Opinion

This one shocking factor can make you 4600 percent more likely to become an addict

One of my earliest memories is of trying to wake up one of my relatives, and not being able to. As I got older, I understood why. We had addiction in my family. And as I watched some of my other close relatives become addicts, I asked myself several questions, but one in particular seemed haunting and insistent: why does addiction so often run in families? Why does it seem to pass from mother to daughter, from father to son, as though it were some dark genetic twist?

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Dan Rather trashes Trump at G7 for 'coddling dictators while spitting in the faces of our best friends'

Legendary journalist Dan Rather on Friday tore into President Donald Trump -- who is attending the G7 conference -- for getting chummy with North Korean strongman Kim Jong-un while giving the cold shoulder to longtime U.S. allies like France and Canada.

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Noam Chomsky has the perfect explanation for what's wrong with libertarianism

The following is the adapted text of an interview that first appeared in Modern Success magazine.

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Trump's empire of disorientation is dragging America backwards -- but how far back will it go?

Inspired by the recent Supreme Court decision ruling that a Colorado baker could legally discriminate against a gay couple by refusing to provide them with a wedding cake, a South Dakota state representative named Michael Clark said on Facebook that a business owner is free to discriminate against black people: “He should have the opportunity to run his business the way he wants. ... If he wants to turn away people of color, then that [sic] his choice.”

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A Republican power grab is being orchestrated by the White House -- and going almost unnoticed

The Trump administration’s decision to alter the 2020 Census to ask people if they are American citizens is an unconstitutional power grab that would hurt many disadvantaged Americans. It must be stopped.

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The white supremacist roots of the Republicans' so-called 'right-to-work' laws

The U.S. Supreme Court will soon hand down its decision in Janus v. AFSCME Council 31, which challenges the ability of public sector unions to collect “fair share” fees from workers who are covered by a negotiated union contract but don’t want to join the union. While the case may seem technocratic, its argument is one thread of a well-worn tapestry by conservatives: attacking union rights to thwart working-class solidarity, especially across racial and ethnic lines.

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Trump has been lying to us from day one

What’s the most recent lie Donald Trump has told? Was it his lie about the Philadelphia Eagles showing that they don’t respect the flag and our national anthem when they didn’t show up at the White House on Tuesday? In fact, none of the Eagles “took a knee” during the playing of the national anthem last season. Was it his umpteenth denunciation of his Attorney General for refusing to warn him that he would recuse himself from the Russia investigation? In fact, neither Trump or Sessions had been made aware of any investigation of Trump’s campaign at the time he appointed Sessions to the office of Attorney General in November of 2016, so Sessions could hardly have warned him about something he had no knowledge of.

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Here are 10 historical 'facts' only a right-winger would believe

As you may have noticed by following their writings, conservatives are not sticklers for historical accuracy, especially when they have a point to defend and not a lot of evidence to support it. Get a load, for example, of John Podhoretz explaining how the pro-choice Rudy Giuliani reduced abortions in New York City (though, um, not really) because he cut crime, which is one of "the spiritual causes of abortion."

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The elites have no one to blame but themselves for Trump's rise

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”And so Charles Dickens opens A Tale of Two Cities, an iconic read about how French and English elites faced the challenges of revolution and war. For American elites, A Tale should also resonate today. By every metric of wealth and power, elites live in the best of times. The top 10% of the U.S. population controls over 75% of the nation’s wealth, a figure not seen since the eve of the 1929 stock market crash. And a growing administrative state and the digital revolution have concentrated power and information control in ways that early Federalist elites would only envy.

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Trump and Sessions’ border policy is a nightmare — and that was the idea all along

When you get these terrorists, you have to take out their families! They care about their lives, don’t kid yourselves. They say they don’t care about their lives. But you have to take out their families. -- Donald Trump

Trump delivered many disturbing, un-American declarations during the 2016 campaign but that had to be one of the most chilling, immoral comments any American politician has ever made. He hasn't changed his attitude since he became president. The Washington Post reported this just last April:

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Here are 4 of the biggest quacks plaguing America with false claims about science

It may be easy to draw a caricature of a "quack” as a cross between the ShamWow pitchman and an alchemist, but they’re really not so easy to spot. Modern-day quacks often cherry-pick science and use what suits them as semantic backdrop to fool unsuspecting consumers. Quacks may dazzle people with fanciful research studies or scare them with intimidating warnings before trying to peddle products that make unreasonable promises. And those who use these alternative, unproven products may forego treatments that would be more likely to help them.

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The language emanating from Trump's lawyers sounds more appropriate to 17th Century France

During the increasing consolidation, centralization, and bureaucratization which marked the political life of the 17th Century, no ruler exemplified the absolutism which marked that era as much as Louis XIV of France. Authoritarianism as practiced by the “Sun King” was a relatively novel type of tyranny, predicated on absolute allegiance to the sovereign, who in turn was in many ways identical with the burgeoning nation-state itself. Louis’s reign was marked by its reactionary nature: his opposition to religious toleration, the fearsome gap between the aristocrats and everyone else, and France’s martial policy toward both the other European powers and overseas colonies. But more than all of those developments, it was his strict absolutism as regards the separation of powers and the identification of the person of the king with the legal code itself which may be Louis’s most darkly enduring political legacy, a position toward government so totalizing that it’s apocryphally been asserted that the ruler claimed “L’Etat, c’est moi!” – that is, “I am the State.”

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Donald Trump's trade war provides cover for an even more sinister agenda in Europe

Amid all the brouhaha about President Trump's lawyers declaring that he is above the law, there is other news, some of it just as alarming as the idea that Trump has decided that he has "absolute power" to pardon himself. I touched on the growing trade war in my Monday column and discussed how Trump is alienating America's traditional allies in Europe and North America, while cozying up to strongman dictators who clearly see him as a mark. Even his good pal, French President Emmanuel Macron, is in the doghouse for failing to properly kowtow. CNN described a phone call about migration and trade between the two leaders:

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