Forward reported that friends who attended Hunter College High School in Manhattan with Kagan in the 1970s wanted to send her a "care package" of bagels, lox, babka, chocolates, and other inexpensive items in February 2021.
However, they later scrapped the idea after Kagan expressed concerns about issues it could pose under the Supreme Court's rules on gifts and disclosures, per Forward.
"We thought it would be a sign of support to send her some lox, but she was too ethical to take the lox," said Sarah Schulman, a former school friend, according to the media outlet.
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has had to explain decades of omissions on his annual financial reports. The most recent revelation, as reported by ProPublica, is that Thomas did not mention Republican donor Harlan Crow’s private school tuition payments for the justice’s grandnephew, whom the justice and his wife, Virginia Thomas, were raising “as a son.” That was a direct financial benefit to the Thomases, but it appeared nowhere on the justice’s disclosure statements mandated by the Ethics in Government Act.
The discovery is just the latest to cast a pall on Thomas for providing flimsy excuses for failing to make disclosures on these reports. As a Supreme Court justice, Thomas routinely interprets complex statutes that affect millions of Americans, priding himself on close adherence to the text. It beggars belief that he could repeatedly misinterpret plain statutory requirements and simple instructions on his annual disclosure reports.
In the case of the private school tuition, Thomas’ close friend Mark Paoletta released a statement on Thursday acknowledging Crow’s generous payments for the justice’s greatnephew at two schools for at least the 2006-07 and 2007-08 school years, which may have totaled over $100,000 by the calculations of ProPublica based on the publicly available tuition rates. The money was paid directly to the schools at Crow’s suggestion since Thomas and his wife were “struggling to find a school where they could send their great nephew,” according to Paoletta, a lawyer who has represented Virginia Thomas. The gifts were not included on Thomas’s annual disclosure reports, according to ProPublica.
The payments were excludable from reporting, Paoletta said, because they were gifts to the student rather than the Thomases. Although gifts to a justice’s minor children must ordinarily be disclosed, Paoletta found an escape route. “The definition of a ‘dependent child’ under the Ethics in Government Act … does not include a ‘great nephew’” or ward, he explained. It is limited to a “son, daughter, stepson or stepdaughter.”
Paoletta does not acknowledge the inconvenient truth that the payments were reportable gifts to Thomas himself. I have never heard of adolescents who pay their own tuition, and the boarding school arrangements were made with Thomas’ participation and approval, according to Paoletta’s statement.
Is there any doubt that most parents would consider it a wonderful gift for their dependent child to be provided an expensive education beyond their own means? A few years earlier, Thomas himself disclosed a different donor’s $5,000 “education gift” for the same child.
It is indeed admirable that the Thomases, as Paoletta put it, “devoted twelve years of their lives to helping a beloved child in desperate need of love, support, and guidance,” while encountering “immeasurable personal and financial sacrifices.” But there’s no question Crow’s largesse financially benefited Thomas by saving him, as a legal guardian, from making hefty tuition payments on his own.
Unfortunately, that was not the first time Thomas attempted to justify nondisclosure with a dubious interpretation of the law.
"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
A media commentator for the Daily Wire, Walsh tackles big questions like the scientificity of a black mermaid and the fertility of sixteen-year-old girls. But Walsh has become most well-known for the relentless bile he directs at the LGBTQ movement, particularly in his widely cited documentary What is a Woman? and its sister book.
While the competition has become stiff, Walsh’s truly obsessive fixation on what people do with their genitals has made him the US right’s homophobe and transphobe in chief. And he pairs this bizarre preoccupation with a crusading right-wing Christianity, on full display in Church of Cowards: A Wake-Up Call to Complacent Christians.
Sinan Mahmoud (THE NATIONAL) reported:
Iraq on Saturday called for emergency assistance from the international community to help restore the flow of water in the country's two main rivers.
Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani made the plea for “urgent international intervention” at the start of the two-day Baghdad International Water conference.
“The issue of water has become a sensitive one not only in Iraq but in all countries,” Mr Al Sudani said.
Water levels in the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, which account for more than 90 per cent of Iraq's freshwater reserves, have declined significantly over the years, partly as a result of the construction of dams and diversion of water upstream in Turkey and Iran.
The Prime Minister warned that a shortage of water compounded by climate change would have a substantial impact on Iraq's economic development and environment, with wider ramifications for regional stability.
The KRG Minister of Agriculture and Water Resources, Begard Dlshad, is heading the delegation to present the Region’s perspective on water issues such as drought, that has negatively impacted Iraq in recent years, the minister told Kurdistan 24.
The United Nations is also participating in the conference along with representatives of neighboring countries, including Iran and Turkey.
“The KRG’s dam construction project aims to reduce the reliance on water flow from neighboring countries,” the minister told Kurdistan 24 and added that 30 percent of Iraq’s water reserves are in the Kurdish region.
The 45-year-old Begard Dlshad Shukralla has her degree in biology and has previously held the following posts: 2011 to 2013 head of the PUK's Office for Monitoring and Follow Up, 2013 to 2017 MP in the Kurdistan Parliament and, in 2017, Secretary of the Kurdistan Parliament.
Julian Bechocha (RUDAW) reports:
Iraq is among the countries most vulnerable to the effects of climate
change, including water and food insecurity, according to the United
Nations. It is facing a severe water shortage because of reduced
precipitation and higher temperatures, and waste and mismanagement. The
crisis is worsened by dams upstream in Turkey and Iran that have led to a
significant decrease in the volume of water entering the country.
A visit by Sudani to Turkey in March saw measurable success
after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan agreed to double the water
releases in the Tigris River for a period of one month, saying the
decision was made “in order to relieve Iraq’s distress.”
“The government has set the water file as one of its priorities, and has
taken many policies. And it was necessary to identify the problems with
upstream countries so our meetings with the countries emphasized the
need to give the full share of water,” Sudani said.
During the conference, Sudani also pleaded for “the efforts of all
friends” of the international community to “urgently” assist Iraq
counter water insecurity.
In one of the latest stark warnings of the threats a heating climate
poses to Iraq, a report by the Ministry of Water Resources late last
year predicted that unless urgent action is taken to combat declining
water levels, Iraq’s two main rivers will be entirely dry by 2040.
The Special Representative to the United Nations Secretary General spoke at the conference. Here's what Ghulam Isaczai stated:
Excellencies,
Distinguished guests, good morning.
Today, I have the honor of speaking at the 3rd Baghdad International Water Conference, at the invitation of H.E. Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, Prime Minister of Iraq, and H.E. Aoun Diab, Minister of Water Resources.
I would like to begin by highlighting some positive developments related to the water agenda that have taken place in recent months, thanks to the joint efforts of the Government of Iraq and the United Nations.
Specifically, I would like to congratulate Iraq for being the pioneer in the region to accede to the UN Convention on the Protection and Use of Transboundary Watercourses and International Lakes. This accession will open new opportunities to enhance transboundary water cooperation, while strengthening national water policies and practices, and enhancing intersectoral cooperation and stakeholder participation.
From our side at the United Nations, we have established a Water Task Force comprising water experts from different international organizations and think tanks to provide technical assistance and advice to the Government of Iraq on water issues. Our advocacy and engagement on water challenges in Iraq have increased significantly, reflecting our commitment to supporting Iraq in addressing its looming water crisis.
At the national level, there is a need to:
- Initiate a national dialogue on water and around SDG6 on Clean Water and Sanitation leading to development of a national Water Roadmap.
- Make water resources management as a national priority, while allocating sufficient funds towards research, analysis, innovation, and transfer of efficient technologies for integrated water resources management.
- Invest in national capacity building, water infrastructure including dams, irrigation systems, and wastewater treatment plants, to maximize water usage.
- Promote water conservation measures: such as repairing leaky pipes, introduce water-saving technologies, and enforce regulations on water usage.
- Revive traditional Rainwater harvesting practices such as building catchment systems, to collect and store rainwater for future use.
- Establish water monitoring systems for river and ground water, and take regulatory, technological, and behavioral measures to prevent water pollution, while also investing in urban water recycling.
- Combat desertification through integrated and adaptive land, water, and forest management.
- Launch education and awareness campaigns to promote responsible water usage and conservation.
At the regional level there is a need to:
- Strengthen regional cooperation to develop equitable and eco-friendly water use policies, while developing a negotiated strategy encouraging riparian countries to sign river-basin-management agreements based on a win-win approach.
- Conduct regional water assessment of the economic, environmental, regional integration and political benefits costs of non-cooperation on water resources.
- Actively leverage relevant global legal instruments on transboundary water.
To effectively address Iraq’s water challenges, we must work jointly and transparently. The cross-cutting nature of water means that challenges must be addressed through a whole of government and whole of society approach, and approach that is inclusive and engages the Iraqi people, that is those most directly affected by the water situation.
On our side at the United Nations, we will continue to actively engage with our government counterparts, through the Water Task Force and the Inter-agency working group on climate and environment.
Let me close by saying that all technical solutions to the water problems are within our reach; what we need is effective policies, investments, incentive mechanisms, regulations, and enforcement actions.
The United Nations stands ready to support. I wish you all a fruitful conference.
Thank you.
The following sites updated: