Politics
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Editorial: A safer 'net for kids: The Kids Online Safety Act is worth passing
Whether it’s TikTok or Instagram or Snapchat or some yet-to-be-released app sure to enrapture its users, it’s pretty clear — to us, at least — that too many young people are now spending too much of their time falling all the way down shallow-yet-deep online rabbit holes designed by profit-hungry companies to draw them in.
You don’t ...Read more
Francis Wilkinson: Springfield shouldn't be a maga war zone
“We cannot let the bad guys win,” Ohio Governor Mike DeWine said Monday. DeWine announced that he was sending 36 state police officers to patrol schools in Springfield, Ohio, and protect, at long last, the town’s besieged residents.
Bad guys have been terrorizing Springfield. Dozens of bomb threats have been made against local schools and...Read more
Commentary: California's AI safety bill is under fire. Making it law is the best way to improve it
On Aug. 29, the California Legislature passed Senate Bill 1047— the Safe and Secure Innovation for Frontier Artificial Intelligence Models Act — and sent it to Gov. Gavin Newsom for signature. Newsom’s choice, due by Sept. 30, is binary: Kill it or make it law.
Acknowledging the possible harm that could come from advanced AI, SB 1047 ...Read more
Editorial: Restraint, respect needed from those who aspire to lead
Politics can be a rough-and-tumble enterprise, a dominion where those with thick skin, steel jaws and bare knuckles thrive. Nobody expects the candidates competing in hotly contested races to resolve their differences with pillow fights.
But in a country where mental health services are sparse for those who need them and nearly everyone has ...Read more
Jackie Calmes: JD Vance to Springfield, Ohio: 'You're expendable'
As a vice presidential pick, JD Vance has been a big mistake, as even some of Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago mafia and media friends concede.
A younger version of Trump, Vance brings no new voters to the Republicans' side; their ticket is MAGA squared. He's likely lost more than a few votes, by maligning millions of "childless cat ladies" — not ...Read more
Commentary: How to save a democracy
The presidential debate has come and gone. The sitting American president is rattling the saber of long-range weapons for Ukraine. The sitting Russian dictator is expelling the West’s diplomatic staff. The outgoing president of Mexico has pulled off the largest-ever change of a judicial system in a substantial democracy. The prime minister of ...Read more
Commentary: Harris and Walz: Gunning for the Second Amendment
Vice President Kamala Harris is a gun owner. Apparently that fact is supposed to make other gun owners less leery of her stance on Second Amendment issues.
There’s just one problem. Harris is a gun owner who’s also currently an integral part of the most anti-gun administration in American history.
As President Joe Biden’s right-hand ...Read more
George Skelton: California voters are fed up with crime and, apparently, the response by Democrats
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democratic legislative leaders vehemently oppose an anti-retail theft measure on the November ballot. But they're being ignored by California voters who support the proposal overwhelmingly.
Maybe voters don't know about the governor's and lawmakers' strong opposition. Or maybe they do and don't care....Read more
Mark Z. Barabak: This bellwether county picked 11 straight presidential winners. Here's how it views Trump vs. Harris
PORT ANGELES, Wash. — In a far corner of the continental U.S., amid the salty air and green-carpeted mountains of the Pacific Northwest, lies a unique place with an unparalleled record of political precision.
Clallam County, Washington, which takes its name from its Indigenous peoples, has voted for the winner in every presidential election ...Read more
Robin Abcarian: Trump's politics of hate have come for Taylor Swift
Last month on Truth Social, former President Donald Trump reposted a collage of young women wearing "Swifties for Trump" T-shirts. Most of the images clearly looked as if they'd been generated by AI.
"I accept!" Trump told his 7.1 million followers, prompting the world's most famous childless cat lady to come at him with her claws out.
"...Read more
Danny Westneat: It's surreal when the lie machine comes for your hometown
I try to stay optimistic that our institutions, our democracy and our American mixing-bowl experiment are all going to survive the current stress test they're undergoing.
But lately I've been having serious doubts. The reason is because I am originally from Springfield, Ohio.
Yes, that Springfield — the one that's suddenly been slandered as ...Read more
COUNTERPOINT: Neither glee nor gloom in ending the Education Department
The presidential election has brought back a topic that always seems to need more momentum to succeed, but always has enough support to stick around: ending the Department of Education. Why has it stayed in political purgatory? While there are good reasons to end the department, there is no huge benefit if the programs it administers remain.
...Read more
Commentary: Denying migrants housing only makes them more vulnerable
Marie-Louise stood in Boston’s Logan Airport, clutching her two young children. Behind them was a life shattered by violence in Haiti, forcing them to flee for safety. Now, they face an uncertain future with no place to go. Access to housing will determine their fate.
Policy decisions, such as determining who gets access to emergency shelters...Read more
Commentary: The US and China are talking again. But will it lead anywhere?
Whenever the topic of China comes up for discussion, President Joe Biden’s administration has a talking point waiting in its back pocket: While the U.S. and China are global competitors, Washington seeks to ensure that relations are managed responsibly so “competition doesn’t veer into conflict.”
U.S. officials, from Secretary of State...Read more
Robin Epley: Trump hates California so much, he threatened to stop federal aid to wildfire victims
During a press conference at his golf resort in Rancho Palos Verdes last week, former President Donald Trump threatened to withhold federal funding from the state if Gov. Gavin Newsom doesn’t divert more water to farmers in Southern California.
It was the former president’s latest swipe at Newsom, an attempt at punishment delivered via a ...Read more
Commentary: Community schools do more for students than 'parents' rights'
If right-wing lawmakers really cared about what they call “parents’ rights,” they would not be spreading misinformation to pit parents against teachers. They would be listening to what parents really want instead of stoking racial and social divisions to drain resources from public schools.
In contrast, President Joe Biden has made ...Read more
Editorial: Up the game in protecting presidential contenders
It shouldn’t take another attempt on Donald Trump’s life to convince the Secret Service its strategy for protecting the former president is inadequate.
A second apparent try at assassinating the former president came Sunday, when a man with a high-powered rifle and scope set up on the perimeter of the Florida course where Trump was playing ...Read more
Catherine Thorbecke: Social media age limits are too little too late
Australia’s government wants to ban children up to age 16 from social media, and is spending millions of dollars to figure out how. I’m willing to wager it won’t take long for tech-savvy teens who grew up on Instagram, TikTok and YouTube to figure out how to log back on.
The promised regulation, currently sparse on details, comes at a ...Read more
Francis Wilkinson: Trump has paved the way for future demagogues
A large national survey released last week by PRRI, a nonpartisan, nonprofit polling organization, applied some sharp detail to the rise of authoritarianism in the U.S. The overall trend, of course, is unmistakable. Donald Trump lavishes praise on international thugs and promises to unleash vengeance on any American who excites his insecurities ...Read more
Commentary: Will we let mpox spread, repeating devastating public health failures?
Mpox (formerly known as monkeypox) is back in the news. As of early September, the World Health Organization has reported more than 5,000 laboratory-confirmed cases this year. Given the well-documented shortcomings of mpox surveillance, these numbers underestimate the true magnitude of the disease burden.
The highest number of cases are in the ...Read more