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Our House Was a Very, Very, Very Fine House

Our House Was a Very, Very, Very Fine House Trump views the physical history of the White House much as he views the nation’s laws: somethi...

The Problem with ‘Populist’ Politicians

 

The Problem with ‘Populist’ Politicians

They claim to represent the will of the people as they tear down our foundations of freedom and democracy.

Jared Wesley TodayThe Tyee

Jared Wesley is a professor of political science at the University of Alberta. Find him on Substack at Decoding Politics.

When political parties ride to power calling themselves “populist,” their leaders can sound as if they are restoring power to the people as they carry out their radical reform movements.

But here’s what populist parties — from the extreme-right AfD in Germany to Donald Trump’s Republicans in the United States, from the Conservative Party of Canada to the United Conservatives in Alberta — have in common. Their idea of freedom and democracy is fundamentally different from what most of us are used to.

A “liberal democracy” doesn’t mean one governed by liberals or Liberals. The term, originating in 18th-century Europe, instead means a form of democracy that protects individual liberties and group rights, and ensures diverse voices are heard.

Populists, by stark contrast, push a version of democracy that focuses only on the will of the majority — often at the expense of minorities and dissenters.

I am not talking about routine legislative changes, which — as Jon Stewart points out — are well within the democratic purview of populist leaders (no matter how much they anger progressives and moderates). Nor do I count conventional attempts to amass power in the hands of the leader and their entourage. (Governments of all stripes do that.)

No, I’m pointing to how populists see institutions like courts, legislatures and independent bodies as barriers to the will of the people and work to weaken them, all while consolidating power. Over time, this approach doesn’t just create a less fair and open society — it risks destroying democracy altogether, leaving behind a system that looks democratic in name only. This is something progressives, moderates and conservatives should resist.

The populist approach to democracy

Populism is often described as simply anti-elitist. Yet, as the Dutch political scientist Cas Mudde reminds us, its defining feature is its rejection of pluralism: a democratic approach that embraces diversity, advocating for the coexistence and active participation of multiple groups, perspectives and interests to ensure no single entity dominates decision-making.

It’s true: populists frame democracy as the unfiltered expression of the “will of the people,” sidelining institutions and expertise. However, their concept of “the people” is rarely inclusive. Instead, they imagine a homogeneous majority whose values they espouse, casting minorities and dissenters as obstacles or threats to “democracy.”

It is important to note: the “majority” populists envision is seldom more than half of the population. (Not even Trump won a majority of the popular vote, and Conservative majorities in Canada are often based on pluralities, not majorities. This doesn’t account for the fact that non-voters usually make up one-third of the population in both countries.)

Nonetheless, populists exaggerate the size of their base, convincing both their followers and their opponents that “their side” is much bigger than it is. (Think: crowd sizes.) Their version of “the people” is too big to challenge, yet somehow small enough to be victimized by the corrupt establishment.

Similarly, populists often invoke freedom, but their concept of it is tied to loyalty to the dominant group rather than universal liberties. As the French political thinker Benjamin Constant observed more than 200 years ago, this echoes ancient democratic systems where freedom was reserved for those who conformed to the ruling group, with outsiders excluded and individual rights subordinated to collective will.

In the modern (liberal democratic) sense, freedom is about individual rights and group protections. It is about both liberties and responsibilities, whether embedded in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms or the U.S. Constitution. Aided by elaborate sets of checks and balances, this pluralistic vision embraces diversity and ensures that no single group or perspective dominates. For generations in both countries, liberals, progressives and conservatives have all agreed to defend this core democratic principle.

By contrast, the ancient notion of democracy was steeped in the type of majoritarianism that today’s populists admire. Freedom was a collective privilege, granted to those who were accepted into the dominant group. In ancient Athens, “the people” enjoyed freedom as a protected class, while outsiders were excluded and often regarded as threats to the community’s way of life. In this view, individuals were subordinate to the collective. Those who aligned with the ruling majority were free to live as they pleased, so long as their actions reinforced the prevailing norms. Populists are often accused of being retrogressive in their attempts to “make their countries great again.” Hearkening back to ancient Greece takes this rear-view peering to a whole new level.

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The tensions between liberalism and democracy

The erosion of liberal democratic norms under populist governance highlights a tension once identified by political theorist Carl Schmitt, a member of Germany’s Nazi party: the inherent contradictions between liberalism and democracy.

Schmitt argued that “liberal democracy” is in many ways an oxymoron, attempting to reconcile two fundamentally different principles. Understanding this tension sheds light on why populism so effectively exploits the cracks in the system.

At its core, liberalism is about protecting individual rights and freedoms, often through mechanisms that constrain the power of majorities. Institutions like federalism, independent courts, media and boards and commissions exist to ensure that no single group, even a rare electoral majority, can dominate or oppress others. Liberalism values deliberation, compromise and the rule of law — all of which prioritize stability and the protection of minority rights over the immediate will of the many.

Democracy, on the other hand, is fundamentally majoritarian. It presumes there is a singular common good. It emphasizes the direct expression of the people’s will, often through electoral processes that produce clear winners and losers. Democracy produces decisions reflecting the preferences of the most numerous group or groups in society, even when those preferences conflict with established norms or the rights of the less numerous.

As Schmitt pointed out, liberalism seeks to temper the blunt force of majorities, while democracy resists the constraints imposed by liberal institutions. This tension creates a constant push and pull within democracies like Canada and the United States.

The more liberal a system becomes, the less responsive it may appear to the will of the majority. The more democratic it becomes, the more likely it is to erode the safeguards that protect individual and minority rights.

Populists thrive on exploiting this tension. They argue that liberal institutions — courts, legislatures, the press, academics — are undemocratic because they obstruct the majority’s will. By framing liberal safeguards as barriers to true democracy, populists justify their attacks on pluralism and the institutional checks and balances that preserve it.

Populists claim to restore democracy by removing liberal constraints, but in doing so, they create conditions that undermine both liberalism and democracy.

The genius of liberal democracy lies in its attempt to balance these competing principles, allowing the most populous groups to govern while protecting the rights of minorities and individuals. However, this balance is inherently fragile. When populists tip the scales too far toward majoritarianism, they reveal the contradictions at the heart of the system. Liberal institutions can appear elitist and disconnected, giving populists the ammunition they need to dismantle them.

Schmitt’s insights remind us that liberal democracy is always a work in progress — a delicate balance that requires constant vigilance to maintain. He would know: as an eventual Nazi, he helped tilt democracy toward illiberal ends. In this sense, the challenges posed by populist movements today are not new, but they underscore how easily the system’s internal tensions can be exploited to erode its foundations.

The pPopulist playbook in action

Once in government, many populists set about dismantling the pillars of liberal democracy. The process follows a predictable pattern, which should sound familiar to people living under populist rule these days.

Ignoring the rule of law. Populists erode the rule of law by interfering with judicial independence and introducing discriminatory legislation. Independent boards are stacked with loyalists or bypassed altogether, while laws target marginalized groups or political opponents. This creates a two-tier legal system where some citizens enjoy full rights while others are subjected to restrictions, undermining equality and justice.

Eliminating checks and balances. Populists view legislatures, courts, parliamentary officers, independent agencies and other orders of government as obstacles to their agenda. They bypass legislative debate through strict party discipline and closure, dismiss constitutional constraints and other orders of government, replace watchdogs with loyalists and centralize power by overriding municipal authority.

Undermining electoral integrity. Populists often attack the integrity of elections to tilt the playing field in their favour. Measures such as introducing restrictive voter ID laws, threatening to gerrymander districts or outlawing vote tabulating machines cast doubt on the fairness of elections. These tactics weaken public trust in electoral systems while consolidating power for the ruling party.

Consolidating power. Populist leaders frequently usurp authority from other institutions to tighten their grip on power. This includes undermining academic freedom by controlling university governance or silencing dissenting scholars. Similarly, tearing up the traditional public servant’s bargain — marginalizing civil servants in the policy-making process or replacing non-partisan expertise with loyalists — turns the bureaucracy into an instrument of the ruling party.

Cronyism. By hollowing out institutions and prioritizing loyalty over competence, populists create fertile ground for cronyism. Populists thrive on a narrative of “cleaning house” and dismantling elite networks, but they often replace these networks with their own. Key government positions are awarded based on political allegiance rather than expertise, ensuring loyalty but weakening governance. Public resources are redirected to allies through key appointments, lucrative contracts, quid pro quo dealings, pay-to-play rules or pork-barrel spending, with little regard for accountability.

To accomplish all of this, populists conflate their party’s interests with “the people’s,” justifying actions that enrich themselves or their supporters. Scandals are reframed as attacks by the enemy, further polarizing public discourse and insulating leaders from accountability. In this way, populist regimes often replicate or even exacerbate the corruption they claim to oppose.

Left unchecked, populism’s erosion of pluralism creates an environment where dissent is suppressed, and loyalty to the regime is rewarded. Critics clam up for fear of retribution. Independent institutions crumble, elections lose legitimacy, and public trust erodes.

What begins as a promise to restore power to the people ends as a system where power is concentrated in the hands of a few. Democracy’s form remains, but its modern substance — pluralism, accountability and individual rights — is gutted. If left unabated, this trajectory leads not just to authoritarianism but to a society defined by fear, exclusion and inequality (a recipe for the sort of fascism Schmitt helped establish in Germany).

Restoring pluralism through a conservative turn

Restoring pluralism in Canada and the United States will require the “real people” to reassert themselves — not the narrow, exclusionary version championed by populists, but the diverse, moderate, silent majority who have watched their democratic institutions erode while assuming they would remain resilient.

Populism thrives when the real majority disengages, allowing a vocal and aggrieved minority to hijack the political process. Drowned out by radical voices, people in the real mainstream of society get trapped in a spiral of silence.

The first step in pushing back is recognizing that populists represent a minority view, and that democracy is not self-sustaining — it demands vigilance, participation and, most of all, a collective reaffirmation of its foundational principles.

Part of this renewal means rediscovering a model of leadership that predates populist demagoguery: an “old chap” democracy, stripped of its past exclusivities but grounded in its core ideals. The strength of this model lies in the expectation that leaders would act with honour, not because they were inherently virtuous but because the people selected those who respected the system, played by its rules and accepted its outcomes.

In a well-functioning liberal democracy, elites do not seek to stoke division for the sake of factional gain; they understand that governance is about stewardship and trusteeship of the public good, not spectacle. The challenge now is to restore this ethos while preserving the legitimate grievances that populism has surfaced —grievances about economic insecurity, political alienation and institutional complacency. This means the people must start selecting honourable representatives, while they still can.

The burden of this work falls most heavily on conservatives. Populism has consumed the right in both Canada and the United States, distorting its fundamental role as a guardian of order, stability and continuity. If pluralism is to be preserved, it will be not because progressives impose it, but because conservatives rediscover their own first principles. The instinct to preserve — to honour institutions, to safeguard traditions, to maintain social cohesion — runs deep in conservative thought. The task ahead is not to reinvent conservatism but to reclaim it from those who would tear it down in the name of a grievance-fuelled populism.

Tories in Canada and anti-Trump Republicans in the United States must take back their parties, not out of nostalgia, but out of necessity. A democracy in which one side plays by the rules and the other seeks only to destroy them cannot endure. If the conservative movement truly wishes to conserve anything, let it be the time-honoured traditions of pluralism and honourable leadership. That is the real conservative impulse — and it is long overdue for a revival.

[Editor’s note: An earlier version of this article appeared on the author’s Substack, Decoding Politics.]  [Tyee]

Like dictators before him, Trump threatens international peace and security

Like dictators before him, Trump threatens international peace and security

At first, Canadians just shook their collective heads when United States President Donald Trump suggested Canada become the 51st American state.

They rolled their eyes when he posted a fake image of himself standing next to a Canadian flag amid snowy mountaintops — in actuality, the Swiss Alps.

Another Trump post showed a map purporting to merge Canada and the U.S. That prompted Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to respond on social media that there was not a “snowball’s chance in hell” that Canadians would soon become Americans.

Meme wars are one thing, but in the real world, threatening the sovereignty and territorial integrity of a foreign state is quite another. Canadian leaders have stopped laughing, and they now need to situate Trump’s dangerous rhetoric in the language of international law and state-to-state relations.

As a former Canadian ambassador to the Netherlands, and a permanent representative to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons and international courts and tribunals in The Hague, I know language matters.

Trump’s threats make it an opportune time to provide a brief snapshot of the historical context for Trump’s rhetoric, and the necessary 21st-century vocabulary with which to respond and shape the public discourse.

Manifest Destiny

In threatening hefty tariffs on Canada, Trump cited the flow of fentanyl over the Canada-U.S. border, but it was clear it had little to do with fentanyl, particularly since so little crosses the border into the U.S. Instead, it seems he is coming for Canada’s sovereignty as an independent state.

When asked on Feb. 3 how Canada could ward off tariffs, Trump reiterated: “What I’d like to see is Canada become our 51st state.”

Later that same day, Trump paused tariffs on Canada, ostensibly thanks to border measures that Canada, like Mexico, had already announced. But what is still being said by the president of one of the most powerful nations on Earth cannot be unsaid.

At a Jan. 7 news conference, Trump called the border between Canada and the U.S. an “artificially drawn line” — echoing rhetoric deployed by Vladimir Putin as justification for Russia’s aggression against Ukraine. His remarks, in fact, were gleefully retweeted by Russia’s propaganda channel RT.

Putin claims the Ukrainian border is the result of “administrative” action under the former Soviet Union, while Trump appears to be invoking the 19th century American concept of “Manifest Destiny.”

He used the phrase verbatim in his inaugural address in the context of planting a flag on Mars, but it is entirely consistent with his plans for, and rhetoric on, Canada.

As John O'Sullivan, the American diplomat who coined the phrase, wrote in a 1845 article entitled Annexation, it’s America’s destiny to “overspread the continent.” Trump appears to be taking that idea to heart.

‘The free white race’

Arguably the biggest fan of territorial expansion in the 20th century was Adolf Hitler, architect of the Third Reich. Trump reportedly has some of Hitler’s writings on his bedside table. Hitler had this to say in Chapter 4 of Mein Kampf:

“The extent of the national territory is a determining factor in the external security of the nation. The larger the territory which a people has at its disposal, the stronger are the national defences of that people.”

Sound familiar?

But why Canada and not Mexico, you may ask? Likely because he considers Canada less racialized, even though modern-day Canada has a large multicultural population.


Read more: Trump has put down his racist dog whistle and picked up a bull horn


In 1848, however, in the midst of the American expansionist era, pro-slavery South Carolina Sen. John Calhoun said:

“We have never dreamt of incorporating into our Union any but the Caucasian race — the free white race. To incorporate Mexico, would be the very first instance of the kind, of incorporating an Indian race; for more than half of the Mexicans are Indians, and the other is composed chiefly of mixed tribes. I protest against such a union as that! Ours, sir, is the Government of a white race.”

In short, neither the context nor the history informing Trump’s designs on Canada are reassuring for Canadians.

Rules still matter

Trump’s dismissive approach to established borders ignores fundamental norms and principles on the sovereignty, equality and territorial integrity of states, codified following the Second World War in the Charter of the United Nations. Canada is a founding member of the UN; its status as a sovereign state is not subject to challenge under international law.

The charter clearly states that “all Members shall refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations.”

Similarly, the North Atlantic Treaty obliges NATO member states to “refrain in their international relations from the threat or use of force in any manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations.”


Read more: Allies or enemies? Trump's threats against Canada and Greenland put NATO in a tough spot


Trump has said he will use “economic force” to annex Canada. The suggestion that an economically devastated Canada could be sufficiently brought to heel has been embraced by the so-called MAGA-sphere, including an influential blogger with ties to Russia.

International law

Threatening economic rather than military force does not make Trump’s efforts at subjugating Canada any more acceptable in terms of international law.

In 1970, in the UN’s Declaration on Principles of International Law Concerning Friendly Relations and Co-Operations Among States, the UN General Assembly unanimously confirmed that “no state may use … economic, political or any other type of measures to coerce another state in order to obtain from it the subordination of its exercise of its sovereign rights.” While not legally binding, this declaration represents customary international law.

In 1986, the International Court of Justice ruled in Nicaragua v, United States that:

“A prohibited intervention must accordingly be one bearing on matters in which each State is permitted, by the principle of State sovereignty, to decide freely. One of these is the choice of a political, economic, social and cultural system, and the formulation of foreign policy. Intervention is wrongful when it uses methods of coercion in regard to such choices, which must remain free ones.”

Keeping score

It’s both right and righteous for our elected leaders to say that Canada will never be the 51st state.

But the time has come, especially in the context of Trump’s threats to buy Greenland, seize the Panama Canal and turn Gaza into a Middle Eastern Riviera, to call out his threats to Canada.

Amid Trump’s dizzying litany of outlandish pronouncements, Canada’s leaders must keep track of what Trump’s declarations represent:

  • A threat to international peace and security;
  • A threat to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Canada;
  • Unlawful coercion and intervention in the affairs of a sovereign state;
  • A breach of the UN Charter;
  • A breach of the North Atlantic treaty.

Trump’s threats are no way to treat an ally, but unfortunately for him, international law is on Canada’s side.

Sabine Nolke does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Javier Milei in hot water over memecoin collapse

 

President Javier Milei of Argentina

Luis Robayo/Getty Images

What do the leader of a country with over 46 million people and the host of the Talk Tuah podcast have in common? After this weekend, both Argentina President Javier Milei and internet celebrity Haliey Welch will forever be associated with memecoins and rug pulls.

The libertarian Milei promoted $LIBRA in a post on X late Friday, saying, “This is a private project dedicated to encouraging the growth of the Argentine economy.” Hours later, after it had risen to a market cap of $4.4 billion, it crashed in value by more than 95%. Milei then deleted his post and said he was not familiar with the details of the project.

Setting a President: This move by Milei follows in the footsteps of US President Donald Trump, who launched a memecoin not long before his inauguration in January.

What’s next? One political faction wants the Argentinian Congress to investigate what a center-left opposition group called “a scandal without precedent,” while Milei himself has said he will also look into whether any laws were broken. Lawmakers have also raised the possibility of an impeachment hearing for Milei.

8,000 pregnant women may die in just 90 days because of US aid cuts

8,000 pregnant women may die in just 90 days because of US aid cuts This article first appeared in The Checkup, MIT Technology Review’s weekly biotech newsletter. To receive it in your inbox every Thursday, and read articles like this first, sign up here. Yesterday marks a month since the inauguration of Donald Trump as the 47th US president. And what a month it has been. The Trump administration wasted no time in delivering a slew of executive orders, memos, and work notices to federal employees. On February 18, Trump signed an executive order that seeks to make IVF more accessible to people in the US. In some ways, the move isn’t surprising—Trump has expressed his support for the technology in the past, and even called himself “the father of IVF” while on the campaign trail last year. Making IVF more affordable and accessible should give people more options when it comes to family planning and reproductive freedom more generally. But the move comes after a barrage of actions by the new administration that are hitting reproductive care hard for people around the world. On January 20, his first day in office, Trump ordered a “90-day pause in United States foreign development assistance” for such programs to be assessed. By January 24, a “stop work” memo issued by the State Department brought US-funded aid programs around the world to a halt. Recent estimates suggest that more than 8,000 women will die from complications related to pregnancy and childbirth over the next 90 days if the funding is not reinstated. On January 24 Trump also reinstated the global gag rule—a policy that requires nongovernmental organizations receiving US health funding to agree that they will not offer abortion counseling and care. This move alone immediately stripped organizations of the funding they need to perform their work. MSI Reproductive Choices, which offers support for reproductive health care in 36 countries, lost $14 million as a result, says Anna Mackay, who manages donor-funded programs at the organization. “Over 2 million women and girls would have received contraceptive services with that money,” she says. The US Agency for International Development (USAID) had a 2025 budget of $42.8 billion to spend on foreign assistance, which covers everything from humanitarian aid and sanitation to programs promoting gender equality and economic growth in countries around the world. But the “stop work” memo froze that funding for 90 days. The impacts were felt immediately and are still rippling out. Clinical trials were halted. Jobs were lost. Health programs were shut down. “I think this is going to have a devastating impact on the global health architecture,” says Thoai Ngo at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. “USAID is the major foreign funder for global health … I’m afraid that there isn’t [another government] that can fill the gap.” Reproductive health care is likely to lose out as affected governments and health organizations try to reorganize their resources, says Ngo: “In times of crisis … women and girls tend to be deprioritized in terms of access to health and social services.” Without information on and access to a range of contraceptive options, unintended pregnancies result. These have the potential to limit the freedoms of people who become pregnant. And they can have far-reaching economic impacts, since access to contraception can improve education rates and career outcomes. And the health consequences can be devastating. Unintended pregnancies are more likely to be ended with abortions—potentially unsafe ones. Maternal death rates are high in regions that lack adequate resources. A maternal death occurred every two minutes in 2020. “It’s difficult to overstate how catastrophic this freeze has been over the last several weeks,” says Amy Friedrich-Karnik, director of federal policy at the Guttmacher Institute, a research and policy organization focused on global sexual and reproductive health and rights. “Every single day that the freeze is in place, there are 130,000 women who are being denied contraceptive care,” she says. The Guttmacher Institute estimates that should USAID funding be frozen for the full 90 days, around 11.7 million women and girls would lose access to contraceptive care, and 4.2 million of them would experience unintended pregnancies. Of those, “8,340 will die from complications during pregnancy and childbirth,” says Friedrich-Karnik. “By denying people access to contraception, not only are you denying them tools for their bodily autonomy—you are really risking their lives,” she says. “Thousands more women will die down the road.” “USAID plays such a central role in supporting these life-saving programs,” says Ngo. “The picture is bleak.” Even online sources of information on contraceptives are being affected by the funding freeze. Ben Bellows is a chief business officer at Nivi, a digital health company that develops chatbots to deliver health information to people via WhatsApp. “Two million users have used the bot,” he says. He and his team have been working on a project to deliver information on contraceptive options and family planning to women in India, and they have been looking to incorporate AI into their bot. The project was funded by a company that, in turn, is funded by USAID. Like the funding, the work is “frozen,” says Bellows. “We’ve slowed [hiring] and we’ve slowed some of the tech development because of the freeze [on USAID],” he says. “It’s bad [for] the individuals, it’s bad [for] the companies that are trying to operate in these markets, and it’s bad [for] public health outcomes.” Reproductive health and freedoms are also likely to be affected by the Trump administration’s cuts to federal agencies. The National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have been in the administration’s crosshairs, as has the Food and Drug Administration. After all, the FDA regulates drugs and medical devices in the US, including contraceptives. The CDC collects and shares important data on sexual and reproductive health. And the NIH supports vital research on reproductive health and contraception. The CDC also funds health programs in low-income countries like Ethiopia. Following Trump’s executive order, the country’s ministry of health terminated the contracts of more than 5,000 health workers whose salaries were supported by the CDC as well as USAID. “That’s midwives and nurses working in rural health posts,” says Mackay. “We’re turning up to support these staff and provide them with sexual reproductive health training and make sure they’ve got the contraceptives, and there’s just no one at the facility.” So, yes, it is great news if the Trump administration can find a way to make IVF more accessible. But, as Mackay points out, “it’s increasing reproductive choice in one direction.” Now read the rest of The Checkup Read more from MIT Technology Review‘s archive Last November, two years after Roe v. Wade was overturned, 10 US states voted on abortion rights. Seven of them voted to extend and protect access. My colleague Rhiannon Williams reported on the immediate aftermath of the decision that reversed Roe v. Wade. Fertility rates are falling around the world, in almost every country. IVF is great, but it won’t save us from a looming fertility crisis. Gender equality and family-friendly policies are much more likely to be effective. Decades of increasingly successful IVF treatments have caused millions of embryos to be stored in cryopreservation tanks around the world. In some cases, they can’t be donated, used, or destroyed and appear to be stuck in limbo “forever.” Ever come across the term “women of childbearing age”? The insidious idea that women’s bodies are, above all else, vessels for growing children has plenty of negative consequences for us all. But it has also set back scientific research and health policy. There are other WhatsApp-based approaches to improving access to health information in India. Accredited social health activists in the country are using the platform to counter medical misinformation and superstitions around pregnancy. From around the web The US Food and Drug Administration assesses the efficacy and toxicity of experimental medicines before they are approved. It should also consider their “financial toxicity,” given that medical bills can fall on the shoulders of patients themselves, argue a group of US doctors. (The New England Journal of Medicine) Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the new US secretary of health and human services, has vowed to investigate the country’s childhood vaccination schedule. During his confirmation hearing a couple of weeks ago, he promised not to change the schedule. (Associated Press) Some scientists have been altering their published work without telling anyone. Such “stealth corrections” threaten scientific integrity, say a group of researchers from Europe and the US. (Learned Publishing) The US Department of Agriculture said it accidentally fired several people who were working on the federal response to the bird flu outbreak. Apparently the agency is now trying to hire them back. (NBC News) Could your next pet be a glowing rabbit? This startup is using CRISPR to “level up” pets. Their goal is to eventually create a real-life unicorn. (Wired)