Meet the new boss / ‘It’s disgusting’ / Daylight saved? / New colors!

Meet the new boss, son of the old boss. Iran’s named Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s replacement: His hard-line offspring, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei.

‘Why did the war begin?’ Nine days in, Popular Information says, Trump and his administration have failed to answer that most fundamental question about their actions in Iran.
Law and Chaos columnist Liz Dye: “Right now would be a really good time for the U.S. to have a direct line to speak to the Iranian people. A radio station, broadcasting directly into Iran from a friendly Gulf state like, say … Kuwait. But we don’t because Arizona’s perennial loser Kari Lake pulled the plug” …
 … although a federal judge has now ruled that Lake’s actions to dismantle Voice of America were illegal.
Chicago-born journalist Terry Moran—fired from ABC after a tweet critical of Trump (June link)—on gas prices climbing as the Iran war unfolds: “The earth is beginning to shake. The man in the White House is yelling at it to stop.”
The Wall Street Journal: “The long-feared Persian Gulf oil squeeze is upon us … acting as a tax on consumers.”
The AP: “New footage raises likelihood the U.S. struck an Iranian school where a blast killed at least 165.”
Author and Emmy-winning veteran NBC and NPR broadcast journalist Jeff Kamen: Because Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is a “cartoon character of mindless machismo, it is unlikely that there were psychologists on the scene to help the missile crew sort out the shock to their system.”

‘Now is the time to be loudly anti-war.’ Handbasket columnist Marisa Kabas: “We can distance ourselves by calling it ‘Trump’s War,’ but the fact remains that, as the president of this country, his actions cast a filthy pall on all of us.”
As Hegseth revels in the carnage, military experts are sounding the alarm: “I can’t even muster the words to describe his self-adulation, matched only in scope by his apparent moral depravity.”
Colin Jost, playing Hegseth on Saturday Night Live’s opener: “Whoever called this a war, except maybe the president a couple of times accidentally?”
LateNighter: The corporate escape routes are narrowing for late night’s comic Trump critics.

Ya think? Virginia Democratic Sen.—and 2016 vice presidential candidate—Tim Kaine says his vote to confirm Kristi Noem as Homeland Security secretary was a “big mistake.”
Columnist Jeff Tiedrich has questions about Noem’s new portfolio: “What the fuck is a Shield of the Americas?

‘We were being lied to our faces.’ Friends and supporters say Customs and Border Protection agents detained six legal U.S. residents—returning to O’Hare Thursday from a work trip to Turkey—for more than 30 hours without explanation.
The Trump administration faces a court filing accusing it of wrongly deporting hundreds of people.

‘It’s disgusting.’ Civil Discourse columnist Joyce Vance: “If you’re Donald Trump, nothing says great opportunity for pushing your merchandise like bringing home fallen soldiers.”

Racism rising. That was Gov. Pritzker’s warning yesterday in Alabama, joining thousands marking the 61st anniversary of Selma’s “Bloody Sunday,” a protest that sparked passage of the Voting Rights Act—which the governor says faces a gutting by the Supreme Court.
Republicans vying for the chance to challenge Pritzker are running this time without cash from big-bucks regressives.
When you hear U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush in a campaign commercial for Jesse Jackson Jr., you’re hearing an AI-restored version of his voice, weakened by throat cancer.
If you’re ready to dig into your ballot for the March 17 primary, the Chicago Public Square Voter Guide Guide awaits.

Ticketmaster punched. The company’s parent, Live Nation, reportedly has cut a deal with the Justice Department to settle an antitrust case launched under President Biden.
Early reports indicated the company would have to open parts of its platform to rivals and would agree to limits on its longtime exclusivity deals with venues.

Daylight saved? At least five bills in Congress would make daylight saving time—on which we now are, at the earliest date possible under present law—permanent.
Honk if these seasonal disjunctions add credence to this 2012 call to shift the whole world to Universal Time.

New colors! We’ve doubled the number of shades in which Square T-shirts and hoodies are available.
You get $5 off by pitching in any amount—even just $1, once—to underwrite the cost of producing and distributing this publication.
Make it a recurring payment—which you can cancel anytime, but we hope you won’t—and get one free.

You did it / ‘A candidate frenzy’ / Quiz / ‘Your printer is snitching’

You did it. National security journalist Ken Klippenstein says mainstream media are missing the story behind President Trump’s decision to fire Kristi Noem as Homeland Security secretary: “The people of Minneapolis, Chicago and Los Angeles deserve credit.”
 Gov. Pritzker to Noem on Twitter X: “Don’t let the door hit you on the way out.”
 A Tribune editorial: “It is a shame that Noem’s pitiful performance as homeland security secretary reportedly wasn’t the primary reason for her dismissal.”
 Trump calls her “a fine person,” but says replacing her “wasn’t a hard choice.”
 Columnist Brian Tyler Cohen suggests this moment sealed her fate.
 Late night had fun with Noem’s next job: “Same joke, four ways.”

Next. Trump’s selection of Sen. Markwayne Mullin to replace Noem, in the words of the What Did Trump Do Today? blog, “underscores the administration’s fixation on loyalty over competence.”
 His pick would leave an Oklahoma Senate seat vacant—but Oklahoma’s Republican governor gets to pick the replacement.
 Satirist Andy Borowitz: “Mullin Now Romantically Linked to Corey Lewandowski.”

Moms at large. Cook County prosecutors have suspended 21 cases filed against Immigration and Customs Enforcement protesters—including 15 mothers who hopped concrete barricades.
 One of those women says she hopes their experience will inspire others: “There are so many small things that people can do … for our democracy and the country that we want to see.”

‘A sadist’s poetry of love.’ Author and filmmaker Steven Beschloss calls out Defense Secretary Hegseth’s celebration of “death and destruction from the sky all day long” in the war on Iran.
 The House has followed the Senate’s lead in rejecting a resolution to curb the president’s ability to wage that war.
 Updating coverage: With U.S. support, Israeli warplanes have been bombarding Iran and Lebanon.
 The death toll in Lebanon has passed 200.

Fresh meat. The Justice Department has released more files related to Trump’s convicted and dead sex-offender pal, Jeffrey Epstein—this time, involving charges from a woman who said she was around 13 when Epstein flew her to a location where she bit Trump after he tried to assault her sexually.
 A Jan. 6, 2021, rioter pardoned by Trump has been sentenced to life in prison for molesting two kids.

‘A candidate frenzy.’ With Congress on track for record turnover, the AP says “Illinois is having one of its most frenzied primary elections in years.”
 Need a scorecard? The newly updated Chicago Public Square Voter Guide Guide has a bunch.

Democracy’s ‘5-alarm fire.’ Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch (gift link): The Texas primary exposed Republicans’ plans to rig the midterms.
 On the other hand: Columnist S.E. Cupp says “Trump’s GOP, in its bloodlust for lefty scalps, still doesn’t realize it keeps handing the opposition giant gifts … thanks to Trump’s ham-fisted attempts at censoring them.”

Farewell, Rev. Thousands of people—including former presidents Obama, Clinton and Biden—were gathered in Chicago today at a “people’s celebration” for civil rights champion Jesse Jackson, who died Feb. 17.
 The service was to stream live here at 11 a.m. Chicago time.

‘Bombs, billions, zebrafish and Kansas IDs.’ You’ll find ’em all in the latest challenge from The Conversation’s quizmaster, past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel.
 Your Chicago Public Square columnist’s score: 7/8.
‘We may have underestimated the damage.’ A Trib editorial reminds readers of its prediction two years ago that the acquisition of Discover by Capital One would yield little good …
 … and, sure enough, Capital One has cut more than 1,100 workers at Discover’s old suburban HQ.
 In what The Wall Street Journal calls an “unexpected downturn,” the U.S. lost 92,000 jobs last month.

Dingus of the Week. Men Yell at Me columnist Lyz Lenz’s pick: McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski …
 … whose promotional video was the subject of a brutal deconstruction by Stephen Colbert.

At this stage of my life, my definition of aging well is still not dead.’
And yet, Pulitzer winner Dave Barry took a shot at what The New York Times billed as “simple tests” to find out if you’re aging well.
 Capitol News Illinois: Illinois and Cook County have helped out more than a million residents by wiping out $2 billion in medical debt for pennies on the dollar.

‘Your printer is snitching.’ Tech watchdog Kim Komando: Every color laser printer since the 1980s has been putting teensy yellow dots on your printouts, capable of linking those pages back to you …

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