Robert Cropf: America’s unnamed crisis

posted in: All news | 0

I first encountered Leszek Kołakowski, the Polish political thinker, as an undergraduate. It was he who warned of “an all-encompassing crisis” that societies can feel but cannot clearly name.

His insight reads less like a relic of the late 1970s and more like a dispatch from our own political moment. We aren’t living through one breakdown, but a cascade of them — political, social, and technological — each amplifying the others. The result is a country where people feel burnt out, anxious, and increasingly unsure of where authority or stability can be found.

This crisis doesn’t have a single architect. Liberals can’t blame only President Donald Trump, and conservatives can’t pin everything on “wokeness.” What we face is a convergence of powerful forces: decades of institutional drift, fractures in civic life, and technologies that reward emotions over understanding. These pressures compound one another, creating a sense of disorientation that older political labels fail to describe with the same accuracy as before.

For generations, the institutions that shaped everyday life acted as the community’s informal infrastructure, propping up society. Churches didn’t just offer a place to worship, but also offered childcare, shared meals, and weekly bingo nights that gave people a place to gather. Local newspapers kept residents informed about school tax referenda, zoning disputes and neighborhood issues. Political party associations held fish fries and ward meetings where voters could meet the candidates seeking their support.

Today, many of these anchors have thinned out or disappeared. A church that once ran a weekly food pantry shutters after membership declines. A small-town paper closes, leaving residents dependent on cable news and social‑media rumors. Local parties dissolve into little more than automated fundraising emails. Screens replace shared spaces, and as those real-world ties fade, so does the trust and connection they once made possible. None of this should surprise us — Neil Postman and Robert Putnam warned more than two decades ago that these civic foundations were eroding — and why — and that the consequences would be far-reaching.

That erosion leaves citizens mentally exhausted. Protest movements draw millions, but engagement rarely translates into sustained civic renewal. People show up in the streets, go home, and feel just as unmoored as before. The vocabulary of past ideological battles — left vs. right; big government vs. small — doesn’t capture the hollowing out of confidence that Kołakowski and others identified. This moment is about something deeper: a frayed sense of meaning. The connective tissue that once gave politics its purpose has worn thin.

Technology has accelerated this shift. What once promised connection now delivers outrage cycles instead. Social platforms sort people into warring tribes, reward the loudest voices, and spread half-truths faster than accurate reporting can catch up. Algorithms built to keep people engaged now drive wedges between them. Instead of broadening public debate, digital platforms splinter it into hostile enclaves. As misinformation grows easier to produce — thanks to AI — and harder to correct, trust in both institutions and each other falls further.

Some remedies are already visible. Stronger privacy protections in Europe have curbed the most aggressive forms of surveillance advertising. Experiments that reduce the reach of engagement bait show real drops in viral misinformation. Several cities that invested in community journalism, public libraries, and adult media-literacy programs report higher turnout and more civic participation. These may be small steps, but they show how concrete local initiatives can rebuild public life.

At the national level, the work begins with restoring competence and clarity to the federal government. Congress can reestablish its role by passing a real data privacy law, strengthening oversight of digital platforms and updating antitrust rules so a handful of companies cannot dominate public discourse.

The White House can improve public confidence by speaking consistently, limiting policy whiplash and giving agencies the stability they need to do their jobs. The courts can help by strengthening judicial ethics rules and explaining major decisions more clearly, closing the distance between legal reasoning and public understanding.

Trust grows when institutions do what they claim to do. People notice when benefits arrive on time, when rules are applied evenly and when large projects move forward without years of delay. Visible competence matters. It’s one of the few things that reliably cuts through polarization.

But the deeper work to be done concerns meaning. No policy — however well-crafted — can endure without a public that believes in the institutions carrying it out. Technology transformed how Americans live together; now those institutions must shape the conditions under which technology operates. They must reward behaviors that strengthen the civic commons rather than erode them. And they must do so in a way that benefits ordinary people, not just the already powerful.

Kołakowski’s point remains as urgent now as it was then: a crisis without a name is still a crisis. The task ahead is more than fixing broken systems. It is rebuilding a politics capable of producing meaning rather than noise—one that encourages people to trust one another enough to act together. If we fail at that, the crisis will no longer be unnamed. It will simply feel permanent.

Robert Cropf is a professor of political science at Saint Louis University. He wrote this column for, The Fulcrum, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news platform covering efforts to fix our governing systems.

Related Articles


America continues to rely on the collective wisdom of the people


Mark Glende: Against the odds, this tipsy tree with the leaning star


Abby McCloskey: A case for childlike wonder in a grown-up world


Other voices: Inflation appears to ease


Noah Feldman: The Supreme Court generals failed their troops this year

F.D. Flam: The microplastics problem isn’t necessarily in your brain

posted in: All news | 0

In the realm of horror, it was hard to beat the headlines last February that you were carrying around the equivalent of a plastic spoon’s worth of microplastics in your brain. The findings, reported in Nature Medicine, generated lots of outrage on morning talk shows and were even repeated as fact by would-be surgeon general Casey Means.

A number of chemists were initially skeptical of the study, which was based on analyzing brains from a small sample of cadavers. In a rebuttal published last month in Nature, a group of chemists argued that the technique used couldn’t accurately distinguish fat particles that are a normal part of the brain from microplastics, and that the study didn’t include the necessary validation steps to ensure they weren’t simply seeing post-mortem contamination or otherwise misleading themselves.

When I wrote to chemist Fazel Monikh at the University of Padua in Italy, an author of the rebuttal, he responded that the initial claim was extraordinary because “such particle loads would cause catastrophic occlusion, inflammation, and tissue destruction incompatible with life.” And the analysis didn’t constitute extraordinary evidence — or even reasonably good evidence.

That’s not to say the proliferation of tiny plastic particles isn’t a serious problem. A review paper published last month lists ways microplastic particles might damage your brain and increase the risk of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. However, it also lost credibility by citing the plastic-spoon claim without caveats.

This raises an important ethical question: Is it OK for scientists, science journals and journalists to be less rigorous or critical of extraordinary results if they raise awareness of serious problems or otherwise contribute to the greater good?

Mark Jones, a retired chemist who has independently studied microplastics, drew my attention to the Nature follow-up, which the journal did not publicize as heavily as it had promoted the initial findings with a splashy press release. Jones said he’s deeply concerned about scientists and journals failing to maintain high standards of evidence. He is worried about eroding public trust, as evidenced by the rising resistance to essential vaccines.

Before the plastic spoon image, there was another alarming statistic: that the average person ingests enough plastic each week to make up a credit card. That claim was based on a 2019 study that used several models to estimate that the average person consumes either 0.1 g, 0.3 g, or 5 g (the credit card amount) per week.

Jones noted that other scientists questioned the assumptions in that model, and a couple of studies found that the 5-gram figure was about a factor of a million too high, meaning it would take roughly 23,000 years to consume the amount of plastic in a credit card. Nevertheless, the credit card estimate continues to be propagated in popular media, policy circles and other studies.

In the “plastic spoon” study, the initial intentions were good. Researchers from the University of New Mexico designed the study to solve a significant problem. There’s longstanding evidence that our food and water are contaminated with microplastics, but scientists don’t know where they go in the body, whether they’re excreted or get lodged in our organs, and how they affect our health.

Those questions have been difficult to answer because plastic inside the body is tough to measure. The team approached the problem by taking samples of organs from cadavers and dissolving them, removing presumably normal tissue and leaving behind a residue of what might be plastic. They analyzed the residue with a technique called pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry — a way to identify what’s there by the masses of broken-up fragments.

The end result was a wide range of plastic concentrations in the different bodies. It was surprising that the brain appeared to take up much more plastic than the other organs, as if it were preferentially absorbing it. Almost all the plastic was one type — polyethylene — with a notable absence of other common forms, such as polyethylene terephthalate (PET), which makes up plastic water and soda bottles.

The analysis could have been described as a good start — a first attempt at answering a difficult question. Some skeptical chemists were quoted in the media, but most of the public just saw clickable headlines or TV outrage, taking these very preliminary findings as fact.

“Who bears responsibility when extraordinary claims enter science and policy without solid evidence?” Monikh wrote in a LinkedIn post. The journals Nature and Nature Medicine deserve some blame for the way they publicized the paper on the plastic spoon, but not for the follow-up. Journalists also deserve blame for uncritically promoting a single study as fact.

In the end, there’s no ethical justification for selective hype by journals or for the lack of skepticism among journalists and researchers. We don’t need to exaggerate claims to generate concern over microplastics and their potential harm to us and other living things. And promoting studies lacking rigor could backfire and breed cynicism or a sense of doom, rather than care or action. None of us is in a position to judge which falsehoods might benefit people. We should stick to the truth as best we understand it, and still do what we can to fight the pollution of our environment by plastic.

F.D. Flam is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering science. She is host of the “Follow the Science” podcast.

Related Articles


America continues to rely on the collective wisdom of the people


Mark Glende: Against the odds, this tipsy tree with the leaning star


Abby McCloskey: A case for childlike wonder in a grown-up world


Other voices: Inflation appears to ease


Noah Feldman: The Supreme Court generals failed their troops this year

Sheriff’s office investigating homicide, attempted suicide in rural Dakota County

posted in: All news | 0

The Dakota County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a double shooting Wednesday as a homicide and attempted suicide, according to the sheriff.

Deputies responded to the shooting in Castle Rock Township, south of Farmington, at 2:20 p.m. They found a woman dead from a gunshot wound, and a man wounded with a gunshot wound to the head.

The man was transported to a hospital and was alive as of late afternoon, according to the sheriff’s office.

There were other people in the home, though they didn’t witness what happened, said Sheriff Joe Leko. The sheriff’s office is investigating.

For help

Throughout Minnesota, the Day One crisis line can be reached around the clock by calling 866-223-1111 or texting 612-399-9995. The 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline can be reached by calling or texting 988 for free 24/7 support.

Related Articles


Archbishop Hebda: Immigration officials won’t target holiday church services


Devastating Eagan church fire changes Christmas Day service plans


Minneapolis man convicted of triple murder in homeless encampment shooting


St. Paul man who shot at mother, shutting down Metro State, sentenced to prison


St. Paul lawmaker says someone attempted to break into his home

Trump warns against infiltration by a ‘bad Santa,’ defends coal in jovial Christmas calls with kids

posted in: All news | 0

By WILL WEISSERT

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) — President Donald Trump marked Christmas Eve by quizzing children calling in about what presents they were excited about receiving, while promising to not let a “bad Santa” infiltrate the country and even suggesting that a stocking full of coal may not be so bad.

Vacationing at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, the president and first lady Melania Trump participated in the tradition of talking to youngsters dialing into the North American Aerospace Defense Command, which playfully tracks Santa’s progress around the globe.

“We want to make sure that Santa is being good. Santa’s a very good person,” Trump said while speaking to kids ages 4 and 10 in Oklahoma. “We want to make sure that he’s not infiltrated, that we’re not infiltrating into our country a bad Santa.”

He didn’t elaborate.

Trump has often marked Christmases past with criticisms of his political enemies, including in 2024, when he posted, “Merry Christmas to the Radical Left Lunatics.” During his first term, Trump wrote online early on Dec. 24, 2017, targeting a top FBI official he believed was biased against him, as well as the news media.

But Trump was in a jovial mood this time. He even said, I “could do this all day long,” but likely would have to get back to more pressing matters like efforts to quell the fighting in Russia’s war with Ukraine.

When an 8-year-old from North Carolina, asked if Santa would be mad if no one leaves cookies out for him, Trump said he didn’t think so, “But I think he’ll be very disappointed.”

“You know, Santa’s — he tends to be a little bit on the cherubic side. You know what cherubic means? A little on the heavy side,” Trump joked. “I think Santa would like some cookies.”

The president and first lady Melania Trump sat side-by-side and took about a dozen calls between them. At one point, while his wife was on the phone and Trump was waiting to be connected to another call, he noted how little attention she was paying to him: “She’s able to focus totally, without listening.”

Asked by an 8-year-old girl in Kansas what she’d like Santa to bring, the answer came back, “Uh, not coal.”

Related Articles


Kennedy Center Christmas Eve jazz concert canceled after Trump name added to building


Pediatrics group sues HHS for cutting funds for children’s health programs


Federal judge upholds Hawaii’s new climate change tax on cruise passengers


After missing deadline, DOJ says it may need a ‘few more weeks’ to finish releasing Epstein files


Judge blocks Trump effort to strip security clearance from attorney who represented whistleblowers

“You mean clean, beautiful coal?,” Trump replied, evoking a favored campaign slogan he’s long used when promising to revive domestic coal production.

“I had to do that, I’m sorry,” the president added, laughing and even causing the first lady, who was on a separate call, to turn toward him and grin.

“Coal is clean and beautiful. Please remember that, at all costs,” Trump said. “But you don’t want clean, beautiful coal, right?”

“No,” the caller responded, saying she’d prefer a Barbie doll, clothes and candy.

Associated Press writer Darlene Superville contributed from Washington.