Opinion

Trump knows he's losing his grip on his base

It was pretty stunning to see NASCAR — an emblem of Donald Trump’s core support — decide  to ban the Confederate flag from all events and properties.

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How Obama is really the one responsible for this week's big Supreme Court victory

In a piece in Gen, I write about how, ultimately, President Obama — and the work at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission during his administration — paved the way for the massive and stunning Supreme Court win on LGBTQ equality, in which the court ruled that gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people are protected from employment discrimination under Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.

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What the disturbing parallels between 'twisted' Trump and Nixon tell us about the 2020 campaign

History often repeats itself. Just as the vast majority of civil rights and anti-Vietnam War protesters of the 1960s were peaceful, the majority of “Justice for George Floyd” protestors have been peaceful. But President Donald Trump, not unlike Richard Nixon in 1968, is using civil unrest to attack protestors in general and is aggressively campaigning on a law-and-order message.

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'Snowflake' Donald Trump mocked for being so scared of John Bolton's book he made the DOJ sue

President Donald Trump may be headed for another foolish lawsuit that embarrasses him. According to the Justice Department, John Bolton is being sued for moving forward with his book when the administration says it hasn't been cleared by the classification review staff.

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Don't make the mistake of counting Trump out -- yet

Five years ago, on June 16, 2015, I watched in mounting panic as Donald Trump and Melania rode down the escalator at Trump Tower to announce his run for the White House. I immediately dropped everything I was working on because, knowing Trump well, I feared what was about to unfold and it would not be good.

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Our current coronavirus predicament is a direct result of Trump's staggering short-sightedness

Donald Trump wants to pretend the coronavirus is in the rearview mirror, but reports over the weekend suggested that instead the U.S. is witnessing a resurgence of the virus after weeks of decline. Twenty-one states have seen an increase of new cases in recent days. Most of the spikes are in Republican-controlled states like Texas, Florida, Georgia and Arizona, where governors curried favor with Trump by lifting restrictions long before meeting even some of the criteria recommended by public health officials. On Sunday, the death toll from the virus, now at 118,000, surpassed the number of American lives lost in World War I.

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Neil Gorsuch shows how Donald Trump loses white evangelical Christians

When it comes to the president’s support among white evangelical Christians, my first instinct is skepticism. Always. These people are not subject to political factors normal people are subject to, such as a pandemic that has killed more than 118,000 people. There’s precious little Donald Trump can do to alienate them, because the point in supporting him isn’t protecting “religious freedom” or outlawing abortion. The point is seeing people punished who deserve to be punished—and enjoying it.

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'Is he high?': Trump criticized for 'low energy' Rose Garden event filled with 'lies'

President Donald Trump was criticized as being "low energy" during his Rose Garden announcement on police brutality Tuesday.

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What George Floyd’s dying breaths tell our fractured nation

For writers like me, one of the soundest pieces of advice over the last week came from columnist and film historian Mark Harris, who tweeted on Saturday, “I am calling on all my white colleagues to join me in a 24-hour moratorium on personal essays about our feelings.”

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A brief history of the 'Lost Cause': Why this toxic myth still appeals to so many white Americans

By now it should be obvious to anyone paying attention that Donald Trump is one of the most notorious revisionists of any modern president, routinely authoring his own myths, lies and tall tales to counter the brutal reality of his incompetence, malevolence and despotism. It started from Day One, with his easily debunked insistence that his inauguration generated the largest audience in the history of audiences. His myth-making continues today with his whiny laments about his popularity backed with alleged "Democrat hoaxes" surrounding every one of his obvious crimes.

It's no wonder, then, that Trump is a marketeer for the apocryphal "Lost Cause," the toxic revisionist history that emerged in the decades following the Civil War and continues to flourish today. "History," by the way, is used loosely here, given that the Lost Cause is nothing more than a series of dubiously manufactured myths — counterfactual propaganda designed to absolve southern whites of the sins that precipitated and fueled their separation from, and rebellion against, the United States in the name of preserving the right to own African slaves.

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The Supreme Court just dealt a massive blow to the religious right's assault on America

In the cascade of bad news that has marked 2020, it's almost impossible to believe that something good could happen, and yet here we are: On Monday morning, the Supreme Court ruled that gay and trans workers are protected by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits firing someone on the basis of sex. The decision encompasses a number of cases, but the most prominent was that of Aimee Stephens, a trans woman from Michigan who was fired by her longtime employer, Harris Funeral Homes, because she had transitioned from living as a man to living as a woman. Sadly, Stephens did not live to see this victory — she died from kidney failure in May — but she will go down in history as the person who secured this critical right for trans people to do their jobs free of discrimination.

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'Cease and desist?' Trump mocked as new Scott Rasmussen poll backs up the CNN poll his campaign tried to suppress

Pollster Scott Rasmussen has released the results of a poll showing President Donald Trump is doing as badly as a recent CNN poll said he was.

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Trump basically confessed to playing a fake Christian on television -- but not many people noticed

The president of the United States is known the world over for his infidelity to the whole truth. The most recent tally from the Washington Post has him at 18,000 false or misleading statements since taking office. If telling a lie puts Donald Trump in a better light, by his estimation, he will tell it. Conversely, telling the truth rarely puts him in a better light, because he’s a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad president.

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