Opinion

GOP can’t say hunger’s just a city thing

Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives want to make big cuts to the federal budget as a condition of raising the national debt ceiling. Where do they want to start? Food stamps, of course. And that could have a big impact on Kansas and Missouri. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is reportedly eyeing stringent new work requirements for participants in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP, the formal name for what many folks still refer to as food stamps. We don’t know the precise details of what he and the House GOP plan to propose — after months of dithering, Republicans ...

No trial, no error: Fox News’ Dominion lies weren’t innocent mistakes

Fox News has avoided going to trial by reaching a $787.5 million settlement with Dominion Voting Systems over the network’s smearing of the company following the 2020 election. Some have cautioned against celebrating the settlement, along one of two tracks. The first group warns of precedent and the supposed watering down of reporters’ First Amendment rights that the lawsuit represents, an argument that, as writers on an editorial page that frequently criticizes the politically powerful, we would presumably be sympathetic to. Yet while it would be a disaster for democracy for the press to sudd...

Fox News owes accountability to a hell of a lot more people than just Dominion

Fox “News” has settled with Dominion, paying them about three-quarter-billion dollars and admitting that they lied.

But nobody died at Dominion. Nobody’s life and family were turned upside-down at Dominion by being thrown into prison for sedition and insurrection. Nobody at Dominion was hospitalized or committed suicide because of the injuries they received at the hands of an angry mob Fox helped incite.

While Dominion had a strong legal case against Fox for lying on the air and harming their business, the families of Ashli Babbitt, Anthony Antonio, three dead and over 140 injured police officers, and patriotic Americans across the country have an even stronger moral case.

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Why is Justice Thomas telling us he's above the law?

You know I’ve been reading up on the eldest member of the rightwing supermajority of the United States Supreme Court. Something I have noticed, not for its presence but for its absence, is that Clarence Thomas keeps saying things that, if it were anyone but a justice saying them, would cause reasonable people to wonder: why is he telling us he’s above the law?

Allow me to remind you of the stakes, by which I mean the stakes for the Republicans. They have succeeded in tipping the balance of power in this country so that redhat authoritarians are emboldened to mount aggressive campaigns to return their states to their natural state of authoritarianism.

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Never-ending line of fire: Wrong-address shootings expose a broken society

Everyone has made the same error at some point: looking for an address and accidentally ending up at the wrong door. The moment of awkwardness is usually forgotten quickly. For 20-year-old Kaylin Gillis, it was her last memory before being gunned down by 65-year-old Kevin Monahan after she and some friends accidentally turned into his driveway in upstate Washington County. The killing came just two days after 84-year-old Andrew Lester shot 16-year-old Ralph Yarl in Kansas City after the teen accidentally went to the wrong address; fortunately, Yarl survived and is recovering. The thing about a...

Gov. Parson, not President Biden, is who made the Ralph Yarl shooting political

Missouri Gov. Mike Parson should know better. Accusing President Joe Biden of politicizing the shooting of 16-year-old Ralph Yarl is rich, after Parson stayed mum about the incident for almost a week. This week, Biden, quite admirably, held an hourlong phone conversation with Ralph and his family, and invited the teen to visit the White House once he is well enough to travel. On Tuesday, Biden wrote on Twitter: “No parent should have to worry that their kid will be shot after ringing the wrong doorbell. We’ve got to keep up the fight against gun violence. And Ralph, we’ll see you in the Oval o...

Why ‘Second Amendment people’ should be at the forefront of gun control solutions

Former U.S. Rep. Adam Kinzinger, who served Illinois’ 11th Congressional District and later the 16th from 2011 to early this year, is one of the Republican Party’s most significant truth tellers. Kinzinger is now a political commentator. In his blistering farewell address to Congress in December, Kinzinger said: “Where Republicans once believed that limited government meant lower taxes and more autonomy, today, limited government means inciting violence against government officials.” On Monday night, Kinzinger spoke in Chicago at a meeting organized by The Joyce Foundation. In a session modera...

The shame of Ohio: Corrupt, gerrymandered Statehouse Republicans assault voters, again

Just moments after I watched Ohio Senate Republicans pass a resolution for 41% minority rule over the Ohio Constitution on Wednesday, I walked past a field trip of Ohio children touring the Statehouse.

Seeing those kids’ faces as their eyes explored the beautiful Ohio Statehouse Rotunda, a sharp, stabbing pain of shame for our once-great state pierced into me, knowing what the unscrupulous, morally, ethically, and intellectually bankrupt GOP lawmakers and Senate President Matt Huffman in the nearby chamber just did.

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Progressives are dogpiling Dianne Feinstein because they sense weakness

The progressives are wrong about Dianne Feinstein. I know, I know. The 89-year-old Californian has been out for weeks with a nasty case of shingles. She’s missed more than 50 votes on the Senate Judiciary Committee. The president’s federal bench noms are queuing up. The rank corruption of Justice Clarence Thomas keeps begging hard for investigation.

They’re wrong. They’re wrong for practical, political reasons. This isn’t about the federal judiciary. This isn’t about the most geriatric member of the most geriatric Senate in American history. This isn’t about principles.

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Republicans in Tennessee and Arizona were wrong to kick out elected legislators they disagreed with

Everyone knows that the foolish ruling Republicans in the Tennessee House of Representatives expelled two freshmen Democrats, Justin Jones and Justin Pearson, on some specious charges on April 6, a partisan move that backfired when both men were promptly reinstated. But just six days later, the foolish ruling Republicans in the Arizona House of Representatives did the same thing to freshman Republican Liz Harris, ejecting her. Let’s hope this wrongful expulsion wave doesn’t spread to the 48 other states. Some of the particulars are different: The two Justins were charged with “disorderly behav...

Money talks. Justice Clarence Thomas listens

The hits keep coming for ethics-challenged Justice Clarence Thomas. At a time when the credibility and objectivity of the Supreme Court are under attack, Thomas seems intent on demonstrating why public skepticism of the court is so richly merited. Court judges across the country at every other level of the justice system are bound by strict and enforceable ethics rules — but no such enforcement applies to the nation’s highest court, a fact that Thomas seems keenly aware of. According to recent reports, Thomas has maintained an overly cozy financial relationship with Texas billionaire and GOP m...

States are using anti-terrorism laws against protesters

While federal law prohibits international terrorism, it defines but does not yet prohibit domestic terrorism. In the absence of congressional authorization, the FBI and Justice Department simply have not had the resources to address the increasing frequency of white supremacist violence over the last decade. Fortunately, most states filled the gap after 9/11. The first wave of state laws in 2002 closely followed the federal Patriot Act of 2001 in focusing on threats such as the use of “weapons of mass destruction.” And in the past five years, many states updated their anti-terrorism statutes t...

Stress is a silent killer for pregnant Black women

“We don’t take walk-ins,” the receptionist at my obstetrician-gynecologist’s office at a large academic medical center told me when I showed up without an appointment on a Friday afternoon and asked to be seen by a nurse. I was close to 28 weeks pregnant. I’d suffered severe headaches throughout my pregnancy. For the past several days, my feet and ankles had been so swollen that I could not lace up my sneakers. The night before, while receiving an award, I was so short of breath that I had trouble speaking. The prior weekend, I phoned the nurse on call and told her my blood pressure had been g...