Opinion

The real reasons the GOP suddenly pretended to care about Harvard

By Will Bunch

For the last couple of weeks, it’s seemed like the New York Times has decided to reinvent itself as the Manhattan edition of the Harvard Crimson.

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Inoculated against democracy: Trump immunity claim is dangerous

Donald Trump was in federal court Wednesday as his lawyers laid out his preposterous argument that presidents are immune from federal prosecution for actions taken in office unless impeached and convicted in the Senate. Whatever the three-judge appeals panel decides, the case will most likely end up before the Supreme Court, which must reject this ridiculous notion. A detail here that’s easy to overlook is that Trump’s legal claim rests on the premise that whatever Trump could have immunity to do, Joe Biden could too. That he feels comfortable explicitly stating this in court counteracts all t...

Better that voters reject Trumpism than judges. But Trump makes that case hard.

Excising Donald Trump’s cancerous affect on our democracy should be up to the voters, not the courts.

After all, what better way to repudiate someone — or a movement — espousing plainly anti-democratic values and policies than through the ballot box?

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State of the state? Delusional, according to DeSantis

Gov. Ron DeSantis brought his failing presidential campaign back to Florida Tuesday in the guise of his annual State of the State speech, delivered to a joint session of the Legislature and dozens of other dignitaries.

The setting was the state Capitol in Tallahassee and the audience included most of the state’s political infrastructure. But DeSantis could have been giving his stump speech to a Rotary Club in Iowa, which holds the first-in-the-nation nominating caucuses next Monday night.

Can divided Washington unite? The fractured GOP is the biggest obstacle

Faced with looming deadlines to produce a federal budget, the top Republican in Congress, House Speaker Mike Johnson, and the top Democrat, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, agree that Pentagon funding for the fiscal year that started Oct. 1 should be $886 billion. But this being Washington, their handshake deal differs on non-defense funding, with the Democrats pegging it at $773 billion, while the GOP says it is $704 billion. Still, that difference of $70 billion is still small compared to the chasm among Johnson’s Republican conference, which is seeing its very narrow margin get smaller...

America seems intent on repeating its history of Black oppression with book bans

America has a race problem, and it has abandoned all pretensions to hide it. We need only to do an autopsy on 2023 to witness this toxic brew of racial animosity boil over, in full public view. The days of the so-called post-racial, colorblind America are long behind us, if they ever existed. White legislators in statehouses and boards across the U.S. seized power to institute openly anti-Black laws, resolutions and decrees. Take, for example, the recent decision by an all-white Missouri school board to remove Black history classes and books from the district’s course offerings. This act of Bl...

The future of the search for alien life is with Harvard’s Avi Loeb

Avi Loeb leaned in, grabbed my hand and said, “Be as critical as you like.” What, after all, was one more critic? He resembled a caricature of a scientist, his body wiry and short, in a plaid tailored suit, holding an expression that suggested both the severely etched Oppenheimer and the anxious, chain-smoking lawyer Martin Short played years ago on “Saturday Night Live.” Certainly, that’s the image many of his peers seem to hold for Loeb: one part austerity meets one part sketchy. He is a theoretical astrophysicist. He teaches astronomy at Harvard University and chaired the department for nin...

Overcoming the Fox News-Musk-Trump propaganda machine

A new study reports that a quarter of Americans believe the FBI, not Donald Trump, instigated the attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. That one-fourth of the country is so grossly misinformed actuates Ben Franklin’s wry quip about Americans having “a republic, if you can keep it.”

We cannot keep it, and we won’t, if half the country continues to consume disinformation-for-profit as news.

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Rumors of electric vehicles’ demise greatly exaggerated. Don’t let political attacks fool

After several years chasing electric-vehicle companies with state incentives that he had to sweeten for lack of interest, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker finally got his big ribbon-cutting.

In September, the governor arrived in Kankakee County to welcome a new $2 billion lithium battery “gigafactory” in Manteno.

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Is Joe Biden sleepwalking toward disaster?

If you’re like me and pay attention to politics every day, you know that one of the foundational truths about last year was that it was terrible. Even as real wages rose, joblessness fell, inflation eased and prices dropped, Very Serious People like the top editor of The Economist said nuh-uh, everything’s bad. Joe Biden is sleepwalking toward disaster.

Here’s what Zanny Minton Beddoes, The Economist’s editor-in-chief, said in her teaser of that magazine’s first edition of the new year:

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Donald Trump’s un-American ploy for criminal immunity

On January 2, Donald Trump’s legal team filed his last official salvo with the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, continuing to argue that he is entitled to presidential immunity for plotting to overturn the 2020 election.

His ploy for criminal immunity, if not for the seriousness of the matter, would be laughable for its legal flaccidity.

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Donald Trump’s failed coup: the complete January 6 timeline

It was evident that Donald Trump was likely to lose the presidency 20 minutes after Election 2020 polls closed in California.

At 11:20 p.m. EST, the Fox News Decision Desk called Arizona for Joe Biden. The Copper State had gone Democratic just once since 1948, when Bill Clinton won by two points in his 1996 landslide.

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Believe it: Convicting Trump would inspire trust in democracy

Across all our institutions – academia, police, media and government – we see declining levels of trust. Trust in our government has been declining since the 1960s. It’s now at historic lows.

This is happening everywhere with sharp declines over the past several years. According to a 2022 Gallup Poll, only 14 percent of Americans have a great deal or a lot of confidence in our justice system.

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