Opinion

GOP's Greene faces brutal backlash after bizarre 'bloodthirsty media' rant: 'Osama Bin Karen at it again'

Embattled Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) issued a scenery-chomping response to her critics as she faces calls for her resignation or expulsion for promoting bizarre and violent conspiracy theories.

The newly elected Georgia Republican is facing bipartisan criticism for suggesting her support for the execution of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other leading Democrats, and has expressed support for the cult-like QAnon conspiracy theory and questioned whether mass shooting and the 9/11 attacks were staged.

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In newly surfaced video Marjorie Taylor Greene again attacks David Hogg – this time as a ‘very trained’ dog

QAnon promoter U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) in a newly-surfaced video from 2019 brags about how she attacked Parkland school shooting survivor turned gun control activist David Hogg, calls him an "idiot," and compares him to a dog.

"He is very trained. He's like a dog. He's completely trained," Greene says in an interview with Georgia Gun Owners, Inc. in April 2019. NBC News first reported the existence of the video Tuesday evening.

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Here's the real reason Republicans don’t want Biden’s COVID relief plan to pass

Ten Senate Republican have proposed a COVID relief bill of about $600 billion. That's less than a third of Biden's plan. They promise "bipartisan support" if he agrees.

Their proposal isn't a compromise. It would be a total surrender. It trims direct payments and unemployment aid that Americans desperately need. Biden should reject it out of hand.

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'Hypocrite' John Cornyn hammered for highlighting alleged Hunter Biden nepotism: 'You're gonna be really upset when you learn about Ivanka'

Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) suggested that President Joe Biden's administration inappropriately appointed an attorney to temporarily head the Department of Justice's criminal division, and he was served up a slew of reminders about the recently departed administration's appointees.

The newly elected president's younger son Hunter Biden hired former federal prosecutor Chris Clark to assist in his possible criminal defense in December, and his father nominated Nicholas McQuaid, one of Clark's partners at the law firm Latham & Watkins, to serve as principal deputy assistant attorney general in the criminal division.

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Censure Trump: In praise of the next best thing to an impeachment trial

The 45 Republican senators who deem it unconstitutional to try a former president for encouraging a mob to sack the Capitol leave no doubt: They’d acquit Donald Trump, meaning there’s nowhere near the 67 votes necessary for conviction. If censuring Trump can get Congress on record against Trump’s anti-democratic behavior, censure it must be. Before we get there, digest the absurdity that these same nullifying senators purport to care about precedent and the plain language of the Constitution. That language here is ambiguous, while a Congressional Research Service 2019 report asserts that “fede...

Republicans are left with 3 bad choices in the post-Trump era

When House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy went to Mar-a-Lago last week to meet with former President Donald Trump, it was obvious that he didn't view Trumpism as a thing of the past. Journalist Joan E. Greve examines Trump's hold on the GOP in an article published by The Guardian this week, noting the frustrations of some conservatives who wish Republicans could move on from Trumpism.

"Donald Trump may have left the White House, but his shadow still looms large in Washington and the Republican Party as the Senate prepares for his second impeachment trial," Greve explains. "The 50 Republicans in the Senate are grappling with how to appease Trump's supporters, who still make up a hefty share of the Party's base, while acknowledging that the former president incited the 6 January attack on the U.S. Capitol."

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Trump forces Republicans into a humiliating position -- again

For weeks now, Republicans in Congress have been playing a rhetorical game regarding the impeachment of Donald Trump on charges — for which he is quite obviously guilty — of inciting an insurrection. On one hand, Senate Republicans want very badly to acquit Trump, even though this would allow him to run for office again, believing that the Republican voting base is more loyal to Trump than they are to the GOP or to the nation itself. On the other hand, they don't want to come right out and say that Trump was justified in sending a violent crowd to storm the Capitol on January 6. That sort of overtly fascist stance can hurt one's bookings on cable news shows and cause corporate donors to put you on ice for a cycle.

So Senate Republicans glommed onto what they thought was the perfect strategy to have it both ways: pretend that they are springing Trump on a technicality.

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Jarring images from Moscow raise questions about Trump's brainwashed followers

We couldn't help wondering what the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers and other right-wing militia groups are making of the images of pro-democracy violence, mostly from anti-democratic police, on the streets of Moscow.

The inside-out juxtaposition of images of thousands in the streets in an attempt to take down the Vladimir Putin government for jailing opponent Aleksei A. Navalny with the constant airing of Donald Trump-clad militants attacking the U.S. Capitol to overturn democratic elections is startling.

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'You have no plan': GOP 'idiot' Jim Jordan ripped to shreds for response to COVID-19 stimulus

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) tweeted out an attempted pithy response to the coronavirus stimulus negotiations and was hit hard with criticism.

Senate Republicans offered less than a third of what the Biden administration says is needed to meet the nation's needs nearly a year into the pandemic, and Jordan weighed in by suggesting even that was too much.

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Here's why Trump really lost his impeachment legal team

As the second impeachment trial of Donald Trump approaches, we are beginning to get some idea of how the House managers intend to proceed. The single Article of Impeachment alleges that Trump lied repeatedly about the results of the election and called people to Washington, D.C. for a rally at which he incited them to "violent, deadly, destructive and seditious acts." It cites his earlier attempts to subvert and obstruct the certification of the results of the election including that astonishing phone call in which Trump openly asked an election official in Georgia to "find" the votes needed to overturn the election in his state.

Senate Majority leader Chuck Schumer told MSNBC on Saturday that the trial will "show the American people — vividly, on film — what happened there in the Capitol, what Trump said. … All of America will see it."

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Marjorie Taylor Greene is a menace and a traitor -- and there's only one way to deal with her

Let's put in perspective the atrocious conduct of freshman lawmaker Margorie Taylor Greene, the pistol-toting Congresswoman from Georgia who wants to put a bullet in Speaker Nancy Pelosi's head.

Any private employer would have fired Greene already. Failure to do so would expose a private company, a nonprofit or any other employer to ruinous damages should Greene reach into her purse and use her Glock or if a fellow QAnon fan were to fulfill these homicidal impulses.

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After Trump, the crisis: White America at the historical crossroads

Donald Trump's coup attempt — and especially the Jan. 6 attack he incited on the U.S. Capitol — were a type of "white riot" and insurrection against multiracial democracy. Sociologist Bart Bonikowski recently offered this analysis to Thomas Edsall of the New York Times:

Ethnonationalist Trump supporters want to return to a past when white men saw themselves as the core of America and minorities and women "knew their place." Because doing so requires the upending of the social order, many are prepared to pursue extreme measures, including racial violence and insurrection. What makes their actions all the more dangerous is a self-righteous belief — reinforced by the president, the Republican Party, and right-wing conspiracy peddlers — that they are on the correct side of history as the true defenders of democracy, even as their actions undermine its core institutions and threaten its stability.

The lethal violence by Trump's followers at the Capitol was not the end but rather another stage of escalation in right-wing extremism and terrorism against multiracial democracy. Law enforcement officials and counter-insurgency experts are warning that the United States will likely experience an increasing amount of white supremacist and other right-wing extremist terrorism and other political violence in response to the country's changing racial demographics. The symbolic power of Joe Biden's presidency, and especially of Kamala Harris, the first woman, first Black person and first Asian American to serve as vice president, will only fuel more right-wing terrorism and other violence.

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Expert: Sarah Palin's case against the NYT is a landmine for the First Amendment

For more than half a century, conservatives have wanted to eradicate New York Times v. Sullivan, the 1964 Supreme Court decision that is the nation's most important First Amendment case. A trial scheduled for February 1 may give them that opportunity. If the Supreme Court invalidates NYT, federal judges—including the 230 appointed by President Trump—will preside over more libel suits against journalists he calls "the enemy of the people." Those judges can carry out Trump's promise to "open up…libel laws…[and] have people sue you like you've never got sued before."

Anyone who makes factual errors when criticizing government or accusing a person of misconduct could be dragged into court and left destitute by a jury's verdict or legal bills. Public officials with government jobs and public figures—those who are well-known or have entered a public controversy—can win lawsuits that previously would have been unsuccessful.

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