Opinion

Why Roger Stone’s trial could be a major step forward in exposing Trump’s wrongdoing

Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s office is no more, but the legacy of his office lives on.

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Fox News' top stars had a meltdown after Mueller's bombshell press conference

It was a sharp contrast to the Democratic presidential candidates who lined up to call for President Donald Trump's impeachment in the wake of special counsel Robert Mueller's bombshell first public remarks about his investigation. On Fox News, an alternate reality seemed to exist, where many of the network's most prominent personalities claimed the special counsel had done little more than "grandstand before the cameras."

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Trump-loving pundits heard Mueller's message loud and clear -- and they're pissed

Special counsel Robert Mueller's Wednesday statement about his investigation into Donald Trump's campaign corruption was a frustrating morass of legalisms, leaving just enough wiggle room to allow mainstream media reporters to pretend that it's a mystery where Mueller stands on the topic of impeachment.

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I was an expert witness against a New Jersey teacher who taught students to question the Holocaust

When I first set out to research how the Holocaust was being depicted in textbooks in New Jersey’s public schools, my hope was to see what students were being taught about the systematic state-sponsored killing of 6 million Jewish men, women and and children.

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Robert Mueller's old school rhetoric is no match for Trump's deranged lies

I doubt I need to convince anyone who is likely to read this article what Robert Mueller meant to convey during his brief televised appearance at the Justice Department on Wednesday. He believes Congress should impeach President Trump, or should at least explore that possibility seriously.After nearly two years of investigation, the now-former special counsel has concluded that the president of the United States probably or certainly obstructed justice. (I’ll get to exactly what Mueller said later, because that’s important.) Indeed, Trump has repeatedly obstructed the investigation into his own obstruction of justice, and has no doubt also obstructed the investigation into that secondary obstruction (and so on!), a Möbius strip or Quaker Oats conundrum that epitomizes the dream-logic at work in this administration, and for that matter in America in 2019.Mueller knew he could not indict a sitting president — "knew" and “could not” in this case being terms of art not backed up by any clear guidance from Congress, the Constitution or the Supreme Court — and concluded that in the absence of potential criminal proceedings it would be unfair to make a criminal accusation. There's a certain mechanical logic to that, whether or not it makes any sense in moral terms.

As Mueller put it, in an almost coquettish turn of phrase that would have merited a curt nod of approval from his long-ago rhetoric instructors at St. Paul’s School in Concord, New Hampshire, “the Constitution requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting president of wrongdoing.” That’s so interesting! I wonder whether that process has a name?

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A new unhinged opinion from the Supreme Court reveals how the right wing is planning to go after birth control

They always deny it when directly confronted, but make no mistake: Conservatives are coming for your birth control. That much was confirmed yet again on Tuesday when Justice Clarence Thomas issued an unhinged opinion on what was supposed to be an abortion case in which, not to put too fine a point on it, he suggested that the founder of Planned Parenthood, Margaret Sanger, advocated for birth control because she was hoping to kill black people.

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Donald Trump pardons two war criminals and the country shrugs — but the world is watching

The thing about war crimes is, the military gives you training in how to commit them. That’s not to say that military commanders want you to commit war crimes. There is plenty of training in the rules of engagement with the enemy and the legalities of how to handle prisoners of war. In the army, you are taught how to conduct operations in urban environments so that civilians are not killed accidentally. In the air force, the days of carpet-bombing entire cities are over. Pilots are trained not to engage targets on the ground with so-called “smart bombs” unless cleared to do so by higher command.

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What does American 'oligarchy' mean? That we're all screwed

“Oligarchy” means government of and by a few at the top, who exercise power for their own benefit. It comes from the Greek word oligarkhes, meaning “few to rule or command.”

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Conservative explains why Mueller's carefully chosen words are incredibly damning for Trump

Wednesday, May 29, 2019, will be remembered as the day in which Special Counsel Robert Mueller spoke publicly for the first time since being appointed to head the Russia probe in 2017. Mueller, speaking for ten minutes in Washington, D.C., discussed his final report for his investigation — and conservative journalist David Frum, following Mueller’s speech, urges Americans to go back and read the report and see for themselves how “damning” of President Donald Trump it is.

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This was the most damning thing Robert Mueller just said about Trump

In a brief statement to the press on Wednesday, Special Counsel Robert Mueller offered little new substantial information even as he highlighted many of the key aspects of the report on his investigation. He made clear that, if he testified before Congress, he doesn’t intend to offer comments that go beyond the content of the report — and made clear that he wouldn’t answer hypotheticals about whether he would have indicted President Donald Trump were he not president.

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Here are 4 key moments from Mueller’s stunning statement on the Russia investigation

Breaking his extended silence, special counsel Robert Mueller publicly spoke for ten minutes on the Russia investigation in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday morning at 11 a.m. EST. Here are some of the highlights.

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Rudy Giuliani's back: Trump's sleaziest hitman delivered 2016 victory -- can he do it again?

A few years ago I wrote here in Salon about a phrase I call "Cokie's Law," referring to a comment by journalist Cokie Roberts during the Lewinsky scandal. There was a silly kerfuffle over Hillary Clinton allegedly claiming that her husband's philandering was a result of his rough childhood. Roberts said,

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Trump nearly killed democracy in just one day last week — can it still be saved?

Future historians will mark last Thursday, May 23, as an especially important day in the decline of American democracy in the age of Donald Trump. The date will not be noted by an asterisk but rather with an exclamation mark.

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