Opinion

Coronavirus makes it critical FDA ends blood donation discrimination against gay men

Along with surgical masks, ventilators and intensive care beds, the nation’s blood supply is under heavy strain during the coronavirus pandemic.The American Red Cross announced a “severe blood shortage” on March 17 as COVID-19 spread and planned blood donation drives had been canceled. While social distancing and staying out of public spaces continue to be sound policy to tamp down the pandemic, the need for a robust blood supply is urgent and will be ongoing for weeks to come.This need has little precedent, and the federal Food and Drug Administration must act accordingly by broadening the po...

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Donald Trump's suicide warning is a sign of his privilege -- and most Americans can't relate

We always knew that Donald Trump was out of touch with most Americans. The fact that he thinks we’re going to kill ourselves if the economy doesn’t improve soon shows how clueless he is about how resilient we are.Only someone of privilege could believe that being without money is worse than death. Obviously, he wasn’t referring to the people who live from paycheck to paycheck and are broke every other week.Of course, everyone is worried that so many people are out of work. We aren’t naive enough to believe that even when the coronavirus pandemic is over, everyone’s job will be waiting.Some com...

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Little this president does makes sense: Trump opens up America for business and to peril

President Trump’s new mantra is, “We cannot let the cure be worse than the problem,” which was the themeof his press briefing Monday, just eight days into his “15-day challenge” to practice social distancing.That is quite a pivot. Now he intends to roll back the CDC’s self-quarantine guidelines designed to stem the coronavirus and explore ways to “open up the country again” by Easter Sunday, which defies the warnings of his own medical experts.There’s a hole in his plan, however: The “problem” he cites is that people are dying. The problem is that Americans are getting sick at an exponential r...

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'Disaster socialism': Will coronavirus crisis finally change how Americans see the safety net?

Diana Hernandez has one foot in the Ivy League, where she’s an assistant professor of sociomedical sciences at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, and another in the grittier streets of the South Bronx, the mostly working-class area where she lives. Walking down a Bronx boulevard the other day, she witnessed scenes much different from the TV news version of the coronavirus crisis, where suburbanites stuff payloads of squeezably soft toilet paper and price-gouged Purell in the back of luxury SUVs.Instead, Hernandez wrote that she witnessed Bronx shoppers at her local Dollar T...

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The GOP is no longer the party of Lincoln -- it's become a launching pad for bigots

The GOP has an image problem. For some reason, bigots and other undesirables seem to think they can run for office as Republicans and win.Sometimes the candidates are right. More often, they’re wrong. But that’s not the issue. What’s concerning is that there’s something about the Republican Party that makes loathsome candidates think they are welcome there.It is unlikely that many Americans are paying attention to the congressional race in Illinois’ 3rd Congressional District. But everyone should.Arthur Jones is on the Republican ballot again. The Nazi sympathizer and Holocaust denier is makin...

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Why are PG&E executives getting bonuses?

PG&E has no equal when it comes to chutzpah.This is a utility that is in bankruptcy proceedings after causing 111 deaths and destroying more than 20,000 structures in the last decade. This is a utility that admitted to a federal judge that it did not meet its 2019 wildfire safety plan risk-reduction targets.But that didn’t keep PG&E attorneys last week from asking the bankruptcy court to approve more than $450 million in bonuses for its employees and executives. That’s right. The utility that has become synonymous with failure wants to hand out rewards for its shortcomings last year.We’re not ...

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Vladimir Putin just made himself president for life -- does Trump dream of doing the same?

While world leaders focused this week on coping with the coronavirus, Vladimir Putin’s attention was elsewhere.The Russian president was busy setting himself up as president for life.After 20 years as president or prime minister, the 67-year-old former KGB spy organized a brazen end run around Russia’s presidential term limits that will permit him to serve two more six-year terms after his current mandate expires in 2024.This internal coup frees Putin to pursue his bitter vendetta against the West, which he blames for all Russia’s troubles. Indeed, he justified his power grab by arguing that R...

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Here's the only way Joe Biden can beat Donald Trump

On Monday there was a lot of buzz about a piece on the clickbait-ish, Beltway-access-lapdog website Axios which looked at possible cabinet picks in a Joe Biden administration in 2021, and which was truly remarkable in two ways.First, of course, were the names themselves — a weird hodgepodge of high-profile picks that seemed guaranteed to anger every voter in one way or another, from clueless $500-million-burning billionaire Mike Bloomberg to run the World Bank to the idea that a Biden secretary of the Treasury would either be the ultimate Wall Street insider, JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, o...

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America needs to talk about the new book that says lacking a college degree might kill you

One thing that’s been really striking about the long-running (too-long-running?) series of Democratic presidential debates is how many hours have been spent jawboning about universal health care plans like “Medicare for All” and how little time has been spent debating something else that could save tens of thousands of American lives.That thing is universal higher education, which — unfortunately — is often simplified by friend and foe alike into “free college.”OK, so most people agree that it should be easier and less expensive to attend college, in an economy where a diploma is frequently de...

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'The Plot Against America': HBO's gripping historical fantasy rebukes the notion that it can't happen here

Working quiet emotional miracles, Zoe Kazan is the simmering kettle in the middle of an inferno in “The Plot Against America,” and she deserves every available award for her work in this fine, eerily evocative HBO adaptation.She’s not top-billed: Winona Ryder is, and Ryder’s good, in a flamboyant, outsized way. Kazan works differently, befitting her domestic anchor of a character. There is nothing extraneous in her performance. There is, however, a world of heartache behind her eyes and a supernatural ability to judge the proper tone and rhythm of a scene.Premiering Monday, HBO’s six-part mini...

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'Winds of Winter' release date could revive a mindblowing Tyrion fan theory

Back in fall 2018, one particular Game of Thronesfan theorywas all the rage. Based on set leaks and evidence from a credible leaker who'd accurately predicted many of the twists and turns of Season 7,it claimed we would see a beloved character make a dramatic heel turn. However, that character wasn't Daenerys Targaryen, it was Tyrion Lannister.While Song of Ice and Fire author George R.R. Martin previously revealed that he gave Game of Thronesshowrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss some rough "bullet points" for the conclusion of his saga, he's got to be thinking twice about incorporating tha...

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Here's why Elizabeth Warren's exit feels personal to women

If this week could be summed up in one image, it would be the photo of Jill Biden shoving a vegan protester off her husband’s stage.The photo, shot on Super Tuesday, was celebrated as #Fierce and #JillBidenMVP and #FightLikeAGirl. But all I see is a metaphor for the full-scale, tireless, sometimes ugly struggle that women undertake over and over and over, only to watch all the biggest platforms remain occupied by men.The end of Elizabeth Warren’s candidacy, fewer than 48 hours after that moment was captured, felt like a personal loss. To me, and to a lot of women.“If you say, ‘Yeah, there was ...

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After Super Tuesday, expect greater Russian election interference amped up by Trump

The day before Super Tuesday, all the nation’s top security agencies issued a joint statement warning that “foreign actors continue to try to … cause confusion and create doubt in our system.”This should hardly have been surprising since intelligence officials and the FBI have been publicly warning that Russia is waging “information warfare” to fan U.S. political divisions and undermine trust in the 2020 elections.Yet, on Super Tuesday, President Donald Trump was tweeting about the “phony Russia Witch Hunt” and the “Mueller Scam,” Robert Mueller’s investigation that detailed the Kremlin electi...

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