Opinion

This was the most damning thing Robert Mueller just said about Trump

In a brief statement to the press on Wednesday, Special Counsel Robert Mueller offered little new substantial information even as he highlighted many of the key aspects of the report on his investigation. He made clear that, if he testified before Congress, he doesn’t intend to offer comments that go beyond the content of the report — and made clear that he wouldn’t answer hypotheticals about whether he would have indicted President Donald Trump were he not president.

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Here are 4 key moments from Mueller’s stunning statement on the Russia investigation

Breaking his extended silence, special counsel Robert Mueller publicly spoke for ten minutes on the Russia investigation in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday morning at 11 a.m. EST. Here are some of the highlights.

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Rudy Giuliani's back: Trump's sleaziest hitman delivered 2016 victory -- can he do it again?

A few years ago I wrote here in Salon about a phrase I call "Cokie's Law," referring to a comment by journalist Cokie Roberts during the Lewinsky scandal. There was a silly kerfuffle over Hillary Clinton allegedly claiming that her husband's philandering was a result of his rough childhood. Roberts said,

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Trump nearly killed democracy in just one day last week — can it still be saved?

Future historians will mark last Thursday, May 23, as an especially important day in the decline of American democracy in the age of Donald Trump. The date will not be noted by an asterisk but rather with an exclamation mark.

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How Republican dirty tricks got even dirtier: The GOP has played dirty for years — In the Trump era, they’ve pushed even further

In his State of the Union address, Donald Trump gave Congress a choice between doing one half of its job or another.

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Mitch McConnell's new admission confirms he pulled a historic fraud on the American people

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made plain on Tuesday that he’s just as manipulative, mendacious, and unprincipled as any of his critics have ever said.

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Trump's 2020 strategy sounds surprisingly familiar

Unsurprisingly, Donald Trump spent Memorial Day sending out petty tweets about former Vice President Joe Biden, who continues to hold the lead in Democratic presidential primary polls.  In his typical trolling fashion, Trump floated the offensive and preposterous argument that he would somehow perform better with black voters than Biden in the 2020 race.
Many, many progressives on Twitter immediately gulped down Trump's bait, pointing out that Trump has been a blatant racist his entire life, was literally sued by the government for racial discrimination and called the neo-Nazis who organized a march for white supremacy in Charlottesville "fine people."This article was originally published at Salon

None of that is wrong, of course. Trump is a racist who actively encourages the rise of white nationalism, even as he fussily denies it when called out. But it's naive to imagine that Trump sincerely believes he can somehow win over black voters in 2020. The man is no one's idea of a genius, but he's not that stupid.

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Unlike the rest of the Trump Administration, Bill Barr actually knows how to do his job – and that's a bad thing

Last week’s White House decision to give the attorney general total discretion about selectively making public information collected, processed, vetted and held by 17 federal intelligence agencies was too broad a policy to let pass without question.

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Goodbye Fourth of July: Our self-aggrandizer-in-chief is hellbent on making the theme of the day Trump’s America

Years ago, I was interviewing the college roommate of a famous politician who told the story of being sent to a shop by the pol to pick up a large impressive trophy. It would be presented at an official school dinner that night. Is this for the university president, the roommate asked? No, the politician replied, without missing a beat, it’s for me.

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Think Donald Trump wants to be impeached and acquitted? Ask his old pal O.J. Simpson

President Trump is back in Washington on Tuesday after yet another disastrous foreign trip. This time he managed to embarrass himself by saying that Korean dictator Kim Jong-un's missile testing didn't "bother" him. This came as he stood next to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe, who clearly disagreed, seeing as his country would be among North Korea's most likely target. Then Trump launched into some juvenile insults against Joe Biden, saying he and Kim had agreed that Biden is a "low IQ individual" and tweeting that Japanese dignitaries had said that Biden would be a disaster for the United States. In other words, our president behaved like a petulant child, as usual.

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Scapegoating George Soros: How media-savvy right-wing extremists spread lies

Facebook recently banned several far-right extremists, including Canadian Faith Goldy, who made a failed bid for Toronto mayor last year. Far-right media darling Lauren Southern was denied admission to the United Kingdom last year because of her extremist political activities.

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Democrats' push for impeachment really is gaining steam — but they may have already made a fatal mistake

Despite clear opposition from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the push to impeach President Donald Trump driven by many Democrats both in and out of Congress appears to be gaining steam.

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Why religion is not going away and science will not destroy it

In 1966, just over 50 years ago, the distinguished Canadian-born anthropologist Anthony Wallace confidently predicted the global demise of religion at the hands of an advancing science: ‘belief in supernatural powers is doomed to die out, all over the world, as a result of the increasing adequacy and diffusion of scientific knowledge’. Wallace’s vision was not exceptional. On the contrary, the modern social sciences, which took shape in 19th-century western Europe, took their own recent historical experience of secularisation as a universal model. An assumption lay at the core of the social sciences, either presuming or sometimes predicting that all cultures would eventually converge on something roughly approximating secular, Western, liberal democracy. Then something closer to the opposite happened.

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