Opinion

The 'dark underside to conservatism': Ex-Republican reveals how he finally realized that racism and extremism are behind the GOP's success

Conservative writer Max Boot has had a major reckoning with his fundamental political beliefs and alliances since the rise of Donald Trump.

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The GOP mask has slipped off -- and Republicans have been exposed for who they really are

The past month has been excruciating, especially for survivors of sexual violence and those who support them. As happened previously with Donald Trump and Roy Moore, it was predictable that Republicans would not simply fall in line behind Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh when he was credibly accused by multiple women of sexual abuse. Beyond that, their devotion would soar as Kavanaugh showed himself to be an entitled, overgrown frat boy who resorted to red-faced screaming and lying at even the hint that his history with women would be examined.

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A neuroscientist explains why evangelicals are wired to believe Trump's lies

President Donald Trump lies so often that it is no longer shocking when it happens, no matter how blatant or absurd the falsehood may be. Not only does Trump regularly exaggerate the truth, he frequently denies facts that can be observed directly from video or audio tapes. This has led some professionals to diagnose his lying as compulsive or pathological, and many psychologists have pointed out that he is constantly gaslighting his base—a term that refers to a strategic attempt to get others to question their direct experience of reality.

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How Catholics became the brains of the Religious Right -- even though it's evangelicals who brought the votes

Catholics make up a disproportionate share of the intelligentsia of the religious Right in the United States. Although they constitute only a fifth of the US population (and white Catholics make up less than 12 per cent of the US population), they maintain a high profile among conservative think tanks, universities and professional organisations. On the US Supreme Court, four out of five Republican-appointed justices are Catholic, despite evangelicals making up a substantial portion of Republican Party support.

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Republicans claimed their tax cuts would boost wage growth -- here's what really happened

The recent announcement by the founder of Amazon, Jeff Bezos, that his company would give substantial raises to its lowest-paid employees should not blind us to the fact that most American workers are not receiving big wage increases. In fact, the real wages (that is, wages adjusted for inflation) of average American workers are declining.

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We all know what MAGA is really code for: 'It's not even a secret'

After all the protesting, crying, calling and suffering in the wake of Christine Blasey Ford testifying that Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, had sexually assaulted her, the Senate voted to confirm Kavanaugh to the court anyway over the weekend. The rage levels of feminist women, which had already been explosive after the election of the pussy-grabber himself, reached nuclear levels in wake of yet another reminder that, in the eyes of Republicans anyway, women have no value outside of objects to be used and discarded.

The time couldn’t be more perfect for Rebecca Traister’s book, “Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Women’s Anger.” In it, the New York magazine journalist explores the history and continuing power that women’s anger can have to cause change — which is why men are so afraid of it.

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The historic voter registration surge in Texas should terrify Ted Cruz -- here's why

As Texas voters attempt to register in droves for the high stakes election between Republican Sen. Ted Cruz and Democratic Rep. Beto O'Rourke, a new report reveals that thousands of voters are having their registration forms unfairly rejected.

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Here are 5 things Susan Collins got horribly wrong in her flawed defense of Brett Kavanaugh

When Sen. Susan Collins announced, on Friday, October 5, that she would be voting “yes” on Brett M. Kavanaugh’s confirmation to the U.S. Supreme Court, the four-term senator from Maine went out of her way to convince Kavanaugh’s detractors that he wasn’t nearly the far-right extremist they thought he was. Kavanaugh, Collins insisted, “fits within the mainstream of legal thought” and is “more of a centrist than his critics maintain”; further, he has a “record of judicial independence” and will protect abortion rights as well as access to health insurance if one has a preexisting condition—which, of course, would be just about anyone over the age of 40. But Kavanaugh’s critics weren’t buying it.

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Kavanaugh had a point -- what goes around may well come around

The Senate has voted. Brett Kavanaugh has been narrowly confirmed. In a normal time, that would be the end of the story, or at least this chapter of the story.

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Here's what the mapping of hate groups reveals about white supremacy in America

Organized hate groups span all geographic areas of the United States, from White nationalists in Washington state to neo-Nazis in Alabama to radical traditionalist Catholics in New Hampshire. While persecution of classes of people happens everywhere, the drivers that push people to join hate groups are unique to specific places. In this way, hatred can be a study in geography as much as anything else.

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The Supreme Court now works for the Republican Party -- and this Harvard law professor agrees

When I wrote this editorial, the Senate had merely voted to advance Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court nomination by limiting debate and setting up what was likely to be the final vote regarding his candidacy on Friday. By the time this piece was ready for publication, however, my hunch had been officially confirmed — and now Kavanaugh is on the Supreme Court.

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