For more than 250 years, the presidency and the country have rested on a simple foundation, the oath. They are just 35 words spoken by every president with a hand on the Bible, promising to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States.” The oath is supposed to be the anchor that keeps the office tied to the rule of law, no matter the pressure, no matter the politics. But the system was never designed for a president who uses lawsuits as a regular political and personal tool by filing cases against media companies, state officials, private citizens, and even federal agencies within the Executive Branch. My memory goes all the way back to the Eisenhower Administration, and I have never seen anything like it. Legal analysis and historians note that no previous president has sued his own government while simultaneously asserting broad immunity from the laws that bind everyone else. That combination alone pushes the presidency into territory the framers ...
America Says It Protects Children. The Reality Tells a Different Story. America loves to say it cares about children. “Family values”, “protecting the innocent,” and “defending life” are the battle cries of many of the elections. But after the election, you have to look at how this country actually treats living, breathing children. Not the unborn, not the symbolic idea of a child, but real kids in real situations. That is when the truth becomes unavoidable. Children in America are not a priority; they are just something to use to get elected and then put out of mind when the election is over. Children are actually the people who survive some of the worst kinds of abuse and are treated as if they barely exist. You can see the contradiction everywhere. The fetus is talked about like it is sacred, but once it becomes a child, the urgency disappears. The family the politician claims is so important is left to figure everything out alone. Survivors of child sexual assault ...