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Heritage Foundation Spreads Deceptive Videos About Noncitizen Voters - The New York Times

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Americans misunderstand their contribution to deteriorating environment | Ars Technica

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Most people are “very” or “extremely” concerned about the state of the natural world, a new global public opinion survey shows. 

Roughly 70 percent of 22,000 people polled online earlier this year agreed that human activities were pushing the Earth past “tipping points,” thresholds beyond which nature cannot recover, like loss of the Amazon rainforest or collapse of the Atlantic Ocean’s currents. The same number of respondents said the world needs to reduce carbon emissions within the next decade. 

Just under 40 percent of respondents said technological advances can solve environmental challenges. 

The Global Commons survey, conducted for two collectives of “economic thinkers” and scientists known as Earth4All and the Global Commons Alliance, polled people across 22 countries, including low-, middle- and high-income nations. The survey’s stated aim was to assess public opinion about “societal transformations” and “planetary stewardship.”

The results, released Thursday, highlight that people living under diverse circumstances seem to share worries about the health of ecosystems and the environmental problems future generations will inherit. 

Explore the latest news about what’s at stake for the climate during this election season.

But there were some regional differences. People living in emerging economies, including Kenya and India, perceived themselves to be more exposed to environmental and climate shocks, like drought, flooding and extreme weather. That group expressed higher levels of concern about the environment, though 59 percent of all respondents said they are “very” or “extremely” worried about “the state of nature today,” and another 29 percent are at least somewhat concerned.  

Americans are included in the global majority, but a more complex picture emerged in the details of the survey, conducted by Ipsos.

Roughly one in two Americans said they are not very or not at all exposed to environmental and climate change risks. Those perceptions contrast sharply with empirical evidence showing that climate change is having an impact in nearly every corner of the United States. A warming planet has intensified hurricanes battering coasts, droughts striking middle American farms and wildfires threatening homes and air quality across the country. And climate shocks are driving up prices of some food, like chocolate and olive oil, and consumer goods. 

Americans also largely believe they do not bear responsibility for global environmental problems. Only about 15 percent of U.S. respondents said that high- and middle-income Americans share responsibility for climate change and natural destruction. Instead, they attribute the most blame to businesses and governments of wealthy countries. 

Those survey responses suggest that at least half of Americans may not feel they have any skin in the game when it comes to addressing global environmental problems, according to Geoff Dabelko, a professor at Ohio University and expert in environmental policy and security. 

Translating concern about the environment to actual change requires people to believe they have something at stake, Dabelko said. “It’s troubling that Americans aren’t making that connection.”

While fossil fuel companies have long campaigned to shape public perception in a way that absolves their industry of fault for ecosystem destruction and climate change, individual behavior does play a role. Americans have some of the highest per-capita consumption rates in the world.

The world’s wealthiest 10 percent are responsible for nearly half the world’s carbon emissions, along with ecosystem destruction and related social impacts. For instance, American consumption of gold, tropical hardwoods like mahogany and cedar and other commodities has been linked to destruction of the Amazon rainforest and attacks on Indigenous people defending their territories from extractive activities.  

The United States is one of the world’s wealthiest countries, and home to 38 percent of the world’s millionaires (the largest share). But a person doesn’t need to be a millionaire to fit within the cohort of the world’s wealthiest. Americans without children earning more than $60,000 a year after tax, and families of three with an after-tax household income above $130,000, are in the richest 1 percent of the world’s population

United Nations emissions gap reports have said that to reach global climate goals, the world’s wealthiest people must cut their personal emissions by at least a factor of thirty. High-income Americans’ emissions footprint is largely a consequence of lifestyle choices like living in large homes, flying often, opting for personal vehicles over public transportation and conspicuous consumption of fast fashion and other consumer goods.  

If a majority of people are worried about the state of the planet, why hasn’t that translated into more effective responses? 

The answer, according to Robert J. Brulle, a visiting research professor of environment and society at Brown University, is that surveys showing high levels of public concern about nature tend not to compare the environment with other issues, like the economy, health care and national security. 

When asked to prioritize a range of issues, Americans’ feelings about the environment typically end up at the bottom. In a 2024 Pew poll on Americans’ top concerns, the economy landed at the top while protecting the environment came in 14th and dealing with climate change came in 18th. In a 2024 Gallup poll of Americans’ most pressing problems, the environment didn’t even make the list. 

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Policymakers also tend to respond to voting behavior—not the sampling results of public sentiment. 

“Environmental issues are not a major voting issue, so there is no reason for the politicians to respond to those issues if they are a peripheral concern to the population,” Brulle said. 

Other experts suggested that the disconnect between some environmental poll results and political action could be partially attributed to the sway that polluting industries hold over the U.S. political system. That sway, they say, has largely come from corporations’ ability to make unlimited political donations and run campaigns aimed at deceiving politicians and the public about the environmental impacts of their products.  

There is at least one area where the Global Commons survey appears to track with political developments happening in a handful of countries and the European Union. 

About three out of four people polled said they would like to see acts that cause serious environmental harm made a criminal offense.

Activists have long called for a crime of “ecocide” to be enshrined into international law alongside crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide. But in recent years, the campaign to make ecocide a crime at the international and national levels has ramped up. In 2021, an independent group of legal experts proposed a definition for an ecocide crime covering “severe” and “widespread or long-term environmental damage.” 

Discussions have since bubbled up among governments about incorporating a version of the proposal into the founding treaty of the International Criminal Court. 

Over the past few years, the European Union, as well as governments in Chile, France and Belgium have passed ecocide-like laws. Lawmakers in Brazil, Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Peru and Scotland have proposed such legislation. 

Though criminalizing environmental offenses is not new, proponents of ecocide say the laws act as a catchall, as compared to rules that delineate certain pollution thresholds. They also argue that an international ecocide crime would have moral sway, affecting public opinion about mass harm to nature being morally wrong. That might change the behavior of corporations, governments and insurers, said Jojo Mehta, the co-founder and CEO of Stop Ecocide International. 

“People clearly understand that the most severe forms of environmental destruction harm all of us, and that there is real deterrent potential in creating personal criminal liability for top decision-makers,” she said in a press release. “Damage prevention is always the best policy, which is precisely what ecocide law is about.” 

Perhaps you noticed: This story, like all the news we publish, is free to read. That’s because Inside Climate News is a 501c3 nonprofit organization. We do not charge a subscription fee, lock our news behind a paywall, or clutter our website with ads. We make our news on climate and the environment freely available to you and anyone who wants it.

That’s not all. We also share our news for free with scores of other media organizations around the country. Many of them can’t afford to do environmental journalism of their own. We’ve built bureaus from coast to coast to report local stories, collaborate with local newsrooms and co-publish articles so that this vital work is shared as widely as possible.

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How Telegram Became a Sanctuary for Domestic Terrorists — ProPublica

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This story is part of a collaboration between FRONTLINE and ProPublica that includes an upcoming documentary.

In late December, a 26-year-old construction worker in Sarasota County, Florida, used his phone to send a flurry of ominous online posts.

Alexander Lightner, tapping away on his Samsung Galaxy, announced his intention to commit mass murder, according to federal court records. He used the coded language of a new breed of neo-Nazis who call themselves Accelerationists. Lightner wrote that he planned to become a “saint” — the term followers use for someone who advances their racist cause through lethal acts of terror — and to set a new “Highscore,” or death toll.

Lightner launched what federal prosecutors allege were threats on Telegram, the sprawling, no-holds-barred platform that has become a hive for the movement. Accelerationists aim to speed the collapse of modern civilization and create a white ethno-state from the ashes of today’s democracies. Deep in the chatter of the platform’s roughly 900 million users, these extremists have created a constellation of Telegram channels where they encourage followers like Lightner to assassinate political leaders, sabotage power stations and railways, and commit mass murder.

A week after firing off his alleged threats on Telegram, Lightner woke up from a nap at his home to his father’s shouts: “Whoa, whoa, whoa. What’s this? Are these people here for us?”

Lightner threw an illegal, homemade silencer into a laundry basket, according to a summary of his interview with federal agents. Then he stepped into the sunlight. In his front yard, agents in camouflage and body armor pointed rifles at him. An armored vehicle faced his family home, its massive battering ram aimed at the front door.

An FBI agent asked Lightner if he knew why federal agents were at his door.

Lightner answered simply: “Telegram,” according to court records.

Late last month, Telegram burst into the news with another arrest related to alleged criminal activity on the giant messaging and social media platform. This time, the man in police custody was the company’s founder, Pavel Durov. French authorities detained the Russian-born billionaire after his plane touched down at an airport a few miles north of Paris.

French prosecutors issued preliminary charges against Durov last Wednesday related to alleged criminal activity on his platform. The allegations include organized fraud, drug trafficking and possession of pornographic images of minors, as well as refusal to cooperate with authorities, according to a press release by the Paris public prosecutor.

David-Olivier Kaminski, a lawyer for Durov, could not be reached for comment. French news reports quoted him saying that it was “totally absurd to think that the person in charge of a social network could be implicated in criminal acts that don’t concern him, directly or indirectly.”

The platform Durov created has long been both applauded and derided for its extreme commitment to free speech and for rebuffing inquiries from both U.S. and foreign law enforcement agencies, which have sought to gather information about alleged criminal activity on the platform.

“They are exceedingly unhelpful,” said Rebecca Weiner, the New York Police Department’s deputy commissioner of intelligence and counterterrorism. Weiner, who oversees one of the world’s largest metropolitan counterterrorism units, said the platform was notable for “being a center of gravity for a wide range of extremist content” and for its “unwillingness to work with law enforcement.”

Telegram’s ease of use, its huge public channels and the ability to encrypt private conversations have helped fuel its global appeal. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky used the app to rally his compatriots to repel the Russian invasion. Activists in Hong Kong turned to Telegram to organize demonstrations against a repressive law. In Belarus, pro-democracy forces used the platform to fight back against election fraud.

But the platform has also served as the online home of the Russian mercenary company Wagner Group, which has posted gruesome videos of extrajudicial killings. In April, the British government targeted the Terrorgram Collective, a subset of Telegram users who promote racially and ethnically motivated terrorism to people like Lightner, making it a crime to support or belong to the group. And more recently, the service played a key role in fomenting the anti-immigrant riots that swept across the United Kingdom.

ProPublica and FRONTLINE have been investigating Telegram’s role in a string of recent alleged far-right acts of sabotage and murder, and how the company’s inaction allowed extremists to plan and even advertise their crimes. Researchers have long warned that Telegram routinely allows extremists to share propaganda aimed at inciting violence, noting that the Islamic State group and al-Qaida were able to use the service for years with little interference.

“Telegram plays a key role in the perpetuation of militant accelerationism,” said Michael Loadenthal, a research professor at the University of Cincinnati and director of the Prosecution Project, which tracks felony cases involving political violence in the U.S. The company, he said, “has shown that deplatforming violent and hateful content is not its priority.”

Before Durov’s arrest, a Telegram spokesperson responded to questions from ProPublica and FRONTLINE in messages on the platform. The spokesperson said that the company bars users from calling for acts of violence, adding that moderators remove millions of pieces of harmful content from the platform every day. “As Telegram grows, it will continue to solve potential moderation problems with efficiency, innovation and respect for privacy and free speech,” the spokesperson, who used the name Remi Vaughn, said in the messages.

Yet ProPublica and FRONTLINE found that Telegram today is the main nexus of far-right Accelerationist crime. Law enforcement agencies on both sides of the Atlantic have interrupted a series of criminal schemes, including:

  • In July, a Georgian man accused of leading an Accelerationist terror group was arrested in Europe for allegedly soliciting people to carry out murders and bombings in the U.S. Michail Chkhikvishvili allegedly used Telegram to communicate and distribute his group’s propaganda and is facing charges in New York. He is being held in Moldova pending extradition, according to Wired. ProPublica and FRONTLINE could not locate counsel for him.
  • The same month, federal prosecutors charged an Accelerationist named Andrew Takhistov with plotting to destroy an energy facility in New Jersey. They allege he used Telegram to incite racial violence and share a how-to guide for white supremacist terrorism that included instructions on the use of Mylar balloons and Molotov cocktails to damage power substations. An attorney for Takhistov did not respond to a request for comment.
  • In June, Manhattan prosecutors announced charges against Hayden Espinosa, accusing the Texas man of selling illegal guns and firearm components through a Telegram channel aimed at white supremacists and Accelerationists. Espinosa allegedly used a contraband phone to sell weapons and gun parts while incarcerated in federal prison. He has pleaded not guilty.
  • A judge in England recently sentenced a British man to eight years in prison for plotting to carry out a suicide bombing at a synagogue. According to the Crown Prosecution Service, 19-year-old Mason Reynolds was “the administrator of a Telegram channel which shared far right extremist, antisemitic and racist views, as well as manuals on bomb building and how to 3D print firearms.”
  • Brandon Russell, a former leader of the Atomwaffen Division, a now-defunct neo-Nazi group tied to five murders, was charged last year with planning an attack aimed at disabling the power system in Baltimore. Russell and a co-defendant, Sarah Beth Clendaniel, used Telegram to organize the sabotage scheme, according to prosecutors. Clendaniel has pleaded guilty; Russell faces trial later this year. Attorneys for the duo declined to comment.

And then there is Lightner. U.S. prosecutors say in court filings that Lightner went to Telegram to discuss his plans to use a .308-caliber rifle to kill as many people as possible. He remains in jail awaiting trial on federal charges of making threats online and possessing an illegal silencer. He has pleaded not guilty. His attorney declined to comment.

Before Lightner’s arrest, he told an agent from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives that he was “blackout drunk” at the time of the posts, distraught over a bad breakup. “I was broken and really upset. And I went drinking, and then I did some stupid thing online,” he said, according to a recording of the conversation. He told other agents that he was not planning an act of violence but just wanted someone to notice him and care.

Lightner told federal agents that he started using Telegram in 2015, about two years after the platform launched. The online service grew steadily over the next few years, with the majority of users coming from outside the U.S. Then in 2021, Telegram’s growth exploded after its rival WhatsApp announced a new privacy policy. Some users feared WhatsApp was poised to begin sharing their confidential messages with parent company Facebook, now called Meta. In a Telegram post, Durov boasted that his platform was experiencing “the largest digital migration in human history,” claiming that 25 million new users joined Telegram in 72 hours.

That same month, in the U.S., Telegram got a bump in users when major social media platforms including Facebook and Twitter ousted former President Donald Trump and many of his most ardent supporters in the aftermath of the Jan. 6 insurrection. Today, Telegram is heavily favored by right-wing extremists, including QAnon followers, Proud Boys, militia members, and white supremacist groups like Patriot Front and the Active Clubs.

Axel Neff, who helped start Telegram, said the company’s core team of about 60 employees, 30 of whom are engineers, is too small to monitor the platform for criminal conduct. “Think about the size of Telegram. There are about a billion users on Telegram every month. A billion!” he said. “Telegram is a massive, massive community. … They are not staffed — and they do not have the capacity — to monitor everything that goes on there.”

Neff said it would be “professional suicide” for Telegram, which has marketed itself as a bastion of unfettered speech, to make a serious effort to moderate content. “I don’t think it is something [Durov] will ever do.”

The company’s privacy policy puts strict parameters around cooperation with law enforcement: “If Telegram receives a court order that confirms you’re a terror suspect, we may disclose your IP address and phone number to the relevant authorities. So far, this has never happened.”

Telegram ignores requests for information from government agencies that aren’t “in line with our values of freedom of speech and protecting people’s private correspondence,” Durov told Tucker Carlson in an interview with the former Fox News host earlier this year. Durov noted that Telegram refused to cooperate with the U.S. congressional committee probing the events of Jan. 6, 2021.

Telegram stores “very limited data” on its users, the Telegram spokesperson told ProPublica and FRONTLINE. “In most cases it is impossible for Telegram to access this data in order to provide it for the authorities,” the spokesperson said. “Police, governments and users are able to report content to Telegram they believe is illegal. Telegram processes these reports according to its terms of service.”

ProPublica and FRONTLINE found that much of the most disturbing content is posted in channels maintained by violent, right-wing Accelerationists, whose ideas have attracted neo-Nazis, Charles Manson admirers and anti-government revolutionaries.

The Terrorgram Collective, the group of Telegram users targeted by the British government’s crackdown, is an alliance of Accelerationists who use an ever-evolving array of Telegram channels to promote terrorism. The group has produced at least three e-books, including a manual celebrating white supremacist mass killers that court documents show was found at Lightner’s home in Florida.

David Skiffington, a former British counterterrorism specialist for London’s Metropolitan Police, said the “proliferation of extremist content” on Telegram “cannot be overstated.”

Other social media platforms such as Steam, Discord and Gab also host extremist-related content, Skiffington said. “But Telegram is by far the most widely used and accessible.”

Skiffington, who now runs the counterterrorism consulting firm DBA Insights, has been monitoring the Terrorgram Collective for years. He said the group’s influencers encourage “angry, white, lonely vulnerable individuals … to commit real-world acts of violence.”

It’s unclear how many people are part of the collective, though law enforcement has arrested individuals in Slovakia, Canada and the U.S. who are allegedly linked to the group.

In Florida, Lightner — or someone using his username, “Death.” — participated in at least 17 extremist Telegram channels, according to an analysis by Miro Dittrich, a co-founder of the Center for Monitoring, Analysis and Strategy, a German organization that studies online disinformation and extremism. Three of the channels were part of the Terrorgram network.

On the day of his arrest, Lightner was asked by a federal agent to explain his most explosive Telegram postings. At first, Lightner said he did not remember the online threats. But when a federal agent read the words back to him, Lightner said he had never seriously considered an act of violence. But he added that he knew that in making the Telegram postings, he was “playing with fire.”

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Giant 'gurgling' earthworms living under Gippsland farms the focus of new research - ABC News

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Under the steep rolling hills of eastern Victoria are "gurgling" creatures farmers can hear but rarely lay eyes on.

"It's kind of a strange little thing, that we're passionate about something we never see,” farm manager Burke Brandon said.

"But still, we know they're there.

"They're kind of like our hidden allies."

The south Gippsland organic beef and lamb farmer is talking about a species of annelid worm called the giant Gippsland earthworm (Megascolides australis).

It earns the name "giant" because an average adult is a metre long — making it one of the biggest earthworms in the world.

Mr Brandon had heard people talk about them but it was not until a mudslide about 10 years ago that he found them on his property.

"I actually saw a part of a giant earthworm, which was quite a surprise when you actually see how big they are in real life," he said.

"And we have seen cases where there's been accidental erosion or a landslip ... and you can see in the soil profile these hundreds of little holes in the soil the size of your finger."

Stomp around and listen

The farmer is getting to know where these elusive creatures live on his property at Moyarra, 125 kilometres south-east of Melbourne, as they don’t travel far.

"You know they'll always be roughly in the same area," Mr Brandon said.

"The more we stomp around on the surface, the more you hear them moving," Mr Brandon said.

"They feel the vibrations of you walking around, that's when they scurry back into their holes.

"It makes a gurgling sound, like you've let the water out of the bathtub."

Mr Brandon now wants to understand more about protecting the species listed as endangered in Victoria.

He is one of several farmers taking part in a project mapping the sites of local colonies.

Not too wet, not too dry

The species is endemic to west and south Gippsland and is fussy about its underground home.

Dr Beverley Van Praagh has been studying the worms for more than 30 years and describes them as the "Goldilocks of the earthworm world".

"They don’t like it too wet, they don't like it too dry. It has to be just right for them to be able to survive in those clay soils," Dr Van Praagh said.

The biggest threats to the species are changes in soil conditions, which could come from new housing estates, damming a creek or redirecting a waterway, she said.

Another less obvious threat could be planting trees on top of them with the best intentions.

"When people plant dense vegetation on top of earthworm habitat, it sucks the water out of the soil," she said.

An idyllic rural home

Most giant Gippsland earthworms are found on private farming land.

A telltale clue the species is lurking under the soil is terracing across hill sides.

Dr Van Praagh said the worms are often found along the banks of small creeks or tributaries or on south or west-facing hill slopes.

But when it comes to the exact soil conditions they like, there are knowledge gaps.

Gippsland Threatened Species Action Group and the Bass Coast and South Gippsland Landcare Networks are leading a new project to better understand these parameters.

It has federal funding under the Saving Native Species Program and will involve mapping colonies on private land and studying the hydrology with probes.

Co-existing with worms

The project aims to help farmers understand how to coexist with giant earthworms and still have productive farmland.

Researchers will track soil hydrology over time, looking at changes in moisture, temperature and oxygen.

Mr Brandon hopes to help preserve the species on his property for years.

"Some areas we may fence off so we know we can manage that area differently with grazing," he said.

"There is the potential for those areas to be revegetated with plants that coexist well with the earthworms, so grasses and ferns and sedges and small shrubs, but certainly not eucalyptus trees or deep-rooted trees.

"It's about being aware of how we can incorporate those [earthworm] communities in our whole farm plan, into our long-term future."

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Idiots Who Tried TikTok's Viral 'Free Money Glitch' at ATMs Are Getting Reported for Fraud

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Last weekend, TikTok videos went viral that purported to show how to receive free money from Chase Bank ATMs across the country. The technique involved depositing a check for a large amount of money the user didn’t actually have and withdrawing a smaller but substantial amount before anything officially cleared. In reality, the “glitch” was better known as fraud. And now, JP Morgan Chase has confirmed the bank is reporting the people who committed the crimes to authorities.

“As with any fraud-related issue, we review internally and refer to law enforcement as appropriate,” a Chase spokesperson told the Wall Street Journal on Friday. “Regardless of what you see online, depositing a fraudulent check and withdrawing the funds from your account is fraud, plain and simple.”

It’s not entirely clear how many people may have tried this scheme, but the Journal describes it as “thousands.” The viral meme got so popular that tens of millions of people have watched TikTok videos about the “glitch” at this point, according to the Journal.

One popular video on TikTok features a woman on the phone trying to explain to her mother that they’re letting people get between $40,000 and $50,000 for nothing with this infinite money “glitch.” The mother is rightly skeptical and says she doesn’t want her bank account closed, while her daughter insists her account won’t be closed since it’s just a glitch.

Some videos on TikTok even showed people throwing money they’d ostensibly gotten through this method into the air in celebration. But Chase told the Journal they’ve frozen some accounts who tried it, though, again, the exact numbers haven’t been disclosed. And the bank is giving “surveillance footage and other information related to individuals” to police.

While there were far too many people who believed that this was a “glitch” that wouldn’t get them into any trouble, the tide has certainly turned at this point, with most new videos about the ATM scam ridiculing people who thought it was just a loophole rather than check fraud.

“Only TikTok would transform grand larceny into a ‘life hack’ and rename check fraud as ‘a glitch,'” one user on X wrote after the videos had started to go viral.

The U.S. Postal Inspection Service also tweeted “unlimited money glitch” with a monocle inspection emoji earlier this week, expressing skepticism.

“Don’t believe the TikTok trend, check fraud is a serious crime. You will be prosecuted. If it sounds too good to be true…” the account continued.

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Supreme Court Justice Barrett describes coming home with bulletproof vest - The Washington Post

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COLORADO SPRINGS — Asked Friday about the challenges of being a Supreme Court justice and a parent of seven children, Amy Coney Barrett told an audience about a time she was sent home from the court with a bulletproof vest and her 13-year-old son saw it tossed on a bed.

Her son asked whether it was a bulletproof jacket, Barrett said, and she grew apprehensive — thinking that maybe she should have hidden it from him. But his next reaction surprised her.

“He said, ‘That’s so cool! Can I try it on?’” Barrett said, drawing laughter from the crowd. But her son then asked more seriously, “Why do you have a bulletproof vest?”

The comments came during a 45-minute discussion at the 10th Circuit Bench & Bar Conference that largely stuck to personal topics, rather than cases and controversies surrounding the high court after a contentious term. Barrett spoke in conversation with Chief Judge Jerome A. Holmes and Judge Allison H. Eid.

Barrett said her family has “adjusted just beautifully” to the pressures of her being on the court, but she has found it personally challenging to constantly travel with a security detail of U.S. Marshals.

She also relayed that she and fellow Justice Sonia Sotomayor are doing a PBS show on the topic of civility, and that she attempts to keep alive her New Orleans roots by eating gumbo and jambalaya at home.

Barrett did briefly comment on the court’s work when asked whether disagreements over legal opinions spill into personal relationships among the justices. She said they did not.

“On the court, justices are sparring over ideas, not one another,” Barrett said. “It’s not personal.”

Barrett, 52, emerged as a singular voice among the court’s conservative supermajority during her fourth term, which ended in July. She was willing to criticize fellow Republican nominees and occasionally break with them.

In one caustic dissent joined by the court’s liberals, she accused the conservative majority of “feeble” and “cherry-picked” arguments in a ruling that halted a plan by the Environmental Protection Agency to regulate air pollution.

Barrett often advocated for a more incremental and pragmatic approach than some of her conservative colleagues, who wanted to move more aggressively. But she was still a reliably conservative vote on the court’s weightiest issues, often siding with Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh.

The Supreme Court has had a busy summer weighing roughly two dozen cases on its emergency docket. Most recently, the court cleared the way for the Biden administration to strip millions of dollars in health-care funding from the state of Oklahoma because officials there have refused to comply with a federal requirement that they inform patients about abortions.

Justice Neil M. Gorsuch joined fellow conservative Justices Samuel A. Alito Jr. and Clarence Thomas in saying they would have granted the state’s request to the high court to block the Biden administration’s action.

Gorsuch gave the introductory remarks to the 10th Circuit conference in the Rockies on Thursday. He outlined cases that affected mountain states, arguing that the court was more unified in its decisions than it is given credit for and praising his retired colleague and ideological opposite, Stephen G. Breyer.

Gorsuch relayed a common refrain from Breyer, who liked to say that if you listen to someone else speak long enough, you are likely to find some common ground that can serve as a starting point for working together.

“That thought, that wisdom, that attitude Steve brought to our deliberations every day, and we profited hugely from it,” Gorsuch said.

The Supreme Court’s next term begins in early October. The justices so far have said they will hear cases on topics including gender transition care for minors, ghost guns, and the innocence claim of a man on Oklahoma’s death row.

Ann E. Marimow contributed to this report.

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1 public comment
acdha
11 hours ago
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Perhaps she could reconsider whether the Founders thought “well-regulated” was something other than syntactically-null padding, as evidenced by the first couple centuries of American history treating it as meaningful. Just a thought.
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