Opinion

Jeff Bezos and the Enquirer: Everything bad and stupid about America in one package!

There’s no way around it: Jeff Bezos, the founder and CEO of Amazon and purportedly the richest man in the world, performed an enormous civic service this past week by turning the tables on the odious David Pecker and his poisonous, Trumpified supermarket tabloid, the National Enquirer. But even the fact that Bezos is presented as a hero, however provisionally and temporarily, in this all-universe battle of the celebrity titans that devoured the week’s news cycle signifies the sad and bewildered state of American public discourse.

Maybe it’s a cliché to say that the United States resembles an empire in decline, where formerly marginal cultural theories about the “society of the spectacle” and the rise of the “pseudo-event” are enacted in reality on a grand scale. But clichés are repeated for a reason. We cannot possibly perceive the greater lessons or long-term impact of the impossibly overstuffed Bezos-Pecker imbroglio at this moment. (One of the best lines comes from Robinson Meyer of the Atlantic: “Bezos once founded the Everything Store; now he has given us the Everything Story.”) It’s entirely possible, as many commentators have suggested, that Bezos’ counterattack against Pecker’s media empire will have beneficial effects.

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Trump is feeding the delusion that the economy is working -- and the corporate media is helping him sell it

In President Trump’s State of the Union address we saw a brilliant display of rhetorical sleight of hand on the economy. The successful misdirection was enabled by the corporate news media, which consistently maintains that the one thing Trump should be claiming credit for is his stellar performance growing the economy.

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Here are the 5 biggest right-wing outrages of the week: Did the State of the Union have any impact?

On Tuesday, President Donald Trump delivered his second State of the Union address, in which he doubled down on attacking immigration while simultaneously wrapping his speech in a flimsy call to bipartisanship.

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Bernie Sanders may struggle in the 2020 primaries — and that could be a good thing for Democrats

So far, Sen. Bernie Sanders' second potential presidential run has not taken off the in the way that his supporters might have hoped.

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How Trump's radical Republican tax cut broke the economy

Donald Trump’s tax cut for the rich and the corporations they control is turning out to be a bust for the American economy.

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Virginia’s garbage fire: Here is why the decline of local journalism is a national disaster

There’s much that’s astonishing about the enormous scandal consuming Virginia politics right now, in which the Democratic governor and both of the Democrats behind him in line of succession are embroiled in what may be career-ending scandals. Blackface photos, sexual assault allegations, the threat that Gov. Ralph Northam might moonwalk in public: It’s by turns terrifying and ridiculous. But perhaps the most astonishing part, for most people involved or watching from afar, is this: How it can possibly be that all three of these Democratic elected officials — the top three in a middle-sized state right next to the nation’s capital — are confronting these scandals all at once?

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Under Trump the GOP's dirty tricks machine has gotten even dirtier

In his State of the Union address, Donald Trump gave Congress a choice between doing one half of its job or another.

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Salon journalist reveals he was a sexual abuse victim at the hands of New York's powerful Cardinal Spellman

“Mary’s” real name was Francis Cardinal Spellman. The year was 1967, and he was Archbishop of the diocese of New York. An intimate of popes going back to Pope Pius XII, whom he had befriended when he was Archbishop Eugenio Pacelli in the 1920’s and serving as Papal Nuncio in the Vatican, Spellman was the most powerful Catholic figure in the United States, and one of the most powerful in the world.

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Republicans are reveling in the Virginia blackface mess -- because they want to see the world burn

Virginia Democrats are in turmoil these days, as Gov. Ralph Northam and the two Democrats behind him in the line of succession have all been caught up in possible career-ending scandals involving racist costumes and alleged sexual assault. Republicans, unsurprisingly, are striking poses of outrage and demanding the immediate resignation of all three officials. Democrats, meanwhile, are charging Republicans with hypocrisy, because the GOP continues to support its own politicians who are racist or sexually abusive -- such as President Trump, who has a long track record of racism and was recorded bragging about sexual assault.

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Trump's State of the Union address put his full wannabe-dictator form on display

In the 2019 State of the Union address, Donald Trump revealed yet again that his administration is based on reality television practices, not the faithful execution of duties assigned by our Congress.

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Trump uses National Prayer Breakfast speech to undermine civil rights of LGBT people

President Donald Trump delivered his third speech at the annual National Prayer Breakfast, and used the opportunity to attack LGBT people's civil rights and show support for those who wish to discriminate.

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How the GOP’s giant tax reform con was designed to trick American voters — and is now backfiring spectacularly

Even as the Republican Party pushed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act through Congress in December 2017, critics were pointing out that it was filled with tricks and gimmicks meant to obscure the fact that it was a massive giveaway to corporations and the wealthy.

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Trump is running scared as final stages of the Russia probe leave him under assault from all directions

State of the Union addresses are almost always as dull as dishwater, and Tuesday night's was no exception. President Trump haltingly read a speech that sounded as if it were written for someone else and the audience responded in entirely predictable ways. But sometimes these events are interesting simply because they are happening in the midst of a crisis or some other news event. For instance, Bill Clinton gave his speech in 1997 against a split-screen image of the O.J. Simpson jury preparing to deliver its verdict. In 1986, Ronald Reagan postponed his address because of the Challenger space shuttle disaster.

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