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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Leana S. Wen: The CDC is in chaos. But here’s where it’s devastating.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been without a permanent director since the removal of Susan Monarez in August. Its recently installed acting director, Jay Bhattacharya, is also running the National Institutes of Health, located hundreds of miles from the CDC’s headquarters in Atlanta. The CDC has also lost scores of senior staff and shuttered key programs, including those focusing on tobacco control and injury prevention.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Michelle Goldberg: The idea that Trump was anti-war was always delusional

In 2023, JD Vance, then a freshman senator from Ohio, endorsed Donald Trump for president in a Wall Street Journal column headlined “Trump’s Best Foreign Policy? Not Starting Any Wars.” It suggested that despite his impolitic rhetoric, Trump was a statesman who understood that “the U.S. national interest must be pursued ruthlessly but also carefully, with strong words but great restraint.”
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Commentary: Corporate America’s new slogan: Make more, pay less

America is now living in what might be called the Age of the Corporation. Corporate profits, after having reached 8% of GDP only once in the previous 94 years, have averaged 9% since 2021. The statutory corporate income tax rate, meanwhile, is now just 21% — down from 52% in 1960 — as federal tax revenue from corporations has fallen from 4% of GDP to just 1.8% in that same period. That’s how ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Paula J. Dobriansky and Paul J. Saunders: How to make NATO great again

At January’s World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney announced the collapse of the rules-based order. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz likewise declared at February’s Munich Security Conference that the rules-based “order, imperfect as it was even at the best of times, no longer exists.” Meanwhile, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who led the American delegation in Munich, was more forward-looking, announcing a “new era in geopolitics” ahead of the trip and outlining a vision for a NATO that retains what works while adapting to new realities.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Heidi Stevens: Dissenting Americans keep making lemonade out of Trump’s lemons — including his hockey call

For the first time in history, the USA women’s hockey team and the USA men’s hockey team both won gold at the same Olympic Winter Games. The men’s team last won gold in 1980, against Finland, shortly after defeating the heavily favored Soviet Union in a match that stunned and sustained a weary nation. The game against the Soviets, which inspired the fantastic movie “Miracle,” happened exactly ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

George F. Will: Stand back, Congress needs a second Supreme Court jolt

By curtailing the president regarding tariffs, the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday perhaps applied a defibrillator to Congress. Its weak contemporary heartbeat threatens the constitutional architecture of powers separated, checked and balanced. But Congress’s fluttering pulse requires a stronger jolt than last week’s 6-3 decision. It addressed only part of the problem that Congress has created by behavior that fuels today’s rampant presidency.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Trudy Rubin: On 4th anniversary of Ukraine war, Kyiv refuses to cave to Putin’s terror or Trump’s pro-Russia demands

MUNICH — When Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, no one imagined Moscow would be enmeshed in a quagmire four years later, having lost nearly 1.2 million killed, wounded, or missing soldiers to an army a fraction of its size. The price Ukraine has paid for its defiance was written on Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s face — weary, puffy, aged dramatically beyond his 48 years — as he took the stage at ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Commentary: We celebrate civil rights heroes only after they stop making us uncomfortable

Every February, Black History Month invites Americans to honor the giants of the civil rights movement. We commemorate them in speeches and street names, reassuring ourselves that their struggles belong safely to the past. But history tells a less comforting story. We tend to celebrate Black moral courage only after it has been stripped of urgency — after its disruptions have been neutralized ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Commentary: What ‘America’ meant before 1776, and who ‘Americans’ are today

Who gets to be “American”? In the United States, it’s become a fiery political question with life-or-death consequences. On one side is Team MAGA, for whom “America” means the U.S. and “American” signifies a U.S. citizen — in many of their minds, specifically a native-born, white, Christian U.S. citizen. They routinely deny that the category of “American,” even if limited to meaning ...