In Name Only

McCarthy should have done the right thing and backed out of the race for Speaker. That would require something Kevin lacks: Integrity. Instead, he selfishly hung in there and got the job by giving the right-wingers want they wanted, more power, thereby diminishing the job he coveted. The man’s unprincipled. I can’t even begin to imagine the lies spread during the fifteen votes it took for him to win the gavel.

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James OSheaComment
Let’s Get Real

Lying is nothing new on the campaign trail, but congressman elect George Santos set a new record for being a fake. About the only thing he didn’t fabricate was his imagination! The New York Times exposed Santos, an openly gay Republican, in an investigative piece that detailed the sordid history of lying during a race he ran — and won — in a district that President Biden carried by a hefty margin only two years ago.

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James OSheaComment
War Crimes

They are crimes for certain, taking civilian lives in a military conflict has been viewed as criminal behavior now for decades, murder in fact. But that doesn’t mean a court in The Hague or anywhere else is going to step in and prosecute the perpetrators. Even if the International Criminal Court has the will power to make a case, we may see it suffer the same fate as Serbia’s Milosevic, who died in his cell before a verdict was reached. 

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James OSheaComment
Winter War

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky told a joint session of Congress that the war would not end soon. When Napoleon invaded Russia in 1812 with 500,000 troops, the Russian Army used some of the same scorched earth tactics it’s using today. As it withdrew toward Moscow it burned Russian crops and villages, making it difficult for Napoleon to sustain his army. Sound familiar? By the time he left he only had about 100,000 troops left.

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James OSheaComment
Steele Yourself

Reagan’s relentless drive to cut taxes set in motion an unraveling of the tax code that spanned four decades. The cuts made the fortieth president a Republican hero. Less publicized is the role those tax cuts played in the nation’s descent into inequality and the  indelible mosaic of a red and blue America. James B. Steele, a distinguished journalist and author, has documented the role that tax policy played in creating inequality in America.

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James OSheaComment
Conspiracy of Dunces

The Dems need a good, strong candidate for president, someone with executive experience. In other words, they need a governor like the one where I live in Cary, North Carolina. I like our governor, Roy Cooper, a Democrat who’d make a fine candidate. He’s won two times in a state that the Republicans have sliced up in gerrymanders so badly that the state’s political map is now at the center of a U.S. Supreme Court case.

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James OSheaComment
Leaving the Heartland

I worked at the Des Moines Register when the Iowa caucuses first appeared on the political stage. None of us really knew how to cover these eccentric gatherings. Jim Flansburg, the Register’s colorful top political reporter, sat me down and explained the whole caucus process. Then he sent me to a cover one. I didn’t find the caucus representative of much. But I was a young reporter.

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James OSheaComment
What Makes You Click?

Given the nature of human curiosity, most readers will click on the “dog-floating-on-the-ice-in-Lake-Michigan” story before they open a thoughtful take on Chicago’s budget. If abused, the exercise will simply lead to a loss of respect among readers who will think editors prioritize fluff over substance. Giving readers less and charging them more for papers full of fluffy clickbait is not a winning formula.

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James OSheaComment
Relegated to the Sidelines

“I only regret,” Hale said, “that I have but one life to lose for my country.” Although no credible historical record exists to document whether Hale really uttered those words, Colonel Robert McCormick, the legendary publisher of the Chicago Tribune, nevertheless found them inspiring enough to commission a replica of bronze sculpture of Hale in 1940.

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James OSheaComment
Twitter From Hell

Even billionaires are not immune to the laws of economics. Musk simply paid too much for Twitter and I think he knows it. He now owns it as a private company, and can do as he pleases, being the principle shareholder. He’s also saddled the company with enough debt that it’s a prime candidate for a Zell-like bankruptcy. I wrote a book about the Zell fiasco called The Deal From Hell. It was aptly titled.

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James OSheaComment
Vote While You Still Can

One of the “losers” I hold in high esteem is Adlai Stevenson. He lost uphill political races twice, defeated by a true American hero, President Dwight D. Eisenhower. Stevenson accepted his fate gracefully with wit and humor. “I will make a bargain with Republicans,” he later quipped, “if they will stop telling lies about us, we’ll stop telling the truth about them.”

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James OSheaComment
Musk Mucks It Up

I cringe when I hear people talk about passing laws to impose limits on speaking our minds in speech or words. I’d simply rather have that power in the hands of a private person. I understand where Musk is coming from; he wants money and power, probably more of the latter than the former. But I don’t pretend to understand the motives of the people now making our laws. Musk may be a powerful person, but he’s not immune from the law.

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James OSheaComment
Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?

A conversation with Charles Madigan about those irritating email requests that jam our inboxes before every election. Wait a minute, she also wants money! Maybe $5, $10 or $15. I once had a woman in the old Soviet Union ask me for money right on the steps of the National Hotel, and she promised me a very good time. “I’m in the Workers Paradise, ” I said. ‘I’m already having a good time!”

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James OSheaComment
Oh My God! Democracy is Collapsing!

For weeks now, media has been focusing on everything from the impending collapse of the economy to the potential for a “civil war” mounted by angry Donald Trump supporters still peeved about the 2020 election “theft” by slippery Democrats and their child-molesting, Communist partners in crime.

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James OSheaComment
Break Some Goddamned News!

For most readers who probably didn’t know her, Nikki Finke struck fear in the hearts of movie stars and the Hollywood hoity-toity for years. In Deadline Hollywood, her column initially published in LA Weekly, she eviscerated her subjects. At times, it seemed as if she had blood dripping from her fingers. “I can’t help it,” she once told a writer from The New Yorker, It’s like meanness just pours out of my fingers.”

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James OSheaComment
Bruce Sagan’s Unwavering Crusade

“We had a little classified ad page in the Hype Park Herald, but I realized that the student body never read the Hyde Park Herald. So, I began reproducing the pages of our classified ads and I tacked them up on to the stump of a tree that was a readership tree on 57th Street where the kids posted ‘I want a ride to New York’ pleas. It was in front of a bookstore. And every week for years, I posted that page. And that page grew to two, and it grew to two and one half.”

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James OShea
NewsGuard Exposes Journalistic Rascals

The media, in effect, now operates on two levels. One includes a small group of companies or non-profits with the financial muscle to serve elite national and international audiences. The other — a potpourri of failing or struggling, well-known or little-known, journalistic organizations serves the rest of us. Scrupulous and devious operators alike percolate on both levels.

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James OShea
Can NewsGuard Make Journalism Safe Again?

A four-year-old effort by journalism entrepreneur Steve Bill and Gordon Crovitz, a former publisher of the Wall Street Journal, NewsGuard grades news organizations on their editorial integrity much in the same way Standard and Poor grades corporate finance or J.D. Powers differentiates a car that sizzles from a lemon.

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James OShea
We Should Cheer Inflation Fighter Jay Powell

I covered the fight against inflation during the late 1970s and 1980s, much of the time as the chief economics correspondent in Washington for the Chicago Tribune. The Fed had put its muscle behind the Philips Curve — a theory that the central bank could lower unemployment by tolerating high inflation to goose the economy.

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James OShea
A Journalist Walks the World

In 2013, Paul Salopek took his first steps out of Ethiopia on an epic 24,000 mile walk following man’s migration out of Africa to populate the world. Paul is currently in China. He is one of the few outsiders in the Middle Kingdom, trudging up mountains, across ancient trade routes and through rural villages where he shocks local populations who’ve never seen a white man.

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James OShea