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

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Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Andreas Kluth: Obsessed with Greenland? You too may have the wrong map

At some point in his life, Donald Trump looked at a world map and saw something he wants – something that, as president of the US, he now says he will take “one way or the other.” It’s Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, one of America’s closest allies. “I love maps,” Trump once explained. “And I always said: ‘Look at the size of this. It’s massive. That should be part of the United States.’ ”

Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Commentary: Under Trump, the Voice of America has fallen silent. US enemies are cheering

Almost 30 years ago, toward the end of President Bill Clinton’s first term in office, Republicans in Congress forced a government shutdown that led some 800,000 nonessential federal workers to be furloughed. At the time, I was the director of the Voice of America, and VOA was broadcasting in more than 45 languages reaching more than 200 million regular listeners around the world. We ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Bret Stephens: Democracy dies in dumbness

It used to be common knowledge – not just among policymakers and economists but also high school students with a grasp of history – that tariffs are a terrible idea. The phrase “beggar thy neighbor” meant something to regular people, as did the names of Sen. Reed Smoot and Rep. Willis Hawley. Americans broadly understood how much their 1930 tariff, along with other protectionist and isolationist measures, did to turn a global economic crisis into another world war. Thirteen successive presidents all but vowed never to repeat those mistakes.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Commentary: Did we learn or not? Why there can be no going back on COVID lessons

Five years ago this month, COVID-19 changed the world. The first pandemic in a century altered how Americans saw themselves, each other, work, health care, relationships, government, mortality, and media. It tangled everyone across the globe in webs of fear, conflict, grief, disbelief, estrangement, and gratitude. It prompted a parallel pandemic of disinformation that has only deepened in the ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Conor Sen: These unpopular mortgages may be the key to affordable housing

Can a mortgage product tainted by the financial crisis come back to revive U.S. housing? The answer could reorient the housing market and give the Federal Reserve greater control over consumer spending in the years ahead. A lack of affordability has hindered housing transactions the past two years, frustrating would-be buyers and, more recently, hammering the stocks of developers. Those ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Michelle Goldberg: This is the greatest threat to free speech since the Red Scare

On Saturday, immigration agents showed at the apartment building of Mahmoud Khalil, a leader of last year’s pro-Palestinian protests at Columbia University, and told him that his student visa had been revoked and that he was being detained. Khalil is married to an American, and his lawyer, speaking to the agents by phone, informed them that he had a green card, but they said that had been revoked as well. He was taken away, and as of this writing appears to be in a detention facility in Louisiana.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Trudy Rubin: In attack against Zelenskyy, Trump and Vance shame America

The only hero in the extraordinary Oval Office shouting match on Friday between President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance and Volodymyr Zelenskyy was the Ukrainian leader. The grotesque White House spectacle ended with the eviction of Zelenskyy from the White House before he could sign a framework for a Trump-demanded deal to “repay” the United States for helping Kyiv stand up to ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Urgently needed: A reborn patriotic belief in Western virtues

From an unlikely place – the upper reaches of the technology industry – comes an unexpected summons to an invigorated patriotism. The summons will discomfit progressives by requiring seriousness about the nation’s inadequate defenses, which endanger peace immediately and national survival ultimately. Conservatives will flinch from the new – actually, a recovered – patriotism that calls them up from an exclusively market-focused individualism, to collaboration between public and private sectors in great collective undertakings.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Michelle Goldberg: Trump wants to destroy all academia, not just the woke parts

In 2021, JD Vance gave a speech to the National Conservatism Conference, a gathering of Trumpist thinkers and politicians, titled “The Universities Are the Enemy.” It contained the usual complaints about critical race theory and gender ideology, but it went further, arguing for a frontal attack on the power and prestige of higher education writ large. Comparing universities to the sci-fi totalitarianism of “The Matrix,” in which parasitic machines have seized control of reality , he said, “So much of what drives truth and knowledge as we understand it in this country is fundamentally determined by, supported by and reinforced by the universities.” Why, he asked, have conservatives consented to intellectual tyranny?