Opinion

Golden years or golden scam? Inside the Republican battle to annihilate your retirement

Recently, a retired woman seeking advice wrote to MarketWatch’s financial advisor, saying:

“I was ‘financially set’ after my husband died. But my current adviser lost $500,000 over the last few years, and then a new adviser said my portfolio was ‘a mess’ and wants 1.25% to fix it. What’s my move?”

She was the victim of an unethical financial advisor hustling decades of churning commission-based products that essentially transferred her money into his pocket. As she told MarketWatch, “The adviser was paid per trade.”

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How Harris is snatching power from the press

The first thing you need to know about the vice president’s approach to the Washington press corps is look how well she’s doing as a result. Kamala Harris is now leading Donald Trump in some national polling averages as well as in some swing-state polls. True, her lead is within the margin of error in most cases, but that’s an improvement from where the Democrats were before Joe Biden dropped out of the running and orchestrated instantaneous unification around his No. 2.

I don’t think I’m overstating things. Her current lead, the millions of dollars she’s bringing in, the thousands of volunteers who are signing up to help, the big big mo’ – I think all of it comes directly from her campaign’s decision not to give the press corps too much access too fast. I think that decision comes directly from the fact that Harris saw firsthand what the press corps did to Joe Biden’s campaign.

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GOP's attack on Americans' retirement savings just went to the next disgusting level

It will come as no surprise to the regulars around here that I have soured to the point where I can barely pucker up to the work being done by our corporate, national media these days.

My love affair with the profession I gave most of my life to has ended in hurt and disappointment. Our national press too often presents as incompetent fools who are more interested in being led around by the nose than they are in sniffing out stories, including the biggest one of our lives.

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Trump's greatest heist

For once, the Chief Thief’s told the truth —

His tone as usual uncouth.

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J.D. Vance’s comments and foreword to Project 2025 book show his contempt for women

It was the kind of juvenile stunt you’d expect from a frat boy being a jerk. But the problem child pulling the bizarre maneuver on an airport tarmac in Wisconsin last week — to stalk Vice President Kamala Harris — was none other than Senator Cringeworthy from Ohio, or J.D. Vance, his latest alias.

The Republican vice-presidential nominee is seemingly hellbent on reinforcing his odious public image as a weird piece of work from The Handmaid’s Tale. No wonder the Gilead-curious Vance is soaring off the unlikability charts as more voters discover what Ohioans already have about the fringe right-winger with patriarchal fever dreams.

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It's time for Bill Barr to be brought to justice

The Washington Post reported last week that there’s very good reason to believe that Egypt’s dictator, Gen. Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, organized a $10 million cash bribe to Donald Trump when he was most desperate for the same amount of money during the 2016 election.

American intelligence reported that el-Sisi ordered $10 million in $100 bills be taken from a bank in Egypt — representing a large chunk of that country’s entire US dollar foreign reserves — and have them transported, possibly, to Donald Trump.

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How Harris and Walz are fighting Trump with joy and positivity — and winning

Evolutionary biologists know why humans spend disproportionate energy on negative thoughts compared to positive: Teasing out threats, real or perceived, is a basic tool of survival.

Around 3 a.m. isn’t the only time negative thoughts seize us. Even when we’re at ease, evolutionary instincts cause us to seek out whiffs of threat. Commonly called the human “negativity bias,” we train our mental energy on perceived danger, releasing cortisol and triggering flight or fight instincts that have served mammals from the beginning.

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Why isn't the media reporting on Trump's increasing dementia?

Today, Trump held an hourlong news conference in the main room at Mar-a-Lago. He insulted Kamala Harris’s intelligence, lied about the state of the U.S. economy, and claimed the country would be in mortal danger if he didn’t win the election.

In other words, the usual Trump torrent of lies and insults.

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Trump's insatiable ego is destroying the former president

Just before I posted this piece, the former president gave a press conference. The questions weren’t as difficult as those he faced at last week’s convention of the National Association of Black Journalists, but if the current Theory of Trump is accurate, they aren’t going to help Donald Trump. They’re going to hurt him. We should all be so lucky.

The current Theory of Trump comes from Sarah Longwell. She’s the publisher of The Bulwark, a former Republican and a pollster. She’s often on cable news talking about what swing voters want. Last week, after the NABJ’s interview, she said the more people see Trump, the lower his approval ratings are. The less they see, the higher they are.

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Trump’s health questioned after news conference but what do we know about J.D. Vance?

During and after Donald Trump's "rambling, weird, scary," and “lie-filled” press conference Thursday afternoon, reporters, casual observers, political experts, and even his own former aide, expressed concern about the 78-year old's physical and mental health. But if the ex-president wins re-election, his running mate, JD Vance, could at some point become president, and the Trump campaign has not told America much if anything about the freshman U.S. Senator from Ohio's health.

"The surface layer of Trump cracked yesterday. Even his most ardent supporters could [see] someone unhinged and out of step with the times," warned former Trump communications director and former longtime friend Anthony Scaramucci, on Friday, after Thursday's presser.

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Quiet quitting? Trump's Mar-a-Lago 'meltdown' fuels speculation

The first question during Donald Trump's "angry," "rambling, incoherent, demented," "complaining," and "lie-filled" Thursday afternoon news conference from Mar-a-Lago was about campaign strategy, and would he be changing it. No, Trump insisted. Another question – which the ex-president declared "stupid" – was about his lack of campaign events.

In the weeks since President Joe Biden's campaign-ending debate performance, Donald Trump has hit the campaign trail barely more than a handful of times. In 42 days, Trump has held just eight rallies.

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Harris has figured out Trump’s greatest liability

There are many things to say about Tim Walz’s debut last night as Kamala Harris’ vice presidential pick. But I want to zero in on one thing he said, a throwaway joke about JD Vance, that says something important about pundits, parties and politics. It was about that couch.

That what?

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Harlan Crow helped fund Swiftboating. Trump campaign continues that legacy in Walz attack

The year was 2004. U.S. Senator John Kerry was the Democratic presidential nominee running to unseat President George W. Bush. The Iraq War was a major campaign issue and Sen. Kerry campaigned against it by accurately attacking his Republican opponent.

"Saying there are weapons of mass destruction in Iraq doesn't make it so. Saying we can fight a war on the cheap doesn't make it so. And proclaiming mission accomplished certainly doesn't make it so," Kerry declared upon accepting the Democratic nomination.

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