Opinion

Here are 10 things you should know about the lunatic Ayn Rand

"The reason I got involved in public service, by and large, if I had to credit one thinker, one person, it would be Ayn Rand."

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Lessons of Maria Butina: Are men too easily flattered by young women to be trusted with power?

Overall, the various scandals involving Donald Trump, his associates and Russian agents tend not to bring to mind sexy spy thrillers so much as screwy comedy. One theme, however, would fit just as comfortably in classic film noir as in absurdist comedy: Powerful, aging men brought low by their own pathetic desire to believe comely young women are really into them.

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Here are the 6 most egregious lies in 2018 from Trump press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders

Sarah Huckabee Sanders has a legacy of lying to such a degree it's become a farce.

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The truth about the Steele Dossier: Experts compare the infamous memo with Mueller's findings

A former U.S. attorney and a Harvard Law student teamed up to revisit the Steele dossier by cross-referencing it with special counsel Robert Mueller's findings -- and unveiled which parts of it hold water.

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Here's how Trump's ridiculous presidential dreams turned into a real legal nightmare

Can we, after all these months, find it within ourselves to manage a teeny-tiny, eensie-weensie, little itty-bitty smidgen of sympathy for Donald Trump? It doesn’t have to be much. Something about the size of the period at the end of this sentence would do. I mean, all the man did was run for president and accidentally win, and now it’s all over Twitter and everywhere else that he could end up in jail!

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Trump's worst legal nightmare isn't Robert Mueller: Meet Letitia James

The blue wave that came with the 2018 midterms was bad for President Donald Trump not only because Democrats obtained a majority in the House of Representatives (with a net gain of 40 seats) and picked up more than 350 seats in state legislatures around the United States—they were also bad for the president because of a Brooklyn native named Letitia James. On November 6, the 60-year-old Democrat was elected attorney general for New York State. And James has made it abundantly clear that after she starts her new job in January, she will launch comprehensive investigations of Trump, his family and his business associates.

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Here are the top 10 reasons I don't believe in God

"But just because religion has done some harm -- that doesn't mean it's mistaken! Sure, people have done terrible things in God's name. That doesn't mean God doesn't exist!"

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Paul Ryan’s disgraceful last act: Providing cover for Trump

The Senate finally found its spine this week. But just as Mitch McConnell steadied his wobbly feet to stand up to Donald Trump, Paul Ryan swooped in to undercut one of the only real acts of Republican resistance in two years of galling fecklessness.

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Here are 5 of the biggest legal perils the Trump White House will face in the new year

MSNBC’s Mika Brzezinski made an accurate statement when, on December 14, she told co-host Joe Scarborough—the anti-Trump conservative and former Republican congressman who co-hosts “Morning Joe” with her—that President Donald Trump has faced “an avalanche of bad legal news” in recent days. From Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen being sentenced to three years in federal prison for, among other things, campaign finance violations, to American Media, Inc. (the National Enquirer’s parent company) admitting that it paid hush money to Playboy model Karen McDougal on Trump’s behalf during the 2016 election, 2018 is not ending on a favorable note for the president. And on December 13, Russian spy Maria Butina pled guilty in federal court to conspiring against the United States, admitting that she infiltrated the Republican Party and the National Rifle Association on behalf of the Russian government.

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This perfectly illustrates how low our craven, so-called public servants are willing to stoop for a buck

There was a time when, once they left the job, a former cabinet head or member of Congress would find employment back home casting their seeds of knowledge and experience in the local groves of academe. Or return to naps on the cracked leather sofa at his or her old law firm in South Bend or Twin Falls or Toledo.

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The bombshell revelations about the National Enquirer could doom the president -- and Trump knows it

Bill Clinton made a number of memorable comments over his years in public life, from "I feel your pain" to "It depends on what the meaning of 'is' is." But I think we all know that the one he will be most remembered for is this infamous line: "I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky, and I never told anyone to lie, not even once." That will probably be in the first paragraph of his obituary.

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Why won’t the Supreme Court do anything about racism?

The Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke fired 16 shots, killing the African-American teenager Laquan McDonald; 14 of those shots were apparently fired while McDonald lay on the ground. It took four years and the expulsion of the state attorney general before the trial against Van Dyke for first-degree murder resulted in convictions for the lesser crimes of second-degree murder and aggravated battery this October. Before the shooting, Van Dyke ranked among the worst 3 per cent of officers in excessive force allegations, making him identifiable as a ‘problem officer’ even before he killed McDonald. This case is remarkable not for the violence committed by a white police officer against an unarmed African American, but because it involved a rare instance of the United States’ legal system scrutinising a police shooting. The courts in the US have done little to intervene more generally in the mass surveillance, mass violence and mass incarceration affecting people of colour.

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The NRA’s financial weakness, explained

The National Rifle Association’s political spending fell during the 2018 midterm elections. There’s talk of ending small perks like free coffee at its offices and even employee layoffs.

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