Andrew Moss: What it means to do the work of freedom in the era of Trump 2.0
When conceding the presidential election to Donald Trump, Kamala Harris told supporters gathered at Howard University that they needed to keep up the fight for freedom.
When conceding the presidential election to Donald Trump, Kamala Harris told supporters gathered at Howard University that they needed to keep up the fight for freedom.
South Carolina Republican Nancy Mace, who backed adjudicated rapist Donald Trump for president, and the alleged child sex trafficker Matt Gaetz to be the next Attorney General, wants the world to think she’s now a champion of women’s rights.
A recent Washington Post headline read “Democrats face a reckoning and a long rebuilding. There’s no quick fix.”
Elon Musk knows a thing or two about slashing things. To cite one for instance, he slashed the value of Twitter a point where the one-time global social media giant could drown in a bathtub.
We got ourselves a 2025 Virginia politics cycle shocker on Monday: Jason Miyares is going to run for a second term as attorney general, ceding the Republican Party gubernatorial nomination to Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears.
Donald Trump might have to give up on his first Attorney General nominee, Matt Gaetz, who we’re now learning as the new week starts reportedly participated in drug-fueled orgies that included underage girls during his first term in Congress.
Unadulterated power in any branch of government is a menace to freedom, but concentrated power across all three branches is the very definition of tyranny: a dictatorship disguised as democracy.
Amazon, market cap: $2.2 trillion, got its hands slapped by the National Labor Relations Board on Wednesday, for a union-busting effort at a Staten Island warehouse.
Matt Gaetz, who is under investigation by the House Ethics Committee on sex trafficking allegations involving underage girls, is Donald Trump’s pick to be attorney general, because of course that’s what Trump would do.
Former vice president Mike Pence doesn’t want Donald Trump to free the more than 1,500 people charged in the aftermath of Jan. 6.