Opinion

Waco was a pilgrimage, not a rally, for the far-right's newest martyr

Did we need another sign that Donald J. Trump is mobilizing antigovernment white supremacists in his bid for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination? Not really. But we have one.

Over the weekend, and facing criminal indictments in the coming weeks, Trump held his first big campaign rally in Waco, Texas. As Julia Manchester at The Hill characterized it, Waco was “friendly territory” for Trump. This is something that could not be said unequivocally about Austin, Houston or San Antonio, cities with far more liberal voting constituencies.

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Iowa caucuses will be first test of GOP’s standards after Trump indictment

The latest round of indictments against Donald Trump — 37 federal indictments, including 31 for violating the federal Espionage Act — has implications for the 2024 Iowa Republican Caucuses.

They will now do a lot more than simply pick a winner in the first official contest as the party begins its presidential nominating process. They will provide the first answer from Republican voters to an increasingly urgent and vital question: Does the Republican Party have meaningful, minimum standards for who it is willing to nominate for president of the United States?

Does character count? Loyalty to America and to democracy? Competence? Is being a skilled problem solver still an asset? Or is it enough for Republicans these days for its leaders to simply seethe with grievance, mostly imagined? Is it necessary to obey the law?

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Why do we use 'cult' to describe normal illiberal politics?

Hillary Clinton said during a recent presentation that Donald Trump’s followers won’t abandon him no matter how many criminal indictments are brought against him. The former Democratic presidential candidate added, “that it’s more of a cult than a political party at this point and they’re going to stick with their leader.”

With that, “cult” became the appellation of the week in the right-wing media apparatus, which is global in scale, because anything Clinton says about Trump and his followers is a cut so deep that it demands a week’s worth of outrage.

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Trust Trump’s impunity for the law. Trust democratic politics, too

I can’t think of anything good to say about him except maybe this: Donald Trump is predictable. We can trust his impunity for morality and the law. But we can trust something else just as much. We can trust democratic politics.

Consider the new news. Same as the old news.

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How the racist 'Great Replacement' theory keeps fueling Trumpism

The white nationalism that remains a virulent strain throughout Donald Trump’s MAGA base received a jump start with the election of a U.S. president.

But white nationalism alone didn’t bring the man now known as “Inmate #P01135809” into power in 2016.

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'White Supremacy': a poem

Some said that, with Obama, it was past —
That racism was done. It couldn’t last!
But they forgot our history’s basic twist.
Our origins are white-supremacist.

Our founders, all of European stock,
On superiority assumed a lock;
Considered all but white to be quite savage …
Theirs to control, command, confine — and ravage!

Though slavery’s the major exhibition,
Other tragedies deserve more exposition.
Schools for “Indians,” their culture to erode;
The KKK, the lynchings, and Jim Crow.

No matter what we think or how we act
White supremacy’s embedded; that’s a fact.
For our culture, institutions, and our laws
Were created and designed to serve The Cause.

To get a loan; a house to own; and voting rights
The main condition was: you must be White.
Boys of color get the lecture, “Just behave!
For to the so-called law, you may be prey!”

DeSantis and his cronies make the case:
We must not look this history in the face.
Their purpose is both obvious and cruel —
Have White supremacists regain their rule!

Carolyn McGiffert Ekedahl is the former deputy inspector general for inspections at the Central Intelligence Agency and co-author of “The Wars of Eduard Shevardnadze.”

'Ninety-one and counting': a poem

Ninety-one counts for the Count of Sedition.
Once again he’s blown past all our norms and traditions.
We know for a fact there could be a lot more.
The emoluments clause still hangs out there — a lure.

Alone, Trump’s a liar, a cheat, and a con.
With lawyers and minions, he’s Dangerous Don!
He began with big greed, then craved power. Now fear
Drives him on; he’s not likely to veer.

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Voters embraced, then recalled Chesa Boudin. Will his quest for justice live on?

In 2019, I and other San Francisco residents witnessed Chesa Boudin’s surprising election to district attorney. He was a candidate whose life experience was shaped by the trauma of being a child of incarcerated parents. As an adult, he vowed to try to do something about the shame and violence inflicted by the prison system on families.

Boudin’s parents were Kathy Boudin and David Gilbert, two white, well-educated, 1960s radicals who bombed capitalist and government buildings to support Black freedom fighters and protest the Vietnam War. After a Brinks armored car robbery north of New York City in 1981 went awry and led to the deaths of two guards and a police officer, Kathy Boudin and Gilbert were caught and jailed for decades.

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Lying isn’t supposed to be baked in

The mainstream news media is not going to save us. We’re going to have to save ourselves. Contribute money to good candidates. Join a phone bank. Knock on doors. Run for office yourself. But don’t wait for the media to reform itself. Because that may never happen.

There’s an aspect about Donald Trump that doesn’t get the attention it deserves. I’m talking about his incoherence. If you watch him during his campaign speeches, and I’m not recommending that you do, you’ll come across moments after which you’ll think: what the hell was that?

I’ll let others go into the weeds as to what Trump says, or meant to say, or whatever, because for me, the point isn’t what he says or what he meant to say. The point is none of that matters. It doesn’t matter that the GOP’s leading presidential candidate often makes no sense.

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Hamas isn’t the first military group to hide behind civilians as a way to wage war

By Benjamin Jensen, American University School of International Service

The Israeli military said on Nov. 15, 2023, that it had found weapons and a Hamas command center at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, after sending troops into the medical facility.

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King's dream: rooted in labor’s rising

This article originally appeared in InsiderNJ.

This Martin Luther King Day comes just weeks after a year that’s been dubbed "the year of the strike" because in 2023 there were well over 300 such work stoppages involving 450,000 union workers willing to take the risk of walking out on their employer — a 900 percent increase from just a few years earlier.

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Russian Nero: a poem

Vladimir Putin believes he’s exalted —
His rebuild of Empire cannot be halted.
He started out slowly — Abkhazia, Ossetia,
Small, unknown places, like little Transnistria.

He bit off Crimea and eastern Ukraine;
Then his ambition became very plain.
Though he started out slowly, one slice at a time,
Now NATO is building a “Maginot line!”

His bombing in Ukraine is terror of course.
Killing innocents is the approach he endorses.
He squashes opponents — at home and abroad,
Apparatchiks in Moscow just smile and applaud.

He’s a relic of Empire — an Empire fallen.
He’s a KGB thug and a wannabe Stalin.
He arrests those who anti-war sentiments say;
Assassinates those who may get in his way.

This devious, poisonous, treacherous Nero
Murdered an icon, a genuine hero.
He poisoned Navalny, next he’ll go for his wife.
That’s Vladimir Putin, Dictator for Life.

Carolyn McGiffert Ekedahl is the former deputy inspector general for inspections at the Central Intelligence Agency and co-author of “The Wars of Eduard Shevardnadze.”

The chief thief's pickles

The Chief Thief lacks the dimes and even nickels
That he needs to extricate himself from pickles
Of the legal sort that have him somewhat harried.
A richer immigrant he should have married!

While he said that he had billions he could beckon,
On needing to produce them didn’t reckon.
And now it seems no one will give him bond,
Afraid that in the end they will be conned!

For years the Don has cheated one and all,
Yet managed to avoid a fatal fall.
Gone bankrupt yes, failed lots, but blest
With systems slow, not speed-obsessed.

Now, once again, for Don, the system works.
Slow rolling all the charges, Kafka’s clerks
Postpone the days of reckoning until
The chances to convict him become nil.

So Donald rolls along his crooked way.
Perhaps some court will finally make him pay.
But, if as jailbird, Chief Thief doesn’t sing,
We may have to deal with Donald as our King!

Carolyn McGiffert Ekedahl is the former deputy inspector general for inspections at the Central Intelligence Agency and co-author of “The Wars of Eduard Shevardnadze.”