Opinion

'Ugly' Noem’s dog killing was bad — but to really understand her, consider her billy goat

Since Gov. Kristi Noem’s disclosure of her farmyard killing spree, everybody’s been focused on Cricket.

That’s understandable. Cricket was a 14-month-old dog. It’s easy to imagine her head jutting out of a pickup window, hair and tongue blowing in the wind. Like many dogs, Cricket probably had a personality and other human-like qualities that we so often attribute to canine companions.

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Trump vs. history: Former presidents typically implode on their comeback tours

Grover Cleveland is the historical standard among American presidents who lose or leave office then seek to regain it. The reason is simple: he achieved his goal.

Cleveland, however, is hardly the only commander-in-chief who tried to win back what was lost. The difference is that the historical record for ex-presidents trying for a comeback is pretty terrible.

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Columbia University protests look increasingly like those in 1968 as police storm campuses nationwide

Columbia University has become the epicenter of student protests over the war in Gaza.

In the following Q&A, Stefan Bradley, a history professor at Amherst College and author of the 2009 book, “Harlem vs. Columbia University: Black Student Power in the Late 1960s,” touches on the similarities and differences between the protests of the 1960s and now.

Mike Johnson is speaker because Hakeem Jeffries allows it

Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene took the next step today in removing Mike Johnson as House speaker. This play is part of a small story in a larger narrative about the politics of revolt inside the Republican Party. While that tale is worth telling fully, this one isn’t.

We can spend our limited time talking about why Greene is pissed about Johnson’s leadership in the passage last week of military aide to Ukraine, contrary to the interests of Donald Trump and the Russian despot whom he openly serves. Or we can talk about brass tacks.

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Why America’s happiness ranking is irrelevant

LaGRANGE, Ga. — Earlier this month, the news media was flooded with articles showing that America’s happiness ranking had declined, pushing the United States down to 23rd in the world. Reports showed that younger people are behind their elders when it comes to measures of happiness.

While reading these articles, I was invited by my college students to a “Dance Marathon.” These students spent their morning and afternoon having the time of their lives, fundraising thousands of dollars for the Children’s Miracle Network while perfecting a dance routine. There were athletic teams, Greek organizations, student government and theater students. They even worked with those who weren’t part of a student organization, making them feel welcome.

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A supreme failure: How the most corrupt high court ever is getting cover from the press

On Thursday, we got confirmation that our Supreme Court is completely in the tank for Donald Trump and his repellent Republicans, and our country very well might not survive it.

By having the audacity to even schedule oral arguments to consider whether one man in America can be granted immunity, and is above the laws that guide the rest of us, this rogue, corrupt court is incinerating one of the most basic tenets of our Democracy right in front of our eyes.

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Trump’s Manhattan trial could determine whether rule of law survives: criminologist

Now that the Supreme Court appears to be agreeing, at least in part, with former President Donald Trump in his un-American quest for unlimited presidential impunity, the threat to American democracy just got worse.

And Trump’s Manhattan criminal trial, now fully underway, just became more critical to the very survival of the rule of law.

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Trump, flatulence and the last taboo

As I was telling you, I haven’t been paying much attention to Donald Trump’s trial. I should, but I haven’t. In that, I’m probably like most people. If he’s found guilty, he’s found guilty. Everything else is noise.

But there are related aspects of the trial that stand out to me. I mentioned one yesterday: his weird call out to supporters to “protest” more. Another is Trump’s continued attempt to sound like a tough guy even as he whines like a child. This week, he complained about being “locked up” in a courtroom while Joe Biden is on the campaign trail.

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How Fox News is lying about Trump’s trial

David Pecker, long-time publisher of the National Enquirer and Donald Trump’s bosom buddy, spent hours on the witness stand in Manhattan last week.

With the relaxed demeanor of a jovial grandfather, Pecker described how he, candidate Trump and Michael Cohen met in 2015 to plot how they’d influence the outcome of the 2016 election. During that meeting, they conspired to hide news that could harm Trump and embellish fake stories that disparaged Trump’s rivals.

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These southerners aren't listening to Donald Trump anymore

The UAW’s successful unionization effort last week at a Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee — the first successful unionization effort at a car factory in the South since the 1940s — is breaking the brains of Republicans in that region. They’re truly astonished that workers might not trust their corporate overlords with their working conditions, pay, health, and retirement.

Tennessee’s Republican Governor Bill Lee — along with Governors Kay Ivey (AL), Brian Kemp (GA), Tate Reeves (MS), Henry McMaster (SC), and Greg Abbott (TX) — issued a joint statement last Tuesday condemning the vote:

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That time Trump admitted he’s been lying

We have grown so accustomed to hearing Donald Trump accuse Joe Biden and the Democrats of rigging or stealing elections we might not notice when he admits he’s been lying the whole time. But that’s what happened April 8.

Make no mistake. He didn’t mean to. It was an accident. He was intending to get U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham, of South Carolina, to stop going on and on and on about the desire for a national abortion ban among a majority of Republican voters. Graham himself has nothing to fear. Trump does. He’s principally responsible for the collapse of abortion rights. Meanwhile, Republican candidates have been losing winnable elections since 2022.

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The agony of the gasbag

I didn’t expect to learn much from week one of People of the State of New York v. Donald J. Trump, otherwise known as the Stormy Daniels Hush Money Case.

Why? Because as anyone who has ever reported on it knows, the jury phase is normally dull for everyone involved. The last time I was called (10 years ago in Brooklyn), the judge wouldn’t let us read, which — as any of my former therapists could tell you — was agonizing for me. As the attorney and judge questioned other people from the jury pool, the court officer marched around yelling at anyone peeking surreptitiously at a magazine or book under their coat.

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Extreme apocalyptic rhetoric is everywhere

Judging by her 100,000-follower X account, Danielle Johnson was a typical astrology influencer. She chided Cancers to stop being chaotic and Tauruses to lay off the carbs. She burned candles, cast spells and peddled energy healing sessions.

It was your standard sunny apolitical pseudo-spiritual shtick, but her tone darkened abruptly in the days leading up to the solar eclipse.

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