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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Commentary: The issue of human rights is on life support. Here’s how to save it

I once heard Jimmy Carter say that in a war there are no human rights. With the fighting in Ukraine and in Gaza front and center, that observation seems more profound than ever. Human rights as an issue may be on life support. There are so few great examples of progress to look to. Maybe just one — Northern Ireland, finally. In addition to major war zones, human rights are being trampled in so ...

Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Robin Givhan: Bless the Trump jury, not for the verdict but for their service

At a time when Americans can barely agree on whether the sky is blue or the grass is green, five women and seven men, all strangers until two months ago, agreed that former president Donald Trump was guilty on 34 counts of falsifying business records in the first degree – a felony. They rendered their verdict Thursday evening with solemnity and care after deliberating over the course of two days.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Robin Abcarian: Samuel Alito’s ethical lapse isn’t the Supreme Court’s first. This is why it’s different

Another day, another ethics crisis at the Supreme Court. When I first read about the upside-down American flag that flew at the Virginia home of Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. in early 2021, I thought, "Boy, that's dumb." When I later read about the "Appeal to Heaven" pine tree flag that flew at Alito's beach home in New Jersey, I thought, "Wow, how many election denier flags is too ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Noah Feldman: The Supreme Court doesn’t agree on what racism is

According to the Supreme Court, it’s perfectly fine for state legislatures to draw congressional districts according to political party — they just can’t gerrymander by race. This simple-sounding rule poses a serious practical problem, however, in places where there is a high correlation between being Black and voting Democratic. The conservative majority of the court, in a 6-3 decision issued ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Paul Krugman: America is still having a ‘vibecession’

If Donald Trump wins the election, the main reason will surely be that a majority of voters believe that America’s economy is in bad shape. And no matter how much you may dread a second Trump administration, electoral defeat for an incumbent who is seen as presiding over a bad economy is, at least in one sense, politics as usual.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Peter Jensen: Why the Justice Alito flag flap matters — even if he blames his wife

When I entered the world of professional journalism more than four decades ago, I quickly discovered that certain colleagues felt so strongly about the mere appearance of political bias that they abstained from voting. This is not true of most reporters, but you can still find some who choose not to affiliate with a political party nor even to cast a ballot. They liken it to umpires calling ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Michelle Goldberg: Trump could soon be a felon. Does it matter?

If I’d pictured Donald Trump’s first criminal trial a few years ago, I’d have imagined the biggest, splashiest story in the world. Instead, as we lurch toward a verdict that could brand the presumptive Republican nominee a felon and possibly even send him to prison, a strange sense of anticlimax hangs over the whole affair.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

F.D. Flam: It’s officially hotter than anytime since the birth of Jesus

It’s one thing to say the Northern Hemisphere summer of 2023 was the hottest of the 150 years people have been making measurements. This well-documented claim is often dismissed by skeptics of global warming who point out that the Earth has a long history of temperature fluctuations. That’s why it’s important that a new paper shows last summer was actually the hottest in the last 2,000 years — ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Geoff Duncan: Why I’m voting for Biden and other Republicans should, too

It’s disappointing to watch an increasing number of Republicans fall in line behind former president Donald Trump. This includes some of his fiercest detractors, such as U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu and former U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr, who raised eyebrows during a recent interview by vowing to support the “Republican ticket.”
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Wokeness is dying. We might miss it.

In her new book “Morning After the Revolution: Dispatches From the Wrong Side of History,” Nellie Bowles, a former New York Times journalist grown disillusioned with both the mainstream media and the left, writes about the year 2020, when the combustible confluence of the pandemic, the murder of George Floyd and the prospect of Donald Trump’s reelection made politics and culture go “berserk.” She describes a liberal intelligentsia “wild with rage and optimism,” brimming with “fresh ideas from academia that began to reshape every part of society.” Her name for this phenomenon, often derided as “wokeness,” is the “New Progressivism,” and her book attempts, with varying degrees of success, to skewer it.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Commentary: New data shows charter schools increase segregation

As we approach the 70th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, a crucial question arises: Why are our nation’s schools experiencing increased segregation despite progress in neighborhood integration? A new study by Sean Reardon of Stanford University and Ann Owens of the University of Southern California provides a startling answer — more than half of the blame is due to the expansion of ...