R.I.P., junk fees / Apple’s big bite / Quiz / ‘Radio’s biggest lie’

R.I.P., junk fees. Gov. Pritzker’s signed a package of laws aimed at eliminating sticker shock when people buy Illinois concert, sporting event or other tickets, or order food or hotel rooms …
 … so the price you first see when shopping online is the price you pay.
 Other new laws on the way next week include expansion of the state’s “cyberbullying” rules to include the posting of unauthorized AI images of children, and the permanent extension of a pandemic-era law allowing the delivery of cocktails.
 Illinois Policy bitterly reminds you that Illinois is one of just three states that ban the use and sale of consumer fireworks.

‘Were you apoplectic when you guys bought it?’ City Council members were not encouraging yesterday as they questioned the managing director of a New York investment firm trying to acquire Chicago’s parking meters …
 … a firm that also owns an airline that Mother Jones reports “shackled passengers on long-haul ICE flights to Africa and Asia.”
 Florida’s governor says the widely denounced “Alligator Alcatraz” immigrant concentration camp is closed.
 The feds’ first felony conviction in the “Operation Midway Blitz” immigration crackdown here is falling apart …
 … coincidentally—or not—because the indictment in that case came from the same grand jury that on the same day indicted the “Broadview Six” in a case that also collapsed.

Trump’s literal ‘water-gate.’ Former Politico editor Garrett Graff says this is a funny time for Vice President Vance to be defending Richard Nixon …
 … as President Trump’s being driven mad by that Reflecting Pool algal bloom …
 … which CNN’s Brian Stelter suggests constitutes the summer’s best TV drama …
 … and which some have cleverly dubbed “The Strait of Warm Ooze.”
 Columnist Jeff Tiedrich: “Nixon’s mistake was presidenting during an era when there was no corrupt and compliant Supreme Court willing to declare him a Very Special Boy Who Gets To Crime All He Wants.”
 A Tribune editorial: “Trump is a troll. But he’s correct that lots of killing is going on in Chicago.”

‘The Cold War called. It wants its anxiety back.’ Columnist and former U.S. Rep. Marie Newman says Democrats need to get over their aversion to the concept of “democratic socialism.”
 Politico: “Illinois Democrats are … helping fellow Democrats around the country navigate the party’s increasingly fraught politics around Israel.”

Apple’s big bite. Blaming a memory chip shortage fueled by the AI boom, the company’s raising prices on the order of 20% for Macintosh computers and iPads—but not iPhones … yet.
 On the environmental upside, a Trib editorial (gift link) suggests, “folks are much more likely now … to repair them rather than trade them in for something new.”

‘Meta culpa.’ Business Insider: After years of mass layoffs, restructuring and overbearing management, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg acknowledges a collapse in employee trust and morale.
 Oligarch Watch:Why Zuck sucked up to Trump.”

Practically perfect in every ___. For a refreshing change of pace, your Chicago Public Square columnist nailed all eight answers to this week’s fill-in-the-blank news quiz from past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel.

‘Radio’s biggest lie.’ Barrett Media news editor Garrett Searight says the massive layoffs at iHeartMedia stations across the country expose the hypocrisy of the industry’s mantra that “content is king.”
 Radio Ink columnist Erik Cudd sees an opportunity for locally owned radio stations to step up their game …
 … which brings to mind a memo from your Square columnist back in 1998.
 Journalism professor Jeff Jarvis: “California is about to hand out $20 million … to news organizations, and it is … sending too many checks to the hedge funds that have ruined news.”

‘A man who co-opted Black culture and who stole an iconic bass line from Queen and David Bowie.’ Lyz Lenz’s Dingus of the Week is Vanilla Ice …
 … the subject of what she calls “a really stupid” profile in The Atlantic (gift link).

‘Babies are an important source of adults, without whom the economy cannot function.’ Pulitzer winner Dave Barry sounds an alarm about the “baby drought.”
 According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Illinois’ fertility rate dropped from 68% to 54% between 2007 and 2020.
 Columnist Elizabeth Austin declares: “I am sick to death of people poking fun at Trump’s allegedly small, mushroom-shaped penis as a symbol of his unfitness for office.”

‘Dislike the AI cartoon!’ Jessica Knobbe was among a handful of readers turning thumbs down on an artificial-intelligence-generated illustration in yesterday’s Square: “It just seems to be a medium that steals from actual illustrators.”
 ChatGPT’s “art director” for that picture, Jan Kodner, responds: “I understand that AI is a hot button for some. … I can’t draw at all. … Without AI imaging (under my supervision and direction), I wouldn’t have been able to help create … effective messaging in these dark times.”
 So Jan’s back with a different approach—his ChatGPT-assisted perspective on this story:
 What do you think? Email AI@ChicagoPublicSquare.com.

‘Likely tornado’ / SCOTUSpalooza / Broadcast bloodbath / ‘Make AIs fight’

‘Likely tornado.’ Another round of heavy rain and strong winds hit the Chicago area yesterday.
Camp Mystic, where 25 kids and two counselors were killed in last year’s catastrophic floods along the Guadalupe River in Texas, has filed for bankruptcy.
Reflecting on those floods, a meteorologist tells The Atlantic that, in an age of climate change, nowhere’s immune to flash floods: “All you need is rain. And that can happen almost anywhere” (gift link).
Chicago’s now set up to monitor air pollution neighborhood by neighborhood.

‘He’s having a fucking tantrum.’ That’s a senior Republican to NOTUS on Trump’s refusal to sign a housing reform law unless Congress OKs his clampdown on voting rights.
Columnist Jeff Tiedrich is typically blunt: “Colicky piss-baby melts down at Senate Republicans.”
The AP: What Trump’s refusal to sign the housing bill means for homebuyers and renters. (ChatGPT illustration—based on prompts and bickering from retired lawyer Jan Kodner, who’s embracing AI “for spoofing whatever fresh hell awaits in my inbox.”)
The American Prospect: “Trump has found a way to soothe Democratic fears that Republicans in Congress will continue to savage the poor, funnel money to the rich, and make the nation safe for corporate dominion. He’s effectively shut down Congress.”

SCOTUSpalooza. In a raft of rulings handed down this morning, the U.S. Supreme Court …
 … cleared immigration officials to turn away asylum seekers at the border …
 … approved the administration’s plan to end temporary immigration protection—and commence deportation—for more than a million people allowed to live and work in the U.S. because of crises in their home countries, such as Syria and Haiti …
 … and blocked thousands of lawsuits claiming the weed-killer Roundup causes cancer—clamping down on one of the biggest cohorts of product liability lawsuits in U.S. history.

War some more. Berated by Trump over a narrow vote to tamp down on his assault against Iran, Senate Republicans caved.
Wonkette’s Evan Hurst: “Now Trump feels much more free to continue losing the war he started for the sole purpose of breaking things so that he could say he fixed it better than Barack Obama did.”
The Daily Show’s Josh Johnson: “Our status in the world went from ‘global superpower’ to ‘monkey who got loose at the zoo and has a knife.’”

‘Trump changed the rules for Park Police. Now an innocent man is dead.’ Popular Information: The Republican administration’s embrace of vehicle pursuits by U.S. Park Police was “played for laughs” last year.
Got questions you’d like asked? Email Qs@ChicagoPublicSquare.com.

CTA security boost. Cook County sheriff’s deputies are now patrolling Chicago Transit Authority trains, as Sheriff Tom Dart considers creation of a united police force to keep the peace on all Chicago-area mass transit.
A Tribune editorial pooh-poohs the notion of a Gun Violence Reduction Department: “More bureaucracy is no answer. … Mayors must be responsible for keeping the streets of Chicago safe. Period.”

Broadcast bloodbath. Radio giant iHeartMedia—you may remember it as Clear Channel Communications, now overseeing eight Chicago-area stations—has been laying off hundreds of workers across the country …
 … including Chicago and the Quad Cities.

‘My mind went straight to the Monty Python song Every Sperm is Sacred—but satire has apparently become reality.’ That’s journalist Stephanie Zimmermann’s reaction to The New York Times’ report “Support Builds on the Right for Prosecuting Women Who Get Abortions.”
Gov. Pritzker’s signed a law shielding out-of-staters seeking abortions in Illinois from retaliation in their home states.
Here’s the Python song.

‘Make AIs fight.’ Tech guru Kim Komando spells out how she pits ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude against one another: “One AI, left alone, can turn into a yes-man with a keyboard.”
Nobel-winning economist Paul Krugman ponders the question “Why does everyone hate AI?
Columnist Neil Steinberg: “I will probably still be savoring examples of AI incompetence up to the moment the robot guards herd me into the camp.”

Want Obama Center tickets? More will open to the public July 8 …
 … or July 1 for Obama Foundation founding members—one of which you can become here.

Correction. Yesterday’s Chicago Public Square—sadly, not for the first time—said “Iraq” when it should have said “Iran.”
Mike Braden made this edition better.

Square up.

🟥 Square on Bluesky: