Opinion

Trump has induced a dissociative mental state that is eroding America's sense of self

Americans teeter on the brink of a state of collective fugue. A psychiatric state of mind, the fugue is caused by extreme distress in the aftermath of one or more cataclysmic events. The fugue state causes a person to fail to recall intrinsic identifying personal characteristics and to no longer remember what they believed in the past; those things they knew to be true no longer exist. This dissociative mental state erodes one’s fundamental concept of self. Under Donald Trump’s cataclysmal presidency, our collective memory and awareness of who we are as a people and our shared aspirations to perfect our union appear to be at the point of dissolution.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump is mainstreaming a poisonous delusion that makes it harder to protect kids from sexual abuse

Last night, during the shameful town hall NBC gave Donald Trump so he could avoid another humiliating debate defeat at Joe Biden's hands, Trump played the same game with QAnon that he does with white supremacists and right wing terrorists: Played dumb while giving winking encouragement to his more unhinged followers.

Keep reading... Show less

‘Cancel the show’: Trump mocked for losing ratings matchup against Biden

The ratings are in for President Donald Trump's head-to-head TV matchup against Joe Biden, and he lost.

Keep reading... Show less

Rick Wilson: 'Trump reeked of desperation' in NBC town hall -- and proved his campaign is 'broken'

President Donald Trump's one-man town hall showed he's "broke, broken and unmoored" as his re-election campaign hits rock bottom, according to former Republican strategist Rick Wilson.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's town hall stunt backfires: The president made the wrong choice when he refused to appear for a virtual face-off against Joe Biden

Donald Trump made the wrong choice when he refused to appear for a virtual face-off against Joe Biden.

Keep reading... Show less

This is your brain on Trump: Four years of chaos has changed America -- so what would four more do?

PHILADELPHIA — On an October afternoon nearly a month ahead of the presidential election, Mohamed Kabba hustled into the mail-in voting center at Tilden Middle School in Southwest Philadelphia with an air of urgency.“As an immigrant, there’s a lot at stake for me,” said Kabba, 64. He left Sierra Leone 30 years ago — but the past four divisive, unpredictable, and chaotic years have been like nothing he’s experienced in America.Head-spinning highlights include: President Trump’s impeachment, the longest government shutdown in U.S. history, divisive battles over Supreme Court appointments, countl...

Keep reading... Show less

12-hour voting lines give me hope -- even as America looks like a banana republic

Like most Americans, Stacy Bogan — a headshot and wedding photographer who lives in the sprawling Texas exurb of Mansfield, south of Dallas-Fort Worth — has had a rough 2020. While working to keep her studio afloat, her husband lost her job at the business services giant Cintas, which she blames on the mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Mostly, the couple shelters at home — but not when Texas opened polling stations for early voting on Tuesday.Bogan was hardly alone in venturing out to vote at the very first opportunity. Standing in a line that wrapped all the way around a local courthouse ...

Keep reading... Show less

Inside the Trump administration's coverup at the Cleveland Clinic

The Cleveland Clinic boasted that co-hosting the first presidential debate along with Case Western Reserve University was an honor for both institutions and the city. As the health security adviser to the Commission on Presidential Debates, it publicized protocols to protect everyone at their site on the Health Education Campus and at subsequent debates. It knew those protocols would also protect members of the public with whom all attendees would later come into contact.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's town hall is just another ratings ploy from 'The Apprentice' network

Never forget that when it comes to the phrase "news business" the word that carries the most weight is "business."

Speaking of which – and not coincidentally – avid fans of "The Apprentice" in its heyday may recall Donald Trump's second-favorite catchphrase, after "you're fired", was some variation of, "It's nothing personal, it's just business."

Keep reading... Show less

Team Trump humiliated as Rudy Giuliani's attempted 'October surprise' backfires

The case of Rudy Giuliani will go down as one of the more perplexing mysteries of our time. Even though the man was a terrible mayor of New York City, he was likely going to be remembered fondly as the guy who actually stepped up and did his job on 9/11. But instead of spending his retirement years sipping martinis and resting on that particular laurel, Giuliani has apparently decided that being a basement-level launderer of Russian disinformation is the best use of his dotage. And all on behalf of Donald Trump, whose guaranteed role in American history will be, at best, as our nation's greatest embarrassment.

Keep reading... Show less

Here are 4 ways Biden team's response to positive COVID test shows the breadth of Trumpworld's incompetence

The Democratic and Republican presidential campaigns' response to the COVID-19 pandemic have differed vastly and their handling of internal outbreaks varies just as greatly.

Keep reading... Show less

Latest election stunt proves Uber and Lyft are their own worst political enemies

Like so much about politics today, the debate around Uber and Lyft’s Proposition 22 in California has quickly become polarized. Simplistic media narratives like “Silicon Valley versus labor unions,” or Uber’s self-serving argument that its drivers prefer flexibility over security, leave voters confused and torn.

Keep reading... Show less

Desperate Trump drops the act: 'Please like me'

For most of his adult life and most especially during the past 5 years, Donald Trump has created a false self, a façade, a public facing veneer. He created an image of himself as a strong and successful businessman, a “stable genius,” and, most recently, as a “perfect physical specimen.” This false self has been propped up by a sycophantic inner circle, a complicit Congress, and a steady blockade made up of non-disclosure agreements, ignored subpoenas, a flouting of Presidential ethics and norms – as well as “mainstream media” that has ranged from intentionally to cluelessly complicit, reinforced by the increasing power of social media. The creation and maintenance of this façade has been fueled by a pathological narcissism that includes behaviors mental health professionals have described as “antisocial,” “sociopathic,” “psychopathic,” and “sadistic.”

Keep reading... Show less