As the Winter Olympics proceed in China this year, Guterres’ worthy aspiration is being tested — we’ll find out whether this year’s truce may prove as limited as the earliest ones were.
Worth noting: On the day of the opening ceremony the last time the Games were held in Beijing, in 2008, Russia invaded Georgia.
This year’s games began while a huge force of Russian troops remained perched on the Ukraine border and with US President Joe Biden sending troops to Eastern Europe.
China’s Xi Jinping and Russia’s Vladimir Putin met Friday before the opening ceremony in a show of harmony between the US rivals, agreeing, in general, to “step up coordination and cooperation in international affairs” and specifically to oppose NATO expansion.
In some ways, the threat of war overshadowed the start of the Olympics. As Amy Bass noted, “Before competition even began, Ukrainian officials warned its athletes to avoid social contact with members of the Russian team … Last August in Tokyo, Ukrainian Yaroslava Mahuchikh, who took bronze in the high jump, drew the ire of many back home for a celebratory photo with Russia’s Mariya Lasitskene, the gold medalist in the event.”
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Biden’s moves
Responding to Putin’s massing of troops, “Biden has launched a muscular diplomatic offensive, coordinated with NATO allies and held high-level talks with Russian officials, while warning of stiff economic sanctions and boosting the military defenses of Ukraine and now of the United States’ allies in Eastern Europe, such as Romania and Poland,” wrote Frida Ghitis. Leading Senate Republicans backed Biden’s moves while Trumpists adopted positions more sympathetic to Russia.
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The potential contenders
A replacement for retiring Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer will be nominated this month, if Biden meets his own deadline for the pick. One potential choice, US District Court Judge J. Michelle Childs, already has support from both sides of the aisle — from Sen. Lindsey Graham and Rep. James Clyburn — in her home state of South Carolina. Bakari Sellers, who has represented clients in Childs’ courtroom, called her “a judge without any air of pretension.”
Trump floats pardons
The week began with condemnation from Democrats and some Republicans of Trump’s suggestion that he could consider pardoning some January 6 rioters if he is elected president in 2024. For some, it was even more troubling that at his rally last weekend, he also threatened prosecutors investigating him with massive demonstrations if they “do anything wrong or illegal.”
The week ended with the Republican National Committee censuring two members of Congress who dared to call out Trump for his election lies and serve on the House select committee investigating January 6.
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Black History Month
Ever since 1976, US presidents have designated the month of February as a time to recognize Black history. But this year, as Peniel E. Joseph noted, “Black History Month commemorations will unfold alongside efforts in numerous states to ban the teaching of its content. Efforts that purport to bar the teaching of ‘Critical Race Theory’ have evolved into a full-scale assault, with Republican lawmakers unleashing attacks on Black History under the guise of protecting White children from ‘discomfort.'”
A survivor’s voice
Joan Salter was born in Brussels, the child of Polish Jews. Her mother’s family was murdered in the Treblinika death camp and her father’s in Belzec. “It was thanks to a tip-off from a police officer that deportations of women and children were due to start, that my mother managed to smuggle us out of Paris in a laundry van in the dead of night,” Salter wrote. She was shipped to the US in 1943 as a child survivor.
Salter spoke out this week after Whoopi Goldberg apologized for saying the Nazi persecution of the Jews had nothing to do with race.
“The reality is that Nazis declared Jews and other groups like the Romani and Sinti as inferior to their own supposedly superior ‘Aryan race.’ In the years leading to the Holocaust, Nazis referred to Jews as ‘rats.’ And it is for this one reason that Jews were targeted for destruction. Six million of my people were murdered simply for who they were.”
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‘Pam & Tommy’
Under different circumstances, a new series streaming on Hulu could be applauded for foregrounding the story of a woman victimized. But that’s not what’s being delivered to viewers, wrote Sara Stewart:
“This eight-episode show about the infamous 1995 Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee sex tape is, at its core, about a violation of privacy. It’s the story of a honeymoon videotape the famous couple never wanted anyone to see, stolen and distributed at great profit to various men. And the story of that piracy is now being sold as a TV series … at great profit to the team who made it. Without the consent of the woman at its center …”
Bigger than Boris
Holly Thomas wrote, “As Johnson probably realizes, it isn’t just the fact of our nation’s cabin crew boozing their way through the pandemic that offends the British populace.”
“Regular and excessive bouts of group drinking are chronic throughout British working culture — and the political world of Westminster is an exaggerated caricature of what goes on elsewhere. In non-lockdown times, Whitehall pubs spill onto the streets from 6 p.m. onward — and overflow even more with proximity to the Houses of Parliament. Drinking carries on until late every weekday. Junior advisers know the value of showing up for pints if they want to endear themselves to their superiors and as a result, journalists cruising for stories do the same, habitually stalking the House of Commons’ heavily subsidized bars.”
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The future of policing
Michael Fanone, a former Washington, DC, police officer who was badly injured defending the Capitol on January 6, traveled to New York for the funeral of NYPD Officer Jason Rivera, one of two officers killed responding to a domestic disturbance call last month. Fanone, who wanted “to honor their sacrifice and grieve alongside my peers,” cited former police officer and current New York Mayor Eric Adams’s remark, “Once a cop, always a cop. It never goes away.”
“Adams understands this, as evidenced by his administration’s recently released ‘blueprint to end gun violence,’ a 15-page plan which includes proposals to detect and confiscate illegal guns, create new public safety units and provide mental health resources and other social programs.”
President Biden flew to New York Thursday to meet with Adams, as Julian Zelizer noted.
“The Biden administration is acknowledging the problem and taking steps to show it can be tough on crime. This visit also appears to be an attempt to push back against progressives who are calling to ‘defund the police,’ and neutralize any GOP attacks on Democrats for being soft on crime.” But Zelizer wrote that the administration shouldn’t lose sight of the genuine issues raised by the Black Lives Matter movement.
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NFL plays defense
Former NFL coach Brian Flores confronted the NFL last week with a blockbuster lawsuit. “No one expected Flores, who seemed to have a long career in front of him at the age of 40, to disrupt the NFL,” wrote Roxanne Jones.
“But disrupt he did.”
Flores, “fed up with his treatment and that of other Black executives, filed a class-action lawsuit against the NFL and three teams Tuesday alleging racial discrimination. He is suing the Miami Dolphins over his firing in January — a termination that happened despite the team’s first consecutive winning seasons in nearly 20 years … Flores is also suing the Denver Broncos and the New York Giants, alleging those two teams discriminated against him in the hiring process. The NFL called Flores’ allegations meritless, and all the teams named in his lawsuit deny any wrongdoing.”
Don’t miss
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A great time to be a five-letter word
Wardle invented Wordle — and launched a craze that culminated this week in the purchase of the word game by The New York Times Company for an amount in the low seven figures.
The game makes it easy for people to share their results on social media. “Sharing Wordle scores is not just an act of community but, in some ways, a boast of intelligence,” wrote Hemmer. “Solving a Wordle with just two or three guesses feels not lucky but savvy: a combination of intellect and cleverness.”
Don’t be surprised if the Wordle for Valentine’s Day is H-E-A-R-T.