Opinion

Hey, Republicans: Want to keep the grift going? It's time to dump Trump

It's no great mystery why Republicans continue to defend Donald Trump, even as his obvious crimes and corruption pile up: They think it's the best way to maintain power. Trump may be chaotic and embarrassing, but he signs off on major Republican priorities, mostly meaning right-wing judges and tax cuts for the rich. Republican voters, mainly motivated by bigotry and a desire to stick it to liberals, adore Trump's trollish behavior and generally worship him like a god. So the party's leading political figures have gone along with the whole thing, making transparently silly arguments and generally making fools of themselves standing by the orange gremlin in the White House.

Trump, in other words, is a price Republicans have to pay to keep their multi-decade deal — or, to speak more directly, their long-term grift — going. This deal is simple enough: Republican voters will continue to elect officials who dismantle the American dream by concentrating all the wealth at the top. In exchange, those elected official will inflict pain on the people that Republican voters hate, such as independent women, people of color, immigrants and LGBTQ people.

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Trump's quid pro quo isn’t Mitch McConnell’s only headache

William Taylor is the US senior diplomat to Ukraine. He gave testimony to Congress Wednesday confirming what we already know: the president held up aid in exchange for Ukraine’s president to announce publicly that he was investigating Joe Biden.

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Ukraine ambassador didn't just blow the lid off Trump's conspiracy — he hinted at a whole lot more

I hear a lot of pundits and analysts insisting that the Democrats have finally decided to move on impeachment because the Ukraine scandal is so easy to understand. They also insist that all the earlier evidence of Donald Trump's lawbreaking, such as the 10 obstruction of justice charges in the Mueller report and the ongoing violations of the emoluments clause, should be set aside as articles of impeachment because they are simply too confusing. That is nonsense. It's the same story.

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Republicans are clearly spooked as the most dangerous witness in Trump’s impeachment speaks to Congress

Ever since texts from the behind-the-scenes State Department efforts to induce Ukraine into investigating President Donald Trump’s political opponents were released, it’s been clear that the House’s impeachment inquiry desperately needed to hear from acting U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Bill Taylor.

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A psychology expert explains why human evolution can help us understand impeachment

Whatever you think about the potential – likely? – impeachment of Donald Trump (and I’m all for it), this development converges intriguingly with The Goodness Paradox, a fascinating 2018 book by anthropologist Richard Wrangham. In it, Wrangham makes the paradoxical suggestion that socially orchestrated murder - something very much like the modern death penalty - may have acted in our prehistoric past to make us less violent than we would otherwise be, at least within our own groups. Let me explain.

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That new trade deal with China looks awfully familiar

The United States has reached a “very substantial phase one deal” with China in the high-stakes trade negotiations between the two economic superpowers, Donald Trump says.

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The Kurds will never again help the US in the Middle East: Veteran CIA officer

This week, as hundreds of ISIS fighters escaped from Kurdish prisons in northeastern Syria following Donald Trump’s decision to pull out American troops, a group of current and former “special operators” for U.S. intelligence met for a previously scheduled casual lunch in Washington.

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200 women say 'creepy' Trump molested them

Most women know what it’s like to be approached by a guy like Donald Trump. He’s that guy you spot coming at you from across the party with hands extended and eyes emblazoned by a voracious glare. Certainly his mouth is open a bit, and there’s a drop of predator drool at one edge. To him you are not a woman, but an assemblage of body parts -- mouth, ass, breasts.

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James Byrd, Jr., John William King, and the history of American lynching

In February, 1999, John William King – who was executed in Huntsville, Texas on April 24, 2019 –became the first white man in modern Texas history to be sentenced to death for killing a black person.  How that black person, James Byrd, Jr., died was no mystery. Three self-proclaimed white supremacists had drawn up a plan to start a race war while they were in prison. These men chained Byrd to the back of their pickup truck and dragged him for a mile and half until his head and right arm were torn from his body by a concrete culvert on Huff Creek Road in Jasper County.

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Can the Trump cult be deprogrammed? Here's what this mind control expert says

Author of "The Cult of Trump" Steven Hassan on our president's similarities to famous cult leaders — and how to break the grip

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Republicans' laughable effort to attack Adam Schiff lands with a thud

Republicans' effort to castigate California Democrat Rep. Adam Schiff, the chair of the House Intelligence Committee spearheading the impeachment inquiry, met a quick and sudden defeat on Monday in a vote of 218-185.

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Minimum wage workers win big union victory in anti-union Texas

While Donald Trump’s Labor Department works to diminish employee rights, organized workers have scored an important victory deep in the heart of anti-union Texas.

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Freedom of thought is under attack -- here's how to save your mind

Freedom of thought stands at a critical crossroads. Technological and psychological advances could be used to promote free thought. They could shield our inner worlds, reduce our mental biases, and create new spaces for thought. Yet states and corporations are forging these advances into weapons that restrict what we think.

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