Opinion

Keep calling him #MoscowMitch: McConnell is finally running scared

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell doesn't like it when you call him #MoscowMitch. He hates it so much that he'll accuse you of being a McCarthyist for doing so. If the accusation was untrue — that is, if McConnell, President Donald Trump and other Republicans weren't empowering Russia at the expense of America for their personal benefit — then #MoscowMitch and talk of collusion in Trump's 2016 presidential campaign would be unfair, even unjust. As the facts currently stand, however, it is a perfectly fair label.

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It’s not just David Duke and the KKK anymore; it’s Tucker Carlson and Fox News Network who sell hate

Some guy named James Neally, sent me a death threat a couple of weeks ago via Facebook Messenger. “Keep taling (sic) about the potus that way you did in your last article and it will be the end of you and your family.”

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Calling out Trump's racism is the right thing to do —and the right 2020 strategy for the Democrats

After a mass shooting, inspired by white nationalist talking points regularly amplified by Donald Trump and the pundits at Fox News, resulted in the 22 deaths in El Paso, TX, Trump and his allies have been focused like a laser on one goal: Helping Trump evade political responsibility so that he can keep stoking violent racism.

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Trump's frightened legions show a pathology at the root of our cultural nervous breakdown

The United States of America is less of a nation than a collective, psychotic episode.

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Yes, Donald Trump is making the shootings all about himself

President Donald Trump was obviously irate with the fact that many in the media blamed him for stoking the anti-immigrant bigotry behind the recent mass shooting in El Paso, Texas. But like the much of the media, Trump can’t help but make everything about himself, as his response to the El Paso slaughter and the subsequent massacre in Dayton, Ohio, has made clear.

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Trump lashed out at his aides even as they tried to protect him from the ‘debacle’ he created: reports

Even when it comes to the solemn duties of the office, President Donald Trump can’t help but make everything about himself and obsess about the media coverage.

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Desperate Trump supporters push a false equivalence between inciting terrorism and campaign finance transparency

Once it became irrefutable that Donald Trump had colluded with a criminal Russian conspiracy to interfere with the 2016 (even if there wasn't quite enough evidence to charge conspiracy), Trump and his Republican enablers switched tactics. Unable to deny the Russian collusion, instead they leaned on one of Trump's favorite gambits: Whataboutism, a propaganda technique also heavily favored by Russian president Vladimir Putin. The idea of whataboutism is to throw up a bunch of false equivalences and accuse the "other side" of doing what you do, to make it seem like your critics are hypocrites and that everyone is doing the terrible thing you can no longer pretend you didn't do.

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Ivanka Trump's mask slips: What her Chicago tweet reveals

Apparently, no longer content with traveling the world on seemingly pointless missions as a shadow First Lady, Ivanka Trump has taken a more curious role in her father’s administration as of late: Clean up lady.

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This is the face of radical Republican anti-Semitism

Call the Capitol hypocrisy police: We seem to have another incident needing attention.

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This pervasive American myth is utter baloney

The American dream promises that anyone can make it if they work hard enough and play by the rules. Anyone can make it by pulling themselves up by their “bootstraps.”

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Winemaker Eric Trump has a big grin on his face -- and one of daddy's signature issues may be the reason why

Is Trump hoping that his threatened new tax on French wine might benefit his son’s poorly-reviewed Trump Winery in the vineyards of Virginia?

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Conservative writer George Will says Trump’s incitement of violence shows he’s weak and a ‘national embarrassment’

In a new column this week, conservative writer George Will said clearly what many of his ideological brethren have been unwilling to say.

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Mass shootings are more than hate: Trump's politics of vengeance stokes violent grievance culture

In the wake of the mass shootings In El Paso and Dayton over the past weekend, the news media has responded slightly differently than the usual ritualistic wall-to-wall coverage. Because the El Paso killer provided an online screed explaining his white supremacist beliefs and murderous intentions toward Latinx people in the U.S., there has been a greater willingness to use plain language to talk about the president's demagogic rhetoric and racist worldview.

There have been exceptions, of course, most glaringly by the New York Times which made an egregious mistake with a headline that implied Trump was seriously changing his ways based upon his dry canned speech on Monday which looked like a hostage video. And presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke, who hails from El Paso, responded with raw incredulity when asked by the press if the president is a racist, making it clear that the time for such questions is long past.

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