Opinion

Tough on crime should not mean inhumane US prison conditions

At the Waupun Correctional Institution, a maximum security Wisconsin penitentiary located about three hours northwest of Chicago, some 1,000 prisoners have been confined mostly to their cells for more than four months. In an extensive Aug. 19 report on the horrendous conditions, The New York Times alleged “walls speckled with feces and blood,” birds flying around cells, an absence of toilet paper, the cancellation of any and all visits with family and no meaningful time whatsoever in the fresh air. Officials argued that staff shortages and threats of significant disorder and disruption at the ...

Jared Kushner and Donald Trump sold out America for billions while the media looked the other way

Lauren “Bam Bam” Boebert announced at CPAC:

“We are going to investigate Hunter Biden because he has used his father’s positions in government for shady business dealings with Ukraine and China. We no longer need a resident in the White House. We need a president who puts America first and not his business dealings with corrupt foreign countries.”

You’d think such a statement by a Trump supporter would be met with shocked silence, but the crowd went wild with applause. And there is, of course, some legitimacy to the sentiment.

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A prebuttal of the GOP's debate trashing Biden and progressives

The first Republican debate of the 2024 election cycle is tonight, and while all the drama seems focused on whether or not anybody beyond Chris Christie will take a serious swing at Trump, odds are most of the evening’s time will be devoted to trashing President Joe Biden.

So, to help keep you sane through all the lies and BS — and the fog you may be in by the end of the debate if your drinking game involved the word “woke” — here’s a quick summary* of the things that Biden has accomplished (with a little help from Democrats in Congress) in his first two-and-a-half years in office.

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How my grandmother was one of the first to be destroyed by right-wing propaganda

My grandmother was of her generation. That’s to say, she could be a little racist from time to time.

Born in 1912, eight years before women would get the right to vote, she held down a full-time job in an office “with all those men” in the 1930s when most women stayed home and worked in support of all those men. That’s to say, she didn’t take any shit from anybody.

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19 questions Fox News should ask candidates at the GOP presidential debate

Eight Republican presidential hopefuls will take the Fox News debate stage tonight for a game of “kill the man (or woman) with the ball” as the candidates seek to emerge as Donald Trump’s top challenger.

In normal times, the frontrunner — Trump — would face attack from all the others. But these times are anything but normal, with Trump planning to skip the Republican debate. So the event is widely viewed as a battle to occupy the second-place spot now tenuously held by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

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Blindsided by Hollywood’s obsession with white saviors

Leave Sandra Bullock alone. The chances of Bullock returning her Academy Award for her winning role in “The Blind Side” are about as good as former Super Bowl winning offensive tackle Michael Oher coming out of retirement to protect Aaron Rodgers in the pocket. It’s not happening. Bullock got trolled on the internet last week for her 2009 movie role as Oher’s adoptive mother in the blockbuster film about a southern white family who takes in a Black foster child and steers him to college football stardom. But it turns out that Leigh Anne and Sean Tuohy never adopted Oher. Instead, as Oher alleg...

How Donald Trump’s narcissism is now a major threat

In a Vanity Fair article published before Trump became president, developmental psychologist Howard Gardner of Harvard University called Trump “remarkably narcissistic,” and clinical psychologist Ben Michaelis called Trump a classic case of “textbook narcissistic personality disorder.” The article cites more than a few mental health professionals who believe Trump fits all the criteria for having pathological narcissism, and over the years many similar articles would follow, such as this 2016 article in The Atlantic by Northwestern psychology professor Dan McAdams, and this New York Times article by Jennifer Senior, titled “We Are All at the Mercy of the Narcissist-in-Chief.”

Even some Republicans have come out and attested to Trump’s narcissism. For example, this CNN article claims that “Paul Ryan was convinced Donald Trump has narcissistic personality disorder,” and Ty Cobb, a lawyer who was a member of the Trump administration legal team, described the ex-president as a “deeply wounded narcissist.”

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The chaos of Chicago’s 1968 Democratic National Convention could happen again

As Chicago begins its yearlong preparation for hosting the 2024 Democratic National Convention, there’s value in remembering the events surrounding its hosting of the same event 55 years ago, in 1968. For before there was Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, there was Aug. 28, 1968, in Chicago. Both are dates and events that will forever be markers of infamy, controversy and, ultimately, conversations on the contours of democracy and freedoms. Both occurred amid a traditional democratic process: one involving the counting of electoral votes and the other involving the nomination of a presidential cand...

The Supreme Court temporarily halted the corrupt Sackler deal. A permanent fix is needed.

While the U.S. Supreme Court is sharply divided along ideological lines, it might surprise many Americans to learn that unanimous rulings happen every term, even in cases where lower courts have reached opposing conclusions. We see a good chance of the high court coming together for a 9-0 vote in the months ahead to shoot down a terrible injustice that festered in bankruptcy courts for years — until the notorious Sackler family inadvertently put a spotlight on it. The Sacklers made billions engineering an opioid epidemic that ruined countless lives and killed off Americans by the hundreds of t...

4 indictments in 4 months. For the party’s sake and the nation’s, GOP must renounce Trump

The latest indictment of Donald Trump, an unprecedented fourth set of charges handed down against him in a span of four months, has spawned chatter across America’s airwaves and dinner tables about the GOP’s prospects in 2024. Will they be doomed not just by the dark shadow cast by the cases against Trump but also by what is sure to be his continuing obsession with perpetuating the lie that he won the 2020 presidential contest? If Trump ends up being the GOP nominee, it’s likely that much of the party will, like lemmings, continue to hew to Trump’s irrational, self-serving script and echo his ...

Inside the MAGA plan to track and control your life

In a Yahoo News/YouGov poll last year, 62 percent of Republicans said they preferred Vladimir Putin’s leadership to that of President Biden; only 4 percent saw Biden as a stronger leader than Putin.

Just a few weeks ago, rightwing darling Marjorie Taylor Greene tweeted:

“Today, I filed six amendments [to the National Defense Authorization Act] to prohibit sending any additional funding, weapons, ammunition, or other resources to Ukraine…”

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'Traitor': Tucker Carlson calls Ukraine conflict 'NATO war against Russia'

Last month, The New York Times described an Iowa Christian presidential forum hosted by a “conservative evangelical kingmaker,” which featured Tucker Carlson interviewing six GOP candidates, as “Jesus is out. Vladimir V. Putin is in.”

The lineup of six GOP presidential candidates featured Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Asa Hutchinson, Mike Pence, Vivek Ramaswamy, and Tim Scott.

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GOP’s abortion loss in Ohio confirms it’s simply out of step with much of the rest of America

Ever since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, Republicans have been repeatedly shooting themselves in the foot when it comes to grappling with the highly charged issue of abortion. They did it again in Ohio this month. The GOP tried to pull a fast one, asking voters in the Buckeye State to approve a measure that would have raised the threshold to amend the state’s constitution from a simple majority to 60% support. Ohio GOP lawmakers who put the measure on the ballot smoke-screened their real intent by pitching it as a bid to firewall the amendment process from deep-pocketed specia...