Opinion

Trump’s checkered past proves this massive move was smoke and mirrors

As a life-long and serial violator of law and order – both civil and criminal – and likewise constitutionally, as president of the United States, Donald J. Trump, the Outlaw and Extorting Commander-in-Chief, is someone criminologists would commonly label as a “career criminal.”

Accordingly, Teflon Don or the Houdini of White-collar Crime, as he is known in criminological circles, possesses an unmatched or unique expertise in fraud, corruption, and lawlessness. And ever since the Boss narrowly defeated Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election, and even before he returned to the Oval Office in 2025, he has been ratcheting up his dictatorial lawlessness and amplifying his corruption more than in his first term.

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This despicable move just exposed what really drives Trump

In 1989, Donald Trump purchased full-page ads in four New York newspapers, including the New York Times, calling for the return of the death penalty after a white jogger was brutally attacked in Central Park. Five Black and Latino teens were arrested for the assault, and, after confessions later determined to have been coerced by the police, they were convicted, even though there was no physical evidence linking any of them to the crime.

In 2002, after the five young men had spent years in prison for a crime they did not commit, their convictions were vacated when DNA evidence linked a serial rapist, Matias Reyes, to the crime. Reyes ultimately confessed, and provided an accounting of the crime that matched details prosecutors already knew, and forensics confirmed he had acted alone.

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​This glaring weakness could bring Trump to his knees​

President Donald Trump has left his opponents an opening, one with which Democrats can claw away at his seemingly unbreakable hold on power in Washington. It is just not necessarily one that jumps to mind.

In the entirety of Trump's term, nothing has galvanized interest and controversy like the fate of the Epstein files. Yet despite righteous fury over what appears to be an obvious cover-up of historic proportions, there is nothing to indicate that scandal alone, no matter how big and worthy, can threaten Trump's governing coalition and backing in Congress.

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One whiny little brat in Congress shows how Trump keeps Republicans on a leash

I think it’s worth dwelling on a small comment made by a small man who thought it was a good idea to sacrifice his dignity as a man, on live TV, for the sake of a dictatorial president and his dictatorial ambitions.

I’m talking about Tennessee Congressman Tim Burchett. In a side comment in an interview this morning CNN’s John Berger, he said: “You don’t want to go out on the streets at night in Washington, D.C. … That’s one of the reasons I live in my office at night … It is too dadgum dangerous, brother. It’s too dangerous and everybody knows it.”

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One powerful remedy would rid us of Trump — and he's scrambling to hide it

It has become increasingly apparent that Donald Trump is turning his presidential administration into the most corrupt in U.S. history. Nothing that comes from the mouth of Trump or his loyalist appointees can ever be trusted.

Trump appointees John Radcliffe, Kash Patel, and Pete Hegseth, heads of the CIA, FBI, and Pentagon respectively, reiterated Trump’s lie that the U.S. bombing of Iran’s nuclear facilities “obliterated” the country’s nuclear program.

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This secret greedy deal proves Trump's summit is a cynical farce

This is what happens when cynical, greedy, amoral billionaires and psychopaths run a country.

The Times of London (Murdoch-owned) is reporting that billionaire Steve Witkoff, billionaire Donald Trump, and billionaire Vladimir Putin have worked out a model behind the scenes to solve the Ukraine problem: just make it like Gaza.

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This GOP senator told his Mississippi constituents to 'get a life'

When 34-year-old Thad Cochran arrived in Washington after his first election in 1972, the Republican felt it important to document what he’d heard and learned from Mississippians on the campaign trail and share it with his young staff.

He sat down at a typewriter and wrote a memo titled “General Responsiveness" and dated March 14, 1973:

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Even Trump's top toady is warning this appalling move risks disaster

Something treacherous looms today on the Alaskan horizon.

As Presidents Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin meet to hammer out their version of a Ukrainian-Russian “peace” plan, it could portend one of the darkest chapters in the history of American foreign policy. That’s not hyperbole.

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This street battle took a huge bite out of freedom

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

'Idiots': How a Republican's attacks on the left threaten to backfire

This article has been edited by Raw Story.

Tennessee’s Ethics Commission could take action against Memphis area residents after dismissing their sworn complaint against Sen. Brent Taylor for critical remarks he made against participants of a “No Kings” rally there.

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Disaster hero terrified as Trump threatens new catastrophe for his tiny town

VILLA PARK, ILLINOIS – “No one locks their doors in Villa Park,” says village board President Kevin Patrick.

This town of 22,000 could be the set for Andy of Mayberry, a Norman Rockwell painting of America.

Patrick sports a military haircut befitting his years in the Coast Guard and steel blue eyes that reflect military determination, compassion — and fear. Fear of what could happen to his town.

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Trump's fast-track to a prison cell lies in this single sentence

Donald Trump says he’s deploying the military to Washington, D.C. because of a “crime emergency,” but armies don’t do policing: Their job, and their training, is to blow things up and kill people.

They have no training in evidence-chain-of-custody, arrest procedures, civil rights protections, criminal investigation, or any other aspect of policing. Sending the military to do policing is like inviting the neighborhood butcher to perform your brain surgery.

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Trump has found a new fall guy in the Epstein saga

When we left convicted sex offender Ghislaine Maxwell, she had just received several remarkable gifts from the Trump administration.

First, while serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking minors as Jeffrey Epstein’s procurer, she got an unprecedented meeting with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, the second highest official in the Justice Department. Blanche was also U.S. President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer in the hush-money trial resulting in his 34 felony convictions. That such a meeting even occurred astonished legal observers across the political spectrum.

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