Opinion

What connects the religious right to Trump? The willingness to use violence to prevent women's autonomy

It's been a week since Kevin Williamson, a conservative columnist who had recently been hired by the Atlantic, lost his job after it became clear that he sincerely believed that women who get abortions should be executed by hanging. Still, fury in conservative media has not abated, as evidenced by the constant stream of articles defending Williamson, who had argued that abortion is "worse than your typical murder."

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This is how the United States became irrelevant to the rest of the world

Depending on the hour, President Trump is in open conflict with Congress, the media, the intelligence services, his own national-security adviser, his generals, and now, seemingly, his own veterans affairs director. That sort of turbulence leaves the United States paralyzed and indecisive, unable to speak with a common, or even coherent, voice on a number of important policy issues. And it appears that, on many topics, other countries have stopped listening.

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Trump is the product of conservative vanity and fevered imagination

The idiosyncratic pantheon of Trump administration staffers continues its exodus, a stream of comic book villains exiting stage right. The combination of venality, incompetence, and pathological narcissism, however, remains. And the world lives in the Trump era’s bubble of strangely dilated time: everything agonizingly slow—and bewilderingly fast.

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Republicans reveal their bizarre Facebook obsessions during Mark Zuckerberg hearings

The most surreal aspect of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s testimony during two congressional hearings this was easily a Wednesday episode featuring Rep. Larry Bucshon, R-Ind., who made detailed inquiries about whether the internet giant was secretly recording his private conversations in order to serve him advertising.

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The simple reason Donald Trump is so much worse than Andrew Jackson ever was

Rumors swirl around our nation’s capitol like winds through a canyon. In recent days, it has been reported that last year, Donald Trump’s lawyers discussed the president pardoning Michael Flynn and Paul Manafort, both of whom have been indicted as part of the Mueller probe. Constitutional scholars disagree over whether a president can actually use the pardon power in unlimited ways, but to this writer it seems impossible to believe that the Framers of the Constitution, who feared too much centralized power, really thought a president would act in such a way. Alexander Hamilton, the main proponent of a strong and energetic president, indicates in Federalist No. 75 that the chief executive should act with “scrupulousness and caution” in issuing pardons, especially in cases that may involve treason. And one of the framers, George Mason of Virginia, refused to sign the Constitution partly because of his reservations over the pardon power, alarmed that one could be issued “to screen from punishment those whom [the president] had secretly instigated to commit the crime, and thereby prevent a discovery of his own guilt”.

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What we really have to worry about isn't Trump

The country is divided into two hostile camps, a division as much geographic as ideological.

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Paul Ryan's retirement is a sign Republicans are giving up -- here's why

With the announcement that he will be leaving Congress in 2019, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan has guaranteed that his congressional legacy will be that of a cautionary tale — namely, of a once fiercely autonomous and independent-minded legislator who sold his soul in order to appease a corrupt politician, President Donald Trump. And he will be leaving behind a party at a crossroads, on the verge of a very important election.

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The pardon power can be used in the commission of a crime by the president

News that one of President Trump’s lawyers allegedly told lawyers for Michael Flynn and Paul Manafort in secret that the president might pardon them has caused renewed interest in the question: Can the pardon power become an instrument to obstruct justice? The answer is: Of course it can.

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Millennials are fleeing organized religion as Christian hypocrisy becomes impossible to ignore

I think we can safely say that President Donald Trump has changed American politics forever. He won the White House with no political experience, didn’t release his tax returns, and the extent to which Russia was involved in tilting the election is still under investigation. In the midst of all of Trump’s deception and corruption, there’s one rule he had to follow: yielding to the word of God.

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The problem with data privacy didn't begin with Facebook -- you helped create this crisis

As Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg testifies before Congress, he’s likely wondering how his company got to the point where he must submit to public questioning. It’s worth pondering how we, the Facebook-using public, got here too.

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How to destroy the NRA's talking points in 5 easy steps

The next time you hear someone repeating pro-gun NRA propaganda, respond with these five points:

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Michael Cohen has been Trump’s thug for years — here are 7 shocking claims against him

The office and residences of Donald Trump's personal attorney Michael Cohen were raided Monday, by federal prosecutors apparently acting on information from special prosecutor Robert Mueller.

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This is the depressing truth about the dangers of untethered Trump

The petulant adolescent in the White House – who has replaced most of the adults around him with raging sycophants and has demoted his chief of staff, John Kelly, to lapdog – lacks adequate supervision.

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