With the mayoral elections in Kosovo, tension rise between ethnic Serbs and ethnic Albanians

By: Aeden Evenson-McDermott

Photo by Element5 Digital on Pexels.com

The conflict at hand here reminds the world of the Kosovo War back in the late 1990’s. Kosovo strived to become an independent nation from the former Federal Republic of Yugoslavia as they had controlled Kosovo. Serbia to this day remains steadfast on Kosovo being a part of Serbia even though it is its own country now. Russia and China, who are also deniers of Kosovo’s sovereignty, are impartial but relative to the issue directly due to their stance.

With the two heads of state, Aleksandar Vučić of Serbia and Albin Kurti of Kosovo, both find themselves in a tumultuous time of exchanging blame accusations and dealing with out of control tensions.

Last month’s mayoral elections took place throughout four municipalities in the north of Kosovo. With ethnic Serbs and their parties refraining from participation, turnout was only 3.5% which was the election of ethnic Albanian mayors in predominantly Serb towns.

With many Western leaders taking strong condemnation on the crisis at hand, Albin Kurti decided to move forward with his support. All the while, Vučić mobilized troops and put them on standby. With NATO peacekeepers in the area, 4,000 were mobilized and sent to the conflict zone.

Zvečan, has been the town where tensions were high. Kosovo blamed the ethnic Serbs for the clashes with NATO peacekeepers and over 30 were reported injured.

Even one of the world’s greatest tennis stars, Novak Djoković, had words to say at the French Open tennis championships: “Kosovo is the heart of Serbia,” it read. “Stop the violence.” His words created strong condemnation from the media as he has been at the focus of attention previously when he talked falsely about COVID-19. He did a bit of backtracking on his statement a few days later to clarify his point.

Furthermore, the tensions have eased slightly as the mayors have agreed on not going back to their offices yet. There’s still a way to go with tensions remaining high as cooperation for the future isn’t in sight.

‘Currents’ album review

By: Caden Kipfmueller

On July 17th, 2015, an Australian musician going by the stage name Tame Impala released his third studio album, ‘Currents’.  Tame Impala, or Kevin Parker, had been rising steadily in popularity since the release of his last album nearly three years prior, but ‘Currents’ was undoubtedly his big break.

Two years after its release, I would listen to this album for the first time, while sitting in my middle school English class during silent work time, browsing YouTube and idly looking for something to help me focus while I studied in the thirty minutes I had left in class. I remember the day well, I think because of how important it would be to me one day.

The album cover caught my eye, with its wavy lines that looked like optical illusions and an overwhelming amount of purple. A friend of mine once told me it looked like a physics textbook from the nineties, and I’m inclined to agree. Something about it was so…enticing to me. I knew what I was doing for the next thirty minutes.

From my very first listen I was hooked. ‘Currents’ was nothing like I’d ever heard before, a unique blend of 80s inspired synths with a modern twist. It was catchy. Intoxicating, even.

Tame Impala has this innate ability to masterfully craft dense soundscapes in this album, with a variety of trippy synths as well as a handful of percussion instruments, guitars, smooth bass and smoother vocals all coming together to make the most utterly jaw dropping music I’ve ever heard to this day. Parker’s voice, an airy falsetto, is the cherry-on-top in every song, somehow grounding tracks despite its ethereal nature.

Listening to this album makes me feel like I am floating in a sensory deprivation tank. I was shocked to learn that the entire album was mixed, written, and recorded by him and him alone because it seems otherworldly, and far more complex than could be imagined by one creative artist. In my mind, it’s so far beyond what anyone is capable of creating, much less one man who describes himself as “Just some guy”.

The album’s opening track, “Let it Happen”, was a seven minute masterpiece that left me so floored the first time I heard it that I had to play it again. And again. And again. Before I knew it, English was over and I hadn’t even gotten past the first song. The rest of the album was similar, filled with moments that made me do a double take and play over and over again. I think it took me three days to listen to the whole thing start to finish when all was said and done simply because I couldn’t stop going back and listening to my favorite moments one more time.

Lyrically, ‘Currents’ is surprisingly nuanced. It may be hard to notice because his vocals are so frequently distorted and hard to pinpoint exactly, but Kevin Parker weaves intricate stories into his songs. You may not pick them up on the first listen but they are always there. Stories about loneliness and loss and growth, and the agonizing process of slowly losing contact with loved ones. Some songs you can relate to. Some songs you can’t. I find his songs especially poignant as a teenager growing up in the twenty-first century, but I feel like the overall themes would have held up over any time period.

“Yes I’m Changing” holds specific emotional significance to me as I prepare myself for college and the next stages of my life. Sometimes I look back on the person I used to be with deep longing. I frequently wish I could go back to before I was stressed out about grades and friends and, well…growing up. Listening to “Yes I’m Changing” is always a deeply personal experience for me, as it grounds me and reassures me that growing up is going to be ok.

I never really listened to music much when I was younger. Some homes are occupied by music-philes, where music is constantly on in the background, others not so much. Mine? Not so much. Sure, my mom would turn on the radio in the car, or my dad would play songs on his iPod for me, but the music I was hearing regularly never really resonated with me. I didn’t hate it, per-se, but I never really connected with it. I just didn’t know how powerful music could be. When I listened to ‘Currents’, I discovered that power. Finally, I understood what it was that made music so important to so many people. For the first time in my life, I understood the emotional potential of music.

This album has sparked a long lasting passion for music inside of me. I don’t know if that passion was always there and just waiting to emerge or if it came out of nowhere, but frankly I don’t care. It doesn’t really matter to me. What matters to me is that music is now an integral part of who I am. It makes me a more well-rounded person, and it’s given me the chance to connect with those that share my love for this album, forging deep connections over our common love for this music. This album’s role in my willingness to branch out and seek out new types of music across all genres will never be understated. It is only now that I am coming to realize that music can be a vehicle of relaxation, protest, awareness, diversity, escape, or sympathy beyond simply serving as background noise on a long car trip.

‘Currents’ marked the start of a lifelong love for music. Without it, I don’t think I’d look at music, or even art more generally, the same way. The album has fundamentally changed my perspective on life more broadly, setting a standard for myself when I create things of my own.

Carlota de limón

By: Jessica Garcia Saligan

Image created with Wonder

Carlota de limón is an ice box style cake! There’s a layer of limon frost then there’s a layer of Maria cookies. If you’re a lemon lover, you’re going to love this cake!

Utensils

  • Blender
  • Spoons
  • Bowls (multiple)
  • Casserole dish
  • Spoon or spatula
  • Plastic wrap

Mexican frosty pastry

  • 4 Mexican limes or use Key limes
  • 1 Can of condensed milk
  • 1 Can of evaporated milk
  • Galletas Maria or Maria biscuits (multiple packs)
  • Vanilla extract

You’re going to start out with squishing your 4 lime into the blender, getting every drop of the lime juice.

Get your condensed milk, evaporated milk and a dash of vanilla extract and pour that into the blender. Blend it all together until it comes into a smooth consistency but don’t blend too fast or some air bubbles will start to form.

Once you start getting the smooth mixture you’re going to start to make the Carlota.

You’re gonna grab your casserole dish, or a deep baking pan, both work perfectly! You’re going to pour in a little bit of the lime mixture – not to cover the can completely – but enough to get all over the pan.

Grab your Maria cookies and spread an even layer covering the whole bottom of the casserole dish.

Then pour in a good layer of the lime mixture over the cookies to coat them, then you’re going to use the back of a spoon or a spatula and spread it evenly all around.

Add in another layer of cookies and you will be repeating it until you have no mixture left and have several creamy lime layers.

You end up with the lime mixture on the top and if you like, you could leave it as it is or what ‘s more preferred is to add Maria cookies on top to cover every part of the cake and add some lemon zest on top!

Place plastic wrap carefully on top of the casserole, not letting it touch the surface of the Carlota. Place it in the refrigerator for overnight, or 2 to 5 hrs is preferred.

That’s how you make a Carlota de limón Enjoy!

Why are there so many mosquitoes this year?

By: Biftu Osman

Image created with Wonder

As the weather began warming up, there has been a sky rocketing rise of mosquitoes in Minnesota. The big question is: Why are there so many mosquitoes this year compared to the past few years?

Mosquitos are born in water and typically live in moist and dark places. Due to the large amount of rainfall, and all the snow melt from this past winter season, mosquitoes have been given the perfect weather to breed and thrive in.

The Metropolitan Mosquito Control District predicts; “…this season is the biggest for mosquitoes in more than two years. Water samples are showing high counts of larva ready to blossom into bite-ready adults.”

The most common mosquito type in Minnesota is the floodwater mosquito. Their eggs can last as long as 7 years and due to the drought these past few years, they haven’t been hatching much.

This summer, due to the flooding in the Mississippi River, all the past year’s eggs as well as this year’s eggs are all hatching. Once floodwater mosquito eggs are placed in water, it only takes them about a week to be fully developed and hatched.

The Metropolitan Mosquito Control District says on the average peak days of summer, they receive around 100 calls a day in complaints about mosquito swarms. This season they’ve received around 350 calls in just one day.

The biggest hot spots where mosquitos have been thriving this year are in the Twin Cities area. Specifically, the big bodies of water like the Mississippi River and Minnesota River.

Although the mosquito situation this season makes it seem inevitable to get bitten by mosquitos, there’s multiple strategies to try and prevent it. One of the most effective ways to treat mosquito bites is using insect repellent.

If you’ve already been bitten, some efficient techniques to treat it are rubbing it with an ice cube/ice pack or applying anti-itch cream/lotion.

End of school year look into Highland Park’s spring sports

By: Abby Altman

Highland Park has been a powerhouse in many sports over the last few years, most notably Cross Country running and Nordic skiing. So what happens in the spring, when Highland no longer represents a powerhouse endurance sport?

Spring sports at Highland Park Senior High have not historically compared to that of fall and winter sports, both in success, and in spectator turnout.

Baseball and softball games don’t attract nearly as many viewers and support as football and basketball, and most people don’t even know that Highand has a combined ultimate frisbee team with Central High School.

However, each of the spring sports at Highland have achieved some level of success and each team deserves to be recognized.

Softball:

Image taken from: @athletics_hp on instagram

The Highland Park softball team has been short in numbers ever since the COVID-19 pandemic. For the first time since 2019, Highland was able to fill a JV roster this spring, and utilized an abundance of underclassmen to fill out the Varsity roster.

The softball team went 8-0 in conference play, outscoring conference opponents 132-10 en route to their sixth conference title in team history. The team then went on to beat Minneapolis Southwest 16-6 to earn the first Twin Cities championship title in team history.

Baseball:

Image taken from: @athletics_hp on instagram

Similar to softball, the Highland Park baseball team went 8-0 in conference play, and 14-3 overall. The baseball team started the season extremely hot, going 14-0 to open the season, before dropping the last 3 games of the regular season.

Baseball and softball both went 0-2 in section play to end their seasons.

Badminton:

Image taken from: @athletics_hp on instagram

The Highland girls badminton team went 9-3 in conference play, and 17-3 overall on the season. Highland finished the season ranked 4th in team state.

At the individual state meet, Sunny Vang placed 1st overall in the singles varsity matches, and Houahna Yang placed 2nd overall in the singles JV matches. Edi Damiyo and Sara Leticho placed 3rd overall in the JV doubles matches.

Track:

Image taken from: @athletics_hp on instagram

The track team had a relatively bumpy start to the season, with many distance runners continuing their Nordic ski season, and several top athletes out with injury. Despite these setbacks, both the boys and girls teams won the team conference meet, with every single relay team taking 1st or 2nd place, and 12 overall event wins.

The team is now in the middle of their section championships, with Gavin Roberts and Terez Vaughn going to state in the 3200 and triple jump respectively. The finals for the section meet will be held on Friday, June 2, with 7 athletes qualifying for finals in various events.

Girls Golf:

Image taken from: @athletics_hp on instagram

The girls golf team had a record breaking number of participants this year. The golf team went 5-0 in conference, and won the conference tournament for the 18th time, by a daunting 150 strokes. This marks 10 conference titles in the last 11 years for Highland girls golf.

Boys Golf:

Image taken from: @athletics_hp on instagram

For the 3rd straight season, the Highland boys golf team was conference champions, finishing the match with a team score of 326. This is the 16th conference title in team history.

Ultimate Frisbee:

After losing the majority of their team to graduation last season, the Highland-Central combined team was able to recruit lots of new players, and the team is now even bigger than in years prior. The team went 5-4 on the season, including a 4 game win streak in April.

Tennis:

Image taken from: @athletics_hp on instagram

The Highland Boys tennis team clinched the conference title, going 6-0 in city play, ending with a 7-0 defeat over Como Park. This is the 17th conference win in team history.

Doubles duo Andrew Bacigalupi and Bodie Zwank defeated Eagan in the Section 3AA doubles championship, taking 1st place and qualifying for the state tennis tournament. The state tournament will begin on June 8th.

Loot Boxes versus Battle Passes in games: Which is worse?

By: Daniel Kendle

In a lot of multiplayer video games you’ll find 2 types of micro-transactional models: loot boxes and battle passes. They both have good qualities, but both also have negative ones as well. As someone who has experienced both, I’m here to answer the burning question: which is worse? Or, more importantly, which is better?

On that note I must say that I’m not the biggest fan of FPS shooters, in which these two models are most commonly found across gaming. I’m more of a fan of single-player games, and online battle royales aren’t really my thing, so take this article with a grain of salt.

To start, let’s give an overview of both options. Both loot boxes and battle passes involve you spending real-world currency to purchase various items that either affect gameplay or are purely cosmetic. However, how you go around receiving those items differs.

Loot Boxes are 1-use purchases that automatically give you some item or cosmetic. There are different types of boxes, with some games having a randomized system of boxes, and others not. When buying one, they usually only have 1 or 2 items, so you can expect to have differently-priced boxes for different rarities of stock.

Battle Passes are much different in that after taking your money, you don’t receive some reward immediately. Instead, you have a roadmap of unlockables that, after playing more of the game, you can unlock more for free. Many passes have free roads that have less items and lower quality in terms of looks. Also, many games have different “seasons” of battle passes, where you’ll get a new set of unlockables, sometimes themed around something different. These don’t come at any extra cost if you want the free gimmes, but if you want the road with the higher-quality items, you have to pay again.

Now that we have an idea of what each of our options look like, we can get into their upsides – and issues.

Starting with loot boxes, the one big upside they have is that they don’t take time to get. Battle passes have you play more of the game in conjunction with the pass, and therefore take a lot of time to keep progressing. Meanwhile, loot boxes are simple, automatic transaction models that either give you exactly what you want or a chance to, getting something else instead.

However, the issues stemming from these boxes are from this simplicity. One big thing is that for a lot of games you can’t necessarily get the exact item you want. This’ll be the last time I discuss this, but a bunch of loot boxes have a loot pool that the game randomly chooses from for your item, which can make your spent money either wasted or used for something you didn’t need. It’s also not that fun; a 1-1 purchase for whatever you want – or something close to that – doesn’t provide much in the way of interacting with the game more so than your wallet.

Next is battle passes. I’d say that there are 2 big pluses to these systems. The first is that having to work through the game, playing matches and whatnot, has you actually using the game. This is in contrast to loot boxes’ transactional module. The second is that you get more content for generally less-expensive prices, even if the cosmetics and items you earn aren’t able to be hand-picked.

However, there’s also a couple of problems with battle passes. For one thing, while the dull currency exchanging of loot boxes doesn’t give much in the way of game interaction, the ease can’t be understated. Imagine if a game you’re playing has you get weapons by defeating enemies, dropping only every few hundred kills. Well then, it’d be a slog to get through, and being able to simply buy the desired item is too convenient. This is the big obstacle with battle passes; playing the game over and over to work your way to nodes on a path can be monotonous and lengthy.

Nowadays we see battle passes more often used in games than loot boxes, so I’d say that the gaming industry has chosen their favored model. Personally, I’d say that both are better in different games, with loot boxes being best in games with gameplay focused more on repeatable gameplay loops, like many mobile games. Meanwhile, battle passes are seemingly best in longer campaigns, like shooters and open-world systems. Not that you can’t have a battle pass in a mobile game or loot boxes in longer campaigns, as hundreds have proven they’re perfectly viable options. However, I find that loot boxes are best in shorter experiences that can be easily picked up, and battle passes in either longer narratives or more complex systems.

If I had to pick a favorite, I’d say I prefer battle passes due to their inherent allowance of game interaction. I mean, why did you buy the pass in the first place? To play the game!

Of course, you can have instances where boxes and passes don’t work at all. A loot box in a single-player RPG would be decently-strange, and as for battle passes…

Yikes.

‘Plátanos Flameados’ recipe

By: Pablo Contreras

Image taken from: Cocina Como Se Hace

I have never made Plátanos Flameados but from the video that I watched I can see that this recipe is definitely interesting and slightly unique. This recipe requires using fire and alcohol so be careful in that part if you are doing those steps.

I’m pretty sure that we all have tried Platanos flameados, I know you can find them in buffets, and me personally, I have never liked the taste and texture of them. I don’t like how soft the banana is and the taste of the banana.

Now here are some warnings before we start the recipe:

  1. This recipe is not mine it belongs to ‘Cocina Como Se Hace’
  2. The photo on this article also belong to ‘Cocina Como Se Hace’
  3. This recipe does have alcohol in it but you can skip that part, if not then have an adult help you

‘Plátanos Flameados’ Ingredients:

  1. 2 Bananas
  2. Brown sugar
  3. Butter
  4. 2 sliced oranges
  5. Whisky or cognac
  6. 1 cinnamon stick

Steps:

  1. The first thing that you need to do is put your pan on the stove on medium heat, and add in the brown sugar and wait for your sugar to get caramelized
  2. While waiting for your sugar to get caramelized peel your bananas and cut then in half
  3. Now, once your sugar is fully caramelized then add in your butter and your 1 stick of cinnamon and mix thoroughly
  4. Next squeeze the juice of the oranges in the pan and mix
  5. Once everything is mixed thoroughly then add in your sliced bananas
  6. Leave your bananas to cook in the caramel for a little while and then flip them

(For this next part I don’t recommend doing this without an adult because it requires you using alcohol and a lighter. You can skip if you want, if not make sure you have an adult help you)

  1. You are going to add in the whisky and turn your heat all the way up and use a lighter to light the bananas on fire
  2. Wait for the fire to stop and then you will know that they are ready

Now that you are done you can enjoy 🙂

Here is the link to the original recipe, beware the video is in Spanish ‘Canal Cómo Se Hace’: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MKtbJArs23s

Florida had become hostile to African Americans

By: Jasmine Williams

Photo by Guillaume Hankenne on Pexels.com

According to ‘Rolling Stone,’ the NAACP had issued a travel advisory warning Black Americans who were thinking about going to Florida. The NAACP has said, “[Florida is] openly hostile toward African Americans, people of color and LGBTQ+ individuals.” This is surprising because of how many people actually would or would have gone to Florida.

About 34.6 million domestic people went to Florida from January 1st to March 31st for vacation. The NAACP had stated, “Before traveling to Florida, please understand that the state of Florida devalues and marginalizes the contributions of, and the challenges faced by African Americans and other communities of color.”

Ron DeSantis, the Florida Republican governor, is against diversity and inclusion. In 2022, he signed a bill that executed a ban on race topics being taught in schools. AP African American studies are inaccessible to students because he thinks it’s a political agenda. DeSantis said, “[T]he country is rotten and that our institutions are illegitimate.”

DeSantis had tried to cover up the truth of discrimination of Black Americans now and in the past. DeSantis neglects Black Americans struggles and their history, showing how inconsiderate he is about Black people. Since they would ban AP African American studies, others would not be able to learn about the history behind African Americans and their struggles and be able to help them.

The president and CEO of the NAACP, Derrick Johnson, had said, “Let me be clear — failing to teach an accurate representation of the horrors and inequalities that Black Americans have faced and continue to face is a disservice to students and a dereliction of duty to all.”

Just before this advisory for Black Americans came, the LULAC, the League of United Latin American Citizens, had announced an advisory to Latinos. DeSantis had put into place cruel penalties for undocumented people. It may be better to book your next flight to another place next vacation.

For more information, please go to:

https://www.cnn.com/2023/05/21/us/naacp-florida-travel-advisory/index.html

https://naacp.org/articles/naacp-issues-travel-advisory-florida

With the U.S. facing a looming debt default, the race is on to raise the debt ceiling before the June 5th deadline

By Aeden Evenson-McDermott

Photo by Photo By: Kaboompics.com on Pexels.com

After the past few weeks of going back and forth between reaching the settlements and negotiators hunkering down, Biden and McCarthy’s teams finally struck a deal to raise the debt ceiling.

There were many consequences to the situation and if a deal wasn’t reached it would be quite catastrophic for the U.S. but also the world markets and economy overall. As for the U.S., inflation would continue to rise, prices for almost everything would be higher, health and social security benefits would be in limbo, and military personnel could go unpaid along with millions of jobs being lost.

Thankfully, in recent days, Biden and McCarthy struck a deal to avoid a default but still need the house and senate on board. Moderate Democrats and many Republicans are against the deal as they feel they lost important things in the bill. When you have two sides hammering out measures, both sides won’t be able to get everything, it’s just a part of the process which is inevitable.

With the deal being passed, it would create some time until after the next presidential election in 2024, and in 2025 it would expire.

Some of the issues at large that were in the deal will be examined. Caps on spending would be in the ballpark of $1 trillion less and no budget caps are in place after 2025. Defense spending would slightly increase and more protections for medical care of military veterans would also increase. Unspent COVID funds from the pandemic would be returned and are estimated to be at a value of $30 billion. Welfare of food stamps were protected but stricter work requirements were instituted. Further funds to tax the rich resulted in $80 billion for IRS funding. Energy projects would become more mainstream and projects would begin faster.

A few important clauses that were not included in the deal were student loan relief, tax hikes, and clean energy.

Overall, both sides came together at the bargaining table and got somewhat of what they bargained for. It remains to be seen on how the deal will be passed through the house and senate but both sides seem optimistic.

McCarthyism and the demolition of progress in the United States

By: Charlie Boone

Welch-McCarthy Hearings: Image via Wikimedia Commons

Wisconsin Senator, Joseph McCarthy’s corrupt and unfounded attacks on communism during the 40s and 50s, portraying the ideology as a vague, amorphous enemy have both directly and indirectly halted societal progress within the United States and influenced the right wing’s focus on culture war issues.

While a majority of McCarthy’s attacks were rooted in white supremacy, homophobia, and anti-semitism, many modern anti-communists lead with a different approach, depicting all socialization as tyrannical; typically citing nations with downfalls directly related to U.S. imperialism and intervention i.e. coups, sanctions, banana republics, etc. and blaming it all on the bogeyman of socialism. This depiction has done arguably the most damage, as it’s a very regular talking point to say that free healthcare and education are too radical, from both the left and the right. This is an intentional move from establishment capitalists, as well as the corporations in their pockets because, for example, if you explained to the average person that the LAPD was just given an extra $3.2 billion, as reported by the LA Times, and there are over 420,000 homeless people in the United States, and 37.9 million people live below the poverty line, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, I think they would agree that there’s a problem.

According to the right, America is a meritocracy, and your material conditions are exclusively a product of how hard you work, rather than an amalgamation of systemic, historical, and personal circumstances. This characterization is very obviously not true, as a person born into a wealthy family will experience distinct advantages, both economically and socially, despite not working any harder than someone born into poverty or homelessness.

It’s also important to mention that in our current economic state, upward-class mobility is nearly impossible, despite the exceptions that are often highlighted to try to dismiss the problem. Obviously, hard work is important but if you looked at two people born in completely different economic situations, both working as hard as one another, their outcome is likely going to be drastically different, which again, most people would agree is a problem. With all of the barriers set up to avoid hiring people in poverty, as well as it being pretty much impossible to find a job if you are homeless, the “pull yourself up by your bootstraps” mentality simply does not work, especially in the United States where just under 900,000 Americans die in poverty, as cited by the University of Columbia in 2010, and 45,000 Americans die as a direct result of lack of access to healthcare each year according to a 2009 report by the Harvard Medical School.

The fundamental idea of capitalism is the maximization of profit for the corporation while spending the least amount of money on labor. This is important because the capitalist does not necessarily hate the worker, they simply view them as disposable, and a means to make a profit. This inevitably leads to an insane gap of wealth between the working class and the CEOs, where the workers are barely making a fraction’s worth of their labor.

My point here in explaining the exploitation and inherent inequality of capitalism is to say that without McCarthy and the general right’s demonization of communism and socialism, a much larger number of Americans would agree that the current system at the very least needs serious reform. I also believe that there would be a much larger number of prominent socialist politicians that aren’t constantly bogged down by the Democratic party without McCarthy’s direct career-ruining actions toward anyone who presented views anywhere close to anti-capitalist.

McCarthy’s accusatory and defamatory tactics have also proven to be incredibly influential in shaping the right wing’s focus on the “culture war’”. If you’re not familiar, the term culture war is used to describe a general polarization and stark divide between societal values, typically to distract voters from the fact that a majority of their frustrations are a direct result of capitalism. One of Joseph McCarthy’s commonly used tactics was to accuse his ideological enemies of not only being communists but also homosexuals, expanding the evil, amorphous fog sent out to destroy your family and attack your children.

Over time, the fog continued to grow, collecting more marginalized groups to scapegoat issues onto, as is always the case with fascism. In 2023 alone, the republican party has passed 75 anti-trans bills with 555 proposed in total, some being as egregious as making providing gender-affirming care to someone under 26 years old a felony for healthcare providers (OK SB129). Most Americans see this as ridiculous and fascistic, the same way they looked at Joseph McCarthy, but the rapid influence of far-right legislators and echo chambers continues to push culture war issues to the point of genocidal rhetoric.

Fascism is still very much alive and well in the United States, and the lack of action from the Democratic party is worrying. It’s becoming more and more apparent that many establishment Democrats would rather have a fascist in office than a progressive, and the continued push for “business as usual” neoliberal politics is going to swing that door wide open.

For more information, please visit: