Opinion

Fear ye not the loss of trust

We inhabit a constitutional democracy. Whether it’s seen as liberal or illiberal, either way, it’s a democracy. Because it’s a democracy, there’s always going to be some person, some group or some party that does not like what’s going on so much that democracy, from their perspective, will always be in doubt.

Even the founders couldn’t bring themselves to trust democracy. Not completely. That’s why they built into it all these mechanisms that make the full flowering of a free republic pretty much impossible. Is there anyone who thinks that the Electoral College is not rooted in doubt about the people?

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The presidency can indeed save Trump

As you know, I think Donald Trump can win the Republican Party’s presidential nomination despite or because of being the subject of (so far) two criminal indictments. However, I don’t think he can beat a strong incumbent. That said, we need to talk about the foolish notion that the presidency can’t save him.

It can.

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When the rich get a global rescue mission and the drowning poor get... nothing

The sinking of two vessels—the Andrianna, filled with hundreds of desperate migrants, and the Titan, with a handful of multi-millionaires—provides a vivid picture of the world today. All drowning deaths in the ocean are tragic, and one has to sympathize with the families who have lost loved ones. Yet these events also dramatically demonstrate global economic inequality and injustice.

Those who died on the Titan have names. Stockton Rush, chief executive and founder of OceanGate, was the pilot of the Titan. Hamis Harding was a British businessman, chairman of Action Aviation based in Dubai, and an explorer. Paul-Henri Nargeolet was director of underwater research for RMS Titanic, Inc., an American firm that owns the rights to the wreck of the Titanic. And finally, Shazad Dawood and his 19-year-old son Sulem Dawood were scions of one of Pakistan’s wealthiest families.

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In Florida, not all voter fraud is considered equal

A few weeks ago, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was campaigning in Illinois when he wanted to let voters there know how popular he was back home — and also take a few swipes at the blue state he was visiting. So he told Illinois Republicans that his re-election margin of victory was so big in some of Florida’s rural counties that it reminded him of the stories he’d heard about Chicago, saying: “I just assumed it was dead people voting or something.” Presumably, the line got a good laugh from the crowd in Peoria. What DeSantis didn’t tell the crowd was that, just a few months earlier, it was residen...

Here's why billionaires needed to outfit Supreme Court justices with 'golden handcuffs'

The media is interpreting the relationship between rightwing billionaires and Supreme Court justices as good old fashioned corruption, as if they’re trying to buy votes. But what if, instead, it’s actually something far more insidious than that?

Billionaires Harlan Crow and Paul Singer both have had business before the Supreme Court, but both also argue that they’ve never specifically discussed that business with Clarence Thomas or Sam Alito, respectively.

And Thomas and Alito, while not recusing themselves from those cases, claim that they’re not taking into consideration the positions, needs, or desires of their “good friends” when making decisions or casting votes.

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Shame, shame, shame: You but indict yourselves

Talk about "conduct unbecoming": A vengeful, ignominious GOP just barely passed a farcical censure resolution against Adam Schiff for doing his duty, confronting "one of the most egregious abuses of presidential power in our history," and spearheading Trump's impeachment. As furious Dems blasted the rare censure as "deflection, retaliation, and distraction" from Trump's crimes, a stately Schiff dismissed "this hollow sop to the MAGA crowd" and thanked a clownish GOP for placing him "among the truth-tellers."

Wednesday's censure squeaked through a bitterly divided House on a 213-209 vote - with six GOPers voting present - as rowdy Democrats shouted "Shame!" and "Disgrace!" and Kevin McCarthy tried to quell the chaos by repeatedly, vainly commanding, "The House will be in order." (Warren, you are missed). "Out of order!” thundered Dems. Meanwhile, disgusted observers wondered "what the absolute fuck backwards-ass country do we live in" when the honorable Schiff is attacked for exposing Trump's collusion with Russia in 2016 while the malevolent likes of "Marjorie Shit For Brains, Lauren Boebert, Paul Gosar, and George Santos" remain untouched. Add to the list far-right goon and freshman Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., who introduced the resolution last week not as a wacko partisan hatchet job but a "clear vote between right and wrong"; it failed when 20 Repubs failed to support it, but many of them flipped when she re-introduced it stripped of the bizarre $16 million fine she wanted Schiff to pay. Still, she was ripped by Rep. Jim McGovern (D-MA), who cited her deeply unimpressive record: "Five out of the six legislative items she’s ever introduced are about Adam Schiff. I mean, doesn’t she have anything better to do? Like, I don’t know - help her district?"

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Wokeness did not doom the Titan sub, no matter what conservatives say

This week, the world has been following the saga of the OceanGate Titan sub, lost at sea while on a trip to see the remains of the Titanic. As it increasingly looks like those on board are dead—especially as a debris field has been found near the Titanic, and oxygen is believed to have run out hours ago—conservatives are pinning the blame on their favorite target: wokeness.

"Wokeness killed the people on that submarine. Let that sink in. They died because the woke CEO said he wouldn’t hire 50 year-old white men who knew how to command submarines and would rather train others. And the CEO died too. That’s the next level of 'go woke, go broke'," political strategist Joey Mannarino tweeted Thursday morning.

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The warping of the American mind: How Trump's two 'Big Lies' have metastasized

America is heading into a presidential election in which Donald Trump is basing his candidacy on two Big Lies — that President Biden stole the 2020 election from him, and that Biden is orchestrating a prosecutorial witch hunt against him.

So you might think the social media companies that in 2020 responded to Trump’s first Big Lie by removing him from their platforms would at least continue their practice. Right?

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How a transphobic Bud Light boycott foiled Gov. DeSantis and made Mexican beer No. 1

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis had hoped to elevate Mexico’s detrimental impact on the U.S. economy this month by airlifting Venezuelan migrants seeking asylum near the Texas border to the “havens” of Sacramento and Los Angeles. It turns out that the far right of his own Republican Party was thirsty for another fight. Outraged that Bud Light had partnered with transgender social media influencer Dylan Mulvaney, conservative luminaries such as Kid Rock launched a boycott just as DeSantis was making his California move. Sales of Bud Light sank. Sales of a rival from Mexico, Model Especial, rose. The ...

Gov. DeSantis’ veto list puts payback first, Floridians and environment last

Reviewing Gov. Ron DeSantis’ application of his veto pen on the bloated 2023-24 budget plan crafted by lawmakers leads to one conclusion: While there were a few surprises, the governor stuck to the script many had pre-written for him. Budget appropriations made at the behest of Democratic lawmakers suffered the heaviest cuts, at a rate of more than two to one — which unfairly punished two of the state’s most populated counties, Orange and Broward. He also savaged many of the appropriations pushed forward by the handful of GOP lawmakers who dared to oppose the governor’s arm-twisting “requests”...

Cannon fodder: Federal judge in Trump documents case must deliver equal justice under law

Judge Aileen Cannon, appointed to the federal bench by President Trump, now oversees the former president’s trial on charges of mishandling national secrets and obstructing justice. Not including this one, 224 cases have been assigned to Cannon, and just four have gone to trial over a total of 14 days. So neither prosecutors nor defense attorneys nor jurors nor the public truly know what to expect. There are worrying signs, however. When Trump brought a civil case to recover some of these very same documents, Cannonwrote a poorly argued decision in his favor that, among other things, strongly ...

Hunter in the sights: Donald Trump has gotten more leniency than Hunter Biden

A “slap on the wrist,” is what House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer says of Hunter Biden’s plea deal over two misdemeanor counts of failing to pay taxes and likely getting a gun charge dismissed. Many of Comer’s colleagues chimed in with even more laughable hysterics about a supposedly politicized Justice Department. Left unsaid in their tirades was that the U.S. attorney who hammered out this deal, David Weiss, was nominated by their champion, Donald Trump, and confirmed by a Republican Senate in 2018. Weiss has been kept in place by Joe Biden. In an inverse scenario, there’s little do...

How the right-wing lie and spin machine plans to annihilate anyone who dares to tell the truth

She thought she was doing the right thing, tracking down the source of deadly lies that killed a half-million Americans and almost led to the overthrow of the US government.

Little did she know that the very people whose behavior she was studying would use the power of government to try to destroy her work, funding, and even her personal life and reputation.

University of Washington disinformation researcher Kate Starbird learned the hard way: according to The Washington Post she’s been sued — along with multiple other disinformation-studying academics — by groups, sites, and people who are, in many cases, affiliated with some of the more prolific purveyors of disinformation on the web.

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