Opinion

Why everything about the Trump administration's new opioid video campaign is wrong

A new campaign—from the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), the Truth Initiative and the nonprofit Ad Council—has live-streamed a woman’s detox from opioids in a cubic “treatment box” to NYC passers-by. It then released a video including clips of the woman’s detox, interspersed with melodramatic music, commentary from “experts” and pedestrians’ gawking reactions.

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This 'will go down in history' as clear moment 'American democracy truly at risk'

Less than 12 hours after praising himself for being on his best behavior as bombs were found in the mail of several targets of his incendiary and conspiratorial ravings—including Congresswomen Maxine Waters, CNN, former President Barack Obama, and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton—President Donald Trump cast aside his temporarily subdued facade Thursday morning and fired off a tweet blaming the media for the explosives sent to at least nine separate locations and warning that the press must "clean up its act, fast."

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'Someone is going to be killed before this is over': Trump is inciting violence — and now we have a MAGAbomber

I’ve been writing about Donald Trump for more than two years. I wrote a couple of pieces on his campaign for the Village Voice in 2016. I started this column in the spring of 2017. I haven’t kept an exact count, but I’ll bet I’ve written more than a hundred columns on him.

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David Brooks' latest NYT column bashing Democrats exposes the hollow core of centrist political commentary

New York Times columnist David Brooks is no fan of President Donald Trump, but to maintain his own credentials as a certified centrist pundit, he cannot bear to praise the Democratic Party either.

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These are some of the disturbing lessons America is refusing to learn from Jamal Khashoggi's murder

We’re not connecting the dots. We ought to be holding our breath – the fallout from the assassination of Jamal Khashoggi could easily have plunged the world into economic chaos. Even if we slide through this time, the pattern is clear – a world which cannot survive even a temporary  disruption of Saudi Arabia’s desire or capacity to pump 10 million barrels of oil every day is a world at risk.

This article was originally published at Salon

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Trump’s midterm strategy is right out of the ‘Wag the Dog’ political playbook

President Donald Trump faces real risks from the upcoming midterm elections, and he's clearly getting desperate. Instead of boasting about his supposed "successes" in an attempt to rally his voters, he's going on the attack against Democrats — and against immigrants.

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Undeterred by Trump’s threats, early voters break turnout records

Early voting numbers are achieving dizzying heights for the 2018 midterm elections, despite President Donald Trump tweeting a veiled threat on Saturday.

This article was originally published at Salon

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Trump attacks democracy with 'one of the most naked attempts' to suppress voters in modern times

After President Donald Trump fired off a hysterical tweet this weekend warning of mass "voter fraud"—a right-wing bogeyman for which there is virtually zero evidence—and threatening violators with severe punishment, the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law condemned the president for deploying Jim Crow-era scare tactics to suppress minority voter turnout just two weeks before the midterm elections.

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Roger Stone re-thinks his rhetoric as Mueller aggressively pursues his ties to WikiLeaks

One of the members of President Donald Trump's inner campaign circle who has thus far avoided criminal charges is Roger Stone, a longtime Republican operative going back to the Nixon years who worked on getting Trump elected in 2016.

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The forgotten anniversary of a war from hell and why it should be remembered

We’re already two years past the crystal anniversary and eight years short of the silver one, or at least we would be, had it been a wedding -- and, after a fashion, perhaps it was. On October 7, 2001, George W. Bush launched the invasion -- “liberation” was the word often used then -- of Afghanistan. It was the start of the second Afghan War of the era, one that, all these years later, still shows no signs of ending. Though few realized it at the time, the American people married war. Permanent, generationalinfinite war is now embedded in the American way of life, while just about the only part of the government guaranteed ever more soaring dollars, no matter what it does with them, is the U.S. military.

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To hell with civility -- stop your whining about angry citizens making Mitch McConnell uncomfortable

The news media has been rightfully up in arms about the president of the United States participating in a cover-up of the murder of a journalist and Washington Post columnist. And they've been equally critical of President Trump's comments last week at a rally in Montana, where he applauded a GOP congressman for body-slamming a reporter because he asked a question. Likewise, the media has understandably protested the Secret Service telling an accredited journalist that he was not allowed to ask Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner questions on an airplane.

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Some evangelicals are waking up to the nightmare of the GOP's deeply troubling sell-out of the Kingdom of God

Eyes are locked on Texas. And deep in its heart are white evangelicals who could be part of a blue wave many hope will wash over that red state to carry Ted Cruz far out to sea.  In tight race between Cruz and his energetic Democratic Party opponent Beto O’Rourke, New York Times reporter Elizabeth Dias suggests that white evangelical women could be open to Democratic candidates. Her interviews with long-time Republican voters point to an increasing disenchantment that could temper the unwavering evangelical support that Republican incumbents and candidates view as their inalienable birthright.

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A historian explains what Machiavelli can teach us about Donald Trump

Throughout the The Prince and his other political works, Machiavelli cautions that internal subversion is the most dangerous consequence of a prince losing the trust of his subjects. To guard against this, a prince must never appear frivolous, unprincipled, fickle, or shallow. Instead, he must always appear to adhere to “certain values of virtu.” If he can do this, a prince will avoid the greatest danger of all: revolt from within. “Internal subversion is more perilous than external attacks,” Machiavelli cautions, “and if a prince doesn’t take care to avoid the hatred of the people, he will live in a state of constant fear.”

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