Opinion

How Donald Trump's destructiveness forced us to a point of reckoning about America

If every cloud has a silver lining, Donald Trump's destructiveness offers this one: He has forced us to a point of reckoning about America. If we think all this chaos is just about him, we've missed the whole point. On that point, there's wide agreement. Beyond that, however, there's considerable disagreement, if not confusion. The vast majority of elite discourse sees this in terms of a challenge to liberal democracy — a challenge that's been unfolding worldwide over the past decade or so, sometimes characterized as a "third wave of autocratization."

There's a large body of knowledge and experience behind this point of view (see groups such as Varieties of Democracy for a global perspective, or Bright Lines Watch in the U.S.). But such an idealized view of American democracy has always been challenged by African Americans, for instance: See Frederick Douglass' "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?" or Langston Hughes' "Let America Be America Again.") Trump's election, in obvious response to Barack Obama's, has had the effect of pushing the longstanding Black critique of American democracy to the very center of our politics.

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These 9 red states should have their results thrown out based on GOP 'fraud' claims

Everyone knows Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will be sworn in January 20. Donald Trump will leave by that day, one way or another.

Before that happens, however, a sizeable number of Republicans will challenge the integrity of U.S. elections to curry favor with Trump's angry political base. It is perhaps the most ironic of Trump's legacies that the subject of election reform will long outlast his tenure. It indeed cries out for attention, just not for the bogus reasons he claims. Voter suppression and the need to make the franchise more accessible to more Americans do require immediate attention.

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Americans lash out at GOP for refusal to act during Trump impeachment but freak out over #TrumpTapes now

Americans can now hear with their own ears just how far President Donald Trump is willing to go to steal the election from President-elect Joe Biden.

About a year ago, however, Republicans in the Senate refused to even hear evidence of Trump doing exactly the same thing, using the power of his office to attempt to influence someone into interfering with his election so he can win.

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Calls for Trump impeachment after he's busted for 'criminal election tampering' in Georgia phone call

Commenters on Twitter were stunned on Sunday morning after a bombshell Washington Post report claimed that Donald Trump pressured Georgia's secretary of state to rustle up over 11,000 votes so he could win the state's 16 electoral votes.

According to the report the Post "obtained a recording of the conversation in which Trump alternately berated [Brad] Raffensperger, tried to flatter him, begged him to act and threatened him with vague criminal consequences if the secretary of state refused to pursue his false claims, at one point warning that Raffensperger was taking 'a big risk.'"

The post also noted that Trump was very specific about the number of votes he wanted telling the Georgia official, "So look. All I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have. Because we won the state."

Commenters on Twitter were quick to point out that Trump's call was both criminal and impeachable with one saying the phone call was "absolutely insane.".

See below:


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'Biggest fraud in the Senate': Lindsey Graham attacked by Trump fans after shooting down GOP election stunt

Sunday morning, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) broke ranks with multiple colleagues in the Senate who are proposing to hold up the certification of President-elect Joe Biden's win over Donald Trump -- and that has fans of the president hopping mad.

In a series of tweets, the ardent defender of Donald Trump wrote, "Proposing a commission at this late date – which has zero chance of becoming reality – is not effectively fighting for President Trump. It appears to be more of a political dodge than an effective remedy," before adding, "My colleagues will have the opportunity to make this case, and I will listen closely. But they have a high bar to clear."

Graham immediately felt the wrath of Trump's supporters who accused him of being a fraud" ...and worse.

A sampling below:


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'You vile monster': Trump slammed for trying to diminish the COVID-19 death toll

Donald Trump's accusation that the Centers for Disease Control is inflating the number of Americans who have been infected or died from COVID-19 was hammered on Twitter Sunday morning, as critics reminded him that --whatever the number -- he is responsible for bungling the pandemic response.

According to the president, "The number of cases and deaths of the China Virus is far exaggerated in the United States because of @CDCgov 's ridiculous method of determination compared to other countries, many of whom report, purposely, very inaccurately and low. "When in doubt, call it Covid." Fake News!"

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Amid surging poverty, 500 richest grew $1.8 trillion wealthier in 2020

Bloomberg's year-end report on the wealth of the world's billionaires shows that the richest 500 people on the planet added $1.8 trillion to their combined wealth in 2020, accumulating a total net worth of $7.6 trillion.

The Bloomberg Billionaires Index recorded its largest annual gain in the list's history last year, with a 31% increase in the wealth of the richest people.

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Another scandal at West Point -- where secrecy comes before honor

There are two things you can be sure of when you read the words, "West Point honor scandal": It's always way bigger than they say, and it's never as simple as it appears. That's why the "scandal" announced at the U.S. Military Academy last week, after 73 freshman cadets were apparently caught cheating on a calculus exam in May, is almost certainly not what it seems.

This article first appeared in Salon.

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A party divided: Lindsey Graham slams Mitch McConnell

U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina addresses the National Guard Association of the United States 138th General Conference, Baltimore, Md., Sept. 11, 2016. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. 1st Class Jim Greenhill)

Farewell to privacy: Lindsay Graham unveils a bill that would make encryption useless

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Trump attorney Jenna Ellis ridiculed after she flees Lin Woods over bizarre conspiracy rants

Jenna Ellis, an attorney who has been unsuccessful in her endeavors to get any court to overturn election results for Donald Trump based on allegations of voter fraud, attempted to put some distance between herself and attorney Lin Woods after days of bizarre accusations on Twitter.

Following a week in which Woods has accused the son of Justice Antonin Scalia of having a hand in the death of his father, linked Chief Justice John Roberts to accused pedophile Jeffrey Epstein and said Vice President Mike Pence would be arrested and tried for treason, Ellis appeared to have enough.

She then tweeted, "To be clear: I do not support the statements from Attorney Lin Wood. I support the rule of law and the U.S. Constitution."

As one commenter was quick to point out, "Too late now Jenna."

You can see more of that below:


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'They won't succeed': GOP lawmaker reveals what Republicans really think about overturning the election

Rep. Adam Kinzinger of Illinois has been feuding with Alabama Rep. Mo Brooks and other fellow Republicans over their plans to contest 2020's Electoral College results when the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives meet for a joint session of Congress on January 6. The conservative Illinois congressman has made it abundantly clear that he accepts Joe Biden as president-elect, and in a video posted on New Year's Eve, Kinzinger explained why he is refusing to go along with Republicans who won't publicly admit that President Donald Trump lost the election.

"The president doesn't want to admit defeat, and nobody would," the 42-year-old Kinzinger explains in his video. "But he's currently trying to discredit the election results through falsehoods and conspiracies. As someone trusted to lead, I have a choice. I can be quiet, and I can survive by taking the easy path. Or, I can speak up and lead without concern for the consequences. I choose to lead without fear."

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Trump lashes out at Senate Republicans — just when they need him the most

President Donald Trump fumed on Friday after the Senate voted by a wide margin to override his veto of the National Defense Authorization Act, the legislation that funds the Pentagon.

While Trump has usually touted his push for increased funding of the military, he decided to use the transition period as an opportunity to block the $740 billion bill as leverage to repeal Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. The provision protects online platforms from liability for posts by users, and the right wing has — for reasons that are not entirely clear — latched on to the idea that repealing it will address their major grievances with tech companies.

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Trump mocked for tiny crowd at Mar-a-Lago super-spreader New Year's Eve party with Vanilla Ice

President Donald Trump left Mar-a-Lago early to go back to Washington one week ahead of his Jan. 6 protest rally he intends to host to attack the 2020 election results. That left a void of attendees interested in hanging out with Donald Trump Jr., Kimberly Guilfoyle, Rudy Giuliani and Vanilla Ice.

"No official explanation for the President's early departure from Mar-a-Lago was given, though he remains consumed with efforts to overturn the election results and tensions are ratcheting up in the Persian Gulf ahead of the one-year anniversary of the US killing of Iran's top general," CNN.com reported.

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