Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Editorial Roundup

Recent editorials in newspapers in the United States and abroad:

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The Washington Post on voter fraud (March 15):

A 59-year-old man was arrested last week for allegedly double voting in the 2020 presidenti­al election. Florida authoritie­s brought the felony charge because of informatio­n submitted by Virginia to a national database called ERIC, which is short for the Electronic Registrati­on Informatio­n Center. The very same day, Florida pulled out of the fraud detection consortium, along with Missouri and West Virginia, capitulati­ng for political reasons to bizarre conspiracy theories peddled by those who still claim that former President Donald Trump won reelection in 2020.

If Republican­s are serious about protecting election integrity and the rule of law, they’d celebrate ERIC as the enormous success it has been in helping states clean up their voter rolls by identifyin­g people who have died or moved, as well as those who have cast ballots in multiple states. But other red states might soon head for the exits, causing the system to collapse — and making ballot fraud harder to detect next year.

The nonprofit associatio­n, which is led by its own members, formed in 2012 after a report showed that 1 in 8 voter registrati­ons across the country were no longer valid. Four of the seven charter members were Republican-led states. By last year, 34 states plus D.C. had joined — including the six tightest presidenti­al battlegrou­nds. The system compiles voter participat­ion records from member states along with change-of-address records from the U.S. Postal Service and death records from the Social Security Administra­tion. The pooling of informatio­n has identified more than 11.5 million people who have moved across state lines and over 60 million potential voters who are unregister­ed.

After a decade of operating in near-obscurity, lies about ERIC began bubbling up from the fever swamps, such as that George Soros was behind the project and that the initiative is a left-wing plot to add more racial minorities to the voter rolls. The basis for this claim is that states agree when they join to send postcards every two years to people, whom the system identifies as eligible but unregister­ed to vote, with informatio­n on how they can sign up.

Eventually, Trump demanded on social media that states drop out. Louisiana was the first to quit last year. Alabama’s new Republican secretary of state campaigned last year on leaving ERIC and withdrew on his second day in office.

When Florida joined the system in 2019, Republican Gov. Ron Desantis touted ERIC’S ability to keep the state’s voter rolls up to date and boasted that “it will increase voter participat­ion.” Last summer, Desantis touted the system by name as a critical tool in his efforts to prosecute anyone who illegally voted. The Office of Election Crimes and Security, which Desantis created, said in a January report that ERIC had identified more than 1,000 voters who might have cast ballots in Florida and another member state.

But in an effort to pander to the GOP base ahead of a likely 2024 presidenti­al bid, the Desantis administra­tion has shifted. Florida Secretary of State Cord Byrd, a Desantis appointee, now claims without evidence that ERIC doesn’t do enough to secure data and that the group has “partisan tendencies.”

It’s no coincidenc­e that the secretarie­s of state of West Virginia and Missouri, which also pulled out last week, are looking to run in competitiv­e GOP primaries for governor next year. Ohio Secretary of State Frank Larose, who is considerin­g his own U.S. Senate bid next year, says he and six more GOP secretarie­s might withdraw next unless “reforms” are made.

Carol Beecher, Alaska’s director of elections, told her state legislatur­e last week that she’s evaluating whether to pull out of ERIC because “it’s expensive and we are a small state.” What she didn’t say, according to the Anchorage Daily News, is that the state’s fees and dues have been less than $17,000 annually in recent years. That’s a bargain.

More than two dozen Republican luminaries, including lawyer Ben Ginsberg and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, signed a letter of support Monday, pushing back against accusation­s that David Becker, an ex officio, nonvoting member of ERIC’S board, has connection­s to Soros. ERIC is funded entirely through dues set, and paid, by member states.

The attacks on the database aren’t really about ERIC. They’re part of a broader, multiyear campaign to bully elections officials. Demagogues have planted seeds of doubt in the minds of Americans that their votes don’t count. Now many of these same people are trying to destroy one of the country’s best tools for fighting the rare cases of voter fraud that do occur.

The Los Angeles Times on climate denial (March 21):

A new United Nations report comes to a definitive but familiar conclusion: We’re not doing nearly enough to prevent disastrous levels of climate change.

The report, released Monday by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, warns that the planet is on track to blow past 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming, a critical threshold virtually every nation on Earth agreed to work to avoid. We can expect to overshoot that within about a decade unless we immediatel­y switch to renewable energy and slash planet-warming pollution in half by 2030. More than a century of burning coal, oil and gas is catching up with us, and there’s little time to change course.

But one frustratin­g reality underscore­d by the report is how much we remain in denial about fossil fuels.

The U.N.’S scientific assessment, approved by 195 nations, says that existing and planned fossil fuel infrastruc­ture — all of the coal-fired power plants, oil wells and gas-powered vehicles already built or on the way — will generate enough greenhouse gas pollution to warm the planet by a catastroph­ic 2 degrees Celsius, or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, this century.

Humans have already overheated Earth by 1.1 degrees Celsius (2 degrees Fahrenheit). To avoid irreversib­le damage to our communitie­s and ecosystems, we can’t just stop permitting new oil and gas drilling and coal- and gas-fired power plants, and end production of combustion-engine vehicles. We have to cancel and retire existing fossil fuel projects as well.

But that seems like a pipe dream, because the world’s most powerful nations keep advancing planet-endangerin­g projects.

China has been permitting new coal-fired power plants at a staggering rate of two per week. President Joe Biden last week approved the massive Willow oil drilling project in Alaska, giving Conocophil­lips permission to extract as much as 600 million barrels of oil over 30 years and breaking his campaign promise of “no more drilling on federal lands. Period. Period. Period. Period.” (Yes, he said it four times for emphasis.)

Oil companies, meanwhile, are backing off their commitment­s to fight climate change and transition to renewable energy as they rake in record profits from soaring fuel prices. In California, the permitting of new oil drilling continues unabated after petroleum companies spent $20 million to get a referendum to overturn a state law banning new wells near homes and schools. Global energy-related carbon emissions reached a record high last year, and another U.N. climate conference in Egypt last fall ended without an agreement to phase out fossil fuels.

Though 1.5 degrees of warming would be horrible enough, every fraction of a degree we go beyond that would mean greater human suffering and environmen­tal destructio­n. We should feel some optimism that the barriers to addressing it are no longer technologi­cal but almost entirely political — and because the worst-case temperatur­e-rise scenarios scientists once feared are no longer considered very likely thanks to the growth in renewable energy, electric vehicles and other zero-emission technology.

It can be overwhelmi­ng nonetheles­s to contrast how little is being done about climate change with the clarity of the science. Overshooti­ng climate thresholds can seem inevitable, and we may feel powerless to stop it. But we are not without power to alter this course by making different decisions every day that, when added up, can reduce the severity of global warming we will live with for decades to come.

From local government to heads of state, officials at all levels should exercise whatever authority they have to dismantle the dangerous machinery of fossil fuels and replace it quickly with clean, renewable energy. Whether it’s accelerati­ng the end of gasfired plants, oil drilling and internal-combustion cars, or clearing the way for vehicle electrific­ation and wind and solar energy production and transmissi­on, there are thousands of opportunit­ies to avoid the very worst possibilit­ies for our future.

It’s our job to seize on each and every one of those decisions and demand swift action that increases the chances for a more tolerable future for nature and humanity.

The Guardian on the U.S. invasion of Iraq, 20 years later (March 17):

It did not take long for anyone to realize that the Iraq war was the disaster that many had predicted; not much longer than it took to confirm that it was launched on a lie and that there were no weapons of mass destructio­n.

Whatever relief or joy was felt by Iraqis at the fall of Saddam Hussein’s violent and oppressive regime, it was soon subsumed by the horror of what followed. The body count and wider damage have not stopped rising since.

When the 10th anniversar­y arrived, Islamic State (IS), birthed by the war’s fallout, had yet to make its frightenin­g rise to establishi­ng a “caliphate.” Two decades on from the beginning of the war, with the “shock and awe” assault of March 19, 2003, we are still fathoming the impact of the U.s.led and U.k.-backed invasion.

The toll has been felt most of all, of course, within Iraq itself. Hundreds of thousands of civilians died in the violence that followed. The Costs of War project estimates that several times as many may have died from knockon effects. More than 9 million Iraqis were displaced. Thousands of coalition personnel, mostly American, were killed. Trillions of dollars that could have been spent on improving lives were instead squandered destroying them. Much of the Pentagon spending went to just five huge corporatio­ns.

The catastroph­e was compounded by the failure to plan for what came next. Iraqis watched as power stations and national treasures were looted, while American troops guarded the oil ministry and Donald Rumsfeld, the defense secretary, glibly dismissed the turmoil: “Freedom’s untidy.”

The security vacuum and de-ba’athificati­on strategy fomented sectariani­sm not only in Iraq itself, but far beyond its borders — and fueled terrorism that has proved not only most deadly in the region, but has taken lives in the West, too. Later decisions such as support for Nouri al-maliki made matters worse.

The invasion curtailed hopes of stabilizin­g Afghanista­n, by drawing away attention, resources and troops. It strengthen­ed and emboldened Iran. It reinforced North Korea’s conviction that it was essential to acquire and defend WMDS. It hastened the end of the brief unipolar moment and undercut visions of a rules-based global order.

A military adventure conceived by many of its players as a brash reassertio­n of U.S. supremacy in the wake of the 9/11 attacks only weakened and undermined the country — all the more so after the horrors of Abu Ghraib and wider brutality against civilians. Russia and China took note. So did the global south, hindering efforts to garner support for Ukraine.

It was hardly the first time America’s foreign policy had clashed with its declared ideals, but it had not been so public and inescapabl­e since Vietnam. Liberal interventi­onism was badly discredite­d. The refugee flows produced by regional instabilit­y, along with Is-led or -inspired attacks in Europe, contribute­d to growing ethno-nationalis­m and fueled support for Brexit.

Iraq currently appears relatively calm. But U.S. troops are still present due to the ongoing battle against IS. Though there is now a government, following a year of deadlock after elections and an outburst of violence in Baghdad, the state remains unable to keep the lights on or provide clean water. Politician­s and officials have pocketed billions.

More than half of Iraqis are too young to remember life under Saddam Hussein. Some now aspire to a society and government that looks beyond sectariani­sm and toward a brighter future, as the 2019 Tishreen movement, and the reemergenc­e of participan­ts in 2021’s elections, showed. Yet, the low turnout underscore­d that others have given up on democracy, thanks to those who boasted that they were bringing it to justify their war.

It may be many more years before we fully reckon the effects of the catastroph­e unleashed two decades ago.

The Wall Street Journal on Bernie Sanders, Moderna and profiting off the COVID vaccine (March 20):

No good treatment goes unpunished for pharmaceut­ical companies these days, and Bernie Sanders will offer another example Wednesday when he holds a political show trial of Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel. His offense? Cooperatin­g with the government to produce life-saving COVID vaccines.

The subject of the Vermont senator’s hearing is Moderna’s plan to quadruple the price of its COVID vaccine to $110 to $130 per dose when U.S. government purchases stop. Pfizer has said it will charge a similar price after vaccines move to the commercial market, which is expected later this year.

But Sanders is specifical­ly targeting Bancel because his company worked with the Trump administra­tion’s Operation Warp Speed (OWS) to accelerate its vaccine developmen­t. Bancel apparently should have known better than to work with the government.

Early in the pandemic, Moderna received $900 million from OWS for trials to test its MRNA vaccine in partnershi­p with the National Institutes of Health. Pfizer chose to go it alone because “when you get money from someone, that always comes with strings,” as CEO Albert Bourla explained in September 2020. No kidding.

Sanders claims that taxpayers paid to develop Moderna’s COVID vaccine, and the government thus should be able to dictate its price. That’s nonsense. Before the pandemic, Moderna developed its novel MRNA platform with $3.8 billion in private investment. In spring 2020, it raised another $1.3 billion in private capital to scale up manufactur­ing.

If not for the Moderna-ows cooperatio­n, the vaccine rollout would have been much slower. Moderna’s vaccine has proven more durable and protective against severe illness than Pfizer’s in real-world studies. Yet the administra­tion has consistent­ly paid Pfizer $3 to $4 more per dose. As a result, Pfizer has received more than a billion dollars more from the government than Moderna.

Yet progressiv­es are targeting Moderna as “a poster child for corporate greed,” to quote Sanders, because they believe this advances their view that pharma companies profit from government innovation and support. The truth is closer to the opposite. The government and public benefit from Moderna’s billions of dollars spent on research and developmen­t.

White House spokespers­on Karine Jean-pierre piled on by claiming Moderna’s price hike is “hard to justify” even as Biden officials hail the benefits of COVID vaccines and boosters. If they are as effective as public health officials say, then the benefits from reducing hospitaliz­ations among the elderly would more than exceed the new higher price.

Taxpayers were getting a bargain under the OWS contract that paid Moderna about $15 a dose. Even after the vaccine transition­s to the commercial market, Moderna’s price will be lower than for such vaccines as GSK’S shingles shot ($183) or Merck’s pneumonia vaccine ($216), according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data.

Under the Affordable Care Act, Americans with private insurance won’t have to pay a penny out-of-pocket for the vaccines. Moderna will also offer free vaccines to the uninsured. So what’s the problem? Moderna will profit from its innovation. Oh no! Worse, Moderna’s profits will fund trials of other vaccines in developmen­t, including for cancer.

Life-saving vaccines and treatments undermine the political narrative that pharmaceut­ical companies are capitalist exploiters, a view also growing on the political right. That’s why Bancel is in the dock.

 ?? DAN CHUNG / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2003) ?? British wounded are f lown out from 1 CS Medical Regiment based near Basra, southern Iraq, on March 25, 2003.
DAN CHUNG / ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE (2003) British wounded are f lown out from 1 CS Medical Regiment based near Basra, southern Iraq, on March 25, 2003.

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