Minnesota Vice. Is There Anyone Trump Can’t Fire? Plus. . . Let kids play with kids. Charlie Kirk’s final message for America. Free Press meetups. And much more.
A Minneapolis nonprofit group was supposed to feed children during the Covid pandemic but is now at the center of a sprawling fraud investigation. (Stephen Maturen via Getty Images)
It’s Tuesday, December 9. This is The Front Page, your daily window into the world of The Free Press—and our take on the world at large. Today: Will the Supreme Court let Trump fire whoever he wants? The woman who got a PhD—and was abused online for it. Should assisted suicide be legal? Why you shouldn’t feel guilty for not playing with your kids. And much more. But first: What’s the matter with Minnesota? How could this happen? That is a question we have been asking ever since the Minnesota fraud scheme landed in the headlines recently. The basic facts are shocking. A Minneapolis nonprofit group called Feeding Our Future was supposed to feed children during the Covid pandemic but is now at the center of a sprawling fraud investigation that has uncovered more than $250 million of plunder. Dozens of people with ties to the Somali community in Minneapolis and neighboring St. Paul billed the state for services they never provided, sometimes spending the money they received on cars, houses, trips, and other luxuries. If that wasn’t bad enough, we learned last month that some of the cash siphoned off from the Land of 10,000 Lakes might have ended up in the hands of Islamist terrorists in Somalia. One answer to our big question comes from Dave Kansas, who grew up in Minnesota, left for much of his newspaper career, and now lives in St. Paul. Many things in the state have changed—and not for the best, Dave writes. Ayaan Hirsi Ali was born in Mogadishu, not Minneapolis, and she writes that it wasn’t hard to predict what happened. The Somali community has clustered with the same social logic that governs life where she grew up. Click below to read both of the stories. —Rick Brooks Should We Legalize Assisted Suicide?New York is considering legalizing assisted suicide, and it has ignited a fierce debate over morality, bodily autonomy, and what we owe patients with terminal illness. Two medical ethicists, Dr. Lydia Dugdale and David Hoffman, face off over what’s at stake in the future of medical aid in dying. |