Opinion

Tuberville's military blockade is dangerous. End it now

One of the things that makes the United States Senate what some call “the world’s greatest deliberative body” is a rule structure that ensures even members of the minority party have a voice. That is generally to the good — unless one of those voices is ideologically obsessed with one topic to the point of holding the country hostage over it. That’s what Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville has been doing for months now, by blocking hundreds of senior military promotions in protest of the Pentagon’s abortion access policy. But there were promising signs last week that that dam is near the breaking po...

Is Trump’s 'Brave New World' coming soon?

4 November 2025

Leavenworth, Kansas

Dear Louise,

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Why Gaza cannot become a binary choice

Hand-painted protest signs declaring “Israel can’t bomb its way to peace,” serve up palliative if elliptic logic for a Gaza cease fire. Continued violence guarantees violence will continue, a heart-wrenching Israeli/Palestinian pas de deux stuck on replay since 1948.

And yet, calling for an Israeli ceasefire is like telling someone to drop his gun while the psychopath who just murdered his family is still in the house. Hamas terrorists, likely armed by Iran and Russia, are committed to Israel’s complete annihilation, and they have the house surrounded.

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A neuroscientist explains how — and why — to get inside your political enemies’ minds

With the 2024 U.S. presidential election approaching, and our nation deeply divided, understanding the psychological differences between conservatives and liberals is more important than ever.

But why?

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Officials downplayed involvement in Kansas newspaper raid — but here’s what they knew

MARION — Marion Police Chief Gideon Cody enlisted the support of local and state law enforcement officials in the days before he led raids on the local newspaper office, the publisher’s home and the home of a city councilwoman.

The Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Kansas Department of Revenue, Marion County Sheriff’s Office and the Office of the State Fire Marshal — along with the county attorney and a magistrate judge — were complicit in the Aug. 11 raid or knew it was imminent. But in the days that followed, they largely downplayed their involvement.

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Mayor Johnson, crime in Chicago is not a ‘dynamic.’ It’s a full-blown crisis

There is no more important job for a big-city mayor than public safety. Progressive politicians in recent years seem to have lost sight of that. We’ve heard plenty of brusque dismissals of traditional anti-crime methods. And lots of talk about focusing instead on the root causes of crime. Chicagoans, are beginning to lose patience. In West Town and Logan Square last week, a coalition of 10 community groups called on Mayor Brandon Johnson and police Superintendent Larry Snelling to crack down on armed robberies and carjackings plaguing the area over the summer and into the fall. They called, am...

No more fine tuning: Fed is right to stay the course on interest rates

Last week, the Federal Reserve did the right thing by leaving well enough alone, keeping the benchmark interest rate at about 5.4%. With the acute pressure that the board and Chair Jay Powell in particular have faced in the past several months, we’re glad they’ve had the wisdom to know when to step back. There have been those that, wedded to formulaic understandings about the economy, have insisted it’s all but mechanically impossible for inflation to come down into acceptable ranges without seriously harming the economy. We’ve even heard that we need a recession, that a recession is the inevi...

The Medicare 'Hunger Games' have begun

— Echoing the sentiments of Neil Howe’s new book The Fourth Turning Is Here, President Biden said this week: “There comes a time maybe every 6, 8 generations where the world changes in a very short time. We are at that time now, and I think what happens in the next 2-3 years is going to determine what the world looks like for the next 5 or 6 decades.”

Our president is so right.

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Colorado trial proves a Trump return would be America’s demise

At one point during the trial in Denver over whether former President Donald Trump is disqualified from the Colorado presidential ballot next year, Trump’s attorney quibbled with a witness’s characterization of a confrontation during the violent 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Depicted in a photo, a person uses a flagpole to assault a counter-protester. The witness, Pete Simi, a scholar of far-right extremism, was asked by a plaintiffs’ attorney to discuss the photo as part of a line of questioning about the role of violence in right-wing extremism of the sort Trump enlisted in his effort to overturn President Joe Biden’s 2020 election win.

Trump’s attorney, Scott Gessler, a former Republican Colorado secretary of state, took a page out of Trump’s own gaslight playbook, and during cross-examination he advanced implausible interpretations of the photo. The attacker could have been trying to pull the flagpole away, Gessler asserted, and there was nothing about the attacker’s attire that indicated he was “a member of a far-right extreme group.”

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How to deal with the most extremist House speaker in living memory — and Trump’s puppet

Mike Johnson, the new Republican speaker of the House, is turning out to be the most aggressively right-wing, confrontational speaker since … who? (I was about to say Newt Gingrich, but early indications are Johnson will be far worse than Newt.)

Johnson has already separated the White House’s funding requests for Israel and Ukraine — jeopardizing aid to Ukraine.

And he wants to finance the $14 billion aid bill for Israel by cutting the same amount of money earmarked for the Internal Revenue Service in the Inflation Reduction Act, — letting wealthy tax-dodgers avoid IRS audits while increasing future budget deficits. (For every $1 spent auditing the richest 1 percent of U.S. earners, more than $3 is brought in to the Treasury, and for every $1 auditing the richest 0.1 percent, over $6 is brought in.)

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How the GOP became the party of tax cheats

Yesterday, House Speaker MAGA Mike Johnson gave his first press conference. The billionaires sure picked the right guy: his performance was flawless. Slick, slimy, and unctuous.

For example, even though every dollar the IRS spends auditing billionaires produces between $6 and $12 in added tax revenue to our government, Johnson insisted with a straight face that we need to cut over $14 billion from the IRS’ budget to “fully pay for” a package of military aid to Israel.

No reporter — as is so often the case when interviewing Republicans — was willing to point out what BS his pitch on behalf of his billionaire owners was. (Nobody wants to be banned from future press conferences or ignored during question time.)

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Mental health is the leading cause of pregnancy-related deaths. So how do we fix it?

In 2019, 63 Texas women died from causes related to pregnancy. One in four of those deaths was related to a mental health condition — making maternal mental health the leading cause of death for those women, according to new data released last week by the Texas Department of State Health Statistics.

So what are we doing about it?

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Is the white working class ready to trade in some of their whiteness?

One of the major narratives about working-class white Americans - white people without college degrees - has been that they vote against their economic interests. They have shifted to the right since the mid-1990s and support policies that may preserve their cultural identity but do little to address their economic downslide. Restricting abortion is a winning issue with them, but not raising the minimum wage. Banning critical race theory is a top priority, but not universal health care.

Consider Barack Obama’s infamous 2008 remarks about Midwestern working-class voters: “They get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations."

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