History, Karl Marx observed, repeats itself — first as tragedy, then as farce. So it was fitting that on the 48th anniversary of President Richard M. Nixon’s Watergate-spurred resignation, Aug. 8, the Department of Justice should search former President Donald J. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home in Palm Beach, Florida, for his alleged failure to return documents belonging to the National Archives.
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America's monkey(pox) business
I became a cultural writer in the age of AIDS,. And because my beat, the arts, intersected with the gay community, which was disproportionately affected by the disease in the United States, I was assigned by the newspaper I worked for then to help cover a subject few would touch with a 10-foot pole.
It’s hard to remember now more than 40 years ago as well as to overestimate the feeling of dread AIDS engendered. A wave of it came flooding back with Covid. And another wave of a different variety has come flooding back with monkeypox, wihich the World Health Organization (WHO) has declared a global health emergency even as the Biden Administration weighs appointing a monkeypox coordinator.
Read MoreWhat are our pronouns? Try me, myself and I
You know how people ask what your pronouns are nowadays, or include them in email signatures, as a result of nonbinary and trans people who identify as “they” even though it’s a plural? Well, we don’t have to ask many people in the news what they’re pronouns are. Let’s just assume they’re the unholy trinity of me, myself and I.
Read MoreThe case for Novak Djokovic
I knew Novak Djokovic would win his seventh Wimbledon title. As a Djokovic fan, this one is all the sweeter given the strange, Nole year he’s having.
Read MoreCassidy Hutchinson -- Ms. America
I always knew former President Donald J. Trump would be done in by a woman, but I never imagined it would be this woman and in this way.
I always thought the Trumpian comeuppance would come at the skillful hands of the estimable Stormy Daniels or the equally estimable House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, skilled in a different way but with the same results.
But there she is. No, not Miss America but Ms. America, Cassidy Hutchinson — earnest, principled, detail-minded, determined and crisply attired in summer-ready black and white, looking for all the world like something out of a John Grisham movie. (Back in the day, she would’ve been played by Julia Roberts. Today, she’d probably be played by Dakota Johnson.)
Read MoreThe end of Roe and of an era
It’s hard to know where to begin with the Supreme Court’s overturn of Roe v. Wade. The repercussions are that great.
For women who seek abortions, the 6-3 decision marks an eventual return to coat-hanger, knitting-needle days. If the pro-life crowd — which is generally pro-guns and pro-death penalty — thinks it has seen death, it’s hasn’t seen anything yet. Women have always sought abortions and will continue to do so, now less safely. But now death will come in other ways, too.
Read MoreThe Jan. 6 hearings and our cult of narcissism
If you’re a reader of this blog, then you know that I have often said that two things will destroy our world — the failure of Alexandrian leadership (leadership from the front) and the lack of education, with the second creating the first.
We are living in a time when education has failed badly, when students and teachers have been straitjacketed by the far right and the far left so that many lack any real knowledge and concomitant respect for language, history and science. As a result, the public, or at least the minority that controls many elections in this country, has given power to those who do not best serve the people but those who best serve their baser instincts, who reflect their own narcissism.
This chicken has come home to roost once again in the Jan. 6 hearings into the insurrection at The Capitol that are now being televised, with coverage resuming 10 a.m. EDT Wednesday, June 15.
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