Browsed by
Month: July 2019

Evangelical Christians, convinced Trump is God’s man, would rather see America destroyed than see him fall

Evangelical Christians, convinced Trump is God’s man, would rather see America destroyed than see him fall

Peter Wehner writes: The enthusiastic, uncritical embrace of President Trump by white evangelicals is among the most mind-blowing developments of the Trump era. How can a group that for decades—and especially during the Bill Clinton presidency—insisted that character counts and that personal integrity is an essential component of presidential leadership not only turn a blind eye to the ethical and moral transgressions of Donald Trump, but also constantly defend him? Why are those who have been on the vanguard of…

Read More Read More

Justice Dept struggles to contrive new rationale for census citizenship question as Trump may have just undercut their effort

Justice Dept struggles to contrive new rationale for census citizenship question as Trump may have just undercut their effort

The New York Times reports: Justice Department lawyers told a federal judge on Friday that they would press ahead in their efforts to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census, but indicated they did not know yet what kind of rationale they would put forward. The assertion capped a chaotic week in which administration officials first promised to abide by a Supreme Court order that effectively blocked the question from next year’s head count, then reversed themselves after President…

Read More Read More

Where John Roberts is taking the Supreme Court

Where John Roberts is taking the Supreme Court

Garrett Epps writes: Last year’s Supreme Court term ended with a vivid display of willed gullibility by Chief Justice John Roberts. In Hawaii v. Trump, the “travel ban” case, Roberts announced he would pay no attention to that Islamophobia behind the curtain and instead treat the ban as a “facially neutral policy denying certain foreign nationals the privilege of admission.” This year’s term ended with the same man stating in Department of Commerce v. New York, the census case, that…

Read More Read More

Valuing the work of women of color

Valuing the work of women of color

Elizabeth Warren writes: Our society and our economy demand so much of women — but they place a particular burden on Black, Latina, Native American, Asian, and other women of color. More than 70% of Black mothers and more than 40% of Latina mothers are their families’ sole breadwinners — compared to less than a quarter of white mothers. Black women participate in the labor force at higher rates than white women, and Latinas’ share of the labor force has…

Read More Read More

An entrenched and inept elite has led Britain into chaos

An entrenched and inept elite has led Britain into chaos

Gary Younge writes: Last week Boris Johnson delivered a speech to a Royal Horticultural Society audience in Wisley, Surrey, before heading to the affluent village of Oxshott to buy some fennel and tarragon sausages and have a cup of tea in the Munch and Wiggles cafe. In a series of interviews later that day, he was unwilling to reveal the provenance of the staged photograph of him and his partner, Carrie Symonds. He was, however, able to insist that Britain…

Read More Read More

Venezuela forces killed thousands, then covered it up, UN says

Venezuela forces killed thousands, then covered it up, UN says

The New York Times reports: Venezuelan special forces have carried out thousands of extrajudicial killings in the past 18 months and then manipulated crime scenes to make it look as if the victims had been resisting arrest, the United Nations said on Thursday in a report detailing wide-ranging government abuses targeting political opponents. Special Action Forces described by witnesses as “death squads” killed 5,287 people in 2018 and another 1,569 by mid-May of this year, in what are officially termed…

Read More Read More

How our brain sculpts experience in line with our expectations

How our brain sculpts experience in line with our expectations

Daniel Yon writes: The Book of Days (1864) by the Scottish author Robert Chambers reports a curious legal case: in 1457 in the town of Lavegny, a sow and her piglets were charged and tried for the murder of a partially eaten small child. After much deliberation, the court condemned the sow to death for her part in the act, but acquitted the naive piglets who were too young to appreciate the gravity of their crimes. Subjecting a pig to…

Read More Read More

Tree planting ‘has mind-blowing potential’ to tackle climate crisis

Tree planting ‘has mind-blowing potential’ to tackle climate crisis

The Guardian reports: Planting billions of trees across the world is by far the biggest and cheapest way to tackle the climate crisis, according to scientists, who have made the first calculation of how many more trees could be planted without encroaching on crop land or urban areas. As trees grow, they absorb and store the carbon dioxide emissions that are driving global heating. New research estimates that a worldwide planting programme could remove two-thirds of all the emissions that…

Read More Read More

Forget the tanks. Trump’s violation of the Lincoln Memorial is the real offense

Forget the tanks. Trump’s violation of the Lincoln Memorial is the real offense

Philip Kennicott writes: The Mall is a place of public reconciliation. Although originally conceived as a wide avenue in Pierre L’Enfant’s 1791 plan for the city, the Mall and its surrounding parks were configured in the early 20th century as a grand symbol of national reunification, centered on a monument to Abraham Lincoln, the man who led the country through civil war. From the Lincoln Memorial, one looks down the long expanse of the Mall to the Capitol, at the…

Read More Read More

Anchorage has never reached 90 degrees. That could change this week

Anchorage has never reached 90 degrees. That could change this week

The New York Times reports: In more than 100 years of Anchorage history, weather stations have never recorded a single 90-degree reading. If current forecasts hold, it could happen multiple times in the coming days. With the combined forces of climate change that has disrupted temperature trends around the state, a remarkable dearth of ice in the Bering Sea and weather patterns generating a general heat wave, Alaska is facing a Fourth of July unlike any before. Anchorage has canceled…

Read More Read More

Justin Amash: Our politics is in a partisan death spiral. That’s why I’m leaving the GOP

Justin Amash: Our politics is in a partisan death spiral. That’s why I’m leaving the GOP

Rep. Justin Amash writes: When my dad was 16, America welcomed him as a Palestinian refugee. It wasn’t easy moving to a new country, but it was the greatest blessing of his life. Throughout my childhood, my dad would remind my brothers and me of the challenges he faced before coming here and how fortunate we were to be Americans. In this country, he told us, everyone has an opportunity to succeed regardless of background. Growing up, I thought a…

Read More Read More

Trump administration officials shelved proposed census change, then unshelved it, then admitted they had no idea what’s going on

Trump administration officials shelved proposed census change, then unshelved it, then admitted they had no idea what’s going on

Jay Michaelson writes: This is what it’s like working for a madman: Suppose you’re a lawyer at the Department of Justice. You’ve worked there for 16 years, serving Democrats and Republicans alike. And, in a contentious lawsuit about the census, you tell the judge that, following last week’s landmark Supreme Court decision, the government has abandoned its plans to change the census to ask about citizenship and is printing the forms without the question now. Everyone verifies this is true:…

Read More Read More

Americans caught in poverty traps harbor unrealistic expectations

Americans caught in poverty traps harbor unrealistic expectations

The New York Times reports: A widening income gap and sagging social mobility have left dents in the American dream. But the belief that anyone with enough gumption and grit can clamber to the top remains central to the nation’s self-image. And that could complicate Democratic efforts to frame the 2020 presidential election as a referendum on a broken economic system. Americans, who tend to link rewards to individual effort, routinely overestimate the ease of moving up the income ranks,…

Read More Read More

NRA meltdown has Trump campaign sweating

NRA meltdown has Trump campaign sweating

Politico reports: The National Rifle Association aired an avalanche of TV ads and pushed its 5 million-plus members to the polls for Donald Trump in 2016, propelling him in the Rust Belt states that delivered him the presidency. Now, the gun rights group is in total meltdown — and senior Republicans and Trump 2020 officials are alarmed. In recent weeks, the NRA has seen everything from a failed coup attempt to the departure of its longtime political architect to embarrassing…

Read More Read More