RawStory

Opinion

January 6 was a day of horror in DC — but we must remember where it came from

Five years ago today we were transfixed by the surreal spectacle of the attack on the U.S. Capitol. The violence and horror of that day was made more bearable when the insurrectionists were arrested and the election results they tried to overturn were certified.

But now they’re back, pardoned by President Donald Trump and released from prison and planning to parade triumphantly today through the streets of Washington, D.C.

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This direct line links Jan 6 to Trump's attack on Venezuela

Donald Trump’s domestic and foreign policies — ranging from his attempted coup against the United States five years ago today, to his incursion into Venezuela last weekend, to his current threats against Cuba, Colombia, and Greenland — undermine domestic and international law. But that’s not all.

They threaten what we mean by civilization.

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This brutal doctrine explains what Trump's done to America — and what's coming next

When Donald Trump and the buffoons who surround him invaded Venezuela and captured Nicolás Maduro, they broke with almost a century of American-led respect for the international rule of law and, instead, nakedly embraced the Putin Doctrine.

There was a brief, shining moment when Russia was a democracy. I visited there at the time. Starting with Mikhail Gorbachev and lasting about a decade, Russia embraced the ideals of the European Enlightenment, which itself was inspired by the North American colonists’ contact with Native American tribes who had been practicing democracy for millennia.

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Megalomaniac Trump is out of control as makeover madness hits our most sacred monuments

Renaming the Kennedy Center the Trump-Kennedy Center is just the beginning of renaming buildings and landmarks after one of the greatest presidents in US history. Here are the current plans according to the administration’s new Monumental Renaming Department — plans which, honestly, fell off the back of a truck and landed on Raw Story's doorstep.

  • The White House will be renamed the Trump White House, in honor of Trump turning the 225-year-old presidential mansion into a monarchical palace to rival the Palace of Versailles or the Summer Palace of Peter the Great. With the addition of a 90,000 square-foot ballroom and undoubtedly more magnificent additions the next three years, the White House will be fit for a king, executed by a regal visionary who found the White House far too old and frumpy.
  • The US Capitol will be renamed Trump Capitol, for his being the first president in history to make it truly the Capitol of the people. Trump was the only president ever to provide many thousands of patriotic Americans the simultaneous opportunity to tour the Capitol. Trump planned the tour on Jan. 6, 2021 when the enthusiastic throng could stroll into the Capitol to view the House and the Senate in rare joint session. Not surprisingly, the crowd was so enraptured that they overstayed their allotted time but willingly dispersed upon Trump’s eleventh-hour request.
  • The US Department of the Treasury will be renamed Trump Treasury, as President Trump has amazingly pumped trillions of dollars into the treasury in one year. Trump’s tariffs have provided the financial boon through import taxes, with American businesses and the American people willingly picking up the cost to enrich the government. The ever-generous Trump is even considering giving the American people some of their money back.
  • The Mexico-U.S. border will be renamed Trump Border, as President Trump has done more to keep immigrants out of the country than any president. Just the name Trump Border will throw paralyzing fear into any immigrant looking to escape poverty or extreme violence and aspire to a better life. A great humanitarian, Trump feels the pain of every immigrant, but his message is clear: aspire somewhere else.
  • The Grand Canyon will be renamed Trump Canyon, in answer to an obvious question: Why hasn’t even one natural wonder been named after the great environmentalist? Niagara Falls was a candidate except for the complication of its Canadian side, Mt. Rushmore didn’t qualify as “natural,” and Mt. Everest seemed a bit of a climb. Trump Canyon seemed the perfect fit: immense, old, and empty.
  • The Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia will be renamed the Trump-Putin Strait, symbolizing the great friendship between the American and Russian presidents. In time, the Trump-Putin Tunnel will be built connecting Alaska and Russia, cementing the close ties between America and its new dearest ally. Soon after, a mutual non-aggression agreement will be signed — the Trump-Putin Super Peace Pact -patterned after Neville Chamberlain’s 1938 Munich Agreement.
  • The Vietnam Memorial will be renamed the Vietnam-Trump Memorial, in honor of both America’s fallen soldiers and the most militarily supportive president in American history among non-servers. A life-sized statue of President Trump is being contemplated to sit beside the Memorial, soaking his bone spurs in a bucket of water. A look of deep chagrin will cover Trump’s face, forever disconsolate over being medically ineligible to serve his country.

Most recently, Department members are considering renaming Caracas, Venezuela “Trump City,” honoring the US military’s assault on the capital resulting in needed regime change, killing no Americans and a mere 40 to 80 Venezuelans, including civilians. It was the swiftest, most successful attack on a militarily inferior sovereign country posing no threat to the US in violation of international law since the US military under President Reagan subdued the tiny island of Grenada in seven minutes.

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Odd duck DeSantis heads to charm school and other New Year’s 'resolutions' for the GOP

It’s a new year here in the Free State of Florida and you’re freer than ever!

Free to tote guns; free to kill bears; free to drain and pave; free to call ICE if you spy some brown-complected fellows in the Home Depot parking lot.

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Trump created an earthquake with just 6 words

I listened to Donald Trump's Jan. 3 press conference with a knot in my stomach. As a Venezuelan American with family, memories, and a living connection to the country being spoken about as if it were a possession, what I heard was very clear. And that clarity was chilling.

The president said, plainly, that the United States would “run the country” until a transition it deems “safe” and “judicious.” He spoke about capturing Venezuela’s head of state, about transporting him on a US military vessel, about administering Venezuela temporarily, and about bringing in US oil companies to rebuild the industry. He dismissed concerns about international reaction with a phrase that should alarm everyone: “They understand this is our hemisphere.”

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This brutal and incoherent Trump action bodes ill for the whole world

The story of what’s happening in Venezuela is unfolding quickly and big questions are mounting. The immediate danger in Venezuela (and potentially in Colombia and Cuba) is chaos.

Asked who’s in charge of Venezuela, Trump answered: “We’re in charge.”

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The Trump dumpster fire vows to put out latest blaze

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

America's most dangerous enemy sits at its very heart

The only United States President in history to violently attack his own country, and attempt a coup to stay in power was always going to be a threat to illegally attack other countries like Venezuela, and destabilize the entire world.

This was the greatest fear when Donald J. Trump was recklessly reelected in 2024 by a slim majority of voters in a battered country that is split apart at the seams, and gasping for air.

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The most shameful day in American history

Five years ago tomorrow was the most shameful day in American history.

We must not allow Trump to persuade America that it did not happen or that he was innocent, or let him deflect the nation’s attention from the fifth anniversary of what occurred that day.

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This super-sized problem threatens Trump's survival — and he's making it worse

If you were hung over on New Year’s Day, and decided to take it easy by reading the Wall Street Journal’s deep dive into Donald Trump’s aging and health, one item no doubt stood out, because it was so viscerally grotesque.

The Journal resurfaced an account of a McDonald’s meal Trump consumed on the 2024 campaign trail that would make anyone suffering from a New Year’s Eve booze-binge gag at the thought.

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The right can howl all it wants — Muslims have always been part of the American story

“If there is no struggle, there is no progress.” — Frederick Douglass

America’s story has always been a story of struggle — for liberty, for justice, for recognition. On a cold January afternoon outside City Hall, Zohran Mamdani stepped into that struggle. Raising his right hand, he took the oath of office as mayor of New York City — the first Muslim ever to hold the city’s highest office — embodying Douglass’ truth: Progress demands courage, perseverance, and the relentless pursuit of inclusion.

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What next at the Fed? Will the AI bubble burst? For Trump, economic questions mount

The U.S. economy heads into 2026 in an unusual place: Inflation is down from its peak in mid-2022, growth has held up better than many expected, and yet American households say that things still feel shaky. Uncertainty is the watchword, especially with a major Supreme Court ruling on tariffs on the horizon.

To find out what’s coming next, The Conversation checked in with finance professors Brian Blank (Mississippi State) and Brandy Hadley (Appalachian State), who study how businesses make decisions amid uncertainty. Their forecasts for 2025 and 2024 held up notably well. Here’s what they’re expecting from 2026 — and what that could mean for households, workers, investors and the Federal Reserve:

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