Chicago Public Square will take a few days off. We’ll be back in your inbox Friday with a special “nice news” edition of The Conversation’s weekly quiz, returning to regular coverage here Monday.
■ Meanwhile, keep tabs on breaking news and perspective via the Square Bluesky account …
■ … and consider Pod Save America co-host Dan Pfeiffer’s guidance for handling “your MAGA uncle at Thanksgiving.”
■ For now, here’s what’s up:
‘He’s not gonna silence us.’ U.S. Sen., retired U.S. Navy Capt. and retired astronaut Mark Kelly dismisses as “absurd” the Pentagon’s launch—at President Trump’s urging—of an investigation into him and five other Democratic lawmakers who’ve encouraged service members to refuse “illegal orders.”
■ Kelly stands by that message: “You don’t want to wait for your kid to get hit by a car before you tell them to look both ways.”
■ Columnist and Army veteran Charlotte Clymer sees the charges as “a failed human being kissing the ass of another failed human being by slandering the character of a genuine war hero.”
■ Lawyer/columnist Robert Hubbell: “We must all be Mark Kelly.”
■ Evan Hurst at Wonkette: “Kelly is the man Pete Hegseth will never be.”
Two strikes. A federal judge has dismissed criminal cases against ex-FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James—concluding that the prosecutor who brought the charges at Trump’s prodding was appointed illegally.
■ In a video message posted to Substack, Comey called for Americans to “stand up and show the fools who would frighten us, who would divide us, that we’re made of stronger stuff.”
■ Law professor Joyce Vance says the law may yet allow those charges to be re-filed.
■ Yeah, but Trump was set to pardon two turkeys today.
‘These are in no way suitable conditions to be holding anyone—period.’ That’s U.S. Rep. Lauren Underwood after visiting the Broadview ICE detention center yesterday.
■ Congressional candidate Kat Abughazaleh on MSNBC MS NOW: What’s happening inside is “immeasurably worse” than what’s been caught on camera outside.
‘These conditions are not livable.’ Residents of the Chicago apartment building ransacked by federal agents in a horrific raid two months ago are forming a union.
■ They’re asking for repairs and help relocating.
■ WBEZ explores the fiasco that unfolded “when The Sausage King of Chicago bought a South Side housing complex.”
Obamacare reprieve? The White House is circulating a plan to extend federal subsidies for skyrocketing healthcare premiums …
■ … but The American Prospect says it’s still not great: “The insurance will get worse, and the poor will pay more.”
‘A day of reckoning for … hapless electronic monitoring.’ A Tribune editorial says the man accused of setting a young woman on fire on a CTA train makes a compelling case for overhauling Cook County court rules “to ensure that dangerous people who violate their terms of release face timely repercussions.”
■ Friday’s deadly “teen takeover” downtown is fueling renewed calls for police power to declare “snap curfews.”
‘See you in hell, DOGE :)’ Wonkette’s Marcie Jones sheds no tears over news that Trump and Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency” exists no more.
■ The New Republic: “DOGE may be dead, but its crimes live on.”
■ Its website is moribund.
‘Parents may want to think carefully.’ The Public Interest Research Group is sounding a warning about AI-enabled toys.
■ Read its 40th annual “Trouble in Toyland” report here.
■ Casey Newton at Platformer: The online game platform Roblox has a child safety problem—exemplifying “a world where CEOs no longer feel shame.”
■ The Onion: “AI-Enabled Teddy Bear Pulled From Shelves For Giving Advice On BDSM, Where To Find Knives.”
■ Gizmodo: “Those viral photos of Elon and Zuck are AI. But Google launched a new way to check for fakes.”
■ A Boston College humanities prof writes for The New York Times (gift link): “AI has changed my classroom, but not for the worse.”
■ Popular Information: Tennessee public libraries have closed for a Trump-inspired book purge.
Thanks to viewers like you. John Oliver’s auction of Last Week Tonight memorabilia has raised more than $1.5 million for public broadcasting.
■ A gold-plated recreation of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s testicles went for $25,000.
■ Critic Bill Carter: “Trump keeps trying to silence late-night TV. He’s only making it louder.”
‘Chicago’s winter-parking rules … are … a cash grab.’ Columnist Eric Zorn points to other big-city bans that restrict parking just during “snow emergencies.”
■ The Pace suburban transit system is buying 36 new hybrid buses.
Chicago’s win, Chicago’s loss. “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve” this year will feature Chance the Rapper as host for its first-ever Chicago-based countdown …
■ … but Axios notes that leaves the city without a locally produced New Year’s Eve countdown show for the first time in modern history.
■ Historian Robert Loerzel praises Mavis Staples’ spirited cover of Tom Waits’ song “Chicago.”
■ Longtime WBBM-FM DJ Joe “JoBo” [Bohannon] Colborn is dead at 70.
Corrections. Thanks to readers thoughtful enough to take the time to set things straight, yesterday’s Square has been fixed:
■ The Wisconsin woman apprehended in a Chicago suburb admitted to nearly stabbing a classmate to death in 2014.
■ That WXRT recording of Jimmy Cliff performing at the Park West dates back to 1978.
‘Too much leftist bull shit.’ Chicago Public Square yesterday lost a reader who offered that as an explanation. Then again …
‘It’s nice to have the news of the day … served up piping crazy.’ Those kind words accompanied another reader’s financial support for this publication.
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■ Harry Politis made this edition better.