Opinion

Ralph Nader: Forget Mueller. Forget impeachment. A million people should surround the White House and demand Trump's resignation

Special Counsel Robert Mueller spent almost two years to produce a $25 million report that is a flat tire. Still unreleased in full to the American people, Trump’s acolyte, Attorney General William Barr, a longtime friend of Republican Mueller, gave us what Trump long craved—by stating that “the investigation did not establish that members of the Trump campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities” during the 2016 election. As for obstruction of justice by Trump, Attorney General Barr cryptically burped, that “The Special Counsel states that ‘while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him”—whatever that means. Give people the whole report now, as the House of Representatives voted 420 to 0 to do.

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After the Mueller gaslighting, we know the adults won't save us. But the kids might

With William Barr's non-release of the Mueller report, the truth now smacks us in the face: The grown-ups aren't going to save us.  Barr’s predictable sabotage (read the backstory here) was merely icing on the cake, and no one should be surprised that President “Where’s My Roy Cohn” would suddenly go all Joe McCarthy on us in the immediate aftermath, with eagerly promised assistance from his lackey Lindsey Graham. As Greg Sargent says, it’s the same old gaslighting.

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Here are 7 of the wildest moments and lies from Trump’s profane and uninhibited campaign rally

Following the release of Attorney General Bill Barr’s summary of the special counsel’s final report, President Donald Trump has been in a celebratory mood — despite the ambiguous findings presented and the fact that few people really know how damaging the underlying material could be.

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Conservative writer zeros in on the Republican Party’s ‘painfully obvious’ vulnerability — and it’s not Trump

President Donald Trump has, for all intents and purposes, been normalized. He is an unpopular president — he pretty much always has been — but though the prospect of his taking office was once a frightening and norm-shattering idea, it has become the status quo.

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Trump's latest Obamacare challenge is a test of how badly Republicans have dismantled democracy

For months now, there's been a lawsuit quietly working its way through the courts that threatens to end the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as "Obamacare," in its entirety. That case, which was originally filed in February 2018, would be widely understood as a certain loser in normal circumstances. The ACA has survived dozens of court challenges already, and the arguments in this particular case are so legally absurd as to verge on demented. The lawyers behind the case appear to understand this, which is why they filed in a district court run by Reed O'Connor, a north Texas judge who might be the biggest right-wing nut in the federal judiciary.

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Have Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump just pulled off the crime of the century?

Did I miss news footage of 25 Russians in handcuffs being frog-marched off an airplane at Dulles Airport and put under arrest by FBI agents? I didn’t think so, because it didn’t happen.

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This crucial point in the Russia probe may have been the moment Mueller’s conspiracy case was thwarted

Special Counsel Robert Mueller has concluded that he does not have enough evidence to bring a charge of criminal conspiracy between President Donald Trump or anyone associated with his campaign and members of the Russian government, according to Attorney General Bill Barr's summary of the investigations final report.

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Robert Mueller’s ‘most enduring legacy’ may be the most frightening part of his final report

In a lucid and persuasive piece of analysis, New York Times reporter Peter Baker argued that Special Counsel Robert Mueller's final report erases a red line established for presidents first set in the aftermath of Watergate.

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You'll hear these 4 arguments in defense of the Electoral College – here's why they're wrong

For the first time in the country’s modern history, the existence of the Electoral College has become a campaign issue.

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Trump and his vengeful cronies turn to character assassination as they try to flip the script on Democrats

Too much has probably been written about Donald Trump's twisted psychology. It's clear he has many "issues." But while it's interesting to try to unravel what makes him tick, it may be more useful to consider his philosophy if one wants to figure out how to successfully oppose him. Many people assume that the Trump ur-text "The Art of the Deal" offers a window into Trump's worldview. But that book and the others that followed were ghostwritten to sound like something Trump would believe, not what he actually thinks.

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A psychologist explains how incompetent men fail their way to the top

It is perplexing to think that although humans have unprecedented, near-instant access to more historical information than at any point in history, we are in a political epoch characterized by a rise in authoritarians being voted in worldwide. One expert described the current situation as constituting a “global democratic recession." This democratic recession is helmed by — for lack of a better word — incompetent men.  The study of incompetent men, and how they ascend to undeserved leadership positions, has been a personal interest of leadership psychologist Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic. As a child in Argentina, Chamorro-Premuzic observed that his country's politics were characterized by a series of incompetent, mostly-male leaders; ultimately, the politics motivated him to leave the country. “I promised myself that I would do what it took to understand — and help fix — this toxic side of leadership,” he writes in his new book, "Why Do So Many Incompetent Men Become Leaders? (And How To Fix It)," which was published on March 12.

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How to conquer right-wing bullies: It’s not a debate — so stop taking their bait

Yes, they’re dog whistling for racism, sexism, Islamophobia, homophobia, and antisocialism but those are just overtones. We shouldn’t be distracted by them. The dog whistle’s fundamental tune is simply "Join us. We’re Gods. No deed too dirty for us deities.”

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'People aren’t panicking enough': Financial analysts are spooked as a key economic warning sign is 'flashing red'

If you're worried about predicting the next economic recession, there's a key indicator in the financial markets to watch: the yield curve. While it typically slopes upward, the curve has flattened out recently and even turned downward — a phenomenon many observers warn is our best predictor of a recession.

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