Opinion

This is fascism

Trump’s 940-page Big Ugly Bill was passed today by the House and is now on the way to the White House for Trump’s signature.

It is a disgrace. It takes more than $1 trillion out of Medicaid — leaving about 12 million Americans without insurance by 2034 — and slashes Food Stamps, all to give a giant tax cut to wealthy Americans.

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Republicans just declared war on Grandma

Societies are typically organized along one of two lines: “We” or “Me.” We societies drive wealth and rights from the bottom up. Me societies do it from the top down, much like the kingdoms of old.

It’s a choice every nation must make. Franklin Roosevelt turned America into a We society with the New Deal; Ronald Reagan began the process of turning us into a Me society with the Reagan Revolution. And his and the GOP’s efforts are now coming to full fruition.

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This Republican's heartless shrug should never be forgotten

Here is what we know: The gargantuan budget reconciliation package making its way through Congress will kick thousands of Kansans off Medicaid and cost the state’s hospitals billions of dollars.

Here’s something else we know: U.S. Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kansas, doesn’t deny those facts.

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This GOP bill is the mother of all attacks on the American people

With President Donald Trump’s July 4 deadline looming, Republicans are set to sell out working class families by passing Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” — all to please their billionaire backers. Inside this devastating bill are a host of tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy, paid for with cuts to Medicaid, SNAP, and other essential programs. It would also effectively eliminate the middle class in America as we know it.

To Republicans, and even some Democrats, these programs are just a line item on a budget. To myself, communities of color, and millions of Americans at risk, they are the difference between having healthcare and living in fear of sickness or injury because we can't afford the care we need to survive.

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Trump is staring down curse that few presidents survive

By Garritt C. Van Dyk, University of Waikato

While he likes to provoke opponents with the possibility of serving a third term, Donald Trump faces a more immediate historical burden that has plagued so many presidents: the “second term curse.”

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Alligator Alcatraz has troubling echoes — of Dachau

When Louise and I lived in Germany in 1986-87, we visited Dachau with our family. The crematoriums shocked our children, but even more so because this was simply a “detention facility” and not one of Hitler’s death camps. The ovens were for those who had been worked to death or killed by cholera.

The death camps, it turns out, were all located outside of Germany so Dear Leader could deny responsibility for them. You know, like Gitmo.

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The billionaire oligarchs are dancing in the street. It's time to get to work

The reconciliation bill that Republicans passed in the U.S. Senate by one vote on Tuesday will give the top 1% a trillion dollars in tax breaks. At a time of unprecedented income and wealth inequality, the very rich just got much richer.

Pathetically, these tax breaks for the wealthy are paid for by a trillion dollars in cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act. The result of those cuts will be that over 16 million Americans will lose their health insurance and an estimated 50,000 will die unnecessarily each year. These cuts will also be devastating to rural hospitals, nursing homes and community health centers.

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Trump's Supreme Court is raising specters of racial division

The 14th Amendment guarantees that all children born in the United States are citizens. It aimed to undo the notorious Dred Scott ruling, which held that some people born here — Black people, to be precise, free and formerly enslaved — nevertheless were not citizens. As you’ll recall, just hours into his term, President Donald Trump signed an executive order purporting to end birthright citizenship. The order was, and remains, unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court chose this case, out of all the possible cases, to strip judges of a key power used to stop illegal actions.

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'Alligator Alcatraz' is a temple to​ Trump's cruelty

Some 63 years and a week ago, a young attorney general named Robert F. Kennedy announced the closure of one of the world’s most infamous institutions.

Alcatraz.

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Who is Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' for? Not you

Donald Trump and the Republicans want you to believe their budget bill is going to cut your taxes and put more money in your pocket.

They say that if they do not pass the bill being debated now in the House, tax cuts passed during the first Trump administration will lapse. They say that will trigger “a massive tax hike” on Americans.

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Admit it: you think white people look most American

Katherine Kinzler, Professor of Psychology, University of Chicago.

In the U.S. and elsewhere, nationality tends to be defined by a set of legal parameters. This may involve birthplace, parental citizenship or procedures for naturalization.

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'The cognitive dissonance is frightening': How Trump controls his supporters

As I was editing the following interview with Charles Gaba, founder of ACAsignups.com, I was reminded of something Will Stancil told me during my chat with him. Will said: “I think people are used to living in a relatively stable era and have come to believe that stability is normal."

Will was talking about the dominant interpretation of political history among liberals. For most of us, the battles of the past settled the biggest arguments, and from those settlements arose a period of relative peace and stability that nearly all of us take for granted.

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Meet Trump's best friend

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.