Opinion

A Nazi drug's US resurgence: How methamphetamine is making a disturbing reappearance

Although I am teaching a course at Indiana University this semester on the opioid epidemic, I can’t get meth out of my mind.

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Lindsey Graham is now Trump's attack dog -- but sooner or later, the blowback will come

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina told Fox News' Brian Kilmeade last week "When I go to meet God at the pearly gates, I don't think he's going to ask me, 'Why didn't you convict Trump?'" He may be right about that, but only because he's likely to first be asked to explain what he did afterward. Graham has become Trump's instrument of revenge in the Senate, and he isn't making any bones about it.

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Trump's shameful acquittal and the history of the intentionally undemocratic Senate

Years and decades from now, it’s not improbable that the January 31st scheduling confluence of both Great Britain’s official exit from the European Union and the Senate’s vote to dismiss witness testimony in the Donald Trump impeachment “trial” will mark that date as a significant nadir in trans-Atlantic democracy. A date that will live in infamy, if you will, or perhaps rather “perfidy” as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer admirably put it. The Senate Republicans’ entirely craven, self-serving, undignified, and hypocritical vote to shield their president from any sort of examination is entirely unsurprising, though somehow still shocking.

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Trump the American fascist and authoritarian is no longer a hypothetical — it is the here and now

Donald Trump's show-trial impeachment and "acquittal" was much better in the original Russian or German.

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Can the 2020 Democrats fix Trump's damage to the courts?

Much as the still-male-dominated press may resist understanding it, reproductive rights continues to be a major issue for Democratic voters, and for the heavily female volunteer troops that get out the vote. It's an issue that can win Democrats elections. But especially after recent victories driven by female voters, most notably in the 2018 midterms, the party seems to get it. That's why nearly every major Democratic candidate — except former Vice President Joe Biden, who has always been a reluctant member of the pro-choice coalition — turned up early Saturday morning for a New Hampshire forum run by the Center for Reproductive Rights and NARAL.

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Critics blast 'absurd' plan to put 'garish' Trump in charge of architectural style for all new federal buildings

In a fascinating article, The New York Times shared the news that the Trump administration is proposing an executive White House order to decide on architectural style for all new federal buildings --- to make them look akin to the classical style of the White House itself.

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Why is the media giving Mike Bloomberg a free pass?

Surely the American news media is way too on top of its game to miss a New York City billionaire — with a global brand and a little racist baggage — execute a takeover of one of America's major political parties and become president.

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Obama was unprepared for Trump — and for the way the GOP has abandoned the rule of law: WaPo editor

Along with global climate disaster, the global right’s assault on democracy is the defining story of the last decade.

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How can the media earn back the trust of viewers? Stop playing by Trump's rules for coverage

Last Monday a group of political journalists showed up to a renowned seat of power to attend a press briefing. An aide to the nation's leader asked several journalists from within the group to stand on one side of a rug, according to a report, while security asked for the other journalists to remain on the other side.

After the separation, the aide told the group that wasn't on their list of invited reporters to leave. Upon hearing this, the rest of group joined their dismissed colleagues and walked out collectively.

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Not just Trump: The 'bully' president is looking for 'payback' for his supporters too

OK, imagine for a moment that you are Donald Trump and you want to strike back at a Congress, at the FBI, at the Deep State and fully half the country for having the temerity to challenge you. I know, you don’t want to put yourself in that situation, but it seems necessary to try it out just to prepare for the retaliation program that is headed our way.

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Ralph Nader: The vengeful, lawless, corporate toady Trump just exploded

The day after his acquittal by the Republican Party in a trial that banned witnesses, the unhinged Donald Trump gloated for over an hour on all the television networks. Trump flattered his courtiers, one by one, and fulminated against his Congressional adversaries, Hillary Clinton and ex-FBI chief James Comey.

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Media report that Trump is now 'unshackled' following the GOP's Senate show trial -- but was he ever shackled to begin with?

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.

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America's fatal flaw: The founders assumed our leaders would have some basic decency

No historian or political scientist has better explained the fragility of American democracy than a poet. When I interviewed the poet Rita Dove three years ago, she offered the following assessment of exactly how a sociopathic president like Donald Trump could inflict irreparable damage on institutions of governance, and the norms — written and unwritten — that have directed them for centuries:

Much of our government seems based on trust, the assumption that people will behave like decent human beings. Yes, the founders implemented checks and balances and limits on power, but there are these loopholes that betray a belief that people will be decent. That optimism on human ethics is something I love about this country. Now, it threatens to harm us.

Decency, in other words, was a bulwark against the corrupt impulses and wicked instincts of men in power. Even Richard Nixon, who had no compunction when persecuting citizen activists or illegally bombing Cambodia, recognized that he was a participant within an important system of laws. Eventually, he was forced to surrender to those laws. Fealty to American order has also motivated unwise and harmful behavior, such as Al Gore agreeing to accept the results of an election under suspicion of fraud for the "good of the country." The erosion of faith in American institutions and their democratic objectives, Gore and Nixon appeared to believe, would create chaos — a fracturing of the public, and a collapse of the government's ability to preserve societal stability.

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