Opinion

Bill Barr is wrong — he's the one who is 'playing with fire'

When CNN's Wolf Blitzer challenged Bill Barr's fearmongering about mail-in ballots in an interview on Wednesday, the attorney general had no credible counterargument. So instead of responding with a coherent explanation, he had an emotional outburst.

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Trump makes more violence inevitable by refusing to condemn Kenosha gunman: Conservative

President Donald Trump's mindless loyalty toward his supporters -- who are thus mindlessly devoted to him -- has done real harm to American society, according to a conservative writer.

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Test your knowledge of wild, weird and outright wacky American religious beliefs

Americans in past generations lived in a sea of religion inherited largely from the Middle East by way of Europe, with home grown refinements. Most still do. When Americans venture off the continent, one of the things many find fascinating is the religious  beliefs they encounter. Some people worship flying monkeys, or magical big breasted dancers, or Prince Phillip.

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Bill Barr shows his true face in a startlingly arrogant and partisan interview on CNN

In a new interview with CNN on Wednesday, Attorney General Bill Barr showed stunning levels of arrogance, partisanship, and contempt — falling short of even the extremely low expectations he has already earned.

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Here's how right-wing Christian propaganda trained Republican voters to accept Trump's Covid denialism

Donald Trump didn't like what the experts were telling him about the coronavirus pandemic, so he found a guy with "Dr." in front of his name who will tell the president the bedtime stories he wants to hear. Dr. Scott Atlas isn't an expert in infectious disease or epidemiology, as are coronavirus task force advisers Dr. Deborah Birx and Dr. Anthony Fauci, whom he has pretty much usurped. Atlas is a radiologist and, more importantly, a senior fellow at the far-right bad-idea incubator known as the Hoover Institution (previously home to the infamous prediction that the U.S. death toll from the COVID-19 pandemic would be around 5,000).

According to the New York Times and the Washington Post, Atlas — who apparently caught Trump's eye the way so many of his advisers do, by peddling BS on Fox News — is ready and willing to say all sorts of medically unsound things that just happen to align with everything Trump wants to believe about the coronavirus. So Atlas has risen rapidly as a power player and is reportedly even getting venerable institutions like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to echo his unscientific beliefs.

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Trump staged a 'fascist photo shoot' in Kenosha in hopes of staying out of jail: Columnist

President Donald Trump went to Wisconsin and he went through the motions of being president there, but if his manner seemed off, one columnist wrote, that's because he didn't understand why he was really there.

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Trump has flirted with right-wing terror for years -- but his re-election strategy seems to be a full-on embrace

In the aftermath of tragedies and disasters, the country naturally turns to the president for words of reassurance. Whether it's a mass shooting or a terrorist attack or a hurricane — all events that happen more often than we'd like — the president is called upon to comfort those directly affected and bring the nation together to face whatever the aftermath might be.Depending on your political bent, you might think of Ronald Reagan after the Challenger explosion saying, "We will never forget them as they 'slipped the surly bonds of earth' to 'touch the face of God.'" Or maybe George W. Bush standing in the rubble of the World Trade Center or speaking at the Islamic Center of Washington six days after the attacks to quote from the Quran and declare that "Islam is peace." I think of Barack Obama singing "Amazing Grace" after the Charleston church massacre and Bill Clinton after the Oklahoma City bombing, saying, "You have lost too much, but you have not lost everything. And you have certainly not lost America, for we will stand with you for as many tomorrows as it takes."This is a big part of the job that presidents are required to perform, and certainly some are better at it than others. But no president has ever been as terrible at the task as Donald Trump. He is simply incapable of being empathetic or reassuring. He doesn't even try. Instead of trying to bring the country together in a time of almost unprecedented stress and trauma, he has decided to intensify the nation's anxiety for his own personal and political gain. If there's ever been a more cynical election strategy I can't think of it.

Trump and his campaign are making no secret of the fact that they believe protests and civil unrest will make people vote for a second term and so they are stoking the discord as much as possible. They think they can finesse his administration's disastrous response to the deadly pandemic and the resulting economic catastrophe by ginning up chaos in the streets and focusing people's attention away from the other problems in their lives and aiming their anxiety at Black Lives Matter protesters, progressives and big cities.

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Four years ago, we warned progressives Trump could win -- and now we're warning you again

Five days before the election that put Donald Trump in the White House, a 2016 article we wrote appeared under the headline "Dangerous Myths About Trump That Some Progressives Cling To." The piece warned progressive activists about "three key myths":
Myth #1: Trump can't win.

Myth #2: If Trump becomes president, he'll be blocked from implementing the policies he's been advocating.

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Here's how Biden must call out Trump's lies during the debates

Joe Biden should insist on some crucial ground rules in his debates with President Donald Trump or skip them altogether, according to a new column.

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‘He just admitted it’: Trump mocked for giving life to rumors of him having a stroke

President Donald Trump took off for Wisconsin Tuesday morning, despite requests by officials not to come and take manpower away from police. But before he left, he fired off a tweet giving life to rumors that the reason for his late-night trip to Walter Reed in Aug. 2020 was due to a series of mini-strokes.

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New revelations about Mueller’s investigation raise serious questions about how and why Rosenstein shielded Trump

Donald Trump was never investigated to determine if he is a Russian agent or asset, according to an explosive book published today by a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter.

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America hits another grim milestone to remind us how tragically Donald Trump has failed -- but it didn't have to be this way

The United States this week surpassed 6 million cases of COVID-19, the most in the world. Even when measuring relative to population, America's standing is dismal and depressing. We're currently ranked 10th in the world with 18,675 cases per million people, and growing by 30-50,000 new cases every day. As I begin to write this essay, midday on Monday, we've already racked up 14,151 cases for the day so far.Just for the sake of contrast, Italy is ranked 60th in cases per million residents. France is ranked 63rd. Germany is 83rd. Iraq is ranked 49th. Canada is 76th. Again, the U.S. is ranked 10th. There are "shithole countries," as Trump called them, who are faring better than we are.

In case the Red Hat trolls jump into the comments to rubber-stamp Donald Trump's nonsense about how we have the most cases because we do the most testing, the U.S. is ranked 18th in testing per million residents, far from the most in the world (per million), yet we're 10th in cases, and 11th in deaths. Denmark, on the other hand, is 13th in testing, meaning it does more testing than we do, but it's ranked 82nd in cases and 55th in deaths (all per million residents). If Trump were right, and testing artificially increased cases and deaths somehow, Denmark would have many more cases and deaths per million than we do. It doesn't. We still have more. Many more.

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Republicans are running on a 'big lie' about American cities and it's getting people killed

The Covid-19 pandemic has resulted in a modest influx of New Yorkers to my town, which is located about 90 miles Northwest of the city. My new next-door neighbors just moved up from Brooklyn this month. As one of them told me the other day, they made the move because they are now able to work remotely, and it made sense to get out of the city because they could rent an entire three-bedroom house for less than they had been paying for a cramped two-bedroom apartment.

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