Opinion

Billionaires, bigots and bullies: There's nothing patriotic about today's Republicans

“[I]t is of infinite moment that you should properly estimate the immense value of our national union to your collective and individual happiness; that you should cherish a cordial, habitual, and immovable attachment to it; accustoming yourselves to think and speak of it as of the palladium of your political safety and prosperity; watching for its preservation with jealous anxiety; discountenancing whatever may suggest even a suspicion that it can in any event be abandoned, and indignantly frowning upon the first dawning of every attempt to alienate any portion of our country from the rest or to enfeeble the sacred ties which now link together the various parts.” — George Washington Farewell Address September 17, 1796

The GOP has abandoned even a pretense of caring for our country and supporting democracy at home and abroad. Now all they care about are bigots, billionaires, and bullies.

There was a time in this country when most Americans — regardless of political affiliation — agreed on a basic set of principles:

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Why Kevin McCarthy can’t keep tap dancing

I think we are missing an important factor in the discussion of the House Republicans and their desire to avenge Donald Trump by impeaching Joe Biden. What’s missing is an appreciation of the difference between two things that constitute the entire discussion and our understanding of it.

There are reasons.

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‘Existential fight’: Five ways the media must cover Donald Trump as an authoritarian threat

The presumptive 2024 Republican presidential nominee, Donald Trump, is promising to dismantle this country’s government institutions and increase his power if he returns to office. He’s also threatening to jail his political opponents.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is currently a distant second in the Republican primary, also plans to dismantle America’s institutions and attack our democracy should he become president.

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'This is unprecedented': Record-breaking rain brings deadly flooding to Greece, Turkey, Bulgaria

Historic flooding in Greece, Turkey, and Bulgaria has killed at least 11 people as rain followed heat and fire in a summer of extremes.

The storm knocked out bridges, swept cars out to sea, and made roads impassable, dumping more than two feet of rain on some parts of Greece within hours.

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Columnist: Donald Trump is spreading a dangerous mental illness to his supporters

Donald Trump has built a cult around himself. This is dangerous to America and dangerous to democracy.

Cults of personality in governance are broadly incompatible with democracy. They usually erupt in dictatorships where the Great Leader’s face and sayings are splashed all over public places. Think Mao’s China, Stalin’s USSR, Hitler’s Germany, Kim’s North Korea.

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How the GOP suckered America on taxes

Over the past 40 years, Republicans have pulled off an incredible magic trick. They’ve convinced average working people that tax cuts benefit them when in fact the opposite is true.

It all boils down to two simple principles, which are — unfortunately — a mystery to most Americans and ignored in both our political and media discussions of income taxes.

1. Income tax cuts for the morbidly rich raise a nation’s debt but do nothing else. Reagan’s BS “trickle down” claims notwithstanding, tax cuts for the rich don’t even stimulate economic growth: they just fatten billionaires’ money bins and offshore accounts. And because tax cuts on the rich are paid for by increasing the national debt, they’re a drag on the economy. They make rich people richer, but make the nation poorer.

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D.C. insider on the terrifying next 14 months

The week after Labor Day weekend usually signals the start of a return to serious business — summer vacations over and kids back to school, fiscal years ending and new ones beginning, cleaning up and battening down for winter.

This particular week after Labor Day also marks the start of a terrifyingly high-stakes ride for America — five months until the beginning of the primaries, eight until Trump’s trial for seeking to overturn the 2020 election, 10 until the Republican convention in which Trump is almost certain to be nominated, 14 until the presidential election of 2024.

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The feds are about to take on Google’s alleged anticompetitive behavior. The history involves the ‘Chicago School.’

The federal government’s biggest antitrust trial against a tech giant since it took on Microsoft in the late 1990s is scheduled to open Sept. 12. Who has the best case? Hard to say. We’re leery whenever the government intrudes into a marketplace, and this case is no slam-dunk. Google is accused of anticompetitive behavior in its core web browser business. And even though Google and its fellow tech giants have been flaunting monopolylike power for years now, this lawsuit’s tortured history doesn’t fill us with confidence. In what smelled like an attempt to win quick political points, the Trump ...

Grifters, wannabees and Putin-style autocrats: Here's why the GOP is no longer a legitimate political party

US News and World Report had a story about how the fringe has become the mainstream in the Republican Party. The headline of the story says it all: “Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene Rises From GOP Fringe to Front.”

The backstory here is fascinating and grim.

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Iowa town blocked Pride group from Labor Day parade

This article originally appeared in Bleeding Heartland, a news and commentary website covering Iowa politics.

City leaders in Essex, Iowa, a town of about 722 people, ignored warnings about the First Amendment when they prevented local LGBTQ residents from participating in the town's Labor Day parade on September 4.

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The man with the hoe

Editor’s note: American poet and educator Edwin Markham wrote the following poem after seeing Jean-François Millet’s painting “L’homme à la houe” (“Man with a Hoe”). It was published in the San Francisco Examiner in January 1899 after an editor heard Markham recite it at a New Year’s Eve party. It was reprinted in periodical across the country and included in “The Cry for Justice,” an anthology of humanist writing edited by Upton Sinclair. The anthology, published in 1915, was referred to as “a new Bible,” which Sinclair called a “Gospel of the new hope of the race … a book to cheer the discouraged and console the wounded in humanity’s last war of liberation.”

Bowed by the weight of centuries he leans
Upon his hoe and gazes on the ground,
The emptiness of ages in his face,
And on his back the burden of the world.
Who made him dead to rapture and despair,
A thing that grieves not and that never hopes,
Stolid and stunned, a brother to the ox?
Who loosened and let down this brutal jaw?
Whose was the hand that slanted back this brow?
Whose breath blew out the light within this brain?

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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.

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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.

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