Opinion

Trump couldn't possibly be a Russian asset...could he?

Imagine you’re in the FBI overseeing national security and a candidate for President for the United States hired to run his campaign a man who’d:

taken $66 million from Russian intelligence services via Putin-friendly oligarchs,
— helped Russia install their own puppet government in Ukraine in 2010,
— was paid $1 million a year to help the corrupt dictator Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire (now Democratic Republic of the Congo), solidify his relationship with Moscow,
— forced his party to remove references in their platform to defending Ukrainian democracy,
— gave a Russian intelligence agent top-secret insider campaign information about voters in 6 swing states so they could run an ultimately successful micro-targeted Facebook campaign to help the candidate,
— offered to run the campaign for free because he’d been well-compensated by Russian intelligence services,
— and then repeatedly lied to the FBI about his connections to Putin and Russia, leading to his being charged, convicted, and imprisoned until that candidate pardoned him.

Imagine that candidate had visited Moscow with his Soviet-citizen wife — whose father was a Soviet agent — and been groomed all the way back in 1987 by Russian intelligence (then Soviet intelligence, the KGB) to run for president.

Keep reading... Show less

As a slow-motion banking crisis unfolds, consumers should beware

Back when banking was heavily regulated, the “three-six-three” rule prevailed. Bankers would pay 3% interest on depositors’ accounts, charge a 6% loan rate when lending out the depositors’ money and, with a profit practically assured, tee off on the golf course at 3 p.m. “Bankers’ hours” were a real thing at the time. Starting in the 1980s, deregulation ushered in more intense competition. But even so, banks should be feasting these days. With the economy chugging along nicely, banks with household names are still paying peanuts to many depositors, and charging much more in interest on loans: ...

When these passengers scam airlines, other travelers pay the price. It’s not nice

In late August, American Airlines announced that it was suing an airfare website that sells seats using a sneaky money-saving trick — one that is forbidden in almost all airlines’ contracts of carriage. It works like this: If the airfare from, say, Boston to Houston is $400 on a nonstop flight, but on the same day the fare from Boston to San Antonio with a connection in Houston is $300, some people buy the connecting flight instead of the more expensive nonstop and get off in Houston. Their seat to San Antonio remains empty. So why is this, arguably, immoral? First, the airline loses money on ...

NYC lawyers demand judge axe ‘scandalous,’ ‘prejudicial’ parts of fire chiefs’ ageism suit against FDNY Commissioner Laura Kavanagh

The city is biting back against FDNY chiefs suing Fire Commissioner Laura Kavanagh, arguing that allegations of her poor decision making and discussions about department brass who are not part of the wide-ranging ageism suit are “scandalous and prejudicial” and have nothing to do with the case. In a motion recently filed in Brooklyn Supreme Court, city lawyers demand a judge strike several pieces of the 88-page lawsuit that “do not even remotely go to any of the material elements of (their) claims.” “Plaintiffs [the chiefs] have now filed multiple versions of the complaint, each with more hype...

Debate failed to deliver for those seeking a Trump alternative

The nation got an insight Wednesday night into what Floridians already suspected — that Gov. Ron DeSantis ousted two Democratic prosecutors, turned schools into culture-war battlegrounds and purposefully underplayed the state’s response to COVID to create bragging rights for his own political ambitions.

That is a logical inference from his frequent boasts during the first Republican presidential debate. But the debate was light on what voters need most to hear: Why Donald Trump should not be president again.

Ramaswamy is trying to outsmart white power. It won’t last.

Vivek Ramaswamy is having a moment. After last night’s first debate among GOP hopefuls, an Associated Press headline said he’s taken “center stage.”

The tech entrepreneur, the AP reported, “has crept up in recent polls, leading to his position next to [Florida Governor Ron] DeSantis at center stage. And he quickly showed why when he showcased his ready-for-video, on-message approach — talking about how his poor parents moved to the US and gave him the chance to found billion-dollar companies.”

Keep reading... Show less

Donald Trump: The fascist who doesn’t want America to think

I want to talk about symbols, images, and fascism.

Here is Trump’s mug shot from his arraignment yesterday in Georgia. It’s a look of defiance — which I’m sure he practiced repeatedly beforehand — intended to make his supporters and his Republican base feel defiant, too.

Keep reading... Show less

Sane Republicans, stand up: The first debate of the 2024 cycle laid out a stark choice for GOP voters

Donald Trump wasn’t on the stage — the cowardly tyrant had taped a Tucker Carlson interview in which he branded the American left “savage animals” and called his Republican opponents “people that shouldn’t even be running for president” — but some of the eight candidates who did face off in the first debate of the 2024 presidential cycle did a decent job channeling him. The 38-year-old upstart in the Trump mold, bloviating businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, said he’d preemptively pardon the former president, who stands credibly accused in federal and state court of plotting to undermine American dem...

A neuroscientist explains how religious fundamentalism hijacks the brain

In moderation, religious and spiritual practices can be great for a person's life and mental well-being. But religious fundamentalism—which refers to the belief in the absolute authority of a religious text or leaders—is almost never good for an individual. This is primarily because fundamentalism discourages any logical reasoning or scientific evidence that challenges its scripture, making it inherently maladaptive.

It is not accurate to call religious fundamentalism a disease, because that term refers to a pathology that physically attacks the biology of a system. But fundamentalist ideologies can be thought of as mental parasites. A parasite does not usually kill the host it inhabits, as it is critically dependent on it for survival. Instead, it feeds off it and changes its behavior in ways that benefit its own existence. By understanding how fundamentalist ideologies function and are represented in the brain using this analogy, we can begin to understand how to inoculate against them, and potentially, how to rehabilitate someone who has undergone ideological brainwashing—in other words, a reduction in one's ability to think critically or independently.

Keep reading... Show less

Thinking about a password-free future? Think again

Why would the CEO of a password management software company ever want to get rid of passwords? The answer is obvious. Passwords litter our brains. They require an endless cycle of updates and have to follow complex rules that at times require a Ph.D. to comprehend. They even need an extra layer of security because they’re not strong enough on their own. Even worse, the pandemic magnified everything wrong with passwords across billions of new devices, which not only shifted to the cloud but also into our homes. In this environment, every application and every endpoint for every user needs — you...

Trump to the GOP is like a parasitic wasp is to a caterpillar

The Republican presidential debate wasn’t encouraging: Trump’s hold on the GOP appears stronger than ever. And that’s bad news for America.

In Robert Hubbell’s excellent Today’s Edition Newsletter on Substack, he made the point yesterday that Trump’s relationship to the GOP is like that of one of those parasitic wasps that puts an egg into a caterpillar or spider and when the wasp larvae hatches it eats its host, leaving behind only a husk.

Keep reading... Show less

Voters must understand that Republican politicians created the migrant chaos

Recent polling shows that New York Democratic voters are souring on Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams on their handling of the migrant situation; while we can and certainly do criticize both on aspects of their approach, let’s remember who set the stage for this crisis, and who benefits politically. Republicans have for decades refused any rational approach to contending with humanitarian migrant flows, rooting themselves firmly in the camp of feel-good and pointless symbology and insistence on draconian enforcement that is both illegal and immoral, as perhaps best exemplified by Donald T...

The price American industry may pay for remote work

Remote work has become a de facto benefit to recruit, retain and, in some cases, appease workforces. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, remote work was a luxury. During the pandemic, employers sold it as a necessity to keep their businesses functioning. Once the public health risk abated, it became a privilege. Now, some employees take it as a right. What began as a means to mitigate public health risk to individuals and keep the economy functioning has persisted beyond what anyone could have envisioned. During the peak risk period of the pandemic in 2020, more than 40% of the workforce was remote....