Featured
Project 2025: The Latest Plot Against America
by Anne Nelson
Shaping the Narrative
by WS Editors
The Pentagon’s Unbeatable Adversary
by Robert Rudney
Trump’s 10% Import Tax — An Economic and Ecological Nightmare
by Steven Pressman
Dancing in the Dark: Steps to Avoid a Constitutional Coup in the 2024 Election
by Mark Medish and Joel McCleary
Politics
Seven Pillars of Political Wisdom
by Mark Medish
The Wide Angle: Washington Has Lost the Plot
by Dave Troy
The Student Debt Debacle: Rising Costs, Decreasing Public Support
by Steven Pressman
Never Underestimate the Power of a Small Group of Committed People
by Robert Alvarez
Canberra, Brasilia, and Abuja Have Taxation and Representation
by Robert Rudney
Dark Money Vouchers Are Having a Moment
by Josh Cowen
The Wide Angle
by Dave TroyThe Wide Angle: Is a UFO Hoax a Ticking Time-bomb for Biden?
Is there life elsewhere in the universe? Statistically, it’s likely. But don’t count on the...
Foreign Policy
The Wide Angle: Reality in Taiwan Differs from Perception in DC
by Dave Troy
It has become an article of faith in Washington circles that conflict between China and Taiwan is...
Culture
Peter Sarsgaard, Best Actor at Venice, Reflects on Acting, AI and the Actors’ Strike
by WS Editors
Peter Sarsgaard (Garden State, The Lost Daughter, Blue Jasmine, Jarhead, Jackie, Shattered Glass)...
Economy
Trump’s 10% Import Tax — An Economic and Ecological Nightmare
Were awards given for the worst economic idea each year, Donald Trump’s call for a 10% tax on all...
Letters to the Editor
The Spectator welcomes letters from our readers reflecting diverse points of view. We'll assume they are for publication unless stipulated otherwise. Send letters via email to [email protected], and for information on where to send written correspondence to the editor, click here.
January 19, 2024
To the Editor:
Re: Dancing in the Dark: Steps to Avoid a Constitutional Coup in the 2024 Election
This great article on concrete steps to avoid unconventional threats to a valid and trusted election in 2024 is extremely important. This article is the only effort I know of that warns and prepares us for the unexpected but possible coup against American democracy.
Dick Gephardt, former Majority Leader, US House of Representatives, currently working with Save our Republic, a bi-partisan effort to defend democracy.
January 9, 2024
To the Editor:
Re: Dancing in the Dark: Steps to Avoid a Constitutional Coup in the 2024 Election
Amazing piece of legal and Constitutional analysis. Extremely lucid explanations of complex hypothetical election scenarios. Well done Medish and McCleary! There is, as you show, ample room for bad faith to upend our democracy. We are left trembling.
March 9, 2023
To the Editor:
Holtec International, the firm responsible for decommissioning the Indian Point nuclear power plant, has stated that it will resume discharging radioactive wastewater into the Hudson River as early as August, and possibly sooner.
New legislation introduced by Senator Harckham and Assemblymember Levenberg, with the support of a growing list of co-sponsors, will put a stop to any radioactive discharges into the Hudson River. We need to make this bill a law before Holtec resumes the release of radioactive waste from Indian Point into the Hudson River. Legislators need to hear from you - click here to tell our representatives you support this important bill. [...]
To the Editor:
Re: Justice Thomas Should Take a Long Look in the Mirror, by Jesse Wegman, New York Times, May 15, 2022
Looking into the mirror won’t help Clarence Thomas. He is a hopeless Uncle Tom, a stooge for white conservatives and a hypocrite. The depths of his hypocrisy can be seen when one considers that he grew up in segregated Pinpoint, Georgia at a time when Georgia crackers did all they could to suppress and dehumanize black folk. However, he was fortunate to come along in an era when black civil rights pioneers had paved the way for more open minority college admissions[...]
Unquiet Flows the Don
To the editor,
After Vladimir Putin seized the Crimea in 2014, he tried to shift blame for its woes on to Ukraine. He made the case that, by virtue of long occupation—Crimea was taken from the Ottomans in 1783 by Catharine the Great and defended by Nicholas the First in the Crimean War—the temperate peninsula was as Russian as Tolstoy or Red Square. [...]
“The wheels of justice grind slowly….”
To the Editor,
The House Select Committee on the January 6th attack on the Capitol was formed on July 1, 2021, almost 6 months after the insurrection took place. The DOJ and Attorney General Merrick Garland began their investigations much earlier, yet we are still waiting to learn if the instigators and planners of the attack will be charged and indicted and, just as important, that the events preceding the election and subsequent to it, amounting to federal offenses (interfering with election-results), are also investigated by the DOJ. [...]
To the Editor,
I recently read the article "Changes in the Electorate Signal Close Florida Race" by Karen Houppert. She repeatedly used the term "Latinx" to, I assume, describe people of Latin American heritage. I understand that she wants to be as "woke" as possible, but to use a meaningless word is unacceptable. The proper English word is Latin or Latin American. Spanish is a gender based language (as are all romance languages), so if you are going to use the language then use it properly. My wife is a Venezuelan-American and can't stand how "woke" people abuse her native language.
Frederick Dennstedt
Flagstaff, AZ
To the Editor,
This afternoon I've been listening to the impeachment trial with tears in my eyes for several reasons. The first is because of the thorough and deeply researched history lesson that the Democratic House managers are providing in the proceedings. It is not fine oratory but it is compelling and you can hear the passion in their voices. What an example for our offspring, in place of the pathetic administration currently in power. [...]
To the Editor,
I am not sure why Steve Pressman wrote, and you published, such a lame set of arguments against a wealth tax (Sep 1 issue, p 6). The article claims "Perhaps the biggest negative is that the wealth tax does not have a very distinguished history." The main historical fact reported is that some wealth taxes were repealed, or reduced, or were unpopular as evidenced by their decline. So what? [...]
Pressman responds:
First, and maybe most important, property taxes are not wealth taxes. The property tax is a tax on the assessed value of a home and the land it sits on. It is not a tax on the equity that one has in one's home, which would make it a wealth tax. The same property tax applies to someone underwater on their mortgage and someone who owns their home outright -- when the two homes are of equal value in the same neighborhood. Rather than a tax on the wealthy, property taxes fall primarily on the middle class. [...]
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Editor’s Picks
-
Dancing in the Dark: Steps to Avoid a Constitutional Coup in the 2024 Election
By Mark Medish and Joel McCleary
-
The Wide Angle: Is a UFO Hoax a Ticking Time-bomb for Biden?
By Dave Troy
-
How Christian Nationalists, Big Oil and the Big Lie Seized the Speaker’s Gavel
By Anne Nelson
-
By Art Levine
From the Editor’s Desk
Podcast
Listen to “Paranoia on Parade”, a 3-part audio podcast with commentary from author Dave Troy, Jack Bryan, director of the 2018 film “Active Measures," and Hamilton Fish, Editor of The Washington Spectator.