Opinion

Here are 3 dark and disturbing reasons why Trump could win again

It seems absurd to believe that America could make the same mistake again, to elect an ignorant and vulgar narcissist to the most powerful position in the world. But we can't underestimate the ability of the self-serving super-rich to convince millions of Americans that a surging stock market and a powerful military are essential to their livelihoods. All at the expense of jobs and health care and education.

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Impeaching Donald Trump is risky: But not impeaching him might be even riskier

The president of the United States blew up an epic tweetstorm this past weekend, hitting on subjects from the trade talks with China to his son's subpoena from the Senate Intelligence Committee and a number of others in between. It was a manic performance that returned repeatedly to one subject, however. He continues to publicly vent his spleen about the Russia investigation and the Mueller report even taking the risky step of contradicting his former White House counsel, Don McGahn:

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Trump's 10,000-plus lies are not just random bluster – they are an attempt to remake reality as he wants to see it

In Part 1, we looked at Trump’s lies through the lens of the Washington Post’s own “bottomless Pinocchio” lists as well as three academic studies based on their data, before turning to a broader perspective. That involves seeing Trump's lies as part of a larger rhetorical strategy, as described by Jennifer Mercieca, a historian of rhetoric, whose book, "Demagogue for President: The Rhetorical Genius of Donald Trump," [table of contents here] will be published next year.

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George Orwell has given us an essential lesson on how to deal with Trump's relentless attack on reality

As evidence of Hitler’s intentions crystalized in the 1930’s, many politicians who recognized the danger continued to vote against vital defense expenditures. George Orwell, reflecting on that and other cases of “ignoring facts which are obvious and unalterable,” concluded: “To see what is in front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle.”

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What's behind Donald Trump's astounding avalanche of lies? Nothing good

So Donald Trump has told 10,000-plus lies, or “misstatements,” since taking office as president. So what? All those lies, and what sense have we made of them? That’s the first question that really matters: What sense can we make of an avalanche of lies designed to overwhelm our capacity to make sense of anything? The second question is also important: What can we do about them?

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Why most of us are not reading the Mueller report

When he testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 1, Attorney General William Barr likely was comforted by one fact: it appears that most Americans have not read the actual Mueller report.

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Rigged: How the US tax laws prop up frauds like Donald Trump — while screwing over everyday taxpayers

The New York Times disclosure that Donald Trump  was able “to avoid paying income taxes” for years, while he racked up $1.17 billion in losses, tells you all you need to know about the American system of taxation that rewards risk, debt and speculation because it so completely insulates the greediest among us from the real world consequences of all three.

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Trump has been exposed as a billion-dollar fraud -- and his rabid base still won't care

Donald Trump does not exist. He is a character who plays many roles simultaneously. Trump is a vigilante, professional wrestling villain, a TV pitchman and a reality TV star. He's also a cad, a bully and a wannabe dictator. And yes, he is a billionaire. (Or rather, he plays one on TV.) Because of his guile, boldness, help from foreign sponsors and — yes, let's admit it — his charisma, in 2016 Donald Trump won the greatest role on the world stage: President of the United States of America.

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How Donald Trump spun three years of investigations into two words

Exactly two years ago, at a time when he had been in office less than four months, Donald Trump invited two Russians into the Oval Office and shared with them how he was going to handle the scandal engulfing his White House. He met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Ambassador Sergey Kislyak, the two most senior foreign officials to have met with the president so far.

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Protecting Trump’s family has now become the primary mission of the Republican Party

Republicans are up in arms about the actions of one of their own. What did he do to elicit such wrath? He dared to issue a subpoena to Donald Trump Jr.

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How Donald Jr is the perfect MAGA Trump fanboy

Hard as it may be to believe, once upon a time, Donald Trump Jr. had some semblance of sense when it came to dealing with his father, a man with no redeeming qualities. When he was still a boy, Don Jr. reportedly stopped speaking to Donald Trump for a year, understandably furious at the way that his father, who bragged about how he saw parenting as women's work, had cheated on and then dumped his mother, Ivana Trump, in maximally humiliating fashion.

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Republican arsonists are burning their party's own traditions and principles to the ground

In the mid 1970s, America faced an impeachment crisis under President Richard Nixon. A lawless President who had abused power and obstructed justice was creating a constitutional crisis that presented his party, the Republican Party, with a dilemma: how should they react?

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The mystery behind Richard Burr's subpoena: Why is one Republican senator still pursuing the Trumps?

One day after the midterm elections in which the Republicans lost the House majority, President Trump once again sought to flip the script by firing his longtime nemesis, Attorney General Jeff Sessions. He announced the dismissal in an especially sour press conference, during which he berated all the losing Republicans for failing to tether themselves close enough to him, which he of course insisted sealed their defeat.

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