Opinion

Trump takes another step towards authoritarianism as America grapples with the coronavirus pandemic

No sooner did Donald Trump sign the $2-trillion coronavirus aid bill last Friday than he immediately made clear that he intends to break the new law to insist on his own powers, not those dictated by Congress, in seeing how money gets spent.

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Here's why conservatives really oppose federal aid for the 'undeserving'

There is a singular and profound question that tugs at the sleeve of even the most sober analyst pondering the federal response to coronavirus. To wit, what the hell is it with these people? Although he's since backed off the proposal Michael Gerson couldn't figure out why Trump would decide to re-open the nation on Easter:

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'The greatest risk factor of disease and death is Donald Trump': Forensic psychiatrist

The final death toll from coronavirus will not be the result of viral disease; it will be the result of mental disease.  The greatest risk factor of disease and death is not being considered, and that is Donald Trump.  If he continues in this presidency, he is on course for having three main effects: First, he will make a deadly pandemic much worse.  Second, he will stoke divisions between “believers” and “unbelievers” in his alternative reality.  And third, he will vastly augment suffering, which he will be tempted to direct into widespread violence.

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Trump's bizarre coronavirus show isn't working

Here's an example of what President Trump thought was important to share with his millions of Twitter followers this past weekend as we watched the nation's coronavirus numbers climb into the tens of thousands:

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Donald Trumps needs a coronavirus scapegoat -- and right now it’s China

"If we are at war, who is the enemy?" asks Fred Hiatt, editorial page editor for The Washington Post in a smart piece that examines the question of who constitutes a target for a self-declared "wartime president."

While it is obvious that the enemy, in this case, is a tiny, sticky, invisible microbe that stubbornly gloms onto surfaces or leaps through the air to weaponize subway cars or shared gym equipment or a touch to the face.

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Arguing with the coronavirus deniers in your life can backfire -- here's how to make them see the light

For those of us diligently practicing social distancing, it can be infuriatingly frustrating to encounter friends and loved ones who refuse to. There’s a strong temptation to lash out at them as selfish fools whose irresponsibility endangers us all. But doing so will backfire because, when people feel attacked, they get defensive and entrench in their position. Like it or not (not!), this is human nature.

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Pandemic modelers warn that Trump’s lies may increase the spread of COVID-19

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.

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Governors emerge as the nation's true leaders as Trump faceplants during coronavirus crisis

This was the week that the United States and our region became the global epicenter for the coronavirus pandemic.

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How to make a coronavirus vaccine

The coronavirus pandemic may seem like something out of a horror movie — an invisible enemy that kills millions of people and shuts down society, reducing vibrant communities to ghost towns — but it is important to remember that the virus itself is not some supernatural monster. It is a thing that lives by and through infecting other cells,it has tangible physical characteristics — meaning it can be captured and therefore killed.

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Here’s what we know — and don’t know — about possible coronavirus treatments promoted by Trump

President Donald Trump’s excitement about decades-old anti-malarial drugs to treat the coronavirus has touched off widespread interest in the medications, hoarding by some doctors, new clinical trials on the fly and desperation among patients who take them for other conditions.

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As US coronavirus testing lags, scientists say we need better tests to get back to normal

Despite the United States' struggles to test patients for the COVID-19 coronavirus, medical experts say the country will need an entirely different type of test to end statewide lockdowns and let people return to work.

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Pandemic modelers warn that Trump's lies may increase the spread of COVID-19

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.

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Scientists: Trump bungled this badly

A public health expert told Salon that President Donald Trump's handling of the coronavirus pandemic has been abysmal.

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