Opinion

Inside the 'irregular warfare' campaign Putin is conducting against America

Trump says that the guilty verdict against him — by a jury of his peers that his own attorneys vetted — is an illegitimate, politically motivated show trial.

Trying to help Trump destroy Americans’ faith in our democracy and its justice system, Russian president Vladimir Putin’s spokesman today said of Trump’s trial:

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Liberals are being way too cynical about Trump's conviction

Friday was a very bad day for Donald Trump. Bill Pruitt, a producer on Donald Trump’s reality TV show The Apprentice, published a piece accusing Trump of using the n-word to denigrate a finalist on the show — and to justify not letting them win.

That was in the morning. By the afternoon, Trump was convicted by a jury of his peers on all 34 counts of falsifying business records related to hush money payments. Trump was covering up a sexual encounter with adult film star Stormy Daniels. He was worried that if the story came out it would cost him the 2016 election.

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Why is everyone so grumpy about the economy?

Americans think the economy sucks and while the Democratic response of “nuh uh!” is technically correct, it’s probably not politically viable. People historically vote based on their wallets, so it’s a serious problem for the incumbent president (that’s Joe Biden) if a majority of Americans wrongly believe we’re in a recession. A recent Harris poll for the Guardian detailed these upside-down sentiments:

55% believe the economy is shrinking, and 56% think the US is experiencing a recession, though the broadest measure of the economy, gross domestic product (GDP), has been growing.

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Stop wondering if Trump’s felony convictions will hurt his campaign — just listen to him

Do yourself a favor. Stop wondering if Donald Trump’s felony conviction on 34 counts of business fraud in Manhattan is going to hurt his campaign. Stop wondering, because there’s nothing to wonder about. The former president and his allies are telling us it’s going to hurt. You don’t need any polling to say what they are saying directly.

Yes, I know. They are adept at spin. The former president and his allies have convinced bored and cynical reporters the thing that looks like it’s going to sink him is the thing that’s going to save him. Bored and cynical reporters have their reasons for believing that. (They’re bored and cynical.) But you don’t have to. Sometimes things are very simple, and it’s simply very bad to be a convicted felon running for president.

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Does Georgia Court’s Latest Decision Mean Trump Could Be on Trial as President if He Wins?

On the Saturday before Election Day in 2016, Donald Trump attacked Hillary Clinton over then-FBI Director Jim Comey reopening his investigation into her emails, with the Republican nominee making the case that his Democratic opponent “should not be allowed to run.”

Now, five months before Election Day in 2024, Donald Trump is in the position he wrongly claimed Hillary Clinton was, only worse.

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Michael Cohen, Red Finch and the fateful moment Trump lost the jury

I have an unusually high win record with jury trials, partly because I’m chubby and matronly, traits jurors seem to find trustworthy. When smart things come out of my pudgy mouth, it’s a novelty to them, like a stuffed animal come to life, and what juror doesn’t want a warm cuddly friend offering life advice?

About 15 years ago, I tried an injury case before a jury in Chicago. This was before Ozempic; I was even fatter. The plaintiff, my client, was walking her dog on a jogging path when she was hit smack in the eye by a golf ball. The ball had sliced 90 degrees right off the first tee from the adjacent public golf course.

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Justice delayed is not always justice denied

As the 12 New Yorkers began deliberating Wednesday and Donald Trump had to stick around the courthouse with nothing to do but wait, he erupted before news cameras and on social media:

"It was weaponization”

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Trump’s felony convictions force Republicans into telling even bigger lies

As you know, one of my mantras is that most people most of the time have something better to do than pay attention to politics. That goes double for criminal prosecutions. Despite the media’s focus on Donald Trump’s trial, most people most of the time did not focus on it. They would focus in the end, and in the end, he was found guilty 34 times.

That most people most of the time do not pay attention to politics can be to Trump’s advantage. He and his allies can lie about the prosecutor, they can lie about the judge, they can lie about Joe Biden’s role, and with those lies, they can win over some people, because those people don’t have a base of knowledge that comes with paying attention.

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Bon appetit, Trump’s zombies

It’s been nearly four years since I wrote that the “Republican Party may not be dead yet, but it’s probably time to put it out of our misery.”

GOP acolytes probably thought I was being mean-spirited. Looking back, it seems I was being generous.

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How stupidity is an existential threat to America

It may sound like an insensitive statement, but the cold hard truth is that there are a lot of stupid people in the world, and their stupidity presents a constant danger to others. Some of these people are in positions of power, and some of them have been elected to run our country. A far greater number of them do not have positions of power, but they still have the power to vote, and the power to spread their ideas. We may have heard of “collective intelligence,” but there is also “collective stupidity,” and it is a force with equal influence on the world. It would not be a stretch to say that at this point in time, stupidity presents an existential threat to America because, in some circles, it is being celebrated.

Although the term "stupidity" may seem derogatory or insulting, it is actually a scientific concept that refers to a specific type of cognitive failure. It is important to realize that stupidity is not simply a lack of intelligence or knowledge, but rather a failure to use one's cognitive abilities effectively. This means that you can be “smart” while having a low IQ, or no expertise in anything. It is often said that “you can’t fix stupid,” but that is not exactly true. By becoming aware of the limitations of our natural intelligence or our ignorance, we can adjust our reasoning, behavior, and decision-making to account for our intellectual shortcomings.

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Should Biden emphasize Trump's guilty verdict or focus on democracy instead?

The jury in the New York criminal case against Trump for falsifying business records to hide a $130,000 payment to adult film actress Stormy Daniels is now deliberating.

If Trump is found guilty, how should Biden respond?

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We're witnessing a large and concerning movement in American history

I was dying…It was just a matter of time. Lying behind the wheel of the airplane, bleeding out of the right side of my devastated body, I waited for the rapid shooting to stop.

—Former Representative Jackie Speier (D-CA) in her memoir Undaunted: Surviving Jonestown, Summoning Courage, and Fighting Back recounting her experience after being shot five times during an ambush during her fact-finding visit to Jonestown, Guyana where Jim Jones and his cult, Peoples Temple, had built a compound.

It, combined with everything else that was going on, made it difficult to breathe…Being crushed by the shield and the people behind it … leaving me defenseless, injured.

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It’s obscene: Inside the Medicare Advantage sham

They’re competing unfairly with Medicare, and you and I are paying for it. It’s obscene.

When George W. Bush and congressional Republicans (and a handful of bought-off Democrats) created Medicare Advantage in 2003, it was the fulfillment of half of Bush’s goal of privatizing Social Security and Medicare, dating all the way back to his unsuccessful run for Congress in 1978 and a main theme of his second term in office.

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