Opinion

'Bullsh*t and gaslighting': Here is why Trump's rabid fans buy into his lies

Donald Trump lies. A lot. This isn’t news. In December 2015, PolitiFact bestowed its annual “Lie of the Year” award on “the campaign misstatements of Donald Trump," and it wasn’t even close:

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Was the Pope's summit on sexual abuse a publicity stunt?

In my seven years as a published writer, no single interview has had a greater impact on me than my conversation with Pennsylvania state Rep. Mark Rozzi. Rozzi, a Democrat, has made it his personal mission to hold the Catholic Church accountable for allowing priests to sexually abuse children — and, on a broader level, to make it harder for any institution that conceals child sex abuse to get away with it.

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Here are 5 ways the 2020 election will be shaped by late night comedy

Just over four years ago, on February 10, 2015, Jon Stewart, then host of Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show,” announced he was stepping down from his post as the nation’s satirist-in-chief. Over the years Stewart had increasingly become one of the most important critics of the flaws in our democracy and by the time of his departure he was regularly considered one of the most trusted “journalists” in the nation. Stewart, often in tandem with Stephen Colbert, broke stories, cut through the BS of political spin and invigorated a nation hungry to step outside of the culture of fear that so often predominates on televised news.

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Here are tawdry financial crimes theories contained in Robert Mueller's Trump-Russia investigation -- so far

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.

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The witch hunt may be over — but Donald Trump is about to burned at the stake

After more than 20 months of digging, issuing subpoenas, interviewing witnesses, getting indictments, making plea deals, and achieving felony convictions in federal court, Special Counsel Robert Mueller is reportedly nearing the end of his investigation into Donald Trump and his campaign for their connections to Russians during the 2016 election. Whether one week away or one month away, the Trump White House is said to be steeling itself for Mueller’s report. The end is near.

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Conservatives desperately latch onto Jussie Smollett's hoax to cover up the steady stream of right-wing violence

The arrest of "Empire" actor Jussie Smollett for allegedly faking a hate crime against himself arrived like an extra Christmas for Donald Trump and his devoted propagandists.

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You shouldn’t be surprised the American public is dangerously complacent about Russian meddling

No one should be surprised if a substantial minority of American voters remains unconvinced that Russian agents interfered in the 2016 presidential election, or if an even larger percentage of the American public downplays the urgency of the Russian threat to the nation’s electoral system.  Complacency in the face of foreign dangers is nothing new in the United States; during World War Two, it was plainly visible among Americans less than two months after the Japanese attack upon Pearl Harbor.

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So how's your tax refund? Thanks to GOP tax scam -- big banks made extra $28 billion last year

While headlines continue to proliferate about average Americans discovering they will not receive the tax return they were expecting—and in many cases, depending on—new federal date released Thursday showed that major U.S. banks earned an extra $28 billion in profits last year thanks to the tax scam bill passed by the Republican Party and signed by President Donald Trump at the end of 2017.

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Should we take Trump's Twitter threats seriously? We'd be fools not to

At this point, I’d almost prefer that Donald Trump act on at least one of his tweet-threats instead of constantly hurling his rage-gasms into the void, keeping us all perpetually in a state of awkward panic. Observing Trump’s ongoing series of thirst-traps for dictators feels like leaning too far back in your chair and almost falling over but catching yourself at the last second -- that sense of adrenalized gravitational panic seems to linger more and more between presidential outbursts as time wears on.

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The revolving door between media and government spins again with CNN's hiring of Sarah Isgur Flores

A common practice in American journalism has, once again, sparked outrage.

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Should we take Trump's threats against his enemies seriously? History shows we'd better

At this point, I’d almost prefer that Donald Trump act on at least one of his tweet-threats instead of constantly hurling his rage-gasms into the void, keeping us all perpetually in a state of awkward panic. Observing Trump’s ongoing series of thirst-traps for dictators feels like leaning too far back in your chair and almost falling over but catching yourself at the last second -- that sense of adrenalized gravitational panic seems to linger more and more between presidential outbursts as time wears on.

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What Michael Cohen will discuss about his seedy past with Trump

President Donald Trump's former attorney Michael Cohen has waffled on whether he will testify for Congress before he reports to prison for the crimes he's pleaded guilty to — but on Wednesday, the House Oversight Committee confirmed that he will be appearing publicly at a hearing on Feb. 27.

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Trump isn't colluding with the Russians — he's conspiring with Putin

The question is no longer whether Trump and his campaign colluded with Russians in advance of the election of 2016. The New York Times reported recently that “Donald J. Trump and at least 17 campaign officials and advisers had contacts with Russian nationals and WikiLeaks, or their intermediaries,” during the 2016 campaign for president. “Among these contacts are more than 100 in-person meetings, phone calls, text messages, emails and private messages on Twitter.”“Mr. Trump and his campaign repeatedly denied having such contacts with Russians during the 2016 election,” The Times reported. They dropped that last assertion like an afterthought, but in fact, the denials by Trump and his henchmen that they had any contacts with Russians go to the heart of the case of collusion. Prosecutors call it “a sign of guilt,” the repeated denial of facts that are later shown to be true. Why would Trump stand up at his very first news conference after taking office on February 16, 2017, and deny that neither he or any of his associates other than Michael Flynn had any contacts with Russians? He was asked the question repeatedly, in different forms. Did he have any business dealings in Russia? No. Did anyone working on his behalf have any contacts with Russians? “No, nobody that I know of.” Can we get a yes or no answer, sir? “Russia is a ruse.” “It’s all fake news.” “It’s a joke.”In an off-the-cuff manner, Trump told reporters at his first press conference that he had already talked to Russian president Vladimir Putin twice: once right after the election, and the second time after he had been inaugurated. Reporters didn’t question him about what they had talked about. Everyone was concerned with whether there had been contacts between Trump’s campaign and Russians before election day, not after.

But not enough attention has been paid to the number of times Trump and Putin have talked since the election. According to The New York Times, Trump and Putin have had at least five meetings in person, and nine conversations over the phone since Trump won the election on November 9, 2016. Trump has gone to extraordinary lengths to keep those conversations secret, including taking away his own translator’s notes after a private meeting with Putin in Hamburg, Germany at the G-20 Summit in 2017. He also had a second meeting with Putin after a dinner at the same summit, during which Trump’s own interpreter was barred from the meeting. “There is no official United States government record of what was said,” according to the Times.

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