Opinion

Quagmire: Trump's mail order Fascism is as ineffective as his campaign against the coronavirus

If the street scenes during protests in Portland, Oregon, looked familiar this week, it's because you've seen them before … in Iraq.

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Trump already tried to distract voters from health care with racist paranoia — and that was before the pandemic

In 2018, Donald Trump's very-stable-genius plan to win the midterm elections for Republicans was to hype the hell out of a so-called caravan of Central American refugees who were crossing Mexico in hopes of seeking asylum in the United States. About 7,000 people, mostly consisting of families with children, were indeed making the 2,500-mile trek to escape poverty and gang violence, but Trump and his Republican sycophants tried to convince American voters that they were coming to the U.S. to kill white people and burn down the suburbs. Through his preferred media of Twitter and Fox News, Trump endlessly hyped the "invasion" of these migrants, and suggesting they might be terrorists, and were coming to create gang warfare, not escape it.The nonstop fear-mongering about the caravan did work its magic on the ever-gullible mainstream news media. A Media Matters study published two weeks before the election showed a precipitous rise in cable news coverage of what would have otherwise been a minor story, as similar caravans had been in previous years.

But if Trump and his minions succeeded in hijacking the news cycle with their racist hysterics, they failed in their goal of winning the 2018 midterm elections. While Republicans certainly leveraged their unfair electoral advantages to maintain a wildly disproportionate share of power, Democrats racked up historic wins, retaking the House of Representatives with a 40-seat pickup, as well as winning seven governorships and hundreds of state legislature seats.

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The eviction ban is almost over -- and some landlords are preparing to give renters the boot

As tenants across Florida lost their jobs and incomes during the coronavirus pandemic, executives at Axiom Realty Partners LLC, whose portfolio includes at least nine apartment buildings throughout the Southeast, applied pressure on some tenants to either pay rent or move out.

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Trump is daring us to stop him

President Donald Trump’s recent reelection campaign advertisement is straight out of the plot of a horror movie. Just days after he deployed federal officers to the streets of Portland, Oregon, his campaign released a 30-second television spot featuring an elderly white woman watching on her television the news of activists demanding a defunding of police. The woman shakes her head in disapproval as she notices a figure at her door trying to enter her house. She nervously calls 911, but apparently the activists she disapproves of have been so effective in their nefarious demands that the universal emergency hotline Americans rely on now goes unanswered. The vulnerable woman drops her remote control as the intruder enters her home, and we are only left to imagine the horror of what he does to her as the words “You won’t be safe in Joe Biden’s America” appear on the screen. In this dystopian version of America, only Trump promises law and order.

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Historian outlines a terrifying scenario that could happen if Trump loses

It looks like Biden will beat Trump badly and the Republicans will suffer disastrous losses across the country in November. Although the polls have just been inching toward the Democrats, suddenly articles about what Trump might do if he loses are multiplying, herehere, and here.

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Troubled Trump uses new COVID briefings to blame others for deadly mistakes as his bungling becomes undeniable

Listening to Donald Trump’s White House coronavirus briefings this week, his first in 90 days, I remembered an old joke:

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Trump sticks his foot in his mouth with a desperate appeal to female voters

Almost nothing President Donald Trump ever does is subtle. When he tries to appeal to specific voting demographics, he often lacks the finesse to communicate the essential idea that he doesn't just care about them for their votes — he actually shares their values.

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Protesters march on Mitch McConnell’s home as he weighs 80% unemployment cut

Protesters marched to the Washington home of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., on Wednesday to call for an extension of federal pandemic unemployment benefits before they expire next week.

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Trump upends GOP convention plans — again

Citing health concerns over the coronavirusPresident Donald Trump revealed Thursday that he had canceled the portion of the Republican National Convention scheduled to take place next month in Jacksonville, Fla.

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‘Joe, are the Russians bad?’: Here are 5 revealing details from new records of Trump’s intel briefing

A new document declassified by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence gives a new glimpse into Crossfire Hurricane, the investigation that was eventually taken over by Special Counsel Robert Mueller.

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Tom Cotton is being attacked for anti-1619 Project bill with 'he's so racist' jokes

Sen. Tom Cotton is being triggered by the 1619 Project, which is an ongoing effort by the New York Times to reexamine the U.S. legacy of slavery and its aftermath. In response to the effort, Cotton has filed a bill that would ban the project from being able to be used in schools.

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Women blast Trump for 1950's name 'suburban housewives': I'm a suburban woman, a mom and a lawyer

President Donald Trump has lost suburban women, voters over the past several months of the COVID-19 pandemic. But instead of calling on those women or women living outside the cities, Trump called them "suburban housewives," assuming that none of them work outside the home.

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Trump has inadvertently punched himself in the face with his politically-driven war on cities

On June 1, Donald Trump, the failed businessman who became president by pretending to be a successful businessman on reality TV, decided to tear-gas peaceful protesters in search of a photo op. With no apparent provocation, federal police assaulted a crowd of people staging a nonviolent protest in Lafayette Park, adjacent to the White House, unleashing tear gas on the crowd and laying into them with batons and rubber bullets. Soon it became clear why this was happening: Trump wanted his picture taken in front of St. John's Episcopal Church, and wanted a clear path to walk across the park.

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