Author: nick

Senate Republicans who fear their three-seat majority could be in danger in this year’s midterm election would welcome the retirement of conservative Justice Samuel Alito as an “October surprise” that could change their political fortunes by rallying GOP-leaning voters to the polls. Read Full Article ⟶ Source link

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In one of the scariest moments in modern history, we’re doing our best at ScheerPost to pierce the fog of lies that conceal it but we need some help to pay our writers and staff. Please consider a tax-deductible donation. By Sol Elias, Black Agenda Report. Misogynoir, a term meant to name the specific violence against poor and working-class Black women is now being used as a shield for political elites. Identity reductionism—often misidentified as and used interchangeably with identity politics, coined by the Combahee River Collective—has become one of the definitive political reflexes of our time: an automated response that…

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 Download Audio. Scott interviews author and journalist Michele McPhee about the extensive research she’s done on the Boston Marathon Bombing that happened exactly thirteen years ago this week. Scott and McPhee dig into the background of the Tsarnaev brothers, the holes in the story that they carried out the bombing entirely on their own, how the Russians warned the FBI about the brothers before the attack, the broader political and geopolitical context that the Tsarnaevs and the US and Russian governments were navigating at the time and much more. Discussed on the show: Michele R. McPhee is a screenwriter…

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Photograph Source: G. Edward Johnson – CC BY 4.0 The most restrictive voting bill ever passed by Congress” is how Michael Waldman, CEO of the Brennan Center for Justice, describes the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act. The former counsel to Sen. Mitch McConnell wrote in the conservative National Review that “It federalizes elections in a way that Republicans have long opposed.” Since mid-March, the Senate has been debating the SAVE Act, with President Trump insisting that the Republican majority must end the filibuster to pass it and help Republicans win the 2026 midterm elections. The SAVE Act Demands Documentary Proof of Citizenship The Campaign Legal Center…

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Britain has an alarming casualty rate as far as prime ministers are concerned. It has lost five in the last decade. It could be about to lose a sixth. The Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer entered Number 10 after a landslide general election victory only a year and a half ago, yet he has been mired in almost continual scandals, U-turns, and mishaps since the day it emerged in the summer of 2024 that he had failed to declare gifts, including designer clothes, glasses, and accommodation from the Labour donor Lord Waheed Alli, who received a Downing Street security pass.…

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Hello, I hope your week is going well. I wanted to tell you about something our newsroom did recently that I’m incredibly proud of. I think shows exactly why your support of RealClear matters. In February, RealClearInvestigations published an in-depth investigation by Mark Hemingway into what’s been happening in Portland, Oregon. You may have heard the political back-and-forth about Portland — is it in decline, and, if so, how bad is it? Mark dug in and found the truth, which is worse than most people realize. Portland now has the second-highest crime rate of any major American city. Forty percent…

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An unusually public row between hardliners and more moderate Iranian leaders has erupted as negotiations with the U.S. are supposed to resume in Islamabad this week, writes Joe Lauria. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf in Iran’s Majlis, or parliament, 2023. (Hamed Malekpour/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 4.0) Tuesday, April 21 By Joe LauriaSpecial to Consortium News All governments have internal divisions, sometimes severe. But all governments do what they can to hide it from their own people and especially from their enemies. That rule of thumb of governing is perplexingly being ignored by the leadership in Iran. In the midst of a tense ceasefire…

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Is personal freedom a reality or a myth? Does the government execute the will of the governed or the will of those who finance its officials? Does the Bill of Rights restrain the government? Are the levers of government power pulled by those the governed have elected or those we don’t see? Do elections change anything? Can the president kill people whom he suspects might commit a crime? Aren’t even those who would cause great harm entitled to due process? Isn’t everyone entitled to a fair trial in front of a neutral judge and jury before any punishment can be…

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