Monday, September 21, 2020

This Is a Blatant Middle Finger to Our Political Legitimacy

 
A president who won millions fewer votes from actual citizens will have filled one third of the nation's highest court if he gets the approval of a Republican Senate majority that represents a minority of Americans.
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This Supreme Court Power Grab Will Bring Forth an Astonishing Outbreak of Public Shamelessness
 
As of Monday morning, a president who won millions fewer votes from actual citizens than his opponent did is set to make a third lifetime appointment to the nation's highest court, meaning he will have installed one third of the justices. This can happen if his nominee is approved by a Republican Senate majority hailing from states that represent around 15 million fewer actual citizens than the Democratic minority. In this way, a president who has never commanded the support of a majority of the American population can enact a potentially decades-long conservative majority on the Supreme Court with the help of a minoritarian Senate caucus. This is a major crisis for the legitimacy of the American political system, one which Republicans will navigate by simply saying, "F**k you." Politics Editor Jack Homes on why Republicans who are operating as an insurgency against legitimate democratic government that represents the interests of a majority of the American people in procedure and policy. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
Can a Supreme Court Justice Be Replaced in an Election Year? Here Are the Facts.
 
It was only an hour after the announcement of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death, but political games were already being played. In a statement he posted on Twitter, Majority Senate Leader Mitch McConnell confirmed that he intended to bring a vote on President Trump's nominee to the senate floor before the election in November. This is despite the fact that in 2016, McConnell refused to call for a vote on President Obama's Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland because it was an election year. At the time, there were three hundred and forty-two days left in Obama's second term. The only question that remains is can McConnell get away with it? And the answer is, yes—if he has the votes. Here's the lay of the land. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Todd Snyder's Latest Timex Watch Is an Affordable, Wearable Piece of Design History
 
Benevolent menswear deity Todd Snyder and the expert watchmakers at Timex are back again to bless us all with another absolute banger of a timepiece courtesy of their ongoing collaboration, and I couldn't be more excited about it. The duo's latest team-up comes in the form of a handsome-as-hell watch they've dubbed the Art Deco Milano, a retro-looking beauty inspired by the designer's interactions with Timex's Milan-based product team. And needless to say, it's excellent. Here's why you should grab one before there aren't any left. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
So, Just What the Hell Was Jeremy Strong Wearing at the 2020 Emmys?
 
The Succession star scooped an Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series for his portrayal of slack-jawed wannabe media titan Kendall Roy, wearing a very non-Kendall outfit in the process. You guys are seeing this, right? Because I'm not entirely sure what's going on here. Accepting the award virtually, Strong video-called in rocking some sort of elaborately tied top we'd like to think is a pussy bow blouse that looks like it went slightly awry somewhere along the way. The pussy blow blouse has been a bona fide thing for a minute now (typically modeled by stylistically adventurous young guns like Harry Styles, and often courtesy of Alessandro Michelle's Gucci) but as Strong proved tonight, the look isn't the sole domain of the arena-packing global pop star. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Seagrams Heiresses Clare and Sara Bronfman Funded NXIVM For Years. Here's Where They Are Now.
 
Before NXIVM's 2017 New York Times unmasking as a violent sex "cult," the self-help organization attracted celebrities, CEOs, and even a visit from the Dalai Lama. This group of elite members included sisters Clare and Sara Bronfman, heiresses to the Seagram alcohol fortune. The daughters of late billionaire Edgar Bronfman Sr. became enmeshed with cult-like organization NXIVM and its founder Keith Raniere in their early twenties. Episode Five of HBO's The Vow introduces the sisters into the slowly unfolding narrative, explaining the important role that the deep pockets of the Bronfmans played within the NXIVM organization over the years. Here's everything we know about them. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
Minority Report Is One of the Few Great Sci-Fi Blockbusters That Hasn't Been Loved to Death
 
An overabundance of nostalgia has already littered the entertainment landscape with endless sequels, prequels, spinoffs, and live-action remakes. But I don't think its impact is only on current movies and TV shows—overdosing on nostalgia can change the way we see old entertainment, too. Beloved movies are endlessly referenced on TV and in other films, they're memed and analyzed and continuously scoured online. How can favorites like Jurassic Park, Ghostbusters, The Dark Night, and Star Wars fulfill their due destinies as escapist fantasies when it's so hard to escape them? But there's one acclaimed, thrilling, and deeply fun big-budget adventure that's been a bit more immune to this cultural cannibalization, says Esquire's Gabrielle Bruney. If you're looking for a movie that's just as immersive now as it was when it was released, a summer blockbuster that can still be viewed first hand, you've got to watch Minority Report. Read More
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
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