Opinion

Secure Act is a good but small step in relieving student-debt

In one of its last acts of 2022, the Biden administration and the Democrats in the Congress passed a measure that reaffirmed their commitment to addressing the student-loan debt crisis.

The measure was buried in the Secure Act 2.0, an overhaul of the retirement system. That act was itself buried in the end-of-year $1.7 trillion spending package (known as the omnibus) that included $45 billion in aid to Ukraine and vital fixes to the electoral system.

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Everyone blames the liberals

Everyone blames the liberals. That should be the American motto. Put it on the money. Put it on the national monuments. Everyone blames the liberals and their ideas about liberty, even other liberals.

But everyone should blame the institutions that get the liberals’ ideas wrong, and everyone should blame the illiberals for blaming the liberals for the institutions that get the liberals’ ideas all wrong.

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President Joe Biden's new deal is real

Every time I read about the American working class in the pages of the New York Times, I feel I’m reading someone who can just barely speak English, who has no idea they can just barely speak English but is manifestly convinced their command of English is mustachioed, donning a pith helmet and entitled to shout when the just barely-ness of their English is in doubt.

Every once and a while, but with more frequency when a Republican is in the White House, the Times dispatches correspondents to the dark heart of the American continent to enter into talks with native inhabitants who entribal themselves there without first considering they have no idea what they care about, what they’re interested in, what they love or what they fear. And they don’t, because, well, they know everything they need to know. Just ask them!

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What both sides of the abortion fight can learn from Antonin Scalia

In January, Linda Greenhouse wrote a column in the New York Times entitled, Does the War Over Abortion Have a Future?

In the column, Greenhouse observed that since the Dobbs decision overturned Roe v. Wade, there had been a massive national shift on the abortion issue. As a string of losses on state ballot initiatives demonstrated, the anti-abortion movement has lost the country and Republicans are scrambling to figure out how to adjust to this new political reality.

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Republicans don't care about human health regardless of who is to blame for the Ohio train disaster

For those of us who focus closely on the rhetoric of Democratic presidents, the news, in the immortal words of Vice President Joe Biden, was a BFD.

Yesterday's news was about the current administration putting blame on the previous administration for a crisis faced by the current administration.

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Political progress followed by political backlash is the American way

Everyone still blames the liberals when institutions, organization and corporations get their ideas wrong. Everyone blames the liberals (still) though they really should blame capitalism. Liberalism is not a utopian vision. It does not try to be all things to all the people all the time. Capitalism does.

Liberals aren't selling anything but their ideas. You can take 'em or leave 'em, and most people leave ’em. Corporations, on the other hand, seek to dominate markets in which people spend money the stuff they make.

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Ron DeSantis and Florida's Doctor Antivax

Last week, Dr. Joseph Ladapo issued a meaningless "health alert" to the people of Florida about mRNA covid vaccines.

Ladapo was back last week when it emerged that he'd been investigated for allegedly falsifying data for a previous antivax gambit.

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Congress should include education and healthcare in its fight against hidden fees

If you are a Comcast cable customer, your bill probably includes a Broadcast TV fee and a Regional Sports Fee. Together, these may add up to $18-$20 a month or more, according to a 2019 Consumer Reports analysis.

What is a Broadcast TV fee?

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Help for depositors? Yes. Help for debtors? No.

This week the Biden administration moved swiftly to contain the fallout from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, reassuring depositors and other wobbling institutions.

Biden wants to head off a financial crisis, which could spark a recession and potentially harm millions of people. The government's decisive actions here are reasonable and probably necessary.

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Trump’s alliance with Putin against America

Donald Trump again blamed America for threatening the values of western civilization instead of the foreign nation that’s threatening them. “The greatest threat to western civilization today is not Russia,” he said. “It’s probably, more than anything else, ourselves, and some of the horrible USA-hating people that represent us.”

The criminal former president seemed to be taking Vladimir Putin’s side over his own country’s. Indeed, he thinks we should stay out of the war in Ukraine. He thinks Russia is a victim of American aggression. This pattern might be the only thing about this lying, thieving, philandering sadist that’s steady, reliable and predictable.

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The debt ceiling and the dangers of an incompetent right

“For years, Democrats have worried about the prospect of a more disciplined heir to Trump,” the New York Times declared in a profile of Florida governor Ron DeSantis last year.

DeSantis’ star has fallen since then. But the fear of a more competent Trump remains.

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Democratic voters will forget why they ever worried about Joe Biden

It is no surprise to hear that Joe Biden is going to campaign for president for a second term. The wind is at his back. He has accomplished more in two years than any Democratic president in my lifetime. He has more reason to run than did Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama.

What’s going to surprise some people is the outcome of the president’s decision to make himself clear. That outcome will be in the form of a massive, collective spasm of amnesia by normal Democratic voters.

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What Republicans are really talking about when they raise the issue of Joe Biden’s age

The more Republican candidates running for their party’s nomination raise the issue of Joe Biden’s age (80), the more the president’s allies, among the Democrats and normal Democratic voters, are likely to defend him, almost certainly with some kind of warm pap about age being only a state of mind.

Age is not only a state of mind.

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