Opinion

‘The GOP lost its heritage by adopting racism’: Republican blasted for Fox News appearance

On Fox News Monday, Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI), under fire for his controversial remarks that he would have been scared of Black Lives Matter storming the U.S. Capitol, as opposed to Trump supporters who "loved this country," insisted that people are overreacting to what he said.

In conversation with Fox anchor Maria Bartiromo, Johnson insisted that his comments about the Capitol riot were "blown out of proportion" and there was "nothing racial" about what he said comparing Black Lives Matter to pro-Trump insurrectionists.

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'Sending people to their deaths': Tucker Carlson blasted for pushing anti-vaxx information

On Monday evening, Fox News star Tucker Carlson used his segment to cast doubt on the efficacy and importance of COVID-19 vaccines — raising fears that an already-paranoid segment of Republican households will refuse to get vaccinated, and give the virus a safe harbor to keep spreading, with more deaths in its wake.

"All of this should invite some pretty tough questions for our public health experts in this country," said Carlson. "And one of those questions is, how effective is this coronavirus vaccine? How necessary is it to take the vaccine? Don't dismiss those questions from 'anti-vaxxers.' Don't kick people off social media for asking them. Answer the question!"

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How Biden found a way out of a 'toxic dilemma' by creating a 'new reasonable'

Every day is a good day when Ted Cruz is the subject of humiliation. The United States senator from Texas has been trying for days to get people to see the newly enacted American Rescue Plan Act as something dangerous, despite being universally popular. "Three words to describe the first weeks of the Biden administration: boring but radical," Cruz wrote on Twitter Saturday. The wags came out in force. "You say this like it's a bad thing lol," responded Luke Zaleski, the legal affairs editor for GQ.

There's more going on here than an unctuous politician with delusions of White House grandeur putting his foot in his mouth. On the one hand, Cruz might be acting out of habit, portraying any Democrat, including Joe Biden, as "radical" by dint of being a Democrat. Such rhetoric is time-tested and dependable. On the other hand, Cruz might understand what the covid-relief law will mean to Texans, and he's doing his best to warp their view of it. For Cruz and the Republican Party, that might backfire. By calling it "radical," they might inadvertently normalize fundamental change. They might indeed hasten broad acceptance of a new paradigm underway.

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Joe Biden is boring — and it's driving the media crazy

After years of relentless reality show antics caused by Donald Trump, the latest word in the cable news discourse is that President Joe Biden is boring. He spends all his time doing policy work and his press engagement is a total snoozefest, with nary a single unhinged rant in front of buzzing helicopter blades. And the mainstream press is starting to get annoyed by it.

This article was originally published at Salon

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Attorney General Merrick Garland is taking seriously the threat from the Proud Boys — and the police

Back in July of 2016, not long after he had clinched the nomination, Donald Trump made an important declaration. "We must maintain law and order at the highest level or we will cease to have a country, 100 percent. We will cease to have a country. I am the law and order candidate." Lest you think he was advertising himself as a hardcore authoritarian, he set us straight by adding, "not only am I the law and order candidate, but I am also the candidate of compassion, believe it. The candidate of compassion." That was very reassuring.

This article was originally published at Salon

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The pandemic will rage on longer because Republican men and white evangelical Christians refuse to get vaccinated

Ever since the start of the pandemic Americans have been asking each other, "When there's a vaccine are you going to take it?" At first many were wary because Donald Trump was president and not many felt he could be trusted to not push the FDA to approve the vaccine to get re-elected. And in fact, he came close, promising Americans it would be available in October. (His Chief of Staff Mark Meadows said September.)

In response many mocked those who were vaccine hesitant, saying they would be risking death. The real story there was because of how the virus spreads, they wouldn't only risking death, they would potentially be helping to spread it.

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Can Trump's QAnon followers be deprogrammed?

No one in 2017 could have imagined that QAnon — an inscrutable right-wing conspiracy theory that alleges that an underground global elite of pedophilic Satan-worshippers plotted to take down President Donald Trump — would have found so many adherents. What started as a strange series of posts on anonymous forums in 2017 culminated in a violent riot in the U.S. Capitol nearly three years later.

This article originally appeared at Salon.

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'Is he ill?': Trump's health questioned after Mar-a-Lago photo with Lara Trump

A photo posted online of a slack-jawed Donald Trump, whose hand appears to be being held by daughter-in-law Lara Trump, had Twitter all abuzz on Saturday night as commenters wondered if he might be in declining health.

Trump supporter Nick Adams posted the picture—taken at Mar-a-Lago—with the caption, "President Trump is looking better than ever before!! He's getting in shape for 2024 and the liberals are freaking out!!"

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Toxic combination of militarism and market ideology has poisoned America

Many of us who support government social programs still feel ambivalent about them — largely because we buy into, or are cowed by, the ideologies of free enterprise and militarism. The first holds that we alone determine our lot in life through competition and have no obligation toward others beyond taking care of ourselves and our families and obeying the law. The second exalts the soldier, who risks life itself in combat for God and country, who will sacrifice his own life for the sake of comrades (but who will also kill any member of an enemy population, man, woman or child, who might pose a threat).

This article originally appeared at Salon.

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'You can always move to Cancun': Ted Cruz battered for complaining Joe Biden's administration is 'boring'

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) kicked off his Saturday morning on Twitter by taking a shot at President Joe Biden's first six weeks in office which culminated with the signing of a massive $1.9 trillion COVID-19 aid package that has proven immensely popular with the public still reeling from the pandemic that began on former President Donald Trump's watch.

Doing little work, but sharing a meme, Cruz wrote, "Three words to describe the first weeks of the Biden administration: boring but radical."

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'Disgusting' Lara Trump faces furious backlash for funneling dog rescue donations to Mar-a-Lago

According to a report from the HuffPost, Donald Trump's daughter-in-law Lara Trump has been helping funnel donations made to a Florida dog rescue organization into the family's pockets with pricey fundraisers at the family's Mar-a-Lago resort.

The report states, "A dog rescue charity with links to Lara Trump has spent as much as $1.9 million at former President Donald Trump's properties over the last seven years and will drop an additional quarter-million at his Mar-a-Lago country club this weekend," before adding, "According to a permit filed with the town of Palm Beach, Florida, Big Dog Ranch Rescue estimates it will spend $225,000 at the club where Donald Trump has taken up full-time residence since leaving the White House. All the profit from that spending winds up in his pocket."

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The worst senator in the country lets slip his bigoted thoughts about the Capitol attack

Who is the worst member of the U.S. Senate? There's certainly a lot of fierce competition. But for my money, there's a clear answer: Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson.

One reason to be confident in this choice is that I've been mulling making this argument directly for several months now, and there's been no shortage of news events to build the thesis around. His latest missive against decency in an interview on the conservative Joe Pags Show, though, is particularly ghastly.

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The most stunning part of President Biden's speech was totally missed by the media

The president said something stunning last night during an address that marked the one-year anniversary of the start of the covid pandemic. If the press corps had been truly paying attention, it would be headline news. What Joe Biden said reflects the sea change I've been talking about here in the Editorial Board, a fundamental shift in thinking about pretty much everything. "We need to remember the government isn't some foreign force in a distant capital," he said. "No, it's us. All of us. We, the people."

This article was originally published at The Editorial Board

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