Opinion

The Republican vote thieves strike again

The first rule of business and marketing is that if you make it easy for folks to buy your product or engage with you, more people will do so. If you don’t want people to buy or use your product or service, on the other hand, just make them jump through hoops to complete the transaction and many won’t bother.

Republicans know this and have been applying it to voting for the better part of 50 years; recently they’ve turned it into a science.

Polling before the 2020 election in Texas, for example, showed that Joe Biden may beat Trump just as he did in so many other swing states across the country. From Trump failing there, the Republican elders in the state knew, it would be a short jump to flipping the entire state Blue, as happened with Michigan and Wisconsin.

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For Republicans, NC’s 12-week abortion ban might just be the first step

North Carolina Republicans just passed a 12-week abortion ban, but their recent comments suggest this might just be a first step in a long-term plan. Because although they are calling the legislation a “compromise,” what that means is that it’s a compromise among themselves. GOP leaders said when introducing the bill that — after months of internal deliberations — they’d landed on a 12-week ban because that was what would get enough votes to successfully override Gov. Roy Cooper’s veto. In order to become law, every single Republican in the legislature needed to be on board. But what could hap...

Withdrawn DeSantis: GOP presidential candidate is a disaster, but a dangerous one

The Ron DeSantis campaign for president began with a whimper, or rather, a glitch. A Twitter Spaces announcement with Elon Musk failed repeatedly to function for the first 20 minutes, and those heading to DeSantis’ own website were met with something that looked like a high school project done over lunch. The botched rollout neatly encapsulated everything that DeSantis is: an ideologue whose commitment to sing and dance for the Republican base comes at the cost of actual managerial capability, and who at the end of the day isn’t even particularly good at the song and dance. It’s almost certain...

How Biden can distance himself from Trump's border 'politics of fear' at Friendship Park

That President Joe Biden's record on immigration is controversial is no surprise. Few issues divide Americans as much. But Biden has pulled off the unusual feat of managing to anger conservatives and liberals alike with his discordant policies. Critics on the right see an out-of-control crisis because the number of undocumented immigrants Border Patrol encountered at the southwest border in fiscal year 2022 topped 2.76 million, eclipsing the previous annual record by more than 1 million. Critics on the left say Biden's approach to immigration — despite a push for a pathway to citizenship for u...

'Make America Florida': Columnist paints bleak vision of US under President DeSantis

A grim vision of an America under a President Ron DeSantis was painted by a Salon columnist Monday – and it describes a nightmare.

“Ron DeSantis has turned Florida into a laboratory for fascist cruelty and authoritarian oppression,” wrote Chauncey Devega. “He hopes to take this experiment nationwide.”

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Paul Krugman lays out 3 possible ways to prevent Republicans from causing a financial 'disaster'

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen continues to sound the alarm about the United States' debt ceiling crisis, warning that the U.S. could begin to default on its debt obligations as soon as Wednesday, June 1 — which is less than a week away.

A default, according to Yellen, would be an "economic and financial catastrophe." And she is urging President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-California) to work out some type of agreement before a default occurs.

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Don't be taken by corporate media both-siderism: The GOP alone manufactured this debt ceiling disaster

The credit-rating agency Fitch on Thursday morning put the nation’s AAA rating on a watch list, citing “increased political partisanship” over the debt ceiling. Later, I heard ABC News attribute the standoff on the debt ceiling to “polarization” in Congress. NPR blames the fight on “hyper-partisanship” in American politics. Reutersblames the stalemate on lawmakers “digging in on partisan positions.”

“Partisan standoff” is the way most of the media is now characterizing the fight.

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Attorney general’s report on Catholic clergy child sex abuse lays out a shameful chapter in Illinois history

The Illinois attorney general’s gut-wrenching 696-page report on Catholic clergy child sex abuse in Illinois is illustrated, incongruously but perhaps necessarily, with aspirational images of the Prairie State: cornfields at sunrise, the shimmering waters of Lake Michigan, sunsets over lakes and barns, gorgeous stained glass windows. But the text, which is agonizing reading, reveals a much uglier side of Illinois. It lists the names and circumstances surrounding 451 Catholic clerics and religious brothers who the report says abused at least 1,997 children across the state’s dioceses. And, in t...

'Inherently cowardly': Stewart Rhodes' son explains why he rejected his seditious father

Editor's note: Judge Amit Mehta today sentenced Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes to 18 years in federal prison following Rhodes' conviction last year of seditious conspiracy and other charges in connection to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. This commentary, written by Rhodes' son, Dakota Adams, originally appeared in Raw Story on July 12, 2022.

Update: The claim, made by the author in 2022, that Trump held a Bible upside-down has since been disproven. Raw Story regrets this error.

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DC insider: Biden should ignore the debt ceiling

I want to start today with a bit of history that sheds some light on what’s happening in Washington this week and what Biden should do about the debt-ceiling crisis created by Kevin McCarthy’s Republican House.

On October 22, 1985, Treasury Secretary James A. Baker III told congressional leaders that if Congress failed to raise the debt ceiling by the end of the month, the Reagan administration would pay the nation’s bills by taking back Treasury securities in which Social Security had invested.

I remember being stunned at the time. It was an extraordinary move. It meant Social Security would lose interest paid on its funds.

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Major questions on minors: Research and regulation needed on child social media use

A new report from U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy outlines how often compulsive social media use by children and teens leads to a variety of negative health outcomes, including declining mental health, lack of sleep, exposure to harassment and other problems. As platforms like Instagram and TikTok become ubiquitous with 95% of kids using some app, the report calls on parents, children, tech companies and, crucially, policymakers to take action. There is broad agreement on the need for federal regulation, with even industry groups and officials pushing for clear and generally applicable guard...

Trump’s mouth on trial: Donald is compelled to spout off and the courts won’t abide it

Like the scorpion in the fable that causes its own drowning, Donald Trump cannot stop himself from attacking and insulting and belittling. It’s been his nature for his nearly 77 years and helped propel him into the White House. A fitting word for his attitude is contemptuous. While his sneering has often served him well, this trait is now putting him at risk. We hope it sinks him like the scorpion and the frog that was fatally stung. A day after a Manhattan federal jury unanimously found that Trump sexually abused and defamed E. Jean Carroll and ordered he pay her $5 million, he went on CNN an...

If public schools teach Bible classes, whose version of religion rules?

Missouri legislators have adopted yet another solution in search of a problem. They’ve passed a bill — and sent it to Gov. Mike Parson to sign (he shouldn’t) — that would allow public schools to offer elective courses on the Bible. This isn’t the first time lawmakers have attempted this, even though there seems to be no prohibition against teaching about scripture in public schools. In fact, there can be value in that. What is — and should be — prohibited is teaching that promotes a particular religion. People are right to be suspicious that backers of this Missouri legislation are simply tryi...