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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Bret Stephens: The banality of evil, again

President Donald Trump erupted in anger at CBS journalist Norah O’Donnell after she read him excerpts from what is said to be a manifesto written by Cole Tomas Allen, the man charged with trying to kill Trump at Saturday’s White House Correspondents’ Association dinner. Some conservatives seem to think no good can be served from reading these words, but that’s a mistake: It’s always useful to be reminded, again, of the banality of evil.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Outside View: Iran war talks stall. Defense chiefs get fired. Where’s the Senate?

For the fifth time, the Senate Democrats last week tried to put constitutionally protected guardrails on President Donald Trump and his authority over the war in Iran. For the fifth time, Republican senators blocked them. The actions and statements of the president and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth should snap Republican senators back to reality. Congress should have been consulted; it was ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Rex Huppke: Cocaine salmon is the energy boost I crave

So a group of scientists got together and decided to give cocaine to a bunch of salmon. It sounds like the kind of fantastic idea a person comes up with while using cocaine, then talks about it for 13 consecutive hours to someone who is also doing cocaine and eagerly nodding in agreement while repeating, “It makes. So. Much. Sense.”
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Trudy Rubin: Trump administration wants to give Afghans who helped U.S. forces a choice between death and disaster

Just when you think the White House policy toward refugees can’t get any uglier, it sinks to new depths that should infuriate Americans of all political persuasions. After the suspension in November of a resettlement program for Afghans who helped U.S. soldiers and civilians, the Trump administration is now trying to send up to 1,100 of such Afghan refugees to the Democratic Republic of Congo. ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Nia-Malika Henderson: Congress has a male predator problem. Here’s how to fix it

The House Ethics Committee wants to try to create a culture of disclosure and transparency in Washington, a place where secrecy, fear and power have long been the order of the day. A week after two representatives, California’s Eric Swalwell and Texas’ Tony Gonzales, resigned amid allegations of sexual misconduct, Congress is taking a small, necessary and long overdue step to try to break the cycle of abuse and the silence that feeds it. The committee is being proactive and strongly encouraging “anyone who may have experienced sexual misconduct by a House Member or staffer, or who has knowledge of such conduct,” to get in contact.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Commentary: Trump’s empty bluster worked until he took on the pope and Iran

Until recently, President Donald Trump always found a way to fail forward, through a combination of spin, threats, payoffs and bluster. OK, that’s the simplistic interpretation. The fine print tells a less-glamorous story: a man born on third base who spent decades insisting he’d hit a triple. Still, it’s hard to argue with success. When Trump entered politics, he redefined the rules of the ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Joe Battenfeld: Inflation putting a squeeze on Trump

President Donald Trump is the new Gerald Ford. Fifty-two years ago, President Gerald Ford came up with “Whip Inflation Now” (WIN) — a gimmick to convince voters to ignore high unemployment and rising gas and food prices during the mid-term election. There were signs, buttons, and speeches all to promote Ford’s presidency and his WIN economic plan, which consisted of asking people to ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Outside View: Americans continue to bear the cost of Trump’s chaos

Last April, President Donald Trump announced what will go down as one of the dumbest economic policy decisions in American history. Nearly every economist told the president that tariffs imposed using the International Emergency Economic Powers Act were a loser — with disagreement coming mostly from how bad their impact would be — and the administration was warned the move was likely ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Bret Stephens: An academic miracle

University administrators sometimes ask how their institutions can best serve democracy. For decades, many believed that their role was to serve as instruments of social change. Diversity, equity and inclusion programs, especially in hiring and admissions, were one part of the tool kit. Politicized academic departments, often with the word “studies” attached to them, were another.
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Trudy Rubin: Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump were big losers in Hungary’s election on Sunday

The biggest losers in Sunday’s extraordinary election in Hungary, aside from its four-term autocratic prime minister Viktor Orbán, were Russia’s Vladimir Putin and President Donald Trump. Moreover, the reasons for Orbán’s fall offer surprising parallels with diminishing support for the U.S. president. And the restoration of Hungarian democracy at the ballot box offers highly relevant insights ...
Opinion >  Syndicated columns

Mark Gongloff: An inflation time bomb is hiding in home insurance

A standard complaint people have about economic data, especially inflation data, is that it doesn’t reflect their own experience and is therefore wrong. This might annoy the economists, politicians and policymakers who are trying to use these numbers to make big decisions about the economy, but every now and then the complaint is spot-on.