Author: Norman Solomon
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The U.S. Left Vietnam 50 Years Ago Today. The Media Hasn’t Learned Its Lesson.
By Norman Solomon / The Guardian The last helicopter liftoff from the roof of the American embassy in Saigon on 30 April 1975 marked the end of the Vietnam war. Fifty years later, mythology about US media coverage of the war is locked into the faulty premise that news outlets were pivotal in causing Americans to…
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The Vietnam and Gaza Wars Shattered Young Illusions About U.S. Leaders
By Norman Solomon Eight years before the U.S.-backed regime in South Vietnam collapsed, I stood with high school friends at Manhattan’s Penn Station on the night of April 15, 1967, waiting for a train back to Washington after attending the era’s largest antiwar protest so far. An early edition of the next day’s New York Times arrived…
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What’s Preventing a United Front Against the Trump Regime?
By Norman Solomon / TomDispatch America desperately needs a united front to restrain the wrecking ball of the Trump regime. While outraged opposition has been visible and vocal, it remains a far cry from developing a capacity to protect what’s left of democracy in the United States. With the administration in its fourth month, the magnitude of the…
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Democrats’ Deference to Biden Was a Disaster. They Still Haven’t Learned Their Lesson
By Norman Solomon / The Guardian Joe Biden’s insistence on running for re-election was certainly disastrous. It kept credible contenders out of the Democratic presidential primaries and prevented the selection of a nominee who had gained momentum in the winnowing process. Even after his stunningly feeble debate performance on 27 June last year, Biden took several weeks before finally opting…
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Can the Democratic Party Free Itself From the Biden Brand?
By Norman Solomon / The Hill Former President Joe Biden “has told some Democratic leaders he’ll raise funds, campaign and do anything else necessary for Democrats to recover lost ground,” NBC News reported last week. Some prominent party supporters reacted with skepticism while insisting on anonymity, but Jane Kleeb, a new vice chair of the Democratic National Committee, voiced open enthusiasm. “If…