Opinion

When will Americans flood the streets to protest our broken, corrupt Supreme Court?

So it turns out that a huge number of voters actually do understand that it’s essential for a functioning democracy to have a fair and uncompromised judiciary, even when the rules needed to make that happen tends to be arcane and unsexy. They finally get it ... in Israel. Incredible scenes have been witnessed in the streets of Tel Aviv, where last weekend a record throng of as many as 160,000 protesters packed every inch of the main thoroughfares downtown to voice their extreme displeasure with proposed changes by the increasingly far-right government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Coup...

Angry New York congressmen are firing blanks against fraudster George Santos’ profiteering

Thanks to the presence of George Santos (or Anthony Devolder or any other alias the con man may be using) being a freshman member of Congress from New York this year has been sullied. So we sympathize with the legitimate New York frosh and their frustration with the faker in their ranks. For the unaware, the very real representative from Nassau and Queens is a fake college grad, a fake Wall Street banker, a fake Jew, a fake 9/11 family member and a long list of other fakes, due to him being an actual liar extraordinaire. Democrat Dan Goldman filed an ethics complaint against Santos within days...

Commentary: Jimmy Carter was right about human rights

When I first joined the U.S. State Department’s Foreign Service, I was optimistic about the positive role the United States played in the world. By the time I left not quite a decade later, I was haunted by how dangerous our shortsighted foreign policy can be. What worried me most was how casual the U.S. government was about arming, training, and resourcing dictators, tyrants and local thugs all over the world. We typically justified this in the name of stability or maintaining influence, but pursued it with shockingly little accountability for the negative consequences. I didn’t understand ho...

How House Republicans plan to crush your 401(k)

The most powerful Republican wants to put millions out of work. That's what Senator Elizabeth Warren got Jerome Powell to admit on Tuesday as the Donald Trump-appointed chair of the Federal Reserve testified before the Senate Banking Committee.

You can debate whether taming inflation, which has cooled year-over-year for seven straight months, is worth raising interest rates to put about two million Americans on unemployment.

But if Powell is really worried about the general health of the American economy, he should concentrate on a far greater threat to the US economy than high egg prices – his fellow Republicans.

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DC insider predicts what will happen in the biggest battle between House GOP and White House

A few days ago, I got a call from a reporter who wanted to know why President Biden has suddenly become a budget hawk: Hes proposing to trim the federal budget deficits by over $2 trillion over the next 10 years! He was an FDR-like spender in the first two years of his presidency, but now he’s turned into a Calvin Coolidge skinflint! What’s up?

What’s up is that Biden is neither a big spender nor a skinflint. He’s a cunning political operator.

Biden knows that he — along with his three immediate predecessors — have spent gobs of money. In addition, Bush and Trump cut taxes on the rich and on corporations.

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Why is Rupert Murdoch’s lie machine poisoning American Democracy?

What country in its right mind would allow a foreign entity to come into their country, set up a major propaganda operation, and then use it to so polarize that nation that its very government suffers a violent assault and its democracy finds itself at a crossroads?

Apparently, the United States. And we’re not the first, according to former Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.

Writing for The Sydney Morning Herald (the Australian equivalent of The New York Times) Rudd called Rupert Murdoch and his rightwing news operations “the greatest cancer on the Australian democracy.”

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Republicans are systematically destroying democracy — and replacing it with strongman authoritarianism

In 1926 Ernest Hemmingway published his novel The Sun Also Rises, which has this extraordinary bit of dialogue about how change happens in most aspects of life — and how governments rise and fall.
“How did you go bankrupt?” Bill asked.
”Two ways,” Mike said. “Gradually and then suddenly.”
”What brought it on?”
“Friends," said Mike. "I had a lot of friends. False friends.”

For some unfathomable reason, Democrats insist on calling their Republican colleagues their “friends.” They are not friends.

With few exceptions, they are systematically destroying American democracy with the clear objective of replacing it with strongman authoritarianism, a new and American version of what Benito Mussolini called fascism.

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Trump's 'evident emotional issues' aren't scaring off his fans – and that's dangerous

The hero's welcome that greeted Donald Trump at this past weekend's CPAC gathering in Maryland -- despite the fact that he tried to subvert the 2020 presidential election while inciting a riot at the Capitol -- should be a cause for concern over what it will take for his fans to abandon him.

That is the opinion of former U.S. Naval War College professor and conservative Tom Nichols, writing for the Atlantic.

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How the NBA disappeared Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf

No refuge could save the hireling and slave

From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave

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The woke war on your 401(k)

First, they came for your kid’s school.

Now, it’s your retirement money.

The woke mob, it seems, is everywhere.

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Why Warren Buffett is wrong and Joe Biden is right

Warren Buffett, one of the richest people in America, defended stock buybacks in his highly anticipated annual letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, released a few days ago.

“When you are told that all repurchases are harmful to shareholders or to the country, or particularly beneficial to CEOs, you are listening to either an economic illiterate or a silver-tongued demagogue (characters that are not mutually exclusive).”

Buffett may be correct about buybacks being good for shareholders, for the simple reason that each remaining outstanding share has more corporate profit behind it.

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Popping the bubble: Columbia makes the SAT and ACT test-optional

Columbia University — which is either the second or 18th best college in the country, if you go by the data-dependent, and some say data-distorted, U.S. News rankings — has just made the two big tests high schoolers take, the SAT and ACT, optional. That’s the school’s right, but it’s a highly questionable decision. This may be erstwhile King’s College’s way of preventing its admissions system from being upended if and when the Supreme Court rules that existing subjective admissions criteria at many schools discriminate against Asian-American students. Schools like Columbia understandably value...

Trump and DeSantis are giving Putin reason to believe he can win in Ukraine

As Russia's war on Ukraine enters its second year, Vladimir Putin's best hope for "victory" may lie with the two leading GOP candidates for president. Having failed to achieve an easy political takeover of Ukraine and suffered massive military losses, Putin's best option is to stalemate the war and wait for U.S. and European support for Kyiv to splinter. Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis are already enabling Putin's strategy by publicly proclaiming their willingness to cut off Kyiv. The neon-lit message to the Kremlin: Just drag this war out until 2024, when Trump or DeSantis return t...