Opinion

Woman begs bystanders not to call ambulance due to expense after being trapped and injured by subway car

As Americans across the country celebrate Independence Day with parades, barbecues, and fireworks displays, the story of a woman begging bystanders not to call an ambulance after she was injured in an accident went viral this week—with universal healthcare advocates pointing to the incident as clear evidence that a Medicare for All system would bring gravely-needed relief to all Americans.

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How Trump may be plotting to finally fire Robert Mueller once and for all

President Donald Trump has a problem, and EPA chief Scott Pruitt may be the solution.

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Here are four things right wingers always get wrong about the Declaration of Independence

Every year, on the Fourth of July, NPR has a tradition of reading the Declaration of Independence on July 4. It's a fun little tradition, and one few people thought much about.

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A psychologist explains how to fight right-wing trolls -- and actually win

The right has become an epidemic of exhibitionists. Right-wing trolls sidle up to people on TV, the internet and in person pretending that they want a reasoned discussion. When they’ve got your attention, they open their trench coats to show off their firm pointy little “truths,” anticipating your reaction. It gets them excited to see you respond in predictable ways. They have themselves a little trollgasm, proving to themselves once again that they’ve found the formula for flummoxing everyone always.

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Trump's life has been one failure after another -- his presidency will be no different

Before he was the nominee of the Republican Party, Donald Trump took the stage in March of 2016 flanked by pallets of bottled water, rows of wine bottles and, most peculiarly, a pile of raw steaks. This bizarre stunt came in response to a critical speech made days earlier by Mitt Romney in which the 2012 Republican nominee listed Trump’s failed ventures and declared, “A business genius he is not.”

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We need to take Donald Trump's threats of violence seriously -- before it's too late

Last weekend, on the Fox News program "Sunday Morning Futures," President Donald Trump struck a new note in his constant authoritarian posturing. He vowed that his supporters would retaliate against Democrats and any others who dare to disagree with him.

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These 3 Trump associates have insinuated he knew about meeting with Russians during his campaign

President Donald Trump's long-time lawyer Michael Cohen is now the third person in Trump's circle to refuse to confirm that Trump didn't know about a 2016 meeting with Russian lobbyists in Trump Tower.

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The world is full of bullsh*t -- but here's how you can vaccinate yourself against it

We live in the age of information, which means that we also live in the age of misinformation. Indeed, you have likely come across more bullshit so far this week than a normal person living 1,000 years ago would in their entire lifetime. If we were to add up every word in every scholarly piece of work published prior to the Enlightenment, this number would still pale in comparison with the number of words used to promulgate bullshit on the internet in the 21st century alone.

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This is why you shouldn't try to shield your mind from abhorrent beliefs

Many of our choices have the potential to change how we think about the world. Often the choices taken are for some kind of betterment: to teach us something, to increase understanding or to improve ways of thinking. What happens, though, when a choice promises to alter our cognitive perspective in ways that we regard as a loss rather than a gain?

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A trusted lawyer turned on a corrupt president 45 years ago — and changed history. Are we ready for a hero who saves America from Trump?

If there's one thing that must give a shady businessman or corrupt politician sleepless nights it's the knowledge that his attorney is about to cooperate with federal prosecutors in a case against him. The lawyer is the one person, with the exception of his spouse (and maybe not even then), entrusted with his most nefarious secrets. If that lawyer is also his self-described "fixer," already known to pay hush money and personally threaten people on his behalf, well, let's just say sleepless nights aren't the half of it.

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There's a mysterious web linking the Trump family to Anthony Kennedy

Balzac knew that behind every great fortune there is a crime. But if he were contemplating the retirement of Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, the great French novelist might have put it another way: Behind every great crime is another crime.

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This is the psychological trick that conservatives use to galvanize their base

True righteousness, like true bravery or true love, will cost you. You have to put risky, expensive effort into it or else it’s just lip service.  We each have limited effort to expend. How we expend it is the true expression of our priorities.

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Here's why you don't have the right to believe whatever you want

Do we have the right to believe whatever we want to believe? This supposed right is often claimed as the last resort of the wilfully ignorant, the person who is cornered by evidence and mounting opinion: ‘I believe climate change is a hoax whatever anyone else says, and I have a right to believe it!’ But is there such a right?

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