Opinion

Horror in Minnesota is all on Trump

As I was typing a piece on Saturday morning, endeavoring to stitch together Flag Day, our army’s birthday, and the peaceful marches against tyranny that were going off all over the United States of America, I got a chilling news bulletin — that two Minnesota lawmakers and their spouses had been shot in their homes by a madman impersonating a police officer.

This is what I knew as my fingers hit the keyboard:

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This horrific chaos kills any lingering doubts about America

The top news item about the president’s recent address at Fort Bragg was that the Army vetted the soldiers who appeared behind Donald Trump so that only his supporters were seen in video of the event.

The second news item was that none of them were fat.

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Trump's long-festering dream finally gets its wake up call

Ever since he was ignominiously blocked from shooting George Floyd protesters, Donald Trump has been itching to sic the military on U.S. citizens. Seizing California’s National Guard and sending U.S. Marines into Los Angeles to deliberately escalate violence brings his long-festering fever dream closer to life.

Trump’s former Defense Secretary Mark Esper has recounted how, during a White House meeting in 2020, Trump looked at Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley and asked why he couldn’t just shoot protesters, adding, “It was (both) a suggestion and a formal question. And we were just all taken aback at that moment as this issue hung very heavily in the air.”

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Trump crushed every democratic safeguard — except one

Trump wants blood.

The spectacle is the point. The helicopters. The uniforms. The rumble of armored personnel carriers down the boulevards of Los Angeles. The former president of the United States — now reinstalled in the White House through judicial (Citizens United) and electoral (Musk’s money and X) sleight-of-hand that would make Orbán proud — sent U.S. Marines into an American city.

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Trump can spit on our founders' graves — but he can't run from Lincoln's truth

We’re now living in an early-stage police state.

After Sen. Alex Padilla (D-CA) was assaulted for saying, “I’m Sen. Alex Padilla and I have a question for the Secretary,” Department of Homeland Security Secretary and notorious puppy murderer Kristi Noem went on Fox “News” and lied to the American people, saying that he hadn’t identified himself, she didn’t know who he was, and that he was “lunging into the room.”

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This Navy veteran is shaking with rage at these MAGA tchotchkes

By now, you have most likely heard of the disgraceful appearance by Donald Trump at Fort Bragg in North Carolina on Tuesday.

The convicted felon’s remarks to Army personnel were partisan, incendiary, anti-American and belong in a dumpster and/or Mar-a-Lago, not a United States military base.

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A silver lining on the dark Trumpian cloud

We are relearning the meaning of “solidarity.”

This week, across America, people have been coming together.

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Trump's armed juggernaut is the final chapter of a horrifying old movie

Eventually, people in countries that are in the process of flipping from democracy to fascism figure out that they’re now living in a dictatorship. By then, however, it’s usually too late.

For people in Hungary, it was May 2020 when Viktor Orbán started arresting people for their Facebook posts. For folks in Russia it was when Alexei Navalny and his supporters were first assaulted in public and then arrested and sent to brutal gulags in Siberia. For Germans, it was July 14, 1933 — six months after Hitler became chancellor — when he outlawed all political parties except his own.

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Ret. Admiral warns: Trump ‘crossed the line’ into dangerous military tyranny

In America, the military does not enforce our domestic laws. America does not use the military to suppress peaceful protests, even if we disagree with the protests. We have always known that tyrants use the military against their own people.

The use and misuse of federal military forces to enforce laws and basic order are deeply, and darkly, rooted in Mississippi and Southern history. The deployment of California National Guard troops by President Trump to “address the lawlessness” in Los Angeles is redolent of another century.

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MAGA: Flags for me but not for thee

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

I spent my life caring for these people — then the GOP threw them under a bus

As a registered nurse with over 25 years of experience serving vulnerable communities across Arizona — in school clinics, long-term care facilities, and public health programs — I’ve dedicated my career to helping people live healthier, safer lives. I’ve worked with families struggling to find affordable care, seniors battling chronic health conditions, and children suffering from asthma worsened by air pollution.

That’s why I was deeply disappointed to see Arizona’s Republican delegation in the U.S. House of Representatives vote in favor of what President Donald Trump is calling a “big, beautiful bill.”

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'Let all hell break loose': What's our plan for Trump's military parade?

Demonstrations against Trump’s emerging police state are growing, not just in Los Angeles but around the nation. In New York yesterday, demonstrators walked through the streets after assembling in Lower Manhattan near a large government building that houses federal immigration offices and the city’s main immigration court.

Thousands gathered in Chicago, chanting anti-ICE and anti-Trump slogans while marching through the city.

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Trump's tactics are nothing new — they've fueled rage and violence for centuries

Peter C. Mancall, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

Recently, President Donald Trump declared that he is “bringing Columbus Day back from the ashes.” He hopes to make up for the removal of commemorative statues important to “the Italians that love him so much.”

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