RawStory

Opinion

Enabling a dangerous president: Pence was there

Donald Trump’s disclosure of highly sensitive intelligence to the Russians and reported efforts to shut down the FBI’s investigation into former national security adviser Mike Flynn now shine a spotlight on the next person in line for the presidency. It should be withering, because Vice President Mike Pence (JD, Indiana — Robert H. McKinney School of Law, ’86) is not a solution to Trump. His consistent dishonesty is a central part of the problem America faces. But compared to the boss, whose dangerous tendencies he has enabled, Pence seems like a Boy Scout. That merely proves the depths to which the bar of acceptable behavior has fallen, if it even exists anymore.

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Don't count on the precedent of Watergate to help depose Trump

“Our Constitution works.” So declared newly installed President Gerald Ford in 1974 after Richard Nixon’s resignation. “Our great republic is a government of laws and not of men.”

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Ivanka's book 'Women Who Work' tells the same lies as Trumpcare

By and large, critics have taken Ivanka Trump at her word about her new book, “Women Who Work.” The Conversation

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A neuroscientist explains why we need ecstasy and ketamine in place of Prozac and Xanax

What can doctors do to ease emotional pain? The physicians of ancient and medieval times found many plants and plant-derived substances (ie, drugs) that soothed mental as well as physical ills. Rarely did they draw a line between the psychological and physiological benefits of their remedies. Modern medicine has confirmed the overlap of bodily and mental maladies through painstaking research, and yet treatment for psychological problems lags far behind a cascade of stunning advances in the treatment of physical ills – advances that have doubled the human lifespan and improved our quality of life immeasurably.

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Congress has the power to release Trump's tax returns to the public

Throughout the extremely disturbing first few months of the Trump administration when the President’s views — most recently with respect to FBI Director James Comey — appear to turn on a dime, one important constant has been his refusal to release his tax returns. (His latest promise is to release his returns after he leaves office!) To cut short what seems to be the nation’s inevitable slide into constitutional crisis, Congress should obtain and possibly disclose those returns under authority of a law first passed in 1924. The action requires support from a few Republicans in either the House or Senate, but they must recognize the risk the President presents to the country and that their hopes for major legislative and foreign policy successes continue to dwindle the longer he remains in office.

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Don’t get too distracted by the Comey Scandal -- Trump is still moving forward with his slow-motion coup

The most important revelation in the mushrooming Comey scandal is the report that Trump summoned the former FBI director to a White House dinner and “demanded loyalty.”

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In a time of madness, Sally Yates is a profile in courage

Let us now praise a class act.

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This is why we have become a failed country -- and why we can't just blame Trump

Warner Brothers and Universal have both been dusting off an inventory of classic monsters — King Kong, Godzilla, The Mummy, The Wolf Man, etc. — which prompted New York Times film critics Manohla Dargis and A.O. Scott to speculate whether this was a reaction to a contemporary America, where monstrousness now seems to run rampant. When you add a film like the mega hit Get Out, about human monsters, you get the feeling that maybe Hollywood is onto something.

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Bill Moyers: Trump is hiding something extraordinary and lying as reflexively as the rest of us breathe

So Donald Trump fired James Comey because the FBI director mistreated Hillary Clinton last summer over her use of private emails.

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Donald Trump fires FBI director James Comey and a new national nightmare takes hold

Ever since Donald Trump took office amid revelations of Russian meddling in the 2016 election and his team’s connections with the Kremlin, a monumental political time-bomb has been steadily ticking. But things took an extremely ominous turn on May 9 when Trump suddenly fired the director of the FBI, James Comey. The Conversation

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Is Trump acting like Nixon did during Watergate?

Within minutes of the breaking news about President Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey, Brian Williams on MSNBC wondered if this was like Richard Nixon’s “Saturday Night Massacre,” when President Nixon, his back to the wall in the Watergate investigation, fired the Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox, on Oct. 20, 1973. Nixon ordered the Attorney General to abolish the office of special prosecutor. Refusing to do so and in protest, the Attorney General Elliot Richardson and the Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus resigned.  Nixon then turned to the U.S. Solicitor General Robert Bork, to carry out the firing of the special prosecutor.

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Donald Trump is afraid of the Russia scandal -- and he's having a hard time hiding it

President Donald Trump might be panicking, according to observers. The new president's manic behavior seems to be showing itself in his tweets more and more.

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Here's how Trump could spend $1 trillion to fix America if he actually knew what he was doing

Infrastructure! We’ve really got your attention now, right? Here’s the thing, though: It’s what makes modern life possible. Showers, cellphones, pizza delivery, toilets — all those fail without infrastructure. Much of what we’ve got now is old, dangerous, and needs replacement, and voters of both political parties agree on the need to do something about it. (That last statement in itself should be shocking enough to keep you reading.)

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