Opinion

Mob boss Trump's threats to mobilize his mob are escalating

Shortly after the 2016 election, I spoke with a Republican friend who had retired from the Senate years before. I asked him why so many Republican lawmakers remained silent in the face of Trump’s vile lies and bigotry.

After a pause, he said, “Some of his supporters are nuts, and they have guns.”

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How the Democrats are giving the country what it doesn’t want — a Trump-Biden rematch

Think back five years — challenging, we know, given all that’s transpired since then — but Joe Biden at the time seriously considered whether to declare he would serve just one term if elected president of the United States. It was late 2019, and he was struggling to gain traction in a crowded Democratic primary field and needing to set himself apart from his younger rivals. We know now he made no such pledge and won the prize anyway. But the belief lingered well past his defeat of Donald Trump in 2020 that, once his term ended, he could well cede the mantle of Democratic Party leader, given h...

Florida’s leaders can fight for consumers by defying DeSantis

When Congress passed legislation intended to put solar panels on roofs, more efficient appliances into homes and more electric vehicles on the road, many Floridians were elated. Regardless of their personal political beliefs, Florida residents live on the vanguard of a changing world. Rising sea levels threaten our state more than any other. Fuel prices still hover in the lofty space between $3 and $4 a gallon. Many feel increasingly helpless as their monthly power bills and insurance premiums steadily increase. And thousands of Florida residents are still struggling to rebuild their homes in ...

Is ‘girl dinner’ a feminist movement? Not yet

Since the term “girl dinner” started circulating in May, it has become embedded in our online vocabularies. This term is persistent, potent and political, with some rallying for its place in feminist history. However, as body image researchers, we argue girl dinner is not emblematic of social progress. Rather, in many ways, girl dinner has exposed how only certain women, and certain ideas, are invited to the table. To recap five months’ worth of memes: Girl dinner is what women eat when they’re home alone. A scroll through the hashtag on TikTok reveals easy-to-make, often nutritionally dubious...

MAGA Mike and the GOP must be stopped from inflicting their 'Christian' crusade on America

Mike Johnson wants a religious litmus test for office holders, and thinks environmentalists are possessed by the Devil himself. This shows that his shtick is about power, not Christian religion. If it were about religion, he would be singing an entirely different tune.

Religious charlatans like Speaker Mike Johnson, exploiting a basic human urge to know the unknowable, to touch the mystery of life, are the most despicable of all the various types of con men on Earth. And the most dangerous.

For them, it’s rarely about religion: instead, it’s all about controlling others and acquiring wealth and power for themselves. Which is why more people have been murdered in the name of religion than any other single cause.

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First, Kevin McCarthy gets tossed as speaker, now he faces a primary opponent. Wow

Kevin McCarthy began this year by enduring 15 rounds of voting by fellow Republicans to become the speaker of the House of Representatives — a post to which the congressman from Bakersfield had long aspired. That ended on Oct. 3 when some of those same Republicans summarily dismissed McCarthy with a motion to vacate. His name, above the speaker’s office door, would be taken down. He was the first speaker removed from office in American history. Now McCarthy may be “primaried” by a Republican candidate who claims to be truer to former President Donald Trump. David Giglio of Madera Ranchos said ...

House Speaker Mike Johnson does wrong by Israel and Ukraine

Israel, under attack from murderous Hamas terrorists, needs American financial and military support, even as the beleaguered civilian population of Gaza deserves humanitarian help: Republicans in Congress entirely agree with President Biden and Democrats there. They are all together on the urgency to send assistance to Israel battling against Hamas. Where Republicans break with Biden — or at least a significant slice of them under the thrall of former President Donald Trump do — is in also aiding Ukraine, which has been under brutal attack from Russia for a year and eight months. Against all e...

The rich know that warnings about making people 'dependent on government' are a scam

Cities across America (and around the world) are proving, with new Universal Basic Income (UBI) experiments, how wrong the old Republican canard really is. And what kind of damage it’s done to America during the 80 or so years it’s held the GOP in its thrall.

The first time I heard it I thought it was profound wisdom. Of course, I was only 16 years old, but it still seemed pretty important.

I was going to Lansing Community College part-time and working at WITL-AM/FM and, in addition to my own weekend Country music show, I produced the weekday hourlong talk show hosted by one of the station’s owners, Chuck Drake. My job was to answer the phones and make sure the tape delay was working right. And that’s when I heard Chuck lay out the Great Truth that has so badly held back and twisted the American economy:

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Cronyism on campus is flourishing in Florida

Working remotely has become immensely popular since the COVID-19 pandemic. But it is ridiculous that two of the University of Florida’s new highest-ranking and highest-paid officers will continue to reside in the Washington, D.C., area, some 775 miles from Gainesville. UF President Ben Sasse, himself a former Washington insider, has made himself an avatar of cronyism by appointing those people, who worked for him when he was a U.S. senator from Nebraska. Cronyism is flourishing in Florida. Its epicenter may be New College, founded as an idealistic institution dedicated to innovation and inclus...

One benefit to Americans using weight loss drugs like Ozempic? Less junk food

Can Ozempic save us from the perils of obesity? It turns out that the drug, first developed to treat diabetes, has become a high-profile appetite killer. Ozempic and similar drugs are skyrocketing in popularity, thanks to their ability to help take off those dreaded pounds. Another delicious fringe benefit: The nation’s leading producers and sellers of food, especially of the junk variety, are worried that consumers may be cutting back on loading up the shopping cart. Ozempic was approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treating Type 2 diabetes in 2017. Doctors have also been recommend...

Army bases never deserved Confederate generals’ names. But Eisenhower’s a hero

As a general, Dwight D. Eisenhower led Allied troops to victory over Adolf Hitler’s racist and genocidal regime. As president, he enforced the Supreme Court’s order to desegregate U.S. schools by ordering troops to Arkansas to protect Black students enrolled in Little Rock’s formerly all-white Central High School. And now, more than 50 years after his death, Kansas’ favorite son has won an additional victory against white supremacy. On Friday, the U.S. Army completed the process of rebranding its bases that had previously been named for Confederate generals. Fort Gordon in Georgia received a n...

How Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D minor became Halloween’s theme song

Imagine a grand house on a hill, after dark on an autumn night. As the door opens, an organ pierces through the thick silence and echoes through the cavernous halls.

The tune that comes to many minds will be Johann Sebastian Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565, an organ work composed in the early 18th century. Most people today recognize it as a sonic icon of a certain type of fear: haunting and archaic, the kind of thing likely to be manufactured by someone – a ghost, perhaps – wearing a tuxedo and lurking in an abandoned mansion.

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How America's oligarch problem became the world's oligarch problem

Many of America’s oligarchs — the people whose great wealth and/or ownership of media properties gives them tremendous influence over our politics — believe they’re arguing for policies that will produce a “better” America. Or at least an America that’s better and safer for oligarchs and their families and businesses.

Tragically, they’re wrong. Their support for GOP-aligned racist, “free market deregulation,” and climate denial policies are tearing America apart and will threaten their grandchildren every bit as much as they do yours and mine.

Nonetheless, in America and increasingly around the world, oligarchs taking over the political dialogues of nations are all the rage. From America to Turkey to Russia to the Philippines, oligarchs have either risen to near-absolute power or bought off so many politicians that they have effective control of entire political parties and thus entire nations.

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