New Year’s nightmare / So much courage / R.I.P., CBS News Radio / Quiz perfection

New Year’s nightmare. In a move that The Associated Press says risks drawing Iran’s Arab neighbors into the war directly, Israel pounded Tehran with airstrikes today, the Persian New Year.
 More from the AP: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s Christian rhetoric is drawing fresh scrutiny as the war winds on.
 Evan Hurst at Wonkette: “The world is far more dangerous because of what Trump and Hegseth have done.”
 The American Prospect’s Ryan Cooper: “Trump has really stepped in it this time.”

Trump’s Pearl Harbor punchline. The president stunned a White House audience into silence yesterday during a meeting with Japan’s prime minister.
 Columnist Jeff Tiedrich: “Why didn’t Japan tell him about Pearl Harbor? How about because it happened five years before he was born?
 Jimmy Kimmel: “I guess we should be grateful he didn’t do an accent?
 John Gruber at Daring Fireball: “As Trump sinks further into dementia … his administration, in a sick way, gets funnier and funnier.”

So much courage. The John F. Kennedy Library Foundation is awarding a 2026 Profile in Courage Award to “The People of the Twin Cities, Minnesota” …
 …“for risking their lives to protect their neighbors and immigrant community members from an unprecedented federal law enforcement operation, peacefully defending … values that serve as the foundation of our Constitutional democracy.”

Croke squeaks in. Gov. Pritzker’s choice for Illinois comptroller, State Rep. Margaret Croke, has narrowly landed the Democratic nomination.
 Contrarian editor-in-chief Jen Rubin: “In winning the Democratic nomination in the IL-9 House race, Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss showed us how to … beat back dark money.”
 Injustice Watch: Judicial primary voters rejected three appointed judges …
 … as a couple of judicial cliffhangers linger on.

‘Charter operators cannot play fast and loose with their money or with students’ lives.’ Chicago Teachers Union leadership supports a school board decision to cut ties and support for the financially troubled Aspira charter network.
 Planned Parenthood of Illinois has agreed to pay half a million dollars to settle a government investigation into charges of discrimination tied to the organization’s diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.
 A federal judge in Oregon says the Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. overreached when he declared puberty blockers and other transgender health care treatments unsafe and ineffective.

R.I.P., CBS News Radio. The latest round of cuts at CBS include the shuttering of the network’s nearly 100-year-old radio news network, serving 700 stations across the country—including Chicago’s all-news WBBM.
 The Trump-controlled Federal Communications Commission has OK’d creation of the nation’s largest local TV operator—through the merger of the Trump-friendly Nexstar Media Group, owner of Chicago’s WGN Radio and TV, with the Tegna chain …
 … even as Democratic-led states, including Illinois, seek to block the deal.
 Jorie Lueloff, Chicago TV’s first female news anchor, is dead at 85.

Quiz perfection. Your Chicago Public Square proprietor rarely gets all the right answers on The Conversation’s weekly news quiz …
 … but this week is, um, a little special.
 With no such advantage on City Cast’s primary election quiz, your columnist nevertheless nailed all five of five questions there.


Heads, he wins; tails, he wins.
A federal arts commission appointed by Donald Trump has approved the final design of a 24-karat gold commemorative coin bearing the image of Donald Trump to mark Donald Trump’s celebration of the 250th birthday of the United States.

‘Freedom of speech! Right on!’ Grammy-nominated rapper Afroman (“Because I Got High”) is celebrating his acquittal in a defamation lawsuit filed by sheriff’s deputies whose raid of his home he mocked in music videos …
 … earning those deputies Lyz Lenz’s Dingus of the Week honors.
 Watch The Daily Show’s laugh-out-loud, feel-good breakdown of the case here.
 Stephen Colbert’s selling “Last Show” T-shirts for charity.

Tarnished Reputations Dept.
 New charges of sexual abuse by the late, iconic United Farm Workers co-founder Cesar Chavez have Chicagoans reconsidering all the ways his name and face have been honored around town.
 ABC’s canceled The Bachelorette’s season after release of video in which she can be seen punching, kicking and throwing chairs at her former partner as her young daughter cries.
 Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s $70 billion “Horizon Worlds” virtual social and gaming network? It’s outta here.

‘When should I use a semicolon?’ Donning his “Ask Mister Language Person” hat, Pulitzer winner Dave Barry tackles that question and others …

Chicago Public Square is free for all … thanks to support from people like—and maybe already including—you.
 Welcome, a bunch of new readers joining Square today from The Conversation’s quiz!
 Mike Braden made this edition better.

Super PAC scorecard / Stopped making sense / ‘Deadly childhood plagues’

Super PAC scorecard. The Sun-Times says it wasn’t all bad news for big money in this week’s Illinois primary.
Pod Save America cohost Dan Pfeiffer: “This was a devastating loss for AIPAC.”
Columnist Eric Zorn: “We haven’t seen the last of Kat Abughazaleh.”
At Chicago Public Square’s email deadline today, the Democratic race for state comptroller was unresolved.
A Tribune editorial on Tuesday’s turnout: “Illinois Republicans aren’t just losing. They’re disappearing.”
The New York Times (gift link): “Republicans in Congress propose to ban most voting by mail.”

Welcome, tourists! Pay up. The Chicago City Council’s voted to increase the hotel tax—making it the nation’s most onerous.
The council’s voted to freeze the city’s “subminimum wage” for tipped workers, but the mayor says he’ll veto.
Approved unanimously: An ordinance giving the police oversight agency power to investigate charges cops helped immigration thugs—in violation of city law.
Ex-Mayor Emanuel—now a potential presidential candidate—is calling for a reset on immigration policy.

‘Off the rails.’ That’s how The Associated Press describes yesterday’s Senate confirmation hearings for President Trump’s choice to head Homeland Security, Markwayne Mullin …
 … who got into it with the Homeland Security committee’s chairman, Rand Paul—prompting The Daily Show’s Jordan Klepper to applaud sarcastically: “Low blow, Markwayne, picking on someone with half of your names.”
Columnist Jeff Tiedrich: “Sit back and enjoy Rand Paul ripping Markwayne Mullin several new ones.”
Mullin’s testimony kept PolitiFact busy.
Wonkette: “Mullin has never served in the military. He’s never managed anything bigger than his family’s plumbing company. He has an associate’s degree in construction, and made his name with a radio show … called House Talk.
Regardless, the committee’s sending the nomination to the full Senate—with the support of one Democrat.
The American Prospect reminds us that Homeland Security funding is frozen, leaving us “in the midst of the quietest government shutdown in American history.”
Elsewhere on Capitol Hill, Democrats walked out of a House briefing on the Epstein files by Attorney General Pam Bondi.

Stopped making sense. USA Today’s Chicago-based columnist Rex Huppke: “Trump, the guy who catapulted America into a war of choice with Iran, doesn’t seem like he’s doing well in the think-y/speak-y cognitive department.” (Cartoon: Jack Ohman.)
And yet, the AP reports, the Pentagon’s asking this impaired executive to approve another $200 billion for the Iran war …
 … a conflict that Popular Information says is based on a lie from National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard …
 … who Wonkette’s Evan Hurst says “just blib-blabbed whatever contradictory words fell out of her mouth” yesterday before the Senate Intelligence Committee.
Semafor: The FBI’s opened a leak investigation into the top Trump intelligence official who quit Tuesday in protest over the war.

‘Resurgence of deadly childhood plagues.’ That’s the threat ProPublica sees in Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s vaccine agenda.
Inside Medicine columnist and doctor Jeremy Faust celebrates “a legal win for vaccines. But chaos is the point.”
Your Local Epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina looks back six years to the rise of COVID-19: “It’s striking how much remains unknown.”
Justin Kaufmann and your Square proprietor were trying to figure it out on WGN Radio six years ago this week.

‘The universe is righting itself.’ That’s Car Con Carne podcast host James VanOsdol, celebrating the Smashing Pumpkins’ scheduled first appearance ever at Lollapalooza in Chicago …
 … tickets for which went on sale today.
Y’know what was fun? Working with James at Rivet News Radio (2015 audio).

Thanks. A lovely note from a reader got the day off to a nice start: “You have no idea how much I appreciate how you research and provide these sources of news and commentary for your readers.”
It wouldn’t happen if people such as these weren’t helping keep this service coming.
And a happy 40th anniversary to Newcity, which has been kind to your columnist over the years.

Square up.

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