Awash in business / ‘1 thing you can do’ / CBS in ‘distress’ / Whoops

Awash in business. Friday’s dust storm has brought Chicago-area car washes a boom in customers.
What caused it? Illinois’ state climatologist is looking at climate change and land management—especially uncovered, open farmland.

Wallet shock. The average Chicago-area electric bill is set to rise almost $11 a month beginning next month …
 … providing fresh incentive for homeowners considering going solar—a process columnist Mike Fourcher has been going through himself and breaks down for beginners here.
Know someone struggling with energy bills? The state offers help here.

Skeleton in the pope’s closet. A priest accused of child molestation tells the Sun-Times that, in 2000, the man who would become Leo XIV approved his move to a South Side monastery near a school.
Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich says he expects the new pope to stress matters of the environment and immigration.
The Financial Times: Trump’s dumped Ukraine peace talks on the pope.
The White Sox have unveiled a shrine to Leo at Section 140, Row 19, Seat 2.

‘One thing you can do … that will matter and show your support for federal employees.’
Chicago’s former regional Environmental Protection Agency administrator, Debra Shore, is encouraging people to go online by Friday to oppose the Trump administration’s plan to “abolish the professional civil service and essentially convert it to a patronage system.”
University of Michigan public policy professor Don Moynihan (April link) calls the proposal “the tip of a spear in a broader movement to remove protections against politicization for all federal employees.”
Here’s the comment form—which Moynihan explains you can fill out quickly and anonymously, with something as simple as “Schedule F (politicization) is bad and the rule protecting nonpartisan civil servants is good.”

Meanwhile … Trump’s Justice Department has opened a civil rights investigation into whether Chicago City Hall’s hiring practices are based solely on race.
The justification? Mayor Johnson’s remarks at a South Side church, where he highlighted the number of Black officials in his administration.
Here’s the letter (which misuses the phrase begs the question): “If these kind of hiring decisions are being made for top-level positions in your administration, then it begs the question whether such decisions are also being made for lower-level positions.”
Will Oremus at The Washington Post: Media companies looking to close deals under the Trump administration are ditching diversity policies.

‘We were doing everything right as dictated by the law and we are still getting kicked out.’ Chicago’s Venezuelan migrants face an uncertain future …
 … after the Supreme Court cleared Trump to strip legal protections from more than 350,000 such refugees …
 … policy that Law Dork Chris Geidner characterizes as “a lawless, heartless, process-free anti-immigration system with racist underpinnings.”

Been to Mardi Gras? Big Brother was watching. In what the Post calls “the first known, widespread live facial recognition program used by police in the United States … a surveillance method without a known precedent,” New Orleans cops secretly scanned city streets over two years in search of suspects.
The American Civil Liberties Union’s demanding the program end.
The Tribune reports that the Trump administration may end federal scrutiny of an Illinois school where special education students often got arrested.

‘Joe Biden is out of politics, while Donald Trump—the guy babbling incoherently about Bruce Springsteen, Oprah and Bono—has the nuclear codes.’ USA Today’s Chicago-based Rex Huppke acknowledges legitimate concerns about Biden’s cognitive decline in the White House, “but any concern is tempered by the fact that the country was in far better shape under Biden than it is now.”
Columnist Eric Zorn: “Trump is a gibbering fool.”
The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart ripped into CNN last night for relentlessly plugging Jake Tapper’s book about Biden’s decline: “The news is selling you a book about news they should’ve told you … a year ago for free.”
Columnist Brian Tyler Cohen: “CNN’s breathless, intolerable coverage of its own anchor’s book exposes the fatal flaw of today’s corporate media.”
Dilbert creator Scott Adams—whose strip was 86’d by many newspapers a couple of years ago after he made racist comments—says he has the same aggressive prostate cancer Biden has.

‘I’ve done enough.’ Elon Musk says he plans to cut back on political spending.

CBS in ‘distress.’ CNN’s Brian Stelter goes behind the scenes for CBS News chief Wendy McMahon’s resignation yesterday: “Sometimes the arguments could be heard well down the hall.”
She’s out as CBS’ corporate parent considers settling a lawsuit filed by Trump …
 … a possibility HBO’s John Oliver ripped in this week’s show.
Scandal-scarred ex-Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune executive producer—and, briefly, Jeopardy! host—Mike Richards is taking over as president of the conservative Daily Wire news org.

Whoops. The Sun-Times says it’s investigating how it managed to publish a “Summer Reading List for 2025” that just happened to include books with real authors but fake titles.
Media critic Mark Jacob: “Looks like a new AI scandal. Either that or something even more stupid.”
Update, 1:22 p.m.: Axios reports: “Chicago-based freelance writer Marco Buscaglia, whose byline appears on most stories in the 64-page section but, oddly, not the book story, told 404 Media that he wrote the piece using AI but failed to fact-check it.”
Also: The whole section was created by King Features, which is owned by the magazine giant Hearst.

The deep-dish dish. Trib columnist Rick Kogan talks to Malnati’s pizza boss Marc Malnati about the ups and downs of building an empire on his father’s troubled legacy …
 … a tale told in Malnati’s new book, which Kogan calls “self-aware and, frankly, occasionally chilling.”

‘More essential than ever.’ That’s what one—believe it or not, more than one—Chicago Public Square reader has to say about this service.

30 miles of resistance / ‘Big, beautiful’ … and closer to law / ‘Sesame Street’ saved

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30 miles of resistance. Demonstrators lined Ogden Avenue yesterday from Chicago to Aurora in a “Hands Across Chicagoland” protest of Donald Trump’s administration.
 ABC 7 has video.
 WBEZ looks back to Chicago’s Democratic National Convention nine months ago: Although “the city has little to show for the effort in … securing meaningful punishments,” it keeps prosecuting protesters.

‘Every second the president spends inveighing against paper straws, or denouncing Bruce Springsteen, or messing with the Kennedy Center, is time not spent tearing down our government and freedoms.’ And yet, Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg observes: “Controlling every aspect of life is a hallmark of authoritarianism.”
 He also whined about Beyoncé, Oprah Winfrey and Bono.
 CBS News alumnus Dan Rather shares video of Springsteen’s Manchester, England, call to action that triggered Trump.

‘Fight back unhesitatingly.’ An open letter from seven major organizations committed to free speech calls on universities, media organizations, law firms and businesses to “stand more resolutely” in defense of First Amendment rights.
 Journalism watchdog Margaret Sullivan: “Universities … have cowered. Huge law firms have cut deals. … And some media companies have shown too much willingness to … change their editorial practices. … That has to stop.”
 The American Prospect points to Trump for Major League Baseball’s decision “to drop its ethical standards” and make Pete Rose (and eight members of the scandal-scarred 1919 White Sox) eligible for the Hall of Fame—confirming “the cowardice that so many iconic American institutions have displayed when confronted by this autocratic thug.”

‘Big, beautiful’ … and closer to law. In an unusual Sunday night session, the U.S. House advanced Trump’s plan to cut taxes and government spending.
 Historian Heather Cox Richardson: The legislation “blows the budget deficit wide open by extending the 2017 tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations.”
 Popular Information shares “the ugly truth” about the bill: Because those tax cuts are “offset by steep cuts to healthcare programs and the social safety net … people who make less than $51,000 will see their after-tax income decrease.”
 USA Today’s Chicago-based columnist Rex Huppke channels a Republican: “We guarantee this massive bill will not do a thing to hurt rich people.”
 Wired: Now controlled by “Project 2025” architect (and guy who shares a name with the evil corporation on the dystopian TV series The Boys) Russell Vought, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has 86’d rules designed to limit data brokers’ ability to sell sensitive information about you.

‘Weather forecast services … have had to stop staffing overnight shifts, including … in Kentucky, where those twisters landed.’ But Wonkette’s Marcie Jones paraphrases the reaction on Twitter X: “Natural disasters are … just a thing that happens and nobody can really prepare for them, so what good even is weather prediction?
 As the central U.S. grappled with the aftermath of those deadly storms, more were headed that way this week.
 A Tribune editorial ponders the causes of Chicago’s historic Friday dust storm …
 … which the National Weather Service calls the worst the city’s seen since the 1930s.

Renters, unite. With a tenants’ rights ordinance pending before the City Council, union organizers rallied Sunday to encourage Chicago renters to join forces.
 A nonprofit organization offering thousands of individuals and families subsidies to pay their rent is running $10 million short.
 Block Club: Critics are slamming as “impossible” the city’s regulation of e-scooters.

A gift for the pope. Vice President JD Vance today gave Chicago-born Pope Leo XIV an invitation to visit the U.S. and presented him with a Chicago Bears T-shirt bearing the pope’s name.
 Revisiting “the worst popes in history,” Pulitzer winner Gene Weingarten counsels: “Relax.”

Sesame Street saved. Netflix has stepped up to keep the show alive after HBO/Max/HBOMax cut its support.
 HBO’s John Oliver didn’t hold back as he assessed his employer’s return to the name “HBO Max” after two years of trying to make “Max” stick: “Sometimes, hypothetically, before we can even get used to one dumb name, some genius comes along and only makes it dumber. Then, somehow it gets dumber still, and then against all the odds somehow it becomes even worse, before inexplicably going back to the stupid thing it was before.”

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