Opinion

'The enemy of the people': How Trump plans to exact his revenge on the media

Something I would like to know – what do my compatriots in the Washington press corps really think is going to happen if the criminal former president manages, a year from now, to eke out a victory?

We already know that Donald Trump is planning, in the event that he again becomes president, to prosecute his political enemies: those who have “betrayed” him in the past and who oppose him in the present. We already know that he’s planning to use the military to crush protests of the prosecution of his political enemies. We already know, because there's a death toll, that some supporters will resort to the murder of, even the assassination of, Trump’s political enemies.

We already know these things. Yet my compatriots, in particular the very obscenely rich owners of the lucrative media properties who employ them, continue to treat a man who is planning to do all these things as if there exists a line that he would never cross. They continue to treat him as if he fears the political consequences of crossing it.

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Journalists are dying at a staggering rate in the Israel-Hamas war

The Israel-Hamas war has been deadly for reporters trying to cover the violence that has claimed more than 10,000 lives, including at least 40 journalists and media workers killed so far in Gaza, Israel and Lebanon in the first month of fighting.

The rising death toll for members of the media unfolded as the United Nations marked the International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists on Nov. 2 with a stark warning that reporters around the world are increasingly under attack as they cover not just war but also everything from elections to protests and riots.

Strong ammunition to obliterate the NRA agenda

Women battered at home are five times more likely to be murdered if there’s a gun in the house, so abusers under domestic violence restraining orders, pursuant to federal law, can’t have guns.

Last week SCOTUS heard a 2nd Amendment challenge to that common sense law, and there’s great reason for hope.

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Why Black Americans’ lives depend on backing Israel

October 7 marked the largest death toll for the Jewish population since the Holocaust yet a lacking denouncement of antisemitism remains deafening. I am both a member of a white Anglo-Saxon political dynasty, and I am Black. This is a dichotomy that is rarely lost on me. However, despite the divergence of these varying ancestral identities, it is through both senses of self that I affix a personal responsibility for advocacy on a most urgent international crisis in Israel.

“The Surprising Zionist” — that’s how some historians refer to my grandfather, Sen. Robert A. Taft Sr. Once the most powerful man in both the Republican Party and Senate, yet also defeated in multiple bids for presidential nominations, his was a career characterized by many an element of surprise. Exceptions to this unpredictability laid in the guarantee that, when faced with the choice between that which was popular versus that which was ethical, Taft would always choose the latter. Insinuations of isolationism plagued his failed White House ambitions as he was vocal in the then-unpopular opinion that the United States’ ability to effect global change wasn’t without limits. For this reason, many colleagues were shocked and awed when, at the peak of his political career, the conservative senator rallied bipartisan support for the funding, creation and support of the State of Israel. It was a feat he considered both feasible and one of virtuous American obligation.

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The death of the New York Times

After being a loyal reader for the better part of 60 years, I have officially run out of respect for The New York Times.

I have come to the grudging realization that this newspaper is actively playing a part in undermining our Democracy by convening a political horse race, and backing a burnt-orange, reprehensible, racist traitor, and his dirty trainers, who mean our country harm.

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The GOP civil war is apparently now cleaning out closets

Last week, Tim Miller, the gay Bulwark writer who was communications director for Jeb Bush’s campaign in 2016 but left the GOP, tweeted out that Matt Gaetz appeared to be “outing” the GOP Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Missouri Congressman Jason Smith.

You can watch the clip from Gaetz’s podcast here. Gaetz is extremely peeved that Smith attacked him for triggering the removal of Kevin McCarthy as House speaker. Gaetz played a clip of Smith saying, “Let me just tell you, if Matt Gaetz’s lips are moving, it’s only lies that’s coming out of it,” and calling Gaetz a “foolish liar.”

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How Democrats can win by confronting crime

Cherelle Parker became the first woman elected mayor of Philadelphia this week, in part because of her tough-on-crime positions. She’s a progressive Democrat and beat five other Democrats in the primary (including one endorsed by both Bernie and AOC) before cruising to victory Tuesday.

Her platform was straightforward and almost sounds like Rudy Giuliani back in the 1990s: hire 300 more police officers, fix broken streetlights, remove graffiti, fix up dilapidated buildings, and empower the new police on the street to stop pedestrians they believe may be committing a crime.

“At the time” she first made those proposals, her website notes, “many in the city, including some of those running for mayor now, were convinced that a plan that calls for more police would be political suicide. But she did not take cues from the loudest voices calling to defund the police, instead talking to and listening to people in communities across the city and taking action.”

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By outing 19 students to their parents, Texas school district violated ethics code

This article first appeared on Houston Landing and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

The Katy Independent School District’s decision to out transgender students to their parents is not only what one attorney described as “bullying masquerading as policy” – it’s also a violation of the Texas Education Agency’s code of ethics.

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Disrupting Biden for Gaza didn't take courage

Yesterday, I interrupted an event where President Joe Biden was speaking in Belvidere, Ill., to demand that he call for a cease-fire in Gaza. Over 10,000 Palestinians, half of them children, have been killed by Israeli bombardments in the last month. Entire bloodlines have been wiped off the face of the Earth. And the day I confronted Biden, a harrowing video surfaced of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza evacuating their cities on foot.

Normally, I get incredibly anxious when speaking publicly, and I have a hard time speaking without tripping over my words. You would think that interrupting the president of the United States, arguably the most powerful man in the world, would have made me stop in my tracks. I also knew that if I interrupted the president, the crowd was bound to be hostile, very hostile. My stomach was churning, and my heart was fluttering. But somehow, once the president started to speak, I waited for a quiet moment and then the words just flowed from my mouth; it felt like a miracle.

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Republicans are fiddling with fascism while the shutdown is looming

With a government shutdown looming a week from today, the House of Representatives adjourned yesterday for the weekend after Speaker MAGA Mike Johnson failed to get a successful vote on two essential funding bills.

One, a transportation bill, would have gutted Amtrak, so a few east coast Republicans objected; the other, funding government operations and oversight of banks, went down in flames because it had a draconian anti-abortion provision built into it and Tuesday’s election appears to have spooked the GOP.

Just a week earlier, Florida Republican Senator Rick Scott — who became a near billionaire running a company convicted of the largest ($1.7 billion) Medicare fraud in American history and hails from Ron DeSantis’ home state — endorsed Donald Trump.

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Does Mike Johnson really believe there’s no separation between church and state?

A better question: What will “dominionists” like him do with power?

There’s been a lot of discussion lately of the conservative religious beliefs of the new House speaker, Mike Johnson. And that’s because the new speaker hasn’t been coy about saying what other Republicans, for instance former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, are usually coy about saying. In the past, though less in the present, Johnson has been explicit about his belief that there’s no separation between church and state in the Constitution and that the nation's founders held a “biblical view of government.”

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Looking for the human cost of the Israel-Hamas war, through filmmakers’ lenses

By Michael Phillips

I watched a brilliant and heartbreaking short film the other day, posted online by the New Yorker magazine as part of its story of filmmaker Yahav Winner, killed Oct. 7 in the Hamas extremists’ massacre of Israeli citizens.

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What is Trump planning if he gets a second term? Be worried. Be really worried.

When I read a few days ago in The Washington Post that Trump and his allies have specific plans in a second Trump term to use the Justice Department to target Trump’s enemies, I was doubtful. Trump doesn’t plan. He reacts. He condemns. He lashes out. But he does not carefully think through anything in advance.

Then I checked in with my circle of Washington political operatives, several of whom are familiar with the people who are doing the “planning” for Trump’s second term — a group of bottom-feeding, power-hungry, right-wing opportunists who know that the way to build influence with Trump is to give him and tell him exactly what he wants to hear.

There’s no question that planning is underway. Trump isn’t doing it, but he has given it his blessing.

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