Opinion

How Donald Trump is using America's fear of Black men to destroy the anti-racism coalition

Donald Trump is such a cunning politician. He knows the kumbaya moment taking place in America right now will not last forever.He realizes that this multiracial alliance is fragile, because anything that has to do with race always is. Before George Floyd could be laid to rest last week, cracks already were forming in our cohesive platform.While we were basking in the excitement of white, black and brown people marching in lockstep over Floyd’s killing, Trump was busy looking for fractures.He found two very quickly. First, it was the looters. Now it’s the volatile phrase “defund the police.”Bot...

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Don't let right-wingers like Candace Owens dictate how we feel about George Floyd

Minutes before he encountered police on a Minneapolis street, George Floyd was just another flawed human being. To some, he was even less than that because he was black.Nothing about him — not the way he looked or the way he carried himself — offered a clue that he could become one of the biggest social justice symbols of our time. Few would have noticed this large black man, wearing a black sleeveless T-shirt and sweatpants, walking toward them and decided that he was worthy of knowing.In fact, some would have crossed the street to get away from him.But his death transcended his faulty life. ...

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Donald Trump is the worst case scenario

Donald Trump is not responsible for America’s racial politics, at least not completely. Racial injustice is America’s original sin and you can’t pin that on the current president. That being said, it’s hard to imagine anyone more ill-equipped to handle the current state of unrest. Ill-equipped may not even be the right term to use. He is completely unequipped to deal with the outpouring of anger being expressed on the streets of our cities. He is incapable of listening to anyone besides himself. He cannot sympathize. He cannot empathize. He cannot lead, he doesn’t want to.Instead, he resorts t...

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Doctor sues Washington state hospital after he was fired for raising coronavirus concerns

BELLINGHAM, Wash. — Fired whistleblower physician Dr. Ming Lin, backed by attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union, filed suit Thursday against former employer PeaceHealth, one of its top administrators and a national medical staffing firm, seeking damages and reinstatement after his March dismissal from a Bellingham hospital.Lin, 58, was fired from PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center after publicly protesting what he called inadequate workplace measures to protect hospital personnel and patients from the COVID-19 disease. He became a global cause célèbre among health care workers w...

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The death of George Floyd -- and the frustration that nothing ever changes

Don’t know what it is about warm weather that seems, more so than other seasons, to pull always-present racial tensions to the fore — probably nothing, probably just a perception — but recent high-profile events are conglomerating in such a way as to portend a long, hot summer. “Hot” being a metaphor. And not just in Minneapolis, but across the nation.Start with the death of Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia. Arbery, 25, was jogging in a suburban neighborhood near his home and was shot dead after being pursued, for the purpose of interrogation, by two white men who told police they thought he was a bur...

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As acting intelligence chair, Rubio can be the 'Trump whisperer' on foreign policy

Florida’s senior U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio should make the most of his talents as “Trump whisperer.” He could help elevate the country’s stature in the eyes of a disappointed world.This week, Republican leaders tapped Rubio to be acting chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, one of the most powerful committees in Congress.His predecessor, North Carolina Sen. Richard Burr, is under investigation for recent suspicious stock transactions after being briefed about the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. He has stepped aside.Rubio, the committee’s most influential and knowledgeable member, is th...

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Was fired State Department IG about to blow open the defining scandal of Trump's presidency?

There’s a powerful case to be made that the coronavirus crisis — with its mounting evidence that earlier and more aggressive U.S. intervention in March could have saved thousands of lives — isn’t the first or only time that people have died needlessly because of Donald Trump’s unfitness for the presidency. For more than two years, civilians in Yemen — where a humanitarian crisis caused by a ceaseless Saudi Arabian military campaign has killed tens of thousands and exposed millions to the risk of starvation and disease — have successfully convinced top Americans in both political parties that it...

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Majority of Latinos lack trust in federal response to COVID-19: poll

MIAMI — Latinos say they are skeptical of federal authorities’ response to the coronavirus, but they generally support provisions in the new financial stimulus bill passed by the U.S. House of Representatives, according to a new national poll released by Democratic-leaning organizations Wednesday.The survey, conducted May 10 to May 16 by the research firm Latino Decisions, was commissioned by the nonprofits UnidosUS, SOMOS and the progressive advocacy group MoveOn. Polling in all 50 states — including over-samples in Florida, Arizona, Texas, New York, New Jersey, Colorado, Illinois and Califor...

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No vaccine for baloney: Trump spin runs head-on to pandemic reality

Since January, President Donald Trump has alternately minimized the risks of the coronavirus, oversold his administration’s response and exaggerated possible treatments and vaccines, all while lashing out against experts who dare buck the line of the moment.Friday was par for the course, with a Rose Garden announcement of “Operation Warp Speed” — uniting the Departments of Health and Human Services and Defense to produce a vaccine as early as year’s end. Good luck, good scientists, but beware the hypeman’s promises.This press conference came, surely coincidentally, the day after Dr. Rick Brigh...

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Universal child care was provided during World War II. We need it again during this pandemic — and beyond

Historically, times of crisis have brought out the best in U.S. policymaking. The Great Depression ushered in the New Deal. The Cuyahoga River burning due to industrial pollution in 1969 gave us the Environmental Protection Agency. What might the coronavirus-fueled public health and economic emergencies lead to? If we follow another example from history, the answer just might be universal child care.The crisis facing our nation today shines a spotlight on the shortcomings of our health care delivery system, flaws in our democratic process and racial and environmental injustices. Perhaps more t...

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Jared Kushner opened his mouth and something awful fell out

Senior advisor to the president and guy who looks like he’s wearing a suit his mom bought him, Jared Kushner, opened his mouth earlier this week and something awful fell out. When asked about the administration’s response to the pandemic, the world-renowned failure claimed victory over the virus that has left more than 60,000 Americans dead and counting. Anybody else feel successful?Jared is just about as detached from reality as you would expect someone who was born rich and spent their life failing upwards to be. Jared and his father in law are a lot alike (insert Ivanka joke here). They bot...

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To the 46 percent who approve Trump: What are you thinking?

After President Trump set off a wave of calls to emergency poison lines on Thursday by suggesting that people could protect themselves against Covid-19 by drinking disinfectant, something in me snapped. I have a question for the 46 percent of Americans who approve of his job performance: Do you think maybe your standards are a bit too low? Our president’s ramblings on Thursday were the stuff you hear from a slobbering drunk at the dark end of the bar. It was beyond painful to watch his earth-based health advisors stare at their shoes in horror, as he went on and on, deeper into the abyss.After th...

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Here's how Mitch McConnell could kill off the Republican Party -- for good

It’s been a generation since the right-wing activist Grover Norquist said his movement’s goal wasn’t to eliminate government, but merely to “shrink it down to the size where we can drown it in a bathtub.” Since then, the failure of a downsized and disinterested government to respond to crises like Hurricane Katrina seemed to have proved the empty fallacy of those words. And today, you’d think the federal government’s botched-in-every-way response to the coronavirus would be the exclamation point. Instead, we find Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, his clothes soaking wet, and his thumbpri...

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