Now, the funeral / Things to come / Fox pas / ‘Super gross’

Now, the funeral. CNN: Services for assassinated reactionary activist Charlie Kirk—scheduled for Sunday in Arizona—pose a massive challenge for law enforcement.
 The Bulwark: Stephen Miller—“the most powerful guy in Trump’s ear”—has “a plan for how to respond to the death of Charlie Kirk. You’re not going to like it.”
 Self-described queer Army vet Charlotte Clymer: “Without knowing any details on the shooting—the motivation, who was involved, how it happened—I knew, instinctually, that trans people would somehow be blamed for it” …
 … hysteria fueled in part by what columnist Jennifer Schulze calls “incendiary,” “reckless” reporting by The Wall Street Journal.
 Pro-Israel Political Update proprietor Steve Sheffey: “Kirk did not deserve to die, but he does not deserve the Presidential Medal of Freedom.”
 Politico: Kirk’s death is fueling Republicans’ push to redistrict state congressional maps.
 Columnist Christopher Armitage, warning that Republicans are close to fully capturing the federal government: It’s time to “get serious about local governance.”

‘They are both Vermin! Support ICE!’ That threatening note condemning immigrants and rats—accompanied by a dead rodent—was left outside a Chicago City Council member’s office last night.
 Columnist and former U.S. Rep. Marie Newman: “This week alone I’ve received dozens of threats, insults and accusations on Substack and other platforms or via email.”
 South suburban residents were urged to shelter in place this morning as police sought men “possibly armed with guns.”

On Guard politics. A Sun-Times analysis of federal campaign contributions finds members and employees of the National Guard in Illinois and nationwide split about 2-to-1 in favor of Republicans over Democrats.
 Axios: “Illinois elected officials and immigrant rights advocates are calling for a transparent investigation of a fatal shooting by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer.”
 Block Club: Chicago’s Mexican Independence Day weekend “was unusually quiet.”
 WBEZ and the Sun-Times are mapping your photos of federal immigration enforcement in Chicago.
 You can submit yours here.

Things to come. The Sun-Times says Philadelphia’s experience with massive transit cuts could foreshadow the transportation omnishambles in store for Chicago if the state doesn’t get the Regional Transportation Authority off its path toward a fiscal cliff.
 The RTA’s pressing its subsidiaries—the CTA, Metra and Pace—to spell out just what they’ll cut if they have to.

‘You only truly know how much you love something when you get a sense that you might be losing it. … In September of 2025, my friends, I have never loved my country more desperately.’ Stephen Colbert, his show to be canceled next year, alluded to politics last night as he accepted the Emmy for Outstanding Talk Series.
 The Hollywood Reporter: The ceremony was silent on the assassination of Charlie Kirk—but got political in other ways …
 … including Hacks star and Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series winner Hannah Einbinder’s closing words: “Fuck ICE, and free Palestine.”

Fox pas. Conceding that he’d been “extremely callous,” Fox News host Brian Kilmeade has apologized for advocating the “involuntary lethal injection” of homeless people who refuse to accept support services.
 Stelter at CNN: “Apologies are very rare in Foxville.”
 Columnist and ex-New York Times public editor Margaret Sullivan scans the media landscape to determine “what gets you fired—or celebrated—on cable news.”
 Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch (gift link, possible because people kick in a buck or two to support Chicago Public Square): “It’s unconstitutional for the government to sanction citizens for voicing their opinions. … Yet that’s where this thing is rapidly heading.”
 The AP: Workers commenting on Charlie Kirk’s death are learning that the First Amendment doesn’t do squat for them.

He ‘undeniably made our state better.’ That’s Gov. Pritzker, praising his Republican predecessor Jim Edgar, dead at 79.
 Ex-Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn calls Edgar “a good and decent man who … believed in property tax reform and a quality education for everyone.”

‘Super gross … to see all these glowing obits for [Chicago broadcaster] Bruce DuMont.’ Reader Manning Peterson was disappointed Friday’s Chicago Public Square failed to “mention that his Oak Park ‘housemate’ (and—after prison—husband) was arrested and convicted for child pornography. … Everyone in Chicago media knows about it, but no one mentions it?”

Got ’im? / A broadcast giant passes / Quizzes

 Utah’s governor says the suspect seems to have acted alone.
 Law professor and former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance counsels patience: “Early evidence that leads investigators to focus on one subject and set of motives can ultimately turn out to be … false.” (Photos: FBI release.)

5 rumors about Kirk, fact-checked. Surprise: Snopes says they’re all true.
 Chicago radio veteran Mike Novak: “Kirk … did not deserve to die. He deserved to be fact-checked. Every single time.”
 Stephen King apologizes for claiming Kirk “advocated stoning gays to death.”
 Investigative journalist Ken Klippenstein: “Kirk, 9/11 have this in common.”
 Breaking-news folk singer Jesse Welles whipped out a new one marking Kirk’s death: “Charlie,” whose lyrics include “I heard laughing, I heard glee. But it coulda been you, it coulda been me.”

‘The radical left and … corrupt media.’ That’s who Downstate Illinois Republican Rep. Mary Miller blames for Kirk’s death.
 Columnist Neil Steinberg: “This is a very old playbook. In the 1870s, it was called ‘waving the bloody shirt.’”
 Veteran AP reporter Ron Fournier: “If you’re a liberal, an independent, or old-line conservative who doesn’t toe the MAGA line … the Trump administration may come after you.”
 The growing roster of media figures fired for sharing comments other than thoughts and prayers for Kirk now includes a DC Comics writer.
 A Tribune editorial (gift link, available because readers support Chicago Public Square): “Kirk’s legacy should be a new American commitment to free speech and debate.”
 The American Prospect’s Ryan Cooper: “Trump and the Republican Party … are setting up, without exaggeration, a fully totalitarian attack on campus free speech and academic freedom … the most extreme such attack in American history.”
 The State Department warns immigrants that their legal status will be subject to review if they’re caught “praising, rationalizing, or making light” of Kirk’s death.
 Chicago city officials and community leaders are bracing for a tense Mexican Independence Day weekend amid the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.
 Meanwhile, the president’s turned his attention to Memphis.

How safe are Chicago pols? Almost half the City Council’s signed a letter asking for a full police department review of security measures in light of the nation’s spate of political shootings.
 USA Today’s Rex Huppke: “I shouldn’t have to text my kids and tell them to avoid the horrific viral video of Kirk being shot.”

‘Replace today’s relatively ineffective Regional Transit Authority.’ Transportation-focused columnist Richard Day favors legislation to create “a new and more powerful Northern Illinois Transit Authority.”
 A new survey of rider satisfaction finds CTA riders not so pleased as those riding Metra trains and Pace buses.
 In the works for Chicago: Air pollution readings by neighborhood.

All the media? The Wall Street Journal (gift link) says the newly merged Trump-friendly Paramount Skydance media empire—which now controls CBS, Comedy Central and more—is prepping a bid to absorb Warner Bros. Discovery, including CNN, HBO, Warner Bros. Pictures and DC Studios …
 … a move that Status says could put both CNN and CBS under the editorial control of conservative Bari Weiss.
 A South Park episode in which Cartman is awarded the “Charlie Kirk Award for Young Master Debaters” was yanked from Comedy Central …
 … but it remains available on sibling Paramount+.
 Everyone Is Entitled to My Own Opinion proprietor Jeff Tiedrich: “The worthless scribblers of the corporate-controlled press are not our friends, and they haven’t been our friends in a very long time.”

A broadcast giant passes. Bruce DuMont, whose Beyond the Beltway became must-listening for conservatives, is dead at 81.
 Although the program ended its run on Chicago’s WIND-AM—which coincidentally also carried Charlie Kirk’s show—it began on public radio WBEZ …
 … whose former news director Ken Davis remembers a show that “wasn’t for the weak. It was loud. Raucous. There was emotion. And often, there was laughter.”
 Your Chicago Public Square columnist’s final appearance on the show, in 2020, wasn’t a lot of fun.

In fairness, a lot was going on. Your columnist scored a depressing 3/8 on this week’s news quiz from The Conversation’s quizmaster, past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel.
 Hey, maybe you’ll also do better than Square’s disappointing 2/5 on the City Cast Chicago quiz.

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Thanks. Beth Kujawski made this edition better.

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