from russia hack blame trump shifts...2020/12/20  · remove his name from trending topics pages....

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U(D547FD)v+\!#!/!$!z An oral history of Bed Bath & Beyond’s plus-size mailer, known as Big Blue, which has made it to TV, eBay, even a mobster’s kitchen drawer. PAGE 1 SUNDAY BUSINESS The World’s Biggest Coupon Viola Davis and members of the cre- ative team discuss what it took to adapt August Wilson’s play “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” for Netflix. PAGE 6 ARTS & LEISURE Chadwick Boseman’s Last Bow A ceramic Nativity scene at the Vatican, complete with a torpedo-shaped Joseph and Mary, has prompted both criticism and head-scratching. PAGE 12 INTERNATIONAL 12-18 Not Your Average Manger BJ Miller PAGE 4 SUNDAY REVIEW CHICOPEE, Mass. — The tenants in the third-floor apartment had 30 minutes to leave. Deputies from the Hampden County Sheriff’s Department — in black uni- forms, with bulletproof vests and gold star badges — had climbed the back stairs with an eviction notice. The tenants — 22 and 23, in matching Tommy Hilfiger sweatshirts and Crocs — were exhausted and dazed. They had stuffed some of their possessions into trash bags and suitcases, but much of what they owned would be left behind, in mounds on the floor. “I’m sorry it’s so messy,” said one of the women. In those last moments before becoming homeless, she stood at the sink, carefully washing out the baby bot- tles they used to feed their puppy. As they stepped back to give the wom- en room, the officers talked among them- selves, considering what it means to evict tenants in December 2020. They felt uneasy about it. “I really don’t think people should be displaced, certainly during a pandemic,” said one of the officers, Lt. Michael Gold- berg. “Five months ago we stopped evic- tenants. The coronavirus struck in a country al- ready chronically short of affordable housing. Now, after a summer of cata- strophic job loss, 6.7 million adults are likely to face eviction or foreclosure in the next two months, according to the Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Sur- vey. But evictions are resuming under un- precedented scrutiny. If displacing households was considered unsafe in September, when contagion rates were lower than they are now, is it an accept- able risk at this point? Won’t the virus just spread faster if evicted tenants end up in shelters? One person grappling with these ques- tions is Nicholas Cocchi, the sheriff of Hampden County, in western Massachu- setts. Sheriff Cocchi, who has the gleaming scalp and tree-trunk neck of a central- casting lawman, presides over Spring- field, a city where nearly 27 percent of the population lives below the poverty line. His predecessor was a former social worker, and Sheriff Cocchi has carried on that progressive tradition, branching out tions because of what was going on in the world, and now we’re moving forward with evictions, when it’s still going on, if not worse.” With a federal moratorium set to lapse on Dec. 31, America’s vast eviction ma- chine is gradually coming back online, al- lowing landlords to get rid of nonpaying A deputy in Sheriff Nicholas Cocchi’s department in Hampden County, Mass., placing a notice to quit in an apartment door. BRYAN ANSELM FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES When It’s Time for the Tenants to Go As Evictions Resume, a Massachusetts Sheriff Tries to Soften the Blow Sheriff Cocchi has worried about re- suming evictions, seeking ways to make them “respectful and humane.” JILLIAN FREYER FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page 6 By ELLEN BARRY WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is rushing to ap- prove a final wave of large-scale mining and energy projects on federal lands, encouraged by in- vestors who want to try to ensure the projects move ahead even af- ter President-elect Joseph R. Bi- den Jr. takes office. In Arizona, the Forest Service is preparing to sign off on the trans- fer of federal forest land — consid- ered sacred by a neighboring Na- tive American tribe — to allow construction of one of the nation’s largest copper mines. In Utah, the Interior Depart- ment may grant final approval as soon as this week to a team of en- ergy speculators targeting a re- mote spot inside an iconic national wilderness area — where new en- ergy leasing is currently banned — so they can start drilling into what they believe is a huge under- ground supply of helium. In northern Nevada, the depart- ment is close to granting final ap- proval to construct a sprawling open-pit lithium mine on federal land that sits above a prehistoric volcano site. And in the East, the Forest Service intends to take a key step next month toward allowing a nat- ural gas pipeline to be built through the Jefferson National Forest in Virginia and West Vir- ginia, at one point running under- neath the Appalachian Trail. These projects, and others awaiting action in the remaining TRUMP UNLOCKS FEDERAL LANDS IN A FINAL RUSH FOR ENERGY AND MINING Projects Facing Protests From Environmental and Tribal Groups By ERIC LIPTON Continued on Page 22 WASHINGTON — His eco- nomic and environment teams are a little left of center. His foreign policy picks fall squarely in the Democratic Party’s mainstream. His top White House aides are Washington veterans. Taken together, the picture that emerges from President-elect Jo- seph R. Biden Jr.’s personnel choices is a familiar, pragmatic and largely centrist one. That fits with the implicit deal the former vice president and sen- ator offered Democrats during the 2020 primaries — that he was nei- ther as progressive as Senators Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachu- setts, nor a product of Wall Street like Republican-turned-Democrat Michael Bloomberg. Still a work in progress, Mr. Bi- den’s cabinet is designed to be an extension of his own ideology, rooted in long-held Democratic Party principles but with a great- er focus on the plight of working- class Americans, a new sense of urgency about climate change and a deeper empathy about the issues of racial justice that he has said persuaded him to run for the presidency a third time. His nominees are a reflection of the image that his campaign con- veyed and that powered his defeat of President Trump. They are di- verse in ways that appeal to liber- als, young voters and people of color. And they are moderate like the swing voters who helped him win in states like Wisconsin, Penn- sylvania and Michigan. “That’s him,” said Bill Daley, who was a White House chief of staff for President Barack Obama. “That’s his whole campaign.” For his cabinet, Mr. Obama as- sembled outsize personalities like Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Robert M. Gates, the defense secretary who was a holdover from the George W. Bush adminis- tration. Mr. Biden’s cabinet so far has no one likely to draw the same kind of high-octane attention. His choices have decades of quiet, behind-the- scenes policymaking experience, matching Mr. Biden’s pledge to re- turn basic competence to the gov- ernment after four years of Mr. On Philosophy, Biden Cabinet Leans Centrist Picks Have Left Some Liberals Frustrated By MICHAEL D. SHEAR and MICHAEL CROWLEY Continued on Page 24 In the early hours of Feb. 7, Chi- na’s powerful internet censors ex- perienced an unfamiliar and deeply unsettling sensation. They felt they were losing control. The news was spreading quickly that Li Wenliang, a doctor who had warned about a strange new viral outbreak only to be threatened by the police and ac- cused of peddling rumors, had died of Covid-19. Grief and fury coursed through social media. To people at home and abroad, Dr. Li’s death showed the terrible cost of the Chinese government’s in- stinct to suppress inconvenient in- formation. Yet China’s censors decided to double down. Warning of the “un- precedented challenge” Dr. Li’s passing had posed and the “but- terfly effect” it may have set off, officials got to work suppressing the inconvenient news and re- claiming the narrative, according to confidential directives sent to local propaganda workers and news outlets. They ordered news websites not to issue push notifications alerting readers to his death. They told social platforms to gradually remove his name from trending topics pages. And they activated legions of fake online commenters to flood social sites with distract- ing chatter, stressing the need for discretion: “As commenters fight to guide public opinion, they must conceal their identity, avoid crude patriotism and sarcastic praise, ‘Be Sleek and Silent’: How China Censored Bad News About Covid This article is by Raymond Zhong, Paul Mozur, Jeff Kao and Aaron Krolik. Continued on Page 14 Hours after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told a conservative radio show host that “we can say pretty clearly that it was the Rus- sians” behind the vast hack of the federal government and Ameri- can industry, he was contradicted on Saturday by President Trump, who sought to muddy the intelli- gence findings by raising the pos- sibility that China was responsi- ble. Defying the conclusions of ex- perts inside and outside the gov- ernment who say the attack was a cybersecurity breach on a scale Washington has never experi- enced, Mr. Trump also played down the severity of the hack, say- ing “everything is well under con- trol,” insisting that the news me- dia has exaggerated the damage and suggesting, with no evidence, that the real issue was whether the election results had been com- promised. “There could also have been a hit on our ridiculous voting ma- chines during the election,” he wrote on Twitter in his latest itera- tion of that unfounded conspiracy theory. He tagged Mr. Pompeo, the latest cabinet member to an- ger him, in his Twitter post. With 30 days left in office, Mr. Trump’s dismissive statements Trump Shifts Hack Blame From Russia By DAVID E. SANGER and NICOLE PERLROTH Continued on Page 28 DIEGO IBARRA SANCHEZ FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES An inquiry into a deadly blast that shook Lebanon’s capital has become mired in politics. Page 18. Rebuilding in Beirut LONDON LOCKDOWN A rampant strain of the virus has prompted severe restrictions. PAGE 10 Ohio State lurched to the Big Ten title and Clemson pummeled Notre Dame, further jumbling the virus-plagued College Football Playoff. PAGE 34 SPORTS 32-35 A Messy Season Nears Its End Late Edition VOL. CLXX . . . No. 58,913 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2020 Today, mostly cloudy, passing show- ers, high 37. Tonight, rain or snow showers, cloudy, low 33. Tomorrow, clouds and sunshine, high 40. Weather map appears on Page 26. $6.00

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  • C M Y K Nxxx,2020-12-20,A,001,Bs-4C,E2

    U(D547FD)v+\!#!/!$!z

    An oral history of Bed Bath & Beyond’splus-size mailer, known as Big Blue,which has made it to TV, eBay, even amobster’s kitchen drawer. PAGE 1

    SUNDAY BUSINESS

    The World’s Biggest CouponViola Davis and members of the cre-ative team discuss what it took to adaptAugust Wilson’s play “Ma Rainey’sBlack Bottom” for Netflix. PAGE 6

    ARTS & LEISURE

    Chadwick Boseman’s Last BowA ceramic Nativity scene at the Vatican,complete with a torpedo-shaped Josephand Mary, has prompted both criticismand head-scratching. PAGE 12

    INTERNATIONAL 12-18

    Not Your Average Manger BJ Miller PAGE 4SUNDAY REVIEW

    CHICOPEE, Mass. — The tenants inthe third-floor apartment had 30 minutesto leave.

    Deputies from the Hampden CountySheriff’s Department — in black uni-forms, with bulletproof vests and goldstar badges — had climbed the backstairs with an eviction notice.

    The tenants — 22 and 23, in matchingTommy Hilfiger sweatshirts and Crocs— were exhausted and dazed. They hadstuffed some of their possessions intotrash bags and suitcases, but much ofwhat they owned would be left behind, inmounds on the floor.

    “I’m sorry it’s so messy,” said one ofthe women. In those last moments beforebecoming homeless, she stood at thesink, carefully washing out the baby bot-tles they used to feed their puppy.

    As they stepped back to give the wom-en room, the officers talked among them-selves, considering what it means toevict tenants in December 2020. Theyfelt uneasy about it.

    “I really don’t think people should bedisplaced, certainly during a pandemic,”said one of the officers, Lt. Michael Gold-berg. “Five months ago we stopped evic-

    tenants.The coronavirus struck in a country al-

    ready chronically short of affordablehousing. Now, after a summer of cata-strophic job loss, 6.7 million adults arelikely to face eviction or foreclosure inthe next two months, according to theCensus Bureau’s Household Pulse Sur-vey.

    But evictions are resuming under un-precedented scrutiny. If displacinghouseholds was considered unsafe inSeptember, when contagion rates werelower than they are now, is it an accept-able risk at this point? Won’t the virusjust spread faster if evicted tenants endup in shelters?

    One person grappling with these ques-tions is Nicholas Cocchi, the sheriff ofHampden County, in western Massachu-setts.

    Sheriff Cocchi, who has the gleamingscalp and tree-trunk neck of a central-casting lawman, presides over Spring-field, a city where nearly 27 percent ofthe population lives below the povertyline. His predecessor was a former socialworker, and Sheriff Cocchi has carried onthat progressive tradition, branching out

    tions because of what was going on in theworld, and now we’re moving forwardwith evictions, when it’s still going on, ifnot worse.”

    With a federal moratorium set to lapseon Dec. 31, America’s vast eviction ma-chine is gradually coming back online, al-lowing landlords to get rid of nonpaying

    A deputy in Sheriff Nicholas Cocchi’s department in Hampden County, Mass., placing a notice to quit in an apartment door.BRYAN ANSELM FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    When It’s Time for the Tenants to GoAs Evictions Resume, a Massachusetts Sheriff Tries to Soften the Blow

    Sheriff Cocchi has worried about re-suming evictions, seeking ways tomake them “respectful and humane.”

    JILLIAN FREYER FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    Continued on Page 6

    By ELLEN BARRY

    WASHINGTON — The Trumpadministration is rushing to ap-prove a final wave of large-scalemining and energy projects onfederal lands, encouraged by in-vestors who want to try to ensurethe projects move ahead even af-ter President-elect Joseph R. Bi-den Jr. takes office.

    In Arizona, the Forest Service ispreparing to sign off on the trans-fer of federal forest land — consid-ered sacred by a neighboring Na-tive American tribe — to allowconstruction of one of the nation’slargest copper mines.

    In Utah, the Interior Depart-ment may grant final approval assoon as this week to a team of en-ergy speculators targeting a re-mote spot inside an iconic nationalwilderness area — where new en-ergy leasing is currently banned— so they can start drilling intowhat they believe is a huge under-ground supply of helium.

    In northern Nevada, the depart-ment is close to granting final ap-proval to construct a sprawlingopen-pit lithium mine on federalland that sits above a prehistoricvolcano site.

    And in the East, the ForestService intends to take a key stepnext month toward allowing a nat-ural gas pipeline to be builtthrough the Jefferson NationalForest in Virginia and West Vir-ginia, at one point running under-neath the Appalachian Trail.

    These projects, and othersawaiting action in the remaining

    TRUMP UNLOCKSFEDERAL LANDSIN A FINAL RUSH

    FOR ENERGY AND MINING

    Projects Facing ProtestsFrom Environmental

    and Tribal Groups

    By ERIC LIPTON

    Continued on Page 22

    WASHINGTON — His eco-nomic and environment teams area little left of center. His foreignpolicy picks fall squarely in theDemocratic Party’s mainstream.His top White House aides areWashington veterans.

    Taken together, the picture thatemerges from President-elect Jo-seph R. Biden Jr.’s personnelchoices is a familiar, pragmaticand largely centrist one.

    That fits with the implicit dealthe former vice president and sen-ator offered Democrats during the2020 primaries — that he was nei-ther as progressive as SenatorsBernie Sanders of Vermont andElizabeth Warren of Massachu-setts, nor a product of Wall Streetlike Republican-turned-DemocratMichael Bloomberg.

    Still a work in progress, Mr. Bi-den’s cabinet is designed to be anextension of his own ideology,rooted in long-held DemocraticParty principles but with a great-er focus on the plight of working-class Americans, a new sense ofurgency about climate changeand a deeper empathy about theissues of racial justice that he hassaid persuaded him to run for thepresidency a third time.

    His nominees are a reflection ofthe image that his campaign con-veyed and that powered his defeatof President Trump. They are di-verse in ways that appeal to liber-als, young voters and people ofcolor. And they are moderate likethe swing voters who helped himwin in states like Wisconsin, Penn-sylvania and Michigan.

    “That’s him,” said Bill Daley,who was a White House chief ofstaff for President Barack Obama.“That’s his whole campaign.”

    For his cabinet, Mr. Obama as-sembled outsize personalities likeSecretary of State Hillary Clintonand Robert M. Gates, the defensesecretary who was a holdoverfrom the George W. Bush adminis-tration.

    Mr. Biden’s cabinet so far has noone likely to draw the same kind ofhigh-octane attention. His choiceshave decades of quiet, behind-the-scenes policymaking experience,matching Mr. Biden’s pledge to re-turn basic competence to the gov-ernment after four years of Mr.

    On Philosophy,Biden CabinetLeans Centrist

    Picks Have Left SomeLiberals Frustrated

    By MICHAEL D. SHEARand MICHAEL CROWLEY

    Continued on Page 24

    In the early hours of Feb. 7, Chi-na’s powerful internet censors ex-perienced an unfamiliar anddeeply unsettling sensation. Theyfelt they were losing control.

    The news was spreadingquickly that Li Wenliang, a doctorwho had warned about a strangenew viral outbreak only to bethreatened by the police and ac-cused of peddling rumors, haddied of Covid-19. Grief and furycoursed through social media. Topeople at home and abroad, Dr.Li’s death showed the terrible costof the Chinese government’s in-stinct to suppress inconvenient in-formation.

    Yet China’s censors decided todouble down. Warning of the “un-precedented challenge” Dr. Li’spassing had posed and the “but-terfly effect” it may have set off,

    officials got to work suppressingthe inconvenient news and re-claiming the narrative, accordingto confidential directives sent tolocal propaganda workers andnews outlets.

    They ordered news websitesnot to issue push notificationsalerting readers to his death. Theytold social platforms to graduallyremove his name from trendingtopics pages. And they activatedlegions of fake online commentersto flood social sites with distract-ing chatter, stressing the need fordiscretion: “As commenters fightto guide public opinion, they mustconceal their identity, avoid crudepatriotism and sarcastic praise,

    ‘Be Sleek and Silent’: How ChinaCensored Bad News About Covid

    This article is by Raymond Zhong,Paul Mozur, Jeff Kao and AaronKrolik.

    Continued on Page 14

    Hours after Secretary of StateMike Pompeo told a conservativeradio show host that “we can saypretty clearly that it was the Rus-sians” behind the vast hack of thefederal government and Ameri-can industry, he was contradictedon Saturday by President Trump,who sought to muddy the intelli-gence findings by raising the pos-sibility that China was responsi-ble.

    Defying the conclusions of ex-perts inside and outside the gov-ernment who say the attack was acybersecurity breach on a scaleWashington has never experi-enced, Mr. Trump also playeddown the severity of the hack, say-ing “everything is well under con-trol,” insisting that the news me-dia has exaggerated the damageand suggesting, with no evidence,that the real issue was whetherthe election results had been com-promised.

    “There could also have been ahit on our ridiculous voting ma-chines during the election,” hewrote on Twitter in his latest itera-tion of that unfounded conspiracytheory. He tagged Mr. Pompeo,the latest cabinet member to an-ger him, in his Twitter post.

    With 30 days left in office, Mr.Trump’s dismissive statements

    Trump ShiftsHack Blame

    From RussiaBy DAVID E. SANGER

    and NICOLE PERLROTH

    Continued on Page 28

    DIEGO IBARRA SANCHEZ FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

    An inquiry into a deadly blast that shook Lebanon’s capital has become mired in politics. Page 18.Rebuilding in BeirutLONDON LOCKDOWN A rampantstrain of the virus has prompted

    severe restrictions. PAGE 10

    Ohio State lurched to the Big Ten titleand Clemson pummeled Notre Dame,further jumbling the virus-plaguedCollege Football Playoff. PAGE 34

    SPORTS 32-35

    A Messy Season Nears Its End

    Late Edition

    VOL. CLXX . . . No. 58,913 © 2020 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2020

    Today, mostly cloudy, passing show-ers, high 37. Tonight, rain or snowshowers, cloudy, low 33. Tomorrow,clouds and sunshine, high 40.Weather map appears on Page 26.

    $6.00