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  • The Week Evening Review
    Kristi Noem’s fading star, farmers’ bailout benefits, and the ‘quarter-zip movement’

     
    In the Spotlight

    Kristi Noem might not be long for Trumpland

    For nearly a year, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has been President Donald Trump’s point person to carry out the mass deportation efforts that have descended on cities across the country. But while Noem’s tenure atop the nation’s centralized security services has made her one of the administration’s most visible figures, her time as a high-profile public official may be coming to an end, as rumors swirl that her days in office are numbered. 

    ‘Likely’ exit
    The “heightened speculation” over Noem’s tenure stems in part from “increasing frustration with how she has managed” DHS and fears she has “bungled” her department’s supercharged budget, said Politico. There are also concerns about “tensions” between Noem and the administration’s border czar, Tom Homan, and about the “outsize role” former Trump Campaign Manager Corey Lewandowski holds at the department. Lewandowski has reportedly stepped on staff toes and been described as Noem’s “handler, her bulldog and the shadow secretary,” said New York magazine.

    Despite Noem’s “abject fealty” to Trump, her “standing” in the administration has “grown less stable,” said The Bulwark. Rumors about Noem’s future have been swirling for weeks, with reports suggesting Noem could be “among the Cabinet officials who could be caught in a year-end turnover.”

    Trump is “happy with Noem,” but it has been “brought to his attention” that Lewandowski is a “problem and the agency is being mismanaged because of it,” said one White House source to CNN. Noem “isn’t on the chopping block” at the moment, said Rachael Bade in her Inner Circle newsletter. Still, there are “absolutely questions internally” about whether Noem’s “potential 2028 ambitions” could eventually become a “challenge.” Trump has also expressed concern at the expensive DHS-run TV spots that “puff up” Noem’s profile, said The Daily Beast.

    Emerging list of potential replacements
    While Trump has publicly defended his homeland security chief, he has plenty of options to replace Noem. Outgoing Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) and former Utah Rep. Jason Chaffetz, a Fox News commentator, are “among the names being discussed,” said Politico. 

    Still, the White House continues to deny the rumors about Noem’s future. “I can’t speak for the president,” said Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin to Politico when asked about the speculation, “but I have seen more credible reporting on Bigfoot.”

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘They were able-bodied, they were not injured, and they were attempting to recover the contents of the boat, which was full of narcotics.’

    House Speaker Mike Johnson declaring the U.S. military's second boat strike on Sept. 2 “entirely appropriate,” while speaking to reporters after viewing the videos of the mission and being briefed by the commander who oversaw it

     
     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Will Trump's $12B bailout solve the farm crisis?

    President Donald Trump’s $12 billion bailout of American farmers will provide at least temporary relief from their struggles. But critics say the underlying problems, including his tariffs, still have not been solved.

    The president’s trade wars have “bludgeoned the already struggling U.S. agricultural sector,” said Axios. Farmers were already staggering under the weight of “falling commodity prices and rising production costs,” but the president’s tariffs did not help. China stopped buying American-grown soybeans as retaliation, “crushing the largest export market for American farmers.” Now more than half of U.S. farms are “losing money.” The newly announced bailout will “provide much-needed certainty” to the sector, said Trump. But a “one-time payment is not a long-term fix,” said Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.).

    What did the commentators say?
    Aid to farmers is Trump’s solution to a “self-created trade mess,” said The Washington Post editorial board. It’s not just that the tariffs have cut off export markets for American-grown foodstuffs. They have also “driven up input costs for farmers,” who now must pay $100-per-ton more for fertilizer than they did a year ago. 

    Trump’s aid package will only partly offset the $44 billion that U.S. farmers are expected to suffer this year. Americans get “higher food prices and fewer options” while the farmers who feed them are doing worse than if the president had “never imposed tariffs,” said the Post.

    The bailout is proof tariffs do not work, but “don’t expect the White House to think too hard about it,” said Eric Boehm at Reason. Farmers need aid because Trump’s trade wars are “making American agricultural products less competitive” in worldwide markets. The president should have “learned this lesson already.” His first-term tariffs ended up forcing a $28 billion farming bailout. History is repeating itself with the “same predictable results.”

    What next?
    American farmers “aren’t out of the woods yet,” said Foreign Policy. After the bailout was announced, Trump threatened new tariffs on Canadian fertilizer. That would “risk further straining” the finances of American farmers who use the product. 

    And the president shows no signs of abandoning his overall tariff-driven approach to trade. That will not come as good news to farmers who support Trump and who want to sell their products rather than live with uncertainty. They want “export market access,” said Cornell University economist Chris Barrett, “not handouts.”

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    62,000: The number of lives that could be saved over five years if everyone eligible gets screened for lung cancer, according to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. This is four times the number of people currently being saved.

     
     
    the explainer

    Young Black men embrace the ‘quarter-zip movement’

    Move over, tech bros. Swaths of younger Black men are reclaiming the preppy pullover sweater in a trend dubbed the quarter-zip movement. While some praise the young men for abandoning their Nike Tech sweatsuits for more professional attire, critics say the trend reeks of respectability politics and exposes racial biases in fashion.

    How did the movement start?
    The trend kicked off after a TikTok video of two young Black men “bespectacled and sporting navy blue quarter-zip pullovers” with iced matcha in hand went viral. “We don’t do Nike Tech, we don’t do coffee,” said Jason Gyamfi, one of the men in the video, proclaiming it’s “straight quarter-zips and matchas around here.”

    The movement has inspired multiple large-scale meetups, where young men gather while wearing the versatile pullover. The movement is “bigger than just about what you are wearing,” Corey Dooley Johnson, who helped organize the Chicago meetup, said to the Chicago Sun-Times. It’s about “how you are living” and “community service and brotherhood.” What we want to do is “bring that holistic community feeling back.”

    The movement signals a cultural shift, particularly among young Black men who have popularized it. Many associated Nike Techs with Black culture and, unfortunately, with corresponding negative stereotypes. The movement is fueled by a younger generation trying to leave those associations behind, TikToker Tamu Atemie said to Newsweek. 

    Is it about conforming or does it symbolize more?
    Critics online have dismissed the trend as a “form of respectability politics,” claiming participants are “making themselves more acceptable for white, mainstream society,” said the Chicago Sun-Times. But the quarter-zip enthusiasts “push back on that critique,” saying their intention is to be “fashionable, build self-confidence, foster community and show Black men doing positive things while having fun.” 

    For all his “talk of personal reinvention,” it would be “unwise to read too much into any pivot,” said Gyamfi to The New York Times. There’s not necessarily a difference between “wearing a Nike Tech or a quarter-zip” because “clothes don’t make the man, the man makes the clothes.”

     
     

    Good day 🧑‍🎨

    … for breaking barriers. Glasgow’s Nnena Kalu, 59, has become the first artist with learning disabilities to win the prestigious Turner Prize for what the judges called her “bold and compelling” work. Her large, hanging cocoonlike sculptures, made from old VHS tape, rope and fabric, beat the work of three other artists.

     
     

    Bad day 🫟

    … for having tattoos. Ink from tattoos can migrate to lymph nodes, causing inflammation that can alter the body's immune response to vaccination, according to a study on mice published in PNAS. Ink accumulation can reduce immunity to mRNA vaccines for Covid-19, though it can enhance the response to an influenza vaccine.

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Candlelit prayer

    A devotee of the Virgin of Guadalupe in the atrium of the Basilica of Guadalupe in Mexico City. Every Dec. 12, Mexicans celebrate the anniversary of the Virgin Mary’s apparition in 1531. About 13,500 people made the pilgrimage this year, said The Arizona Republic. The crowd sang the traditional Mexican birthday song “Las Mañanitas” at midnight.
    Cristopher Rogel Blanquet / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily crossword

    Test your general knowledge with The Week's daily crossword, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and codewords

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    Albums to stream during the winter chill

    The new year is mere weeks away, and while the weather outside may be frightful, there’s plenty of new music that isn’t. Check out some fresh albums from your favorite artists this winter.

    Orville Peck, ‘Appaloosa’ 
    The artist is known for often wearing a mask in public, but his fans aren’t hiding their excitement about Peck’s new EP, “Appaloosa,” which comes a year after Peck released his third studio album, “Stampede.” The country rock singer, whose deep voice and booming vocals put him on the map, wants people to hear the “other side of country,” he said to Billboard. (out now)

    Zach Bryan, ‘With Heaven on Top’
    Country star Bryan released a live album one year ago, and now he’s following that up with a new EP, “With Heaven on Top.” The offering is “expected to include previously hinted-at tracks like ‘In Dreams’ and ‘Plastic Cigarette,’” said Country Central. The project’s eponymous single is out now. (Jan. 9)

    Charlie XCX, ‘Wuthering Heights’
    Ms. XCX helped everyone have a brat summer with her 2024 album, and now the pop superstar is getting ready to hit the music world again. The album is the official soundtrack for the upcoming film of the same name starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi. The LP comes as Charlie XCX has been in a “state of overwhelming creativity of late, so much so that I feel like I’m running on the spot in a dream,” she said on Substack. (Feb. 13)

    Read more

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    spoofing

    Disguising one’s identity or location. An oil tanker seized on Wednesday by the U.S. off the Venezuelan coast spent years sailing the seas unnoticed by engaging in AIS (automatic identification system) spoofing. AIS data provides real-time information about a ship’s location. The ship also frequently changed its flags and name.

     
     

    Poll watch

    Almost two-thirds of U.S. teens (64%) have used an AI chatbot, according to a Pew Research Center survey. The poll of 1,458 people ages 15 to 17 found that Black teens (69%) and Hispanic teens (68%) are more likely to use chatbots than white teens (58%).

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today's best commentary

    ‘Young people are getting dumber. Here’s why.’
    David Scharfenberg at The Boston Globe
    Young people are “getting dumber. Like, shockingly dumber,” says David Scharfenberg. The pandemic “certainly bears some of the blame. But the problem runs deeper than that.” We are “in the midst of a worldwide decline in academic achievement that predates the Covid-19 outbreak, going back a decade or more.” It may have “taken the shock of the pandemic to focus our attention on what had been a quiet academic crisis,” but it would be “foolish now to look away.”

    ‘New York City is killing homeownership and no one cares’
    Jason Mendez at The Hill
    New York City is “becoming unsettlingly uniform in one uncomfortable way: Nearly all are renters, hardly ever owners,” says Jason Mendez. For “decades, owning a home in New York was a difficult but attainable aspiration,” but “today, those opportunities are fast disappearing.” The result is a city with a “shrinking supply of homes to buy and where the few left costing millions are unattainable for most New Yorkers — an irresistible scenario for landlords who know they have a captive audience.”

    ‘The slop of things to come’
    Matt Alston at The Nation
    A “bitter chorus of criticism and online vituperation ensued” over an AI-generated McDonald’s ad, says Matt Alston. The “wariness and fear around AI may be galvanizing into something like a collective immune response to AI slop.” The “labor economy Armageddon isn’t likely to descend on what are euphemistically known as the creative industries if the end product is as repellent as the McDonald’s spot.” It’s “little more than the crudest imaginable simulacrum of human experience.”

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Theara Coleman, Nadia Croes, Scott Hocker, Justin Klawans, Joel Mathis, Summer Meza and Rafi Schwartz, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; Scott Olson / Getty Images; The Good Brigade / Getty Images; Warner / Warner / Atlantic
     

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