Politics, Moderate
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Of Course Trump's Immigration Crackdown Is Fueled by Racism
SAN DIEGO -- As a journalist, there are at least three things that really annoy me.
One is when elected officials or public servants who bristle whenever folks in my tribe tell them how to do their jobs then turn around and tell us how to do ours.
Another is when government officials gaslight members of the press, trying to convince us to ...Read more
Coach Prime Opens Up About Tackling Cancer
The press conference that University of Colorado Boulder football coach Deion Sanders held at the end of July brought to light the serious health issues that he has been dealing with. Sanders, known as Coach Prime, opened up to the public regarding his bladder cancer diagnosis, something that he did not immediately disclose to his sons Shedeur ...Read more
In Politics, Surrendering Isn't a Way To Survive. It's the Surest Path to Extinction.
SAN DIEGO -- Confused and rudderless, the Democratic Party has been derailed. Only Cory Booker seems to be on the right track.
The Democratic senator from New Jersey is demanding that fellow Democrats battle Republicans, stand their ground and fight GOP efforts to make America the 1950s again.
An autopsy is in order. Democrats wound up in a ...Read more
FCC Chairman Brendan Carr's Meddling in Broadcast Journalism Contradicts His Own Avowed Views: As a Minority FCC Member During the Bush Administration, Carr Condemned Government Interference With Newsroom Decisions
You may have heard that Skydance Media is merging with Paramount, which owns CBS. When the Federal Communications Commission approved that $8 billion deal last week, its chairman bragged that the agency had extracted concessions that would bring "significant changes" to the network's journalism.
Brendan Carr, a Republican whom President ...Read more
Newsom Needs To Defend California Before Running For President
SAN DIEGO -- Crafting a column can be an unpredictable endeavor. That is especially true when you're writing about politics.
Like most human beings, elected officials can be awfully complicated.
Take California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who is as complicated as they come. His personal story is filled with paradoxes.
On the one hand, as the son of ...Read more
Malcolm-Jamal Warner's Death: A Reminder to Make the Most of Our Lives
Those of us who grew up watching "The Cosby Show" as teens in the 1980s were extremely saddened to learn of Malcolm-Jamal Warner's tragic drowning in Costa Rica while on vacation with his family. Warner held iconic television status among Gen X, as he was most beloved for his role as Theo Huxtable on the pioneering sitcom created by Bill Cosby. ...Read more
Lawmakers Wonder Why a Mountain Climber Was Prosecuted for Climbing a Mountain: Two Members of the House Judiciary Committee Say the Case Against Michelino Sunseri Epitomizes the Overcriminalization That the President Decries
When mountain runner Michelino Sunseri climbed and descended Grand Teton in record time last September, he posted information about his route on social media. According to the National Park Service and the Justice Department, Sunseri thereby implicated himself in a federal misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail.
Although the NPS ...Read more
'Noah': A Riveting Production of the Biblical Story
My church recently celebrated our pastor's 75th birthday with a trip to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, to view the musical "Noah," produced by Sight & Sound Theatres. We boarded a chartered bus from Columbus, Ohio, for a six-hour trip of fun and fellowship through the country's heartland. It had been several years since I had been on a bus, and I have...Read more
Trump Caught in His Own Trap
A new poll, on a matter that adamantly should not be decided by untutored public opinion, finds that 79% of Americans believe all of the documents relating to the Epstein case should be disclosed. A shocking result? Not quite. Ask Americans, who've been hearing wall-to-wall accusations about secret sex abuse cabals, celebrity client lists and ...Read more
Ravaged by Floods, Texas Deserves Compassion -- but So Did California After Wildfires
SAN DIEGO -- I'm the product of a mixed marriage. My parents are both Mexican American, but they were born on what sometimes seem like different planets.
I'm a lifelong Californian, who has spent all but a dozen of my 58 years living in the Golden State. I share those roots with my father, who was born in Central California in 1941.
But I'm ...Read more
The Real Reason for Ditching the TSA's Shoe Rule: The Widely Resented and Ridiculed Policy, Which the U.S. Was Nearly Alone in Enforcing, Never Made Much Sense
The Transportation Security Administration did not officially start requiring travelers to take off their shoes at the airport until August 2006. That was nearly five years after Richard Reid unsuccessfully tried to ignite explosives in his sneakers on an American Airlines flight from Paris to Miami.
The fear of Reid copycats was the ...Read more
A Personal Tribute to David Gergen for an Exceptional Life of Service
SAN DIEGO -- Good mentors can teach us a lot, except how to say goodbye.
One of mine -- who entered my life a quarter century ago as one of my graduate school professors and who I was later fortunate to call "friend" -- schooled me both in and out of the classroom.
Even now, I hear his gravelly voice in my head offering a gentle scolding: "...Read more
Attention Ruben Navarrette Editors: The 8Th Graf References Language That Some Readers May Find Offensive. Thank You. -- Creators
ATTENTION RUBEN NAVARRETTE EDITORS: THE 8TH GRAF REFERENCES LANGUAGE THAT SOME READERS MAY FIND OFFENSIVE. THANK YOU. -- CREATORS
Trump's Immigration Crackdown Creates Mayhem and Madness. Here's What We Can Do.
SAN DIEGO -- It feels as if California has a new state motto that boils down to just four words: "What can we do?"
As a Mexican ...Read more
Slouching Toward Fascism, Trump 2.0 Has Stopped Making Sense
SAN DIEGO -- What does political analysis sound like when it comes from Generation X? For one thing, it can be set to 80s music.
Talking Heads probably hoped that a Trump presidency was a trauma that Americans would only have to experience Once in a Lifetime.
No such luck. The sequel isn't even six months old, and already, many critics agree...Read more
For Many Americans -- and Especially Mexican Americans -- a Somber Fourth of July
SAN DIEGO -- Well, this Fourth of July weekend will be awkward.
As we mark the end of the first month of the Trump administration's occupation of Los Angeles -- which is centered around an un-American crackdown on Latino immigrants, and anyone who looks like them, by masked men who won't identify themselves, don't act like police and get ...Read more
Did Trump Win Over Hispanic Voters, or Did Harris Repel Them? Both.
SAN DIEGO -- It's been nearly eight months since the 2024 presidential election, and Americans are still debating what happened, why it happened and what it means that it happened.
The Pew Research Center recently provided more grist for the mill when it released an extensive study of nearly 9,000 voters conducted in the weeks following the ...Read more
As Trump Continues To Terrorize Los Angeles, the Question Remains: Who Are These Masked Men?
SAN DIEGO -- As they try to tell the complicated story of what has been happening for the last three weeks on the streets of Los Angeles, the media have been making a big mistake.
Reporters, anchors and columnists need to stop accepting at face value the increasingly dubious claim that these are, in fact, "ICE agents" who are snatching from ...Read more
Newsom and Trump Find Their Match -- and Their Soulmate
SAN DIEGO -- The modern-day classic Western "Tombstone" has plenty of memorable scenes. One of the best is set in a saloon when Doc Holiday (played masterfully by the late Val Kilmer) meets fellow gunslinger Johnny Ringo (played exceptionally well by Michael Biehn).
Referencing Ringo, Holiday turns to his female companion and asks: "What do you...Read more
In Los Angeles, Trump's Latino Purge Ensnares a Latino Senator
SAN DIEGO -- Some say politics is poetry. But much of it is metaphor.
As a disturbing symbol of the extreme disrespect being shown Latinos in California, U.S. Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif. -- a mild-mannered Mexican American MIT-trained engineer -- was recently manhandled, thrown to the ground and handcuffed by members of Secretary of Homeland ...Read more
Ever dream of becoming a cartoonist?
Tyrades! by Danny Tyree
I’m glad most people have abandoned chirping, “See ya in the funny papers.”
Because that quaint farewell would reopen old wounds, since folks will definitely NOT be seeing me in the funny papers.
You see, 2025 marks the 50th anniversary of my ill-fated attempt to become a professional cartoonist.
...Read more