Opinion

Trump brags about his fight against overseas terrorism -- while driving a spike in domestic terrorism at home

Donald Trump desperately wanted the death of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi to be a personal triumph, one that would support his hopeless obsession with wiping away the legacy of Barack Obama. But Trump's big moment as a self-proclaimed enemy of terrorism was swiftly undermined by his own incompetence, after reports that Baghdadi was killed despite Trump's mishandling of the situation and after Trump was booed and heckled at a World Series game in Washington.

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Cable-news pundits prove they're dangerously out of touch by scolding Americans for not respecting our Mad King

The last 36 hours have illustrated two horrible truths about this era. First, there are way too many Americans who still accept Donald Trump’s word as truth. Second, too many of us believe Trump deserves the presidential deference we usually reserve for normal times and normal chief executives.

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Syria is still a bewildering mess -- with or without the US

Time was, conflict in the Middle East was complicated. Trump changed all that.

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Trump's EPA disbanded our clean air science panel. We met anyway – and found that particle pollution regulations aren't protecting public health

Since 1980, emissions of six common air pollutants have decreased by 67%, thanks largely to government regulation. At the same time, U.S. gross domestic product has increased by 165%. While some assert that regulation acts as a drag on the economy, this record indicates that environmental protection does not have to undercut economic growth.

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‘A very powerful case against the president’: How Adam Schiff wants to use Trump’s obstruction against him

Though many of the witnesses called to testify in the impeachment inquiry thus far have defied the White House’s efforts to block them, some are openly flouting legally valid subpoenas from Congress — challenging Democrats running the investigation to force them through the courts to sit for hearings.

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Katie Hill's resignation exposes a massive and disgusting double standard

Over the past week, a minor scandal in Congress has served to showcase how different Republicans and Democrats are on issues of sexual and domestic abuse — so different as to nearly be opposites. Indeed, this demonstrates that conservatives are not just indifferent to serious incidents of sexual and domestic abuse but, in some cases, are eager to support or encourage men who commit such acts. Meanwhile, Democrats once again proved that they are willing to uphold strict ethical standards meant to prevent abuse and harassment, even if the price of doing so means giving misogynists and homophobes a "win."This article was originally published at Salon

The scandal in question concerns Rep. Katie Hill, D-Calif., a freshman member of Congress elected in last year's "blue wave," who announced on Sunday evening that she would resign. Hill continues to accuse her estranged husband, Kenny Heslep, of waging an abusive campaign to control and humiliate her now that their relationship is over.

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David Cay Johnston on Trump's lying, crazy, self-absorbed weekend

That Donald Trump is manifestly unfit to be president, and cannot be trusted with national security secrets, was on full display Sunday morning.

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Sorry, Joe Scarborough -- chanting 'lock him up' isn't wrong

I confess to having used the word “polarization” to describe the current state of our national politics. I’ll try to be more careful from now on. That word masks more than it reveals. It conceals one party sabotaging democracy while the other defends it.

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What connects the white supremacist ideology of so-called white nationalists to extreme misogyny? Extreme victimhood

For Jessica Reaves, the journey into the most hateful reaches of the internet began after the 2018 van attack in Toronto. A white male in his 20s plowed his vehicle into a crowd of pedestrians, killing 10 and injuring 16. After he was arrested, the driver told police that an online community of involuntary celibates, or “incels,” had radicalized him.

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Trump could face severe consequences for his continuing violation the Constitution's emoluments clauses

Trump reversed his decision to host next June’s G-7 meeting of heads of state at Trump National Doral Miami because, he said, it would have been an impeachable offense and a violation of the Constitution’s Emoluments Clause.

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Republicans aren't flailing or desperate: Their attack on impeachment is strategic — and it just might work

President Trump left the safe bubble of his properties and his rallies to venture out into a world where people don't cheer ecstatically whenever he appears. He attended the fifth game of the World Series on Sunday night at Nationals Park in Washington, and was lustily booed by the crowd, some of whom also held up impeachment banners and chanted "Lock him up." Trump is not used to that sort of thing and he had a hard time hiding his discomfort.

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Conservatives love originalism -- and any honest originalist would support Trump's impeachment

I have never been a supporter of originalism. Until recently, I was also skeptical that impeachment was the right way to handle Donald Trump’s presidency. But I have recently reevaluated my position in light of President Donald J. Trump’s egregious phone call with the Ukrainian president back in July, in which he requested a favor (dirt) on one of his political opponents in return for releasing military aid to that beleaguered nation.

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Trump's attack on the Constitution is part of a long, evil history

Donald Trump's recent criticism of the "phony emoluments clause," used in defense of his since-abandoned G7 scam, was striking for its bluntness. But it’s part of a long history of conservatives flagrantly ignoring the actual Constitution and substituting an imaginary version in its place. At Vox, Ian Millhiser thoroughly debunked the notion that Trump wasn’t violating the Constitution by seeking to hold a summit meeting at his own hotel, including reference to work by Georgetown’s John Mikhail, whose examination of 40 different dictionaries made mincemeat of any “public meaning” argument to try to defend Trump.

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