Opinion

'Follow the money': DC insider explains how the gun debate changed in the last 25 years

Yesterday morning, a 28-year-old armed with assault rifles entered a Christian school in Nashville and fatally shot three nine-year-old children and three staff members before she was shot and killed by the police.

It makes me weep. It’s happening gain and again and again. Our children.

President Biden renewed his call for Congress to reinstate the Assault Weapons Ban, but with Republicans in control of the House there’s little to no chance.

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Guns don't kill Americans — Republicans do

Yesterday a 28-year old graduate of a Christian school shot up the place, killing three 9-year-old students and three adults. This was almost 2 years to the day that Republican Governor Bill Lee signed a wide-ranging gun deregulation bill allowing Tennesseans to carry guns — open or concealed — without a permit or any other government interference.

Republicans are trying to distract America from the easy access Audrey Hale had to weapons of war by discussing Hale’s personal life, but the availability of guns and the Republican embrace of death as a political weapon are the only real issues here.

We’re the only developed country in the world that unconditionally allows civilians to own military-style assault weapons, that allows “open carry,” and that lets gun manufacturers openly buy politicians (thanks, Republicans on the Supreme Court).

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House Republicans pass bill giving some parents the authority to beat down other parents' kids

The House Republicans passed a bill Friday requiring that school boards give parents greater oversight of their kids' education.

According to Roll Call, the measure would "affirm a parent's right to address the local school board and would require education officials to provide parents with lists of books and other curriculum materials, online budgetary information and alerts about incidents of violence at their child's school. Schools also would have to notify parents if their child uses a different name or pronoun at school."

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How democracies are transformed into fascist oligarchies

The Republican Party has adopted a motto embraced by despots throughout history. In other democracies, people are rebelling against this embrace of fascism: will we here?

They’re revolting in the UK against Boris Johnson’s lack of accountability, viz “Partygate.”

In France, people are burning things in the streets protesting President Macron’s raising the retirement age from 62 to 64 without subjecting it to the accountability of a vote of parliament or the people.

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What 'woke capitalism' really means

We're in another one of those moments in which the makebelievers makebelieve a makebelieve thing, and everyone else – let's call them the spoilers – respects the makebelieving of the makebelievers just long enough to ask themselves whether the makebelieve thing is real.

It's not real.

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Donald Trump indictment story previews Election 2024

With a grand jury in New York City is expected to reconvene today, Donald Trump said that he maybe kinda sorta won't be arrested. According to the Post, he "shared on social media a news report suggesting that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg could take a pass on prosecuting him — while he continued to attack Bragg."

Over the weekend, he said he expected to be taken into custody Tuesday on charges related to a hush-money scheme involving the actor Stormy Daniels. Since, there's been intense focus on the possibility of an unprecedented indictment of a former president.

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Quack science and the GOP

Rand Paul was shocked this week to learn from the CEO of Moderna that more people get inflammation of the heart from catching Covid than from the mRNA Covid vaccines.

Republicans in Missouri just passed legislation outlawing an employer’s ability to fire workers who refuse to take vaccines.

Republicans in a dozen state legislatures (so far) have put forward legislation preventing medical licensing boards from punishing doctors or nurses who prescribe hydroxychloroquine or ivermectin. It’s the law now in North Dakota and Tennessee.

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Anti-drag laws are part of a long history of policing gender

The anti-drag bills sweeping the nation are the latest in a long history of policing gender expression. While focused on supposedly protecting children from a particular kind of “adult performance,” the legislation is really about enforcing strict white, cis-heteronormative ideas of gender to serve nationalistic aims.

If successful this policing of gender expression will not stop at drag. It intends to control all who live outside of strict notions of the traditional binary of femininity and masculinity.

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Just say what the Republicans mean

Once again, we're chasing down and debunking every single Republican talking point instead of saying with a clear voice what the Republicans are saying with those talking points. We can't quit our fetish for the trees. Meanwhile, we're missing the whole forest.

As you know, Donald Trump might be indicted this week on charges related to a hush-money scheme investigated by the Manhattan district attorney's office. The criminal former president said over the weekend he expected to be "arrested" Tuesday. (A grand jury hearing evidence from that inquiry was expected to convene Wednesday but was delayed until today. A vote to indict appears to be imminent.)

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Possible Trump indictment sends GOP into a frenzy

The apparently imminent indictment of Donald Trump by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has short-circuited a number of prominent Republican officials, causing them to crazily careen in different directions to try to undermine the prosecutor. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — along with New Yorkers who should know better, like Rep. Nicole Malliotakis — have accused Bragg of ignoring skyrocketing violent crime, despite the fact that crimes like homicides and shootings have actually gone down in Manhattan in recent months, and this remains one of the safest big cities in the country. Three House...

DC insider: There's a connection between Trump's likely arrest and the bank bailouts

What connects the two biggest stories now dominating the news — Donald Trump’s likely arrest and the Fed’s bailouts of shaky banks?

Start with multi-billionaire Peter Thiel, and follow the money.

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It’s way past time for average Americans to fight back — we’ve been bullied enough

Donald Trump has provoked a bullying crisis in America that extends from elementary school all the way to Congress. It’s time to say, “Enough!”

Marjorie Taylor Greene, an infamous bully who once chased then-17-year-old Parkland school-shooting survivor David Hogg down the street screaming epithets at him, bullied her pooch Kevin McCarthy into threatening New York City District Attorney Alvin Bragg with a congressional investigation if he didn’t back off from prosecuting her role model, Donald Trump.

Following up, Gym Jordan, notorious for his bullying any witness who appears before his committees or brings up his alleged coverup history, has now been joined by James Comer (accused of abusing a girlfriend and then getting her an abortion), and House Administration Committee Chairman Bryan Steil in demanding Bragg give their committees all the information he’s gathered on Donald Trump’s crimes relating to his paying off porn star Stormy Daniels.

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An indictment would be good — but only for Trump’s nomination

Most Republicans have rallied around the criminal former president who may or may not face criminal indictment today (it’s anyone’s guess) in connection with a hush-money investigation led by the Manhattan district attorney’s office involving payments to actress Stormy Daniels in 2016 to keep quiet about his affair with her.

The Republicans say, as they have said for years, that anything that doesn’t kill Donald Trump only makes him stronger. They tell us an indictment will incite the Republican base. According to Lindsay Graham, Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg did “more to help Donald Trump get elected president than any single person in America today.”

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