Opinion

A neuroscientist asks what Jason Aldean, Ron DeSantis and Josh Hawley are so afraid of

In 2022, Ron DeSantis and the Republican Florida legislature passed the legislation, FL HB 7 (22R), or the Individual Freedom Act which expanded anti-discrimination laws to prohibit schools and companies from leveling guilt or blame to students and employees based on race or sex. Casually speaking, the “anti-woke” law aimed at helping white Floridians avoid any white guilt associated with slavery.
In the past few weeks, DeSantis went a step further, this time as a Presidential hopeful, and set a new education “standard” declaring that enslaved people “developed skills which, in some instances, could be applied for their personal benefit.” Despite the pushback that he received from many angles for this revisionist history, DeSantis has doubled down on his widely askew, ignorant, and offensive notion. Many have defined the anti-woke movement by Republicans as a form of fighting reverse discrimination against whites.

Policies such as these beg the question, “What are white males afraid of?” What are you afraid of by admitting slavery was a colossal, historical mistake not to be repeated? A mistake made by our forefathers and those that came before us. This raises the horribly concerning notion that downplaying slavery may serve as some sort of precursor for reintroducing similar inhumane public policies.

White male members of Congress, what are you afraid of? Many congressmen like Ted Cruz, Lindsay Graham, Josh Hawley, Mitch McConnell, Kevin McCarthy, Jim Jordan, Mo Brooks, as examples, have shown that they will do almost anything to keep their seats – even defend the indefensible. Most recently by defending efforts to overthrow the people’s will in a national election and to attempt to explain away why stealing and sharing classified documents is not a serious crime. The fear by many of these white men (and some white women) is that they will lose the votes of die-hard Trump supporters (his “base") if they step out of line against the ex-President. What does keeping those voters do for these whites (and admittedly at least one Black congressman)? They get to keep their job.

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Gov. Ron DeSantis’ campaign meltdown and what must be done to stop Trump

As governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis reopened his state quickly after COVID-19, limited economic damage and managed to reopen schools by the fall of 2020, reducing learning loss. Florida also had an impressive vaccination rate and a lower age-adjusted COVID-19 death rate than most American states. Debates over COVID-19 policies and their consequences will continue for decades, but a growing number of nonpartisan historians are arguing that DeSantis was far more right than wrong. His environmental record, including protection of the Everglades, is better than many Democratic strongholds, he rai...

A neuroscientist explains why RFK Jr. has cast a spell upon millions

Get ready America, because things are about to reach a whole new level of crazy. The nation is more ideologically divided than it has ever been in modern times, and no matter who wins the upcoming presidential election, it is practically guaranteed that half of the country is going to feel like the world is about to end.

And just when it seemed modern presidential politics couldn’t possibly move further into the realm of the surreal, an unexpected player has emerged: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

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How the odd and wonderful people of this small Wisconsin town are slapping Republicans back into reality

I wasn’t going to get into all this small-town noise echoing off a borrowed song by a tone-deaf country music phony named Jason Aldean. Not because I don’t think it’s an important issue worth kicking around in earnest, but because I am not much interested in helping such an intellectual shrimp garner such big record sales.

So that’ll be the last mention of this three-chord poser. If you want more, hit Google, or better yet, wait until he undoubtedly becomes Trump’s opening act during one of those standup routines when he menacingly stalks an Iowa cornfield, shaking down his groupies to help pay for his endless supply of noxious gas.

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Is Tuberville’s hold on military promotions so Trump can fill them with loyalists in 2025?

The morbidly rich often believe they’re immune from the politicians they fund turning on them. And they’re often wrong.

Now, here in America, right-wing billionaires are repeating the same mistake Germany’s ultra-rich made in the 1930s. And the MAGA Republicans and the billionaires who fund them are now gung-ho to put you and me under the thumb of the US military, just like Hitler did.

There’s even some concern that Tommy Tuberville’s Senate hold on military promotions may be a way of keeping top military positions open so Trump or another MAGA Republican president can fill them if the GOP takes the White House in 2024.

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McCarthy caves and caves, then caves some more

I don’t know about you, but House Speaker Kevin McCarthy does not come off as a figure of genuine authority and respect. If Nancy Pelosi, his predecessor, gave the impression of loving but iron-willed matriarch to her party’s rowdiest juveniles, McCarthy gives the impression of a bachelor uncle babysitting the kids for the day and coming close to giving up.

Since becoming speaker, he’s fended off demands by some in his party to meet the Democrats’ impeachments of Donald Trump with their own of Joe Biden. On what evidence? They didn’t know, but they were sure they’d find it. As the search for evidence of wrongdoing keeps running into the problem of there being no evidence of wrongdoing, however, some in his party are apparently fresh out of patience. Evidence, schmevidence.

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A civil rights conspiracy charge matches Donald Trump’s alleged crimes

When it finally leaked that one of the three possible criminal offenses referenced in the target letter sent to Donald Trump by the special counsel involved the civil rights conspiracy statute, some commentators’ knee-jerk reaction was that this was a novel charge, an unexpected and untested legal theory. It was proof, in other words, that the special counsel’s case was too weak to support the more compelling case recommended by the Jan. 6 committee — giving aid and comfort to an insurrection. But, at least from what we know publicly, a civil rights conspiracy is exactly what happened — the fo...

Carlee Russell’s kidnapping hoax shouldn’t distract us from the real issue of missing women and girls

Count me among those who feel duped by Carlee Russell. The Alabama woman — who claimed she tried to help a toddler on a highway before disappearing, only to resurface two days later saying she had been kidnapped — got me good. The nightmarish account of Russell screaming on the phone with her brother’s girlfriend before disappearing, and police rushing to the scene earlier this month and finding only her cellphone and wig had me shook — that is, before Alabama authorities and armchair investigators alike began poking holes in it. Russell claimed she was abducted by a man with orange hair who e...

How Trump’s new Big Lie-filled fascist ad is damaging our democracy

Will 2024 be the year Big Lies overwhelm our entire political system? Is that the goal the GOP is working towards now?

Trump’s people are promoting a new lie-filled fascist advertisement, which even the normally unflappable Frank Luntz called “disturbing.” It follows a fairly ancient pattern of destructive Big Lies that goes back to Renaissance Italy and even the Roman republic and ancient Greece.

German filmmaker Fritz Hippler, one of Goebbels’ most effective propagandists (he produced the infamous movie The Eternal Jew), said that two steps are necessary to promote a Big Lie so the majority of the people in a nation would believe it.

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Face it, Ron DeSantis is losing because he’s bad at this

Ron DeSantis wants his party to think it faces a choice between Donald Trump and Not-Donald Trump (meaning him). “No matter how much the media and DC elites try to destroy Ron DeSantis,” his spokesman said, “they can’t change the fact that this is a two-man race for the nomination.”

But that’s not what new numbers show. Philip Bump, looking at polling from early states by Fox Business, found that, in addition to Trump being ahead by a mile of the other Republican candidates, runners-up included DeSantis about as much as they included anyone not named Donald Trump.

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Ohio Republicans and lobbyists don’t trust a majority of voters but want us to rig the game for them

Issue 1 is about powerful Republican politicians and lobbyists not trusting Ohioans. They don’t want a majority of voters to do anything they don’t like. They don’t want a majority of voters to be able to hold them accountable. And that is the only reason they are trying to rig the game with Issue 1 on Aug. 8.

They are trying to rig the game against voters by asking a majority of Ohio voters to rig the game for them against ourselves. They are asking us to change the rules so future amendments need 60% voter approval for passage.

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How Trump's descent into legal hell could force America into 'narcissistic collapse'

When I was young, I dated a girl who, on reflection, was a classic malignant narcissist. She went from loving me to, when I ended the relationship, stalking and threatening me with both social and physical violence.

This may well be what America has in store as Trump descends into a legal hell of his own criminal creation, particularly when he’s facing real jail time; if he’s rejected by the GOP primary voters; or if he’s the nominee and loses the election while still facing jail time.

It’s called “narcissistic collapse.”

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Surprise! Some good news from the IRS

The “returns” are in from the 2023 tax season, and everyone’s least favorite federal agency has made actual progress. Using funds from the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, the Internal Revenue Service has improved its famously miserable customer service, upgraded some of its antiquated technology and breathed a little life into its moribund efforts to snare wealthy tax cheats. The agency responsible for collecting federal taxes still has a long way to go, but the signs are promising — at least for those of us who believe in enforcing the law. Given that as much as $1 trillion a year in tax rev...