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Oh!  We fell through that rabbit hole. We did!

alice-and-dorothy

The Opinion Pages | Op-Ed Columnist

The Id That Ate the Planet

On Tuesday the political arm of the Natural Resources Defense Council, one of America’s most influential environmentalist groups, made its first presidential endorsement ever, giving the nod to Hillary Clinton. This meant jumping the gun by a week on her inevitable designation as te presumptive Democratic nominee, but the NRDC Action Fund is obviously eager to get on with the general election.

And it’s not hard to see why: At this point Donald Trump’s personality endangers the whole planet.

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Krugman is a Nobel laureate – a certified smart person, and Stephen Hawking is one of the smartest people on the planet.

Stephen Hawking Calls Donald Trump a ‘Demagogue’

Stephen Hawking, the great explainer of cosmic mysteries, is also known for sharing his wisdom on more earthly matters. He has weighed in on climate change (bold action is needed), boycotting Israel (he favored it), and the departure of Zayn Malik from the boy band One Direction (he could still be in the band in a parallel universe).

But on ITV’s “Good Morning Britain” on Tuesday, Mr. Hawking, a theoretical physicist and best-selling author, acknowledged a mystery that he has found impenetrable.

Asked to explain the political ascendance of Donald J. Trump, he said simply, “I can’t.”

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So WTF is going on?

There is something base and toxic in America. It works in offense against our better selves – against our virtues.  Better minds than mine and yours see that something is askew.

I was trained Freudian. I mostly rejected it, but I had a classmate who was a bit unbridled.  When, one day, he stepped over a line, another classmate yelled, “You have no Superego!”

Freud says the Superego controls the Id.  The Superego, he posits, develops between ages 3-5.  It emerges due to social controls.

Trump seems, like my classmate, not to have a Superego.  One wonders why, but that is not the emergency. The Id-run-wild that Krugman discusses and attracts disciples that leave Hawking aghast is only votes and months away from becoming the most powerful person on the planet.  Think about that.

I have spent years here promoting a specific very rational person.  She is beautiful, funny, warm, and cute as a button, but what attracted me and still does is her mind.  Her brain can network in amazing ways that tie together many issues and make those connections clear to all of us in speeches and essays.  Pretty amazing!

I am not saying that we all should bend because smart people say we should.  Hawking and Krugman are certified smart people.  But we should pay heed to their thoughts – and maybe especially to Hawkings’s loss for an explanation.

We are a great nation.  A great civilization. We lead the world. We do this by virtue of our flexibility, inclusiveness, and the continuity of our vision for the future. We are the people who look ahead, not behind.   We are the people who embrace – “with malice toward none and charity for all.”

I don’t know what happened to the party of Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt that this is the candidate that party proffers.  As an American, I cannot explain that to Stephen Hawking.  As a psychologist, neither can I explain why Paul Krugman is right about an Id out of control.  What I do know is this. We are at a crossroad.

We have a choice to make, and it is crucial.  Either we see ourselves as the leaders we are and bring the world forward, or we collapse onto ourselves and yield to global chaos. Yeah. It is that serious. It is that simple. And it means everything.

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I have always said we would carry her into the Oval Office in TR’s chair.   Here is why, in her own succinct words.

Hillary Clinton opinion for Mercury News: A plan to preserve America’s ‘best idea’

By Hillary Clinton, Special to The Mercury News

Posted:   06/01/2016 

Hillary Clinton

Hillary Clinton (Charlie Neibergall/AP)

More than a century ago, John Muir immersed himself in the wilderness of the Sierra Nevada mountains. In the journals he kept on his travels, Muir observed that “Most people are on the world, not in it.” He worried humanity had lost touch with our place in nature, and he hoped to inspire us to find it.

In the years that followed, his message began to break through. Leaders of American industry and society came to agree that public lands and waterways had to be held in sacred trust. Muir even went camping with President Teddy Roosevelt in the Yosemite Valley, who then set off a golden age of conservation.

This year we are celebrating the 100th anniversary of our National Parks. Unfortunately, America’s natural wonders are facing a range of threats today, from climate-fueled drought to fiercer wildfire seasons to declining wildlife populations. Meanwhile, special interest groups are waging a constant campaign to privatize our nation’s public lands.

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Hillary Clinton knows the cost of Donald Trump’s proposed border wall.  She has plans of her own for what we could do with that amount of money.

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In Detroit today, Hillary Clinton addressed the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) 2016 International Convention at the Cobo Center.

“You are often unsung heroes. And I want you to know this: Your fights are my fights.” —Hillary to members in Detroit

The labor movement pioneered the basic bargain that made America great: If you work hard and do your part, you should be able to get ahead.

Donald Trump thinks Americans are being paid too much and has hired union-busting firms to break up organizing campaigns on his properties.

“If fighting for equal pay, paid family leave, and affordable child care is playing the ‘woman card,’ then deal me in” —Hillary to the

“The only thing standing between Donald Trump and the Oval Office is all of us.” —Hillary

“The lesson of our history, through good times and hard times, is that we’re stronger together.” —Hillary

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On Meet the Press this morning, Hillary pointed to her track record an evidence that she can meet populist demands.  She said when people speak against the policies of the 90s she asks what they are against: the peace or the prosperity?

She called Donald Trump “pretend successful” and his slogan a hollow promise.

Hillary faced a lot of the same questions she did on Thursday from Chris Cuomo. Her message re: Bernie Sanders remains one of hope that he will do his part to help unite the Democratic Party in defeating Trump.  Once again she pointed to the 2008 numbers when her numbers and President Obama’s were much closer than Bernie’s are to hers now.  Hillary was clearly focused on unification both within the Democratic Party and in the nation in general.

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The Trayvon Martin Foundation sponsored the Circle of Mothers conference in Fort Lauderdale tonight.  Hillary Clinton was the keynote speaker.

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Calling for a weekend blackout on posts about Bernie Sanders has had the predictable result.  Knowing that Hillary’s Facebook groups are set to avoid talking about him freed him up to make outrageous statements about Hillary that may or may not garner him votes in the upcoming final Super Tuesday primaries but certainly provide Republicans with fodder.  At his point, when Sanders has no chance of gaining on Hillary, disparaging her is self-serving at best, but helpful to the Republicans at worst.

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When two incomes are crucial to raising a family, trustworthy, accessible, affordable child care is not a luxury. It is a necessity.  As usual, Hillary Clinton not only cites the problem – she has a solution to offer.

May 20

Hillary Clinton is a Democratic candidate for president and a former secretary of state and U.S. senator from New York.

Jennifer lives in Loudoun County. She has three young boys. She pays $2,500 every month for child care. That’s more than her mortgage.

This month in Northern Virginia, I met several moms and dads who told me similar stories.

In every state in the country, child care for two kids now costs more than the average rent. You read that right — child care costs more than housing. And in many states, it’s even more expensive than college tuition.

For parents who need to work, this is more than an inconvenience. It’s a crisis.

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issues-index-032816a.originalHillary Clinton’s prodigious websites are filled with issues and answers, fact sheets and statements.  The latest spin coming from the Sanders and Trump campaigns as well as from some media pundits is that the American people do not want specifics and  plans. They want dreams and generalities rather than blueprints for solutions that will box the president in.  When you get finished rolling on the floor laughing, we have to ask ourselves: Have we gotten it wrong?

We have always listened to speeches, town halls, and debates with the idea that the candidates ought to be telling us what they understand the issues to be and how they plan to address them.   Isn’t that the idea?

But the new spin coming at Hillary Clinton from both sides is that she provides too much information. The latest uproar in the media is Donald Trump’s assertion that his tax records are none of our business.  Hillary’s tax returns, health records, and more have long been available on her website. You can peruse them here. >>>  Hillary Clinton releases health, financial records.

Tax records are kind of basic. They provide insights into how money is handled.  Dennis Hastert’s shady past came to light as a result of payments he was mysteriously making.  They are not policy plans, but they shed light on habits. Donald Trump thinks we do not need to look into his habits.  Bernie Sanders says he will release some (non-specific) returns when he finds them.  Well, Lord Almighty!  We hope as POTUS he doesn’t misplace anything else that might be important.

Trump’s remark did inflame many, and Hillary’s defense site, The Briefing, was quick to collect and publish the reactions below.  But given the broader spin of the past week,  the implication seems to be that Hillary Clinton is simply overwhelming the American people with way more information than they can possibly digest or use.  Hillary has far more faith in the voters of this country than any of the talking heads from the other campaigns or in the media.

As the issues arise, Hillary will continue to address them specifically through this primary cycle, through the general election, and through eight years in the White House.  Isn’t that what the American people want?

Statements

What Else in Donald Trump’s Tax Returns Does He Think Is “None of Your Business”?

When asked on Good Morning America this morning what tax rate he pays, Donald Trump responded “it’s none of your business.” If his tax rate is none of our business, what else in his tax returns does Trump think is none of the voters’ business? Donald Trump has repeatedly refused to release his tax returns because he claims he’s under audit. Unfortunately for Trump, the IRS has explicitly said that excuse is bogus. It’s time for Donald Trump to release his full tax returns and stop hiding the truth from voters.

“Our country has a long history of presidential candidates releasing their full tax returns and for good reason. Voters deserve to know what’s in Donald Trump’s returns – how exactly he makes his money and what he does with it. Enough is enough. We know he’s done his best to avoid paying his fair share of taxes. What else is he hiding in those tax returns?” said Hillary for America Deputy Communications Director Christina Reynolds.

But don’t just take our word for it:

New York Daily News: Donald Trump could be hiding his true net worth or that he skirts taxes by not coughing up returns

Atlantic: What Is Trump Trying to Hide in His Tax Returns?

Fortune: Here’s What Might Be Hiding in Donald Trump’s Tax Returns TIME: The ‘Bombshells’ That Could Be in Trump’s Taxes CBS News: 5 ways Donald Trump’s tax returns could spook voters Washington Post: Trump’s false claim that ‘there’s nothing to learn’ from his tax returns

Associated Press: What’s in Trump’s returns? A look at how he plays tax game

Bloomberg: I Saw Trump’s Tax Returns. You Should, Too.

New York Times: What We Can Learn From Donald Trump’s Unreleased Tax Returns

Chicago Sun Times: Top five reasons Donald Trump should cough up his tax returns

Market Watch: Opinion: ‘Dodging Donald’ Trump has no good reason to withhold his tax returns

Boston.com: Mitt Romney calls Donald Trump’s refusal to release tax returns ‘disqualifying,’ again speculates of ‘bombshell’

Citizens for Tax Justice: Why Donald Trump May Be Hiding His Tax Returns

U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen Calls on Donald Trump to Release Tax Returns

When asked on Good Morning America this morning what tax rate he pays, Donald Trump responded “it’s none of your… More

State Representative Daniel Riemer Calls on Donald Trump to Release Tax Returns

When asked on Good Morning America this morning what tax rate he pays, Donald Trump responded “it’s none of your… More

State Treasurer Mike Fitzgerald Calls on Donald Trump to Release Tax Returns

When asked on Good Morning America this morning what tax rate he pays, Donald Trump responded “it’s none of your… More

Congressman Tim Ryan: Trump Should Respect Ohioans and Release His Tax Returns

When asked this morning on ‘Good Morning America’ what tax rate he pays, Donald Trump responded “it’s none of your… More

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One of the barriers that Hillary Clinton wants to break down is that represented by the challenge of finding and funding child care.

Letter sent on May 13

We need to do more to help working parents raise strong families.

On Sunday, a lot of moms woke up to breakfast in bed, presentations of homemade cards and macaroni picture frames. As someone who received quite a few Mother’s Day gifts like these when my daughter was little, I can attest that they’ll be treasured forever.

But it’s not just families who should celebrate moms. Our country should, too — not just with nice words, but with real action that can really help parents do the vital and often difficult work of raising strong families.

I’ve heard from so many families out there who are struggling to keep the lights on, pay the rent, and be there for their children while doing what it takes to succeed at work. Many are trying to do it in neighborhoods where it’s not always safe to play outside. Some are raising kids with special needs or chronic illnesses, who they love with every fiber of their being but who require a lot of help and patience every day.

On Monday, I sat down with some moms and dads in a coffee shop in Virginia to talk about the roadblocks they face trying to balance work and family. These parents are running into the middle-class squeeze that so many families face: Their relative incomes are the same or lower than their parents’ were, but the cost of everything is higher. One mom said that she’s paying $16,000 a year for child care, which means there’s nothing left to put aside for college or retirement.

The parents I met over the past few days — and those I’ve met across the country over the past year — come from different backgrounds, earn different incomes, and have different beliefs. But the core challenge they’re facing is the same: They desperately want to give their kids a good life. And that gap between what they can do and what their children need tears them up.

Too many workplaces and government policies still operate under the rules of an era that no longer exists, and that means parents — and especially women — are expected to do it all: raise the kids, look after the home, be there for a spouse, and earn a living. Many are helping to care for aging parents, too.

We can’t keep going on like this. That’s what this election is about — a chance to do better by American families. And there are a few things we can do as a country that would make a real difference.

Let’s create a national system of paid family leave. Too many new moms have to go back to work just days after their babies are born, or they’re scraping together vacation days, sick days, unpaid leave, short-term disability, and anything they can to get more time with their babies. And too many dads and parents of adopted children don’t get any parental leave at all.

We should expand home-visiting programs nationwide. In some states, nurses and social workers come right to a family’s home to answer questions about nursing and sleep training, screen for health and developmental benchmarks, and emphasize how important it is to talk and read to babies from the earliest days of their lives. Every family deserves that support, no matter where they live.

We also have to do more to raise incomes. We can start by raising the minimum wage, which would give millions of American families a much-needed boost. And let’s finally guarantee equal pay for women so that their families aren’t shortchanged.

Let’s encourage more employers to embrace family-friendly policies. Sophisticated new scheduling software helps employers squeeze every last bit of productivity out of their workforce. But they’re also throwing workers’ lives into chaos. Too many workers find out what shift they’re working at the last minute, meaning they’re constantly scrambling to line up child care. That instability is exactly what kids don’t need.

That brings me to one of the most important things we could do for families: putting quality child care within every family’s reach. Right now, in many states, child care is more expensive than college tuition, putting families in an impossible position. And of course, for single-parent families, it’s even harder.

Enough is enough. It’s time we invest as a nation in making quality child care affordable for all working families. Let’s make it so no family has to spend more than 10 percent of their income on child care.

We also need to give child care workers a raise. Many can’t afford to give their own kids the care they give other people’s kids every day, and low wages lead to high turnover. As president, I’ll support states and cities that take steps to increase pay for child care providers and early educators while making child care more affordable for families.

And let’s do more to help students who are also parents. That means getting more child care centers on college campuses and easing the financial burdens on student parents, so they don’t give up on school because they can’t afford it. Back in Arkansas, I helped start a scholarship for single parents, and it made a real difference for a lot of hard-working students. We should do something similar nationwide.

Supporting women and families has been the work of my life — ever since I took my first job out of law school representing the interests of children. So this is personal to me. I’ve always believed that it takes a village to raise a child. We all have a responsibility to support each other and create the best possible environment for kids to grow up in, where moms and dads can succeed at work and at home.

Respond directly to Hillary here >>>>

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