Opinion

The New York Times has destroyed the most important myth about Trump -- and exposed the breadth of his lies and corruption

On his way out of town on Tuesday afternoon, President Trump took some questions from the press corps and defended embattled Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's youthful drinking habits. Trump said that while he has never had a beer himself he knows lots of people who have and he doesn't consider it a problem.

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This major flaw in Donald Trump's personality is why he's so intolerable -- and a terrible president

In The War Years Lincoln biographer and poet Carl Sandburg wrote,“Lincoln was the first true humorist to occupy the White House. No other President of the United States had come to be identified, for good or bad, with a relish for the comic.” More recently Richard Carwardine has devoted a whole book to Lincoln's humor. In contrast, former FBI director James Comey has stated that he never personally witnessed President Trump laugh, and conservative columnist Max Boot has written, “Has there ever been a president as humorless as Donald Trump? Doubtful.”

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Watch: Here's how we know Brett Kavanaugh is lying

Recognizing that his 10,000-word essay was potentially "a lot" for some consumers, Nathan J. Robinson, editor-in-chief of Current Affairs magazine, has created a video version with the same title—"How We Know Kavanaugh Is Lying"—for those who might find it easier to digest.

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Brett Kavanaugh goes to the movies

I’m a film studies professor, so when I first saw an image of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s June 1982 calendar, I immediately noticed his movie plans.

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Here is what it would take to impeach Brett Kavanaugh if he's confirmed to the Supreme Court

In so many respects, the behavior of Republicans in response to sexual abuse allegations against Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh—President Donald Trump’s second nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court—has been appalling. Senate Republicans have spent more time attacking Democrats than considering the allegations of Christine Blasey Ford (the Palo Alto University psychology professor alleges that Kavanaugh tried to rape her back in 1982), Deborah Ramirez (who alleges that Kavanaugh placed his penis in her face when she was intoxicated at an early 1980s dorm party at Yale University) and Julie Swetnick (who alleges that Kavanaugh was present when she was drugged and gangrapedin 1982). And when Republicans in the Senate Judiciary Committee begrudgingly agreed to a September 27 hearing on Ford’s allegations, most of them were still resisting an FBI investigation—it wasn’t until Arizona Sen. Jeff Flake demanded one the following day that they changed their minds.

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Brett Kavanaugh can mark it on his calendar -- the day he turned into Donald Trump

At the end of the day — and, yes, at the end of a long, long, long day — we still don’t know whether Brett Kavanaugh sexually assaulted Christine Blasey Ford back when they were both in high school in the early ’80s.

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Here is why Thomas Jefferson's not-so-radical religious views could be a remedy for the moral illnesses of the Trump era

Jefferson was a uncompromising liberal when it came to religion. He expresses that sentiment in a letter to Patrick Henry (11 Oct. 1776): “The care of every man’s soul belongs to himself. But what if he neglect the care of it? Well what if he neglect the care of his health or estate, which more nearly relate to the state? Will the magistrates make a law that he shall not be poor or sick? Laws provide against injury from others; but not from ourselves. God himself will not save men against their wills.”

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Think Republican women will turn on Brett Kavanaugh — or Donald Trump? Think again

Are Republican women ever going to get fed up? It's the question that keeps cropping up after every incident of Republican political leaders minimizing, denying or excusing sexual harassment and abuse. So far, the answer is no. Republican women did not turn on Donald Trump after a tape was released featuring him bragging about sexual assault. Republican women did not turn on the party when it backed Roy Moore's campaign for a U.S. Senate seat in Alabama, despite numerous reports of him creeping on teen girls as an adult man. Now the question is being raised again, in light of the allegations of sexual assault against Brett Kavanaugh, Donald Trump's nominee to the Supreme Court.

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'A contest between the bullies and the bullied': Donald Trump, Brett Kavanaugh, Christine Ford and the November midterm elections

As a kid I was always a head shorter than other boys, which meant I was bullied – mocked, threatened, sometimes assaulted.

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A psychologist explains what Brett Kavanaugh could have said about that night that would have been honest

One thing I learned as a psychotherapist is that we tend to believe the stories we tell ourselves about our past and who we are–and revising them can be tough work. I have found myself thinking about that often as #metoo accusations and denials have played out around us, and especially now, during the Kavanaugh hearings.

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Is Brett Kavanaugh a conspiracy-mongering slimeball?

The question in front of the Judiciary Committee was really whether Judge Kavanaugh is a slime ball or is he being slimed. Initially I was one who didn’t know. What I did know was his positions were an anathema to me with regard to many issues including Roe v. Wade and his generally right-wing stances.

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Here is how the Supreme Court can be saved from Donald Trump

Last week's historic Senate Judiciary Committee hearing featuring Dr. Christine Blasey Ford and Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh was primarily about sexual violence and accountability. But it was also about lies, and those issues are inextricably linked at many levels.

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Trump is accelerating the death of the American empire

When you think about it, Earth is a relatively modest-sized planet -- about 25,000 miles in circumference at the Equator, with a total surface area of 197 million square miles, almost three-quarters of which is water. It’s not so hard, if you’re in a certain frame of mind (as American officials were after 1991), to imagine that a single truly great nation -- a “sole superpower” with a high-tech military, its capabilities unparalleled in history -- might in some fashion control it all.

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