Opinion

Did Bannon and Breitbart fabricate a media decoy to distract from Trump's biggest scandal?

Why did Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, the national voice of the Republican’s toxic effort to hijack elections by rigging the voting process, spread out a pathetic and immediately debunked big lie about thousands of illegal voters in New Hampshire last November—an allegation that also was debunked last winter by none other than Donald Trump’s first campaign manager Corey Lewandoski?

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The Trump administration's newest lie may be its most galling yet: Paul Krugman

Trump's decision to wind down the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program is a moral abomination. As many as 800,000 people, who were brought to the United States as young children and have lived in the country their entire lives, face the prospect of deportation because the Department of Justice claims, among other dubious justifications, that these immigrants have "denied jobs to hundreds of thousands of Americans."

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Over 5 million families in America are at risk of being 'divided by deportation'

Trump has been attacking immigrant communities since his first days in office and shows no sign of slowing down. His cruel elimination of DACA, a program that protects nearly 1 million young people, is only the latest of Trump’s many despicable acts.

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Here is the most dangerous company most Americans have never heard of

Gather around, everyone, and let me tell you a story about rules. And greed and hypocrisy.

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The ex-KKK priest and the subtle terrorism of the anti-abortion movement

Largely lost in the coverage of the Rev. William Aitcheson, the priest serving in a Northern Virginia Catholic Church until he was revealed as a former member of the KKK, is his history of abortion clinic protests. According to the Washington Post:

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Trump's cruel and inaccurate boast about General Pershing was even more ignorant than you think

The remarks by President Donald Trump on American strategy in Afghanistan have evoked considerable commentary and even praise from some pundits for maintaining a military presence in South Asia even if the long term goals of that commitment remain rather murky. Another Trump comment in response to the recent terrorist attacks in Barcelona have received far less attention and this silence may speak volumes about how a naïve belief in American innocence and exceptionalism prevents Americans from understanding the world and why we are often perceived in such negative terms.

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I used to obsess over what anti-gay Christians thought -- here's why I stopped caring

For years, I cared what anti-gay Christians thought about me. Deeply. I spent countless hours arguing the finer points of scriptural history and interpretation with them – especially the “clobber passages” – those six or seven passages that they claim unequivocally condemn homosexuality. I cared so much that I created an Whosoever, an online magazine – back in 1996 with the mission of arguing against anti-gay Christians and equipping my fellow LGBT Christians to do the same. I even wrote a book, Bulletproof Faith: A Spiritual Survival Guide for Gay and Lesbian Christians, to help others who deeply cared about what anti-gay Christians believed and said cope with the ongoing battle for our right as LGBT Christians to actually exist.

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Here is why Americans are drawn to the 'holy hypocrisy' of the prosperity gospel

Last month, my colleagues and I were moved by a beautiful and tragic New York Times editorial by Kate Bowler, a religion professor from Duke Divinity School who was recently diagnosed with stage 4 cancer.

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The prosperity gospel was not the only problem with Joel Osteen's Harvey response

Twitter was outraged. Megachurch Pastor Joel Osteen’s Lakewood Church, housed in a former basketball arena, looked to be dry and quiet, even as thousands of Houstonians were seeking shelter from Hurricane Harvey. “Joel Osteen” started to trend on Twitter with comments about the hypocrisy of the prominent Prosperity Gospel preacher, who tweeted out that he and his wife were praying for Houston, while appearing not to do anything to address the great needs of his neighbors.

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When Trump denounces the 'fake media' his anti-Semitic fans hear 'Jewish media'

His attacks resemble Henry Ford’s. He too was embraced by anti-Semites.

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Here are 7 things you need to know about the mindset of white supremacists

The neo-Nazis with whom Donald Trump openly sympathizes fit a psychological profile for the most part, according to two psychologists who just released a survey on the subject. Patrick Forscher and Nour Kteily, researchers from the University of Arkansas and Northwestern University respectively, compiled their findings into a working paper titled “A Psychological Profile of the Alt-Right.” To arrive at their conclusions, they polled 447 neo-Nazis who self-identify as members of the “alt-right,” and compared their answers with 382 non-group affiliated survey subjects.

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Using Hitler's playbook? A German historian uncovers the ominous message behind Trump's pardon

In August of 1932, in the town of Potempa, nine Nazi Stormtroopers murdered a supporter of the German Communist Party, kicking him to death in his own apartment as his family watched in horror. Six were convicted with five receiving the death penalty. After the verdict, Hitler sent them a telegram in which he declared to them his “boundless loyalty.” Shortly after he came to power in 1933, he pardoned the killers. While former Sheriff Joe Arpaio never kicked anyone to death, his pardon by President Trump raises disturbing parallels.

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Here are 8 reasons Jared and Ivanka are as useless and detestable as anyone in Trump's White House

Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump—or Javanka, as some terrible person has dubbed them—moved to Washington, D.C. eight months ago certain they'd become America’s preeminent power couple. Turns out that vision was clouded by an inability to see beyond their own cloistered versions of reality.

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