Opinion

Ron DeSantis orders flags lowered to honor ‘legend’ Rush Limbaugh

Florida's Republican Governor Ron DeSantis on Friday announced he will order flags across the state to be lowered to honor recently deceased right wing radio host and hate purveyor Rush Limbaugh.

“I know they're still figuring out the [funeral] arrangements but what we do when there's things of this magnitude, once the date of internment for Rush is announced, we're going to be lowering the flags to half-staff," DeSantis, a devout Trump supporter, told residents in Palm Beach County, as local NBC affiliate WFLA reports.

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Ted Cruz told the truth for once when he admitted that voter suppression benefits Republicans

The Nation's Joan Walsh is among the journalists who is not shy about using the word "liar" to accurately describe Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas. But in an article published on March 23, the liberal Walsh gives the far-right Republican credit for speaking the truth for once. Cruz, Walsh notes, recently admitted that making it easier to vote benefits Democrats, while making it more difficult to vote benefits Republicans.

All over the United States, Republicans in state legislatures are pushing voter suppression bills designed to make it much harder to vote. A bill in Georgia even proposed making it a crime to give food or water to someone waiting in line to vote. And Democrats, at the federal level, are fighting back with the voting rights bill House Resolution 1, a.k.a. the For the People Act — which was recently passed in the U.S. House of Representatives but faces an uphill climb in the U.S. Senate.

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Reparations for bias and slavery gains momentum

Keep your eye on Evanston, Ill., which this week became the first U.S. city to make reparations available to its Black residents through home loan repairs or down payments on property.

Reparations – financial amends for discrimination and slavery – is among the most controversial of social programs sought by progressives.

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The price tag on Joe Biden's infrastructure plan sounds like a lot -- it's not

Quick, how much is $2 trillion? That's the amount President Joe Biden wants for his infrastructure package.

Okay, it is more money than even Bill Gates, Elon Musk, and Jeff Bezos have, put together. That probably still doesn't give people too much information since most people don't have much familiarity with these folks' fortunes. But it might be helpful if the media made some effort to put the proposed spending in President Biden's infrastructure package in a context that would make it meaningful.

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McConnell is being crystal clear. What don't Democrats get about 'no'?

Democrats seem to be operating in two worlds at the same time: There's a real energy, driven by the base, to move ahead with bold plans, knowing that big majorities of Americans support them.

This article was originally published at The Signorile Report

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G7 showed that post-Trump, the world has shifted

What a difference a year makes in international diplomacy.

A year ago, then-US President Donald Trump was obliged to abandon his plans for a G7 summit at the presidential retreat of Camp David outside Washington.

Various excuses were advanced by participants, including the inadvisability of travelling across the world in the midst of a pandemic. But in reality few, if any, G7 leaders wanted to associate themselves with Trump in what was hoped would be the last days of an ill-starred presidency.

A year later, these same leaders gathered at an English coastal retreat – in the shadow of a persistent COVID-19 pandemic – to celebrate the end of a disruptive chapter in diplomatic history. Relief was palpable in the interactions of representatives of the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Japan, Italy and Canada.

America was back, not in its “America First" guise, but as the proclaimed leader of the free world, to use an old-fashioned description.

However, in the four years of the Trump presidency, during which Washington effectively abandoned its global leadership role in favour of an inward-looking posture defined by its embrace of an America First doctrine, the world had changed, and shifted dramatically.

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Biden must bring back the eviction ban

President Joe Biden and Democratic leadership are glowing with pride about a major infrastructure bill. It's bipartisan and therefore gets gushy praise from the Beltway press. Even voters, who don't really care about bipartisanship, care about shoring up crumbling American infrastructure, so the bill is a win in that department for Biden and the Democrats. But while Democrats hyped their still-fragile victory on moving that bill forward, another crisis threatens to steal the top headlines.

This article originally appeared at Salon.

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America has arrived at one of history's great crossroads

The Democratic Party is having an internal battle over the "small" and the "large" infrastructure bills, but what's really at stake is the future of neoliberalism within the party. The smaller "bipartisan" bill represents the neoliberal worldview, including public-private partnerships and huge subsidies to for-profit companies, whereas the larger "reconciliation" Democratic Party-only bill hearkens back to the FDR/LBJ classic progressive way of doing things.

Milton Friedman began selling neoliberalism to America in the 1950s, and we fully bought into it in the 1980s. Most Americans had no idea, really, what this new political/economic ideology meant; they just knew it involved free trade, economic austerity/tax cuts and deregulation/privatization.

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Unhinged threats against nurses and school boards rage on as mainstream GOP stands by

In a press conference at the state Capitol this week, Georgia's public health commissioner condemned a campaign of bullying, intimidation and threats directed at health care workers attempting to improve the state's abysmal vaccination record against COVID- 19.

This article was originally published at Georgia Recorder

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The Supreme Court has declared war. President Biden must end it

President Biden showed enormous courage in withdrawing all American troops from Afghanistan and bringing the 20-year war to a close. It might have been politically easier, if more costly in American lives and dollars, to continue it, even sending in more troops.

This article was originally published at The Signorile Report

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Anger is the only reasonable response to COVID obstructionists

We were willing to debate the efficacy of masks.

We agreed there should be balance between lockdown measures and economic interests.

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California recall comes down to Donald Trump

The absurd recall election to replace California's Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, is upon us. All registered voters in California were sent mail-in ballots weeks ago and Tuesday is the last day for people to either turn them in or vote in person. So far, turnout has been much better than anyone expected for this weirdly timed special election. That bodes well for Governor Newsom in a state in which Democrats outnumber Republicans 2-1. As of last week, 56% of returned ballots were from registered Democrats and about a quarter from registered Republicans. And it does not appear that many of those ballots came from disgruntled Democrats.

The last Los Angeles Times poll found 60.1% of likely voters surveyed oppose recalling Newsom compared with 38.5% in favor. That's ten points higher than the same poll had the "No" vote in July and close to his 62% - 38% victory in 2018. Most other polls are in the same ballpark, showing Newsom getting well above 50%, which is what it will take for him to survive. It's certainly possible that the Republicans could still pull this off with a massive surge of same-day voting that includes many unhappy Independents and angry Democrats who are not being caught in the polling, but it will be a tough lift.

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Progressives hold the line as 'Manchema' side with oligarchy against Biden agenda

Political observers predicted three options late Thursday as it remained unclear whether Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi would still hold a vote on the Bipartisan Infrastructure Framework, or BIF, which has stirred a Capitol Hill fight between a small band of corporate Democrats in Congress and the rest of the party anchored by the Congressional Progressive Caucus.

As of this writing, there was no final word other than promises earlier in the day by Pelosi that a vote would come—even though fresh public comments from Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.V.) made it clear that a chasm remains between his opposition and that of Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) and House Democrats on the $3.5 trillion Build Back Better Act that must ultimately be passed via the bicameral reconciliation process.

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