Opinion

How to have an argument with a right-wing Trump defender

In his new book "The Right Side of History: How Reason and Moral Purpose Made the West," Ben Shapiro argues that reason is essential to the advancement of human progress. The 35-year-old conservative commentator has positioned himself as something of a latter-day William F. Buckley Jr. -- an intellectual superstar in a quadrant of politics that seems increasingly resistant to facts or rational inquiry. Shapiro has denounced white supremacists and the alt-right, and distanced himself from President Trump (much as Buckley denounced the John Birch Society and other right-wing extremists of his day), while frequently calling upon the venerable classical and biblical Western thinkers.Shapiro has also frequently discussed occasions when he has been threatened or faced what he describes as efforts to silence him, especially on college campuses. In a society with a healthy culture of free speech, of course, Shapiro would be able to argue his points as fearlessly as he wants, without the specter of violence or being otherwise persecuted.Whether Shapiro himself actually models the open dialogue he claims to advocate, however, is a different question. In his book, he writes:
Reason, in fact, is insulting. Reason suggests that one person can know better than another, that one person's perspective can be more correct than someone else's. Reason is intolerant. Reason demands standards.

To be clear, he intends to undermine the perceived arguments of his “politically correct” adversaries, which he summarizes this way: "Better to destroy reason than to abide by its dictates."

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Fox News' smear campaign against Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is working

Over the weekend, Fox News published a story (3/17/19) on a recent Gallup poll that asked the public about their opinions on Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. The headline claimed that her unfavorable rating had “skyrocketed”—rising 15 points since last September—and that “most people” now viewed her negatively.

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The Mueller report is in -- now House Dems need to get busy and impeach Donald Trump

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House

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New Zealand came to its senses and banned assault rifles while American dead pile up

You want to know what’s insane? Don’t listen to a liberal wuss Salon writer like yours truly. Go right to the source. Go to Tactical Life magazine, which describes itself as “your source for gun reviews, gear reviews, knife reviews, and military and tactical news and information. Bringing together gear and gun tests from 18 publications, Tactical-Life.com has the most in-depth firearms information.” These folks, in their camo jackets and mirrored shades and “tactical” style boots, well, you can count on them to know what the hell they’re talking about, right? Here's what Tactical Life has to say about the Victrix Armaments Scorpio, an assault-style rifle its experts recently reviewed.

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Trump has sold out the farmers who voted for him — and now they're racing toward calamity

As a farmer told me, "You can still make a small fortune in agriculture, but the problem is you have to start with a large fortune."

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The evangelical belief that Trump is the messiah is more rampant than you think — and dangerous

Psychologists have explained quite a lot about Donald Trump ’s political invincibility and the unconditional allegiance of his followers. One well-supported explanation is that the president keeps his base loyal by keeping them fearful. Through persistent fear-mongering, with scary messages like, “Illegal immigrants are murderers and rapists,” and “Islam hates us,” Trump gets to play the role of the great protector.

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This impulsive blunder by Trump gave us the special counsel — now we wait to hear what Mueller found

It was the firing heard round the world. With one move, on the advice of his son-in-law Jared Kushner, Donald Trump fired James Comey on May 9, 2017. It would change the course of the Trump presidency.

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Trump just revealed he has no idea what’s going on in the government he’s supposed to run

At many different points in his presidency, Donald Trump has appeared to have no idea what was actually happening in the administration he is supposed to run. And on Friday, Trump made that fact vividly clear yet again with a stunning — even for him — post on Twitter.

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Trump's executive order on campus 'free speech' is a gross obscenity that promotes censorship -- here's why

In 1961, a historian at the University of Pittsburgh named Robert G. Colodny was called before the House Un-American Activities Committee. Colodny was just one of HUAC’s many targets, a list which included screenwriters like Dalton Trumbo and playwrights such as Arthur Miller. HUAC remained a fearsome and fundamentally anti-democratic means of intimidation and often professional ruin even after the height of the McCarthy era’s Red baiting. The professor drew suspicion after he innocuously referred to Cuban “agrarian reforms” in the Pittsburgh Press, which was enough for a local state representative to label Colodny a communist sympathizer. Shortly after, Congress and then the university itself launched investigations. This, it should be said, is what an attack on academic freedom looks like.

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Donald Trump's Golan Heights bombshell reverses 40 years of policy and throws Middle East into turmoil

With one tweet of 35 words, Donald Trump has changed almost 40 years of US policy towards Israel and Syria:

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This is what Trump's executive order on campus 'free speech' is really meant to do

The much anticipated executive order that President Donald Trump issued March 21 to protect free speech on campus is about politics, not policy.

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Yale psychiatrist warns Trump may see only one terrifying escape from Mueller mess

President Donald Trump may soon face the sort of reckoning from special counsel Robert Mueller that he's never experienced before, and those who've closely studied him are deeply worried by how he'll react.

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2020 Democrats don't only have to face Trump — they must say how they'll take on the 'Blob'

If a Democrat is elected president in November 2020, he or she will have two challenges: one global and one municipal.

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