Opinion

What's the point of George Santos?

Can you imagine getting told off by Mitt Romney? Can you imagine Mitt Romney telling you off, and then all the people were like, Oh snap!

Me neither.

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The 'Noble Lie' lives on

Plato (in The Republic) was the father of the “noble lie,” a tale told to people “for their own good and that of society” even though it was utterly untrue. Almost twenty-five-hundred years later, the noble lie lives on in some Crisis Pregnancy Centers (CPCs).

A clear description of CPCs came from the Neeva.com AI-driven search engine:

“Crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs) are anti-abortion clinics with a hidden agenda and part of an industry built on misleading pregnant people with scare tactics and lies. They are designed to look like real health centers, but their goal is to scare, shame, or pressure people out of getting an abortion and to spread lies about abortion, birth control, and sexual health. CPCs are dangerous, predatory organizations and a risk to public health.”

And they and their affiliated groups are hauling in a boatload of money. Over $4 billion dollars a year according to the National Center for Responsive Philanthropy (NCRP) — much of it government money, millions taken out of Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) funds — flows to CPCs. One-fifth of our states, all under Republican control, now directly fund these organizations with taxpayer money.

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What do Marjorie Taylor Greene, George Santos, Jared Kushner, Elon Musk, and Donald Trump have in common? The death of shame

At President Biden’s State of the Union address last week, Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene repeatedly yelled “Liar!,” Tennessee Republican Rep. Andy Ogles shouted, “It’s your fault!,” and another Republican yelled “Bullshit!”

Fourteen years ago, Republican Rep. Joe Wilson was formally rebuked by the whole House after shouting “you lie” at Obama.

Yet now, anything goes.

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Trump-DeSantis race to the bottom is golden opportunity for Democrats

The most memorable words from last week's State of the Union hoedown arguably didn't come from an energized President Joe Biden but from his GOP rebutter, Arkansas' new governor, Sarah Huckabee Sanders. She provided an unforgettable frame for the in-its-infancy 2024 president race — albeit maybe not in the way she intended. "The dividing line in America is no longer between right or left," said Sanders, whose integrity was forever tarnished by her stint as Donald Trump's press secretary. "The choice is between normal or crazy." Just a few seconds later, Sanders revealed to the nation where "cr...

The 'Horse & Sparrow' economic scam is back

Kevin McCarthy’s House Republicans, in their demand that Democrats gut Social Security and education monies to give more trillions in tax breaks to billionaires, are once again trying the Reaganomics hustle. Only this time with a twist.

Boomers and many Gen Xers remember how the media swooned for Art Laffer’s napkin in the 1980s, and then President Reagan turned it into a movement to cut taxes on billionaires because, he lied, it would make average working-class people richer.

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The strange reason so many Republicans now dress like cartoon supervillains

After President Joe Biden's State of the Union address on Tuesday, it was generally agreed across the media that Joe from Scranton had won the evening by masterfully baiting Republicans into showing their asses. The second star of the night, however, was also indisputable: The brillantly white wool coat with an alpaca fur trim that had the misfortune of being draped over the body of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.

Look, it was a lovely coat, but its proximity to such a repulsive person created an unmistakeable air of comic book supervillainy. It served as a stark reminder that, despite her classless and illiterate demeanor, Greene is actually a wealthy heiress who spent her pre-political life as a woman of leisure. She got compared to a Stephen King monster, a gangster's wife in a mob movie, and, of course, a campy Disney villain:

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National Football League sins: a one-man tribunal to judge them

Should you have the kind of entertainment compass that allows you to divine what’s special on Apple TV, you’ll have found Super League: The War for Football.

The new documentary series has as its protagonists professional-league owners and executives who guide the sport as though it’s part of the public trust. But the “football” under consideration here is European soccer — not the National Football League’s brand of American football.

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Hunter Biden is a distraction: Republicans are deflecting for Jared Kushner

Last week featured the first of what promises to be many public hearings about President Biden's son Hunter, whom the new GOP House majority vows to investigate for the next two years. Going after what they all now casually call "The Biden Crime Family" is their number one priority.

That first hearing was about a now infamous New York Post story about the exceedingly weird "discovery" of Hunter Biden's laptop that Twitter initially suppressed only to allow back on the website just 24 hours later. This incident has become evidence, if you want to call it that, that proves Twitter was working on behalf of the Biden campaign and its alleged allies in the woke FBI and Department of Justice (DOJ) to cover up the Bidens' corruption.

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Why do so many Republicans now dress like cartoon supervillains?

After President Joe Biden's State of the Union address on Tuesday, it was generally agreed across the media that Joe from Scranton had won the evening by masterfully baiting Republicans into showing their asses. The second star of the night, however, was also indisputable: The brillantly white wool coat with an alpaca fur trim that had the misfortune of being draped over the body of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.

Look, it was a lovely coat, but its proximity to such a repulsive person created an unmistakeable air of comic book supervillainy. It served as a stark reminder that, despite her classless and illiterate demeanor, Greene is actually a wealthy heiress who spent her pre-political life as a woman of leisure. She got compared to a Stephen King monster, a gangster's wife in a mob movie, and, of course, a campy Disney villain.

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Unless he resigns, New Yorkers are stuck with George Santos

George Santos is an embarrassment to his constituents, to the Republican Party and to the U.S. Congress and should resign if he had any shame. But he is shameless. As lie after lie after lie after lie has been exposed, it’s become clear that the man who won election in November isn’t the one who now serves. He conned Nassau and Queens voters. He may have broken laws; the courts will determine that. He may have broken congressional rules; the Ethics Committee will figure that out. But should he be expelled from the House by his colleagues, as now urged by fellow representatives, including Ritch...

Yes, Republicans have threatened Social Security. And they're still doing it

It seems the hecklers at last week’s State of the Union speech owe President Joe Biden an apology. After some congressional Republicans tried to shout him down for saying some in the GOP want to cut Social Security and Medicare, Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., stepped up to add his voice to the chorus alleging that Biden was lying — then promptly reiterated his call for a universal “sunset” on all federal programs every five years, which would apply to Social Security and Medicare. Oops. And it’s not just Scott. Few other Republicans say it so bluntly, but the whole point of the current debt ceiling ...

Representation matters, which is why two starting Black quarterbacks in the Super Bowl is groundbreaking

NEW YORK — Super Bowl LVII will pit the Kansas City Chiefs versus the Philadelphia Eagles. But that is just a tiny part of what Sunday’s game represents for the Black community. For the first time in Super Bowl history, both teams will start a Black quarterback. Jalen Hurts of the Eagles will be the eighth different Black QB to start in a Super Bowl. Chiefs superstar Patrick Mahomes will start his third Super Bowl (winning it all in 2019 and losing to the Buccaneers in 2020). Eleven Black quarterbacks began the season as their team’s starter. But you don’t have to go back too far in NFL histor...

Republicans got sacked running Super Bowl ads last year — but they don't seem tired of losing

One of the minor highlights of Super Bowl LVI was watching Republican candidates implode by running ads that could only charitably be described as fumbles.

Three GOP hopefuls bought pricey commercials from across the country with one common result: They couldn’t win their primaries. Losing U.S. Senate hopefuls Jim Lamon in Arizona and Dave McCormick in Pennsylvania, and gubernatorial washout Perry Johnson in Michigan, all made truly dubious investments.

But that doesn’t mean viewers won’t see something of an instant replay. Johnson has already announced plans to air Super Bowl ads in Iowa to launch a 2024 presidential bid. That’s what one does after getting busted by Michigan GOP – and left off the 2022 primary ballot -- for having submitted too many fake signatures on nominating petitions.

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