Opinion

Bill Barr is even worse than you think: His entire job is to protect Donald Trump

William Barr, the attorney general of the United States, is a water-carrier for the wealthy. He is only the latest in a long line, including, during my lifetime, such establishmentarian lickspittles as Dean Acheson, John J. McCloy, John Foster Dulles, Allen Dulles and Henry Kissinger.

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Trump may lose in November — triggering a new national crisis

Let’s assume that Donald Trump loses the election in November.

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Trump is attacking Biden’s verbal slip-up -- but here are 10 of his own embarrassing gaffes

Former Vice President Joe Biden has a long history of being gaffe-prone, and President Donald Trump is using Biden’s gaffes to claim that the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee is unfit to be president. He, along with his friends at Fox News, have recently seized on Biden’s relatively minor slip-up of referring to “120 million” COVID-19 deaths when he meant “120 thousand.” But Trump has had plenty of gaffes of his own, all of which demonstrate that those who live in glass houses should not throw stones.

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Ben Carson mocked for reading books to kids during pandemic: ‘Hopefully Trump will be in the front row’

Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson announced that he's going to read to children during the coronavirus pandemic.

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'Bunker Boy' Trump still believes he can win in 2020 using his old school J. Edgar Hoover tricks

Donald Trump is convinced he's the second coming of Richard Nixon. We'll leave aside the psychoanalysis of why someone might be so eager to present himself as heir to one of the greatest villains in American history, but Trump hasn't been subtle about his belief that he can replicate Nixon's 1968 electoral victory by triggering the same animus against civil rights activists and leftist protesters that Nixon successfully exploited back then, but with even less subtlety. (And Nixon wasn't exactly subtle.) Trump even routinely echoes the "law and order" language of the Nixon campaign, even while gleefully flaunting his own criminality and corruption, lest there be any doubt that "law and order" is simply coded language for racism and reactionary impulses.

The problem is that Trump's efforts to demonize anti-racist protesters keep backfiring.

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Radical Republicans are already sabotaging the next president

The Trump EPA is trying to stack an advisory committee on drinking water to continue to help polluters and cost-conscious water utilities even if Trump loses in November.

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Conservatives lose it when Disney announces new Splash Mountain revamp will celebrate their only Black princess

Disney will update the theme of its popular Splash Mountain rides away from "Song of the South" to "Princess and the Frog" -- and conservatives lost their minds online.

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3 things protesters are pushing that could actually move the US away from racist policing

Protesters against police brutality and racism have gathered to demand systemic change since the end of May, holding events in all 50 U.S. states and around the world. Impelled by the police murder of George Floyd on May 25, the protests amplify a long-standing call by social justice organizations, Black civil rights leaders like Angela Davis and many others for decades: dismantle, defund and/or abolish America’s racist and heavily militarized policing systems—and replace them with community-led safety programs and public health initiatives. The movement’s leadership has made it clear that the protests, many of which have been non-violent due to community participation, are calling for more than updates to existing police training programs or reforms within existing police departments. Rather, they are calling for America to rethink the response to crime and safety overall. They are calling for cities to reallocate funding away from police and begin the steps to gradually dismantle the policing system altogether, as Eric Levitz writes in a recent New York Magazine article.

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Trump’s coronavirus crisis and George Floyd’s killing expose America's self-destructive habit of ignoring issues until they explode

People from all cultures, in every walk of life, rely on stability. As much as possible, we form patterns and habits that are oriented towards keeping things the same. Regularity is an integral element of survival.

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Trump's titanic Tulsa failure may make liberals feel good -- but it won't win the November election

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'We're not winning': How America is exceptional in all the wrong ways

As our incompetent president flounders in the face of crises – leading the worst coronavirus response in the industrialized world, and seeking to crush nationwide protests for black lives – the hard truth about this country comes into focus: America is not exceptional, but it is the exception.

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Republicans scramble as reopening proves to be an utter disaster and hopes for a comeback collapse

Republicans believed the state of Texas would be the national model to prove Donald Trump and his supporters in right-wing media correct about the coronavirus. Trump and conservative pundits have continued to champion conspiracy theories painting the virus as being deliberately exaggerated by Democrats in order to power down the economy and sink the president's re-election chances. They've said that it's fine to lift the pandemic restrictions, even in places that haven't met  any of the criteria laid out by public health experts for safer economic reopening.

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Now we know what Trump's hate-fueled, incoherent 2020 campaign strategy will look like

More than a century ago, the American poet James Russell Lowell asked, “And what is so rare as a day in June?” How about a week in June like the one we just had, filled, as they used to say on an old TV show, “with the events that alter and illuminate our times?”

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