What the L? / ‘A disaster for America’ / Quizzes!

What the L? The CTA next month will close and demolish its 130-year-old elevated State and Lake stop for three years—to replace it with a new glass-covered station.
Meanwhile, Axios’ Monica Eng reports firsthand, Chicago’s neglecting snow and ice removal in its bike lanes: “I almost wiped out five times riding Divvys downtown this week.”
Men Yell at Me proprietor Lyz Lenz’s Dingus of the Week: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, who “wants to do for American roads what Oprah did for the beef industry, or what Exxon Valdez did for the oceans. What fire did for the Library of Alexandria.”

 … and the Tribune (gift link) reports that the state has revoked at least one Enterprise Rent-A-Car license plate after it was used in just that way.
The Trib also reports that the City of Chicago was warned weeks in advance about immigration raids that eventually swept up more than 70 people working at O’Hare’s rideshare parking lots.
A Trump administration lawyer says “Operation Midway Blitz” ain’t over.
Someone vandalized an Evanston church’s Nativity scene featuring a zip-tied baby Jesus, Mary and Joseph in gas masks and Roman centurion-like figures dressed like ICE.
Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch writes from New Orleans: “The first day of long-feared federal immigration raids … exposes the Big Lie of mass deportation.”

‘A disaster for America.’ That’s what monopoly expert Matt Stoller foresees if Netflix buys Warner Bros. Discovery …
 … which it’s in a position to do under a deal announced today.
That would give Netflix control over franchises including DC Comics, Harry Potter and Game of Thrones.
Netflix’s chief pledges to keep movies in theaters, but not to wait so long to make them available for streaming at home.
Columnist and ex-Illinois Rep. Marie Newman: “Technology is evolving at lightning speed, while our lawmakers, particularly Congress, move at a crawl. … It has become a longstanding problem.”

‘A bracing reminder of the damage that Trump is inflicting on the rule of law.’ Columnist Robert Hubbell says Thursday was particularly painful …
 … as, among other developments, the Supreme Court cleared Texas to use a congressional map gerrymandered to benefit Republicans next year—despite a lower court’s finding that the map’s likely discriminatory on the basis on race.

‘Mitch testified and, to be Frank … things went Bradley.’ That’s Stephen Colbert’s assessment of yesterday’s appearance before lawmakers by the Navy admiral who oversaw military strikes on an alleged drug boat in the Caribbean, Frank “Mitch” Bradley …
 … who the AP reports insisted that, although “there was no ‘kill them all’ order from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth … a stark video of the attack left grave questions.”
A source with direct knowledge of the briefing called Bradley’s rationale for killing two survivors “fucking insane.”

Another AI caution. Axios: Facebook parent Meta has cut deals with a range of news publishers—notably including several reactionary sources such as Fox News, The Daily Caller and the Washington Examiner—to use their stuff to fuel its AI chat tools’ answers to users’ questions about the news.
The assault on college media continues: Citing Trump administration policies on diversity initiatives, the University of Alabama has shut down two student-run magazines serving Black and female students (New York Times gift link).
Meta’s turning its back on what founder Mark Zuckerberg once called the future of the company, “the metaverse.”

Fa-la-la-la-la fatigued yet? The Conversation’s quizmaster, past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel, has mounted a “nearly holiday-free” news quiz.
Your Square columnist has again scored a measly 6/8 correct.
Then try your hand at Axios’ “Chicago on TV” quiz, on which yours truly scored 7/10 correct.
Maybe you can top 4/5 on City Cast’s Chicago news quiz.
Speaking of intellectual challenges, send thoughts and prayers to columnist Dave Barry, who concludes, “My brain is finally, after all these years, completely full.”

Redwalls singer dead. Justin Baren, who with his brother formed the acclaimed pop band while they were Deerfield High School students, has passed at 40.
A Tribune editorial (gift link) honors the memory of former publisher and editorial page editor Bruce Dold …

67? 41? Those were two of Google’s top trending searches by Chicagoans as highlighted in its “Year in Search” roundup.
Also, Jimmy Kimmel outranked the pope: “None of this would ever have happened without the support of loyal viewers like President Trump.”

Pick the best. The Reader’s Best of Chicago poll is off and running.
It’ll take you less than a minute to vote for Square as Best Newsletter and Best Blog here.

Thanks. Mike Braden made this edition better.

Burn, baby, burn / Costco vs. Trump / ‘A local journalism giant’

Burn, baby, burn. Taking a match to efforts to manage climate change, President Trump is gutting federal rules that would have imposed tighter energy efficiency standards on new cars and trucks—instead making gasoline again the fuel of choice.
 Columnist Mary Geddry describes Trump’s announcement: “A 90-minute monologue about restoring America’s God-given right to burn gasoline like it’s a moral sacrament, all while automakers stood behind him with the pained, frozen smiles of hostages forced to applaud their kidnapper’s karaoke.”

‘The public deserves to see the full extent of the horror.’ Democracy Forward is suing the Trump administration, demanding release of all video footage of its horrific overnight raid in September on a Chicago apartment complex.

Laughing matter—kind of. Federal charges against a Chicago comedy club manager accused of assaulting a Border Patrol agent last month have been dropped.
 Heads Up News columnist Dan Froomkin marvels at New Yorkers who forced ICE to back down—“protesters on offense instead of defense.”

Times vs. Hegseth. The New York Times is going to court, seeking to overturn the Defense Secretary’s rules that have booted most mainstream reporters from the Pentagon.
 Updating coverage: The Navy admiral who reportedly issued orders to fire upon survivors of an attack on an alleged drug boat was on Capitol Hill for a classified briefing. (Cartoon: Jack Ohman.)

Chicago’s police problem. An investigation by the Invisible Institute and ProPublica finds cops getting promoted despite significant problems in their records …
 … notably two of them promoted after investigators had found they’d engaged in sexual misconduct.

Costco vs. Trump. The company’s going to court demanding refunds for the tariffs the president’s imposed on goods from almost every corner of the planet.
 A Tribune editorial (another gift link) cheers: “When one of the country’s most beloved brands says … trade policy is misguided, it risks shifting the conversation from ideology to everyday life—where Trump’s message is most vulnerable.”
 Quartz, on Dollar General’s whoppingly big third-quarter haul: “Welcome to America’s dollar store economy.”
 Economist Paul Krugman: Kevin Hassett, effectively the Trump administration’s chief economist, “did, in just a few sentences, make it clear that he is absolutely unqualified.”
 Meanwhile, Popular Information reports, “an obscure drone company that President Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr., joined as an advisor in November 2024, despite having no notable experience with drones or military contracting,” has landed a $620 million Pentagon loan.

Republicans’ jolt. Politico’s Shia Kapos says this week’s remarkably narrow victory for the Republican in a heavily Republican Tennessee congressional district is sending jitters through Illinois’ Republican Party.
 Message Box columnist Dan Pfeiffer: That election’s turnout was “shockingly high,” which “makes this result far more instructive than your typical special election.”

‘The first Legos ya kinda wanna step on.’ That’s Stephen Colbert, assessing a Lego-made portrait of Trump amid the White House holiday decorations.
 Jimmy Kimmel’s executive producer—and wife—Molly McNearney yesterday delivered a rousing call in defense of free speech—“something I thought I’d always have, like my period. Did you guys know that those just stop? Your period stops. And it turns out your freedom in this country can, too.”
 Kimmel will be honored in March with the President’s Award … from the International Cinematographers Guild.
 Columnist Robert Hubbell: “We need to talk about Trump’s hate speech.”

‘A local journalism giant.’ Tribune alumnus Eric Zorn honors former Trib editor and publisher Bruce Dold, who died yesterday at 70 after battling esophageal cancer for four years.
 Bruce was for many years at the Trib a valued colleague of your Chicago Public Square columnist—long before that, a fellow reporter covering Chicago City Hall …
 … and more recently had been a supporter of this newsletter.

‘A misinformation superspreader.’ NewsGuard finds Google’s new AI image generator “advanced false claims about politicians, public health topics, and top brands 100 percent of the time (30 out of 30) when prompted to do so.”
 And Square would share some of those images here, but that would be wrong.

Voted yet? The Chicago Reader’s Best of Chicago poll is on, and you can help Square regain its title as Best Newsletter—and maybe snag Best Blog, too?
Thanks. Mike Braden made this edition better.

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