Opinion

Paul Krugman explains why Ayn Rand's libertarianism is absolutely deadly

During the coronavirus crisis, President Donald Trump and many of his Republican allies have not only downplayed the severity of the pandemic — they have also vehemently opposed social distancing restrictions, mask wearing and other measures meant to slow down the spread of COVID-19. Liberal economist Paul Krugman discusses that mindset this week in his New York Times column, slamming it as "libertarianism gone bad" and the toxic influence of the late right-wing author Ayn Rand.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump is headed for a demographic disaster on Election Day by dismissing this key group of voters

Pennsylvania small business owners have a drastically different take on Trump than they did 4 years ago

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's fevered imagination goes on full display

I live in a ghost town – at least Donald Trump seems to think so. It’s “a ghost town!” he exclaimed more than once at Thursday night’s second and last debate with Joe Biden. “Take a look at New York and what’s happened to my wonderful city. For so many years, I loved it. It was vibrant. It’s dying. Everyone’s leaving New York.”

Keep reading... Show less

Trump still looked like a callous psychopath despite his relatively calm demeanor at the final debate

The word on the media reviews for Thursday night's second — and blessedly last — debate of the presidential campaign is that it was civil.

Keep reading... Show less

Expert: Trump's funneled lips are a primal display associated with intense emotion and anger

President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden met on Oct. 22 for the final debate in the 2020 election and, like the first debate, it was unusual.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump buried in mockery after trying -- and failing -- to get Israeli prime minister to slam Biden

President Donald Trump tried to goad Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu into attacking Joe Biden, but the gambit failed.

Keep reading... Show less

Confused? Trump's debate remarks indicate he does not understand Biden's health care plan

During the final presidential debate, President Donald Trump claimed that 180 million people would lose their private health insurance to socialized medicine if the Democratic presidential nominee, former Vice President Joe Biden, is elected president.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's voters loved him in the first debate -- but on Thursday, he seemed sour, flattened and all but defeated

If you watched Donald Trump this past week, you might have expected him to show up for the final debate of the 2020 campaign on Thursday night as loaded for bear as he was in the first one. His rallies have been filled with scalding vitriol toward his political opponents and his Twitter feed has been nearly incoherent with rage. He seemed to be working himself up into a full-blown frenzy in anticipation of another Fight Club-style encounter with Joe Biden.

But Trump may have peaked a little early with his petulant interview with "60 Minutes" reporter Lesley Stahl on Wednesday and lost his mojo. He was so upset with Stahl's questions that he suddenly ended the interview and flounced out of the room like a sullen teenager. The next day he followed through on his threat to release a White House recording of the interview, reportedly made for archival purposes. Trump described Stahl's interview as a "vicious attempted 'takeout'" and offered this summary on Twitter: "Watch her constant interruptions & anger. Compare my full, flowing and 'magnificently brilliant' answers to their 'Q's'."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump couldn’t even pretend to care about anyone but himself in final debate: Conservative

President Donald Trump failed his final chance to show voters that he cares about them at all, according to one conservative.

Keep reading... Show less

Joe Biden wiped the floor with Trump

In the second and final one-on-one presidential debate of the 2020 race, President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden both turned in stronger performances than they had in their first, thanks in part to the impressive moderation of NBC News reporter Kristen Welker. Trump, perhaps because of new rules and advice he'd received, was much less inclined to interrupt Biden and marginally less combative. Biden, perhaps because he wasn't interrupted constantly, was able to get to many of his key talking point and directly connect with voters on matters that are important to them.

Keep reading... Show less

Whoops, Trump did it again

Back thousands of years ago, in February of 2020, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, a "moderate" Republican, justified her vote to acquit Donald Trump at his impeachment trial — despite the mountains of evidence of guilt — by claiming that Trump had learned his lesson.

Keep reading... Show less

'Moron' Fox News host Laura Ingraham gets hilariously fact-checked after attack on ‘liberal governors’

Fox News personality Laura Ingraham tried to attack "liberal governors" with a photo of a vacant Washington Dulles International Airport check-in counter.

Keep reading... Show less

Intervention is needed now more than ever as Trump puts America on the path to bloodshed and catastrophe

What is the role of media when the president of the United States promulgates falsehoods, sows division among the populace, demonizes duly-elected officials who disagree with him, gives a wink and a nod to armed White supremacists by telling them to “stand back and stand by,” but orders heavily-armed police to use tear-gas on non-violent Black Lives Matter demonstrators, marching to put an end to police brutality?  How do media outlets cover a president who denigrates and dehumanizes whole sectors of the American public every time he speaks?  That is, Muslims, Mexicans, women, immigrants, Democrats, “blue” states, Obama, Hillary, Kamala, and Biden….  We must not negate the psychological consequences.

Keep reading... Show less