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Orwell’s opposition to totalitarianism was rooted in his support for freeing workers from poverty and exploitation

In writing he did before his most famous novels, Orwell focused primarily on other themes including work, poverty, anti-imperialism and democratic socialism. zoom-zoom, iStock/Getty Images Plus

George Orwell’s dystopian novels “Animal Farm” and “1984” have remained popular in the U.S. ever since their initial publication in the 1940s.

What’s less well known is that in the years before the publication of “Animal Farm” and “1984,” Orwell’s writing often focused primarily on other themes including work, poverty, anti-imperialism and democratic socialism.

In fact, Orwell remained a committed democratic socialist until his death in 1950.

“Animal Farm” tells the tale of a group of farm animals who take ownership of their farm from their human master by means of rebellion, but who eventually end up re-enslaved by the farm’s pigs. “1984” tells the story of one man’s failed attempt to resist totalitarian rule in a hypothetical future dictatorship set in Orwell’s home country of England.

Part of these books’ initial appeal came from their critiques of Soviet communism as the U.S. was entering the Cold War. Part of why the books seem to have remained popular are their anti-totalitarian and pro-freedom messages, which have been praised by people across the U.S. political spectrum.

Orwell, who died of tuberculosis at age 46, is a writer famous for the ideas that preoccupied him in the final years of his life. His journey to those ideas via his thinking about work, poverty and democratic socialism, among other themes, may surprise those familiar with only his dystopian fiction.

Communism and socialism not synonymous

Orwell’s democratic socialism may surprise some Americans for at least two reasons.

First, when many Americans talk about politics, they often treat communism and socialism as interchangeable terms. How could Orwell, the great satirist of Soviet communism, have been a socialist?

The answer is that communism and socialism are not synonymous.

A man with a long face, thin nose and dark, wavy hair.
Author George Orwell was a committed democratic socialist until his death.
Bettman/Getty Images

Orwell denied that Soviet communism was a form of socialism. Instead, he saw Soviet communism as totalitarianism merely masquerading as socialism.

Orwell claimed in his 1937 book, “The Road to Wigan Pier,” that “Socialism means justice and common decency” and a commitment to “the overthrow of tyranny.” Elsewhere in the same book, he maligned communism’s anti-democratic behavior as like “sawing off the branch you are sitting on.”

A second reason that Orwell’s commitment to democratic socialism may surprise some is because in the U.S., democratic socialism is often associated with the nation’s most left-leaning political figures, such as Sen. Bernie Sanders, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani. And Orwell is often not viewed in popular imagination as a political progressive.

Yet, by American standards, Orwell was very politically progressive. He argued in “The Lion and the Unicorn” that his home country of England ought to nationalize mines, railways, banks and major industries. He also argued for limits on income inequality. Some of these policies run to the left of even most U.S. democratic socialists.

For Orwell, such left-leaning economic policies were not only compatible with, but required, a strong commitment to the central pillars of democracy, such as intellectual freedom, free speech, a free press and genuine rule by the people.

I think the best way to understand how these aspects of Orwell’s political views came together is to look at the evolution of his writing.

Work and poverty

Two of the most important themes in Orwell’s first decade as a professional writer, the 1930s, are work and poverty.

These are what he focused on most in his first book, the autobiographical “Down and Out in Paris and London,” published in 1933. There he recounts his experiences living among the poor and unemployed in France and England in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

The book is full of pithy insights, such as “poverty frees people from ordinary standards of behavior, just as money frees people from work,” and “the average millionaire is only the average dishwasher dressed in a new suit.”

The latter quote highlights one of the key ethical and political messages of “Down and Out”: It is primarily social and political circumstances, and not moral character, that separates the rich from the poor.

Another key theme in “Down and Out” is that without a certain amount of leisure, people are incapable of doing certain kinds of thinking.

For example, Orwell argued that the reason the kitchen staff in French restaurants had not gone on strike or formed a union was because “they do not think, because they have no leisure for it; their life has made slaves of them.”

Orwell blamed the owners of such establishments for exploiting their workers. As he saw it, at most upscale restaurants “the staff work more and the customers pay more” and “no one benefits except the proprietor.”

In multiple novels and works of nonfiction in the 1930s, Orwell continued to explore the idea that social and political circumstances robbed people of the time they needed to engage in tasks like serious thinking and writing.

Imperialism and democratic socialism

One of Orwell’s earliest and most enduring political commitments was anti-imperialism – opposition to extending national power by means of colonialization or military force.

Orwell was of English and French descent. He was raised in England, but born in India in 1903. His father worked for the British Civil Service, which at the time exercised administrative control over India as a British colony.

Following his father’s footsteps, he spent five years working for the Imperial Police in Burma, now Myanmar. He came away from that experience with a deep hatred of imperialism. He drew upon this in his novel “Burmese Days” and his essays “A Hanging” and “Shooting an Elephant.”

In “The Road to Wigan Pier,” he wrote, “I hated the imperialism I was serving with a bitterness which I probably cannot make clear.”

“Wigan Pier” also displays Orwell’s commitment to democratic socialism. In the book’s first half, he reports on the dismal working and living conditions of the poor and unemployed in northern England. In the second half, he uses that material to make a case for democratic socialism.

In Orwell’s view, in deciding whether to embrace democratic socialism one had “to decide whether things at present are tolerable or not tolerable.” He concluded that present conditions were not tolerable and that democratic socialism was the way to make things better.

An antique-looking application to join the Indian Police Force.
George Orwell’s 1922 application papers to join the ‘Indian Police Force’ – in this case, the Burma Police – using his real name, Eric Blair.
Heritage Art/Heritage Images via Getty Images

Propaganda and totalitarianism

Orwell developed into a sharp critic of Soviet Russia after witnessing how they used propaganda to mislead much of Europe about the Spanish Civil War. He discussed this in his book “Homage to Catalonia,” which recounts his time during the Spanish Civil War as a volunteer soldier fighting with the Spanish left against Gen. Francisco Franco, who would go on to become the country’s longtime dictator.

From Orwell’s perspective, communism highlighted the risks of how socialist revolution could go wrong. He thought that, without care, attempts at socialist revolution could create opportunities for a new form of oppression through totalitarianism.

He saw that totalitarianism was not limited to either the political left or right. Soviet communism represented left-wing totalitarianism, while Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy represented right-wing totalitarianism.

Thus, a major preoccupation in his final years was trying to warn people about the risks of falling into totalitarianism during times of political upheaval. Orwell wanted radical political change, but the change he wanted was in the service of increasing freedom and democracy, not decreasing it.

“Animal Farm” is a story about falling into autocracy. “1984” is a story about just how much autocracy can take from us.

But the things Orwell wanted to preserve, such as freedom of the mind, were also things that he thought were at risk from circumstances like poverty, oppressive working conditions and imperialism.

The Conversation

Research for this article was supported by a faculty fellowship from the Douglas A. Fraser Center for Workplace Issues at Wayne State University.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Politics

Hurricane Katrina: 3 painful lessons for emergency management are increasingly important 20 years later

National Guard trucks carry rescued residents through floodwaters to the Superdome on Aug. 30, 2005, a day after Hurricane Katrina hit in New Orleans. AP Photo/Eric Gay

Hurricane Katrina looms large in the history of American emergency management, both for what went wrong as the disaster unfolded and for the policy changes it triggered.

As the nation looks back on the disaster 20 years later, I believe as a crisis and emergency management specialist that it is more important than ever to remember Katrina’s lessons to avoid repeating past mistakes.

When Katrina hit New Orleans on Aug. 29, 2005, its storm surge broke through levees protecting the city. Water quickly poured into low-lying neighborhoods, flooding houses up to their rooftops and inundating an estimated 80% of the city. People who could not evacuate before the storm and were lucky enough to escape to their roofs were stranded for days in some cases.

Once the water had receded and the death toll counted, it became clear that nearly 1,400 people had died as a result of this devastating storm. The hurricane did more than $100 billion in damage, equivalent to about US$170 billion today when adjusted for inflation.

A helicopter hovers above a rooftop with people on it.
Helicopters rescue stranded residents from rooftops on Sept. 1, 2005, three days after the hurricane.
AP Photo/David J. Phillip

While there were many unsung heroes during Katrina, the tragic missteps and missed opportunities at all levels of government emergency management are what no emergency manager ever wants to repeat. The response failed in many areas, from broken communications among federal, state and local agencies to the reported horrors in the Superdome as 16,000 evacuees faced failed generators, poor security, dwindling supplies and overflowing toilets.

Three lessons from Katrina stand out today as the Trump administration talks about dismantling the Federal Emergency Management Agency and putting more responsibility for disaster management on local and state agencies.

1. Emergency response is only as strong as the weakest links

FEMA took the brunt of the criticism after Hurricane Katrina. However, serious analyses of what went wrong recognize that good disaster response requires effective governance at all levels.

Before FEMA could spend significant money to deploy people and aid, the state of Louisiana had to request a presidential disaster declaration. However, tensions between the state and federal governments reportedly delayed President George W. Bush’s approval, according to a Senate committee report assessing the response. The committee also found that New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin’s decision to first issue a voluntary evacuation and not issue a mandatory order until a day before the storm cost precious time.

A police officer points at someone while talking to people on a  downtown street.
New Orleans Police Superintendent Eddie Compass tells people in front of the New Orleans Convention Center on Sept. 2, 2005, that they will get food and water. A heavily armed military convoy arrived in hurricane-devastated New Orleans that day, four days after the hurricane, with urgently needed supplies.
Robert Sullivan/AFP via Getty Images

Once the storm hit, communication and coordination fell apart.

Vehicles badly needed for the disaster response were damaged by the storm. Problems with communication systems and a breakdown in situation reporting from local law enforcement and rescue services left state and federal government decision-makers flying blind, without up-to-date reports of conditions on the ground. Media reports of a “war zone” in New Orleans exaggerated the extent of public disorder and threats to responders. That further delayed the arrival of federal military and National Guard assistance – and hindered some local efforts – because it required additional precautions for coping with a hostile security environment.

As challenging as the information environment was during Hurricane Katrina, it is more difficult now. Social media, hyper-partisanship and deliberate misinformation attempts complicate emergency response and recovery efforts.

If the federal government now proposes to push more responsibility for disaster relief to the state and local levels, emergency managers at those levels will be taking on highly complex disasters in a potentially toxic information environment with less support.

States, counties and cities vary greatly in their readiness to shoulder this responsibility.

2. Leave no one behind

An enduring image of Hurricane Katrina was the plight of residents who lacked transportation and took shelter at the New Orleans Superdome, where conditions quickly deteriorated.

Another was the harrowing tales of gravely ill patients and exhausted medical staff stranded at Memorial Medical Center for five days without power as temperatures rose and the lower floors flooded.

A man carries a smaller man from a boat to dry land while people wait in the boat behind him on a flooded city street.
A volunteer who used his boat to rescue several residents from a flooded east side New Orleans neighborhood carries a man who could not walk to safety on Aug. 31, 2005, two days after the storm.
AP Photo/Eric Gay

These extreme predicaments and the deaths of people trapped in flooding homes in the Lower Ninth Ward were powerful reminders of the vulnerability of many low-income, elderly and ill residents who were unable to get out ahead of the disaster.

A few years after Katrina, Obama administration FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate and his team placed a new focus on forging a “whole community” emergency management strategy. It is designed to include marginalized populations in emergency planning and ensure that those who aren’t able to evacuate due to disability or financial limitations are not forgotten during disasters.

Government guidance now states that emergency mass care shelters be in buildings that people who have trouble walking can navigate easily. Emergency information is typically distributed in multiple languages, accessible for people with impaired hearing or vision, and written in ways adapted to the cultures and circumstances of minority groups.

Three older women in portable chairs look for arriving transportation. Many more people crowd the curb around them.
Hurricane Katrina victims wait for transportation at the convention center in New Orleans on Sept. 1, 2005.
AP Photo/Eric Gay

However, many of these advances are in jeopardy today as the Trump administration seeks to eliminate initiatives that might be considered DEI – diversity, equity and inclusion. The misery and death caused by Hurricane Katrina should serve as vivid reminders of why many existing emergency management programs emphasize the needs of socially vulnerable populations.

3. Professional emergency management is essential

The face of the federal government’s shortcomings in responding to Hurricane Katrina was then-FEMA Administrator Michael Brown. Initially, he was publicly praised by President Bush, who declared: “Brownie, you’re doing a heck of a job!”

But Brown was not a professional emergency manager. His prior on-the-job experience in the role did not prove sufficient in this extreme situation. As the problems with the response to Katrina became increasingly evident, Brown proved unable to provide effective leadership in the crisis and was forced out.

A man in party rolled up shirt sleeves points to a map while President George W. Bush stands listening nearby with his arms crossed.
FEMA Administrator Michael Brown, center, updates President George W. Bush, left, on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina on Sept. 2, 2005.
Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Part of the legislative legacy of Katrina is the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act of 2006. It requires that FEMA chief administrators have extensive knowledge of emergency management and substantial relevant executive leadership experience. All of the subsequent confirmed heads of FEMA were once state emergency management directors or had been in charge of emergency management in major cities.

However, those requirements do not always apply to acting administrators. In his second term, President Donald Trump has had two acting FEMA administrators – Cameron Hamilton and David Richardson. Both lacked prior experience managing major disasters on a statewide or comparable basis. Hamilton was abruptly fired after suggesting to Congress that FEMA should not be eliminated. Richardson’s leadership was quickly tested during the Texas flash flood tragedy on July 4, 2025, that killed more than 135 people.

The shortcomings of the response to Hurricane Katrina also led to wider adoption of the National Incident Management System, which helps all levels of government, nongovernmental organizations and the private sector work together in an emergency.

If more responsibility for emergency management devolves to states in the future, they will need to cultivate the ability to coordinate and collaborate effectively to respond to disasters.

Looking ahead

Leaders and organizations such as FEMA have learned from crises such as Hurricane Katrina.

However, political priorities come and go, staff turns over, and generations pass the torch to their successors. Leaders and organizations can forget critical lessons from the past.

As efforts to reform – and possibly rebalance – the U.S. emergency management system continue during the Trump administration, it is essential to remember and heed the costly lessons of Hurricane Katrina.

The Conversation

Eric Stern has recently received funding from DHS Science and Technology for an extreme weather informatics project and from NOAA for work on extreme heat events. He has lectured at the National Emergency Management Executive Academy and many similar programs around the country and the world.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Entertainment

Lil Nas X Charged With Four Felonies After Allegedly Attacking Cops While Nude

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The news just keeps getting worse for Lil Nas X.

As we previously reported, Nas was arrested last week after he was spotted wandering around nude on LA’s Ventura Boulevard.

The rapper and singer was initially hospitalized for a possible overdose. He was then transferred to a holding center, where he’s remained ever since.

US rapper Lil Nas X attends the Vanity Fair Oscar Party at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, California, on March 2, 2025.
US rapper Lil Nas X attends the Vanity Fair Oscar Party at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills, California, on March 2, 2025. (Photo by MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Lil Nas X faces felony charges after allegedly injuring cops

According to TMZ, Nas will be arraigned later today, at which time he’ll be permitted to post bail.

But that bail might wind up being rather costly, as the 26-year-old is now facing four felonies.

Police say Nas charged at them and inflicted multiple injuries ahead of his arrest.

TMZ speculates that three of the felony charges are related to specific injuries to individual cops.

Lil Nas X attends the 36th Annual GLAAD Media Awards at The Beverly Hilton on March 27, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.
Lil Nas X attends the 36th Annual GLAAD Media Awards at The Beverly Hilton on March 27, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images for GLAAD)

It’s unclear when the case might go to trial or what sort of penalties Nas is facing, but more information should emerge at his arraignment.

According to an earlier report, Nas — whose real name is Montero Lamar Hill — “punched an officer twice in the face during the encounter.”

Reached for comment, a spokesperson for the LAPD told Page Six, “There is no further information to disseminate.”

Sadly, this is not the first report of troubling behavior from Nas in recent months.

Lil Nas X attends the "Lil Nas X: Long Live Montero" premiere during the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival at Roy Thomson Hall on September 09, 2023 in Toronto, Ontario.
Lil Nas X attends the “Lil Nas X: Long Live Montero” premiere during the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival at Roy Thomson Hall on September 09, 2023 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images)

Nas was spotted engaging in bizarre behavior in the lobby of a Los Angeles hotel just hours before his arrest.

Hill — who was not a guest at the hotel — reportedly entered the lobby for no apparent reason and was spotted on a security camera removing his shirt before heading back out onto the street.

Obviously, that wasn’t as strange as the behavior that would follow, but it may have been an early sign that the rapper was out of sorts.

In April, Nas was hospitalized for partial facial paralysis.

In February, he confessed that his “last few years” had been “pretty difficult.”

Lil Nas X attends the 2021 MTV Video Music Awards at Barclays Center on September 12, 2021 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
Lil Nas X attends the 2021 MTV Video Music Awards at Barclays Center on September 12, 2021 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. (Photo by Jason Kempin/Getty Images)

“I’m just now arriving to this place of feeling confidence in myself and what I’m doing, and I’m trying to make sure I put intention towards my music and my vision and the creativity of it all,” he told fans in a livestream.

Nas also told People that he stepped away from the spotlight in order to experience a “mundane life” after

“I jumped straight into adulthood with extreme fame around me, so it was really nice to be just outside walking and meeting people in the streets and eating at restaurants, just even alone, spending a lot of alone time in solitude,” he told the outlet.

We’ll have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.

Lil Nas X Charged With Four Felonies After Allegedly Attacking Cops While Nude was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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North West Outfit Draws Condemnation Against Kim Kardashian: Age-Inappopriate or Peak …

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Is North West a walking, talking indictment of Kim Kardashian’s parenting?

Some critics think that Kim is dressing her eldest daughter like a living doll.

Others believe that she’s being too permissive, letting North dress age-inappropriately.

Just about everyone seems to be angry, however. Is this outfit too much (or too little) for a tween?

Kim Kardashian and North West in 2023.
Kim Kardashian and North West speak onstage during The Daily Front Row’s Seventh Annual Fashion Los Angeles Awards at The Beverly Hills Hotel on April 23, 2023. (Photo Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty Images for Daily Front Row)

Check out North West and her sense of style!

Kim Kardashian brought her 12-year-old daughter, North West, with her on a family trip to Rome.

Stepping out with her mom, the tween is wearing vibrant green-and-blue hair. She’s sporting a black corset with a silver-and-black miniskirt.

She’s also wearing a necklace.

Perhaps the most eye-catching part of the ensemble is North’s thick black boots.

Next to North, Kim was actually dressed in a sheer gown that strongly resembled a nightdress.

The influencer and businesswoman’s outfit boasted a plunging neckline and the very visible lace of a bra.

Kim’s outfit would have been very inappropriate on a 12-year-old.

But, critics, say, so was North’s ‘fit.

The internet is full of fierce criticism

“What 12 year old wears a corset ????” tweeted one outraged social media user. “Kim really doesn’t know how to be a sensible parent.”

“Kim is a terrible mother. Knowing her family, a 12yo in these sort of outfits isn’t good,” wrote another. “I pray north finds a better mother figure, at least, and isn’t infected by her mother and succubus family.”

“North being 12 is insane to me,” admitted another user.

That remark may have simply been marveling at someone whom most of us remember being born now being a tween.

Others seemed to speculate that North West did not choose her ensemble, with one writing: “Why they make North look so grown?”

“I swear north only dresses hyper femme like this when she’s with Kim,” another wrote. “Normally she’s in oversized baggy clothes.”

It is true that North has appeared in comfy clothing around the house.

For the record, she has also dressed that way around Kim.

North West and Kim Kardashian both work at the kitchen counter.
Kim Kardashian and North West bond in the kitchen during this Season 4 episode of The Kardashians. (Image Credit: Hulu)

Does this actually showcase what a good parent Kim is?

Just for the record, the condemnation was not universal.

Many pointed out that it’s great to see North West choosing her own outfits. Kim isn’t trying to make her daughter a mini-me and seems to be letting her express herself.

Others also reasoned that, actually, North’s outfit makes sense for an affluent middle schooler.

There are adults who wear similar outfits, but when they do, they are essentially dressing like dolls.

It’s a very adolescent look and North really pulls it off.

North West Outfit Draws Condemnation Against Kim Kardashian: Age-Inappopriate or Peak … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Blake Lively Smear Campaign EXPOSED in Bombshell Justin Baldoni Email: Report

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A bombshell email is exposing the Blake Lively smear campaign and the alleged role of Justin Baldoni.

His massive lawsuit was dismissed by the court due to a law against retaliatory lawsuits.

However, as the legal war continues with no end in sight (at least, not until their 2026 court date), more information is becoming public.

Including an email that appears to be a very direct conversation about how to orchestrate an “untraceable” media blitz against Lively.

Justin Baldoni in December 2024.
Actor/filmmaker and VOS Honoree, Justin Baldoni speaks onstage at the Vital Voices 12th Annual Voices of Solidarity Awards at IAC Building on December 09, 2024. (Photo Credit: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Vital Voices Global Partnership)

What conversation launched the smear campaign against Blake Lively in 2024?

Late in the summer of 2024, around the release of It Ends With Us, a flurry of bad press erupted.

At first, there was public speculation. Why wasn’t Justin Baldoni, the director and one of the stars, with everyone else during the promotional tour?

Why didn’t any of the cast seem to have anything to say about him?

Then came a flurry of vicious and out-of-proportion social media attacks against Blake Lively.

It erupted swiftly, as if “everyone” on social media had simply awoken one morning hating her for a slightly tone deaf promotional tour.

Blake Lively in April 2025.
Actress Blake Lively attends the New York special screening of “Another Simple Favor” at the Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York on April 27, 2025. (Photo Credit: CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

On Monday, August 25, Page Six obtained an email from August 2024 featuring key players from the smear campaign against Lively.

Melissa Nathan, Baldoni’s publicist, introduces Jamey Heath of Wayfarer Studios to Jed Wallace, a PR contractor who owns Street Relations.

Wallace has marketed himself as a “hired gun” when it comes to public relations and defining a public figure’s image.

Justin Baldoni in October 2022.
Justin Baldoni attends Nights of the Jack friends and family nights at King Gillette Ranch on October 08, 2022. (Photo Credit: Andrew Toth/Getty Images for Nights Of The Jack)

It sounds like there was a solid plan to protect Justin Baldoni’s reputation months before allegations came to light

Within this electronic conversation, the parties involved negotiated prices for a social media campaign.

The plan under discussion involved “creation of social fan engagement to go back and forth with any negative accounts, helping to change narrative and stay on track.”

There was an emphasis upon making the social media campaign “untraceable.”

Blake Lively in late April 2025.
Blake Lively attends the 2025 TIME100 Gala at Jazz at Lincoln Center on April 24, 2025. (Photo Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for TIME)

The quoted price was around $25-$30,000 per month.

There was also talk of a PR crisis team for $9,000.

The plan aimed to “leverage relationships with Discord, Reddit, X, IG, TikTok, YouTube, etc. to expose behavior of Blake and other parties, both current and past.”

Additionally, the plan was to “engage directly with communities to adjust or influence the conversations taking place in real time.”

Justin Baldoni in August 2024.
Actor Justin Baldoni attends the New York premiere of “It Ends With Us” at at AMC Lincoln Square in New York, August 6, 2024. (Photo Credit: CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

Perhaps the worst part of all of this is how EASY it was

Allegedly, the parties that Justin Baldoni involved did not have to go all-out on the smear campaign plot against Blake Lively.

Why? Because convincing social media to bombard a famous woman with vitriol is much, much easier than it should be.

The way that the Sophie Turner smear campaign backfired was an exception.

It is much more often for things to go the way that they did during the Brangelina divorce. It’s very sad.

Blake Lively Smear Campaign EXPOSED in Bombshell Justin Baldoni Email: Report was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Tommy & Clare Fleetwood’s 23-Year Age Gap Receives Scrutiny Following PGA Tour …

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Over the weekend, Tommy Fleetwood won the FedEx Cup — his first PGA Tour victory — and pocketed a $10 million payday in the process.

Needless to say, it was a pretty nice Sunday for the 34-year-old golf veteran.

But fans took notice of the fact that Fleetwood’s cheering section was incomplete, as Clare Fleetwood, his wife of eight years, was not present.

Tommy Fleetwood of England poses with his wife Clare Fleetwood after his third round of the Dubai Invitational at Dubai Creek Golf and Yacht Club on January 13, 2024 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Tommy Fleetwood of England poses with his wife Clare Fleetwood after his third round of the Dubai Invitational at Dubai Creek Golf and Yacht Club on January 13, 2024 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

Golf fans express confusion at Clare Fleetwood’s absence

Now, there could have been many reasons for this.

The Fleetwoods both hail from England, and they spend the better part of their year in Dubai.

They have a young son together, and Clare has two kids from a previous marriage, so it’s possible that the trip to Atlanta simply wasn’t feasible for logistical reasons.

But Tommy’s relationship receives more scrutiny than the marriages of most pro athletes.

Tommy Fleetwood of Team Europe and wife Clare Fleetwood attend the Gala Dinner prior to the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf Club on September 27, 2023 in Rome, Italy.
Tommy Fleetwood of Team Europe and wife Clare Fleetwood attend the Gala Dinner prior to the 2023 Ryder Cup at Marco Simone Golf Club on September 27, 2023 in Rome, Italy. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)

That’s because Clare is 23 years Tommy’s senior.

It’s the sort of thing that would probably pass without comment if the genders were reversed.

But as it is, not many male athletes marry women who are more than a couple decades older than them, and so, golf fans can’t help themselves from obsessing over the Fleetwoods’ relationship.

To their credit, the couple has never shied away from discussing their age gap.

Tommy Fleetwood of England poses with the Race to Dubai trophy, partner Clare Craig and son Franklin during the final round of the DP World Tour Championship at Jumeirah Golf Estates on November 19, 2017 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Tommy Fleetwood of England poses with the Race to Dubai trophy, partner Clare Craig and son Franklin during the final round of the DP World Tour Championship at Jumeirah Golf Estates on November 19, 2017 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)

During a recent podcast interview, Clare recalled telling Tommy, “Don’t be stupid” when he proposed (per Page Six).

She also admitted that she was “paranoid” about how their relationship would be perceived by outsiders.

“She just eventually gave in, I think, and thought, ‘I’ll just give him some time.’ … And then I didn’t mess up,” Tommy chimed in.

In another interview, Tommy admitted that he and Clare “definitely get comments,” but insisted that the age difference has “never been a thing” to them.

Golfer Tommy Fleetwood (L) and wife Clare Fleetwood look on from the Royal Box during the Men's Singles second round match between Andy Murray of Great Britain and Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece during day five of The Championships Wimbledon 2023 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club on July 07, 2023 in London, England.
Golfer Tommy Fleetwood (L) and wife Clare Fleetwood look on from the Royal Box during the Men’s Singles second round match between Andy Murray of Great Britain and Stefanos Tsitsipas of Greece during day five of The Championships Wimbledon 2023 at All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club on July 07, 2023 in London, England.

“Clare actually looks very young for her age and I look old — it’s probably all that sun,” Tommy remarked. “She’s incredibly cool and I’m not cool at all, though I am quite mature for my age.”

We might never know why Clare wasn’t on hand for Tommy’s big win. But it sounds like her absence had nothing to do with the state of their marriage.

And it’s not like Tommy was lacking support.

In a post-round interview, he explained that he’s “always so lucky with the support [he] get[s]” from fans, saying it “makes [him] a bit emotional.”

He added, “I’m proud of what I’ve done … and where I’ve been so far knowing I’ve still got a way to go and a lot to learn.”

Notably, Tommy’s stepson Oscar was on hand to help him celebrate.

Tommy & Clare Fleetwood’s 23-Year Age Gap Receives Scrutiny Following PGA Tour … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

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Snoop Dogg Rants and Whines: The Movies are Too Gay!

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Snoop Dogg is confused and frightened at the moment.

Over what he says Hollywood is obsessed with depicting on the big screen.

The veteran rapper made an appearance on the latest It’s Giving podcast… during which he recalled not knowing what to say to his grandchild when he was asked about a same-sex relationship in the movie Lightyear.

Snoop Dogg performs after the game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Philadelphia Phillies at Great American Ball Park on August 11, 2025 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jason Mowry/Getty Images)

“What you see is what you see, and they’re putting it everywhere,” the artist said at one point in this interview.

“They’re like, ‘She had a baby — with another woman.’ Well, my grandson, in the middle of the movie is like, ‘Papa Snoop? How she have a baby with a woman? She’s a woman!’”

Snoop Dogg recalled thinking amid this viewing:

“Oh sh-t, I didn’t come in for this sh-t. I just came to watch the goddamn movie.’”

Lightyear came out in 2022 and is a spinoff of Toy Story; it stars Chris Evans voicing the titular character and it features LGBTQ+ characters and a same-sex kiss scene.

Due to that scene Snoop references above, the film wasn’t permitted to play in theaters in such Middle East markets as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Egypt, Kuwait, Oman, and Qatar.

Snoop Dogg performs onstage during the 2025 BET Awards at Peacock Theater on June 09, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET)

Rather than answer his grandson’s inquiry about Lightyear and the lesbian relationship, Snoop said he told him, “Hey man, watch the movie.”

However, the little one still had questions, asking the rapper, “Uh uh. They just said, she and she had a baby. They’re both women. How did she have a baby?”

The Voice coach said the moment “f-cked me up,” adding:

“I’m like, scared to go to the movies. Y’all throwing me in the middle of shit that I don’t have an answer for… It threw me for a loop. I’m like, ‘What part of the movie was this?’ These are kids. We have to show that at this age? They’re going to ask questions. I don’t have the answer.”

Snoop Dogg attends the BET Awards 2025 at the Peacock Theatre in Los Angeles on June 9, 2025. (Photo by MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Snoop Dogg has not followed up these statements. He has not responded to comments about them from various outlets.

The star’s remarked did spark backlash in the interview’s YouTube comments, though.

“You’re telling me that as a 50+ year old man, you still don’t know how to talk to a kid about same sex parents? Why is that such a difficult concept to grasp?” one person wrote.

“What a terrible take on the lesbian couple. It’s 2025 & y’all still being homophobic?” another critic added.

And then a third offered up an obvious and simple solution to the question Snoop’s loved one posed, stating online:

“How to explain where two women got a child? — ADOPTION.”

Snoop Dogg Rants and Whines: The Movies are Too Gay! was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Politics

This blue state is the first to grapple with megabill response

Democrats have been warning for months that President Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” would wreak havoc on state budgets.

But Colorado is the first state to call lawmakers back to the Capitol to grapple with the ramifications of the massive federal tax and spending bill.

In a special session that began Thursday, the Democratic-led state Legislature is considering bills to cover a budget gap of roughly $1 billion by increasing taxes, reallocating funding and tapping the state’s reserves — as well as set the stage for future cuts. The session — which is also attempting to address artificial intelligence policy — is expected to continue at least through Tuesday.

“The only reason we’re even talking about this is because HR1 passed,” Democratic Gov. Jared Polis told POLITICO on Thursday, referring to the GOP megabill. “[It] not only increased the federal deficit by trillions of dollars, but also increased the state deficit by hundreds of millions of dollars.”

Republicans top legislative priority — or HR1, passed in July — extended Trump’s 2017 tax cuts and made major cuts to social safety net programs. The bill’s passage came after most states had already set their budgets for the current fiscal year, and now many have been scrambling to sort out how it impacts their finances this year and down the road.

Colorado’s response will likely serve as a preview of how other states will address the financial ramifications in the coming months.

The financial adjustments being made by Colorado lawmakers in the special session only address the short-term impacts of the bill, and legislators say they are only the first of many changes their state will undergo as a result of the legislation.

Colorado legislators and the governor told POLITICO that the special session was necessary because changes to the federal tax code — which the state’s tax code is tied to — are estimated to reduce the state’s income tax revenue by as much as $1.2 billion. That could create a deficit of about $750 million in the budget passed in April. Add on funds to fill in cuts to school lunch programs and to soften the looming rise of health insurance premiums due to smaller federal subsidies and it’s estimated that Colorado faces a financial gap of more than $1 billion.

To address the shortfall, legislators are proposing a range of solutions: selling tax credits to increase funds for health care, raising taxes on the state’s highest earners, ending some tax incentives and reallocating funds from less critical programs like the reintroduction of gray wolves.

“Can we fix it 100 percent? No,” House Majority Leader Monica Duran said in an interview on Thursday. “But we’re trying to make it less painful for everyone.”

Sarah Mercer of Denver-based lobbying firm Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck describes the funding strategy as “a third, a third, a third” — filling equal portions of the budget hole by closing tax exemptions, tapping the state’s reserves and cutting costs.

The budget cuts, however, would come later, through a bill already advancing through the Legislature that would allow Polis to propose mid-year cuts if the state cannot meet its fiscal obligations. The governor would still need to work with the legislature’s Joint Budget Committee to enact those cuts.

“It gives the governor some pretty unusual powers,” Mercer explained. “What is really the full scope of this new power, and when else might it be used in the future?”

Colorado Republicans, meanwhile, are accusing Democrats — who hold a trifecta in the state government — of mishandling the state budget and then trying to pass the blame onto Washington.

“For years, Democrats at the Capitol have spent beyond their means and ignored Republican solutions. Now, they want taxpayers to bail them out,” House Minority Leader Rose Pugliese said in a press release. Colorado House Republicans’ communications team did not respond to an interview request.

Mercer said some of the shortfall may stem from funding that states like Colorado received from Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act — which was used to fund some programs and has since run out.

“I think [lawmakers] did try to think through and craft programs that were limited,” Mercer said. “[But] I think our government and our budget did grow a little bit as well during that time.”

State Rep. Shannon Bird, vice chair of the Joint Budget Committee who is vying for the congressional seat currently held by GOP Rep. Gabe Evans, pushed back on the notion that one-time federal dollars led to this problem.

“To the extent that we understood funds to be one time … Colorado, I believe, did a very fair job of using that money either for infrastructure investment or just to fund one time grants,” Bird said, pointing the finger instead at withheld funding that the state expected to be ongoing, like school grants and Medicaid dollars.

Why Colorado faces this financial dilemma

The Colorado tax code’s direct relationship to the federal tax code led it to this point. The state automatically adopts any changes to federal tax code, and also is one of just a handful of states that uses federal tax rates for state taxes. That means the minute the federal tax code changes, so do Colorado’s taxes — leaving a shortfall where the state expected a surplus.

To make matters more complicated, in 1992 Colorado passed the taxpayer bill of rights. It requires the state to ask permission from the voters for any tax changes via ballot measure. When the state increased taxes on cigarettes and other tobacco products to pay for universal preschool in 2020, for example, voters had to approve the proposal via ballot measure before it became law.

To that end, the Legislature over the weekend approved a bill that would allow leftover revenue from a ballot measure already approved for November — which would increase taxes on residents with taxable incomes over $300,000 — to be used for school meals. If approved by voters, it could provide an additional $95 million annually to the state’s healthy school meals program, Healthy School Meals For All. The legislature on Friday also approved a bill to fund Medicaid reimbursements for Planned Parenthood.

The state is also concerned about a possible increase to health insurance premiums. Because Congress has yet to renew higher federal health care subsidies for Obamacare plans that expire at the end of this year, the costs for consumers are expected to substantially increase. Colorado’s insurance division estimated in July that premiums would rise 28 percent on average in the state and as much as 38 percent in the state’s more rural western slope.

“I’m hopeful that the United States Congress takes action and renews the [health care] tax credits,” Polis said. There has been some talk on Capitol Hill of finding another vehicle for the subsidies, but it’s unclear if Congress will act before the year’s end, and Colorado lawmakers are looking to soften the blow by selling tax credits.

“We’ll do what we can,” Polis added. “It’s not going to negate those huge increases, but it’ll at least reduce them.”

The Legislature is also considering removing some tax incentives, including breaks for companies that employ a certain percentage of Coloradans and deductions that allow retailers to cover the cost of collecting taxes, to increase the state’s revenues.

But there are many more details that Colorado will need to iron out in the months and years to come.

“A lot of these cuts will likely need to be ongoing cuts, not just for the current year,” Polis said, explaining that they couldn’t continue to dip into the reserve indefinitely. “The reserve is there for a recession. And this is not a recession. This is caused by HR1.”

​Politics

Categories
Politics

Chicago doesn’t need or want federal troops, Gov. Pritzker says

CHICAGO — Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker pushed back Monday on a threat by President Donald Trump to deploy federal troops in Chicago to fight crime, calling it “unconstitutional and unamerican,” and designed more for theater than public safety.

Pritzker, speaking at a news conference along with top Democratic officials from across the state and with the iconic Chicago skyline in the background, said there is no justification for Trump to use soldiers to patrol the city.

“We have crime like other cities do, but let’s be clear, we are actually in better shape than the 30 biggest cities across the United States,” the governor said. “It’s important to understand that the president of the United States is doing this for theatrics.”

Pritzker’s comments came hours after Trump, speaking to reporters at the White House, renewed his threat to make Chicago the next focus of his effort to draw public attention to crime even as violent incidents fall back to pre-pandemic levels throughout the nation.

No request for federal assistance has been made, Pritzker said — nor has any communication come from the Trump administration.

“No one from the White House or the executive branch has reached out to me or to the mayor,” the governor said. “No one has reached out to our staffs. No effort has been made to coordinate or to ask for our assistance in identifying any actions that might be helpful to us.”

While most officials in a state dominated by Democrats agree with Pritzker, the leader of the Chicago Police union, John Catanzara, told POLITICO that the department is short 1,000 officers and could use reinforcements. “More manpower is still needed,” he said.

The governor, who arrived by water taxi to emphasize the city’s vibrancy and beauty, made his remarks days after Trump floated the idea of federal intervention in Chicago.

“If we need to, we’re going to do the same thing in Chicago, which is a disaster,” Trump said at a White House briefing last week, referencing prior National Guard deployments. On Monday, Trump ratcheted up his rhetoric, suggesting the federal government may need to “barge in” on Illinois.

Pritzker, who was joined by Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, Sens. Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and numerous city and state officials, civic and faith leaders, said Illinois has the authority and the resolve to block any attempt to override local control.

They vowed to fight any National Guard action in the courts, and they urged protests to be peaceful.

Johnson echoed Pritzker in criticizing Trump’s motives. The mayor noted that crime was on the decline in Chicago, down more than 30 percent. “We are being targeted because of who we are as a city,” said Johnson, pointing to Chicago’s progressive roots in labor and immigration.

Chicago Alderwoman Samantha Nugent, who previously worked with the Cook County Department of Homeland Security, said she’s concerned that the National Guard potentially converging in Chicago would only create confusion because there would be a question about “who’s controlling the mission.” The Chicago Police superintendent is in charge of the chain of command, not the Guard, she said.

The high-profile press conference followed Johnson speaking out against Trump over the weekend, telling MSNBC that if the president moves ahead with his threat, it would be a “flagrant violation of our Constitution.”

Over the weekend, former Chicago mayors Rahm Emanuel and Lori Lightfoot also criticized Trump.

“When you look at what he did in D.C., he’s not going to actually deal with crime,” Emanuel said on CNN. “This is an attempt to deal with cities that are welcoming cities, known as sanctuary cities, and deal with immigration.”

Trump also said a group of African American “ladies” are “screaming” for the Trump administration to address violence in Chicago. It was an apparent reference to Chicago Flips Red, whose members have criticized Johnson’s handling of the large influx of migrants who needed housing and other services during the Biden administration.

​Politics

Categories
Health

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Affinity For Fermented Foods Isn’t A Safe Diet For Everyone

Yogurt, kimchi, and other fermented foods are enjoying popularity as gut-friendly foods. Despite their healthy rep, though, some people should avoid them.

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights