Opinion

Here's what Michael Bloomberg should do if he actually cares about this country more than his ego

Presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg is one of the 10 richest persons in the world, with a net worth approaching $60 billion, depending upon the vagaries of the stock and bond markets on any given day.

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Primary day in New Hampshire: Whatever happens, this isn't over

After spending nearly six days on the ground in New Hampshire, tootling around from one campaign event to another through the snowy landscapes that so inspired Robert Frost, I can come away with only one prediction: This ain't over, kids. The leading contenders for the Democratic nomination — Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, former South Bend, Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg, and hell, let's throw in former Vice President Joe Biden — continue to show robust support and are likely to split up the primary vote Tuesday just as they did the Iowa caucuses earlier this month.

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Trump’s ‘Friday Night Massacre’: Why legal experts are so disturbed by the president’s latest purge

Friday, February 7, is being described as the President Donald Trump’s “Friday Night Massacre” because of all the firing that went on: Trump not only fired Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman and Gordon Sondland (U.S. ambassador to the European Union) but also, Vindman’s brother, Lt. Col. Yevgeny Vindman, an attorney for the National Security Council (NSC). Legal experts Joshua Geltzer and Ryan Goodman, in an article published by Just Security three days later, explain why they find the Friday Night Massacre to be so troubling.

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Trump committed to reviving archaic combat technology that still kills more than 15,000 people per year in accidents

Here’s another topic that has never reached a political debate stage: The Trump administration has endorsed – and is developing – cluster bombs and antipersonnel landmines that have been banned by 160 countries.

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A ticking time bomb from the big banks could cause the next recession -- but 'King of Debt' Trump doesn't care

The art of hiding multi-trillions of dollars of debt has found an eager accomplice, the businessman who once proudly proclaimed, "I love debt":  Donald J. Trump.

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Pure fiction: Investigative journalist destroys Trump's new 'happy go magic land' budget

If you love more federal debt, endless wars using antiquated technology, and enjoy breathing dirty air then boy oh boy has Donald Trump got a budget for you.

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Trump just handed Democrats a huge gift — if they can figure out how to use it

Americans know President Donald Trump is an outrageous, scandal-ridden character. They knew it when he won in 2016. If Democrats want to beat him in 2020, they’ll likely have to run against by doing more than just run against him as the public disgrace that he is. They’ll have to run against him the way they would against any other Republican.

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Here's the bizarre formula that drives the robotic behavior of Trump's most cult-like supporters

This is not a post about our president but something more general, a lifestyle that can be adopted by anyone in any arena, at any scale, for any reason, in any culture, disguised as serving any goal. It is an attempt at a unified theory of what makes some humans particularly dangerous company, the product of 25 years of psycho-proctological study – investigating the nature and origins of absolutely asinine behavior.

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The Trump administration has launched a brazen assault on our public lands

Trump’s Bureau of Land Management, now run by attorney William Perry Pendley, wants to take our nation back to the days of the Dust Bowl when ranchers lorded over public land and their cattle grazed away the natural vegetation and destroyed the topsoil.

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The Republicans are treating party affiliation as a crime

The president’s revenge began in November when the US Treasury Department sent highly sensitive financial documents tied to Hunter Biden to three Senate panels led by Republicans. Donald Trump’s vengeance continued Friday when not only national security official Alexander Vindman was perp-walked out of the White House but his twin brother, too. Yevgeny Vindman had nothing to do with his brother’s testimony.

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Mayor Pete is a mirage — but the road ahead looks murky for Democrats

It's obviously asinine to proclaim that the Democratic presidential campaign has reached a turning point in the middle of February, after one disputed election that involved about 175,000 voters and will never be resolved to everyone's satisfaction. But on the eve of the New Hampshire primary, with its long history of launching some presidential contenders and sending others to their doom, that's exactly where we are.

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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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