October, 29 2020, 12:00am EDT

Free Press Releases Directory of Resources for Reporters Covering Protests and Disinformation During the Election and Its Aftermath
WASHINGTON
On Thursday, Free Press released a directory of resources to help journalists keep their communities informed and safe during the volatile weeks ahead.
Before and After the Vote: Journalism Resources for Keeping Communities Safe & Informed was created in response to what might happen: Many have warned about a possible period of uprisings, white-supremacist violence and intentional disinformation campaigns designed to undermine public trust in the election and deepen the debilitating crisis stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic.
The project includes a database (available here) featuring more than 100 resources that address ways reporters can cover white nationalism and white-supremacist violence, police crackdowns against protests, and disinformation spreading through their communities. In addition, the database offers guides to upholding election integrity in the face of efforts to discredit the vote. Other resources include ways to protect journalists' physical safety and secure digital communications.
"The threats facing journalists -- and their ability to produce trusted reporting for the public -- are intensifying and will most likely continue to do so after Election Day," said Free Press News Voices: Philadelphia Project Manager Tauhid Chappell. "The database is the result of the incredible work of many devoted organizations and individuals that have produced guides, webinars, infographics and other educational materials related to coverage of the election and its aftermath. We've brought all of their efforts together in one place so reporters, media-makers and advocates can access and share all of these resources as they cover events."
"Journalism is at its best when it is in solidarity with those fighting for equity and justice," said Free Press News Voices: New Jersey Manager Vanessa Maria Graber. "Many non-journalists, especially those in BIPOC communities, have experienced many of the dangerous situations the database highlights. Black and Brown communities are targeted by police and white-supremacist violence, as well as disinformation campaigns meant to sow division and hate. They are more prone to voter suppression via both draconian laws and intimidation at the polls. Their physical safety during protests is not protected by a press badge or a newsroom legal team."
The database is designed to aid journalists in covering white supremacists without amplifying hate speech; provide tools and tips to ensure communities receive information grounded in facts, truth and credible sources; help communities and journalists remain safe during public demonstrations; and help ensure that those in power do not undermine the election. It will be updated in the coming days and weeks as more resources become available and the election situation unfolds.
Free Press was created to give people a voice in the crucial decisions that shape our media. We believe that positive social change, racial justice and meaningful engagement in public life require equitable access to technology, diverse and independent ownership of media platforms, and journalism that holds leaders accountable and tells people what's actually happening in their communities.
(202) 265-1490LATEST NEWS
'Genocide in Action' as 60-Day Blockade Plunges Gaza Into Mass Starvation
The two-month-long siege is a "clear and calculated effort to collectively punish over two million civilians and to make Gaza unlivable."
May 02, 2025
"This is genocide in action," said one official with Amnesty International on Friday, referring to Israel's two-month humanitarian blockade in Gaza which has resulted in death, starvation, and suffering on a nearly unimaginable scale.
The human rights group is demanding that Israel's allies, including the United States, take immediate action to ensure the Israeli government lifts the total aid blockade that's plunged the enclave into what the United Nations has called "mass starvation," with food supplies rapidly dwindling and thousands of children diagnosed with acute malnutrition.
"The international community must not continue to stand by as Israel perpetrates these atrocities with impunity," said Erika Guevara Rosas, Amnesty's senior director for research, advocacy, policy, and campaigns.
After a brief cease-fire, Israel reimposed a ban on the entry of commercial goods and aid into Gaza on March 2 and cut off power to the enclave's desalination plant, after it had been briefly reconnected to electricity. The plant's blackout has worsened water scarcity that's plagued Gaza for all of Israel's 17-year blockade and has left some Palestinians resorting to drinking seawater.
A spokesperson for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) told reporters in Geneva on Friday that the agency is in "constant contact" with Israeli authorities as it advocates for the reopening of border crossings.
"We don't ask if food is nutritious or not, if it's fresh or good; that' a luxury, we just want to fill the stomachs of our children. I don't want my child to die hungry."
"Food stocks have now mainly run out, water access has become impossible," Olga Cherevko said, leaving children "who have been deprived of their childhood for many months... rummaging through piles of trash" in search of food and combustible material to burn for cooking, due to rapidly shrinking supplies of fuel.
"Gaza is inching closer to running on empty," said Cherevko.
Amnesty interviewed 35 internally displaced people about the forced starvation crisis facing Gaza, which began again shortly before Israel resumed its bombardment of the enclave on March 18—killing at least 2,325 people including 820 children since then.
With the severe food scarcity being "exploited by individuals hoarding or looting supplies, selling them at extortionate prices," according to Amnesty, most Palestinians are relying on overcrowded charity kitchens where they can wait for hours each day for just one meal.
"We don't ask if food is nutritious or not, if it's fresh or good; that' a luxury, we just want to fill the stomachs of our children. I don't want my child to die hungry," one parent told the aid group.
Another described sending their son to wait in line for drinking water "for hours and he had to walk long distances."
"With the relentless bombardment and danger lurking everywhere, you don't know," said the parent. "You may send your child to bring water only for him to return in a body bag. Every day is like this here."
OCHA has reported that 92% of infants and pregnant and breastfeeding mothers are not meeting their nutrient requirements, while the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) released a statement Friday warning that malnutrition among children is on the rise across the enclave.
"More than 9,000 children have been admitted for treatment of acute malnutrition since the beginning of the year," said Catherine Russell, executive director UNICEF. "Hundreds more children in desperate need of treatment are not able to access it due to the insecurity and displacement."
"For two months, children in the Gaza Strip have faced relentless bombardments while being deprived of essential goods, services and lifesaving care. With each passing day of the aid blockade, they face the growing risk of starvation, illness, and death—nothing can justify this," Russell added.
One doctor at Al-Rantissi pediatric hospital in Gaza City told Amnesty that healthcare workers have observed "the impact of the hunger on the children who come here to receive treatment... You recommend that the parent give the child specific attention, specific food, and you know that what you are recommending is an impossibility."
The two-month mark of the current siege came as the International Court of Justice held public hearings this week on Israel's humanitarian obligations in Gaza. The ICJ has previously ordered Israel to prevent genocide in Gaza and to allow humanitarian aid into the enclave.
Amnesty argued that the "cruel and inhumane siege" offers "further evidence of Israel's genocidal intent in Gaza."
"Apart from a brief respite during the temporary truce, Israel has relentlessly and mercilessly turned Gaza into an inferno of death and destruction," Erika Guevara Rosas said. "For the past two months, Israel has completely cut off the supply of humanitarian aid and other items indispensable to the survival of civilians in a clear and calculated effort to collectively punish over two million civilians and to make Gaza unlivable."
Mohamad Safa, CEO and representative to the U.N. for the non-governmental organization Patriotic Vision, emphasized that the crisis that is gripping Gaza is "not famine," but rather "forced starvation."
""Forced starvation is an act of genocide," he said.
U.S. Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), the only Palestinian-American member of Congress, repeated her call for an arms embargo on Israel, which counts the U.S. as the largest international funder of its military.
"The government of Israel is starving Gaza to death," said Tlaib. "It's a war crime to use starvation as a weapon. The only way to end this genocide is with an arms embargo. Time for my colleagues to end their silence."
Guevara Rosas accused the international community, especially Israel's allies, of "contemptible failure to live up to their legal responsibilities to prevent and bring an end to Israel's genocide in Gaza."
"These states' decades of inaction helped establish pervasive impunity for Israel's persistent violations and it is now exacting an unprecedented toll of death, destruction, and suffering on Palestinians," said Guevara Rosas. "States must take action to render Israel's violations against Palestinians politically, diplomatically, and economically unsustainable—the siege on Gaza must end now."
Keep ReadingShow Less
'No Legal Basis,' Says Harvard After Trump Declares Tax-Exempt Status Will Be Taken Away
"Such an unprecedented action would endanger our ability to carry out our educational mission," said a spokesperson for the Ivy League school.
May 02, 2025
Harvard University pushed back forcefully Friday after President Donald Trump declared in a social media post that "we are going to be taking away Harvard Tax Exempt Status," adding that is "what they deserve."
Trump's comment came just hours after Democratic senators sent a letter demanding a probe into whether the administration is acting illegally by trying to compel the U.S. Internal Revenue Service to yank the university's tax exemption.
Trump's post did not specify whether the IRS, the entity that has the power to remove an organization's tax-exempt status, is opting to remove Harvard's designation. Multiple outlets noted they got no immediate response from the IRS when they asked the agency for comment.
"There is no legal basis to rescind Harvard's tax-exempt status," a university spokesperson said in a statement, according toPolitico. "Such an unprecedented action would endanger our ability to carry out our educational mission."
It is illegal for the president, vice president, or other top officials to request, indirectly or directly, that the IRS audit a particular taxpayer.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and multiple other Democratic senators on Friday asked the Acting Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) to probe whether the IRS has received illegal pressure from the administration when it comes to Harvard, and to provide information about whether the agency is looking into other entities at the direction of the president or other top officials.
"It is both illegal and unconstitutional for the IRS to take direction from the president to target schools, hospitals, churches, or any other tax-exempt entities as retribution for using their free speech rights," the senators wrote in a letter dated Friday to the Acting TIGTA Heather Hill.
"It is further unconscionable that the IRS would become a weapon of the Trump administration to extort its perceived enemies, but the actions of the president and his operatives have now made this fear a reality. We request that you review whether the president or his allies have taken any step to direct or pressure the IRS to take politically-motivated actions regarding the tax-exempt status of the president's political targets," they continued.
Loss of tax-exempt status, something that would only typically occur after an audit process that allows the university opportunity to defend itself and appeal, would be extremely significant for the university. Tax-exempt status means the school does not pay federal income tax on charitable contributions to the school and other income. It also means that donations to the school are tax-exempt for those who make them.
Trump mused publicly on April 16 that Harvard should lose its tax-exempt status, after the university's president said the institution would not comply with a list of policy demands from the president, that included, according to the Harvard Crimson, derecognizing pro-Palestine student groups and auditing academic programs for viewpoint diversity. The pushback from Harvard prompted the administration to freeze over $2 billion in federal funding for the school.
That same week, it was reported that the IRS was making plans to revoke Harvard's tax-exempt status.
In response to Trump's bullying tactics, Harvard sued the administration, calling the freeze on funding unlawful and asking the court to restore it.
The tangling between Harvard and the Trump administration is part of a broader wave of scrutiny by the White House on higher education.
Keep ReadingShow Less
'Luigi: The Musical' Premiere Run Already Sold Out in San Francisco
"This show is not a celebration of violence of any kind, nor is it an attempt to pass judgment on an ongoing legal matter," say the producers. "Instead, Luigi: the Musical uses satire to ask deeper cultural questions."
May 02, 2025
A stage musical based on the life and actions of accused murderer Luigi Mangione, charged with killing UnitedHealth chief executive Brian Thompson earlier this year, will debut in San Francisco next month—and the run of the show featuring the high-profile case is already sold out.
Mangione—who has taken on cult status in some quarters over the brazen and cold-blooded killing that served to highlight the nation's cruel, profit-driven healthcare system—is facing a possible death sentence if found guilty on federal charges related to Thompson's murder.
"Why did a figure like Luigi become a kind of folk hero in certain corners of the internet? What does that say about how we see institutions in America today?"
The producers "Luigi: The Musical," who describe the play as a "wildly irreverant, razor-sharp comedy" about the "alleged corporate assassin turned accidental folk hero," also acknowledge how inherently controversial and provocative the show will be. According to the play's website:
This show is not a celebration of violence of any kind, nor is it an attempt to pass judgment on an ongoing legal matter. Our hearts go out to the family of Brian Thompson, and we acknowledge the pain and complexity surrounding this case.
Instead, Luigi: the Musical uses satire to ask deeper cultural questions. Why did this case strike such a chord with so many people? Why did a figure like Luigi become a kind of folk hero in certain corners of the internet? What does that say about how we see institutions in America today?
The show will run at the Taylor Street Theater in the city, premiering on June 13th for an initial two-week run. As of this writing, all shows are sold out, but new dates for an extended run are set to be announced.
Produced by Caleb Zeringue and directed by Nova Bradford, the script was written by the pair alongside Arielle Johnson and Andre Margatini. The original music and lyrics for the show were composed by Johnson and Bradford.
In the show's imagination, Mangione finds himself in a jail cell with convicted crypto-banker Sam Bankman-Fried and indicted hip-hop producer Sean "Diddy" Combs. While absurd in some ways, the origin story of the play is based on the fact that all three men were, for a period, all held at the same detention facility.
In an interview last week with the San Francisco Chronicle, Zeringue said all three men "represent these big pillars of institutions in society that are failing in their trust: healthcare, Hollywood, and then big tech."
Bradford, also speaking to the Chronicle, said that the play seeks to explore society's tendency "to project meaning onto these types of figures," but that the show is "not valorizing" any of them, nor "trivializing any of their action or alleged actions."
"Our hope is that Luigi: the Musical," say the producers in their show notes, "makes people laugh—and think. We're not here to make moral proclamations. We're here to explore, with humor and heart, how it feels to live through a time when the systems we're supposed to trust have stopped feeling trustworthy."
Keep ReadingShow Less
Most Popular