Obamas onboard / Weekly Dingus / Quiz / Taste this

Obamas onboard. Former President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, have formally backed Kamala Harris for president.
The campaign has released a video showing Harris taking the call.
Also endorsing her: Georgia’s former Republican lieutenant governor.
Abortion, Every Day columnist Jessica Valenti: “If the vice president is willing to leave behind Biden-era defensiveness, she can destroy conservatives’ most powerful abortion talking point.”

‘Does she have Silicon Valley donors, or Silicon Valley owners?’ Author and anti-monopoly advocate Matt Stoller says LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman has tossed $10 million to Harris’ campaign—while demanding she dump the anti-monopolistic chair of the Federal Trade Commission.
Sen. Bernie Sanders condemns Hoffman’s “arrogance.”
Press watcher Dan Froomkin offers guidance to journalists: “How to investigate Kamala Harris without repeating the mistakes of 2016.”

What’s in a name? Reporter Ryan Grim: Is it sexist to refer to Harris by her first name?
What’s the deal with the Republican vice-presidential candidate’s initials—“J.D.” vs. “JD” Vance?

Weekly Dingus. Men Yell at Me columnist Lyz Lenz’s pick is Vance, “the false prophet of white male exceptionalism” …
 … and whose dismissal of women without children as “childless cat ladies,” columnist Neil Steinberg says, reveals “a man with an inherently selfish view of life.”
Columnist Evan Hurst: “Turns out he’s frequently made Kamala Harris a primary target of his attacks on women who don’t take their marching orders from white conservative Christian men.”
Donald Trump’s niece, Mary L. Trump: Republican misogyny is “a feature, not a bug.”
Late-night hosts had fun with a story about Vance and … a couch.
The AP had the story but then took it down.
The Washington Post’s Will Oremus: This, um, affair, demonstrates that Elon Musk’s refusal to fight misinfo on Twitter X can hurt conservatives, too.

Can’t get there from here. Get ready to not get near McCormick Place and the United Center during the Democratic National Convention.
The Sun-Times has a detailed list of street closures.
Politico’s Shia Kapos: The plan’s real focus is on safety “as concerns lingered about security stumbles that led to an assassination attempt on Donald Trump.”
Widespread attacks on France’s high-speed rail network paralyzed travel to Paris as the Olympics get underway.

‘Spectacularly wrong.’ Ken Klippenstein complains that “the fact-checking industrial complex” gave a pass to President Biden’s assertion Wednesday night that “the United States is not at war anywhere in the world.”
Vice President Harris says she urged Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to end the war in Gaza.
Updating coverage: Netanyahu was to meet today with Trump.
Columnist Charlie Madigan says Fox News should “drop the pretense” and “just hire Trump.”

‘The question here isn’t how this could happen, but why it happens with such regularity—mostly to Black people.’ Columnist and basketball legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar ponders the police killing of Sonya Massey inside her Springfield home.
A GoFundMe page has been set up to help the family deal with Massey’s death.

Unprecedentedly presidential. This week’s news quiz, devised by The Conversation’s quizmaster, past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel, is a special all-presidential (and vice-presidential) edition.
To beat your Chicago Public Square columnist’s score, you’ll need to be perfect.


Search them. The OpenAI artificial intelligence firm has launched a challenge to Google: SearchGPT …
 … an AI-powered search engine that, instead of spewing just a list of links, aims to organize and summarize the results …
 … but there’s a waitlist to use it.
A U.S. representative from Virginia who lost her voice to progressive supranuclear palsy yesterday became the first lawmaker to use an AI-generated voice model to speak on the House floor.
See and hear her address here.
Aiming to create the “Silicon Valley of quantum development,” Gov. Pritzker’s unveiled plans for a 128-acre project in Chicago’s old U.S. Steel South Works facility, devoted to developing exponentially more powerful computers.

The FDA says several kinds of produce sold at Walmart and Aldi stores in Illinois and other states earlier this month may be contaminated with listeria.
Here’s the full list.

End of the line. This wraps up our latest roll call of Square supporters—people whose contributions keep this service coming: Anne Rowan, David Drew, Darryl Roberts, Randy Young (again!), Ellen Siciliano, Lawrence Rand, Deborah J. Wess, Shel Lustig, Allen Matthews, saknrad, Sally Donatiello, Athene C, Denise Mattson, Eric Davis, Suzy Le Clair, Kevin Wallace, Kevin Parzyck, Tim Woods, Marjorie Huerta, Paul M. Moretta, Ryan Bird, Jim Peterson, Jeff Weissglass, Katherine and Michael Raleigh, Doug Strubel, Barbara Miller, Sara Burrows, Mario Greco, Andrew Stancioff, Keelin Wyman, Ted Slowik, Jayson Hansen, Virginia Mann, Andy Simon, Cynde Seegers, Sonya Booth, Lizzie Schiffman Tufano, Lisa Colpoys and Catherine Schneider, Stan Zoller, Russ Williams, Thomas Gradel, Bob Ely, Sharon Halperin, John D. Abel, Ellen Cutter, Robert A. Shipley, John Teets, Darold Barnum, J. Michael Williams, Annemarie Kill, Garry, Jim Parks, Tom O’Malley, Ann Johnson Arellano, Mike Schultz and Mark Wukas (coincidentally Chicago Public Square Supporter No. 1).
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‘It’d be hard to resist’ / COVID comeback / Sorry for the global chaos. Here’s $10.

‘It’d be hard to resist.’ Gov. Pritzker tells CNN he’d consider becoming Kamala Harris’ running mate if he got the call …
 … and the Sun-Times says he got a call.
He’s one of 12 reportedly on Harris’ shortlist.
Politico’s Shia Kapos: “It seems a long shot. … But Pritzker brings a lot to the table.”
A Tribune editorial calls on Democrats to nominate their ticket live on the Chicago convention floor instead of via virtual vote beforehand.
WTTW: Anticipating possible mass arrests during the convention, Cook County’s opening a new court facility and clearing judges’ schedules.

‘Especially brutal and personal.’ That’s the AP’s take [link added] on Donald Trump’s first rally since President Biden dropped out—a rant brimming with new insults for Harris.
Press critic Dan Froomkin: “The New York Times casts Trump’s racist and misogynistic response … as inevitable, rather than as a deliberate choice.”
Columnist Jeff Tiedrich: “Now he’s got to run against that black lady—and everybody loves the black lady. It’s so unfair.”
Vanity Fair contributing editor and former Tribune TV critic Maureen Ryan braces for the unmasking in the weeks ahead of “a lot more … racist, sexist shitlords.”
Popular Information examines the impact of Trump’s commitment to a corporate tax cut if he’s reelected.
Columnist and ex-U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich spotlights Elon Musk’s support for Trump—“the Mump,” he calls it—and suggests a boycott of Musk’s companies.
Journalism professor Jeff Jarvis shares a pissing match with an MSNBC reporter over her assemblage of a #sowhite focus group of Wisconsin voters.

‘Do we still believe in honesty, decency, respect, freedom, justice and democracy?’ In his historic first speech since dropping out, Biden warned about Trump—without naming him.
Here’s a transcript of Biden’s address, in which he vowed to spend the next six months “doing my job as president.”
Columnist Ken Klippenstein makes the case for Biden quitting now, giving Harris time to “demonstrate her fitness for the Oval Office”—and to render moot questions about whether a woman is ready to be president.
The Daily Beast: Why the veteran Democrats who host Pod Save America refused to cover for Biden after that disastrous debate showing.
Stephen Colbert last night: “I’m a little bit worried—because since Sunday afternoon, I haven’t been that worried.”
The Hollywood Reporter: HBO’s Veep is viral—again.

‘Mostly false.’ That’s PolitiFact’s assessment of Republicans’ labeling of Harris as the Biden administration’s “border czar” …
 … and also its rating of Harris’ assertion that their Project 2025 calls for restricting “access to IVF and contraception.”
CNN: She wrongly described Project 2025’s blueprint for Social Security.

‘How far away was Oswald from Kennedy?’ The FBI director says the gunman who nearly got Trump July 13 googled that phrase a week before the shooting …
 … and he flew a drone around the area two hours before Trump began speaking.

Stark contrast. Comparing congressional reaction to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech with emotions outside the Capitol, Zeteo’s Prem Thakker perceives a big gap between the American people and those in power.
Three Illinois lawmakers skipped the address …
 … instead to meet with families of hostages held in Gaza, who condemned Netanyahu for not discussing ceasefire terms.

COVID comeback. It’s on the rise again in Chicago.
Block Club: Drugstores’ closures are creating “pharmacy deserts” in the city.
CVS and its pharmacy benefits arm, Caremark, reportedly have agreed to pay Illinois at least $45 million to settle charges it cheated the state out of drugmakers’ rebates.
Bloomberg: Poorly trained nurse practitioners, often now at the center of U.S. health care, are imperiling patients.
The Arm and a Leg podcast about healthcare wants to see your hospital bills.

Southwest Airlines’ revolutionary changes. It’s abandoning open seating, offering premium seating and adding overnight flights.

Sorry for the global chaos. Here’s $10. CrowdStrike, whose Windows software upgrade last week generated blue screens of death for governments, businesses and, you know, regular humans worldwide, has been sending its clients $10 Uber Eats gift cards …
Somone stole computers potentially rich with confidential information from Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s office.

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