Opinion

'Demoralizing' new Michael Moore film attacks climate movement at a time when solutions should be at the forefront, say critics

"Throughout, the filmmakers twist basic facts, misleading the public about who is responsible for the climate crisis."

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Here's the sad truth about America's plague of Fox News-addicted Trump supporters

Despite Donald "Why Not Shoot Up Lysol?" Trump's unsubtle yearning to "reopen" the economy (which won't work) and let the novel coronavirus run rampant, a new poll from the Washington Post and the University of Maryland shows that strong majorities of Americans think that's a really stupid idea. Eight out of ten Americans took one look at the yahoos protesting the lockdowns in various state capitals and said, nah, living is more important than being able to order that 400-calorie vanilla-hazelnut frappuccino inside the Starbucks instead of from the drive-through window. Despite the mighty efforts of Republicans to create a false dichotomy between saving lives and saving the economy, it appears most Americans understand that Americans can't go back to work if they're laid up or dying from COVID-19.

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Here's how we could be responding to the COVID-19 crisis instead of the bizarrely backward-looking programs we have now

No matter how welcome, the various aid programs emerging from Washington are helter-skelter and backward-looking.

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History should have told us not to believe the quinine drug hype

Editor's notethis article was submitted and accepted for publication prior to recent reporting of a Veterans Administration observational study of patient outcomes (not a randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial) which observed higher death rates among VA patients treated with hydroxychloroquine than those not treated with the drug. Also subsequent to HNN's decision to publish, the FDA has advised against the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19 outside of hospital or controlled clinical trial settings.

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Stay home or reopen? There's at least one way to avoid Trump's false choice

One of the most insane bits of propaganda being injected into the dual coronavirus and economic catastrophes of the moment is the Trump-marketed gibberish about how "the cure can't be worse than the problem." It's an infuriatingly simplistic zinger, condensing myriad complexities into a facile bumper-sticker slogan that will ultimately result in more dead Americans.

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Trump leaves his defenders hanging out to dry again

By now, almost everything that can be said about Trump’s bizarre bleach-and-sunlight episode has been said. I don’t even need to link, reference, or give background on it. Everyone paying even the slightest attention to the news knows. They know how bizarre it was, how unfathomably stupid it was on every level—political, scientific, common sense, any of it. I don’t think there is anything that could make clear to Trump’s base just how unfit he is for the job. But if anything could do it at all, it would be telling his scientists to research injecting people with Lysol or opening them up for UV rays under the skin.

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Internet slams Mike Pence for suggesting the public is too dumb to know why they can't get tested

At Monday's coronavirus task force briefing, ABC News reporter Jon Karl asked Vice President Mike Pence to explain why the president's promise about testing capabilities was broken. Pence's response was that the public misunderstood what they were actually promising.

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Trump’s public displays of erratic behavior are symptomatic of a country that’s gone off the rails

What's the smartest thing Donald Trump could say to the American people right now? I mean, other than, "I resign."

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How Trump's parade of chaos and failure could trigger a historic shift for the post-corona world

Historically, in hyper-crises, local and global systems can change fundamentally. Before the coronavirus pandemic hit first China and then the rest of the globe, the question of whether the American imperial era might be faltering was already on the table, amid that country's endless wars and with the world’s most capricious leader. When humanity emerges from this devastating crisis of disease, dislocation, and impoverishment, not to mention the fracturing of a global economic system created by Washington but increasingly powered by Beijing on a climate-stressed planet, the question will be: Has the Chinese dragon pushed the American eagle down to a secondary position?

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How old-fashioned American greed has made the COVID-19 crisis even worse

The corporate news media has defined the coronavirus pandemic as merely a public health crisis. It is that, of course — but it has exposed a political crisis, too, that is making the effects of the pandemic far worse than they would be if this were merely a public health issue.

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'I don't want to die because of selfish Christians': Twitter fires back at William Barr's push to take legal action against lockdown orders

This Monday, Attorney General Bill Barr issued a memorandum titled, “Balancing Public Safety with the Preservation of Civil Rights,” where he directed the Justice Department to take legal action against coronavirus lockdown rules it deems to be "an overbearing infringement of constitutional and statutory protections."

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Trump desperately tries to gaslight America as he faces humiliation from Lysol-gate

It's gone mainstream in recent years, but the word "gaslighting" used to be an esoteric term from the world of psychology and domestic abuse counseling. The word refers to the 1944 film "Gaslight," in which Ingrid Bergman plays a woman whose husband tries to drive her insane by hiding her belongings and otherwise manipulating her environment, and telling her that the changes she perceives are all in her head. Experts in domestic violence developed the term to describe the way that abusers in real life try to manipulate victims. The gaslighter works by denying reality, often when the facts are plain as day, with such conviction and repetition that the victim starts to question themselves and the evidence of their own senses.

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Trump's tragic clowning — and his global surrender to China and Russia — have exposed America in a fundamental way

Many Americans who were children sometime between the 1950s and the 1980s no doubt remember Game of the States. It was (and evidently still is) a simpleminded catch-and-carry board game through which multiple generations learned vague, generic facts about the 50 states. That game is probably the reason I know all 50 state capitals to this day. Massachusetts and Georgia are tough because the answers are too obvious; South Carolina and West Virginia are tough because the answers seem almost intentionally confusing.

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