— Marisa Carroll, features editor, New York
| New York’s Irin Carmon has been on the abortion beat for more than a decade, exposing exactly how the right turned basic access to medical care into a political football. Now, she reports, the well-funded groups that successfully pushed for abortion bans are hoping to do the same for transgender people’s health care. Post-Dobbs, “anti-abortion politicians are worried about the politics. They’ve turned to attacking trans youth in order to stay politically viable,” one strategist tells Irin. They say nothing is ever new in politics (well, perhaps except arresting a former president), and this column precisely breaks down the overlaps between the anti-trans and anti-abortion playbooks — and how liberals can avoid amplifying the type of rhetoric that helped kill Roe. |
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| Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Getty Images |
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| James D. Walsh reports from Manhattan Criminal Court, where Donald Trump arrived this afternoon an accused felon as dozens of his fans rallied in support outside. |
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| “That’s when I knew we were back, when he was trying to decide between throwing up or shitting in a bucket.” For Vulture, Erik Adams speaks to the cast of Party Down about the season that almost didn’t happen. |
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| TikTok set social media on a new course and beat its competition to the punch, writes Intelligencer’s John Herrman, and now every other app using algorithmic videos feels like a worse version of it. |
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