Thursday, September 21, 2023

Ferromex: Mexican railway operator suspends routes amid migrant deaths

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Clambering up and down the wagons is very risky, and many migrants have been maimed or killed

A company which operates some of Mexico's railways has suspended 60 of its routes after a surge of migrants hitching rides on freight trains.

Ferromex said services would be halted on the trains travelling towards Mexico's border with the US, in order to "avoid accidents or loss of life".

It added that the number of migrants trying to hitch rides on its freight trains was "unprecedented".

Hundreds of thousands clamber onto the roofs and cling to the sides each year.

Grupo México, which owns Mexico's biggest rail operator, Ferromex, said in a statement published [in Spanish] on Tuesday that there had been "half a dozen cases of injuries or death in recent days".

The network of freight trains is referred to by migrants as La Bestia (The Beast) and many risk jumping on board to speed up their 3,000km-journey (1,860 miles) from Mexico's southern to its northern border.

As the wagons are usually filled with freight, most ride on the train roof or hang from its sides.

If they fall, they risk losing life and limb. The trains are also targeted by gangs who rob, rape and extort migrants.

Ferromex said more than 1,500 people had gathered on top of a train and inside a train depot in Torreón, from where freight services depart for a number of Mexican cities on the US border.

The company said hundreds more had gathered at other key points of the railroad, with more than 1,000 on the roofs of wagons on the route between Chihuahua and Ciudad Juárez.

Ferromex said families with children were among those boarding their freight trains.

The statement by Ferromex comes amid warnings by international organisations about the increasing number of children embarking on the land route through Mexico to the US.

The United Nations Children's Fund, Unicef, says that the number of children migrating through Latin America and the Caribbean has reached record numbers.

"Gang violence, instability, poverty and climate-related events are, alarmingly, gripping the region and pushing more children from their homes," Gary Conville, Unicef's Latin America and Caribbean director, said.

United States Customs and Border Protection said that more than 83,000 children had crossed the US's southern border in the first seven months of 2023.

At some crossing points, nine out of 10 children are below the age of 11, Unicef figures suggest.

Why the first day of autumn is later than usual this year

An illustration of the March (spring) and September (fall or autumn) equinoxes. During the equinoxes, both hemispheres receive equal amounts of daylight. - NASA/JPL-Caltech
An illustration of the March (spring) and September (fall or autumn) equinoxes. During the equinoxes, both hemispheres receive equal amounts of daylight. - NASA/JPL-Caltech

You might be wondering why the autumnal equinox is on Sept. 23 this year – it officially starts at 3:50 a.m. ADT (4:20 a.m. NDT) – and not on the usual date, Sept. 21 or 22.

The date of the autumnal equinox – like the vernal equinox, summer and winter solstices – can vary yearly.

Its date is not determined by the calendar but is an astronomical moment in time when the sun crosses the celestial equator (the plane of the Earth's equator extended out into space), moving from north to south.

While equinoxes and solstices occur at the same moment in time across the globe, due to varying time zones, the actual date of the equinox or solstice may vary, depending on geographical location.

Autumnal equinoxes can occur between Sept. 21-24; in 2024, it's on Sept. 22

Equal day and night

On the date of the autumnal equinox, the sun is directly overhead at local solar time (as seen from Earth's equator).

The word "equinox" comes from the Latin words aequs (meaning "equal") and nox (meaning "night"), referring to equal daylight and nighttime.

There are two equinoxes each year: autumnal and spring here in the Northern Hemisphere. In the Southern Hemisphere, Sept. 23 marks the southern vernal equinox or the beginning of their spring.

On the vernal and autumnal equinoxes, the Earth's axis is neither tilted towards or away from the sun (as it is during the summer and winter solstices in the Northern Hemisphere). The amount of sunlight striking both hemispheres of the Earth's surface is pretty much the same: every latitude across the planet receives approximately the same amount of daylight as it does darkness as the sun is directly over the equator.

Day and night are only relatively equal in length for areas close to the equator; the length of day and night for non-equatorial regions depends on latitude.

For example, on Sept. 23, in Charlottetown, P.E.I., (latitude 46.23824 degrees north), the sun will rise at 7 a.m. and set just after 7:08 p.m., giving a day length of 12 hours, eight minutes, and nine seconds.


On the day of both equinoxes, the sun will rise almost due east and set almost due west, depending on your exact latitude. Charlottetown, on Sept. 23, will see the sunrise at 89 degrees east and set at 271 degrees west.

Decreasing light

Except for tropical regions, most locations in the Northern Hemisphere see a slow but steady decrease in daylight after the summer solstice (the longest day of the year), with the day-to-day differences greatest around the date of the autumnal equinox.

The same is true for the spring equinox, except the daylight period steadily grows longer.

After the autumnal equinox, the daylight period continues to shorten at an ever-decreasing rate until the winter solstice (the shortest period of daylight of the year), when it reaches zero.

Regions closer to the poles experience larger day-to-day differences than those closer to the equator.

Equilux

The moment when daylight and nighttime hours are equal is known as an "equilux," occurring a few days before the spring equinox and after the autumnal equinox in both hemispheres.

For Charlottetown, the equilux is Sept. 25. If you would like to find out when an equilux will occur where you live (you will need to know your approximate latitude), go to timeanddate.com/astronomy/equilux.html.

Astronomy vs. meteorology

The astronomical definition of when seasons begin differs from the meteorological definition.

While astronomical autumn begins Sept. 23, meteorological autumn (which defines the start of the seasons as occurring on the first day of the month that includes the equinox or solstice) occurred Sept. 1.

As the Earth doesn't move at a constant speed in its orbit around the sun, the actual timings of equinoxes and solstices can change each year, meaning the length of astronomical seasons also varies.

On average, the autumnal season in the North Hemisphere lasts about 89.8 days; in the Southern Hemisphere, it's approximately 92.8 days.

Differences

Not all countries use the astronomical definition of when the seasons change.

Australia and New Zealand use the meteorological definition to mark seasons, with spring starting Sept. 1. Some Southeast Asian cultures divide the year into six seasons.

Finland and Sweden base the date of seasons not on a calendar, but on temperature. Seasons within these two countries start and end on different dates, depending on each region's climate.

Global climate change will, no doubt, dramatically alter how these countries determine the start of their seasons.

This week's sky

Mercury (magnitude +2.5, in Leo - the Lion) has emerged from inferior solar conjunction and will reach its highest point in the morning sky 16 degrees above the eastern horizon on Sept. 23, before fading from view as the sun rises.

Venus (magnitude -4.5, in Cancer - the Crab), now at its brightness morning apparition, rises around 3:35 a.m., reaching an altitude of 29 degrees above the eastern horizon, before fading from view around 6:30 a.m.

Saturn (magnitude +0.5, in Aquarius - the Water Bearer) becomes accessible shortly before 8 p.m., 12 degrees above the southeast horizon as darkness falls, reaching a height of 31 degrees above the southern horizon by 11:40 p.m., and remaining visible until about 3:35 a.m. when it drops below 10 degrees above the southwest horizon.

Jupiter (magnitude -2.7, in Aries - the Ram) is visible by about 10 p.m., seven degrees above the eastern horizon, reaching its highest point of 58 degrees in the pre-dawn, southern sky around 4:15 a.m., then becoming lost in the dawn twilight 47 degrees above the southwest horizon by 6:30 a.m.

Mars, two degrees below the western horizon at dusk, is not observable this week.

Comet C/2023 P1 Nishimura reached perihelion (its closest passage of the sun) on Sept. 17 and is too close to the sun to be observed in the western, post-sunset twilight. It will pull away from the sun over the coming weeks, and, although fading in brightness, may still be visible.

Until next week, clear skies.


Events:

  • Sept. 18 – Venus at greatest brightness in morning sky; mag, -4.5
  • Sept. 22 – First Quarter Moon
  • Sept. 23 – Autumnal Equinox; start of autumn season in Northern Hemisphere
  • Sept. 23 – Mercury at its highest altitude in the morning sky; 16 degrees above the eastern horizon

Glenn K. Roberts lives in Stratford, P.E.I., and has been an avid amateur astronomer since he was a small child. He welcomes comments from readers at glennkroberts@gmail.com.

IS THE DAY 12 HOURS LONG ON THE EQUINOX? IT'S COMPLICATED

BY: BOB KING SEPTEMBER 20, 2023  

Denser air near the horizon acts like a lens and refracts (bends) the Sun's bottom half upward into the top, compressing the solar disk into a bean. Refraction also "lifts" the Sun into view at the horizon about 2 minutes before the real Sun arrives there. Both effects increase the amount of daylight we experience at the equinoxes.
Bob King

Astronomical cycles acquaint us with the inevitable. That's what I'm thinking right now as we approach the first official day of fall (spring in the southern hemisphere), also known as the autumnal equinox. At 2:49 a.m. EDT, the Sun will cross the celestial equator going south and won't stop its descent until it bumps into the winter solstice on December 21st.

The celestial equator is a projection of Earth's equator on the sky. On that special day, the Sun will pass directly overhead at noon for residents living along the equator, from Nairobi to Quito to Singapore. At local noon, when the Sun passes overhead, residents won't be able to avoid stepping on their shadows. On the same day at the North and South Poles the Sun scrapes completely around the horizon. And no matter where you live except the poles it rises due east and sets due west.

At both the spring and fall equinoxes, the Earth's axis tilts neither toward nor away from the Sun but sidelong. Day and night momentarily strike a balance, each of them 12 hours long on this day, so neither one of them has the upper hand. That's why we call it the equinox, which literally means "equal night." Right?

Don't believe it. There's more to daylight on the equinox than you might think.

THE SUN'S DISK

Venus, pictured here at dawn on September 14, 2023, is essentially a point source compared the Sun's disk.
Bob King

Even on the equinox, daylight still edges out night for two reasons. First, the Sun is a disk, not a point source. If the Sun were simply a more brilliant version of Venus, all of it would rise in one pop. Instead, sunrise is defined as the moment when the Sun's upper edge breaches the horizon. Since the solar disk is about ½° in diameter, its full disk takes between 2.5 and 3 minutes at mid-latitudes to clear the horizon. Similarly, sunset is the moment the trailing limb finally touches the western horizon. That adds another 2.5 to 3 minutes of sunshine at day's end. The result is a total of approximately 5 to 6 minutes of additional daylight. By the way, this is true for every day of the year, not just on the equinox.

As one approaches the Arctic at the time of the fall equinox, the Sun's angle of ascent becomes shallower and shallower. In Alert, Nunavut, the northernmost continuously inhabited place in the world, it takes more than 16 minutes from the moment of sunrise until the Sun clears the eastern horizon! At the equator — the opposite extreme — the Sun rockets straight up from the due-east horizon and extricates itself in just over 2 minutes.

THE EARTH'S AIR

Adding to the complexity is the fact that Earth has air. Consider atmospheric refraction, in which light rays are bent when they pass from a less dense medium (outer space) into a more dense medium (Earth's atmosphere). A familiar example is the "broken" straw sticking out of a glass of water. Light from the top of the straw travels directly to our eyes, while light from the underwater part is refracted (bent) and travels in a slightly different direction, making it look as if it's fractured.

A pencil in a glass of water looks broken because we see the top part through air and the bottom part through the denser medium of water, which bends or refracts the light in a different direction to our eyes. Refraction effects also magnify the submerged half.
Bob King

As the Sun approaches the horizon, air density rapidly increases, making refraction effects much stronger along the bottom edge of the solar disk compared to the top. The difference bends or "lifts" the bottom half of the solar disk into the top half, flattening an otherwise circular Sun into an oval.

You can see the Sun several minutes before it actually rises due to strong refraction at the horizon which bends light rays upward into view.
Sciencia58 / CC BY-SA 4.0

Even before the Sun has physically risen in the morning, refraction elevates its upper edge, causing it to appear nearly 3 minutes (at mid-latitudes) beforehand. Likewise, the actual Sun sets several minutes before its refracted light does. If you were to remove Earth's atmosphere at sunset, sunlight would disappear the moment the entire solar disk sets.

So, we'll need to add another 5 to 6 minutes of daylight to the equinox due to Earth's atmosphere. Even if we were to imagine a hypothetical point at the center of the solar disk instead of the full Sun, atmospheric refraction would also lift it into view earlier and hold onto it later just like all celestial sources.

On an airless Earth, we could watch the solar corona precede the sunrise by blocking the glaring white solar disk from view. All would proceed unaffected by refraction.
Stellarium


EQUAL LIGHT ON THE EQUILUX

Are days and nights ever 12 hours apiece? Yes! Well, close. This occurs at the equilux, a delightful word that derives from the Latin equi (equal) and lux (light). While the equinox occurs across the planet at the same moment, the equilux varies according to latitude.

In the Northern Hemisphere, it occurs several days after the autumnal equinox (on September 25th or 26th at mid-northern latitudes) and several days before the vernal equinox; in the Southern Hemisphere, it's the other way around.

At the equator, day and night are never exactly equal — daylight always exceeds night by 6 to 8 minutes due to the Sun's large apparent size. At the same time, though, day and night are nearly equal every day of the year.

City Latitude Approximate date of equilux
Anchorage, Ak. 61° Sept. 25
Calgary, Alberta 51° Sept. 25
Champaign, Ill. 40° Sept. 26
New Orleans, La. 30° Sept. 27
Honolulu, Hawai'i 21° Sept. 28
San José, Costa Rica 10° Oct. 4
Bogotá, Colombia 5° Oct. 19
Quito, Ecuador 0° Never

Traveling south, equilux dates increasingly part from the equinox date.
Data from Stellarium and other sources


While the equilux concept is great in principle, a perfect balance of day and night isn't possible from many locations because daylight is decreasing at the rate of 2 to 3 minutes per day, not minute by minute. For that reason day and night lengths often differ by about a minute. For example, in Detroit the equilux occurs on September 25th, when the time between sunrise and sunset is only about 13 seconds shy of 12 hours. In Phoenix it occurs on the same date, but daylight is a little more than a minute longer than night.

Isn't splitting hairs fun?

Fall leaves frame the waning gibbous Moon in early October 2020.
Bob King

The equinox is a happy time to be a night-sky watcher. Insects retreat, and evening temperatures are cool and pleasant. To stand under a dark sky before 9 o'clock is a joy. During the summer many of us start observing at the very time we should be getting to bed. These chances occur because of Earth's tilted axis. As the Sun hastens south, the curtain of darkness drops incrementally earlier. Before you know it, the insatiable night will make sunshine a prized commodity.

Happy equinox and equilux indeed!

















Bpl.org

https://www.bpl.org/blogs/post/the-origins-and-practices-of-mabon

Sep 20, 2019 ... Mabon is a pagan holiday, and one of the eight Wiccan sabbats celebrated during the year. Mabon celebrates the autumnal equinox.


En.wikipedia.org

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mabon

Mabon, the Autumnal equinox in some versions of the Pagan Wheel of the Year · Mabon ap Modron, a figure in Welsh Arthurian legend · Maponos, a pre-Christian ...

History.co.uk

https://www.history.co.uk/articles/mabon-the-pagan-festival-that-marks-the-autumn-equinox

However, it is now, though a purely pagan/neo-pagan holiday, and one of the eight Wiccan sabbats celebrated during the year. Mabon occurs between the 21st and ...

Cosmopolitan.com

https://www.cosmopolitan.com/lifestyle/a37051456/how-to-celebrate-mabon

Aug 16, 2023 ... Mabon is essentially a harvest festival. Ancient Celts and pagans used this day to give thanks to nature for a good harvest and to pray to their ...

Diversity.iu.edu

https://diversity.iu.edu/cultural-involvement/holiday-religious-observances/description/autumn-equinox-mabon.html

Autumn Equinox (Mabon) (Mah-bon or May-bon). While Mabon is not one of the four major sabbats in Wicca, it is one of the eight and is thus significant. It ...





ABOLISH LESE MAJESTE
Estranged son of Thai King Vajiralongkorn says discussion of the monarchy should be allowed

New York-based Vacharaesorn Vivacharawongse signals he rejects Thailand’s harsh lese majeste laws, which ban criticism of the royal family



Ron Lopez in Manila, and agencies
Thu 21 Sep 2023 

Vacharaesorn Vivacharawongse, the second-eldest son of Thai King Maha Vajiralongkorn, said in a Facebook post open discussions of his country’s lese majeste laws should be allowed. Photograph: Lillian Suwanrumpha/AFP/Getty Images

An estranged son of Thailand’s king who has spent almost all his adult life away from his homeland has unexpectedly gone public with his belief that open discussions about the country’s monarchy should be allowed, in a rejection of a harsh royal anti-defamation law.

Vacharaesorn Vivacharawongse, one of the king’s five sons, posted his opinion on Facebook after attending a photo exhibition in New York about people who have been charged under the law, Article 112 of Thailand’s Criminal Code.

The so-called lese majeste law makes insulting the monarch, his immediate family and the regent punishable by up to 15 years in prison per offence.


Thailand king’s estranged son makes surprise return after 27 years


“I love and cherish the monarchy, but I believe it is better to know than not knowing. Every person has their own opinion based on their own experiences. Not listening to them doesn’t make their viewpoints or opinions disappear,” wrote Vacharaesorn, who works at a law firm in New York. “It’s another story whether you agree or disagree with them. Talk to each other with reason.”

Thailand has one of the harshest lese majeste laws in the world, under which people, including children, can be charged for posting, sharing, or liking social media posts that are deemed offensive to the monarchy. In 2015, a man was arrested under the law for posting a satirical online remark about Tongdaeng, a street dog rescued by the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

The law is highly controversial, not only because of its tough penalties but also because anyone, not just the royal family, can file complaints about alleged violations with police. Critics say it is often used to quash political dissent and point to many arrests of pro-democracy protesters by the government of former prime minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who led a military coup in 2014 and remained the country’s leader until last month.

Supporters of the law say the monarchy is the bedrock of Thai identity and should be untouchable.

Vacharaesorn is one of four sons that King Maha Vajiralongkorn had with his second wife, Sujarinee Vivacharawongse, a former actor. In 1996 the then-crown prince divorced Sujarinee, who moved abroad with her children. Their youngest daughter was taken back by the royal family and given the title Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana, but the four sons remain estranged and do not have any formal royal titles.

King Vajiralongkorn has married four times and has seven children, but has not named an official heir.


Woman jailed for record 43 years for insulting Thai monarchy

Vacharaesorn, 42, who had long been out of the public eye, drew major attention in August when he made a brief surprise return to Thailand, where he visited a charity organisation and several Buddhist temples to participate in prayers and offerings. Before departing, he told reporters that he wished Thailand would be “a country full of hope” and that Thai people would “respect one another, listen to one another, no matter who we are.”

His statement about the anti-defamation law was posted after photos circulated online of him attending the exhibition, named Faces Of Victims Of 112, at Columbia University on Monday.

At least 257 people have been charged with lese majeste in 278 cases since November 2020, including at least 20 minors, according to the group Thai Lawyers for Human Rights. Prayuth’s government launched the crackdown as it faced street protests by student-led groups seeking greater democracy, including reforms of the monarchy.

International human rights organizations and UN experts have called on Thailand to repeal the law, which they say is being used to stifle free speech.

Thousands of pro-democracy activists have staged protests against the law in recent years, with 253 protesters charged under the law, including 20 children under 18, according to the Thai Lawyers for Human Rights.

Associated Press contributed to this report

Deadly tornado kills 10 in eastern China

 

'Sick or injured': What's causing the beached sharks on Pensacola Beach?


by Sha'de RayMon, September 18th 2023, 

PENSACOLA BEACH, Fla. -- Two sharks that washed up on Pensacola Beach in the recent days have gained plenty of attention.

First, a longfin mako shark beached itself Thursday afternoon before a group of men helped it back into the Gulf. A mako shark was spotted dead a day later in the Gulf near the shore of Pensacola Beach, although officials can't confirm or deny that it was the same one.

Then, a hammerhead shark also washed up on Pensacola Beach on Saturday.

A marine biologist tells WEAR News on Monday that sharks washing up on shore can be a rare occurrence. She says there can be many factors to cause this -- from an injury to stress.

Kennady Brinley, stranding coordinator with Emerald Coast Wildlife, says animals can beach themselves for a number of other reasons -- forced ashore by abnormal rip currents, getting lost or hunting for food.

"You have to think maybe that animal was sick or injured," Brinley said about the mako shark. "It could have died due to stress. Maybe somebody caught it offshore and then due to being stressed out, it could have stranded that way."

Brinley says if people find a beached shark, don't pull it backwards by its fins.

"Sharks always have to be moving forward," she said. "That's why when you see them swimming, they're always moving forward. So whenever they're pulled backwards, that is allowing for an opportunity for drowning to occur."

Brinley says there is a need for specific marine life rescue crews that can be equipped to save sharks that are in distress.

She says the beachgoers gave the mako a chance at survival.

Still, Brinley urges people who see any stranded mammal to call organizations like Emerald Coast Wildlife or Florida Fish and Wildlife for help.



Republicans want it both ways: less gun control and Hunter Biden gun charges

Conservative efforts to expand the second amendment are exactly what may help Hunter Biden in court

THE GUARDIAN
Wed 20 Sep 2023 

After spending years attacking Hunter Biden over his allegedly illegal behavior, Republicans reacted to the news of his indictment last week with a measure of disappointment.

Congressman James Comer, the Republican chair of the House oversight committee who has focused his investigative work on the president’s son and his business dealings, described the three-felony gun charges filed against Hunter Biden as “a very small start”. In a post shared to his social media platform Truth Social, Donald Trump lamented that the gun charges were “the only crime that Hunter Biden committed that does not implicate Crooked Joe Biden”.

Despite Republicans’ gripes, a number of legal experts have framed Hunter Biden’s indictment as unusually harsh, given that prosecutors rarely bring such gun charges. The law underlying one of the three criminal counts is also now facing legal challenges after the supreme court’s recent expansion of second amendment rights.


Hunter Biden: the moments that pushed president’s son into spotlight

Meanwhile, the legal morass has put conservatives in an awkward position, as they simultaneously pillory Hunter Biden and champion the loosening of firearm regulations that could get his charges thrown out.

News broke on Thursday that Hunter Biden had been indicted on three charges brought by David Weiss, the special counsel who has been investigating the president’s son for about five years. The first two charges accuse Hunter Biden of lying on an official form to obtain a gun in 2018, when he was struggling with an addiction to crack cocaine. The third count alleges that the president’s son illegally possessed the firearm while addicted to a controlled substance. If convicted, Hunter Biden could face up to 25 years in prison. In a Tuesday court filing, his attorney said he would plead not guilty to federal gun charges.

The indictment, which marked the first time in US history that federal criminal charges were brought against the child of a sitting president, came months after prosecutors’ plea deal with Hunter Biden collapsed amid scrutiny from the judge overseeing the case. That deal would have allowed Hunter Biden to plead guilty to two misdemeanor tax offenses while having the gun charge dismissed, assuming he met the conditions of a pre-trial diversion agreement.

Republicans had attacked the original plea agreement as a “sweetheart deal”, but legal experts described the terms as notably punitive given the crimes alleged. According to data compiled by the US sentencing commission, of the 6,549 people sentenced in the US in 2021 for illegal gun possession, only 5% (or roughly 350 people) were charged for their drug use.

“I have charged many defendants with gun offenses in my former career as a federal prosecutor,” Renato Mariotti, a legal affairs columnist for Politico Magazine, wrote in June. “But until this week I had never heard of a prosecution of anyone for possessing a firearm while addicted to a controlled substance before the Hunter Biden case.”

Charges over lying on forms necessary to purchase firearms are similarly rare, with fewer than 300 cases being brought in the year that Hunter Biden bought his gun, according to data compiled by the Washington Post.
Charges over lying on forms necessary to buy firearms are rare, with fewer than 300 cases brought in the year Hunter Biden bought his gun. 
Photograph: George Frey/AFP/Getty Images

Hunter Biden’s legal team has criticized the case against him as flimsy, accusing Weiss of bowing to political pressure from Republicans.

“As expected, prosecutors filed charges today that they deemed were not warranted just six weeks ago following a five-year investigation into this case,” Abbe Lowell, one of Hunter Biden’s attorneys, said on Thursday. “We believe these charges are barred by the agreement the prosecutors made with Mr Biden, the recent rulings by several federal courts that this statute is unconstitutional, and the facts that he did not violate that law, and we plan to demonstrate all of that in court.”

Those recent rulings include an August decision from the New Orleans-based US court of appeals for the fifth circuit that challenged the law barring users of illegal drugs from possessing firearms. The conservative-leaning court ruled that the supreme court’s decision last year in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association Inc v Bruen, which established a new standard for reviewing firearm regulations in a historical context, rendered the 1968 law unconstitutional.

“In short, our history and tradition may support some limits on an intoxicated person’s right to carry a weapon, but it does not justify disarming a sober citizen based exclusively on his past drug usage,” Judge Jerry Smith wrote in the ruling. “Nor do more generalized traditions of disarming dangerous persons support this restriction on nonviolent drug users.”

Because the fifth circuit oversees only Louisiana, Texas and Mississippi, the decision will not have a direct impact on Hunter Biden’s case in Delaware. But Hunter Biden’s legal team may cite the fifth circuit’s ruling to build a broader argument challenging the constitutionality of the charges against him.

“Other courts of appeals’ decisions are oftentimes persuasive to their sister circuits, especially on a case like this where there hasn’t been a lot of post-Bruen precedent,” said Jacob Charles, a professor at Pepperdine University’s Caruso School of Law and a constitutional law scholar focusing on the second amendment.

A separate case considered by the third circuit, which does cover Delaware, could also have some bearing on Hunter Biden’s case. In Range v Attorney General, the third circuit issued what the judges called a “narrow” decision indicating that the federal government cannot ban people convicted of non-violent crimes from possessing guns.

“There’s distinctions that a court might find relevant, but it’s certainly a case within the circuit that I think Hunter Biden’s attorneys would probably cite if they’re going to challenge this,” Charles said.

The stakes of Hunter Biden’s case have presented a challenge for gun rights groups. Although those groups oppose the gun laws now being used against Hunter Biden, they jumped at the opportunity to attack a president they view as hostile to their mission.

“Gun Owners of America opposes all gun control, but so long as this President continues to use every tool at his disposal to harass and criminalize guns, gun owners and gun dealers, his son should be receiving the same treatment and scrutiny as all of us,” Erich Pratt, senior vice-president of Gun Owners of America, said in a statement last week.

Other gun rights groups remained silent, indicating a reluctance to engage in a case that underscores the murky legal questions lingering in the wake of the supreme court’s decision in Bruen. Lower courts have struggled in their efforts to interpret and enforce the new Bruen standard, and the supreme court will probably have to weigh in soon with more guidance on evaluating gun regulations, including the law barring drug users from possessing firearms.

“It’s certainly possible that either the [supreme] court could decide a question that’s relevant to [Hunter Biden’s] case, and then it’s going to affect this case, or even decide a case that’s about this particular provision and then directly control this case,” Charles said.

So the president’s son may soon find himself smack dab in the middle of a much larger battle over the second amendment and gun rights in America.
Republicans Are Losing Their Mind Over the Senate’s New Dress Code

Republicans are so pissed that Senator John Fetterman can keep wearing his shorts and hoodies. Meanwhile, the government hurtles toward shutdown.


DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES
Senator John Fetterman (left) with an aide

THE NEW REPUBLIC

This weekend, Senator Chuck Schumer announced that the Senate will no longer enforce a formal dress code—and Republicans have been losing their mind ever since.

In particular, Republicans are mad that Senator John Fetterman’s casual fashion sense is officially acceptable. The Pennsylvania senator has become known for forgoing the suit and tie worn by his colleagues and wearing shorts and sweatshirts instead.

On Sunday, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene took to X, formerly known as Twitter, to lambaste the change in the Senate’s dress code as a “disgraceful” attempt to “appease Fetterman.”

“Dress code is one of society’s standards that set etiquette and respect for our institutions,” Greene wrote. “Stop lowering the bar!”

In response, Fetterman reminded everyone that it was actually Greene who’d lowered the bar.

“Thankfully, the nation’s lower chamber lives by a higher code of conduct: displaying ding-a-ling-pics in a public hearing,” he wrote in a post on X, referring to MTG’s decision to hold up poster-size prints of Hunter Biden’s nude photos during a House Oversight Committee hearing this summer.

But Greene isn’t the only Republican making a stink.

On Monday morning, former Trump political adviser Stephen Miller took a break from his new career of filing lawsuits against Pop-Tarts and M&Ms to also criticize the new dress code.

Fox News has similarly been quick to pick up the supposed controversy. In an interview on Fox Business on Sunday, Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin was asked about the change in Senate dress code and called Fetterman’s outfits “completely disrespectful.”

“There’s a side of me that’s super excited about it because I hate wearing a tie, and I’d rather be in blue jeans and a pair of boots and a white T-shirt,” Mullin admitted in surprising detail. “But the fact is, that you do dress for the job. And we need to be respectful of the position we hold,” he added.

When asked if the change in dress code was Schumer’s attempt to appease Fetterman, Mullin replied, “Of course it is. Hundred percent.”

Last week, Representative Matt Gaetz also freaked out about Fetterman’s clothes. In an interview with Steve Bannon, Gaetz remarked, “That is the best-dressed we have ever seen John Fetterman.”

“His shirt had both buttons, and the entire pant was not elastic. There were elastic features, but it was not exclusively elastic,” Gaetz said.

Fetterman had this to say to Gaetz: “Instead of crying about how I dress, how about you get your shit together and do your job, bud?”

As the government hurtles toward another shutdown, it’s good to know that Republicans have more interest in fashion commentary than governing.

Menswear experts on Fetterman’s style: ‘More politicians should look like that’


Rightwingers are blaming the Pennsylvania Democrat for Senate’s dress code change


Alaina Demopoulos
Wed 20 Sep 2023 
Are sweatsuits in Congress a sign of the country’s eroding morals? 
Photograph: Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Does it matter what politicians wear? It’s an issue pundits have long debated – especially when the subjects are women. This time, though, the target is John Fetterman, a Pennsylvania Democrat, whose wardrobe is drawing ire, as rightwingers seek to blame him for recent relaxation of the Senate dress code policy.

Fetterman is known for dressing in oversized hoodies, sweatsuits, and shorts. Rightwingers have been blaming him for Senator Chuck Schumer’s introduction of a new dress code last week: lawmakers no longer have to don formalwear before entering the chamber.


“The Senate no longer enforcing a dress code for Senators to appease Fetterman is disgraceful,” wrote Marjorie Taylor Greene on X, formerly known as Twitter. “Dress code is one of society’s standards that set etiquette and respect for our institutions. Stop lowering the bar!”


Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida used the news as a talking point on the campaign trail. “We need to be lifting our standards up in this country, not dumbing down,” he said. Senator Susan Collins of Maine joked that she would wear a bikini to the floor.


Fetterman dresses down critics of US Senate dress code reform


Political fashion has long followed a familiar formula – at least when it comes to men. It’s the bipartisan uniform: black suit, blue or red tie, American flag pin. Since he won his seat last year, Fetterman’s wardrobe has been the subject of praise from constituents who find it relatable, and scorn from those who wish he would try harder.

“I say this with tremendous respect: he looks like he might be an electrician,” says Tres Dean, a menswear editor whose work has appeared in GQ and New York magazine. “More politicians should look like that. It’s more accurate when you think about who he represents.”

The Senate’s new protocol comes at a time when workers in various sectors are rewriting the rules on what’s appropriate for the office. Since the height of the pandemic, many workers have continued to prioritize comfort over formality.

“Dress codes everywhere are relaxing,” Dean says. “It’s cool that if the people who represent us choose to take advantage of these new rules, it will potentially better reflect the people they represent.”
The Senate’s new protocol comes as workers in various sectors rewrite the rules on what’s office-appropriate. Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA

The discourse over suits squarely fits in with culture war narratives in the US that pit tradition-loving conservatives against progress-minded liberals. Are sweatsuits in Congress a sign of the country’s eroding morals?

“Forcing people into a very specific type of suit ties back into a greater story of privilege and classism,” says Noah Zagor, a fashion and culture consultant based in Chicago. “I think it’s important to dress for the environment you’re in, and that these boundaries help us function. But those boundaries are being debated right now, and we agree on so little as a country.”

Fetterman has been open about his battle with depression, receiving in-patient care at a hospital this spring. There is a sense of shelter in baggy, comfortable clothing, and voters may associate those visuals with Fetterman’s past struggles.

Fetterman understands the value of sartorial messaging. This is the same man who appeared in a Levi’s ad while serving as the mayor of Braddock, Pennsylvania, in 2010. The town was attempting to revitalize after years of economic decline, partnering with the denim company for a campaign that used residents instead of models. Billboards with taglines such as “ready to work” underscored the point.

For Erik Maza, executive style director of Town & Country, conservative outrage about Fetterman’s sweats feels performative and is reminiscent of the controversy that came with Obama wearing a tan suit at a White House press briefing. The former congressman Peter King, a New York Republican, said Obama’s outfit pointed to a “lack of seriousness”.

Almost 10 years later, the so-called scandal has become a punchline, a symbol of out-of-touch politicians clutching their pearls to distract from real problems.

It is in this spirit that Fetterman has fielded the recent accusations that his proclivity for hoodies has precipitated the downfall of American political fashion. He responded to Greene with a tweet about conservative hypocrisy, after the Republican displayed nude photos of Hunter Biden at a hearing this summer. “Thankfully, the nation’s lower chamber lives by a higher code of conduct: displaying ding-a-ling pics in public hearings,” he wrote. He issued a similar riposte to a Fox news story blaming him for dress code “fury”, tweeting: “I figure if I take up vaping and grabbing the hog during a live musical, they’ll make me a folk hero.”

“Washington DC is not exactly a sartorial mecca,” Maza says. “Voters care much more about the legislation lawmakers pass than if they wear shorts or sweats.”