Opinion

A Kentucky leader's AI post shows just how deep Republican racism runs

A few days ago, Bobbie Coleman — the chairperson of the Hardin County Republican Party — shared an AI video on the county party’s Facebook page with former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama portrayed as grinning apes.

Coleman took the video down and eventually posted an apology, which began, “Earlier today, I shared a video from social media that was intended to celebrate President Trump’s successful policy achievements by depicting him as a Lion King, triumphing over liberal Democrats.”

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Dems can win this red-state race if they can find the right face

With Brian Kemp leaving the governor’s office after next year’s election, Georgia Democrats have an opportunity to make history.

All they need now is a candidate.

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The trillion-dollar question: When will we have had enough of this guy?

Tesla’s profit fell 37 percent in the third quarter. Yet Elon Musk is demanding a pay package of $1 trillion.

A trillion dollars is hard to envision. It’s a thousand billion. It’s a million million. It’s almost the entire GDP of Indonesia, a country of 284 million people. It’s the annual output of North Dakota, South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, Idaho, Arkansas, Mississippi, and West Virginia put together. It’s close to Tesla’s entire current market value.

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All these corrupt schemes and payments point to something deeply alarming about our future

When corruption becomes endemic, democracy dies from the inside out. The Trump family’s grift is teaching America’s elites that power can be bought, just as it is in Putin’s Russia and Orbán’s Hungary, and it’s already distorting our economy.

When I was working for an international relief agency in the early 1980s, I went to Uganda during the war and famine that began when Tanzanian troops invaded to throw out Idi Amin. To get there, I had to pay a $50 bribe to the Ugandan official at their embassy in Nairobi to get my visa.

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There's one key issue on which Dems can effectively hold GOP feet to the fire — now

On Monday, in one of the single most impressive analytical discussions ever to occur on perhaps the most deeply cerebral and politically aware show in US television — The View — the hosts took turns discussing the clear and present danger that lingers whenever President Donald Trump turns coy and not a little bit smug about his plans for 2028 and a possible third term.

On the heels of yet another failure by Trump to simply say "No" about mounting a diabolical, unconstitutional third run, this one occurring on Air Force One on the way to Asia, each host took a turn making the same simple point: take this seriously, right now.

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Here's why this gutless Republican deserves nothing but crushing defeat

Transgender teenagers ages 13 to 17 comprise a scant 3.1 percent of the youth population in Virginia. But trans issues have loomed unusually large in Virginia’s gubernatorial election this year — and not in a good way.

From 2014 to early 2025 — when state policy changed to prevent transgender athletes from participating in girls’ sports in the public school divisions — just 48 appeals had been filed by transgender athletes to compete in school sports, a Virginia High School League spokesman confirmed to me. That’s a minuscule number of students who participate in sports annually.

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Trump's 'America First' agenda expands to Make Argentina Great Again

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

Seeing the National Guard on our streets is bad — but we must beware Trump's Plan B

I saw some of my former Naval War College colleagues at the recent No Kings rally in Providence. Given that National Guard troops and protestors had clashed in Los Angeles at an earlier June rally protesting ICE raids, we wondered whether we would see National Guard troops as we marched, where they would be from, and their mission? We didn’t. That doesn’t mean, however, that there is no need for concern about the future.

The National Guard is unique to the U.S. military given it is under the authority of both state governors and the federal government and has both a domestic and federal mission. Governors can call up the National Guard when states have a crisis, either a natural disaster or a human-made one. Federal authorities can call on the National Guard for overseas deployment and to enforce federal law.

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These key signs show resistance to Trump is becoming an irresistible uprising

The resistance is becoming an uprising.

Last Saturday, more than 7 million of us poured into the streets to reject Trump’s dictatorship. That’s more than 2 percent of the adult population of the United States.

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One man can tell America what Republicans are trying to hide — and now he wants to do so

The mysterious Jack Smith is emerging from the shadows that keep him.

The one-time special counsel who was tasked at looking into the worst attack on our Capitol since the War of 1812, has lately indicated he has a reputation to protect, even if thanks to the feeble man who appointed him, his protection of the United States of America came far too late.

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No Kings didn't just oppose Trump — it had a clear warning for Dems

Recently, I talked about how the No Kings rally exposed the regime’s weakness. Donald Trump wants the common folk of America to surrender in advance, just like their betters did. But when more than 7 million said hell no, what did he do? Well, let’s just say it was profane.

Today, I want to talk about another kind of weakness that it revealed. Instead of the president and the Republicans, however, the No Kings rally exposed the weakness of certain centrist Democrats.

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What we talk about when we talk about being Antifa

I became a member of “Antifa” at five years old, at my auntie’s house watching The Sound of Music a hundred times over.

I wasn’t exactly sure what fascism meant, but I knew that the guys throwing up their arm in a Sieg Heil salute were terrifying, and that resistance to that salute was dangerous. Very dangerous. Chills ran down my spine each time I watched Captain von Trapp ripping up that Nazi flag, because I understood he was risking his life with that simple act of defiance.

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If it walks like a fascist, talks like a fascist and jokes like a fascist, it's likely a…

For the last few weeks, Republican Party leadership has been carrying out a campaign to, essentially, classify the word “fascist” as hate speech against right-wingers. But while some Republicans shy away from the term, plenty of others, particularly among their base and their influencers, find it edgy and hip. Some have even begun to wear it as a badge of honor.

Most notably, last week, members of the Republican Youth — er, Young Republicans — were caught in a group chat declaring their love of Adolf Hitler and expressing fondness for his policy of mass extermination in gas chambers.

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