Opinion

Exposure of Kremlin lies won’t alter course of impeachment

A key witness in the impeachment inquiry of Joe Biden had been caught trafficking in lies originating from the Kremlin, but that’s not going to stop the Republicans from moving forward. There is no there there, but there never had to be, because “there” doesn’t matter. They are picking up where Donald Trump left off when he extorted Ukraine’s president. The problem is the Republicans are bad at this.

Longtime FBI informant, Alexander Smirnov, told the FBI that Joe Biden and his son were at the heart of a bribery scheme involving Burisma, the Ukrainian energy firm that Hunter Biden worked for. Smirnov told this lie after meeting with Russian intelligence officials who are close to Vladimir Putin. According to CBS News’ Scott MacFarlane, “prosecutors claim Smirnov had contact with Russian foreign agents, including one described as a Russian official ‘who controls groups that are engaged in overseas assassination efforts.’”

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A decade of Russian infowar has made Republicans weird

There’s a clip going around featuring Malcolm Trumbull, the former prime minister of Australia, describing for a home audience the few times he witnessed Donald Trump interacting with Vladimir Putin. He said: “When you see Trump with Putin, as I have on a few occasions, he’s like the 12-year-old that goes to high school and meets the captain of the football team – ‘my hero!’ It is really creepy. It’s really creepy. … It struck everybody. You could touch it. The creepiness was palpable.”

I’ll leave it to worthies steeped in international relations to discuss the ramifications of a former leader of one of America’s closest allies defenestrating Trump’s great claim that all the world respects him.

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The most corrupt Supreme Court in the world and the Trump coup

At least four members of the most corrupt Supreme Court in American history have decided to help Trump delay his trial for trying to overthrow the government of the United States.

Just like in 2000, when five Republicans on the Court ignored Al Gore’s probable (later found to be definite) win in Florida to put Bush in the White House, today’s Court is doing as much as they can to help Trump win this November.

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This is what happens when pro-life Republicans play God

I would suggest that, by overwhelmingly passing a measure Thursday to protect in vitro fertilization providers and patients from criminal and civil liability, Alabama legislators are doing more than covering their asses. They are discovering what happens when you play God.

Alabama’s supreme court ruled recently that frozen embryos are “children” under state law, and that providers and patients can be prosecuted or sued for wrongful death of those “children.” In response, clinics across the state suspended services and procedures, sending not only hopeful parents into a panic, but Republican leaders as well.

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Nakedly partisan Supreme Court lets Trump dance above the law

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court decided to hear Donald Trump’s claim that he — or any president — is immune from criminal prosecution.

This guarantees that Trump will enjoy a significant delay before he stands trial for his attempt to overturn the 2020 election. It’s entirely possible that the trial won’t begin until after Election Day on Nov. 5, when Trump is all but assured to face President Joe Biden in an electoral rematch.

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Trump just received the gift of time, and democracy’s clock is ticking

To appreciate the magnitude more fully of why the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday laid a colossal egg regarding Donald Trump’s presidential immunity claim, we must first understand a bit of recent history.

As I wrote a little over a year ago in a commentary for Salon, “Some two years after Donald Trump’s failed insurrection, three other failed coups were presented or defeated in South America and Europe. Only one of these attempts was not brought about by a president or former president.”

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Corporate media needs to start taking the threats to our Democracy seriously

Dear Mainstream Media:

I want you all to stop whatever it is you think you are doing right now, and listen to me — and listen good. I am proposing some big changes that will affect far too many of you, but could well result in you still having a job after the 2024 presidential election.

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Why it's time to make large corporations pay living wages

There was a time when landing a job with a large corporation was, even for blue-collar workers, a ticket to a comfortable life—good wages, generous benefits and a secure retirement. Women and workers of color did not share fully in this bounty, but they generally did better at big firms than small ones.

All this began to unravel in the 1980s, when big business used the excuse of global competition to chip away at the living standards of the domestic workforce. This took the form of an assault on unions, which had played a key role in bringing about the improvements in the terms of employment. In meatpacking, for instance, what had been a high-wage, high-union-density industry turned into a bastion of precarious labor.

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The impact of right-wing propaganda on fighting jihadist terrorism

If there’s any doubt about the impact of right-wing propaganda, consider the difference between Democratic and Republican presidents and their respective records on jihadist terrorism.

Democratic presidents have twice now ordered the successful assassinations of top leaders of Al-Qaeda, the terrorist group responsible for murdering nearly 3,000 Americans on Sept. 11.

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Starbucks CEO is blind to the publicity in labor organizing

The billionaire who built the Starbucks brand into one of the globe’s favorite recreational drug dealers returned in April as interim CEO of the company. He’s determined, it seems, to either kill the union drives sweeping up his company’s stores or his brand or both.

The National Labor Relations Board has accused Howard Schultz’s company of breaking federal labor laws with the carelessness and passion of a twice impeached president stealing nuclear secrets.

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How Ken Starr established 'proof of concept' for future bogus GOP investigations

Ken Starr, that janus-faced moral hack, died Tuesday. I can’t add more insight to his obituary than Erik Loomis did for the Editorial Board. I can only point out something that might not be obvious. It’s thanks to Starr’s grotesque abuse of investigative procedure that Donald Trump’s influence has been fading “piece by painful piece.”

As you may recall, Starr was the special prosecutor charged with investigating an inconsequential scandal, one particular to Arkansas politics, regarding the appearance of shady real estate dealings (Whitewater) involving then-Governor Bill Clinton and his wife.

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Will January 6 be buried like the JFK assassination?

This week we heard from a Secret Service agent who says there was more than one shooter at Dealy Plaza in Dallas back in November, 1963. JFK’s top aide, Dave Powers — who was in the car just behind JFK at the time of the assassination — told me the same thing, as Lamar Waldron and I reported in our book Legacy of Secrecy: The Long Shadow of the JFK Assassination.

While people may disagree on their favorite theory of who was behind and who executed the killing, there’s broad agreement across America that we still don’t know the entire story (and the CIA and FBI continue to refuse to declassify thousands of pages of documents).

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Trump winning Wisconsin could hinge on an insidious voting practice

Democrats are understandably excited by the upcoming death of the Republican gerrymander in Wisconsin.

Since the heavily GOP-skewed maps were signed into law in 2011, the conservative legislature has been ballot-proof, free to ignore the views of most Wisconsinites.

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