Opinion

Conservative cuts through Trump’s spin on Mueller’s final report and explains why Trump isn’t close to being vindicated

President Donald Trump has been gloating over Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s long-awaited final report for the Russia investigation, boasting on Twitter that it showed “No Collusion, No Obstruction, Complete and Total EXONERATION.” And much of the right-wing media has been echoing that assertion. But conservative journalist Max Boot has a very different perspective, explaining in his Monday column for the Washington Post why he doesn’t see Mueller’s final report as a total vindication of Trump and his associates.

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The stunning history of William Barr's crusade to bury evidence to protect Republican presidents

Back in 1992, the last time Bill Barr was U.S. attorney general, iconic New York Times writer William Safire referred to him as “Coverup-General Barr” because of his role in burying evidence of then-President George H.W. Bush’s involvement in “Iraqgate” and “Iran-Contra.”

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Trump's massive and intense cover-up has been surprisingly successful -- so far

The average person taking in the news this weekend would likely come to the conclusion that the long-anticipated "Mueller report" has been released and that it vindicates Donald Trump in his relentless claims that there was "NO COLLUSION" with a criminal Russian conspiracy to interfere with the 2016 election by stealing emails from Democratic officials.

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This is the brutal and obscene reality of American universities

U.S. federal prosecutors have charged 50 people — 38 of them are parents — for allegedly being involved in fraud schemes to secure spots at Yale, Stanford and other big-name schools. Prosecutors accused some parents of paying millions of dollars in bribes to get their children into these prestigious schools.

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What's behind Bill Barr's whitewash? We need to see the full Mueller report to know for sure

Attorney General William Barr submitted a short letter to Congress and the public on Sunday explaining the conclusion of special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation. It is an elegant little note that leaves more questions unanswered than it answers.

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How to fight right-wing trolls and actually win

The right has become an epidemic of exhibitionists. Right-wing trolls sidle up to people on TV, the internet and in person pretending that they want a reasoned discussion. When they’ve got your attention, they open their trench coats to show off their firm pointy little “truths,” anticipating your reaction. It gets them excited to see you respond in predictable ways. They have themselves a little trollgasm, proving to themselves once again that they’ve found the formula for flummoxing everyone always.

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Controversy over the Mueller report must not obscure this basic reality -- and the real scandal of Donald Trump: Robert Reich

We may never know for sure whether Donald Trump colluded with Vladimir Putin to obtain Russia’s help in the 2016 election, in return for, say, Trump’s help in weakening NATO and not interfering against Russian aggression in Ukraine.

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Can Fox News really change its belligerent stripes?

On March 18 former Democratic National Committee Chair Donna Brazile screeched into the headlines by announcing she had joined Fox News as a contributor. Brazile, a political strategist with a long history of working on behalf of liberal power players in Washington, D.C., held the same job at CNN. But that was before WikiLeaks circulated the content of stolen emails indicating she had secretly slipped debate questions to Hillary Clinton’s campaign prior to a televised debate hosted by CNN.

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Here is why 'no indictments' does not mean 'no collusion' -- and why Trump is far from being in the clear

So Robert Mueller's report has been filed. As I write this, we are still waiting for Attorney General William Barr to reveal what he calls its "principal conclusions" to leaders of the judiciary committees in Congress. Whether those turn out to actually be "conclusive" remains to be seen, but it's safe to say that whatever Barr conveys to Capitol Hill will not provide the level of detail about the outstanding questions to which the public deserves to have answers.

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Paul Krugman explains the 'creepy' and racist assumptions in Trump's new economic report

Each year, the White House releases an Economic Report of the President, detailing the administration's view of the country and the administration's goals to address ongoing economic trends. As the Washington Post's Catherine Rampell noted, this year's report stands out for it's distinctly partisan — and honestly somewhat delusional — focus on "socialism" as a scare tactic about Democratic policy ideas.

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How Evangelical Christianity's brand is all used up

Back before 9/11 indelibly linked Islam with terrorism, back before the top association to “Catholic priest” was “pedophile,” most Americans—even nonreligious Americans—thought of religion as benign. I’m not religious myself, people would say, but what’s the harm if it gives someone else a little comfort or pleasure.

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How Jared Kushner's rise could -- and should -- have been stopped

With the Mueller report floating out in the ethers much of the nation is wringing their hands over the seeming inability of the legal system to hold Donald Trump accountable for what millions of Americans suspect are high crimes and misdemeanors.

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How to have an argument with a right-wing Trump defender

In his new book "The Right Side of History: How Reason and Moral Purpose Made the West," Ben Shapiro argues that reason is essential to the advancement of human progress. The 35-year-old conservative commentator has positioned himself as something of a latter-day William F. Buckley Jr. -- an intellectual superstar in a quadrant of politics that seems increasingly resistant to facts or rational inquiry. Shapiro has denounced white supremacists and the alt-right, and distanced himself from President Trump (much as Buckley denounced the John Birch Society and other right-wing extremists of his day), while frequently calling upon the venerable classical and biblical Western thinkers.Shapiro has also frequently discussed occasions when he has been threatened or faced what he describes as efforts to silence him, especially on college campuses. In a society with a healthy culture of free speech, of course, Shapiro would be able to argue his points as fearlessly as he wants, without the specter of violence or being otherwise persecuted.Whether Shapiro himself actually models the open dialogue he claims to advocate, however, is a different question. In his book, he writes:
Reason, in fact, is insulting. Reason suggests that one person can know better than another, that one person's perspective can be more correct than someone else's. Reason is intolerant. Reason demands standards.

To be clear, he intends to undermine the perceived arguments of his “politically correct” adversaries, which he summarizes this way: "Better to destroy reason than to abide by its dictates."

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