Opinion

What the hell is Pope Francis talking about?

Pope Francis has compared having an abortion to “hiring a hitman to resolve a problem”. The leader of the Catholic Church made the comment during a speech in which he declared that it is always wrong to end a human life. While this has always been the line taken by the church, this comparison condemns abortion in particularly strong terms.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's attack on universal health care grabs headlines -- but here's the real '$660 million hurdle'

President Trump has just penned an op-ed for USA Today, in which he rants against Bernie Sanders’ “Medicare-for-all” plan, claiming that “The Democrats want to outlaw private health care plans, taking away freedom to choose plans while letting anyone cross our border.”

Keep reading... Show less

Fox News analyst unleashes a flood of examples after host asks how GOP has been uncivil

Fox News host Jon Scott on Wednesday asked contributor Marie Harf, a former senior advisor to Secretary of State John Kerry, to answer for Hillary Clinton's comment that when Democrats "win back the House and/or the Senate, that's when civility can start again"-- and got a lot more than he bargained for.

Keep reading... Show less

How would we recognize an alien if we actually saw one?

What would convince you that aliens existed? The question came up recently at a conference on astrobiology, held at Stanford University in California. Several ideas were tossed around – unusual gases in a planet’s atmosphere, strange heat gradients on its surface. But none felt persuasive. Finally, one scientist offered the solution: a photograph. There was some laughter and a murmur of approval from the audience of researchers: yes, a photo of an alien would be convincing evidence, the holy grail of proof that we’re not alone.

Keep reading... Show less

A psychological scientist explains why GOP women are more willing to overlook sexual assault allegations

Judge Brett Kavanaugh has been controversially appointed to the US Supreme Court. The Senate voted in favour of Kavanaugh’s confirmation 50 to 48, despite credible allegations by Christine Blasey Ford that he sexually assaulted her at a high school party in the 1980s.

Keep reading... Show less

How the nightmarish logic of scarcity capitalism will end up killing us all

Four centuries ago, somebody starving in the drought afflicted Elbe region in what is today the Czech Republic, anonymously chiseled onto the stone of the receding river bank a warning. Here, along the river where one day American and Soviet troops would meet on their duel approach to Berlin, a graffito made by unknown hand marks 1616 as the oldest year recorded on one particular “Hunger Stone”, and on that surface there is a memento mori which reads “Wenn du mich sicht, dann weine.” This summer, among the hottest recorded, and the Elbe once again receded to the point where observers could read that ominous missive: “If you see me, weep.”

Keep reading... Show less

'Her name was Heather Heyer': Rand Paul walloped after whining that political rhetoric will get someone killed

U.S. Senator Rand Paul is under fire after a report in a right wing news site quoted him warning that rhetoric in the current political climate is going to lead to someone being killed.

Keep reading... Show less

Here's how Susan Collins gaslit the nation -- and revealed herself to be just another partisan flunky

Back in February of this year, Axios reported that Donald Trump had a plan for the midterms:

Keep reading... Show less

The 'dark underside to conservatism': Ex-Republican reveals how he finally realized that racism and extremism are behind the GOP's success

Conservative writer Max Boot has had a major reckoning with his fundamental political beliefs and alliances since the rise of Donald Trump.

Keep reading... Show less

The GOP mask has slipped off -- and Republicans have been exposed for who they really are

The past month has been excruciating, especially for survivors of sexual violence and those who support them. As happened previously with Donald Trump and Roy Moore, it was predictable that Republicans would not simply fall in line behind Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh when he was credibly accused by multiple women of sexual abuse. Beyond that, their devotion would soar as Kavanaugh showed himself to be an entitled, overgrown frat boy who resorted to red-faced screaming and lying at even the hint that his history with women would be examined.

Keep reading... Show less

A neuroscientist explains why evangelicals are wired to believe Trump's lies

President Donald Trump lies so often that it is no longer shocking when it happens, no matter how blatant or absurd the falsehood may be. Not only does Trump regularly exaggerate the truth, he frequently denies facts that can be observed directly from video or audio tapes. This has led some professionals to diagnose his lying as compulsive or pathological, and many psychologists have pointed out that he is constantly gaslighting his base—a term that refers to a strategic attempt to get others to question their direct experience of reality.

Keep reading... Show less

How Catholics became the brains of the Religious Right -- even though it's evangelicals who brought the votes

Catholics make up a disproportionate share of the intelligentsia of the religious Right in the United States. Although they constitute only a fifth of the US population (and white Catholics make up less than 12 per cent of the US population), they maintain a high profile among conservative think tanks, universities and professional organisations. On the US Supreme Court, four out of five Republican-appointed justices are Catholic, despite evangelicals making up a substantial portion of Republican Party support.

Keep reading... Show less