Opinion

Biden must prepare: Republicans plan to exploit Ukraine for political gain — again

You would think after five years of the Republican standard-bearer telling anyone who will listen that the United States is "stupid" and that "the whole world is laughing at us" while kissing up to dictators and insulting U.S. allies, that members of the GOP would now be embarrassed to fall back on their old playbook of calling Democrats unpatriotic and soft of defense. But as we know, they are shameless so that isn't something that would stop them.

As it stands, after a few weeks of confusion and disarray (which I wrote about here) — not really sure if their supporters' adoration for that gorgeous hunk Vladimir Putin was so deeply felt that they would support the invasion of Ukraine — GOP leadership has mostly come around to the idea that Russia probably shouldn't be ruthlessly murdering massive numbers of civilians. Being the timorous followers these leaders really are, they couldn't just take a moral and principled stand at the outset, particularly since the leader of the party, Donald Trump, was out there saying that Putin was a genius and very savvy for just going in and taking the prime property he coveted. (Perhaps it reminded him of the good old days when he would take elderly widow's land under eminent domain to build parking lots for his casinos.) But they needn't have worried too much. The muscle memory of right-wing anti-communism is still viable in the GOP's body politic.

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Won't someone stand up to protest Putin's biggest fanboy?

Recently, the world watched with a mixture of astonishment, delight and concern as an employee of Russian state television Channel One interrupted the evening news program by coming onto the set, shouting "Stop the war! No to war!" while holding up a large handmade sign that said: Don't believe the propaganda. They're lying to you here.

News editor and producer Marina Ovsyannikova rushed out behind a female anchor (reportedly a Putin favorite), who was presenting the national state-sanctioned "news," with a sign decrying the lies being told there about Putin's war against Ukraine.

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How Joe Biden 're-ignited our government engine' after Donald Trump's damage

What is the source of American power? What, to reclaim a denuded phrase, makes America great? Not the biggest economy, the most powerful military, nor the most coveted cultural icons.

Those are end products, not causes.

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Why I'm going to Ukraine

It turned out to be just another Monday at the White House circus. The clowns came and went. The trapeze artists did their high-wire act. The elephants crapped all over the place and someone forgot to clean up after them.

Under Donald Trump, such apt descriptions were used to define the administration. Today I use it to define the White House press corps. While the world is on fire, we're critiquing the wallpaper.

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The walls may be closing in on Mo Brooks with Alabama's GOP Senate primary just 2 months away

Rep. Mo Brooks just had a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week.

The far-right congressman from Alabama is best known nationally for his role as a leading insurrectionist on January 6. But rather than get attention for that -- Brooks’ new campaign ad promotes his speech before the riot --- he saw his campaign to succeed retiring Sen. Richard Shelby take a series of body blows.

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Bombed out: Why we keep on making war, and tolerating it

The hardest thing I do as a writer is trying to find words to describe the indescribable. It doesn't matter what it is — beauty or bliss or sadness or tragedy or dullness or despair or horror or ecstasy or the ordinary — it's the writer's job. I remember as a young man having a dream that someday I might come up with one great idea. Just one would do it, but that was my goal. Now I realize what I've been doing for more than 50 years is excavating old ideas and finding new ways to express them.

This article first appeared in Salon.

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Switching to renewable energy can dethrone men like Vladimir Putin

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and disruptions in and sanctions on Russian oil, have led to a major rise in oil prices.

In Chicago, I’ve seen gas selling for north of $5 a gallon. Some parts of California are reporting gas over $5.50. Last week, average gas prices nationwide hit $4.196 per gallon, which is the highest recorded price in history, breaking the previous record of $4.165 from July 2008.

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Here's why Ginni Thomas can get away with supporting sedition

It’s not clear to me yet why Virginia “Ginni” Thomas admitted to being at the gathering that came before the J6 insurrection. But I’m sure the spouse of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has her reasons.

Ginni Thomas told the Washington Free Beacon Monday that she attended the rally organized by the former president to “stop the steal.” She said she left before Donald Trump ordered a throng of insurgents, some armed, to sack and loot the seat of government.

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What the New York Times doesn't get about free speech and 'cancel culture'

One can only hope that Friday, March 18, 2022 will mark the nadir of the moral panic over "cancel culture" that has gripped not just the American right, but also the upper echelons of elite journalism upset by the hoi polloi commenting aloud about their writing. Because that is the day the New York Times editorial board published an editorial equating actual government censorship with the "fear of being shamed or shunned" for expressing an opinion in public.

Really, "equating" is an overstatement. The editorial makes it quite clear that the board sees shaming-and-shunning as exponentially worse than actual government censorship.

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Why Vladimir Putin is botching his Ukrainian invasion

The war started by Vladimir Putin against Ukraine is not unfolding as he expected it would.

His attempts to play the Cold War game of making threats to achieve his goals were not perceived as credible by NATO.

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Don't be fooled: The GOP love affair with Putin is worse than it looks

Errol Morris' "The Fog of War" is one of my favorite documentary films. It is especially timely given Vladimir Putin and Russia's war on Ukraine.

Robert McNamara, who was secretary of defense under Lyndon Johnson in the 1960s and one of the chief architects of the disastrous war in Vietnam, is the film's subject. If you let people talk, they will show you who they really are. Morris demonstrates great skill at allowing villains to speak for themselves, and in doing so to reveal their complexity — and their sincere belief in their own victimhood and heroism. "The Fog of War" is a masterclass in that lesson, one which all interviewers and those others who use words for a living should internalize.

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China is a wild card in Russia's war on Ukraine

Even before taking office, Joe Biden had been framing America’s immediate future as one unfolding amid a global conflict between democracy and autocracy. That was powerful rhetoric after a sitting president ordered insurgents to sack and loot the seat of government. It was more so after an actual autocracy invaded an actual democracy.

Perhaps we should thank Vladimir Putin. If it wasn’t obvious before Feb. 24 that native-born fascists in mostly in the form of Republicans pose an existential threat to the American republic, it was obvious after Russia declared war on Ukraine. Biden’s rhetoric was made real.

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Putin's invasion of Ukraine exposes the Fox News-QAnon feedback loop

One of the currently preferred rationalizations pro-Russia propagandists are using to justify the invasion of Ukraine appears to have emerged from an American social media network known for hosting QAnon, neo-Nazis and other assorted deplorables. As Justin Ling at Foreign Policy explained it earlier this month, the new theory is that "Moscow is launching airstrikes on Ukraine to destroy bioweapon-manufacturing labs in order to prevent the American infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci from creating a sequel to the COVID-19 virus."

The notion that Ukraine has "bioweapons" and that Russia is invading to stop some dastardly Ukrainian plot didn't even emerge until after the invasion had begun. Prior to that, the laughably thin rationale was based on Vladimir Putin's asinine claims that Ukraine, whose president is of Jewish ancestry, is being run by Nazis. When that didn't really fly, a new justification emerged, from what look to be American sources.

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