Opinion

The wildfires in Hawaii are another wake-up call that the climate crisis imperils our health

The world is on fire. The devastating wildfires in Maui have led to at least 99 deaths with many hundreds more people unaccounted for and injured. We have seen homes and livelihoods destroyed and hospitals overwhelmed with smoke and burn victims. These wildfires, fanned by winds from Hurricane Dora after years of drought, have undoubtedly been made worse by climate change. Increasing global greenhouse gas emissions are fueling extreme heat, accelerating changes in our environment and harming our global biodiversity. This has led to unprecedented heat waves across the United States, Europe and ...

America finally facing someone who has Mussolini’s willingness to see people die—and it's not who you think

Rosaline is a 60-year-old Floridian who hopes she doesn’t get seriously ill because she’d be wiped out by the increase in her already burdensome medical debt. She has no insurance, and won’t qualify for Medicare for another 5 years.

Ron DeSantis is just fine with this. Cruelty is his trademark.

During the pandemic, Congress appropriated billions to help states expand their Medicaid programs. That money is coming to an end this year, meaning Florida — which refused to expand Medicaid with the federal subsides offered by the Affordable Care Act — is set to throw another 2 million or so residents off their only possible source of health insurance.

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Why you shouldn't throw your vote away on Cornel West — or any other third-party candidate

One of the most fashionable statements these days among progressive-leaning voters who pretend to great political insight is:

“I want to vote for the person I like the most, not some party or candidate that I only half-agree with.”

Its corollary is:

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The fourth indictment — and Trump's willful refusal to stop intimidating witnesses

Last night, Trump and 18 others were criminally charged in Georgia in connection with efforts to overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 victory in the state.

Trump was charged with 13 counts, including violating the state’s racketeering act, soliciting a public officer to violate their oath, conspiring to impersonate a public officer, conspiring to commit forgery in the first degree, and conspiring to file false documents.

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What’s tragic about the coup in Niger

Niger’s coup last month was the eighth military takeover in Africa since 2020. Most occurred in West African states, which have faced rising extremist violence for years. Niger was among them. Affiliates and offshoots of both al-Qaida and the Islamic State found fertile ground in impoverished and neglected communities in Nigeria, Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger. They’ve been met by armies supplied and strengthened by Western powers hoping to stem the tide of terrorism in the region. The United States and France were the primary partners, providing weapons, military education, combat training, int...

Ready, aim, regulate: The Supreme Court makes the right call on ghost guns, for now

Ghost guns aren’t yet one of America’s biggest threats to life and limb — handguns and especially illegal handguns are a bigger menace by far — but the country would be inviting bloodshed to wait until they climb the grim charts to try to contain their pernicious spread. This is why we’ve praised state Attorney General Tish James for doggedly pursuing those who illegally ship parts to build such firearms to New York, and why President Joe Biden was wise last year to direct the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to better police the ready-to-assemble weapons. What makes legal f...

Republicans’ miscalculations on abortion will give Democrats an edge in 2024

Republicans may have won the war against Roe v. Wade, but the battles continue. Issue 1 is advantage No. 1 for the Democrats. The Issue 1 ballot proposal in Ohio would have required any proposed state constitutional amendment to achieve a 60% approval of voters instead of a simple majority. In last Tuesday’s election, voters said “no.” Issues of reproductive choice were not actually on that ballot, but this measure was a proxy for an upcoming vote. Anti-abortion rights interests are working to thwart a November vote on a constitutional amendment that would guarantee abortion rights in Ohio. Th...

How Merrick Garland just helped the GOP gaslight America

I wasn’t remotely surprised when news started seeping out and spilling all over the Capitol Hill press corps Friday morning that Merrick Garland was about to cave and assign a special counsel to look into the Republicans’ energizer bunny, Hunter Biden.

Disgusted? Yes. Surprised? Not in the least.

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Florida Supreme Court should reject DeSantis’ arguments. Let voters decide on recreational pot

Just let the people of Florida vote on marijuana legalization, already. A proposed constitutional amendment for recreational marijuana is under review by the Florida Supreme Court. It has already gotten enough signatures to get on the 2024 ballot. Now the court has to make sure the ballot item is written so that it addresses a single subject and is clear to voters. But the “free state of Florida” has jumped into the middle of this process for reasons that seem blatantly political, designed to halt an effort that might increase liberal voter turnout at the polls next year or at least suppress t...

It’s not just the hard-right that wants Trump as the GOP nominee; the left does, too

My colleague Nicole Russell recently wrote that Republicans turned hard-core MAGA Trump voters are to blame for the persistence of the former president’s poll numbers. Like true fanatics, they have proven themselves incapable of accepting even valid criticisms of the once and former president, all in service to their bizarre addiction. They have been “conned by one of the best,” she explained, acting “more like a committed cult” than a political party. She isn’t wrong. The lengths to which some members of the political right have gone to justify the misdeeds of their leader is mindboggling, ev...

Kansas newspaper raid a grim threat to First Amendment rights

The outrageous law enforcement assault on the Marion County Record newspaper raises a veritable forest of red flags.

Why would a judge sign off on an apparently illegal search? What type of officials would willingly execute such an abuse of power? Could any convoluted sequence of liquor permit infighting possibly justify such drastic measures? Are we still living in a state and nation where the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution applies?

We don’t know definitive answers to any of these questions yet, and the story may well still surprise us. In the meantime, the Record itself and Kansas Reflector’s story offer starting points.

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Is Trump following the same well-worn path blazed by other terrorist leaders?

Yesterday morning at 6:15 a.m. Provo time, Craig Robertson was shot and killed by the FBI after posting to Facebook that he was going to assassinate President Biden during his trip this week to Utah.

Had the FBI not stopped him, he may well have pulled it off: he had a high-tech sniper rifle and apparently knew how to use it. The shoot-out he started with FBI agents trying to arrest him, if nothing else, was a tell.

This, I believe, is exactly what Donald Trump wants.

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Revealed: The shocking voter purge crisis of democracy

If you live in the Blue part of a Red state, Republicans don’t want you to vote. And their latest strategy is their most brute-force method: simply remove you from the voting rolls.

A shocking new study from Demos lays out the dimensions of this voter purge crisis of democracy brought to us by an increasingly desperate GOP.

Republicans are doing this because they know that their policies are unpopular: most Americans aren’t fans of tax cuts for billionaires, more pollution, deregulation, high-priced drugs, privatizing Medicare, ending Social Security, criminalizing abortion and birth control, student debt, hating on Black and queer people, and the GOP’s war on unions and working people.

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