Opinion

Trump is bombarding us with scandals -- but his impact on a crucial economic institution could last for decades

Warning: What you are about to read is not about Russia, the 2016 election, or the latest person to depart from the White House in a storm of tweets. It’s the Beltway story hiding in plain sight with trillions of dollars in play and an economy to commandeer.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's manic and disjointed Fox and Friends interview was an epic disaster for his legal team

President Trump started off the week in a beautiful bromance with French President Emmanuel Macron and ended it with his nominee as Veterans Affairs secretary, White House physician Ronny Jackson, forced to withdraw under allegations of illegally dispensing drugs and passing out drunk on the job. In between, the media harangued Trump repeatedly about his growing legal troubles and his Parisian bestie appeared before Congress and declared in so many words that since the U.S. has a buffoon for a president its allies will take up the job of articulating the values of civilized nations. When the pressure builds up like this, Trump simply has to vent. And for some reason he has to do it in public.

Keep reading... Show less

The weirdly fascinating reason that Trump blocked the release of some JFK assassination files

Of all the fascinating and weird things about the JFK assassination story, the veil of official secrecy that still surrounds the subject a half-century later is one of the most fascinating and weird.

Keep reading... Show less

Republicans should be very nervous about the midterms elections after this week -- here's why

Tuesday provided another series of electoral outcomes that bode well for the Democratic Party and are very ominous for their Republican counterparts.

Keep reading... Show less

This is what's really going on when the United States starts pushing 'religious freedom' around the world

On Jan. 24, the Senate confirmed Sam Brownback, the governor of Kansas – a Methodist, who converted to Catholicism and today attends an evangelical church – for the position of ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom. On Jan. 30, President Donald Trump touted in his State of the Union address the “historic actions to protect religious liberty” as a major achievement of his administration.

Keep reading... Show less

Here is why some progressives are tearing each other apart

Progressives are telling two different stories about the world we live in and the future we are trying to create. In important ways, they clash.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's silence on the Waffle House shooting hero is deafening -- and disgusting

During the early morning hours last Sunday, a 29-year-old white man named Travis Reinking allegedly used an AR-15 rifle to kill four people and injure two others at a Waffle House restaurant in Nashville. Reinking is reportedly a member of the Sovereign Citizens, a right-wing extremist movement that is heavily influenced by white supremacist political ideology. It is likely not a coincidence that all of Reinking's victims were nonwhite.

Keep reading... Show less

The long and despicable roots of voter suppression in the United States

The South may have lost the Civil War militarily, but it won politically. For most of United States history, laws and policies that favor the South haveprevailedOriginally, this hegemonywas based on the Southern states’ paradoxical use of slavery to seize disproportionate power in national institutionsAt the beginning of the Republic, slave states wanted to count each slave as one person for the purpose of apportioning representatives in the HouseHowever, slaves had no civil rights, couldn’t vote, and would not in fact be represented by those elected on this basis; the North therefore took the position that slaves should not be counted as part of the population. As a compromise,the Constitution established that each slave counted as 3/5ths of a person. This compromise in effect gave the Southern states a third more seats in Congress, and a third more electoral votes than if slaves had not been counted as persons.

Keep reading... Show less

A historian explains the stunning parallels between Trump's present-day scandals and Watergate

The Special Prosecutor has become a “parasite,” dangerously draining the presidency, month after month, with nothing to show for his work. He ranges far beyond his limited charter, going after close associates of the president. And with a war in the Middle East a threat, there is a real concern over a superpower clash, as the president is bedeviled and distracted by a pointless scandal.

Keep reading... Show less

Desperate Republicans suddenly sound like the ACLU as Mueller closes in on Trump's shady businesses

What's the old saying? A liberal is a conservative who's been arrested and a conservative is a liberal who's been mugged? Well, the Donald Trump era is proving this to be more true than we knew. Liberals certainly feel mugged by the corruption, ineptitude and chaos of the Trump administration and conservatives are all becoming "card-carrying members of the ACLU" as the senior George Bush used to spit derisively at his political opponents. The former are uncomfortably counting on the rule of law to bring some sanity to an insane political environment, while the latter claim to believe that the "deep state" is involved in a massive conspiracy to remove their president from power.

Keep reading... Show less

The end of the Trump presidency now looms -- here's why

The scandals surrounding President Donald Trump are metastasizing rapidly, much more than anyone would have thought just a few months ago.

Keep reading... Show less

How the shameful silence of CEOs is enabling our most dangerous, divisive, and anti-democratic president

Congressional Republicans would be more willing to stand up to Trump if their major financial backers – big business and Wall Street – had more backbone.

Keep reading... Show less

Fascist fashion: Here is how clothing helps the far right sell their violent message

In the months since white supremacist blogger Andrew Anglin urged his followers to dress in “hip” and “cool” ways at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va., far-right fashion has rapidly evolved. The clean-cut aesthetic of the white polo shirts and khakis that drew national attention last August has been supplanted by new brands marketing to and for the far right, using messages and symbols embedded in the clothing to convey white supremacist ideology.

Keep reading... Show less