‘Trump’s blood’ / Homeland insecurity / Thanks, readers

‘Trump’s blood.’ In what The Associated Press describes as “a rare call for violence by an ayatollah,” that’s what an Iranian cleric has demanded on state television in retaliation for the war launched by the U.S. and Israel.
Iran’s foreign minister says the U.S. will “bitterly regret” torpedoing an Iranian ship.
Suggesting that presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner set a trap for Iran’s leadership, columnist Thom Hartmann recalls that Kushner grew up literally “sleeping in Benjamin Netanyahu’s bed.”
The American Prospect’s Ryan Cooper: “Time to end the American-Israeli alliance. Alliances are built on shared interests. Those do not exist here.”

‘Save your lives and evacuate your homes immediately.’ Updating coverage: After that warning from the Israeli military to residents of Lebanon’s capital, Beirut, streets were jammed with people fleeing.
Meanwhile, Iran attacked Israel.
Popular Information: Hundreds of thousands of Americans have been stranded in a war zone …
 … including a trio of suburban women …
 … and Gov. Pritzker’s asking Secretary of State Marco Rubio to do something about it.

‘Near carte blanche to proceed.’ That’s what Politico says the Senate has given Trump’s war—with a near-party-line vote to defeat a bill that would have required congressional approval for more of the same.
PolitiFact analyzes U.S. leaders’ unproven claims about Iran. (Cartoon: Jack Ohman.)
Author and former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich: Trump is “actively destroying” civilization’s moral basis.
Even as he mourns the death of his wife three weeks ago, columnist Jeff Tiedrich takes a moment to excoriate Trump for failing to “remember that his tyrant Klansman father was born in the Bronx.”

Gas pain. The war’s driving up Chicago-area fuel prices …
 … and farmers’ fertilizer prices …
Columnist Dan Froomkin sees the spread of antiwar rallies as “the green shoots of an anti-imperialist movement.”

Homeland insecurity. Trump’s reportedly been “quietly” asking top Republicans if he should fire his insolent Homeland Security chief, Kristi Noem. (Update: Yeah, he did it.)
USA Today’s Chicago-based columnist Rex Huppke: “Half of Americans now say ‘Abolish ICE.’ It’s about time.”

Paging Pam. Amid news that close to 48,000 files are missing from the hoard of Epstein records her Justice Department is under order to release, a House committee has voted to summon Attorney General Bondi to answer questions.
ProPublica’s assembled a database you can use to explore financial disclosures and potential conflicts of interest for Trump and his team.
Here’s Bondi’s.

‘Flat-out voter suppression.’ Law prof Joyce Vance sees what happened in Texas this week as a preview of Republican efforts to pervert November’s elections.
Columnist Eric Zorn suggests that losing Democratic Senate primary candidate Jasmine Crockett suffered the “Streisand effect.”
He also praises Chicago congressional candidate Kat Abughazaleh for “a clever new commercial that adopts most of the conventions of an attack ad against herself, but turns the accusations on their head.”
The Illinois League of Women Voters says all the candidates in a crowded 7th Congressional District Democratic race will be on hand for a meet-and-greet tonight.
Facebook’s parent is dumping cash into Illinois legislative races—with an eye on state-level legislation that could hurt its bottom line.
Ready to fill out your ballot? The Chicago Public Square Voter Guide Guide is here to help.

Jesse Jackson’s funeral. If you’d like to join thousands likely to attend tomorrow’s service in Chicago, here’s how to get there.
His final destination? Sun-Times architecture critic Lee Bey calls it “a beautiful place that was changed for the better by protest.”

See ’em while you can. Preservation Chicago’s out with its 2026 list of the city’s most endangered buildings …
 … including Pope Leo’s childhood church.

Worse than they thought. The New York Times (gift link): New research shows that sea levels are already higher than many scientists think.
Chicago’s temperatures could approach 70 tomorrow.
Complaining of suppression, NBC’s top climate reporter is quitting and going independent.

Thanks, readers … for bestowing first-runner-up honors on Square in the Reader’s annual Best of Chicago poll.
And a tip of the hat to the winner in those two categories, Block Club Chicago.

One week from today, March 12. That’s when this year’s National Support Chicago Public Square Day falls, and if you want to mark the occasion by donning your Squarewear—T-shirts, hoodies or caps—act now to get yours delivered in time.
You can buy a shirt or hoodie directly here.
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Liar or ignoramus? / ‘Colbert bump!’ / ‘Our destiny together’

Liar or ignoramus? Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday that she knew nothing about the case of Marimar Martinez, the Chicago woman who survived being shot five times last year by Border Patrol agents.
Martinez, in a statement issued after the hearing: “It was reported in every national news outlet for months. Does she not read the newspaper? Is she not briefed on shootings of U.S. citizens by border patrol agents?”
ProPublica: Noem misled Congress about the role in Homeland Security contracts played by a top aide …
 … with whom she reportedly has had a romantic relationship, even though both are married with children.
Gov. Pritzker: “It is long past time she steps down.”
The Tribune reports: Chicago’s immigration court has lost nearly half the judges who worked there last year.

Not so fast. Law professor Joyce Vance on the federal government’s reversal of a decision to abandon an intimidation campaign against four big law firms: “Trump told his Justice Department to change its mind.”
Popular Information exposes how the Trump administration hires legal interns: “You MUST be aligned politically with President Trump. … GPA is not a strong factor.”
Former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich mourns: “The wonderful department I once loved is being turned to shit.”

Illinois’ would-be money mavens. The Trib profiles the four candidates—all women—running to be the Democrats’ candidate for state comptroller.
Hey, candidates: The p in comptroller is silent (2013 NPR link).
Axios Chicago reports that “political attack ads are taking on a different energy this primary cycle, thanks to big bucks from national super PACs backing cryptocurrency.”
Ready to make your call? The Chicago Public Square Voter Guide Guide is here.

Wonkette’s Evan Hurst: The call in that race came late because of “fuckery … caused by Republicans.”
Texas Republicans are bracing for what the AP calls “an ugly fight” in a Senate primary runoff …
 … but it says North Carolina could play a bigger role in which party controls the Senate after this fall.

‘No consequences.’ Expat Trib columnist Kevin Williams, now a resident of Portugal, regrets that Americans take what their country does elsewhere in the world so lightly.
Defense Secretary Hegseth: The U.S. “can’t stop everything” that Iran fires in the war the Trump administration launched.
A Northwestern University journalism professor at the university’s Qatar campus has been sheltering in place with her husband and children as Iranian missiles strike.
Columnist Jeff Tiedrich paraphrases Trump’s counsel to Americans trapped by the violence abroad: “Sucks to be you.”
American Prospect editor Ryan Cooper: “It’s official: Donald Trump is worse than George W. Bush in every way. … Bush at least pretended like he had to seek democratic permission.”
Investigative reporter Ken Klippenstein writes, “Setting aside the absurdity of the question of if killing a head of state is an act of war, there’s a deadly serious question here: What even is war anymore?
PolitiFact gives Trump a “Full Flop” rating for his reversal on “regime-change” wars.
McSweeney’s offers a thought experiment: “Does Your Country Need Regime Change?

‘President Clinton clearly was mistaken.’ Gov. Pritzker says the former president was wrong when he testified that Pritzker was aboard convicted and dead sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s plane …
 … prompting the Clinton team to walk back that testimony.
Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg: The Epstein scandal is complicating the fight against child abuse.

‘Our destiny together, you and me.’ Now that Trump’s agreed to attend the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner for the first time as president, Jimmy Kimmel’s begging: “Please let me host. … You, me, the commissioner of the FCC, all at a table together? Think of the ratings.”

Thanks. Mike Braden made this edition better.

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