RawStory

Opinion

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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Once you see what is driving Trump into darkness, it can't ever be unseen

In the Donald Trump era — praise be! — so much is possible that previously no one had ever even imagined. For instance, not only has “the late, great Hannibal Lecter” come back to life, he might even join Trump’s cabinet.

Well, that’s just a guess, but why not? I think he’d fit right in. All of which is to say: “There’s something happening here. What it is ain’t exactly clear...”

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This thug has dragged us back to the imperial age — what comes next should terrify us all

In the first year of Donald Trump’s second term, he imposed his thuggery on the United States. In the second year, apparently he will impose it on the hemisphere.

America’s takeover of Venezuela — because it’s in our “backyard” and we didn’t like its leader — strengthens Vladimir Putin’s claim over Ukraine, Xi Jinping’s over Taiwan, and Benjamin Netanyahu’s over the West Bank and Gaza.

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Is this key service about to save Trump from a midterms mauling?

It’s not just a brand new year; it’s a midterm election year. And the stakes this coming November are mind-boggling, so, of course, Republicans are starting to do everything they can to rig the election.

Just a week ago, for example, Trump’s Postal Service changed the rules about getting your mail-in ballot postmarked so it’ll be counted. Instead of postmarking letters when they’re received, Post Offices will now postmark them when they get “processed,” which may happen days later.

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I'm trying to work out how ordinary people can support the worst American ever

We who follow this website spent the whole of 2025 wondering how it’s possible for anyone – much less seemingly a full third of the American populace – to support a literal monster named Donald Trump.

It appears to have little to do with his policy or ideology, both of which are nonexistent. No, this is about the man, a person who utterly lacks sensitivity, compassion, empathy, ethics, integrity, decency, and depth.

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Trump has given these Americans billions of reasons to be happy

The first year of the second Trump administration was a very happy new year for the US billionaire class. The richest 15 billionaires, all with assets more than $100 billion, saw their combined wealth surge 33 percent, from $2.4 trillion to $3.2 trillion. This is double the growth of the S&P 500 over 2025, which was 16.4 percent.

Over 2025, the combined wealth of all US billionaires climbed to $8.1 trillion, a 21 percent increase over 2025, up from $6.7 trillion exactly a year ago.

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Trump ignored this clear warning about reckless strikes and the disasters that follow

There is an old warning in foreign policy about the arrogance of power, “If you break it, you own it.”

That principle, popularly known as the Pottery Barn rule, was articulated by Colin Powell in private conversations with President George W. Bush ahead of the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Powell, an experienced general turned Secretary of State, was blunt and prophetic. Forcibly removing a government means inheriting responsibility for everything that follows: security, governance, infrastructure, and human suffering.

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Republicans started this key battle in the states but they should beware the backlash

When the Indiana state Senate recently rejected a mid-cycle partisan redistricting of its congressional delegation, it was not only a rebuke to President Donald J. Trump. It also upheld a norm that has guided American democracy for more than a century.

Since the early 1900s, states have almost never redrawn congressional maps outside the decennial census, except to comply with court orders or to make minor technical corrections. That restraint has served an important stabilizing function.

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This Trump toady is out to smash a US government jewel — and hurt every ordinary American

The walls of the Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Building, which lies blocks from the US Capitol, are decorated with stunning New Deal-era murals. The most famous, “The Meaning of Social Security,” depicts life before and after Social Security. The mural shows the best of America, what we can do when we all come together. Thanks to Donald Trump, “The Meaning of Social Security” — along with everything it represents — is now in grave danger.

The Trump administration is making moves to demolish the Wilbur J. Cohen Building, inevitably destroying “The Meaning of Social Security” in the process. Trump plans to take a wrecking ball to this key piece of Social Security’s history, just as he did to the east wing of the White House. But this is about more than just a mural. Trump spent 2025 doing everything in his power to demolish our invaluable Social Security system itself.

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This mega MAGA mover saw it was all a fraud — soon voters will do too

Marjorie Taylor Greene has been blessed with a profile in the New York Times magazine. The headline — “‘I Was Just So Naïve’: Inside Marjorie Taylor Greene’s Break With Trump” — gives the impression that the Georgia congresswoman and MAGA zealot has seen the error of her ways.

Details from the interview appear to deepen that perception. When Greene threatened to go public with the names of men implicated in “the Epstein files,” the president reportedly told her on speaker phone that she can’t, because, according to Greene, “my friends will get hurt.”

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