Opinion

America is facing two very different coronavirus pandemics

No description of the coronavirus is more misleading than calling it “the great equalizer.”

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Trump supporters in Michigan focused on mail-in voting and ‘Obamagate’ as state is battered by coronavirus, unemployment and flooding

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer has had a lot to deal with this week, from the coronavirus pandemic and job losses to severe flooding in parts of her state. But where there are real problems, there are also far-right extremists and diehard MAGA voters obsessing over non-issues — and journalist Tim Alberta, in an article for Politico, examines some of the things they have been focusing on in that key battleground state.

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A historian explains why the anti-Trump 'Mourning in America' ad could seal Trump’s fate in November

The promise of American greatness knew no bounds in “Morning in America,” the iconic ad created by the group of political consultants and advertising gurus (the “Tuesday Team”) who worked for Ronald Reagan’s 1984 reelection campaign. In the ad, Americans were working, getting married, and buying homes – confident that the country they lived in was “prouder and stronger and better” under President Reagan’s leadership than four short years before.

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Buckle up: How 'Bush's Brain' and Trump's ego are going to ride Brad Parscale's Death Star into November

There have been many rumors in recent weeks that the Trump campaign is starting to disintegrate. This is not surprising. All you have to do is read Trump's Twitter feed to see that the president does not like bad news and he will kill any messenger who brings it to him. Lately, there has been a whole lot of bad campaign news.The New York Times has reported that Trump has been getting so angry at the decaying poll numbers that he yelled at campaign manager Brad Parscale and threatened to sue him during a heated phone call. (Parscale reportedly replied, "I love you too," and flew up to Washingon right away to mend fences.)

Indeed, the polls have not been looking good for Trump, but then they haven't looked very good his entire term. An impeached president whose approval rating has always hovered around 42% doesn't have a lot of room for error to begin with. Now that he's shown what a disastrous leader he is in a crisis, there very little prospect that it's going to improve.

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'Blatant signaling to his fascist base': Trump's praise of an anti-Semite's 'good bloodlines' triggers backlash

President Donald Trump once again is dog-whistling to his base. While delivering a campaign-style speech at a Michigan Ford auto plant that’s been retooled to manufacture personal protective gear, Trump decided to take a walk into history and praise the company’s founder, the infamous anti-Semite Henry Ford.

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Trump is exploiting the pandemic to seek retribution against his political enemies — and frontline workers apparently fall into that category

Sophia Thomas says she had "had a message to share" during her visit to the White House last week. The president of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners says she doesn't regret relaying that message in front of the president of the United States, earning an in-person rebuke from Donald Trump. Thomas, a Louisiana nurse whose clinic serves uninsured and underinsured patients, told reporters gathered in the Oval Office that personal protective equipment (PPE) for medical workers on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic "has been sporadic, but it's been manageable, and we do what we have to do."

Trump shot back, "Sporadic for you, but not sporadic for a lot of other people." He continued, with his arms crossed in front of his chest: "Because I've heard the opposite. I have heard that they are loaded up with (PPE) now."

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Trump keeps lying about the reason he voted by mail

As Democrats argue that voting by mail is more necessary than ever, President Donald Trump is arguing vehemently against the idea — which he claims encourages voter fraud. And yet, Trump himself voted by mail in Florida's March primary, inspiring critics to assert that he doesn’t practice what he preaches. Trump and White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany have offered an explanation, but it doesn't add up.

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‘Positively stupid’: Trump sparks confusion over his COVID-19 test results

President Donald Trump fumbled his explanation for whether he had tested positive for the coronavirus.

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Trump always intended to rig the 2020 election -- and now he's exploiting the pandemic to commit serious crimes

Despite his off-the-charts narcissism, Donald Trump knows on some level that the majority of Americans don't want him to be president and he cannot win in a fair election. He didn't beat Hillary Clinton in the popular vote in 2016 — she got nearly 3 million more votes — and only won because of the outsize influence of smaller, rural states in the Electoral College. He has only grown less popular since then and is now well behind former Vice President Joe Biden in most national polls, usually by a margin of 5 to 8 points.

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History will not be kind to the billionaire Trump whisperers responsible for so many COVID-19 deaths

Several new studies and models suggest that if Donald Trump had simply declared a state of national emergency, largely shutting down the country, a few weeks earlier than he did, tens of thousands of people who are dead right now would still be alive.

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‘Callous disregard for life’: Illinois Republican thrown out of legislative session for refusing to wear a mask

During the coronavirus crisis, many far-right Trumpistas and Tea Party Republicans have managed to politicize mask wearing — equating face masks with liberals, progressives, Democrats and Never Trump conservatives. Not wearing a mask, in some Trumpian and Tea Party circles, has come to be viewed as a defiance of liberalism and an assertion of MAGA values. But one Republican who ran into problems when he refused to wear a mask was Illinois State Rep. Darren Bailey, who was thrown out of a legislative session on Wednesday, May 20.

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Critics slam White House press secretary as she gives 'one of the most ludicrous answers' to defend Trump

President Donald Trump's tweets accusing two vital swing states – Nevada and Michigan – of acting "illegally" by making it easier for their residents to vote by mail during the pandemic were just "alerts" meant just for the eyes of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Acting Director of the Office of Management and Budget.

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Overwhelmed and losing, Trump is melting down in a narcissistic rage: reports

Reports of Trump flying into a rage behind closed doors--shouting at aides, turning on former allies and at one point threatening to sue his campaign manager for failing to deliver good polling numbers--have been ubiquitous over the last three years. But this past week feels qualitatively and quantitatively different, as he has fired a series of inspector generals, lashed out at the reliably sycophantic Sen. Lindsey Graham, pushed a number of snake-oil cures for Covid-19 and threatened to cut off federal funding to several states for the "crime" of sending voters applications for absentee ballots, which he insists against all evidence are rife with fraud. He's lurched between falsely bragging about the number of people we're testing for Covid-19 and saying that we're testing too many; between claiming that we'll have a vaccine by November and insisting that the pandemic will just disappear without a vaccine.

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