Opinion

Desperate Trump's 'final battle' is to destroy America — and that's not an exaggeration

A week after Donald Trump channeled Hitler and Mussolini with his “vermin” speech—in which he promised to “root out” the “left-wing thugs,” which he called “vermin”—he sent out a violence-laced post on Truth Social this past weekend that was at once apocalyptic and authoritarian but also quite revealing:

"2024 is our final battle. With you at my side, we will demolish the Deep State, we will expel the warmongers from our government, we will drive out the globalists, we will cast out the Communists, Marxists, and Fascists, we will throw off the sick political class that hates our country, we will rout the Fake News Media, we will evict Joe Biden from the White House, and we will FINISH THE JOB ONCE AND FOR ALL!"

It had all the horrendous exterminationist language of the vermin speech — ”demolish,” “expel,” “cast out,” “throw off” and “rout”. And it is also a plea to his followers, many of whom are Christian nationalists and follow a plethora of end-time conspiracy theories, or both. It’s the “final battle,” he told them, an armageddon of sorts—wording that gets them completely engaged — and he needs them “at my side.”

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Supreme Court cowards are hiding behind a hollow ethics code. Here’s how to fix that.

Justice Samuel Alito claims Congress has no power to impose an ethics code on the Supreme Court.

And the high court’s embarrassing new “Code of Conduct seems to concur. The court’s newly adopted code is notable for its permissive tone and lack of teeth, and confirms that justices answer to no-one.

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A neuroscientist explains how evolution offers a solution for Palestine and Israel

It is rational to be deeply concerned at this moment in history. The divisive conflict between Israelis and Palestinians ultimately represents a battle between two of the world’s major religions.

At its worst, this war could pit the Judeo-Christian world against the Islamic world, bringing about a kind of global spiritual war. In fact, we are already seeing signs of that — the militant Islamic group Hezbollah in Lebanon is now launching airstrikes over Israel’s border, while U.S. and Iranian proxy forces are attacking each other inside Syria and Iraq. These events are quickly dividing the public, with most feeling like they have to choose one side or the other.

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Coming to a Republican-controlled town near you: Outlawed for being gay

— Behind the Curtain: Trump allies pre-screen loyalists for unprecedented power grab. Both the Trump campaign and the Heritage Foundation appear to be trying to screen up to 54,000 people loyal to Trump and to the idea of a fascist America to take over top government positions nationwide when he returns to the White House. Trump’s folks call it Agenda 47 (as in the 47th president) and Heritage calls it Project 2025. Meanwhile, Tommy Tuberville’s campaign to keep the top ranks of the military open for Trump to stack with people willing to order live ammunition used against Americans protesting his policies in the streets continues: Majority Leader Schumer is trying to change the Senate rules to get around Tuberville, but it will require at least 7 Republicans to vote with all the Democrats, and the Trump folks are apparently putting pressure on them not to go along with Schumer’s request. These fascists are dead serious, well funded, and very organized. They represent a genuine threat to the future of democracy in our republic and around the world.

— Quote of the Day, “One thing. I want my Republican colleagues to give me one thing. One. That I can go campaign on and say we did,” Texas Republican Congressman Chip Roy said. “One!” Is he watching my show? For almost all of the 20 years I’ve been doing my radio/TV show I’ve run a contest. I’ll give an autographed book to anybody who can come up with even one single piece of major legislation since Reagan that was written by Republicans, passed the House and Senate with a majority of Republicans, and was signed into law by a Republican president that helped average Americans more than billionaires or monopolistic giant corporations. While a few folks have identified small efforts around the edges (the no-call list, for example), nobody has found a single “big” thing the GOP has done for all Americans in the past 40 years. Now that reality seems to be sinking in for Texas Republican Congressman Chip Roy as he went to the floor of the House and begged his colleagues to give him the name of even one single piece of legislation they’ve passed this year while they’ve had control of the House. Of course, there isn’t one and probably never will be: the GOP serves the morbidly rich and giant corporations to the exclusion of all else, as anybody who’s been paying attention can see. If Chip Roy is really interested in passing laws and funding projects that help average Americans, he needs to leave the GOP and join the Democrats.

— How Mike Johnson got played. House Republicans can be a slippery bunch, but Speaker MAGA Mike wasn’t ready for this one. He’d come up with what he thought was a foolproof scheme to screw the Democrats in January with very little blowback, and it just blew up in his face. The problem House Republicans have figured out is that when they shut down the entire government — as they’ve been doing since the 1990s whenever there’s a Democrat in the White House and they want to throw a tantrum about social spending — people get pissed off. Nobody wants to see the national parks and monuments closed, the military not get paid, and air traffic controllers and TSA agents having to hold their breath because their checks are being deferred. So Johnson split his continuing resolution to fund the government through early next year into two parts: one that would expire on January 19th and the other in early February. The plan was to load all the “must function” stuff in the first bill, and all the social spending in the second one so they can pass the first in January and then shut down the government all they want for as long as they want when it comes to the second one because only people who are poor, on welfare, or work for agencies like the EPA and IRS would be affected. BUT, at the last minute somebody pulled a switcheroo and put the Defense and Homeland Security funding into the second bill and Johnson didn’t catch it: that was the legislation that got passed and President Biden signed on Thursday. Now the House Republicans are foaming at the mouth, looking for the “traitor” and “rat” who switched the bill versions just before they were voted on. Was it a turncoat Republican member of Congress? Or a mischievous staffer? Keep an eye on this one…

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It's not too late for GOP to dump Trump and pick Nikki

It is time for Republicans who care about foreign policy, are hawkish on national security, or who want to win back the White House to get behind Nikki Haley. The former South Carolina governor and UN ambassador has what it takes to keep America safe. What she does not have is enough support from Republican primary voters. Haley’s campaign comes at a time when GOP voters are increasingly isolationist, prefer personality over policy and seem soft on Russian President Vladimir Putin. Can Haley land her message of carrying a big stick, following in the footsteps of the 26th president of the Unite...

State leaders muzzle Floridians who want to speak out

Floridians, take notice. Your right to a representative government is being stolen away. Recent headlines document angry eruptions among an audience of people who show up to meetings ready to tell their leaders what they think — only to be muzzled by time limits that shut down somewould-be participants before they could utter a single word. More often, however, the exclusion is happening quietly and secretly, in meetings that never take place. Closed doors that should be open. A row of empty seats on a dais, facing a roomful of chairs that are also empty. The result, however, is the same: The ...

How Democrats stormproof democracy from Hurricane Donald before Election Day

Donald Trump has some big plans for his second term should he be reelected, and they would be disastrous for American democracy.

Trump’s plan is called Project 2025, and it would involve replacing more than 50,000 career civil servants in the federal government with Trump loyalists. It’s a project being headed by the Heritage Foundation, and it’s so far backed by more than $20 million in funding. With those loyalists installed, Trump would be able to increase his power and abuse that power as he pleases.

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We must do better on traffic safety

With World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims being commemorated tomorrow, it’s a good time to praise recent efforts to make our streets safer and to remind ourselves how much work lies ahead.

Earlier this month, for example, Bayonne, N.J., took the proactive step of expanding its prohibition on U-turns along its main drag, Broadway, from the business district to its full length.

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How to keep Gen Zers from fleeing America

Young Americans have a resource those of us who came of age before the late 1990s lacked: instant and easy access to information about people and life in other countries. Between the Internet and social media, Gen Zers have a better understanding of what life is actually like overseas, and they’re liking what they’re seeing.



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Show-and-tell, Bibi and Joe

By Martin Schram

It happens occasionally, but only rarely.

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You might think the NFL is racist. An insider says he’s about to prove it in court.

Jim Trotter’s new job at NFL.com began with the former ESPN and Sports Illustrated staffer noticing there were no Black people in decision-making positions at the National Football League-backed news website and multimedia hub.

This was five years ago, and at first, Trotter complained to NFL business managers, noting that the NFL’s workforce includes nearly 60 percent Black players. When no Black people got big jobs at NFL.com, he began to complain in media appearances.

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When bribery was legalized in America

“When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men in a society, over the course of time they create for themselves a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it.” — Frédéric Bastiat, Economic sophisms, 2nd series (1848)
Virtually every crisis America is facing right now is either caused or exacerbated by the corruption of our nation’s third branch of government.

A branch of government — the Supreme Court — that this week laid out one of the most absurd charades in its history, pretending to do something about their own corruption and utter lack of ethics with a sham “Code of Conduct.”

They are responsible for our crises of gun violence, the drug epidemic, homelessness, political gridlock, our slow response to the climate emergency, a looming crisis for Social Security and Medicare, the situation on our southern border, even the lack of affordable drugs, insurance, and healthcare.

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'Sadistic': Clinical psychologist explains the 'creepy depravity' of Trump’s 'fascism'

During a recent rally in New Hampshire, Donald Trump said something he’s been saying for some time. He said the indictments against him are reason enough to bring indictments of his own against his enemies once he regains the presidency. “This is third-world-country stuff, ‘arrest your opponent,’” he said. “And that means I can do that, too.”

At first glance, this is the height of hypocrisy. Just because there are indictments against him – which, by the way, were brought for good reasons – doesn’t mean Trump can turn around and bring indictments of his own against perceived enemies, just because he feels like it.

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