Opinion

Ron DeSantis is a tad more diplomatic than George Wallace was

Despite all those Ohioans and Michiganders moving to The Villages or Margaritaville or other white folks’ play pens, despite the cosmopolitan sheen of the coastal cities and the impossibility of getting decent grits in Miami, when it comes to race, Florida is a Deep South state.

Florida’s plantations were worked by thousands of enslaved people; Florida’s per capita lynching rate was the highest in the South; and from the 1920s to the 1960s we experienced more than our fair share of racist violence.

There was a time, in the 1970s and 1980s, when it looked like we might drag ourselves out of the 19th century.

Keep reading... Show less

McConnell’s public humiliation is a chef’s kiss

Let me first say that Mitch McConnell is exceptionally deserving of every second of dissection that he’s getting after his second seize-up in front of TV cameras. The Senate minority leader is as responsible for America’s fascist turn as Donald Trump is. The more humiliation for him, the better.

That said, his second seize-up, which seems related to a recent concussion for which he was hospitalized, has sparked another round of debate over age – and it’s just tedious. There seems to be a bipartisan consensus among the opinionhavers of Washington that when an elected official is no longer transparent about the consequences of aging, then it’s probably time to retire. The idea seems to be that if they aren’t being transparent, they are staying in office for themselves, and not for the people whom they serve.

Keep reading... Show less

Inside the re-emergence of the Old Confederacy

Increasingly, the Republican Party is consolidating its power in a minority of states and turning them into little laboratories of neo-fascism. This is tough on people in those states — particularly people who are Black, queer, or female — but what is its larger impact on America?

“Power tends to corrupt,” Lord Acton famously noted, “and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

Keep reading... Show less

How much damage has the Trump-Putin collusion inflicted on the US?

If Trump shared American secrets with Putin, our intelligence agencies are not going to call a press conference to let us all know. Similarly, short of a trial for treason, it’s extremely unlikely such an allegation — even if true — will show up in a court of law.

Lawyers, judges, and juries just don’t have the security clearances necessary, so the documents brought to court are almost certainly not among the very most sensitive: they’re just enough to get a conviction.

Keep reading... Show less

Heidi Stevens: In the wake of yet another school shooting, I fear young people will give up on our willingness to protect them

The Aug. 30 edition of the Daily Tar Heel, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s student newspaper, was supposed to be devoted to the upcoming football season. The first game would be days away. They would play South Carolina at home in prime time. Hard to imagine a bigger story.

Then an armed suspect walked up to associate professor Zijie Yan on Aug. 28 and shot him dead. The campus was sent into lockdown and thousands upon thousands of students, faculty and staff—and the people who love them—were sent reeling toward an all-too-familiar cycle of dread and fear.

The overlooked but crucial election subversion ties between Colorado and Georgia

When Georgia prosecutors this month charged former President Donald Trump and others in an alleged conspiracy to overturn the 2020 election, the indictment included a couple of names that were familiar to Coloradans.

But the massive crimes that are said to have occurred in Georgia have ties to Colorado that go beyond those notorious defendants. Several aspects of the indictment trace back to Colorado in ways that range from curious to crucial, and they deserve greater attention as the country heads into another presidential election in which MAGA activists are all but certain to pursue fresh attempts at election subversion.

Keep reading... Show less

Dwight Eisenhower created a unifying brand of politics that the GOP needs today

During his first term as president, Dwight Eisenhower turned to his press secretary, Jim Hagerty, and said, “If the right wing wants a fight, they’re going to get it. If they want to leave the Republican Party and form a third party, that’s their business, but before I end up, either this Republican Party will reflect progressivism, or I won’t be there with them anymore.” Eisenhower wrote in his diary that he might even have to form a third party himself, and he would dedicate it to “the Middle Way” — his term for the political centrism that he favored. This could be a potent theme for today’s...

Biden’s Medicare drug price plan is good medicine for Americans

The federal government operates three gigantic systems providing health care to millions of Americans. The VA takes care of veterans, Medicaid (whose costs are shared with states and localities) is coverage for the poor and Medicare is health insurance for seniors and people with disabilities. The VA and Medicaid can, and do, negotiate with suppliers on drug prices, just like they negotiate payment levels for other health services. Yet Medicare, which sets the reimbursement rates for doctors and hospitals, is barred by federal law from negotiating on drugs. That’s the doing of the well-heeled ...

Karine Jean-Pierre isn’t humoring Peter Doocy anymore

The Biden White House has given Fox News' Peter Doocy possibly more attention than any other press pool reporter, but at times the patience of both Biden press secretaries (and President Biden) has worn thin.

For a while, Biden White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki's almost-daily dueling matches with Doocy made regular headlines, like in February of 2022 when she was forced to say, “Well, Peter, let me just take a step back and explain to everyone how diplomacy works." Or in May of 2021, when Psaki, tired of repeating herself, told Doocy, “Well, we went through this journey together yesterday so let’s do it again.”

Keep reading... Show less

Election denialism just lost again — this time in a red-trending Iowa county

WINDSOR HEIGHTS, Iowa — With hurricanes, mass shootings and endless Trump-y drama dominating the news, a county auditor special election in central Iowa probably wasn’t on your radar.

But the results last night in Warren County, Iowa, are worth your attention, because they continued a surprising and hopeful trend for state and local races across the country.

Keep reading... Show less

Why right-wing billionaires and the GOP want a nation of uneducated, compliant serfs

Republican politicians and the rightwing billionaires who fund them want a nation of uneducated, compliant serfs in their workforce, not a nation of well-educated union-conscious people who are willing to strike to get better pay and benefits.

Which means Job One is to get America’s kids out of the clutches of those evil unionized teachers. Education, after all, is a liberal value. The conservative vision is “quality education for the children of the wealthy, while ending child labor laws for all the rest.”

Keep reading... Show less

The sooner we forget about Trump's hideous mugshot the better

When the mugshot of Donald John Trump, inmate No. P01135809, was released by Georgia’s Fulton County Jail Thursday night, I found the scowl on his hideous, orange face, shadowed by the meticulously taped dead ferret on his head, to be absolutely hilarious.

What a pathetic, miserable old man.

The booking itself and what led to it? There was no humor in that.

Keep reading... Show less

Republicans have been lying to their voters — and now those same voters are dying

This is a climate change story that fossil fuel billionaires and their GOP lackeys would rather you didn’t know.

As more and more people are killed by extraordinarily severe weather in places where it used to be unusual it’s going to get harder and harder to keep Red State citizens from finding out how badly they’ve been screwed by the unholy alliance between Republicans and oil barons.

Severe weather in the United States is not only getting worse, it’s moving.

Keep reading... Show less