Opinion

Trump is gaslighting his base about firing Comey as the Mueller probe closes in

Gaslighting, if you're unfamiliar with the term, refers to the manipulative practice of planting the seeds of doubt about how other people perceive reality, with the hope that in so doing you can get them to question inarguable truths for your own advantage.

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Trump's disturbing demagoguery hits new heights as he becomes character assassin in chief ahead of the midterms

How that the midterm election campaign is finally rolling we will undoubtedly start hearing a whole lot about polls again. Not to worry, Nate Silver at 538 assures us that contrary to popular myth, polling has not fallen apart and is as reliable as it's ever been — which is to say, fairly reliable. Silver and his crew have done a thorough analysis of the various organizations if you are a polling junkie. The rest of us will do fine by just checking the polling averages at the various websites that aggregate them all.

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Trump defenders whine that the Mueller probe is taking too long -- but history shows they're wrong

Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election and possible collusion with Donald Trump's campaign has just entered its second year. It has resulted in criminal indictments of several individuals and Russian companies and a number of other actions.

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The steep consequences of Disney's bet on Roseanne Barr -- a star with a history of spewing bigotry

For a company that has built its multibillion dollar brand on animated features based on fairy tales, it’s a little surprising that Disney isn’t up on its fables. One that could have come in handy is that classic of unknown origin about the scorpion and the frog. You know it, right? It’s a fun bit: A scorpion asks a frog if it can ride on its back to cross a river, and promises the frog it won’t sting him.

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Trump desperately wants to blame Russia scandal on Obama in his latest attempt to weaponize confusion

To describe the ongoing story of the Russian attack on our election as “complicated” vastly understates its working parts. Since July 2016, when the linkage was first established between the infiltration of the Democratic National Committee servers and a Kremlin-connected hacker collective, there have been hundreds of bombshell news items describing the extent of what happened. In some cases, we have seen multiple stories dropping in a single day.

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The morass of Trump's idiocy has become the new normal -- but don't let it distract you from his true goals

In both its title and chorus, Florence Reece’s classic labor song of 1931 asked its audience the only pertinent political question in times of civil duress: “Which side are you on?” Repeated in covers by Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Billy Bragg, and other folk singers conversant in the traditional music of the union movement, Reece’s lyrics present a simple yet steadfast choice – you can either be on the right side, or the wrong.

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If Rudy Giuliani is getting booed at Yankee Stadium where is Trump going to live after his presidency?

At Yankee Stadium on Monday, Rudy Giuliani could not even draw a polite round of applause for his birthday, speaking to his ruined legacy in the community. Instead, Yankee fans viciously booed Giuliani on Memorial Day, a humiliating blow for the former mayor who oversaw the aftermath of Sept. 11.

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Trump dehumanizes minorities to gain the approval of angry whites -- according to science

Writing for the New York Times, demographics expert Thomas Edsall looked askance on President Donald Trump calling members of MS-13 "animals" during a rant on undocumented immigrants and tried to figure out a more scientific approach as to why Trump using the highly inflammatory rhetoric.

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Florida columnist bashes Trump's diehard supporters by using their own words to show they're beyond reason

Writing for the Miami Herald, columnist Leonard Pitts explained that he wanted to take a new approach to describing the unreasonableness and viciousness of Trump's most diehard supporters -- so he decided to publish comments he receives from the president's fans, saying their words speak for themselves.

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What did Hannah Arendt really mean by 'the banality of evil?'

Can one do evil without being evil? This was the puzzling question that the philosopher Hannah Arendt grappled with when she reported for The New Yorker in 1961 on the war crimes trial of Adolph Eichmann, the Nazi operative responsible for organising the transportation of millions of Jews and others to various concentration camps in support of the Nazi’s Final Solution.

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About the kind of people who believe in conspiracy theories

The internet is full of wild-eyed insinuation. Seemingly accidental events are not actually accidental. A few powerful people have hatched plots to bring about certain outcomes, usually with the goal of benefitting the shadowy string-pullers. As Karl Popper noted in Conjectures and Refutations (1963), some people tend to attribute anything they dislike to the intentional design of a few influential ‘others’. While conspiracy theories have long existed, the internet has accelerated their circulation (like the circulation of all information). Who believes in conspiracies, and what might these people have in common?

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Understanding ignorance -- and why you don't have the right to believe whatever you want

Do we have the right to believe whatever we want to believe? This supposed right is often claimed as the last resort of the wilfully ignorant, the person who is cornered by evidence and mounting opinion: ‘I believe climate change is a hoax whatever anyone else says, and I have a right to believe it!’ But is there such a right?

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It's time to start treating American patriotism – the most deadly form of identity politics – as a question, not an answer

Patriotism is the organising passion of modern political life in the United States yet its vitality defies obvious explanation. The country has no national education system. There’s neither compulsory military nor civil service. No government agency distributes the ubiquitous US flags, nor enforces observance of the rituals to country performed at schools and sporting and political events throughout the country. Despite lacking the classic machinery for inculcating patriotism and spreading it among the people, American patriotism is a norm in the true sense: at least within the US itself, it exists in a place without question.

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