Opinion

Critics bury Kayleigh McEnany after she calls Jake Tapper accusations of her lying 'baseless'

Following an appearance by "State of the Union" host Jake Tapper on "CNN's "Reliable Sources" -- where he revealed that he had banned Kayleigh McEnany from his show for her shameless lying, the outgoing White House press secretary tweeted out the clip and complained it was a baseless personal attack."

She wrote, "This is a therapy session for a broken network, and

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Veep: Mike Pence’s 2020 hilariously reviewed by Showtime’s ‘The Circus’

Vice President Mike Pence's 2020 was reviewed in a new video posted to Twitter by Showtime's "The Circus."

"The world stopped this October when a gigantic fly landed on Mike Pence's head and sat there for TWO F*CKING MINUTES. But that wasn't the only — or even the best — highlight of the Veep's year," the show noted on their The Recount account.

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Here’s why the arrogance of ‘centrism’ may destroy us all

The philosopher George Santayana famously said, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." One insight to draw from Santayana's oft-repeated aphorism is that the repetition of clichés is likely to have little effect, given the widespread tendency to ignore pithy advice and continue witlessly recycling, recreating and reliving history.

This article originally appeared at Salon.

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The worst senator on COVID picks the worst time for the worst message

Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky got into his own version of the holiday spirit by using wingnut media on Christmas Day to call for states to lose federal funding over public-health measures he doesn't approve of.

"You know, nobody ever intended that governors would be sort of czars or dictators in charge of the economy,'' Paul told The Epoch Times on Friday," according to nuthouse Newsmax.

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Trump complicates Kelly Loeffler’s election — and it may cost Republicans control of the Senate

Kelly Loeffler had a tumultuous first year in the Senate.

Now, the chief executive-turned-Republican lawmaker from Georgia is in the final days of a just-as-turbulent bid to keep her seat. It will culminate with a January 5 runoff election that will also determine whether her party maintains control of the upper congressional chamber.

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Trump slammed for silence on Nashville bombing — while tweeting election conspiracy theories

On Saturday morning, outgoing President Donald Trump fired off a new round of conspiracy theories on Twitter attacking his own Justice Department and the Republican-controlled Supreme Court — but as of this writing, he has not put out a statement of any kind on the mysterious bombing that took place on Christmas Day in Nashville, Tennessee.

Commenters on social media noticed the disconnect — and were quick to criticize the president's priorities, noting other things he had tweeted about instead.

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Trump’s America is filled with ‘selfish rubes’ who ‘can’t handle even modest adversity’: columnist

Americans were blasted for selfishness and whining in a new column by Rick Newman.

"Did you whine in 2020? Were masks too much for you? Did the coronavirus pandemic cause intolerable inconvenience? Congratulations, American Snowflake—you can't handle even modest adversity," Newman wrote at Yahoo! Finance.

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Wisconsin Chief Justice slams right-wing threats to judges -- after siding with Trump in court

Even people sympathetic to Donald Trump are fed up with his supporters' barbarous anti-Semitic conduct at his behest.

Wisconsin Supreme Court Chief Justice Patience Roggensack issued an extraordinary Christmas Day statement condemning threats received by colleagues who were part of a 4-3 majority rejecting the latest desperate lawsuit from Trump's Keystone Cops legal team. And Roggensack, a conservative, was one of the three justices outvoted in the case.

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Inside a 3-tiered plan to investigate the Trumps after they vacate the White House

Last week I interviewed James Fallows, who'd spoken with many people over a period of a few months who'd been involved in or studied previous investigations of presidents, for a piece he wrote on how Joe Biden should investigate Donald Trump.

As he noted to me, "there's never been anything quite like this," even as many presidents have previously been investigated for wrong-doing. Trump is in a league of his own. And it will take a lot of work to investigate him.

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The Trump Store joins the War on Christmas

You know things are bad for Donald Trump when his own online store bails on him.

If you visit www.trumpstore.com, the first images you'll find are scrolling advertisements at the top of the page for "The Holiday Gift Guide" and "The Holiday Entertaining Guide." No message of Christmas, much less the Lord. Apparently, his own commercial website has been taken captive in the War of Christmas.

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What If, after 9/11, George W. Bush had just thrown a bunch of parties?

'Tis the season to be folly
Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la
Don(ald) we now our gay apparel,
Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la!...

It's party time in the nation's capital and the Christmas spirit reigns supreme, even if the Texas Republican Party does want to secede from the Union. I mean, who doesn't?

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Donald Trump is a dull, nasty and childish man — but his legacy of amazing idiocy will be long remembered

We're tentatively starting to emerge from the four year-long national nightmare of Donald Trump's presidency, but the reckoning of what the nation endured will take years to really understand. Trump was terrible in so many ways that it's hard to catalog them all: His sociopathic lack of regard for others. His towering narcissism. His utter ease with lying. His cruelty and sadism. The glee he took in cheating and stomping on anything good and decent. His misogyny and racism. His love of encouraging violence, only equaled by his personal cowardice.

But of all the repulsive character traits in a man so wholly lacking in any redeemable qualities, perhaps the most perplexing to his opponents was Trump's incredible stupidity. On one hand, it was maddening that a man so painfully dumb, a man who clearly could barely read — even on those rare occasions when he deigned to wear glasses — still had the low cunning necessary to take over the Republican Party and then the White House.

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Trump's last-minute pardon spree shows why Joe Biden just can't 'move on'

No one should be surprised that Donald Trump is on a pardon spree for some of the most notorious crooks in politics. You have the men that were convicted for their role in colluding with Russia's version of the Watergate conspiracy to hack Democratic emails during the 2016 election, such as Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort and Trumpian gadfly Roger Stone. You have former congressional GOP scumbags Chris Collins, Duncan Hunter, and Steve Stockman, all convicted for financial crimes like insider trading stealing from campaign donors and stealing from charity. You have Jared Kushner's father, Charles Kushner, who was sent to the clinker for tax evasion. And for good measure, Trump also sprung some outright murderers, mercenaries who worked for Blackwater, which is run by Trump's buddy, Erik Prince. These men were convicted for their role in an outright massacre of Iraqi civilians, including a 9-year-old boy.

No one is surprised. Indeed, social media is currently duking it out over the trophy for Least Surprised. But it is this very lack of surprise that underlines why Trump's pardon spree is a problem. As we were repeatedly warned would happen when Trump took office, Trump is normalizing corruption — at least on the Republican side. All of which just makes it all the more urgent for the Department of Justice, when Joe Biden takes office, to ignore all calls to let bygones be bygones, and instead investigate and prosecute Trump to the fullest extent of the law. Forget all the claims that doing so is a threat to "national unity." Failure to hold Trump to account is the true threat to national unity.

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