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NEVER PEDESTRIAN

harrysoflondon.com
04.09.2020

Can Trump Persuade Undecided Voters to Back Him—Again?

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INTERNATIONAL EDITION
SEPTEMBER 04, 2020 _ VOL.175 _ NO.06

FEATURES

22 32
TUG OF WAR
The campaign season is about to get underway
LQ HDUQHVW 7KH SDUWLHV DUH ɿJKWLQJ IRU YRWHUV
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those in reliably Republican districts that sent
Democrats to Congress in the last midterms . The X Factor The Fateful Slate
A late break toward Trump In 2018 a lot of red House seats
by undecided voters helped turned blue. To beat Trump
COVER CREDIT
Illustration by Britt SpencerIRUNewsweek; decide the last presidential in November Democrats need
Photograph by SensorSpot/Getty election. Can Trump persuade moderate-to-conservative voters
them to back him again— in a handful of those districts
with the same results? to pull the lever for Biden.
GETTY

For more headlines, go to


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DEPARTMENTS P. 10
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06 Wilmington, 10 What Joe Biden Has
Senior Editors _ Peter Carbonara, Jenny Haward,
Delaware in Store for China Dimi Reider, Elizabeth Rhodes Ernst, Kenneth R.
Rosen, Meredith Wolf Schizer, Rebecca Stokes
The Contenders He Won’t Be Deputy Editors _ Jennifer Doherty,

08 Prague, Czech a “Pushover” Christopher Groux (Gaming), Matt Keeley (Night),


Scott McDonald (Sports), Kyle McGovern,
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(Politics), Donica Phifer, Christina Zhao
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0DQ\ RI WKH EUDYHVW Novo Progresso, Contributing Editor, Opinion _ Lee Habeeb
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the last 100 years Brazil
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18 Coming Clean About
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Doctors Must Do &KLHI&RUUHVSRQGHQW _ &KDQWDOb'Db6LOYD


+HDOWK&RUUHVSRQGHQW _ Kashmira Gander
What Science Proves, 'DYLGb%UHQQDQ'DQb&DQFLDQ%UHQGDQb&ROH
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Weighs In on a Now

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In Focus THE NEWS IN PICTURES

WILMINGTON, DELAWARE

The Contenders
On August 20, Jill Biden; her husband, former Vice President
and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden; and Senator
from California and Democratic vice presidential nominee
Kamala Harris greet supporters outside the Chase Center at the
conclusion of the virtual Democratic National Convention.
O L I V I E R D O U L I E RY

6 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


O L I V I ER D O UL I E RY/AF P/G E T T Y
8
In Focus

NeWSWeeK.COm
Sep tember 04, 2020
CLOCKWISE FROM BOTTOM LEFT: MICHAL CIZEK/AFP/GETTY; CARL DE SOUZA/AFP/GETTY; AFP/GETTY
NOVO PROGRESSO, BRAZIL PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC PORT LOUIS, MAURITIUS

Roadblock People Power Shipwreck


Members of the Kayapo tribe Crowds gathered August Taken on August 17, this picture
block the BR-163, a major 16 in Prague to support shows the MV Wakashio bulk
trans-Amazonian highway, Belarusian protesters who carrier, which ran aground and
during a protest outside of are calling for President broke into two parts near Blue
Novo Progresso on August Alexander Lukashenko to Bay Marine Park. According
17. At issue: the lack of resign after what they and to CBS News, the ship leaked
government support during others say was a fraudulent more than 1,000 tons of oil
the COVID-19 pandemic election. A thousand-plus when the carrier struck a
and illegal deforestation in people assembled in the Old coral reef off the southeastern
and around their territories. Town Square in the capital. coast of Mauritius on July 25.
→ CARL DE SOUZA → MICHAL CIZEK → AFP

NeWSWeeK.COm 9
NEWS, OPINION + ANALYSIS

CAN THEY
G?
GET ALONG
The era of
“engagement” for
engagemen nt’s
sake ‘has no ow
come to an uncer-
emonious close.”
Here, Biden n and
China’s leadder
Xi Jinping at
a a
2011 meetiing
in Beijing.

10 NEWSWEEK.C SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


“Companies of all sizes have signed on to Stop Hate
for Profit to pause Facebook advertising.” » P. 14

ANALYSIS

What
Joe Biden
Has in Store
For China
The former VP is signaling that he won’t be a “pushover” when it
comes to the People’s Republic if he wins the election in November

donald trump ’s rage over the company Huawei’s ability to buy foreign computer
circumstances in which he now finds chips. Two weeks earlier Trump announced that
himself—trailing in the polls as the November he wants to force a sale within 45 days of the U.S.
election approaches; on the defensive over his operations of TikTok, the popular Chinese-owned
handling of the pandemic—has been directed social media app. He also wants to ban WeChat, a
mainly at one target: the government of the Peo- communications app that everyone uses in China,
ple’s Republic of China (PRC). but is used in the U.S. mainly by Chinese people
1 ( / 6 2 1  & + , 1 * ʔ % /2 2 0 % ( 5* ʔ* ( 7 7 <  72 3  5 , * + 7  * ( 7 7 <

The list of grievances seems endless. Of course, talking to friends and family back home. Neither
one of Trump’s greatest hits is that China is to company is a national security threat.
blame for the COVID-19 virus. On July 23rd, Sec- A consistent Trump theme since the campaign
retary of State Mike Pompeo gave a remarkably began has been this: a President Joe Biden would
hawkish speech, even for him, arguing that nearly be soft on China much like he and his boss, Barack
50 years of engagement with the PRC had been a Obama, were during their eight-year administration.
mistake. The administration then intensified eco- So you would think that Biden would be on
nomic pressure, in ways that critics the defensive, avoiding the China
say are untethered to any recogniz- debate every step of the way. To the
able long-term strategy. On August BY
contrary, the Biden campaign now
17, the administration announced plans to turn a potential weakness
it would further tighten restrictions BILL POWELL into an opportunity. It will paint
on the Chinese telecommunications @billasia2010 Trump’s China policy as reckless and

NEWSWEEK.COM 11
Periscope ANALYSIS

ineffective, particularly on trade— achievement—but didn’t agree to effort gathered steam last month,
delivering nothing to American any serious enforcement mecha- when the candidate issued a fairly
workers and consumers. Trump’s red- nism. China’s carbon emissions hit a detailed set of policy proposals on
hot China rhetoric, advisers to Biden record high in 2019—accounting for economic relations with Beijing,
believe, gives his campaign an open- the entirety of the globe’s increase in which criticized the Trump admin-
ing: a chance to present the former emissions— while its investment in istration’s approach—but mimicked
vice president as the grown-up in the renewable energy has been plummet- its stated goals: stiffer trade enforce-
room when it comes to the PRC. ing. No surprise then that on August ment, tougher sanctions for intel-
“[Trump’s] rhetoric and the policy 7, the U.S. intelligence community lectual property theft, penalties for
seem increasingly unhinged,” says reported that it felt Beijing would cyber espionage.
an influential Biden foreign policy prefer a Biden victory in November. Key foreign policy advisers to
adviser not authorized to speak on the As far as Biden’s advisers are con- the campaign, Jake Sullivan, Biden’s
record. “There’s a difference between cerned, Beijing’s leadership might national security adviser when he was
being tough and being unhinged.” be careful what they wish for. They vice president, and Kurt Campbell,
In the coming weeks Biden will acknowledge that early on in the cam- the former assistant secretary of state
likely deliver a serious speech outlin- paign the candidate stepped in it when for East Asia, had previously called for
ing his own views on the PRC. He will he dismissed China as an economic detailed reforms of weak World Trade
emphasize the need to work much competitor—“China is going to eat Organization (WTO) rules, including
more closely with allies in presenting our lunch? Come on, man!” he said subsidies to state-owned industries.
a united front to Beijing on a range last May while campaigning in Iowa. In a high profile Foreign Affairs arti-
of issues, including predatory trade Ever since, they’ve been trying cle late last year, Sullivan and Camp-
practices, intellectual property theft to reassure Americans—and signal bell wrote bluntly that the era of the
and cyber espionage. “It’s one thing to Beijing—that he would not be a era of “engagement” for engagement’s
to talk tough about China, which patsy when it comes to trade. That sake—which was effectively U.S. pol-
Trump has done, it’s the other to be icy for four decades—“has now come
effective in dealing with Beijing to to an unceremonious close.” But they
advance our interests. We think we also argued that China remains “an
can do that, and we’ll lay out how,”
says the senior adviser.
“The ambassador essential partner” on issues like the
environment, global health (includ-
is smart enough ing the prevention of pandemics)
A Biden Weakness?
The guiding presumption was that
to understand and nuclear proliferation. Biden will
also seek to increase military-to-mil-
Biden would spend a lot of time that no candidate itary contacts and “to build personal
defending an Obama administra-
tion record that critics believe did
could afford to ties as well as understanding of each
side’s operations.” Cooperating on
little to deter Beijing from a variety be soft on China.” those issues, while deterring Beijing’s
of economic abuses. “Obama seemed territorial expansion in Asia and its
to care mainly about climate change economic aggression, is what Biden
when it came to dealing with Beijing,” seeks to do, advisers say.
says Derek Scissors, a senior fellow at
the conservative-leaning American Unintended Consequences
Enterprise Institute in Washington, It’s not simply electoral politics
D.C. “They put a lot of other things, that has prompted the campaign to
like trade, like [Beijing’s] expansion- highlight Biden’s approach to China.
ism in the South China Sea, on the There was another audience in play:
back burner.” Advisers say he wanted to make sure
There’s some truth to that. China Beijing understood that in no way
signed the 2013 Paris Accord— was he going to be a patsy. While the
which Obama views as a signal PRC may still prefer Biden to Trump,

12 NeWSWeeK.COm Sep tember 04, 2020


TRADE WARS The White House, led by
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (below),
wants TikTok sold in the U.S.; Chinese
U.S. Ambassador Cui Tiankai (opposite
page), knows Biden will be no patsy.

[Trump and Biden] are both the same.


Don’t bother trying to preserve any
space for a reset, don’t wait to find
out what Biden will do. Just go for it.”

Battle Plan
It is clear, if elected, that Biden will
have to walk a fine line with the Peo-
ple’s Republic, no matter who will
guide foreign policy in his admin-
istration. Confronting China on
trade—which Trump has done—
while seeking to cooperate on seri-
ous issues like the environment and
C LO CK W I SE F RO M L E FT: XI NH UA / L I U YAN G /GE T T Y; BU D RU L CH UK RUT/S OPA I M AG ES/ L IG H T RO C K E T/G ET T Y; L IS I N I ES NE R /A FP/GE T T Y

global health (which Trump has not)


is tricky. It’s not at all clear Beijing
will play along.
Biden’s China advisers run the
gamut from perceived doves—Susan
Rice, a possible secretary of state—to
relative hawks like Ely Ratner, a vice
as the recent intelligence assessment president at the Center for a New
maintains, that message has no doubt American Security, a Washington
been received. Cui Tiankai, the long- think tank. Should they join a Biden
time ambassador to Washington— administration, they and others will
and who is close to President Xi be focused on the same thing: pre-
Jinping—could obviously see how venting a dangerous escalatory spiral
quickly the bilateral relationship was between Washington and Beijing.
deteriorating. Should Biden win, China will
An outside but influential adviser be done with an erratic President
to Trump on China policy, who has Trump guiding the relationship with
a relationship with Cui, says: “The Beijing. China may not think Biden
ambassador is smart enough to under- example, the pro-democracy media will be a patsy, but they probably
stand that no candidate could afford tycoon Jimmy Lai and his two sons think he’d be steadier and more pre-
now to be seen as soft on China. And were arrested. The repression of Chi- dictable. Biden believes it’s possible
no president can, either. He’s no doubt nese Muslims in Xinjiang has ratch- to compete with China and cooper-
passed that on to the leadership.” eted up and there’s been a continuing ate with it when it suits the interest
There may have been some unin- buildup of China’s military in East of both sides. As a guiding principle
tended consequences as a result of and Southeast Asia. The goal? Driv- for Sino-American relations, it’s rea-
Biden’s “no pushover” stance. In fact, ing the U.S. out of the western Pacific. sonable, but it only works if Beijing
some China watchers believe, it may According to one U.S. academic plays along. If it doesn’t, Team Biden
have given a boost to Beijing’s hard- with contacts in the Communist Party, will need a Plan B—and it may be a
liners. The PRC’s crackdown in Hong the hardliners are essentially say- painful one that he shares with the
Kong is intensifying. Recently, for ing, “The U.S. election doesn’t matter. current kid in the room: Trump.

NeWSWeeK.COm 13
Periscope

O N L I NE

Double Standard?
Many of the companies participating in the Facebook
boycott advertise on sites that promote content
they don’t approve of on Mark Zuckerberg’s site

more than one thousand practices of 15 companies par-


companies of all sizes—rang- ticipating in the boycott. Some—
ing from Verizon to outdoors including Patagonia, Coca-Cola, and
retailer REI to hundreds of small Ben & Jerry’s—did not have any ads
business and nonprofits—have appear on NewsGuard Red-rated
signed on to the Stop Hate for Profit sites in recent months.
campaign, a movement led by the However, many others advertised
ADL and NAACP asking companies on infamous misinformation web-
to pause Facebook advertising to sites that have promoted debunked
protest what the civil rights orga- conspiracy theories about Presi-
nizations see as Facebook’s failure dent Barack Obama’s birthplace,
to fight hate speech. “Your profits anti-vaccine propaganda and Islam-
will never be worth promoting ophobic falsehoods.
hate, bigotry, racism, antisemitism Take technology giant HP as an
and violence,” the campaign argues. example. “We expect all platforms
Yet many of the biggest on which we advertise
brands participating in to uphold responsible
the boycott fund web- BY
policies that prevent
sites that promote as our ads from appearing
much or often more of GABBY DEUTCH alongside objectionable
the content that these @GSDeutch content, regardless of
advertisers don’t want the source,” the com-
to fund on Facebook. pany said in a statement announcing
Over the past four months, com- its participation in the boycott.
panies including Pfizer, Microsoft, Over the past four months, the
Starbucks and Target placed adver- company’s ads appeared on 28 News-
tisements—probably inadvertently, Guard Red-rated sites, including
through algorithms that determine GellerReport.com, an unreliable web-
where programmatic ads appear— site that described Islam as an “assault
on sites that NewsGuard has rated to our way of life” in a 2018 article
Red, meaning generally unreliable. that argued that “Until the Western
(NewsGuard rates websites for world understands the threat of
credibility and transparency to give Islamic ideology to their society and
readers more context for the news culture, people will continue to die.”
they see online.) HP also advertised on TheConser-
Using data from Moat, an adver- vativeTreehouse.com, a misinforma-
tising technology service, News- tion site that gained attention in June
Guard examined the advertising for promoting the false claim (which

14 NEWSWEEK.COM SEPTE R 04, 2


“The Facebook later appeared in President Donald
Trump’s Twitter feed) that an elderly
ad boycott has peaceful protester attacked by police
amassed an in Buffalo, New York, had been a

unprecedented member of antifa. (An HP spokesper-


son did not respond to an email from
amount of NewsGuard requesting comment.)
corporate The list goes on.

starpower.” Starbucks, HP, Ford, Target and


Unilever ads fund ZeroHedge, a
finance-blog-turned-conspiracy-hub
that pushed falsehoods about former
Vice President Joe Biden during the
congressional impeachment inquiry
of Trump last fall and has falsely
claimed the coronavirus was stolen
by Chinese spies from a Canadian lab.
Ads for some companies appear
on Russian disinformation websites,
too: Microsoft and HP advertised on
Sputnik, and Adidas advertised on RT,
both of which are mouthpieces for
Vladimir Putin that seek to sow divi-
sion in the U.S. and in Europe.
The Facebook ad boycott has
amassed an unprecedented amount
of corporate starpower, with busi-
nesses asserting that inclusive values
are as important as profits. Yet their
ads continue to subsidize unreliable
sites across the internet, appearing
alongside racist and conspiratorial
articles. This doesn’t mean the com-
panies support those websites. But
it’s what happens when companies
place ads using algorithms, without
considering a website’s content or
journalistic standards.

Ơ NewsGuard (www.newsguardtech.
com) provides a human solution to mis-
information by rating the reliability of
news and information sites. Our ratings,
9 , 6 8$ /  * ( 1 ( 5 $7 , 2 1 ʔ* ( 7 7 <

based on nine objective journalistic cri-


teria, give each website a score from zero
to 100—along with a corresponding
Green (generally reliable) or Red (gener-
ally unreliable) shield—and give people
more context for what they read online.

NEWSWEEK.COM 15
Periscope

BUSIN E S S that’s exactly what many Americans


are experiencing today.

EveryoneNeeds The U.S. has just had the worst


three-month economic collapse in

aSideHustle
its history, with 20 straight weeks of
more than a million Americans filing
for unemployment. Things became
Why true security is never allowing ourselves even more dire when political grid-
to become dependent on one employer lock recently led to the expiration of
the $600 weekly benefit that had kept
many out-of-work Americans afloat,
and the confusion around President
on a monday af terno on paid one) to nothing at all: The paper Donald Trump’s executive order to
nearly 20 years ago, when I was sent me on my way with four days’ partially extend those payments.
a young political reporter, our human severance pay. Compounding the Given the unpredictable course
resources director asked me to stop problem, I was laid off on Monday, of the pandemic, a quick recovery
by his office—and when I left five September 10, 2001. My job search the is impossible to count on. Instead,
minutes later, I no longer had a job. next day did not go as planned. what I’ve learned, through my per-
That’s not so surprising; since 2008, Eventually, of course, sonal experience and writing a book
U.S. newsrooms have been cut in half. I found other work. But on the future of work, is this: These
But at the time, with the newspaper the stress of becoming BY
days, everyone needs a side gig. True
industry flush, I was stunned. unemployed on the security is never allowing ourselves to
Within moments, I went from hav- brink of a national cri- DORIE CLARK become dependent on one employer.
ing a “steady day job” (albeit a poorly sis was profound—and @dorieclark Busy employees may wonder:

16 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


Where would I get the time? How would Child standards, it’s still a (presum- school, giving keynote talks, writing
I even know where to start? ably decent) free dinner. And it’s a way books, executive coaching, online
In the course of writing my book for you to validate the idea, since it’s courses and more. And when dis-
Entrepreneurial You, I discovered a few bad news indeed if no one wants your ruption hits, as it did with the pan-
principles any of us can use to develop product or service, even if it’s free. demic, that diversification creates
a side income stream—in small and Finally, it’s time to get paid. You resiliency: Keynote talks at confer-
manageable ways, over time. probably won’t land top rates at first. ences dried up, but online course
First, even if you don’t know what But drawing on referrals from your sales grew exponentially.
your area of expertise is, others do. original beta testers, you should now Change is certainly coming, but
Almost everyone has friends who be able to earn a bit of money from we don’t know how or when. The
come to them for certain favors: tak- your side gig. And over time, as you best career security possible—for all
ing photos, helping them coordinate hone your skills and confidence—and of us, including those with “steady
wardrobes, improving their résumé or accumulate happy customers—your jobs”—is building a side gig today
LinkedIn profiles. They’re seeking you ability to charge a premium will grow. that can help protect our financial
out because they recognize you have Today, I’ve developed multiple future tomorrow.
unusual skills, and now it’s time for income streams—teaching business
you to take notice. ƠDorie Clark teaches at Duke Univer-
Second, test the concept. No one sity’s Fuqua School of Business and is
wants to pay you for something you’ve the author of reinventing you and
never done before. But—if your offer- “When disruption hits, entrepreneurial you (Harvard Busi-
ing is desirable—many people might
raise their hands to become a free
as it did with the ness Review Press). You can download
her free Entrepreneurial You self-assess-
“beta tester.” It’s low risk for them: Even pandemic...GLYHUVL˽FDWLRQ ment. The views expressed in this article
*(77<

if the dinner you cater isn’t up to Julia creates resiliency.” are the author’s own.

Photog raph b y C . J . B U R T O N NEWSWEEK.COM 17


Periscope

OP IN IO N Without stellar reputations and high


ratings, we might not get referrals.

Coming CleanAbout Because of these reasons, we might


avoid hard conversations.

Hydroxychloroquine
Sometimes, we’re simply pressed
for time. It might take 30 seconds
for a clinician to say yes to a patient’s
Sometimes health care gets it wrong. That doesn’t request for an antibiotic to treat the
mean we’re not doing it right.Some Massachusetts common cold, but 30 minutes to
General Hospital doctors weigh in have a conversation explaining why
it won’t help.
And sometimes, we just don’t know
the right answer. Medical knowledge
patients continue to come to that’s not the only reason we get things is constantly evolving, and it is impos-
our offices begging for prescrip- wrong. The truth is, we’re human and sible for any of us to learn it all.
tions for hydroxychloroquine (HCQ). influenced by more than just science. Here’s what we can say about HCQ:
Some even think there’s a conspiracy Sometimes, we engage in wishful There is no conflict of interest at play.
to prevent them from getting one. thinking. We assume that because Hospitals don’t make money taking
Perhaps this shouldn’t come as a something should work, it will work. care of COVID-19 patients. In fact, they
surprise. The COVID-19 pandemic has For example, if you have chronic lose money, even with government
revealed much about health care and chest pain due to a blocked coronary bailouts. Health care professionals
our society. We have a crisis of trust artery, doesn’t it just make sense to are taking pay cuts or getting laid off.
and truth; it can be hard to know who prop it open with a stent? And if you If cheap HCQ could get us back to
to rely on. To help restore our faith in come in with knee pain, and we see business as usual—making money
one another, it’s important that we torn cartilage on MRI, surely an oper- doing elective surgical procedures—
health care providers admit some- ation to fix it will give you relief? Well, and writing these prescriptions
thing out loud: We often get it wrong. it turns out that in many cases, those would help us secure our jobs and
In the case of coro- stents are no better than our pay, hospitals would be giving it
navirus, first we said low-cost medications out for free given the amazing return
no masks, but now we BY and that knee surgery is on investment.
say masks for everyone. no better than physical Furthermore, the easiest and quick-
First we said no to ste- MASS GENERAL therapy. We have had to est thing for providers would be to just
PHYSICIANS
roids, especially if you learn (and re-learn) the write the prescription, which some are.
@TheOpEdProject
are very sick, now we say hard lesson that intu- But it’s not the right thing to do.
yes to steroids, but only ition is not always a reli- Let’s say you were to go into a fatal
if you’re sick enough. able guide to illness and health. heart rhythm, a known side effect of
And at first we said HCQ might Sometimes, we succumb to con- HCQ, and die. How could we defend
work. In fact, some providers were flicts of interest, even if we are not our decision to a jury, let alone to
guilty of self-prescribing and hoard- always conscious of them. When your bereaved family? Referencing a
ing it. Now we say it doesn’t work there is more money to be made in video posted on Twitter, even a viral
for COVID-19 and could actually do stenting an artery or operating on a one, would be woefully insufficient.
harm. But not everyone believes us, knee, it makes it harder for us to sim- To prescribe something that can
including President Trump and sev- ply prescribe a medication or send a harm without helping violates our
eral members of his administration. patient to physical therapy. most fundamental oath.
And many of our own patients. Sometimes, we just want to make We were hopeful at first that HCQ
We in health care are quick to dis- our patients happy. In fact, our live- would work for COVID-19. It showed
miss our mixed messages by saying, lihoods can depend on it. Providing promise in the lab and in small
“Oh, that’s just how science works.” And, evidence based care does not always human studies. But, ultimately, our
yes, science is a messy process. But correlate with patient satisfaction. wishful thinking did not pan out.

18 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


TRUE CONFESSIONS ”We get things
wrong. The truth is, we’re human and
LQʀXHQFHGE\PRUHWKDQMXVWVFLHQFHŤ
Photo left: A scientist and their test tubes.

Time, mistakes, missteps and


dead ends are fundamental to this
process. That is why one or two
studies’ findings aren’t enough: We
follow trends in a growing body of
evidence. Reproducibility, repetition
and critical reviews are essential.
Whatever its flaws, science is the
best process we have.
Usually medical practice changes
in a gradual, gentle U-turn. However,
the compressed research timeline
around the pandemic has made
this feel like whiplash for all of us
(which, by the way, we no longer
treat with a neck brace).
We are as disappointed as our
patients that HCQ didn’t work. Our
lives are also on the line. If another
well-designed large scale trial, bigger
and better than any others, shows a
positive effect for HCQ, we might
change course again, just like we have
in the past.
In the meantime, we’re going to
Multiple randomized clinical tri- COVID-19 were published and then keep doing right by our patients,
als—our best tool to tell the differ- had to be retracted, many for glaring which doesn’t always mean doing
ence between luck, placebo and actual oversights. But instead of decreasing what’s popular.
treatment effect—showed that HCQ credibility, the willingness to correct
neither prevents infection nor treats course and call out questionable The authors all work at Massachusetts
it, regardless of whether someone has research, identify outright fraud and General Hospital and are public fellows
mild symptoms or is sick enough to hold editorial boards accountable is a at the OpEd project: Dr. Hemal N. Sam-
be hospitalized, either by itself or in sign of a healthy, self-policing scien- pat, Dr. Lucas X. Marinacci, Dr. Jeff Liao,
combination with other drugs. tific community. Dr. Monique Tello, Dr. Sarah Matathia,
We rely on the scientific method Dr. Daniel M Horn, Dr. Jing Ren, Dr.
not as a matter of faith, but because Stephanie Eisenstat, Dallas Ducar, NP,
it works. It has provided us all of the
marvels in modern medicine that
“The easiest and Dr. Carolina Abuelo, Dr. Li Tso, Dr. Mi-
chael F. Bierer, Dr. Jennifer Haas, Dr.
have increased longevity and reduced quickest thing to do... Nancy Rigotti, Dr. Sejal Hathi, Dr. Amy
would be to just write
5 2 % ( 57  '$ /<ʔ* ( 7 7 <

suffering. It also helps us identify and Wheeler, Dr. Marya Cohen, Dr. Andrea
avoid succumbing to our own biases
and potential conflicts of interest.
the (HCQ) prescription. Reilly, Dr. Audrey Provenzano, Dr. Melin-
da Mesmer. The views expressed are their
Like us, science is not infallible. A But it’s not the right authors’ own and do not reflect the offi-
large number of papers related to thing to do.” cial opinions of Massachusetts General.

NEWSWEEK.COM 19
Periscope

NEWSMAKERS

Talking Points
“WE ARE AT A TIME WHERE
“I have encouraged WE NEED CHANGE.”
everybody: Speed Ŝ/H%URQ-DPHVRQ
FDPSDLJQLQJIRU-RH%LGHQ
up the mail, not DQG.DPDOD+DUULV
slow the mail.”
—PRESIDENT TRUMP

“How sad
would it be
if, for the
COVID-19
“ N OW W E ’ R E A L L
P RO D U C E RS A N D
vaccine, Lebron James

VIDEO GRAPHERS.” priority is


—tennessee senator
raumesh akbari given to the
richest.” “It’s incredible that
ŜǝǬǝǢǣǮ ǞǫǠǦǯ
companies
companp es that bigg
can still grow that fast.”

)520/()7%,//&/$5.ʔ&452//&$//ʔ*(77<9,1&(1=23,172ʔ$)3ʔ*(77<0$77(20$5&+,ʔ*(77<
—investment adviser nick
giac oumakis on apple’s $2
trillion market value
Raumesh Akbari

”AMERICA FACES A TRIPLE


“We haaven’t had a clear THREAT: A PUBLIC
nationaal response to this HEALTH CATASTROPHE.
crisis, so our campus is AN ECONOMIC COLLAPSE
a micrrocosm of what AND A RECKONING
goes on elsewhere.” WITH RACIAL JUSTICE
—mimi chapman,
c chair of
unc-ch
hapel hill faculty AND INEQUALITY.”
—Stacey Abrams

20 NEWSW E . M Pope Francis S PTEMBER 0 , 020


“ Knowledge
is power.
Understanding what cancer
clinical trial options
are available to
you and your
loved ones


can make all
the difference.
CEDRIC THE ENTERTAINER
Stand Up To Cancer Ambassador

Photo By
JEFF KATZ

WATCHING MY MOTHER GO THROUGH HER CANCER DIAGNOSIS


TAUGHT ME THE IMPORTANCE OF CLINICAL TRIALS.
When my mom was diagnosed with uterine cancer, I knew that I wanted her to have access to
the best treatments available. The journey taught me about the importance of learning all that
you can about the options available to you. I want all people diagnosed with cancer to have
access to the treatments that can help them become long-term survivors.

Cancer clinical trials may be the right option for you or a loved one. The more information you
have about clinical trials, the more empowered you will be to seek out your best treatments.

Learn more at StandUpToCancer.org/ClinicalTrials


Stand Up To Cancer is a division of the Entertainment Industry Foundation (EIF), a 501(c)(3) charitable organization.
IN 2016, A LATE BREAK TOWARD
TRUMP BY UNDECIDED VOTERS
HELPED DECIDE THE ELECTION.
CAN THE PRESIDENT PERSUADE
THEM TO BACK HIM AGAIN—
WITH THE SAME RESULTS?

The Factor
by J A C O B J A RV I S

22 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


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EL E C T I O N 2 0 20

A
s stark as the differences are between Donald Trump and Joe make their decisions late in the cam-
paign cycle. A slowdown of infections,
Biden, millions of Americans can’t seem to choose between a vaccine breakthrough, a continuing
strong stock market, an uptick in the
them. They’re the 10 percent of prospective voters who, with job market, a foreign policy triumph,
successful reopenings of businesses
less than three months to go until the election, are still technically “un-
and schools: any number of factors
decided:” They haven’t made up their minds between the Republican and could boost Trump’s approval rating
in the weeks before the election and
Democratic nominees, currently back third-party candidates or, at this bring voters into his camp.
“People who are not as engaged, they
point, just don’t care. Analysts say there are fewer undecideds this year get engaged late,” says Renteria. “That’s
why it’s important every step of the
than in 2016, when a surge of last-minute converts to Trump helped de- way to engage them.”

cide the election. But it’s still a sizable enough cohort—particularly in key Who Are the Undecideds?
exactly how many votes are still
battleground states—to potentially determine the 2020 result. “They are
up for grabs in the 2020 presidential
a relatively small population but they are certainly enough to alter the election is an open question.
According to Jackson at Ipsos, about
outcome,” says Chris Jackson, head of public polling at Ipsos. 10 percent of voters probably haven’t
made up their minds yet between
Trump or Biden. Using the 211 million
Americans registered to vote in 2018
for trump, trailing by eight points on average in the most recent as a guide, that suggests there are 21
polls, these undecideds present both an opportunity and a risk. Should he million voters still open to persuasion.
stick with the bombastic, polarizing persona that keeps his base energized or If the number is more in line with the
moderate his policies and tone in an attempt to woo undecideds—and possibly 138 million who cast ballots in the
alienate his most fervent supporters? “The president is a known commodity,” 2016 presidential election, the total
says Thomas Gift, founding director of the Centre on U.S. Politics at Universi- would be closer to 14 million.
ty College London. “Making concessions at this late stage could seem, at best, By either measure, those numbers
disingenuous and, at worst, dampen enthusiasm among ardent supporters. are sizable enough to potentially have
“For that reason,” Gift adds, “Trump may think that his only plausible strategy is an impact. But not everyone lumped
to stick to the tactics that got him to the White House in the first place—and hope into the “undecided” group doesn’t
the U.S. can turn a corner on both the coronavirus and the economy.” have a preference for president. Most
Right now, the number of voters still to firmly align with either of the main sway one way or another, says Patrick
two-party candidates is falling. But the race remains open and even seasoned po- Murray, director of the Monmouth
liticos are wary. “I don’t think you’re gonna hear anyone from the 2016 election say, University Polling Institute, who puts
‘Hey, you’re gonna win, buddy,’” says Amanda Renteria, who was national political the percentage who are truly undecid-
director for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign. Continuing controversy about vot- ed at about 3 percent. Similarly, of the
ing methods and access, roiled by the pandemic, only increases the uncertainty 14 percent of registered voters classi-
about the 2020 electorate and the ultimate outcome of the race. fied as undecided in an Ipsos/Reuters
Undecided voters had a big hand in putting Trump in the White House four survey from early August, only 6 per-
years ago. In August 2016 an estimated 20 percent of voters were undecided, com- cent were actually unsure. Another 6
pared to 10 percent now, and in key battleground states, more than half who chose percent supported a third-party can-
in the final week of the campaign went for Trump. While things look bad for didate and 2 percent said they didn’t
Trump at the moment, with surging COVID-19 infections in red states like Flori- plan to vote this year.
da and Arizona, and the unemployment rate still above its Great Recession peak, As a group, the undecideds tend to
he has plenty of time left to win over undecideds who—almost by definition— be younger, disproportionately His-

24 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


The Biden Advantage
8Q L YRWHUVDUHSUHWW\HYHQO\VSOLWLQSDUW\DIɿOLDWLRQEXWWKHLUYLHZV WDWH
of the country may be leading them to favor the Democrat in 2020.

Direction of the country


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Approval of Donald Trump


ʴʵ'LVDSSURYH ʯʵ% Not sure ʯʵ$SSURYH

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ʰʵ% Democrat ʳʮ ,QGHSHQGHQW1R SDUW\'RQŠW NQRZ ʰʱ5HSXEOLFDQ

If you had to choose, would you support Joe Biden or Donald Trump?
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EL E C T I O N 2 0 20

tive voters who haven’t chosen between Biden and Trump are more lik
young, female and white and less likely to have a college degree.

Gender Education Age Race/Ethnicity

12%
Others
27% 29% 12%
College Degree *HQ; %ODFN
44% 56% 48% 55%
Male )HPDOH Millennial White
73% 20% 21%
No College Degree %DE\%RRPHU +LVSDQLF

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panic, skew female and are less likely to have a college degree than the typical reg- All About That Base
istered voter. They’re also fairly evenly dispersed across parties: Ipsos found half to for a candidate behind in the
be Independents and the rest roughly split between Republicans and Democrats. polls, as Donald Trump is now, that
The Independent half of the group may behave differently than their party-affil- openness to new information could
iated cousins, says Jackie Salit, president of IndependentVoting.org and the author present a promising path to con-
of Independents Rising: Outsider Movements, Third Parties, and the Struggle for a vert undecideds to supporters. And
Post-Partisan America. She points out that independent voters—a group Trump Trump has reason to believe in the
narrowly won in 2016—are not necessarily less engaged than other voters but opportunity this group holds, given
rather see a need for reform in the political system that leads them not to align the pivotal role they played in his
with the major parties. “It’s a statement of non-compliance with the system,” Salit 2016 win, particularly in states where
says. “They don’t want to be forced to vote along party or ideological lines. They he won by a narrow margin.
want to take responsibility for making their own decision.” An analysis of the last election by
That’s quite different from the modus operandi of the typical undecided voter, the American Association of Pub-
who analysts generally view as less politically engaged. “Many ‘undecided’ voters lic Opinion Research shows that in
are what political scientists somewhat patronizingly call ‘low information’ and key battleground areas, most people
‘low propensity’ voters,” says Richard Johnson, a lecturer in U.S. politics and inter- who were undecided eventually went
national relations at Lancaster University. Jackson agrees. “They’re not following for Trump—many of them making
the 24-hour news cycle. They’re people who are just living their lives and can’t up their minds in the final days. In
find the time to care strongly. The election and politics are just not a high priority.” Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania
The fact that these undecideds tend to get their information episodically could and Florida, 11 to 15 percent of voters
make them more open to persuasion than other voters, says Rich Thau, co-founder said they decided in the last week and,
of the research firm Engagious and moderator of the Swing Voter Project, which according to exit polls, they broke for
conducts focus groups with voters who switched support from the Democratic to Trump by nearly 30 points in Wiscon-
the Republican presidential candidate or vice versa between 2012 and 2016. Says sin, 17 points in Pennsylvania and Flor-
Thau, “They could be swayed if they learn something new.” ida and 11 points in Michigan.

26 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


So far this year, though, concerted outreach to un- SIGN UP HERE
decided voters doesn’t seem to be in the Trump play- Registering new voters is
particularly challenging in
book. Instead his focus looks to be largely on main- the middle of a pandemic.
taining his grip on those who voted for him last time. Here, three women help
“The Trump campaign is seriously neglecting the the cause, working to get

“m AN Y Are
out the vote in New York
moderate middle in America, and those voters are City’s Union Square.
turning instead towards Biden,” says David Andersen,
U N De C I De D assistant professor in U.S. politics at Durham Univer-
sity. “Incumbents typically can point to their established records as president to
appeal to ‘middle of the road’ voters by showing that they are not extremists but
be C AU Se t H e Y instead are reliable problem solvers. Trump, though, has spent the last three and a
half years in catering to his base and intensifying the partisan divide in the country.”
D ON ’ t L I K e e I t H e r If these were normal times, Trump’s “relentlessly single-minded focus” on his
base could work, says Gift. “That might have been a viable (if risky) re-election
C A N DI DA t e . t H e Y strategy before COVID-19: Trump could count on dyed-in-the wool Republicans
to turn out to the polls, and also expect a healthy number of swing voters—even
if they didn’t back everything the president stood for—to grudgingly vote for him
W I L L L O OK A t given a strong U.S. economy.”
While Biden currently has a larger number of people saying they’ll vote for him,
W HO I S L e S S b A D.”
A L E XI ROS E NF EL D/G ET T Y

they’re nowhere near as fervent about their choice as the Trump supporters are.
According to a Pew Research survey conducted from July 27 to August 2, two thirds
of those backing Trump say they strongly favor their candidate, while only 46
percent of Biden supporters are as certain of their choice. One mitigating factor:
Among those expressing moderate support, just 10 percent of Biden voters say
there’s a chance they’ll change their minds vs. 17 percent of Trump voters.

NEWSWEEK.COM 27
ELECTION 2020

The president is smart to concentrate on maintaining that enthusiasm, says


Jacob Neiheisel, associate professor of political science at the University of Buf-
falo. “Campaigns that play to the middle where the bulk of the undecided or per-
suadable voters are located risk alienating loyal supporters in order to gain votes
among a group that is less reliable when it comes to turnout,” he says. “Campaigns
can and do win just by mobilizing core supporters.”
Then too, working actively to win over undecided voters probably was a tactic
that had a far greater chance of success in the pre-pandemic era than it would now.
“Trump has spent most of his presidency talking to people who already supported
him,” notes Larry Bartels, co-director of the Center for the Study of Democratic
Institutions at Vanderbilt University. “If there was ever a strategy for expanding
his base of support, it was predicated on peace and prosperity. Given current
conditions, it’s hard to see what positive argument would move ‘undecided’ voters
to change their views of the president at this point.”
Bartels does not believe, though, that Trump would turn off supporters if he
did attempt to moderate his tone or policies. “If people who’ve stuck with him so
far get alienated in the next few months, I think it’s much more likely to be due to
the condition of the country and the president’s response to it,” he says.
Those who have yet to make up their minds may not be looking for different
policies from the president in any case. Monmouth’s Murray, for one, believes that
undecided voters may be more motivated by emotion than logic.“At this point, if
you’re undecided, it’s not about a particular issue. It’s more a gut feeling. They
need to feel some sort of personal connection.”

Accentuate the Negative


if a direct appeal to voters who haven’t committed to a candidate
isn’t the right approach for Trump, what is? The answer may be one that suits
Trump especially well: Go negative.
Douglas Heye, former communications director for the Republican National
Committee, believes this is the Trump campaign’s clearest option as the pandemic
continues to rage and the economy flails. “If you can’t build yourself up, you have
to tear down your opponent,” he says.
Studies show that negative campaigning can be particularly effective with un-
decided voters, and could add the emotional element that analysts say can help
win over this group. It’s a strategy that uses Trump’s combative personality and
comfort with ad hominem attacks to his advantage, even without a formal effort
to win the undecided vote.
Aradhna Krishna, a behavioral scientist and professor of marketing at the Uni-
versity of Michigan, has conducted research on how undecided voters eventually
make their decisions. Her conclusion: Negative factors can be a more powerful
influence than positive ones if people are not particularly happy with the idea
$ 1 * ( /2  0 ( 5 ( 1 ' , 1 2ʔ* ( 7 7 <

of either outcome. “Many [voters] are undecided because they don’t like either
candidate,” Krishna says. “People can be described in desirable and undesirable
attributes. When the set of options is considered unattractive, people focus more
on the unattractive attributes. They will look at who is less bad on each attribute.”
Looking back to 2016, when chants about Clinton such as “lock her up” were
a feature of Trump’s campaign, Krishna said: “Focusing on the negatives made
sense because they were both disliked. I don’t know if it was a brilliant move or
if it was just his behavior.” So far, Trump’s attacks on “Sleepy Joe” and “Creepy

28 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


NOT THIS YEAR
Four years ago, Donald
Trump reveled in packed
campaign rallies, like this
one in Akron, Ohio. In 2020,
in-person campaigning
has been limited by the
pandemic, though Trump
has held some events—often
without strict COVID-19
safety precautions, like
social distancing and
mandatory face masks.

NEWSWEEK.COM 29
EL E C T I O N 2 0 20

Joe” don’t seem to have gotten traction, but continued Biden-baiting could prove is so much attention given to the ‘Oc-
effective, cumulatively. tober surprise’ narrative.”
For now, though, the negatives associated with Trump seem more powerful In 2016, there was a lot of news in
for undecided voters than any bad feelings they may harbor about Biden. Case in October with the potential to affect
point: In a poll last month from Reuters/Ipsos, 68 percent of undecided voters the election. These events included the
said they believed the country was on the wrong track and 67 percent said they dis- release of the Access Hollywood tape in
approved of Trump. It’s not especially shocking then that, when asked if they had which Trump discussed groping wom-
to choose between the two candidates, two-thirds picked the former vice president. en; the WikiLeaks release of emails
The lean toward Biden, though, is soft, polls have shown. And that lack of en- hacked from the Clinton campaign;
thusiasm for the former VP is a weakness the incumbent may seek to exploit.“The multiple women accusing Trump of
Trump campaign’s aim will, I suspect, be to bolster those reservations, encourag- touching them inappropriately; the
ing people to stay home or even to support Trump as the lesser of two evils—not announcement that Obamacare pre-
to change anyone’s mind about Trump himself,” Bartels said. miums would rise 25 percent; and
But some political analysts do not think an apparent lack of excitement over most damaging of all, the announce-
Biden’s candidacy will necessarily be a major hindrance to the Democrat or deter ment by then-FBI Director James Com-
people from casting their ballots for him come November. “The enthusiasm gap is ey of a review of new evidence in the
misunderstood and overstated,” says David Brockington, a lecturer in politics and Clinton email probe.
social science at the University of Plymouth, “While there’s evidence that Biden What could happen this time? “Im-
supporters are less enamored of their guy, they are really strongly motivated by provement in the economy or some
their desire to vote against Trump.” other factor for which Trump could
Adds Brockington, “The real enthusiasm mobilizer is a negative: Dislike for the plausibly claim credit could help him
incumbent will drive a lot of Biden’s supporters to the polls. And it doesn’t really make at least some undecided voters
matter what motivates a vote for Biden, as a vote’s a vote.” vote for him,” says Hoffman. “The
In other words, both sides will play the negative game. question is whether there would be
enough to add to his base and propel
Look for an October Surprise him to re-election.”
since undecideds often delay making their choice until the last week Johnson of Lancaster University,
or two before an election, unexpected events, positive or negative, can have also thinks more people could shift
greater impact on who they ultimately vote for. toward the president—particularly if
“Undecided voters can be swayed by late developments in a campaign, in part increased attacks on Biden are effec-
because they have low levels of engagement to begin with,” says Donna Hoffman, tive. “There is a possibility that the un-
a political science professor at the University of Northern Iowa. “That is why there decided voters could disproportionate-
ly ‘break’ for Trump as we get nearer
election day,” he says.
Those undecided votes could real-
ly make a difference, like last time, in
critical battleground areas. “Remem-
ber, he only ‘won’ in 2016 by 77,000

“ W H E N YO U R OPP ON E N T K E E P S
votes scattered across three states
and lost the popular vote by over two
points,” says Brockington. “He got
SHO O T I NG H I M SE L F I N T H E F O O T, lucky on the day, he got lucky with the
Comey letter and he got lucky that he
YOU D ON ’ T GE T I N T H E WAY.” was facing a candidate with as much
negative baggage as he had.”
In the end, though, the single most
important issue for undecided voters,
as for the rest of the electorate, is likely
to be Trump himself. “An election with

30 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


an incumbent is often seen as a refer-
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endum on the incumbent,” says Daniel


Birdsong, a lecturer in political science
at the University of Dayton. Adds Salit
of IndependentVoting.org, “This elec-
tion is a yes or no on President Trump.”
“What the Biden people are banking
on is more people hate Trump than
love him,” says Thau.
In the final month of the summer,
that’s looking like a pretty good bet,
but that was true in 2016 too, and look
what happened that fall. Michael Biun-
do, a senior adviser to the 2016 Trump
campaign, thinks 2020 could be a re-
peat, if the current re-election team
plays it smart in the home stretch. “Got
to convince the voters who came out
in 2016 to come out again [and] liti-
gate a case against Joe Biden,” he says.
“I think there’s plenty of time.”
American University professor Al-
lan Lichtman, author of Predicting
the Next President: The Keys to the
White House, who called Trump’s win
in 2016, disagrees. He has predicted a
victory for Biden in 2020, and believes
neither late-breaking developments
nor a last-minute surge of undecid-
eds breaking for Trump will change
the outcome. “I’ve been doing this for
almost 40 years, and nothing that’s
happened close to the election has ever
changed my prediction,” he says.
For Team Biden, the best approach
to undecided voters may be to leave
well enough alone, says Joel Benenson,
chief strategist for Clinton in 2016.
“When your opponent keeps shooting
himself in the foot, you don’t get in the
way,” he says. “[Trump] won the [last]
ROCK THE VOTE 2020 election losing the popular vote by the
(Top) Voting booths, like this one in New biggest margin in history. I don’t think
Hampshire from February, will play a he can thread that needle again.”
more limited role this November as
mail-in ballots rise. (Bottom right) Will Note: The Trump and Biden cam-
there be another “October surprise,” like paigns were each contacted for com-
2016’s reveal by the FBI’s James Comey ment. Neither responded to this request
of new evidence in the Clinton email
probe? (Bottom left) “I Voted” stickers or provided representatives for inter-
from Super Tuesday in North Carolina. view in time for publication.

NEWSWEEK.COM 31
In 2018 a lot of red House seats turned blue.
6 2 85 & ( , 0 $* (6   * (7 7 <  ʤ  ʥ

To beat Trump in November Democrats need


moderate-to-conservative voters in a handful of those
districts to pull the lever for Biden.

32 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


by
steve friess

Photo illustration by
gluekit

DO IT AGAIN
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ELECTION 2020

Iwin
2018 democrats flipped 41 republican
House seats, 23 of them in districts that
Donald Trump won in 2016. This year
Democrats are hoping those midterm
round—and turn out to have been harbin-
gers of growing dissatisfaction with Trump among conservatives
and independents, dissatisfaction that could now be decisive in
the race for the White House. The logic: if some GOP voters will
cause he eked out popular vote wins
in elector-rich states. And if Biden
can do the same (or better) this year
he’ll win the White House.

Every Little Bit Hurts


in 2016 trump won the popular
vote in Michigan, Pennsylvania and
vote for moderate Democrats in the House, they should also, after Florida, but not by much. He got Penn-
nearly four years of Trump, be willing to cast their ballots for a sylvania’s 20 electoral votes by winning
moderate in the White House. 48.8 % of the popular vote to Clinton’s
Eight of the flipped seats are in three key states Trump won 47.6% and he won Florida’s 29 electors
by narrow, and in one case razor-thin, margins: Michigan, Penn- by getting 48.6% of the popular vote to
sylvania and Florida. All eight of those freshman Democrats are Clinton’s 47.4%, differences of 1.2 and
running for re-election this year and those elections are being 1.5 percentage points respectively.
closely watched by the brass of both parties. The narrowest and bitterest defeat
“The districts Democrats flipped in 2018 are the places where for Clinton, though, came in Michi-
we might expect to see the most voters move from Trump to gan, which had not gone for a Repub-
Biden, but there aren’t many of them,” says Dave Wasserman, lican for president since 1992. Trump,
House editor for The Cook Political Report, which is non-partisan. helped by Clinton’s inept campaign
UNWANTED BATTLES
“These are largely suburban seats with swaths of voters who used Opposite: Michigan Rep. in the state, won Michigan’s 16 elec-
to support Republicans and have shifted pretty strongly over.” Elissa Slotkin speaking tors by winning the popular vote by
The Democrats are making a big bet on a small group of voters. in January 2019 during only 0.3 percent. Of the 4.8 million
In the U.S.’s system, though, a relative handful of votes can make the federal government votes cast that year in Michigan, a
shutdown. Slotkin, a
a huge difference. Citizens vote, but it’s the Electoral College that state of about 10 million people,
Democrat, has tried to
actually elects the president. All the electors of a given state are DYRLG ELJ SDUWLVDQ ɿJKWV
Trump got only 11,000 more than
awarded to whichever candidate wins the popular vote. Trump like the impeachment Clinton. Put another way: Trump’s
won in 2016 even though he lost the popular vote nationwide, be- of President Trump. microscopic margin of victory was
even tinier than the pitiful average
attendance last season (18,767) at De-
troit Tiger home games. (The woeful
Tigers lost 114 of 161 games, finish-
ing in the basement of the American
League East).
For the 2018 midterms, the Demo-
crats worked to overcome their 2016

) 5 2 0  / ( ) 7  72 0  % 5 ( 1 1 ( 5 ʔ* ( 7 7 <  = $& +  * , %6 2 1 ʔ* ( 7 7 <


nightmare in Michigan and elsewhere,
by choosing candidates in conserva-
tive-leaning states who could plausi-
bly be positioned as non-ideological
pragmatists. In Michigan’s sprawling
8th District, which Trump had won by
6.7%, the candidate was Elissa Slotkin,
a former CIA analyst. The 8th, which
was redrawn after the 2010 census, is
a vaguely pot and handle shaped “pur-
ple” district, a mix of suburbs, small
cities and farms. It is about 80% white
and had not sent a Democrat to Con-

SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


crats opposed; and co-sponsored a
series of bills with Republicans to use
more tech tools to fortify the nation’s
borders. “Any illegal crossing into the
United States should remain illegal.
We have the right to know who is com-
ing into my country. That’s pretty dif-
ferent than a lot of my peers including
the Speaker of the House, ” she says.

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Slotkin’s challenger for reelection
this year is Republican Paul Junge, a
former prosecutor and TV newscast-
er. Democrats are hoping, naturally.
that Slotkin, a formidable campaign-
er, will win. But they also hope the
same moderate pitch that’s worked
for her in central Michigan will help
Biden there. Trump won the 8th
District by 6.7 percentage points
in 2016. Democrats don’t think the
district’s conservatives and indepen-
dents have turned into liberals since
then, but they are betting those who
went for Slotkin in 2018 will vote for
Biden now.
A top Democratic official in Mich-
igan who asked not to be named
describes the party’s thinking like
this: “If you didn’t like the guy who
put kids in cages and kept trying to
take away your health insurance two
years ago, what has happened since
then to make him seem any better?
gress in more than 20 years. While most of the district is reliably AIMING FOR THE 175,000 dead people and 20 percent
CENTER
conservative, the part of it in Ingham County, which includes the Democratic freshmen Rep.
unemployment?” (According to the
state capital Lansing, usually goes Democratic and the party has Conor Lamb (top) and Rep. Labor Department, the official un-
also made inroads in some of the district’s affluent and growing Chrissy Houlahan, both of employment rate is about 10 percent,
Pennsylvania, are facing
suburbs. As Slotkin recently told Politico, “This is a microcosm. re-election challenges two
although some economists say that
All of the crosswinds of the country in one district that’s an hour \HDU DIWHU WKH\ ʀLSSHG UHG significantly undercounts the number
and 30 minutes across.” seats. So is Rep Donna of jobless people.)
Shalala of Florida, a
While maintaining liberal bona fides on issues like abortion self-described “pragmatic
Slotkin, however, doesn’t think it is
rights, LGBTQ equality, and Trump’s attempts to kill Obamacare progressive,” who served going to be easy. “This is a Republican
without a replacement, Slotkin ran as a centrist eager to reach as Secretary of Health gerrymandered district. That’s just
and Human Services
across the aisle. She avoided the subject of Trump himself as much under President Clinton.
the reality. We can win here, but we’re
as possible and beat Republican Mike Bishop by 3.8 percentage going to have to work for it. If anyone
points or about 19,000 votes. Since then she’s co-founded the thinks that we can rest on our laurels
House’s bipartisan Servicewomen and Women Veteran caucus; and just coast into a victory, I’m sorry,
voted for Trump’s U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement; backed a $4.6 that doesn’t reflect what I’m hearing
billion border security bill that nearly 100 other House Demo- and seeing in my district.”

36 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


ELECTION 2020

Not The Squad


the seven other congressional “THE DISTRICTS
districts that could make the differ-
ence for Biden this year include those DEMOCRATSFLIPPEDIN
represented by Haley Stevens, also
of Michigan; Conor Lamb, Chrissy 2018 ARE THE PLACES
Houlahan, Susan Wild and Mary Gay
Scanlon all of Pennsylvania; and Don- WHERE WE MIGHT
na Shalala and Debbie Mucarsel-Pow-
ell, both of Florida. Houlahan, who EXPECT TO SEE THE
wrested a suburban Philadelphia
district from Republican control, MOST VOTERS MOVE
says, “I believe that we can win for
the vice president in my district. We
lost Pennsylvania by something like
FROM TRUMP TO BIDEN.”
40,000 votes [in 2016] and I think we
can find them in my district.” (Ac- caped.” And Slotkin’s opponent Junge says she votes “90 percent of
cording to Politico, the actual num- the time with the radical liberal squad of Congresswomen Rashida
ber was more like 68,000.) Tlaib, Ilhan Omar, and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.”
If all eight incumbent Democrats The GOP challengers also like to point out that when they were
share a strategic theme and image (“I candidates in 2016, all eight Democrats said they were not interest-
am a reasonable moderate who gets ed in impeaching Trump and were open to supporting someone
along with Republicans and so is Joe other than Nancy Pelosi for Speaker. Once elected, they all voted for
Biden”), so do their GOP challengers Pelosi (except for Lamb who voted for Rep. Joseph P. Kennedy III
(“Don’t be fooled again. Under those and Slotkin who voted “present”) and for impeaching the president.
mild-mannered exteriors lurk fanat- Junge, who worked in the Department of Homeland Security’s
ical Bolsheviks”). In a YouTube video, Citizenship and Immigration Services office before returning to
Lamb’s opponent, Sean Parnell, calls Michigan last year, says Slotkin betrayed the promise she made to
him “Nancy Pelosi’s biggest supporter.” voters in 2018: “ She said she would be an independent-minded,
Maria Elvira Salazar, who lost to Shala- bipartisan representative. The message then was, ‘Well, if you don’t
la in 2018 and is challenging her again like a few things here and there, I’ll be independent-minded.’ That’s
this fall, says Shalala has been “disturb- not how she has voted.”
ingly silent” while “some members Slotkin says she changed her mind on impeachment only after
of her party peddle the same radical Trump’s Ukraine shenanigans proved too outrageous to ignore
Socialist agenda that has ruined the and did so reluctantly: “I can’t think of something I would want to
countries from which many of us es- work on less than impeachment in my first term as a Democratic
representative of a Republican-leaning district, and frankly, I re-
sisted it for a long time.” Slotkin says she’s at peace with her vote
to impeach, but she took a fair amount of heat at town halls from
unhappy constituents.
Rather than partisan battles, she and the other Democratic
incumbents prefer to talk about the times they’ve reached across
the aisle. “We passed nine provisions into law, all of them bipar-
tisan,” Slotkin says. “We’ve introduced another 22 in the House,
all bipartisan.”
They also like to talk about the times they challenged their party’s
leadership from the right. Michigan’s Haley Stevens, who was elect-
ed co-president of the Democratic freshman class, points to a letter
she wrote to Pelosi urging support for Trump’s new trade deal with

NEWSWEEK.COM 37
NEW KIDS
The freshman class of the
House of Representatives
pose for a group portrait
after the 2018 midterm
elections. The Squad got
most of the attention, but
the majority of the new
Democrats needed to
appeal to voters accustomed
to voting Republican.

72 0  : , / / , $ 0 6 ʔ& 4  5 2 / /  & $ / / ʔ* ( 7 7 <

38 NEWSWEEK.COM SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


“THEFRESHMANCLASS
HASGIVENSPEAKERPELOSI
THEMOSTCENTRIST CAUCUS
ANYONE HAS EVER HAD.”
E L E C TI O N 20 2 0

Canada and Mexico “for the health of Michigan’s economy, for the ocrats who came in were more moder-
health of Michigan’s workforce, for the health of Michigan’s small ate, business-oriented members.”
businesses. It wasn’t a popular thing, it wasn’t like leadership was Shalala, a former Secretary of
asking me to do that.” Pennsylvania’s Conor Lamb notes he voted Health and Human Services whose
against the HEROES Act, the House Democrats’ $3 trillion COVID-19 last job before running for Congress
relief package which has languished since its May passage, because was as president of the University of
he “didn’t think it was well-constructed.” Miami, agrees: “The freshman class
Indeed, for all the hype around The Squad and the defeats this has given Speaker Pelosi the most cen-
summer of moderate incumbents by Squad-style upstarts, the real- trist caucus anyone has ever had be-
ity is Democrats won the House in 2018 by running centrists. The cause so many people that were elect-
Cook Report’s Wasserman says, “The overwhelming number of Dem- ed had non-political jobs before they
flipped seats, which meant that they
weren’t either to the left or the right.
They were pragmatic. I described my-
self as a pragmatic progressive.”
Not that you’re likely to hear that
from any Republicans. According to
Michigan State University political sci-

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entist Matt Grossmann, “You’re gonna
hear the words ‘socialist’ and ‘extrem-
ist’ a lot, there will be a lot of images
of looters, I wouldn’t discount any of
those things as being effective messag-
es for Republicans.” Grossman adds,
though, it’s not clear that tactic will
work well this year because: 1) Biden,
the man at the top of the ticket, is no-
body’s idea of a revolutionary; and 2)
the Democrats who won Republican
seats in 2016 have worked hard to sep-
arate themselves from their party’s left.

Stuck With Trump


if the eight democrats have avoided
being linked to their party’s progres-
sives, most of their GOP opponents
remain identified with Trump. That
became a liability when COVID-19
and its economic fallout sent his
popularity plummeting.
David O’Connell, a political science
professor at Dickinson College in Car-
lisle, Pa., who is tracking the Pennsyl-
vania races, says, “Things have changed
so dramatically in the last few months.
I was fully confident Trump was going
to win re-election in February. His ap-
proval ratings were similar to Obama
at the end of the third year and he had

SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


a great economy. No incumbent has
ever lost with those situations.”
Now Trump’s weak poll numbers
leave loyal supporters like Junge in a
bind. He says: “I voted for President
Trump in 2016, I served in the Trump
administration and I will campaign
and urge people to vote for him to
win re-election in 2020. Whether
there’s wisdom to being tied to the
president or not, I am.”
The Cook Report’s Wasserman says
that while many Republican House

“YOU’RE GONNA
candidates had to show support for
Trump to fend off right-wing challeng-
ers in the primaries “it’s probably not
an asset in the general election. Even
though Trump carried these Michigan
districts in 2016, he didn’t win by that
HEAR THE WORDS
big a share of the vote and his standing
is lower now than it was then.” ‘SOCIALIST’ AND
‘EXTREMIST’ A
A few Republicans are attempting
to position themselves as the biparti-
san independents they say the Dem-
ocratic incumbents promised to be.
In Florida, Carlos Gimenez is giving
Debbie Mucarsel-Powell a serious
LOT, THERE WILL
challenge by touting his 2016 vote
for Hillary Clinton and by criticizing BE A LOT OF IMAGES
OF LOOTERS.”
Trump for failing to wear a mask in
public amid the COVID-19 crisis. In
Michigan’s 11th District, Haley Ste-
ven’s GOP challenger Eric Esshaki, a
Chaldean Christian whose father
immigrated to the U.S. from Iraq, is serman that Lamb, Houlahan and the other Pennsylvania Dem-
frustrated that Trump has scaled back ocratic incumbents will probably retain their seats and that could
asylum program and left thousands of boost Biden. But success, he says, could come at a price. “If Biden
Christian refugees from ISIS and oth- wins, then Lamb is targeted in 2022 and he’ll be one of the most
er Muslim regimes to languish. He’s ARM’S LENGTH endangered Democrats in the country, the type of person who
also unhappy with the continuous ef- Democratic freshmen definitely loses his seat in a midterm swing election,” he says.
forts to kill Obamacare without offer- like Michigan’s Rep. In the meantime, it remains to be seen whether the eight Dem-
Haley Stevens (above)
ing any other plan. “You can’t repeal have tried to avoid being ocratic freshmen will be able to not only win re-election but also
without a replacement, it’s been im- grouped with progressives draw significant numbers of votes to Biden. All of their districts
plemented now for too long,” he says. like (opposite, left to have big Republican and independent populations and despite the
right): Reps. Ilhan Omar,
“You would essentially pull the rug out Alexandria Ocasio- wins of 2016, none of the incumbents is considered a lock this year.
from underneath private insurance Cortez, Rashida Tlaib and Slotkin could easily be speaking for all of them when she says,
companies and destroy the market. “ Ayanna Pressely. They “It’s a competitive district, it’s always going to be a competitive
have also sometimes
Dickinson College’s O’Connell been willing to cross district. It’s a very independently minded district. And that’s good.
agrees with The Cook Report’s Was- Speaker Nancy Pelosi. It keeps you on your toes.”

NEWSWEEK.COM 41
42
NEWSWEEK.COM
HIGH, LOW + EV

SEP TEMBER 04, 2020


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$QLQWHUQHWSX]]OHZLWKDELJSD\RII » P.48

TRENDS

Bye Bye, Karen


Will anyone ever name their child Karen again? A baby
name expert weighs in on the now-controversial moniker

there are 1,107,736 people named karen in baby boys were given the name, the same number
the United States right now, and there are as were named Susan (yes, really), Parnell and Dick.
probably never going to be 1,107,737. Gender politics aside, the trouble with a boy
The reason: Karen has now joined that battery named Sue, as Johnny Cash once famously sang
of names so closely identified with negative traits about, is a lot more obvious than the problem with
or reprehensible individuals that they’re taken off Parnell. But Parnell, along with its female form
the table as baby names by well-meaning parents Petronilla, was basically the Karen of the 14th cen-
everywhere. tury, a once-popular name that came to mean a
As far off the table as Adolf? priest’s concubine or person of loose morals. The
Unlike Adolf, the name Karen is not associated association may have faded, but the name never
with a heinous person who masterminded the really recovered.
murder of 11 million people and started an inter- Dick is another issue. At the peak of its popular-
national war. Nor is Karen a pointed ethnic slur, the ity in 1938, when it was given to nearly 1,000 baby
way many other names that have become epithets boys, dick was already a slang term for penis. It
often are. Guido is a contemporary example, now a wasn’t until the late 1960s, though, that the word
derogatory term meaning a macho, thuggish person dick began taking on other negative meanings, as a
of Italian descent, sparked by the movie Risky Busi- noun, a verb and an adjective.
ness in 1983. The upshot: zero baby boys named
There were no babies named Guido Dick today.
(or Adolf) in the U.S. in 2018, the most BY
recent year that names were counted Name Reinvention
and ranked. But the year before innoc- PAMELA REDMOND Some names outlast the taint of their
uous Guido became tainted Guido, 17 @prsatran derogatory associations. Few people

NEWSWEEK.COM 43
Culture T R E ND S

remember, for instance, that there


was ever anti-Irish prejudice in the
“The nearly 500 parents fashion as a name since it hit the
height of its popularity 55 years
U.S., much less that it was expressed who named their baby ago, a year after the Civil Rights Act
by calling young Irish maids who girls Karen in 2018 was signed into law. And its current
immigrated to the U.S. “the Bridgets.”
The term was so negative, shorthand
may be suffering the derogatory meaning stems, in part,
from it being a relic of that bygone era.
for ignorant and stupid, that many world’s biggest case It’s a name that stands for an outdated
actual Bridgets changed their names of baby name regret.” brand of normalcy, behavior that was
to avoid being stigmatized. once as unremarkable as segregated
My grandmother was one of them. schools or blackface comedy but that
In 1911 she renamed herself Bertha, who were given the name in the U.S. now is totally unacceptable.
which then itself became infamous at its peak in 1965, for instance—may
when the heavy artillery used by feel it’s too late to restyle themselves DisappearingAct
Germany in the First World War was as Olivias. They may also fear they’ll So is Karen the name as unacceptable
nicknamed Big Bertha. And so then be seen as Karens even if their name is as the behavior it signifies?
she changed her name again, this Lisa or Donna or, okay, Pamela. The short answer is yes. Even before
time to Beatrice. The problem with Karen as a it became a synonym for racist shrew,
Many Karens trying to make a name name is rooted in its very ubiquity. Karen was heading straight downhill
for themselves in this already-difficult The fact that none of the individuals as a baby name. And it’s destined to
world may have the same idea. The who gave Karen her bad name were fall much further much faster until,
more than 2,000 Karens who are turn- actually named Karen is the source like Adolf, like Guido, like Genghis,
ing 21 this year may decide to morph of the name’s power as a pejorative. there are no babies named Karen at all.
into Karas or Kerrys or possibly Oliv- Karen symbolizes the kind of white Still, you have to do something
ias. And the nearly 500 parents who privilege that’s been around so long a lot worse than any Karen to be
named their baby girls Karen in 2018 and is so universal that it passes as crossed off the master list of names
may be suffering the world’s biggest ordinary and acceptable, like the forever. Lilith, Azrael and Cain—
case of baby name regret. name Karen itself. names that are associated with evil of
But most Karens—the 32,000-plus But Karen has been fading from literally Biblical proportions—are all
coming back as stylish baby names.
Figures of death and destruction—
Kali, Electra, Osiris, Pandora, even
FALLING STAR Hades—are now fashionable names
for innocent babies.
The name Karen had been dropping out of favor with new parents even before
the current controversy began. That’s proof that a millennium or
two can wash away even the darkest
40,585 name associations. As the British par-
40k
The number of ents who recently won a legal battle
Karens born
in 1957, when to name their son Lucifer main-
it was the fifth 1965
30k most popular Karen reaches tained, they saw it not as an alias of
girl’s name its highest
ranking among Satan but simply as a unique name
girls’ names with a pleasing sound.
at No. 3
20k Said little Lucifer’s dad, “We just
thought it was a nice name.”
10k
→ Pamela Redmond is the co-creator
of Nameberry, the world’s largest
0 baby name website, and the author
1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 of the novel olDer, the sequel to TV’s
S O URCE: S O C IAL S EC UR IT Y AD M IN ISTR ATI ON younger, due out in September.

44 NeWSWeeK.COm Sep tember 04, 2020


Popularity Contest
WHEN IT PEAKED AT NO. 3 IN 1965, THE NAME KAREN WAS GIVEN TO 32,874 BABIES. HERE’S WHAT ELSE
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1965 BOYS’ NAMES 2018 BOYS’ NAMES 1965 GIRLS’ NAMES 2018 GIRLS’ NAMES

#1 Michael Liam Lisa Emma

#2 John Noah Mary Olivia


POPULARITY RANK

#3 David William Karen Ava

#4 James James Kimberly Isabella

#5 Robert Oliver san Sophia


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NEWSWEEK.COM 45
Culture

02 Nellie Bly
Globetrotting Journalist
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03 Bessie Coleman
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Women in the World: 04


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In honor of Women’s Equality Day and the 100th anniversary of women’s suffrage, we’re c pt in a shipbuilding engineer
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women to ride solo across the U.S. in motorcycles; the first woman to summit the tallest XL  (QGXULQJ D ERXW
peaks on every continent; and the first Black woman to host her own travel show, flying her I GQH\ RQHV DQG WUHDFKHURXV
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travel for granted ever again post-pandemic, we owe a lot to these trailblazing women who 2 Ť JOHKDQGHGO\ VDLOHG
paved the way for all of our adventures—even the ones yet to come. —Kathleen Rellihan   OHV DFURVV WKH VHYHQ VHDV

4 NE K M S TEMBER 04, 2020


07 Junko Tabei
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08 Barbara Hillary
First Black Woman
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NEW EE OM
Culture

P A R T ING SHOT

Jimmy“MrBeast”
living through the pandemic requires necessities like paying bills Was the COVID-19 pandemic
as well as trivialities like fighting boredom. Philanthropic YouTuber Jimmy a factor this contest?
“MrBeast” Donaldson addressed both in July by posting what was billed as the Of course. We’ve been trying to keep
world’s toughest puzzle. The winner got a $100,000 prize. Donaldson says he got everyone entertained while they’re
the idea from the work of an online puzzle maker known only as Cicada 3301. “I inside, and this was another project
got the inspiration from a Cicada riddle on YouTube. I knew we could go bigger!” to keep everyone’s minds busy.
Going big is what MrBeast is all about. The 22 year old with 40 million subscrib-
ers raised $22 million to plant 22 million trees with the #TeamTrees movement Are you disappointed the riddle
he co-founded last year. “I’ve always wanted to use my platform to help people, was solved so quickly?
and, with the success of my channels, I’m able to do that. It started off with some- ,WŠV GHɿQLWHO\ QRW GLVDSSRLQWPHQW
thing as simple as giving pizzas away, and now we have been able to gift cars and more shock that it was solved in under
homes.” Beast’s riddle was solved in just eight hours, but not before participants 12 hours. Ultimately, we did this
learned Shakespeare, scanned hundreds of QR codes and played the game Flappy because we knew fans would enjoy it,
Bird. Regardless, Beast says he’s “100 percent doing another one in the future.” and it would also take their minds off
everything else going on in the world.

Perhaps the most devious step of


the puzzle was the page full of QR
codes. What was the goal of that?
I wanted to create a time-consuming
“It started puzzle that didn’t involve problem
solving, just stuff that was very
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pizzas away, step that would make people stop
and now we wanting to keep going.

have been able What will the next one be like?


to gift cars Encouraging people to play with their
and homes.” friends or allowing steps that take
multiple people to complete. If people
are going to work together, we might
as well lean into it.

What do you say to those who may


not take the job of being a full-
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time YouTuber seriously?


People don’t realize how time con-
suming these videos [are] to come up
with, produce, shoot, edit and post.
Find something you enjoy doing and
make it a career! —Christopher Groux

SEP TEMBER 04, 2020

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