter.

The Clippers advanced to play the top-seeded Los Angeles Lakers on Thursday. The Lakers were unbeaten in pool play and earned a bye.

Cavaliers 96, Kings 84 • First-round pick Collin Sexton had 25 points and seven assists to help Cleveland win its tournament opener over Sacramento.

Sexton, who played just one year at Alabama, made 9 of 15 field goals and 7 of 9 free throws. Jamel Artis scored 14 points and Okaro White added 13 for Cleveland.

Justin Jackson scored 20 points and Zach Auguste added 19 for the Kings.

Cleveland led nearly the entire game and was up 20 points in the fourth quarter.

The Cavaliers will play the Houston Rockets in the second round.

Rockets 109, Nets 102 • Danuel House had 18 points and eight rebounds to help Houston win its tournament opener over Brooklyn.

De’Anthony Melton, a second-round pick from USC, scored 17 points for Houston. Zhou Qi scored 17 points and Deng Adel and RJ Hunter each scored 13 points for the Rockets, who never trailed.

Milton Doyle scored 21 points, Shawn Dawson scored 15 points and Theo Pinson added 14 for the Nets.

Bulls 95, Mavericks 83 • Antonio Blakeney scored 28 points to help Chicago beat Dallas in its tournament opener.

Blakeney, the G-League Rookie of the Year last season, made 7 of 13 field goals and all 10 of his free throw attempts.

Wendell Carter, the No. 7 overall pick from Duke, scored 19 points for the Bulls. Chandler Hutchinson added 16 points and 11 rebounds and Donte Ingram added 13 points for Chicago.

Kyle Collinsworth scored 14 points and Phil Greene and Josh Adams added 10 each for the Mavericks. Jalen Brunson, the second-round pick from Villanova, scored eight points on 2 of 9 shooting but had seven assists.

Pistons 64, Timberwolves 59 • Second-round pick Bruce Brown had 15 points, 11 rebounds and six assists and made a pair of free throws with 1.4 seconds left to help Detroit (2-2) hold off Minnesota.

The Timberwolves closed a 19-point halftime deficit down to 47-43 by the end of the third quarter and briefly led early in the fourth. But Detroit retook the lead and Minnesota missed a pair of 3-point attempts that would have tied it in the final minute.

Khyri Thomas made a pair of free throws with 6.5 seconds left to make it a two-possession game for the Pistons.

Keita Bates-Diop had 16 points and nine rebounds for the Timberwolves (2-2).

Detroit will face Chicago in the second round.

Hawks 107, Pacers 101 • Tyler Dorsey had 24 points, eight rebounds and five assists and No. 5 pick Trae Young added 23 points and eight assists to help Atlanta (2-2) knock off Indiana.

Atlanta trailed by 27 early in the third quarter and erased the deficit at 90-89 early in the fourth — the Hawks’ first lead since the opening basket.

Young had five of his eight assists in the fourth quarter and sank a runner with 11.1 seconds left to give Atlanta a four-point lead.

Alex Pothyress had 21 points, Aaron Holiday had 13 points and nine assists, and Alize Johnson had 12 points and 14 rebounds for the Pacers (1-3).

Atlanta will face the No. 2 seed Trail Blazers who earned a bye to advance to the second round.

Raptors 85, Nuggets 77 • OG Anunoby scored 22 points to help the Raptors (1-3) beat the Nuggets.

Giddy Potts added 14 points and Chris Boucher scored 12. Potts was 4 of 7 from 3-point range and Boucher had six blocks.

The Raptors took the lead during a 16-0 run to open the fourth quarter and mostly led by double digits the rest of the way.

Monte Morris had 21 points and Malik Beasley scored 19 for the Nuggets (3-1).

The Nuggets will face the Hornets in the second round.

Hornets 87, Warriors 67 • Dwayne Bacon scored 19 points and Willy Hernangomez had 18 points and 13 rebounds to help the Hornets (3-1) top the Warriors.

Miles Bridges, the No. 12 overall selection, added 17 points and eight boards for Charlotte.

Marcus Derrickson had 20 points and Rion Brown scored 13 for the Warriors.

Charlotte never trailed in the contest.

Papa John’s founder resigns from pizza company’s board after reportedly using a racial slur

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New York • Papa John’s says founder John Schnatter has resigned as chairman of the board.

The company made the announcement late Wednesday, hours after Schnatter apologized for using a racial slur during a conference call in May.

Forbes said Schnatter used the N-word during a media training exercise. When asked how he would distance himself from racist groups, Schnatter reportedly complained that Colonel Sanders never faced a backlash for using the word.

In a statement released by Louisville, Kentucky-based Papa John’s, Schnatter said reports attributing use of “inappropriate and hurtful” language to him were true.

“Regardless of the context, I apologize,” the statement says.

The University of Louisville also said Wednesday that Schnatter resigned from its board of trustees, effective immediately.

Schnatter stepped down as CEO last year after blaming slowing sales growth on the outcry surrounding football players kneeling during the national anthem. He remains chairman of the company he started when he turned a broom closet at his father’s bar into a pizza spot.

Papa John’s shares fell nearly 5 percent Wednesday after the report, closing at $48.33.

Utah Royals beaten in Seattle by the Reign, 1-0

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U.S. national team star Megan Rapinoe scored on a header in the 54th minute and the Seattle Reign beat the Utah Royals 1-0 on Wednesday night in Washington in NWSL action.

Rapinoe’s header came off a corner kick by Stephanie Catley as she floated to the back post and connected with a header that went the opposite side of the net and over the head of Royals goalkeeper Abby Smith.

It was the first game back in Seattle for Royals coach Laura Harvey, who led the Reign to NWSL titles in 2014 and 2015.

The Royals were without Becky Sauerbrunn, who is injured, and Diana Matheson, who was serving a one-match suspension handed down by the league’s disciplinary committee.

The loss drops the Royals into sixth in the NWSL standings with 21 points ahead of Saturday’s nationally-televised game at Rio Tinto Stadium against Alex Morgan, Sydney Leroux and the Orlando Pride.

Leonard Pitts: Black people are tired of having to explain ourselves

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For barbecuing.

For selling bottled water.

For napping in a dorm.

For mowing a lawn.

For smoking.

Perhaps you recognize the list. If not, be advised that it represents a few of the slew of recent high-profile episodes in which police have been called out on black people for reasons so trivial, nonsensical and stupid as to beggar belief.

These incidents, many captured in cellphone video, have resulted in anger, ridicule, occasional job loss for the instigators and, in one case, corporate sensitivity training. They have also provided a window, for those who need it, into the challenge of breathing, existing, minding your own business, just trying to go about your day, while black.

Not that there is anything new here. To the contrary, this behavior is as old as the Republic. The only difference is that now we see it on video and more attention is being paid. But if, for some of us, this is a trending topic, it is, for the rest of us, just life. We’ve never known a country wherein some white people did not feel they had the absolute, God-ordained prerogative to regulate us — nor the right to call police when we declined to be regulated.

Why else do you think George Zimmerman felt empowered to stalk 17-year-old Trayvon Martin through a Sanford, Florida, neighborhood? He would require this unknown boy to explain himself. He would get answers. He ended up killing the child instead.

Friday makes five years since a jury failed to hold him accountable. Zimmerman, the innocent man just trying to defend his neighborhood, has since compiled a long list of run-ins with the law. Trayvon, the guilty boy who simply had to be up to something, is still dead. Yet too many white people still accord themselves the right to demand that black people explain themselves. In recent days, cops have been called on African Americans ...

For working out at a gym.

For shopping.

For stopping for dinner at Subway.

For trying to use a community pool.

For wearing socks at a community pool.

The old “Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore” used to display a world map with the South Pole on top. It’s a perfectly valid view — there’s no up or down in space — but if you’ve grown used to viewing the world north-side up, it was jarring, a visual metaphor for how difficult it can be to see a familiar thing from an unfamiliar point of view. If you are white in America, the familiar thing is the idea that black equals danger.

And too often, you don’t question that assumption. You barely know you’ve made it. I’m reminded of a reader who wrote to tell me what black people must do to earn his respect. That we should crave his respect was a given. That maybe he should ask how he might earn our respect did not enter into his thinking.

Just as he didn’t recognize, much less question, his implicit assumptions, many white people never question their “right” to regulate African Americans. It never occurs to them that black people, who work, pay taxes, go to school, raise their kids and get dinner on just like normal people, deserve to expect, just like normal people, that they’ll be left the heck alone when bothering no one and minding their own business.

Five years after the Zimmerman acquittal would be an excellent time for them to finally get that. Because it’s tiresome to know that on any given day, you might be stopped and required to explain yourself ...

For checking out of an Airbnb.

For inspecting a house.

For golfing.

For waiting at Starbucks.

For walking home in the rain.

Leonard Pitts is a columnist for The Miami Herald. lpitts@miamiherald.com

Commentary: We are in a battle for our nation’s soul

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When in 2008 Barack Obama was elected the nation’s 44th president, American voters (some 69 million) fulfilled Rev. Martin Luther King Jr’s civil-rights-era dream:

“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”

And despite pundits’ warnings against reading too much into this victory, many of us were thrilled by the sight of the nation’s first African-American president and the realization that our nation had momentarily embodied the vision of its founding fathers: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.”

So two years later, when Tea Party zealots stormed the nation’s capitol with the slogan of “Don’t Tread on Me,” images of a coiled rattlesnake and caricatures of the president as an ape, we knew (or should have known) the “white backlash” had arrived. How deep and widespread it was, was hard to fathom.

But one thing was evident: Tea Partyites perceived a particular, and peculiar, reality. They saw the nation’s traditional power hierarchy upended: A black man, America’s former “n-----,” was President.

It has long been the tool of politicians seeking to limit the influence of the nation’s minorities to issue calls for “Law and Order” and appeals to the “Silent Majority” (as Richard Nixon did) or to proclaim themselves “the law-and-order candidate” who speaks for “the forgotten American,” as Donald Trump did.

So let’s not be fooled. This rhetoric was, is, and forever will be shorthand for: Let’s reinstate America’s white supremacist culture, and let’s stifle the voices and visions rising from the country’s emerging multi-cultural plurality.

Donald Trump is a chronic liar and a con man. He’s an incompetent politician with a limited grasp of U.S. history. But he knows one thing well — powerless people hunger for, and are fascinated by, spectacles of power, real or not.

He knows economically distressed people want to hold onto the illusion of racial privilege, because his America is not offering much else.

He knows the inequities, the frustrations, that lie beneath our society’s polite veneers can be shortchanged if there are scapegoats, people to blame. And he’s betting those raw resentments can be directed at new immigrants, refugees, Muslims, Islam, the nation’s progressive agenda and even the idea of democracy itself. He’s also betting our fear of each other will overcome our capacity to seek and work for the common good.

We are in a battle, folks, for the nation’s soul.

Leslie Kelen
Leslie Kelen

Leslie Kelen, Salt Lake City, is a child of Holocaust survivors and the author/editor of five books, including “This Light of Ours: Activist Photographers of the Civil Rights Movement.”

Holly Richardson: U.S. puts profits ahead of the lives of the world’s babies

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There is no question about what decades of studies have found. Breastfeeding is best for babies. But somehow the United States can’t quite get on board with a resolution that says as much, instead using bullying and threats of retaliation to try and kill it off at a spring meeting of the World Health Assembly in Geneva.

It was supposed to be a simple thing — a noncontroversial resolution that would reaffirm policies already, including limiting deceptive advertising practice for breastmilk substitutes. Instead, the U.S. representative came unhinged, first attempting to strip language from the resolution asking countries to “promote, protect and support breastfeeding.”

When that did not work, they resorted to threats and intimidation towards Ecuador, the original sponsor of the resolution. Ecuador caved quickly and no one else seemed anxious to step into the fray until Russia volunteered to carry the resolution.

According to New York Times reporter Andrew Jacobs, a Russian delegate said carrying the resolution was a matter of principle.

“We’re not trying to be a hero here, but we feel that it is wrong when a big country tries to push around some very small countries, especially on an issue that is really important for the rest of the world.”

Pretty awkward when Russia calls you out for being a bully.

A spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services, the agency leading the charge to torpedo the resolution, claimed that the resolution placed “unnecessary hurdles” on moms who do not breastfeed.

“These women should have the choice and access to alternatives for the health of their babies,” they said.

Monday, President Trump tweeted about the New York Times story, saying in part: “The U.S. strongly supports breast feeding but we don’t believe women should be denied access to formula. Many women need this option because of malnutrition and poverty.”

Of course the resolution does not deny anyone access to formula. What it does do is prioritize breastfeeding over a $70 billion formula industry. It’s also not about stigmatizing women who do not breastfeed, but let’s be frank: Real or perceived stigma is a first-world “problem” that does not end in the death of a baby.

In the United States and other developed nations, women have the privilege of not having to think twice about whether or not their water is clean enough for formula (unless, perhaps, they live in Flint, Michigan). They don’t usually face the prospect of their infant dying of diarrhea because they chose to or were unable to breastfeed. And, they don’t have to worry about formula being inaccessible once their breastmilk has dried up. One news article about breastmilk substitutes showed a picture of a store carrying 113 different kinds of breastmilk substitutes. Refugees living in camps and the extremely poor of the developing nations do not have the luxury of going to the corner store and buying formula.

When I was in Bangladesh earlier this year, I met a couple of mothers whose infants were not being breastfed but had been put on formula at birth. The local population had an average salary of $1 per day, while the refugee population has zero income. The cans of formula were $20 each. Local relief organizations cannot absorb the cost of buying the three or more cans a week that babies need, so they must rely on the large international organizations to continue supplying formula.

What happens far too often, though, is that mothers begin to make the formula stretch by diluting it more and more, so that babies tummies are full, but the nutritional value is negligible. They begin finding substitutes to the substitute — the water used to boil rice, perhaps, or other non-nutritive but affordable options. Almost always, the water used for mixing formula or cleaning bottles is not clean water. Dish soap can also be a luxury and I never have seen a bottle brush in a refugee camp.

The things we take for granted in the United States — clean water, easy access to stores that sell formula and even bottle brushes — are not readily available worldwide and that lack exacts a high price. A 2016 study in The Lancet, the world’s leading medical journal, estimated that 823,000 babies lives could be saved each year if they were breastfed exclusively for six months. Those are a lot of precious lives lost unnecessarily.

Perhaps the reason behind the U.S. opposition can be summed up by the CEO of one of the major formula manufacturers. In his Q1 2016 earnings call with shareholders, Mead Johnson CEO Peter Kasper Jakobsen said: “The start to the year in our U.S. business was affected by market share losses from the highs we saw in the middle of 2015. On a positive note, we believe the strengthening labor market and workforce participation rates have caused a rise in breastfeeding rates to level off over the last four months or so.”

What a sad, sorry statement of prioritizing profits over the health, well-being and even the very life of our most vulnerable.

America, it’s not all about you. Your babies are not the only ones that matter. If you’re mantra is “All lives matter,” let’s actually include all lives, not just American ones.

(Photo Courtesy Holly Richardson)
(Photo Courtesy Holly Richardson)

Holly Richardson, a regular Salt Lake Tribune contributor, has breast and bottle-fed her babies, has no guilt or shame over her choices. She also knows that “breast is best” and can, in fact, save lives. Follow Holly on Twitter @HollyontheHill.


Commentary: Do Americans really want to trash NATO?

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President Donald Trump is at it again. Having just arrived in Brussels for the NATO summit, he marked the occasion by launching a full-scale attack on the Germans, whom he promptly accused of being “captive to Russia.” Germany is not just any country, mind you — it’s one of our most important allies, whose troops are still serving by our side in Afghanistan. But given everything that has happened so far, I doubt anyone at the summit was really surprised. On Tuesday, Trump had already sent out the following tweet: “NATO countries must pay MORE, the United States must pay LESS. Very Unfair!”

Foreign policy experts in Washington and other world capitals were outraged. German Chancellor Angela Merkel pushed back against Trump’s comments in unusually forceful terms, noting that “we can make our independent policies and make independent decisions.” But Trump’s fans seem to be eating it up. (That last Twitter comment on NATO got more than 13,000 retweets and almost 64,000 likes.) His attacks on our transatlantic allies certainly don’t seem to have dented Trump’s popularity among his supporters: 87 percent of Republicans think he’s doing a great job.

All of which raises an important question: Does the president’s systematic trolling of our allies reflect the desires of his constituents? Are Americans really sick of NATO and our other international entanglements? Some observers argue that Trump is tapping into long-standing American traditions of isolationism, fueled by a deep suspicion of decadent foreigners and “global elites.” Trump’s fondness for the slogan “America First” traces its roots directly to the isolationist campaigns of the 1930s.

Polls suggest that he’s on to something. In 2013, after years of apparently endless war in Iraq and Afghanistan, Americans’ appetite for overseas intervention plunged to historic lows. Surveys show that large numbers agree with the proposition that U.S. allies aren’t bearing their full share of the costs of their own defense. This sense that our overseas friends are “free-riding” at U.S. expense slots neatly into the populist rage against the status quo that lifted Trump to the White House.

Yet take a closer look at those same opinion surveys and the message becomes more complicated. Solid majorities of Americans routinely register strong support for NATO and our other allies around the world. How does that square with those concerns about burden-sharing?

Security expert Patrick Cronin points out in an interview that transatlantic crises are nothing new. “What’s different about this one is that it’s been generated by deliberate design of the U.S. president,” he says. In the 1950s, President Dwight Eisenhower’s stance on the possible use of nuclear weapons rattled European allies. In the 1970s and 1980s, NATO responded to the stationing of Soviet short-range missiles in Eastern Europe by building up its own missile forces in the United Kingdom and West Germany, to enormous domestic controversy. The Reagan administration even tussled with the Germans over their imports of Soviet natural gas — a fight that presaged Trump’s current nagging about Berlin.

Nor is Trump the first president to urge NATO allies to boost their share of spending on defense. (Barack Obama famously reproached the allies by saying “we can’t do it alone.”) Yet none of Trump’s predecessors ever really questioned the existence of the alliance itself. Pressuring allies to get their act together is one thing; sowing doubt about the United States’ willingness to defend its partners is something entirely different. And while most Americans are fine with urging allies to do more for their own defense, there’s little evidence that they’re keen to blow up NATO altogether. “If he’s just driving a better bargain, most Americans will be fine with it,” says Cronin. “But I don’t think there’s any fundamental disagreement on the mainstream view that transatlantic allies share the same interests and values — and that it’s better to work together than apart.”

And that raises an even more disturbing question: Why would Trump go to such lengths to undermine NATO if he doesn’t stand to gain voter approval by doing? It could be that he’s acting according to a deep-seated conviction that the United States would be better served by going it alone; he does, after all, have a long-standing record of criticizing our friends overseas. But perhaps it’s also worth noting that Trump’s incendiary comments about NATO are guaranteed to bring a big smile to the face of the man the U.S. president will be meeting in a few days. That would be Vladimir Putin.

Christian Caryl is an editor with The Post’s Opinions section. Follow Christian on Twitter @ccaryl.

Letter: Tribune’s story about Rocky was tabloid journalism

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Having just read Nate Carlisle’s article on Rocky Anderson’s law office published on June 17, I am somewhat speechless.

Employee challenges more than likely are the norm and not the exception with companies the world over. Why, therefore, does a case of two disgruntled colleagues at his law office, while painful and difficult on all sides, suddenly become front-page “newsworthy”? There are avenues open to employees to express grievances that would give all parties an opportunity to address charges and respond to complaints.

The Tribune article was a character smear, and the only reason I can think of why The Tribune would publish something so subjective, so arbitrary and so unfair would be to climb on board the current tabloid wave sweeping the country.

Mr. Anderson should do us all a favor and file a complaint against The Tribune. This is not journalism and one reason why newspapers across the country are losing credibility and readership. At a time when so many of our cherished institutions are under such assault, we must continue to set the highest standards for truth and responsible journalism.

Carlisle’s article was a disgrace to your organization and to your profession in general.

Randall Tolpinrud, Salt Lake City

Leonid Bershidsky: What this World Cup says about immigration

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Three of the four national teams that made it to the World Cup semifinals — France, Belgium and England — are, one might think, icons of European diversity. Immigrants and sons of immigrants are overrepresented on these squads compared with the demographics of these countries as a whole. But one could also see this diversity as a sign that integration isn’t working too well in much of Europe.

France’s starting lineup in Tuesday’s semifinal against Belgium contained five players born overseas or to immigrant parents: Cameroonian-born Samuel Umtiti; N’Golo Kante, whose parents came from Mali; son of Guinean parents Paul Pogba; Kylian Mbappe, whose father is Cameroonian and mother Algerian; and Blaise Matuidi, son of an Angolan father and a Congolese mother. That’s 45 percent of the starting 11. Non-European Union immigrants and their children make up only 13.5 percent of France’s population, according to Eurostat.

Belgium’s starting 11 also had five players of immigrant background: Nacer Chadli, who started out playing for the Moroccan national team before he switched to Belgium; Marouane Fellaini, whose parents are also Moroccan; Vincent Kompany and Romelu Lukaku, whose fathers are Congolese; and Mousa Dembele, whose father is from Mali. Belgium’s population of first- and second-generation non-EU immigrants is 12 percent.

England, too, has a greater proportion of players with non-European immigrant backgrounds — mostly Caribbean, as in the cases of Kyle Walker, Ashley Young, Raheem Sterling and Jesse Lingard; Dele Alli’s father is Nigerian — than the U.K. has such residents. Their share is 14 percent of the overall U.K. population.

England head coach Gareth Southgate is not quite right when he says his team “represents modern England.” Neither he nor the French and Belgian coaches, who have voiced similar sentiments, are wrong to be proud of the diversity, however. The national teams and the powerful player selection systems in the three countries pick the best players regardless or their origin, religion or skin color. Soccer has to be meritocratic because it’s competition in its purest form, not constrained by national borders to the same degree as American sports. In soccer, the son of a banker and a lawyer (that’s the background of French goalkeeper Hugo Lloris) is on an equal footing with someone like Lukaku, whose family couldn’t pay its electricity bills for weeks at a time and whose mother had to water down his milk to make it last longer. Or like Sterling, whose mother cleaned hotel rooms to put herself through school.

For immigrants without fast-twitch muscles and great footwork, however, there is no level playing field. Employment rates are noticeably lower among first-generation immigrants than for the population as a whole, and they don’t improve much for the second generation.

The odds are stacked against kids with the same background as the world-class soccer players in a number of important ways. Statistics show a higher percentage of second-generation immigrants than native-born people go to college in France and the U.K. (though not in Belgium) — but, according to a 2017 report from the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development, an overwhelming majority of young people with low educational attainment in all three countries are second-generation, non-EU immigrants. The report says:

Educational aspirations are generally high among migrant families. However, while educational aspirations may support educational upward mobility, by itself they are not sufficient, particularly when support structures and knowledge on how to attain these goals is lacking.

As a result, in Belgium, people with non-EU-born parents are 13.2 percent less likely than the native-born to get a better job than their parents; in France, the likelihood is 8 percent lower, and in the U.K., 4 percent lower. People are stuck in low-paid occupations - and in low-income areas full of other people with migration backgrounds. This creates a vicious circle for millions of people, even if it gives the extremely talented few the impulse to fight harder.

“Let me tell you something — every game I ever played was a final,” Lukaku told The Players’ Tribune.

When I played in the park, it was a final. When I played during break in kindergarten, it was a final. I’m dead-ass serious. I used to try to tear the cover off the ball every time I shot it. Full power. We weren’t hitting R1, bro. No finesse shot. I didn’t have the new “FIFA”. I didn’t have a Playstation. I wasn’t playing around. I was trying to kill you.

In a column for The Times, Patrick Vieira, the former French international, echoes the violence of that self-description as he recalls his childhood in a poor Paris suburb — the kind of place from which most of the current French team’s second-generation immigrants hail from.

“When I trained and played,” he wrote, “it was with a knife in my teeth. By that I mean I had a hunger to succeed. I loved the game but I also had a drive from my mother. To so many people in those estates, there are no jobs, no help. You see that determination in a lot of footballers from those concrete pitches.”

Sports — in particular, soccer with its well-developed, lavishly funded selection systems and powerful clubs — can be a straight path out of poverty. Several of the French and Belgian players’ fathers are former small-time soccer pros, and they gave their sons good advice, providing some of the networking benefits that immigrants, whether first- or second-generation, lack in Europe.

The soccer meritocracy can’t give every ghetto kid an upward path, though. All it can do is make sure the ones who play every game like their last make it onto big club rosters and national teams.

There’s a lesson in this for the rest of society. Soccer’s support networks for talented kids can and should be replicated in other areas of endeavor. Some of the boys and girls growing up in no-hope areas today could be the Mbappes and Lukakus of tech, finance or the arts. The national teams, multicolored as they are, exist to remind governments, businesses and educational institutions that they just need to look harder.

|  Bloomberg News

Leonid Bershidsky, Bloomberg News.
| Bloomberg News Leonid Bershidsky, Bloomberg News. (BLOOMBERG NEWS/)

Leonid Bershidsky is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering European politics and business. He was the founding editor of the Russian business daily Vedomosti and founded the opinion website Slon.ru. Follow Leonid on Twitter @Bershidsky.

Gehrke: Even if you like guns, Utah Gun Exchange’s tactics against March for Our Lives is a poor strategy

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Every responsible gun owner — and there are millions of them in this country — knows that owning a firearm is a serious responsibility, so exercising that Second Amendment right is not to be taken lightly.

Neither is exercising a First Amendment right to assemble and protest.

Both points are evidently lost on the owners of the Utah Gun Exchange, who seem to care little about exercising either right in a sensible manner.

The Utah Gun Exchange, if you are unfamiliar, is an online advertising portal for people who want to buy or sale, say, an AR-15 with a bump stock or a high-powered sniper rifle, without the headaches of a background check or waiting period. As the Utah School Safety Commission recently noted, a survey of incarcerated criminals in 13 states found just 13 percent got their guns from a licensed dealer.

(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Robert Gehrke writes that the Utah Gun Exchange’s tactics against March for Our Lives is a poor strategy in his latest column.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Robert Gehrke writes that the Utah Gun Exchange’s tactics against March for Our Lives is a poor strategy in his latest column. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

As my colleague Taylor Anderson reported this week, the Utah Gun Exchange has taken to following the survivors of the Parkland, Fla., shooting around the country in their armored pretend Army vehicle to make the pro-gun case at various March for Our Lives events.

It has been provocative, to be sure. In New York, the owner of the vehicle, Bryan Melchior, was arrested because the turret-mounted gun on top of their black vehicle wasn’t clearly a replica, as required by city ordinance.

On Wednesday, the Larry H. Miller Group’s Megaplex Theatres declined to host a town hall planned in Utah this Saturday, concerned about a potential protest.

It was an unfortunate (and frankly cowardly) decision by the Miller Group, but also understandable, in light of the highly charged atmosphere, the inflammatory nature of the issue, and people from the Utah Gun Exchange who are insistent on being a lightning rod in those dangerous conditions.

The First Amendment absolutely guarantees the right of the Utah Gun Exchange folks to speak out on the polarizing gun issue, no question. But just because you CAN say something, doesn’t mean that you should.

For example, Belchior probably would have been well-advised not to say: “The hostile environment created toward gun advocates in the Northeast is not unlike the hostile environments a black man would have experienced in the South hundreds of years ago.”

Yes. Being a gun owner is exactly like being a slave.

Of course, the Utah Gun Exchange has a right to try to organize a protest to the Florida teens pushing for new gun restrictions. But their tactics — seemingly meant to intimidate and instigate — are doing more harm than good to their cause.

That’s not just my opinion.

Charles Hardy is policy director of Gun Owners of Utah, which bills itself as “Utah’s uncompromising” gun owners’ network. These guys have been on the frontlines of Utah’s gun debate for decades and they don’t mess around.

Hardy, for example, believes the Parkland students at the core of March for Our Lives are “well-meaning but misguided young people” co-opted by anti-gun advocates. But he also recognizes gun owners have won their battles in Utah — far more often than they have lost — by organizing and educating, not by intimidating.

“If they’re trying to intimidate or shout people down or grab someone else’s 15 minutes of limelight, it’s not what we’re supposed to do. Quite the contrary,” he said. “I don’t think it’s a good idea to encourage folks of passion and disparate views to show up at the same place at the same time to yell at each other. … I think they’re horribly misguided.”

State Sen. Todd Weiler, R-Woods Cross, got a 93 percent rating from the National Rifle Association when he was up for re-election in 2016 — he’s no softy on gun rights.

“I understand that organizations are very concerned that their Second Amendment rights are at risk,” he said. “But this type of advocacy is not helpful, and is probably counterproductive.”

State Rep. Lee Perry, R-Perry, sponsored gun advocates “Constitutional Carry” bill recently, which sought to give non-restricted adults the right to carry a concealed firearm without a permit. He also is a lieutenant in the Utah Highway Patrol.

“I’m going to stand up for my rights under the Second Amendment,” Perry told me. “I’m willing to have a discussion about gun laws. I’m not afraid of that. But I’m not the kind to show up and do a reverse protest. … To me, that’s animosity and I don’t see anything productive out of it.”

And then there is Clark Aposhian, chairman of the Utah Shooting Sports Council and probably the most noted gun advocate in Utah’s Capitol. He says he doesn’t see anything antagonistic in the Utah Gun Exchange’s actions and he also plans to attend the March for Our Lives event to offer a pro-gun viewpoint.

But if people want to try to solve the issue of gun violence, he said, “it’s going to have to be done out of the limelight. It has to involve trust. … Otherwise it’ll just be a constant clash.”

“I think the big vehicle with the big gun on top and the t-shirts are to get attention,” he said.

The Utah Gun Exchange certainly got attention. National media has picked up on their antics and now they are a focal point of Saturday’s event. Like any business, the Utah Gun Exchange thrives on that free publicity, so their stunt has probably paid off.

It has come, however, at the expense of Utah’s reputation: They are an embarrassment to the state and to the reputation of nearly one-third of Utahns who own firearms and exercise their rights responsibly.

They got their attention, to be sure, like a spoiled brat throwing a tantrum. And on Saturday, at the March for Our Lives event, wherever it is held, we’re likely to once again see children acting out, while these Florida teenagers worried for their safety are speaking up.

Letter: Declaration of Independence is about the collective good

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In a recycled column about the Fourth of July, George Pyle writes: “Independence Day is not about flags, fireworks, military hardware, past presidents or any other icons or graven images. It is about the importance of individual liberty and the recognition that the protection of that liberty is the primary duty of government.”

I could be wrong, but the Declaration of Independence strikes me as having less to do with “individual liberty” than with the collective good. Phrases like “one People,” “the Population,” “us” and “public” are scattered throughout the document; nowhere is there any reference to any individual self. Its most memorable phrase is “All men are created equal,” an idea that’s far more congruent with socialism than with any sort of libertarian individualism.

America is more polarized now than it’s been in decades. I salute the Founders for putting “We the People” first and think we should follow their example.

Tom Huckin, Salt Lake City

Letter: Let’s seize Trump’s ill-gotten assets

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Your editorial rightly condemns the abhorrent practice of civil asset forfeiture.

In a country that proclaims itself dedicated to due process and the rule of law, it is intolerable that law enforcement can profit from seizing people’s property without either bringing charges or securing a conviction.

But there is one redeeming feature. Since we have a president who (in defiance of the emoluments clause) seems intent on enriching himself and his family, whether by Russian money laundered through German banks, Chinese support of his Indonesian resorts, Chinese patents granted to his daughter, or other nefarious maneuvers, and since securing a conviction for such behavior seems unlikely, given a complaisant Congress, perhaps his assets could be seized and put to some constructive use that would benefit the nation instead of him and his retainers?

Richard Middleton, Salt Lake City

Letter: Utah hunters and ranchers call the shots on coyotes

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Regarding the need to "remove" coyotes from the environment, it is fascinating (to me) that the state’s Wildlife Resources conducted a three-year longitudinal study of coyote removal on Monroe Mountain, with half of the area devoted to coyote eradication and the other half where no efforts were made to kill coyotes. This was done to determine fawn survival if coyotes were removed.

When I spoke with an individual at Wildlife Resources knowledgeable with the results of the study, he said it was determined that coyote eradication had no discernible effect on fawn survival. The conclusion, I was told verbally, was coyote removal would only be needed if a deer herd were severely threatened from any cause.

I asked about this study being published and was told that graduate students at the university would be writing up the study. Since the study concluded a couple of years ago, it appears, to my knowledge, there is no hurry to make those findings widely available to the Utah public. An individual attending one of the advisory group meetings reported that the hunters, trappers and ranchers were pushing to increase the $500,000 taxpayer-funded bounty system. That is on top of the $500,000 or so that has been paid in the past to the federal Wildlife Services from taxpayer funds.

I have not inquired on the current state of the contracts to the federal agency but previously confirmed that each county contributed our tax dollars as its contribution. It kind of makes one wonder just where the “science” fits into the seemingly hunter/rancher-controlled state agency.

Connie Ball, Kanab


Letter: Holladay needs more housing

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Utah is growing, and all of us should be more than thrilled with that. In fact, over the past 10 years, Utah was the fastest-growing state in the nation. The problem? We have too many heads and not enough beds.

So it’s no secret that we need smart development in Utah. Especially if we want our children and grandchildren to be able to afford to live in this state and not be priced out.

The recipe for affordability is diversification in housing product. Enough with the NIMBY mindset. Think of the future generations we are affecting now with our choices. Don’t be afraid of townhomes and apartments. They’re real housing options, for real people who breathe life into a city and bring businesses to your area.

Nowhere is this debate more real than the old Cottonwood Mall. This is the last remaining viable commercial space in Holladay. Everyone else is busy going for the obvious play that is developing downtown, Sugar House, I-15, Bangerter, Mountain View Corridor, northern Utah County, etc. No one is biting on a failed mall site with limited population and limited access — except for Ivory Homes and Woodbury Corp., who are well-known local builders and developers in Utah. But how can they do something no one else is willing to do? Because they’ve developed a plan to support the shopping and restaurants that Holladay residents want, but can’t have without the right number of apartments, townhomes and other residential. Bodies are the new anchor for retail!

Don’t be afraid of this project. Think smart and help Holladay move forward with a development that will benefit everyone — especially your kids and my kids who want to stay close to home.

Mark Jensen, Salt Lake City

Political Cornflakes: Steve Bannon is in London ahead of Trump, talking with far-right leaders from Britain and France

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Fresh off NATO meetings in Brussels, President Donald Trump will make his way to London. His former chief strategist, Steve Bannon, beat him there. Bannon has been holding meetings with other far-right European and British populists in his hotel, including the architect of “Brexit" and the boyfriend of Marine Le Pen, the populist French leader and failed presidential candidate. Bannon is also acting as a Trump surrogate in British and European media as the region prepares for a U.S. president’s visit amid contentious “Brexit” discussions. [Politico]

Happy Thursday.

Topping the news: The Larry H. Miller Megaplex Theatres withdrew from its contract with a group that includes survivors of the Parkland, Fla., school shooting three days before the students were scheduled to speak in South Jordan. The withdrawal came a day after The Tribune reported the Utah Gun Exchange was following the students on their nationwide tour. The theater said the event “appears to be escalating into a potentially contentious situation." [Trib] [Fox13] [StandardExaminer]

→ Salt Lake City leaders are offering the Bird electric scooter company a deal that would allow them to continue operating in the city. [Fox13]

→ In the latest development in the fight over public lands, Sen. Mike Lee introduced legislation that would require a president to get approval from Congress and the Utah Legislature before designating a national monument in the state. [Trib]

Tweets of the day: From @Rschooley: "How did Brett Kavanaugh pay off all that debt in a year? Is carpool driver a really lucrative side job?”

→ From @senatoroshana: "If Brett Kavanaugh doesn’t walk into confirmation hearings hungover, in sunglasses, a frat muscle shirt, and in boat shoes, I don’t want him on the bench”

→ From @byrdinator: "Taylor Swift’s silence on Bob Corker’s tariffs bill is deafening.”

Happy Birthday: To former Taylorsville mayor and owner of Rechtenbach Insurance Jerry Rechtenbach and the Utah State Society’s Dain Hansen.

Trib Talk: Tribune reporter Benjamin Wood discusses the nomination of Brett Kavanuagh to the U.S. Supreme Court with Hinckley Institute of Politics director Jason Perry and Michelle Quist, an attorney and Republican candidate for the Salt Lake County Council. [Trib]

In other news: Sen. Orrin Hatch met with President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Judge Brett Kavanaugh, and called Roe v. Wade “a settled opinion.” [Trib]

→ Rep. Rob Bishop introduced a bill that would allow states to determine their Daylight Saving Time. [Fox13]

→ The person who left a loaded handgun in the bathroom at the Loveland Living Planet Aquarium may now be charged with reckless-endangerment, according to Draper police. [Trib] [Fox13]

→ Weeks after detectives raided multiple pawnshops associated with a polygamist sect and seized stolen property, warrants show the Utah attorney general’s office also received permission to seize $28,000. [Trib]

→ An Ogden couple that was charged with torturing and murdering their 3-year-old daughter could face the death penalty if convicted. [Trib]

→ Downtown Salt Lake City Presents launched a new program in a 40-block neighborhood known as THE BLOCKS in order to support filmmakers and artists and establish a premiere urban cultural district in the city. [Trib] [Fox13]

→ A 17-year plan in the making to build a downtown area in Wendover is finally becoming a reality, with ground-breaking planned for 2019. [Fox13]

→ Pat Bagley thinks President Donald Trump sounds a lot like Vladimir Putin lately. [Trib]

Nationally: President Donald Trump kicked off the NATO summit in Brussels by attacking Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany and accusing the country of being captive to Russia by relying on it for so much of its energy. [NYTimes] [Politico]

→ Also at the summit in Brussels, Trump condemned U.S. allies for not spending enough on military and demanded the nations double their military spending commitments. [WaPost]

→ After NATO, Trump will visit Britain and meet with Prime Minister Theresa May in a meeting that will test the “special relationship” between the U.S. and Britain. [NYTimes] [NPR]

Got a tip? A birthday, wedding or anniversary to announce? Send us a note to cornflakes@sltrib.com.

-- Connor Richards and Taylor W. Anderson

Twitter.com/crichards1995 and Twitter.com/TaylorWAnderson

Trump administration cut the funding for Obamacare navigator grants so much that Utah programs may not bother participating

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A federal program aimed at helping people choose and enroll in Affordable Care Act insurance faces a fresh round of funding cuts so steep that the two Utah organizations that participate say it may no longer be worth doing so.

“We’re down to the bare minimum amount,” said Matt Slonaker, executive director of the Utah Health Policy Project, or UHPP. “It’s not going to be enough to even make us interested“ in applying for ACA navigator grants.

Last year, the Trump administration slashed funding for the navigators program from $62.5 million to $36.8 million. Additional trims will now draw the funding down to just $10 million nationwide, according to national reports, along with new guidance that participating organizations steer people toward health plans with less coverage and benefits than are typically required by the ACA, or Obamacare.

Federal law requires that funding be awarded to navigators, nonprofit organizations that function as insurance counselors under the federal health care law.

But the administration has wide latitude to define those funding levels, Slonaker said, and has steadily diminished its support for the program since President Donald Trump moved into the White House.

Slonaker said UHPP originally received $750,000 for its Take Care Utah program, but the funding fell to $290,000 after last summer’s cuts. He estimated that roughly $40,000 would be available for Take Care Utah moving forward, which is not enough to pay for a single full-time employee.

“For me, it’s completely politically motivated, and it’s unfortunate,” he said. “Politics has gotten away from good policy and good sense.”

Utah’s other navigator organization is the Urban Indian Center of Salt Lake, which acts as an insurance counselor for Utah’s American Indian and Alaskan native communities through its Cedar Point Wellness Center.

Ryan Ward, Cedar Point’s director, said last year’s cuts and delays in this year’s grant-application announcement suggested that another round of reductions was coming.

“I had kind of been planning to have less funding and possibly not even apply myself,” he said. “As the months went on and we weren’t notified, I got the feeling that it was bad news.”

Ward said the Urban Indian Center’s grant was smaller than UHPP’s. He declined to provide specific numbers.

In addition to the navigator cuts, the Trump administration has also pared the funding for advertising Obamacare’s open-enrollment period, when people can sign up for insurance through individual markets established under the health care law.

Federal tax cuts passed earlier this year repealed the so-called individual mandate, or requirement that Americans either enroll in health insurance or pay a penalty. Under Trump, the Department of Justice has declined to defend key aspects of the ACA in court.

Slonaker said Take Care Utah will continue with the support of local partnerships and other sources of grant funding. What’s left of the navigator funding, he said, is no longer worthwhile because it includes rules and restrictions on the types of insurance that counselors should promote.

“We see ourselves as very open about the resources that are available and not just directing people to certain things,” he said. “Our mission at UHPP is to help people find what is best for them and not to push in any specific direction.”

As developers build three new homeless shelters, some state leaders are asking: Will they be enough?

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In less than a year, Utah plans to close the big homeless shelter in downtown Salt Lake City known as The Road Home and replace it with three smaller ones. But even as crews construct those new shelters on land picked following much controversy, state leaders are trying to determine if they’ll need more.

A small group has been meeting in recent months to discuss whether the state’s current three-shelter plan will serve all of the people in need of a home, shelter or other services as the June 30, 2019, construction deadline nears.

“We’re saying: ‘Is there a need for another kind of a shelter for those who have these long-term needs?’” said Pamela Atkinson, a well-known advocate who works closely with state, local and nonprofit officials on homelessness issues.

Atkinson said the conversations have been ongoing since February. The group is surveying homeless people who don’t stay at The Road Home to see why they prefer sleeping outside. It will deliver its findings and any recommendations to the state committee that oversees funding for homeless services in August.

At a recent meeting on homelessness, Atkinson said the work included “the possibility of coming up with a shelter, a long-term care shelter, that would be outside of Rio Grande” and could house possibly hundreds of people.

The survey will help determine how many people will likely not be a good fit for the new shelters, which are intended to be all-inclusive, helping people navigate government programs and find a job.

Jonathan Hardy, director of development and housing at the Department of Workforce Services, said his team is approaching this from the “consumer’s perspective,” going to homeless people and asking, “What type of housing fits what they need or are looking for.”

During a recent cleanup at a homeless camp off Victory Road on the north end of the city, several residents who were clearing out said they avoided The Road Home because of safety concerns.

On Wednesday, a man who goes by the nickname Wolf and his friend Shane Thompson said they don’t want to go to the shelter because of concerns about bedbugs and drugs. A recent legislative audit found evidence of widespread drug use at the shelter, and it found more people avoided the shelter for similar reasons.

The Road Home has worked to improve security with an eye on keeping out drugs and weapons. On Wednesday, it announced it began using a new metal detector at check-in.

Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  James passes through a metal detector prior to entering the shelter, July 11, 2018. The Road Home has implemented new security measures at the downtown emergency shelter. New policies and procedures include the use of metal detectors and property searches during check in, managing entrances and exits and  incident response system to ensure safety.
Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune James passes through a metal detector prior to entering the shelter, July 11, 2018. The Road Home has implemented new security measures at the downtown emergency shelter. New policies and procedures include the use of metal detectors and property searches during check in, managing entrances and exits and incident response system to ensure safety. (Leah Hogsten/)

It’s too soon to say how many people who avoid the shelter are looking for a different type of housing, whether that housing is available and what needs to be developed to serve that population. Data show that Utah’s housing market is becoming increasingly unaffordable, and that may push some to the brink of homelessness.

Providers say it’s clear there’s a shortage of affordable housing for low-income residents. When a nonprofit redeveloped a motel on State Street into dozens of low-income units, the rooms filled within weeks.

Preston Cochrane, executive director of Shelter the Homeless, which is coordinating development of the new shelters, said the survey of homeless people will also look at the need to serve “those really chronically, chronically homeless,” including those with severe substance abuse or mental disorders.

Some of the possible suggestions for housing needs, Cochrane said, could range from single-room occupancy “to a tiny home village, even.”

The survey and follow-up in August will determine whether the state, county and city maintain an emergency shelter separate from the three new shelters being built. There is a Midvale shelter for families that will remain open as well.

“We’re going to need some space for an emergency [shelter] and, hopefully, we don’t need as big a space as The Road Home is,” said Jean Hill, who works on homelessness issues for the Catholic Diocese of Salt Lake City. “We really need a concerted focus on the housing side of things.

“Not just general affordable housing,” Hill added, but “supportive and very low-income housing.”

Postmates arrives in Utah, and it’s delivering pretty much anything

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On a recent trip to Los Angeles, Utahn Mishea Kucher discovered the delivery app Postmates.

“I didn’t have a car and was staying relatively far from most stores, so it was a hassle to try to get food or even stop by somewhere and get drinks,” said the 22-year-old from Sandy. “So, for our groceries, snacks, whatever we needed, we just had Postmates bring it to us. And it was so great!”

The app has added four Utah cities — Salt Lake City, South Jordan, West Jordan and West Valley City. And some locals are ecstatic.

“We finally have Postmates in Utah. OMG yes to never going to the store again,” tweeted Toria Faketui.

She’s not the only one who’s excited. Salt Lake Mayor Jackie Biskupski’s office is planning an official release welcoming the service to Utah’s capital city.

“They asked if they could put out their own press release. We were, like, ‘Sure!’” said Postmates spokesperson April Conyers.

Founded in 2011 in San Francisco, Postmates is a delivery app that will bring you breakfast, lunch, dinner or just dessert — but it’s not just a food delivery service.

“You can have them run to a store and grab something for you,” said Kucher. “So if you’re busy with something at home and need something really quick, someone can just bring it to you. It’s like food delivery service meets convenience and grocery stores. You can get anything from pretty much anywhere.”

It’s available at Postmates.com or the app on iOS or Android.

Postmates charges a flat fee of $3.99 to deliver from one of its “merchant partners” (like Chipotle and 7-Eleven); and $5.99 (plus a percentage of the purchase price) for “anywhere merchants” — every other retailer.

You can also buy a monthly subscription for $9.99, which covers all deliveries with a purchase price of $20 or more; a yearly subscription brings that fee down to $6.99 a month — $83.88 for a year, paid up front. (Go to postmates.com/unlimited.)

And it’s not all about food. In other cities, diapers and baby formula are “huge,” Conyers said. So the Salt Lake Valley seems like a natural — particularly “if you have a houseful of kids and you need one thing. And you don’t want to pack them up and put them all in the car and take them over to Walmart or whatever,” she said.

“We do a lot of cold medicine. We do a lot of stuff from convenience stores,” Conyers said. “People send Postmates to supermarkets, to cosmetic stores. We make a lot of trips to Home Depot.”

What do-it-your-selfer hasn’t been in the middle of a home-improvement project and discovered he/she forgot to get all the necessary supplies?

“In Salt Lake, we can’t do alcohol deliveries. But everything else,” said Conyers.

“You can get anything from pretty much anywhere,” said Kucher, whose Twitter plea of a week ago was answered: “CAN POSTMATES COME TO UTAH PLEASE.”

A quick glance through social media reveals more than a few people who insist that, because of Postmates, they’ll never leave their homes again.

“We see a lot of people tweet that way. I’m pretty sure they don’t just stay home,” Conyers said with a laugh.

The company has been launching in cities around the country; it estimates it’s now available to about half of all Americans. It started in bigger cities and has been working toward smaller metro centers — more than 100 as of this month.

“Salt Lake has been in the plans for a while. It just kind of took us a while to get there,” said Conyers, a Weber State University grad. “We take a look at how many people have opened the app in a city, and that helps us determine where to go next.”

The company also factored in that Salt Lake City has a large population of college students, both because college students use the service and many of them are looking for part-time jobs.

The company does not release information on how many couriers it has in a city, but it has been “ramping up” to launch in the Salt Lake Valley.

Hopefuls can apply at postmates.com/apply. You have to be at least 18 and have a valid driver license and proof of insurance — if you use your car.

“We have people who use scooters. We have people who use bikes,” Conyers said. “It all depends on where they are and what they want to do.”

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