• The Movement
  • Posts
  • Officer kept gun pointed at Aaron Bushnell as body burned outside Israeli embassy

Officer kept gun pointed at Aaron Bushnell as body burned outside Israeli embassy

Plus: Republicans relent on opposition to expanding Medicaid

Good morning! We’ve made it to the final three days of February. In today’s newsletter:

⏱️ Estimated read time: 4 minutes.

Officer kept gun pointed at protester who set himself on fire outside Israeli embassy

An unidentified security officer kept his gun pointed at Aaron Bushnell’s body as others screamed for help.

Pure outrage. That’s how many have reacted after seeing how an armed security officer reacted to the fiery death of U.S. airman Aaron Bushnell outside the Israeli embassy over the weekend. 

For 33 seconds—from the time he rushes into frame until the time the video ends—an unnamed officer can be seen holding his gun pointed at Bushnell’s charred, smoldering body lying on the ground as others plead for help. One first responder can even be heard shouting, “I don’t need guns, I need fire extinguishers!” 

Bushnell self-immolated on Saturday shouting “Free Palestine” repeatedly as his body went up in flames. His final social media post implored people to help stop Israel’s genocide against the Palestinian people.

The outrageous video has sparked a firestorm online. As one person astutely pointed out:

Washington Post columnist Karen Attiah contrasted the image with authorities in Israel turning water cannons on its own people over the weekend:

While an artists’ rendering of the event has gone viral, seen over 2 million times on X:

It’s unclear who the security guard is, who he worked for, or if he was just following some sort of “protocol”. As of February 24, the United Nations says nearly 30,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since October 7—70% of the slaughtered are women and children.

Meanwhile: President Biden told reporters last night he hopes there will be a ceasefire by next week. A Hamas official dismissed that claim early this morning.

Also: This Saturday, pro-Palestinian groups are planing a global day of action on March 2.

➡️ Question of the Day

Do you think a ceasefire will be reached in Gaza before an invasion of Rafah? Tell us why in the comments.

POLL: Will a ceasefire in Gaza be reached before an invasion of Rafah?

Login or Subscribe to participate in polls.

Thursday’s Results: This is what you called a blowout. Yesterday we asked how much of right do you have to free speech on social media. You said:

Spyder voted total: “Has the intelligence of the American people deteriorated to the point that they can not determine right & wrong for themselves?”

While Jenna voted limited: “Letting anybody say anything - including fire in a crowded chat room - has opened up a whole pandora’s box for our country. Platforms have a right to police the platforms as they choose.”

Court watchers said the justices seemed to agree. A ruling won’t come until June.

Republicans feel pressure to finally expand Medicaid in last hold out states

Where Medicaid expansion stands, 14 years after Obamacare.

The pressure campaign is working. That’s what some Democrats are saying now that Republicans in the 10 remaining states that haven’t allowed an expansion of Medicaid under Obamacare may finally be giving in. NPR reports that after North Carolina finally relented in December, party leaders in Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia may also throw in the towel, allowing hundreds of thousands of poor and working class people to get health insurance.

Critics say Republican opposition to the expansion is cynical at best, immoral at worst. The Affordable Care Act, now passed nearly 14 years ago, provided for an expansion of Medicaid to cover more people that was almost entirely paid for by the federal government.

Studies have found the expansion dramatically lowered the number of people who are uninsured. In North Carolina, 600,000 low-income North Carolinians became eligible for coverage, while an expansion in Georgia would cover roughly 400,000 people.

But but but: NPR says that for many Republicans, "Medicaid expansion" is still a toxic phrase tied closely to former President Barack Obama. And Republicans in six states are hoping that a second Trump administration would allow them to tie eligibility for Medicaid to work requirements. Nobody gets any help in the GOP’s America.

🗞️ Also making news

Here are some stories the algorithms may have kept out of your feed this week.

On politics…

On business and the economy…

On the climate crisis and the environment…

On LGBTQIA+ rights…

💰Good News: Med school gets $1 billion donation, students get free tuition

A medical school in New York City will be totally tuition-free after a wealthy donor made a whopping $1 billion donation this week. The Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx received the donation, one of the largest ever to a school, from Dr. Ruth Gottesman, a 93-year-old former professor there, according to The Guardian. She and her husband made “their” money by “investing” in Berkshire Hathaway.

Half of Einstein’s most recent class of students are New Yorkers, 59% are women and the majority are people of color.

Something we missed? Have a comment?

Just reply to this email and send it to us! We may just feature it tomorrow here in The Movement or e-mail us at [email protected].

We’ll see you tomorrow!