Opinion

Why are we letting red state welfare oligarchs mooch off of blue states?

America is rapidly bifurcating — becoming two nations — and one of the main drivers of the process is a federal system that encourages Red states to mooch off Blue states, using essentially stolen tax money to reinvent the old Confederacy, “own the libs,” and wage “war on woke.”

Most Red states have become oligarchic white supremacist medieval-like fiefdoms with obscene levels of often multigenerational wealth at the top, extreme poverty at the bottom, and working people, women, and minorities kept in subordinate roles through explicit government and corporate policy.

In this, these Red states are following the once-classic European and later Southern US tradition of a patriarchal, hierarchical society run by male kings, nobles, plantation masters, and wealthy churchmen, with all the work done by serfs, slaves, women, or impoverished wage-slaves.

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Russian roulette: Yevgeny Prigozhin’s Wagner Group rebellion sputters out but the Ukraine war continues

During the failed August 1991 putsch in Russia, the good guys were reformers Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin. The bad guys were an incompetent claque of the military and KGB within the Politburo and the rebellion fizzled when Yeltsin climbed on that tank in Moscow. The Kremlin’s nukes were kept secure and the world caught its breath. The once all powerful Soviet Union then peacefully flickered out of existence a few months later. Today, there is a lot less optimism over the standoff in Russia. There is no white hat promising freedom and liberty, but black hats only with Yevgeny Prigozhin o...

Kansas Sen. Roger Marshall bemoans ‘climate demagogues’ but seeks farm aid in ‘historic drought’

On Wednesday, Kansas Sen. Roger Marshall called those who want to mitigate the already catastrophic effects of our global environmental crisis ‘climate demagogues.’ “If Biden thinks he can send his climate demagogues to Kansas & tell us which cars we can drive, he’s in for a rude awakening,” he tweeted. “The Preserving Choice in Vehicles Act will protect consumer choice & free market competition that drives down costs.” We were going to point out that he only needs to consult Kansas farmers to learn how serious climate change is, right here and right now. But on Friday, Marshall inadvertently ...

20 short observations from a high school teacher at year’s end

As school wraps for the summer, these notes provide a view into today’s classroom. 1. Students tell me they need their iPhones because their brains are wired differently than mine. One said, “Mr. Miller, we need the dopamine hit.” 2. By accident, an intruder alarm warning went off in one of our district schools, and a child hid in a closet and called his dad to say, “I love you.” 3. Equity and social justice initiatives continue to be handed down to teachers, and school becomes, every day, a place where the wealthiest will be educated with the wealthy, as the suburban St. Louis school where I ...

In a speech away from N.C., Mark Robinson is his old combative self

Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson has been a little less pugilistic since officially launching his 2024 bid for governor in April. But in a speech away from North Carolina on Friday, Robinson showed a lot of his old fire. His appearance at the Faith and Freedom Coalition’s annual conference in Washington, D.C. was one of his first major appearances as a candidate, and it offered an early glimpse of what he might be like on the campaign trail. Robinson first delivered a ringing endorsement of Donald Trump onstage, a move that quickly made national headlines. He insisted the country is “at war” and needs a...

How can DeSantis claim success when his policies keep getting destroyed in court?: columnist

MSNBC producer for Rachel Maddow, Steve Benen, is puzzled how Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) will claim that he has been a successful governor when his policies keep getting shot down in the courts.

Just last week, a federal judge issued an injunction for the Florida governor's anti-drag queen law.

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DeSantis. Who needs friends when you’re an instrument of the divine?

Ron DeSantis has no friends.

The guys he played baseball with at Yale didn’t like him. One told New Yorker writer Dexter Filkins, “Ron is the most selfish person I have ever interacted with.”

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How Joe Biden will increase his reelection chances by fixing these five everyday annoyances

President Joe Biden has lately focused on solving relatively small — but highly annoying — everyday problems that Americans face.

Most notably, he’s begun to tackle what his administration refers to as “junk fees,” which range from overdraft fees to unexpected fees that arise when you’re buying tickets to a concert or a sporting event.

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Putin, Trump and the privatization of tyranny

I’m no Russia expert, but I do know something about tyrants (I’ll get to Trump in a moment), and I doubt Yevgeny Prigozhin has mounted a fatal challenge to Putin’s authority.

I say this because of the roles Putin has asked Prigozhin to play, and the dependence of each man on the other.

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Trump is less constrained than he was in 2020 — and more power hungry

Donald Trump should not be allowed on the ballot.

Section 3 of the 14th Amendment prohibits anyone who has held public office and taken an oath to protect the Constitution from holding office again if they “have engaged in insurrection” against the United States.

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Winkin’, Blinken and Musk: America, China and the 'decoupling' myth

Officially, the United States and China are at sharp odds over everything from human rights to the future of Taiwan and support for Russia.

Officially, America is severing its economic interdependence with the second-largest economy in the world. We’re also using hard-hitting approaches to China, including trade sanctions. China has responded in kind, imposing its own trade restrictions and even raiding consulting firms’ offices.

Officially, the purpose of Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken’s visit to Beijing last week and his brief meeting with Xi Jinping — his first since he became secretary of state — was to warn China against further provocation.

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Censure this House: Speaker Kevin McCarthy and Republicans abuse their power to punish Adam Schiff

When 20 House Republicans joined with Democrats last week to reject a partisan censure of California Congressman Adam Schiff, along with a $16 million fine, for his handling of the first impeachment of Donald Trump, there was hope that the nonsense was dead. But seven days later, the Republicans dropped the fine and got everyone in their conference on board. Following the 213 to 209 vote on Wednesday, as is the long custom, Schiff was directed by Speaker Kevin McCarthy to present himself in the well of the House, where McCarthy read the censure. It was shameful. But the shame is not on Schiff,...

Spread the news: US economy is strong under Biden

It's a puzzling dichotomy: Many Americans remain down on the economy even as it continues to strengthen. Stocks hit bull market territory this month — up 20% since October. Even better, the job market remains a juggernaut. Employers added 339,000 jobs in May, way beyond the 180,000 that economists expected. This marked the 29th straight month of robust job growth. Keeping Wall Street and Main Street humming should seal reelection for most presidents, but Joe Biden's approval ratings remain mired in the low 40s. Oddly, Biden's poor poll numbers don't sync with his impressive economic record. Th...