Opinion

This is the face of radical Republican anti-Semitism

Call the Capitol hypocrisy police: We seem to have another incident needing attention.

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This pervasive American myth is utter baloney

The American dream promises that anyone can make it if they work hard enough and play by the rules. Anyone can make it by pulling themselves up by their “bootstraps.”

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Winemaker Eric Trump has a big grin on his face -- and one of daddy's signature issues may be the reason why

Is Trump hoping that his threatened new tax on French wine might benefit his son’s poorly-reviewed Trump Winery in the vineyards of Virginia?

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Conservative writer George Will says Trump’s incitement of violence shows he’s weak and a ‘national embarrassment’

In a new column this week, conservative writer George Will said clearly what many of his ideological brethren have been unwilling to say.

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Mass shootings are more than hate: Trump's politics of vengeance stokes violent grievance culture

In the wake of the mass shootings In El Paso and Dayton over the past weekend, the news media has responded slightly differently than the usual ritualistic wall-to-wall coverage. Because the El Paso killer provided an online screed explaining his white supremacist beliefs and murderous intentions toward Latinx people in the U.S., there has been a greater willingness to use plain language to talk about the president's demagogic rhetoric and racist worldview.

There have been exceptions, of course, most glaringly by the New York Times which made an egregious mistake with a headline that implied Trump was seriously changing his ways based upon his dry canned speech on Monday which looked like a hostage video. And presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke, who hails from El Paso, responded with raw incredulity when asked by the press if the president is a racist, making it clear that the time for such questions is long past.

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El Paso killer manifesto shows how Trump is the Terrorist-in-Chief

Patrick Crusius may have pulled the trigger and massacred 22 people in El Paso on Aug. 3, but the voices in his head that convinced him to carry out a racist rampage were Donald Trump and right-wing media.

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Donald Trump just gave 2020 Democrats a huge gift -- but will they use it?

On Monday Donald Trump gave the Democrats a gift.

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Everyone knows Trump is a racist -- so why can't the media say it?

No one actually believes Donald Trump opposes racism. Not his critics. Not his supporters. Not anyone who tries to live in the zone of "objectivity." Trump's racism is a immoveable fact of life, like gravity or the sun.

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Here’s why Brian Kilmeade’s response to Obama's statement on mass shootings is so terribly flawed

Former President Barack Obama, responding to the white nationalist terrorist attack in El Paso that has left 22 people dead, urged U.S. leaders to “soundly reject language” that “feeds a climate of fear and hatred or normalizes racist sentiments” —and although Obama didn’t mention President Donald Trump by name, it wasn’t hard to read between the lines. Not surprisingly, some of Trump’s carnival barkers at Fox News, including Brian Kilmeade of “Fox and Friends,” have reflexively rushed to the president’s defense. And in doing so, Kilmeade has promoted some ideas about Obama’s presidency that are badly flawed.

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The outburst of white nationalist terrorism requires America to rethink 'national security'

After the El Paso massacre, the idea that white nationalist terrorism is a threat to U.S. national security is the new normal. Even President Trump felt obliged to mouth a bromide about white supremacy.

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Paul Krugman: It's not just Trump -- the entire Republican Party is 'a systematic enabler' of white terrorism

Veteran economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has been a blistering critic of Donald Trump’s presidency. And following a racially motivated terrorist attack in El Paso, Texas that left 22 people dead, Krugman stresses that the Republican Party in general — including President Trump — has become “a systematic enabler of terrorism.”

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This paragraph from before Trump's election now looks ominously prescient about his ability to inspire violence

With just days left before the 2016 election and with Donald Trump projected to have a 33 percent chance of winning the presidency, Lawfare writers Quinta Jurecic and Ben Wittes published a paragraph that now looks disturbingly prescient about the movement of Trumpism:

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