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Month: May 2019

How the courts should handle Trump’s oversight defiance

How the courts should handle Trump’s oversight defiance

Neil Eggleston and Joshua A. Geltzer write: The Treasury Department, with its Monday announcement that it would not comply with a demand from House Democrats to release President Trump’s tax returns to Congress, has set up a battle that will now go to the courts to be settled. President Trump has already filed a novel lawsuit to block his own accounting firm from complying with a congressional subpoena for financial records. Whatever the case or lack thereof to Mr. Trump’s…

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Are we watching John Bolton’s last stand?

Are we watching John Bolton’s last stand?

Jason Rezaian writes: Is John Bolton about to get the Iran war he’s always wanted, or is he on the verge of losing his job? Over the past several days, President Trump’s national security adviser has made comments and issued statements about Iran and Venezuela that are usually reserved for the run-up to military campaigns. Yet Bolton’s boss doesn’t seem to be playing along. [Continue reading…]

Facebook gives social scientists unprecedented access to its user data

Facebook gives social scientists unprecedented access to its user data

Nature reports: Facebook is giving social scientists unprecedented access to its data so that they can investigate how social-media platforms can influence elections and alter democracies. The first group of projects selected for funding involves more than 60 researchers split into 12 teams. They will tackle questions such as how fake news spreads, who distributes it and how to identify it. Their projects, announced on 28 April, will focus on countries including Germany, Chile, Italy and the United States. The…

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Humans are wiping out life on Earth

Humans are wiping out life on Earth

The New York Times reports: Humans are transforming Earth’s natural landscapes so dramatically that as many as one million plant and animal species are now at risk of extinction, posing a dire threat to ecosystems that people all over the world depend on for their survival, a sweeping new United Nations assessment has concluded. The 1,500-page report, compiled by hundreds of international experts and based on thousands of scientific studies, is the most exhaustive look yet at the decline in…

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Loss of biodiversity is just as catastrophic as climate change

Loss of biodiversity is just as catastrophic as climate change

Robert Watson writes: A colleague recently described how fish would swim into her clothing when she was a child bathing in the ocean off the coast of Vietnam, but today the fish are gone and her children find the story far-fetched. Another recalled his experiences just last year in Cape Town – one of the world’s most attractive tourism and leisure destinations – when more than 2 million people faced the nightmare prospect of all taps, in every home and…

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Trump would have faced ‘multiple felony charges’ were he not president, hundreds of former federal prosecutors assert

Trump would have faced ‘multiple felony charges’ were he not president, hundreds of former federal prosecutors assert

The Washington Post reports: More than 370 former federal prosecutors who worked in Republican and Democratic administrations have signed on to a statement asserting special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s findings would have produced obstruction charges against President Trump — if not for the office he held. The statement — signed by myriad former career government employees as well as high-profile political appointees — offers a rebuttal to Attorney General William P. Barr’s determination that the evidence Mueller uncovered was…

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What didn’t work for Nixon, shouldn’t work for Trump

What didn’t work for Nixon, shouldn’t work for Trump

James Reston Jr. writes: On July 30, 1974, nine days before President Richard Nixon resigned, the House Judiciary Committee added a third article to its impeachment charges against the president. The first two had dealt with obstruction of justice and abuse of power; Article III charged that Nixon had failed to comply with eight congressional subpoenas related to the Watergate investigation. Now, with President Trump and William Barr, his attorney general, refusing to cooperate with congressional investigations, the Democrats in…

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The coming generation war

The coming generation war

Eyck Freymann and Niall Ferguson write: As a liberal graduate student and a conservative professor, we rarely see eye to eye on politics. Yet we agree that the generation war is the best frame for understanding the ways that the Democratic and Republican parties are diverging. The Democrats are rapidly becoming the party of the young, specifically the Millennials (born between 1981 and 1996) and Gen Z (born after 1996). The Republicans are leaning ever more heavily on retirees, particularly…

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The forgotten history of how Abraham Lincoln helped rig the Senate for Republicans

The forgotten history of how Abraham Lincoln helped rig the Senate for Republicans

Ian Millhiser writes: Once upon a time, nobody lived in Nevada. In 1860, the year Abraham Lincoln was elected president, Nevada was a desert wasteland with fewer than 7,000 residents. Indeed, the Silver State didn’t even exist on the day of Lincoln’s election. Two days before the lame-duck President James Buchanan left office, he signed legislation carving off part of Utah Territory, which stretched across most of modern-day Nevada, about a third of Colorado and some of Wyoming, to form…

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Can Kamala Harris beat Trump?

Can Kamala Harris beat Trump?

Elizabeth Weil writes: Kamala Harris—the Democratic presidential hopeful and 54-year-old junior senator from California—is a prosecutor by training. She knows well that any misstep, anything you say or do, can and will be held against you. Her fundamental, almost constitutional, understanding of this has made her cautious, at times enragingly so. Harris’s demographic identity has always been radical. She was San Francisco’s first female district attorney, first black district attorney, first Asian American district attorney. She was then California’s first…

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A new brain study shows a better way to engage voters on the climate crisis

A new brain study shows a better way to engage voters on the climate crisis

Joe Romm writes: The phrase “climate crisis” engages voters emotionally better than either “climate change” or “global warming.” That’s the new finding from the brain science startup SPARK Neuro, which used an electroencephalogram (EEG) and other bio-measurements to examine how 120 Democrats, Republicans, and independents responded to different terms for the growing threat we face from rising levels of carbon pollution. According to the study, “climate crisis” got a 60% higher emotional response from Democrats than “climate change.” It triggered…

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A U.S. occupation — led by Code Pink

A U.S. occupation — led by Code Pink

Vox‘s Alex Ward reports: On Monday, I spoke to activists inside the [Venezuelan] embassy [in Washington D.C.] from Code Pink, an antiwar group, about why they were occupying the space. [Ariel] Gold [a Code Pink national co-director] told me her team was living and working inside the mission [since April 10] because they oppose US-led conflict and intervention. “We are willing to put our bodies on the line” to stop President Donald Trump’s support of [Juan] Guaidó [head of Venezuela’s…

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The Gaza ghetto uprising

The Gaza ghetto uprising

Gideon Levy writes: The cruelty and temerity of the people in Gaza once more reached new heights Saturday: dozens of rockets on Israel before the week of its Independence Day, just after its Holocaust Remembrance Day, and worst of all, two weeks before its Eurovision. How dare you Gaza, how dare you. Israel still hasn’t recovered from the Holocaust, is preening itself for its Independence Day, the musicians are starting to arrive at Ben-Gurion Airport, and you’re firing Qassam rockets….

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Trump administration remains focused on China’s ‘trade abuses’ rather than its human rights abuses

Trump administration remains focused on China’s ‘trade abuses’ rather than its human rights abuses

The New York Times reports: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo avoided saying on Sunday whether the Trump administration would impose targeted sanctions on China over mass detentions of Muslims, in another sign of the administration’s paralysis on the issue. Mr. Pompeo was asked on CBS News’s “Face the Nation” about whether the administration might punish Chinese officials for the detention of hundreds of thousands to millions of ethnic minority Muslims in camps in Xinjiang, a vast region in northwest China….

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