Opinion

How the GOP's campaign against Ilhan Omar totally backfired

Last week, when the U.S. House took an important stand against hatred and passed a resolution condemning antisemitism and anti-Muslim bigotry, I was reminded of the days after the horrific synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh last October, when thousands of Jews, Muslims, Christians, and members of countless other faiths and races gathered together across the country to honor the victims. Many Jewish Americans knew then, and continue to recognize now, that we are not safe on our own, that our collective safety rests in solidarity with other communities facing their own challenges and the shared threat of white nationalism.

Last week's vote was only possible because of organizing efforts by dozens of groups representing millions of Americans who successfully pushed for a resolution that recognizes that fundamental importance of unity among our communities. It was a continuation of a movement that began in the early days of the Trump presidency, a nationwide movement of progressive, diverse Americans, all equipped with the understanding that antisemitism, Islamophobia, racism, and xenophobia reinforce each other, and must be addressed together. There are members of my Jewish community who felt that addressing multiple forms of hate at once is problematic, arguing that it is a type of rhetorical dilution of the intent of the resolution. But that’s only true if the intent was to vilify a single person. If Congress wants to denounce antisemitism, then every single member should be able to do so whether or not it’s addressed alongside other oppressions that keep our nation from realizing our true potential.

Keep reading... Show less

Clinton economist: There's only one way to deal with tech giants like Google, Amazon and Facebook

Presidential hopeful Senator Elizabeth Warren announced Friday she wants to bust up giants like Facebook, Google, and Amazon.

Keep reading... Show less

How Michael Cohen's case helps illustrate that 'Trump is symptom of a much larger disease'

Donald Trump's former attorney and personal fixer, Michael Cohen, testified before the House Oversight and Reform Committee. With his seven hours of testimony another chapter has been added to what feels like a badly written movie but is instead all too real. This new chapter in the TrumpWorld melodrama does nothing to alter the overall story.

Keep reading... Show less

Who are the real thugs in America? Right-wing terror and the Trump era

Last month, Christopher Paul Hasson, a lieutenant in the United States Coast Guard, was arraigned in U.S. District Court in Maryland.

Keep reading... Show less

Don't buy Tucker Carlson's excuse: The Fox News host's 'twisted' and 'demented' comments on women reflect his deeply grotesque history of misogyny

Late Sunday, left-leaning watchdog group Media Matters published a lengthy exposé of Tucker Carlson's years of calling into a shock-jock radio show called "Bubba the Love Sponge" and bro-ing down with the hosts by celebrating their shared animosity towards women.

Keep reading... Show less

It is time to end Mitch McConnell's disgusting spectacle in the Senate

Constitutional treasure hunters, stay on your toes these next few days, because they reveal a giant "X marks the spot" on our collective expedition back to that lost democratic paradise: a Congress that represents the will of the people.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump’s use of humiliation could have catastrophic consequences – a psychologist explains why

World War II opened the gates to hell. In 1948, the nations of the world tried to bolt them shut again. They did so with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which recognised the inherent dignity of all people and provided the basis on which international human rights law was built. When this bolt was subsequently loosened in countries such as Cambodia, Rwanda and Bosnia, catastrophe ensued.

Keep reading... Show less

The View’s Abby Huntsman left sputtering after Sunny Hostin takes a wrecking ball to her claims about AOC

The View's Abby Huntsman could do nothing but sputter after co-host Sunny Hostin demolished her claim that Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called the United States "garbage."

Keep reading... Show less

Fox News issues weak condemnation of Jeanine Pirro's shockingly unhinged Muslim-bashing rant

Fox News' "Judge" Jeanine Pirro on Saturday delivered an intensely Islamophobic attack against sitting U.S. Congresswoman Ilhan Omar on her show, "Justice with Judge Jeanine." In her diatribe Pirro suggested that because the freshman lawmaker from Minnesota wears a hijab she somehow is un-American and does not believe in the Constitution.

Keep reading... Show less

Sociologists blow up the myth that uneducated white voters support Trump because of economic anxiety

Despite all of the disproved narratives about the “white working class,” it has been repeatedly and conclusively shown that Donald Trump in fact won the White House because of racism and nativism. But sexism was a key element in Trump’s victory as well. These values, beliefs, and behaviors interact with one another. New research by University of Kansas sociologists David Smith and Eric Hanley demonstrates how a socially combustible mix of racism and sexism, in combination with anger and bullying, put the United States on a path to authoritarianism.

Keep reading... Show less

The 'security' story: Here's how America's cynical right wing uses capitalism to manipulate the working class

Karl Marx was a brilliant analyst of the capitalist system, but his crystal ball got blurry when he tried to see how ordinary people would react to the extreme inequality he predicted. The idea of a capitalist-worker alliance, that began to emerge most recently in the Reagan era and continues to grow in the Age of Trump, drives the neo-Marxist Left crazy, and suggests we need to understand a lot more about how Americans think and feel if we are ever to get to a more socially just society.

Keep reading... Show less

Here are 3 reasons why voters fall for politicians' lies

Politicians use and abuse statistics and fabricate when it suits their purposes. Contemporary examples of either deliberate or inadvertent misuse of data are easy to find on all sides of the political divide, from the Trump administration’s claim that U.S. border officials detained “nearly 4,000 known or suspected terrorists” last year at the Mexican border to U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s December tweet asserting that

Keep reading... Show less