Opinion

How Trump and Falwell Jr. became evangelicals' 'golden calves' despite obvious moral transgressions

Late Thursday night, a video began circulating on Twitter of a small crowd of women in bright red MAGA hats kneeling outside the Clark County Election Department, rocking back and forth with arms lifted in furtive prayer. "We give our hearts to you in the name of Jesus," one of them can be heard saying. The rest called out individual prayers that Donald Trump would narrow the gap between him and Democratic challenger Joe Biden in the state. In the end, their prayers were not answered.

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The GOP has a decision to make: It's either Trump or America

President-elect Joe Biden has been declared the winner of the 2020 presidential election as President Donald Trump and his campaign prepare to wage war on multiple states over the election results. Now, the leaders of the Republican Party have a critical decision to make: either fight to save Trump or fight to save America and uphold its democracy.

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'You're fired!: Internet explodes in a frenzy of joy after Biden ousts Trump

As one might expect, the announcement that now-President-elect Joe Biden beat Donald Trump to become the 46th president of the United States set off an explosion of joy on Twitter for commenters who have waited since Tuesday for the announcement.

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Trump's presidential walls are caving in and his election legal battles are about to hit the biggest one of all

As more mail-in ballots are counted, President Donald Trump's chances at dominating the Electoral Map continue to fade and the latest updates also signal that the walls may be caving in on the potential legal battle he's hoping to create in an effort to save his presidency.

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Critics baffled by Trump's 'Total Landscaping' Philadelphia press conference plans

In one of the few Donald Trump tweets that Twitter allowed to be published on Saturday morning without a warning that it contained false information about Tuesday's election, the president announced a big press conference in Philadelphia at the Four Seasons Total Landscaping -- which caused major confusion among some of his critics.

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'It's over, man. Shut up and leave': Trump buried in derision after Pennsylvania vote freak out

Donald Trump kicked off Saturday morning by launching a full-scale attack on the vote totals coming out of Pennsylvania that show that he is falling well behind former Vice President Joe Biden -- and thereby fail to be re-elected -- and that prompted Twitter commenters to advise him that maybe it is time to stop complaining and start packing.

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Joe Biden may have won -- but America is lost

It's not a perfect comparison, but it's close enough: The way I felt when I went to bed on Tuesday night was almost exactly the way I felt on election night in 1972. Richard Nixon had been president for four long years. Watergate was just the most recent outrage in what had essentially been one long crime spree. Nixon had installed his consigliere, John Mitchell, as attorney general, and Mitchell had proceeded to turn the Department of Justice into Nixon's personal retribution headquarters, empaneling grand juries, investigating political opponents, indicting enemies and jailing antiwar protest leaders. Nixon had ordered the secret carpet-bombing of Cambodia and Laos, killing thousands of civilians over a period of four years. He used the IRS, FBI and CIA against his political enemies, employing illegal wiretaps and mail cover and creating an entire surveillance system, known as COINTELPRO, to illegally investigate, surveil and harass members of the press, political enemies and antiwar activists. And in June 1972, Nixon sent the "Plumbers" into Democratic Party headquarters in the Watergate complex to bug his opponents' phones and rifle campaign records.

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Meghan McCain Nation: Anyone baffled at how Trump's margin among white women went up hasn't been watching 'The View'

On the day after the election, Meghan McCain was feeling nostalgic. Accompanying an Instagram graphic that urges, among other observations, "Vote for whomever, but it will be up to us to rebuild the division this political process has established by being decent, respectful, kind, loving, supportive, and compassionate human beings during these trying times" were a few of McCain's personal thoughts.

"My first Election Day without my dad is my first with my daughter Liberty. Feeling overwhelmed with nostalgia and warm sentiments about the circle of life. . . " she wrote.

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Trump's limp coup is falling apart, but right-wing media and certain GOP politicians don't know when to cut bait

Most still-rational Americans, watching Donald Trump's atrocity of a press conference on Thursday night, had two simultaneous reactions: Wow, that man really is the worst living American, and also, yeah, this is all over except for the paperwork.

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Trump appears to be defeated -- now comes the scary part

Donald Trump will not go in peace. He will not go with dignity. He will not go without committing crimes, or at least attempting to do so. For 75 long agonizing days, Trump is still the most powerful person on the planet.

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Historian: Conservatism needs a hard pruning of Trumpism

The first cut is always the hardest. In May, my wife convinced me to “hard prune” our grape vines. Stretching across a backyard pergola, our dense concord grape vines provided respite on muggy summer evenings. From afar, the sumptuous greenery provided a green oasis of cool comfort. On closer inspection, the frowzy, unkempt creeping plant was riddled with weak shoots, diseased leaves, and deadwood. Despite its sickness, the vine had so encased the entire area it had effectively choked-out any would be competitors. The recommended remedy for the overrun, unhealthy vine called for a hard, heavy prune down to its root. Worried that such extreme measures would kill the vine, I resisted. Hours of spousal cajoling finally convinced me to shear, snip, and slice it to seeming annihilation. Standing ankle deep in grape vine carcass, I hoped the hard prune would catalyze rejuvenation and renewal. Summer sun and time would give me that answer. In the meantime, I discovered a metaphor.

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Will Mitch McConnell back Trump's delusional last-ditch battle? So far the signs are ominous

This has been a tumultuous week, to say the least. But if there was one silver lining — even before Joe Biden's apparent or imminent victory — it was the blessed 36 hours in which we didn't have to hear Donald Trump's voice. After his obnoxious declaration of victory at 2:30 a.m. on Wednesday morning, he stuck to primal tweeting until Thursday evening when he emerged to make the worst speech of his career. He disconsolately rattled off a fantasy laundry list of voting irregularities and declared, "If you count the legal votes, I easily win. If you count the illegal votes, they can try to steal the election from us." Reading haltingly from a script, he rambled about media conspiracies and lied about vote-rigging, saying, "Ultimately, I have a feeling judges are going to have to rule" which he has always believed was his failsafe. It set a new standard for awful, which is really saying something.

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'Can't sleep huh?' Trump ridiculed for 2 am tweet begging Senate Republicans for help as re-election chances fade

President Donald Trump cried out for Republicans to help his battle against an apparent election loss now that their Senate majority is no longer a lock.

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