Opinion

Crime down, hope up: Safer streets are good for everyone except Donald Trump

Making meaningful progress in the lives of New Yorkers, for the second year running, murders and shootings have gone down. And unlike 2022’s drops, 2023’s — homicides down 11% year over year, shootings down 24% — were accompanied by declines in most other types of crime. Unfortunately, there were exceptions: Assaults went up modestly, and car thefts jumped significantly. Anytime a person is shot or robbed or raped or killed, the rippling ramifications to families and neighborhoods (it’s disproportionately poorer areas where such crimes happen) are profound. We don’t often talk about the positi...

Let’s ditch the Electoral College — plus 9 other no-brainer resolutions for the new year

On Jan. 1, 1968, I made a New Year’s resolution to quit cigarettes.

I lasted barely a month, during which I often awoke in the middle of the night, heart racing, following a nightmare in which Marianne would break up with me after catching me smoking.

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How 2024 will bring a reckoning between Trump perception and reality

During my professional career, I’ve said it countless times and in countless ways: perception is reality. Oh, I wish I could take those moments back! Not just because of my awful tendency to weave profanity into my version of the cliché, but because the cliché itself has engulfed far too many of us.

In 2024, the battle between what is real and what is not will be epic.

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The white GOP base has been so abused over the last 40 years they’ve become easy marks

While many trace the beginning of the modern rightwing fascist-friendly MAGA-type movement to the 1954 Brown v Board decision and the way it put the John Birch Society on steroids, another interesting origin story for today’s GOP base is grounded in the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

In the years immediately leading up to the 1970 creation of the EPA, pollution in America had gotten so bad it was impossible to ignore and was quickly becoming a political issue.

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With disqualification in Colorado and Maine, the damage is done — to Trump

Was it antidemocratic for the Colorado Supreme Court to remove Donald Trump from that state’s GOP presidential primary ballot? Ditto for a recent decision by Maine’s top election official to do the same? The answer, for a lot of respectable people, seems to be yes. (Both moves are pending appeal, the first one to the US Supreme Court.)

I get it, but I think that perspective is missing a few important aspects. First, that the courts are part of democratic politics. The law is, too. They are tools that a democratic people use to achieve democratic objectives. Yes, they can be abused, but critics of these decisions are not alleging that. They seem genuinely concerned, no, terrified by the prospect of Trump and the GOP becoming worse than they are.

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Even kids are now living in fear as they’re harassed by Christian nationalist bullies

The news has been all over Nikki Haley’s inability to say “slavery” before she was called out on it, but few are pointing to the larger issue: the institutionalization of racism through American law that has happened in 16 Red states now as well as in hundreds of smaller towns and individual schools.

From Florida to Texas to little towns like Temecula, California, legislatures and school boards across America have been banning what they call “Critical Race Theory (CRT).”

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Nikki Haley shows the GOP base is all about racism and oligarchy

First, a curious person in her New Hampshire town hall this week asked Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley, “What caused the Civil War?”

You could almost see the gears turning in her head, as she backs away from the questioner and takes a long pause, knowing that if she says “slavery” she’ll offend the white racist base of the GOP.

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Journalism's outdated 'standards' are keeping voters in the dark about the 2024 election

You wouldn’t know if you relied solely on the mainstream media that Americans face an election on November 5 of this year in which one of the two likely candidates was engaged in an attempted coup and has given every indication of wanting to substitute neofascism for democracy.

Again and again, the mainstream media have drawn a false equivalence between Donald Trump and Joe Biden — asserting that Biden’s political handicap is his age, while Trump’s corresponding handicap is his criminal indictments.

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Happy New Year 2040 from the land of morons

It’s New Year’s Day, 2040, in the land of Idiocracy.

President Ron DeSantis is in his fourth term, having won Powerball and purchased the presidency from Trump’s children after Trump died in office, crushed by a marble statue of himself. Security footage showed some intimacy between the then-president and the stone just before it toppled, pulverizing all but his hair. The head of the staffer who leaked the footage remains impaled on a spike, displayed outside the Trump-created Bureau of Alternative Facts.

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'Another year': a poem

Another year,
And so another year begins.
Wars continue. No one wins.

Hamas-depraved. Israelis-cruel.
No practice of the Golden Rule.

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Why Trump is rising in the polls — and why American capitalism is so rotten

As we barrel toward the fateful year of 2024, many of you have asked why Trump is rising in the polls despite his increasingly explicit neofascism, and why Biden is falling despite a good economy. Fearing the worst, you ask what can be done to preserve American democracy.

These are hugely important questions, and they fit so directly into our series on reconciling the common good with American capitalism that I thought today would be an occasion to tackle them.

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Judgment year has arrived: Will America pass her greatest test yet or will she fail?

Not because I consider it a banner year in the annals of my lifetime — quite the contrary. That year is now etched into the gravestones of my little sister, Suzanne, and a sister-in-law, Peg.

These two terrible losses, while almost too much to bear, were also tragically inevitable. One of them had incurable cancer, and the other extremely aggressive dementia.

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'Kill yourself now so we can save ammo': How Trump's violent movement could conquer the US

How would you react if one day you were sitting at home and the phone rang and when you picked it up you heard a man shout:

“Kill yourself now so we can save ammo!”

Moments later, an email arrives that says:

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