Opinion

Donald Trump is a symptom of a democracy coming apart at the seams

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.

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Donald Trump and Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi: 'Disordered Minds' who think alike

The death of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is being hailed as a major victory in the war on terror. But al-Baghdadi and ISIS fit a pattern known as “the toxic triangle” — destructive leaders, susceptible followers, and conducive environments — that can explain how tyrannical leaders with personality disorders come to power and maintain it. Personality disorders are key to understanding how the toxic triangle operates, but the focus is on a system much larger than just the leader alone—both the system of followers and their ideology, and the larger social system out of which they arise.

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Spare us from the Vichy Republicans

Item: Bob Livingston. Remember him? When last seen by the wider public in the waning, innocent years of the 20th century, he was the newly minted designee to succeed Newt Gingrich as Republican Speaker of the House.

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It’s about the oil, stupid: Trump wants to end the forever wars -- except the one about oil and money

Remember the lengths the Bush administration went to counter the argument that the real reason we invaded Iraq in 2003 was the oil? It was about weapons of mass destruction, until there turned out to be no WMDs. Then it was about bringing democracy to the Middle East, until that turned out to be harder than we thought it would be. Then it was about rebuilding Iraq, which wouldn’t have needed it if we hadn’t blown the place up to begin with. Then it was about fighting terrorism, which Iraq had had no part in exporting to the rest of the world in the first place.

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GOP sinks lower and outs purported 'whistleblower'

Republican lawmakers are publicly spreading the name of a CIA officer named in a RealClearInvestigations report as the whistleblower who reported President Donald Trump’s pressure on Ukraine to investigate the Bidens.

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Warren’s plan to pay for Medicare runs headlong into the corporate media’s double-standards

All federal programs are financed through a combination of taxes, fees and public debt. The details are worked out by relevant Congressional committees. With big legislative efforts, multiple committees in both chambers usually wrestle with the fine print. Multiple proposals are scored by the Congressional Budget Office, the House and Senate each settle on a bill, and then the two final bills are reconciled before a final vote.

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The Ukraine scandal proves Trump is exactly who we warned you he was

As Democrats are preparing to begin public hearings in the House of Representatives laying out the evidence of President Donald Trump’s misconduct, his more intellectually inclined defenders head toward consensus on a key fact: The White House did, indeed, propose a quid pro quo with Ukraine, leveraging military aid in exchange for investigations of the president’s political opponents.

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The problem isn't 'polarization' -- the problem is Republicans have lost their damn minds

When the final vote tally on a formal resolution governing the impeachment inquiry concluded on Thursday with a party-line split — all Republicans present voted against the resolution, and all but two Democrats voted for it — one could practically hear the squeak of excitement from the mainstream media pundit class. Here was an opportunity to run with a "partisan polarization" narrative that neatly sidesteps the substantive disagreement between the two parties.

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Three reasons why we need to talk about the mental health of political leaders

As the impeachment investigation gathers pace on Capitol Hill, some commentators have argued that if Donald Trump remains the Republican presidential candidate in 2020, there is no way the election could be deemed legitimate.

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A distracted White House does nothing as China makes a startling expansion into the South China Sea

While President Donald Trump basked in the glow of a fake picture of him giving a military hero dog a medal of honor and infuriated Russia by claiming the U.S. is “keeping the oil” in Syria, he’s blowing off two key summits in East Asia this week, despite China’s increasing aggression in one of the most dangerous corners of the world.

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Trump flees to his bankruptcy-proof Florida home as New York prosecutors close in

Donald Trump signaled in a trio of Halloween night tweets that criminal investigations into his New York tax and business filings are vexing him. Knowing how Donald's mind works, my bet is that he just learned he is getting closer to civil lawsuits or indictment

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Trump's defense is collapsing -- so Bannon is coming back in a desperate bid to save him

President Trump made history on Thursday, and not in a good way. The House of Representatives took its first vote on impeachment, passing a resolution that governs the terms of the inquiry, 232-196.   If this proceeding goes all the way, as it likely will, Trump will become the third president in history to be impeached.

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Mitch McConnell warns Trump to stop attacking GOP senators who will decide his fate

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell warned President Donald Trump to stop attacking Republican senators who will soon consider his fate at an impeachment trial, Politico reports.

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