Opinion

Brexit is like an escape room with no escape

Brexit is beginning to look a lot like an “escape room” with no exit.

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Bill Barr remains a big mystery -- will he protect Bob Mueller or shield Donald Trump's crimes?

The New York Times' Michael Schmidt reported a year ago that back in March of 2017, President Trump was steaming mad that Attorney General Jeff Sessions had recused himself from any inquiry into the Russian interference in the election.

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William Barr’s terrifying 'Deep State' resume: Cover-ups, covert ops and pardons

“I started off in Washington at the Central Intelligence Agency and went to law school at night while I was working at CIA,” recalled William Barr in a 2001 oral history for the University of Virginia.

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A neuroscientist explains why the belief that Trump is the messiah is rampant and dangerous

Psychologists have explained quite a lot about Donald Trump ’s political invincibility and the unconditional allegiance of his followers. One well-supported explanation is that the president keeps his base loyal by keeping them fearful. Through persistent fear-mongering, with scary messages like, “Illegal immigrants are murderers and rapists,” and “Islam hates us,” Trump gets to play the role of the great protector.

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Here are 10 disturbing moments from Trump’s attorney general nominee hearings

President Donald Trump’s efforts to exert control over the Justice Department — one of the few bodies left that can assert a real check on his power and corruption — have been an ongoing crisis and scandal during his time in office. In that context, his nomination of former Attorney General William Barr to retake the top position at the head of the department warrants extreme scrutiny.

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Radical changes to Iowa's 2020 caucuses could have major consequences for Democrats

The Iowa Democratic Party is preparing to implement the most sweeping and radical changes to its first-in-the-nation caucuses in 50 years, including potentially adopting online elements that could increase participation by upward of 100,000 voters, according to party leaders.

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This is the real importance of Trump's rambling, historically ignorant Afghanistan remarks

Once again, the President put his factually-challenged relationship with the past on public display. In a January 3rd Cabinet meeting, Trump offered a tour de force with a fanciful alternative history of Afghanistan. According to him, the Soviets invaded in late 1979 because of cross-border terror attacks. The subsequent decade-long war, the President insisted, bankrupted the USSR and led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Trump clearly had no idea what he was talking about. If the past is a foreign country, then in Trump’s parlance, he is an illegal immigrant trespassing upon it.

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Yale historian explains why Trump is 'deliberately hurting white people' in his war on democracy

Donald Trump has led America -- and the world -- through the looking glass. What lies on the other side is a condition of confusion and befuddlement, a perpetual moment of asking "Did that just really happen?" while knowing that the answer is always "Yes." Because without a doubt, President Trump did in fact just say or do that extraordinary thing.

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Trump is a dictator and we need to force him out of office: Robert Reich

The only redeeming aspect to Trump’s presidency is he brings us back to basics. And what could be more basic than the difference between democracy and dictatorship?

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Here is how frantic Republicans are enabling Trump's desperate cover-up of his ties to Russia

Even forcing a record-setting government shutdown over nonsense is not enough to keep people from noticing that Donald Trump acts very much like a criminal scrambling to conceal a multitude of crimes. Just this weekend, the Washington Post reported that Trump "has gone to extraordinary lengths to conceal details of his conversations with Russian President Vladi­mir Putin," including personally confiscating notes from his interpreter in 2017.

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Faced with the 'greatest scandal' in US history, what will the American people do?

Donald Trump is not a Manchurian candidate.

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Will senators ask Trump's Attorney General nominee about his anti-gay and religious extremism?

Perhaps it comes as no surprise that the man who served as Attorney General in the early 1990's under President George H.W. Bush would have written an anti-gay and religious call to action, lamenting the civil rights advancements of the 30 years prior, and modern culture which he saw as far too sexually permissive.

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Trump's downfall is all but certain because his tantrums follow a predictable historical pattern

King Charles I of England, frustrated at the limitations of his otherwise powerful position, decided to dissolve Parliament in March of 1629 and to clap several of the opposition’s leaders in irons. The monarch had come to an impasse over issues as lofty as religious conformity and as mundane as the regulations concerning tonnage, eventually finding it easier to simply dissolve the gathering than to negotiate with them. Historian Michael Braddick explains that the “King was not willing to assent to necessary measures” in governance, and that Charles was intent on “upholding his right to withhold consent” as he saw it, believing that “without that power he was no longer a king in a meaningful sense.” Charles was a committed partisan of the divine right of kings, truly believing himself to be ennobled to rule by fiat, and regarding legislators as at best an annoyance, and at worst as actively contravening the rule of God.

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