On Our "Virtual Route 66" (Special Month End Edition): On Journalists and The Week that Was in America

 


As we embrace June here at the Daily Outsider, our team wanted to pay homage to all around the World, courtesy of the Committee to Protect Journalists, BBC Persian  who struggle to bring the truth to all and a snapshot of the discourse that was courtesy CNN and the Coop Scoop in America, as we look forward to continuing to serve: 

 
 
Gaza journalists speak out about Hamas intimidation, threats, assaults
A Palestinian youth takes photos with his phone during an anti-Hamas protest, calling for an end to the war with Israel, in Beit Lahia in northern Gaza on March 26, 2025. (Photo: AFP)
Journalists in Gaza recently told CPJ they face intimidation, threats, and assaults by Hamas — abuses that often go unreported due to fear of retaliation.
 
For almost two decades, CPJ has documented multiple press freedom violations by Hamas — as well as all the other warring parties in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories — including detentions, assaults, obstruction, and raids.
 
The war in Gaza has been the deadliest period for journalists since CPJ started keeping records in 1992, with at least 178 journalists among some 52,000 Palestinians killed since Hamas’ deadly October 7, 2023 attack on Israel. An overwhelming majority of these killings, arrests, and threats were carried out by Israeli forces.
 
The Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate (PJS) often documents Hamas attacks on the media internally, without publicizing them, for fear of reprisals, the group told CPJ. In other cases, PJS staff hear about events secondhand as journalists are too scared to report them.
 
Read more.

Global press freedom updates

  • CPJ, partners condemn Saudi Arabia’s press freedom record ahead of Trump’s visit
  • The Wire’s website, 8,000 X accounts blocked in India amid conflict with Pakistan
  • CPJ, 58 groups call for journalist Zhang Zhan’s immediate release on 5th anniversary of unjust arrest
  • Azerbaijan arrests 2 more journalists, increasing crackdown tally to 25
  • Russian journalist sentenced to 13 days administrative detention after filming anti-Putin protest
  • Taliban intelligence detain journalist Sulaiman Rahil following critical Facebook posts

Spotlight

Documentary filmmaker Maryia Bulavinskaya's country house was seized as part of an investigation into her journalism. She is one of dozens of Belarusian journalists in exile facing criminal cases. (Photo: Courtesy of Maryia Bulavinskaya)
Hundreds of Belarusian journalists went into exile after President Aleksandr Lukashenko intensified his jailing and persecution of the press following 2020 protests calling for his ouster. More than 60 exiled journalists are under investigation or facing criminal charges in cases that were opened after they left Belarus, according to CPJ research.
 
“Having repressed virtually everyone inside the country they could, the authorities have now turned their attention to those abroad,” said Barys Haretski, deputy head of Belarusian Association of Journalists, in an interview with CPJ. “The authorities have no intention of reducing the number of repressive acts; they want to keep not only those inside the country in fear, but also those who have been forced to emigrate.”
 
CPJ spoke with 15 Belarusian journalists facing criminal cases and found a pattern of intimidation of their families, opaque investigations, property seizure, and conviction.
 
Read their stories.

What we are reading

May 15-16

By Marc Cooper

In my last Coop Scoop post about a week ago, I described the Trump administration as a “patrimonial kleptocracy.” An organization modeled as a criminal syndicate.Given the putrid flood of events over the last few days, I will now triple down on that definition.

Donald Trump’s tour of Middle East dictatorships is perfectly consistent with a crime-family boss meeting with other, richer bosses, trying to cut as many self-serving financial deals as possible regardless of a difficult past. So what if MBS chopped up his critic, whips his oppoents or that Qatar has funded and sheltered Hamas. Nothing personal. Just business. And Trump can’t wait to kiss their asses. As they say: “These are friends of ours.”

The level of corruption we are witnessing now is staggering and unprecedented—and 100% conducted in broad daylight.

The corrupt despots, including Trump, are building and parlaying multi-billion dollar commercial agreements that have nothing to do with politics or foreign policy. They are all about enriching themselves, their families, and their subservient cronies.

Trump is the poor man in this assemblage, and it’s going to be tough-going to catch up with his petro-dollar partners. He’s definitely the junior partner. He merely has more button men than his wealthier associates., Watching him grovel to inherit the 13-year-old second-hand “flying palace” from the Emir of Qatar is as pathetic as it is infuriating (and I will guarantee you he’ll never get that plane anyway).

Not that Trump isn’t making out great anyway. He’s got at least five multi-billion dollar ventures in course with the Gulf dictatorships. The monarchs are also pumping big bucks into his scam crypto currencies. He’s a made guy.

And Trump has used his monetarily worthless $TRUMP meme coin as a device for literally anyone who buys enough of them to get VIP access to him and the White House. And his kid’s vaguely more legit crypto, at last report, allowed 58 people to make $1 million or more, while 750,000 sucker buyers have lost money.

But who cares about those losers? The Trump crime family, including his two older idiot sons, have made at least $3 billion in the last 3 months since Daddy’s elevation to American Capo.

I’m not going to dwell on this corruption in this post. There’s been excellent coverage of it. There’s also been plenty of complaining about it. And while protest against Trump is slowly building, it’s still grossly insufficient. There appears to be too much apathy, indifference, and nihilism among the American electorate for this, the most corrupt administration in history, to spark the popular upheaval it merits.

Yes, Trump’s polling stinks. But in the latest survey that covers the first 4 days of the Qatar plane affair, he’s actually up a point or two. If you are consulted by a pollster, it costs nothing to say you disapprove of Trump. That doesn’t mean you are going to do anything about it. You hang up the phone and go water the garden.

Also under-reported is that while Trump is in the terrible 30–40% range on almost every issue, the Democrats score an anemic 26% among those who say they agree with Democrats “on the issues.” And in simualted one against one match ups, Trump is winning.

But that doesn’t really worry the Democratic Party elite. They are busy writing “stiff letters” to House Speaker William Johnson—which assumes he can even read.

Here are two throwaway lines I will toss your way:

A) Kleptocracy is a feature of autocracy. B) Late-stage capitalism is not just an economic system—it also has severe cultural, social, and psychological aspects. Or better said, people in general, and the electorate in particular, are often as short-sighted, self-serving, and insensitive to anything except their own personal welfare as are their overlords.

Hence, too many shrugs about the world-class corruption taking place above their heads. God knows how many Americans wish they were running a billion-dollar scam of their own.

This outbreak of corruption is taking place—unbelievably—at the very same moment that MAGA is hard at work fashioning a budget that many moderate economists have labeled the largest transfer of money from the poor to the rich in world history.

Now that is something that just might evoke some stronger responses to the Trump regime. As he tries to conjure $4–6 trillion to extend the juicy tax cuts to the ultra-rich, the only pool of funding really available to him to raid remains Medicaid. The other three big pots are the untouchable Pentagon and the combined third rail of Medicare and Social Security—both of which even Trump is not quite stupid enough to cut, at least not with the midterms looming.


THE GREAT MEDICAID CHURN

So that leaves only Medicaid and some similar programs available for him to plunder—the programs that serve the neediest of all—to pay for tax cuts for Jeff Bezos’s 500-foot yacht and Zuckerberg’s purchase of half of Hawaii. Medicaid is a ripe targets with 71 million Medicaid recipients (50% of births in the paradise of Georgia are Medicaid babies). More than 40 million Americans are on food stamps—that provides a whopping $50 a week to recipients. MAGA says it will shake down Medicaid for nearl $800b and Food Stamps for anotther $300b.

Going unsaid here is the completely failed work of Elon Musk. He had promised to deliber up to $2 trillion in savings. He ended up with, using suspect math, of dribbling out just $150b though his critics say he actually cost the government a slightly greater amount. But he did an A-1 jon of helping Trump capture a cornucopia of state agencies.

It is immoral, obscene, repulsive, and will be a stain on the country as a whole if these healthcare cuts come to pass in his “big beautiful” omnibus bill now up before the usually inert Congress. It will harden the image of Americans as an insensitive, uncaring people, interested exclusively in their God-given right to consume as much as they can and screw everybody else.

But wait, hasn’t Trump promised time and again he would not be “cutting” any medical care benefits? Yes—and technically, very technically—he will not be. His Republican stooges in Congress would like to get re-elected and they don’t want to go into the midterms with the blood of disabled grannies and hungry kids on their delicate, soft hands. Neither does Trump.

So, here in the middle of this essay, I have buried what should be the lead graphs. Trump and MAGA, looking to loot $800 billion from Medicaid and $300b from the food stamp program—SNAP—have backed down from earlier, more dangerous notions of simply cutting benefits. They will not cut the benefits. Instead, they will cut the recipients. Or better said, will have their underlimgs do the cutting.

MAGA has defaulted to a less transparent, downright diabolical scheme to skim the trillions they seek. They are not going to cut monthly checks. They are just going to make it more onerous, more burdensome, and, for some people, just impossible to do the reporting and paperwork to either enroll in or stay on Medicaid.

Estimates are that this will “churn” out as many as 10 million recipients just from Medicaid. And, by the way, having reported on this and other welfare programs for over 40 years, “churn” is always a desired goal of plan administrators and is openly talked about and celebrated in program management meetings. The more needy you can churn out, the more efficient the program.

The plan now being favored by the Republican House would impose an 80-hour-a-month obligation on “able-bodied” single Medicaid recipients to either work, formally study, or formally volunteer to remain eligible. The ill, the disabled, and caregivers for others would be exempt.

A majority of Americans, of course, support this measure. It sounds tough—and that’s what the despised poor leeches deserve, right? (Note: I prefer the words “poor,” “hungry,” or “homeless” over the oh-so-delicate terms like “underserved,” “food insecure,” and “those experiencing homelessness.” For the Right, these are bloodless euphemisms that deny the existence of a political-economic system that leaves 65% of Americans with less than $400 to meet an emergency. For the Left, they are politically correct, self-virtuous ways to describe people who are just plain f**ing poor and/or hungry or have been abandoned by society to live on the streets. Please do not use these terms—they make me experience great scorn).*

Making people work for their measly handouts sounds tough and fair somehow. But it is also a ruse. Study after study—somebody in Congress must have read one—shows that something like 95% of Medicaid recipients already meet these conditions.





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