Opinion

Historian: Conservatives are bombarding us with carefully crafted lies

Is there truth? During the late 20th century, the humanities became enmeshed in esoteric discussions about truth. Deconstructionists argued that all writing was relative to the writer, whose identity and biases created work that might be true for the writer, but not for other people with different identities. This argument came out of a radical critique of Western white male hegemony, which has since been expanded to the analysis of all forms of hierarchy. White supremacy, male chauvinism, homophobia, and all other kinds of discrimination lead to claims by dominant groups that they possess truth, when they are actually only expressing their self-interest.

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Trump has turned the entire Republican Party into the MAGA tribe — and now they'll go after his enemies with gusto

Donald Trump is a simple man but he does have one philosophy, and it's very primitive: Get even. He has not kept it a secret. Most recently, he had his ghostwriter put it in "Think Big," his 2009 self-help tome:

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Requiem for a Senator: How Lamar Alexander maneuvered himself into the dustbin of history

I first met Lamar Alexander almost exactly forty years ago, when i was a cub reporter for Memphis magazine, and he was but one year into his first term as Governor of Tennessee. He served one more, then became president of the University of Tennessee, after which he served as Secretary of Education under George H.W. Bush, before moving on to three terms in the Senate. He is retiring at the end of this year.
If there is a more popular politician in the Volunteer State, I know not who it would be. When I wrote him a note a couple weeks ago, urging him to vote for documents and testimony in the Trump impeachment trial, I reminded him that, while I was a lifelong Democrat, I had voted for "Alexander" more often than not when his name was on the ballot.
It was difficult for me, however, to watch the contortions the Senator went through last week as the impeachment trial was winding down. For a few hours there, it appeared that Alexander was leaning towards voting "yes" for testimony and witnesses. But by Thursday that particular coach had turned into a pumpkin, as word trickled out that Lamar had decided to vote "no" on any kind of evidence.
When Senator Alexander finally released his statement, I was reminded of the wisdom of Solomon. While conceding that Trump's behavior regarding aid to Ukraine was "inappropriate," Alexander cut the baby neatly in half, asserting there was no need to punish the President so late in his first term. "Let the people decide," Alexander pronounced, in effect ending the chances of new evidence being introduced into the Senate trial.
Let the people decide, Lamar said. That thought kept running through my mind while I listened to Trump's bizarre "victory speech" earlier today at the White House. Evidently, only some people will decide. The President launched a celebration of sorts, uplifting his friends and supporters, of course, but demeaning his political enemies, named and unnamed, in a fashion never before seen inside that two-century-old building.
It seemed just the right time to send my senior Senator a follow-up letter, and so, having grown tired of listening to Trump howling at the moon in broad daylight, I did just that:
Dear Senator Alexander:
I do hope you are part and parcel of this disgusting spectacle now going on at the White House. Perhaps you're seated there and watching helplessly, as Donald Trump launches one despicable rant after another, perhaps the single most egotistic and delusional speech ever given by an American president within those walls.
Hang your head in shame, sir, while you're listening...
I have to say that, while typing and watching this speech on television, I can't keep up with the sheer volume of nonsense flowing effortlessly out of this self-centered egomaniac's mouth, each snippet full of equal measures of delusion, distortion and hate.
The bombast echoes off the walls:  "If we didn't win, the market would have crashed."  "We did nothing wrong!" and "We were treated unbelievably unfairly. It was all bullshit..."
Yes, I guess even "big winners" sometimes need good-old-fashioned profanity to deliver their messages.  On and on Trump goes, where he stops nobody surely knows. He is truly a law unto himself.
 
I do hope you saw the letter I sent you about ten days ago, suggesting that you keep an open mind about whether or not to impeach Mr. Trump.  I included this observation: "Our current President seems less a Republican than a South American demagogue."
I don't about you, Senator, but right now I know I am watching a genuine demagogue in action, one born in Queens, not Paraguay.  What a great pity for you, for me and for all Americans of good will.
I can't watch anymore, sir, so I'll stop right now, long before he does. I do hope you're there, Senator, with your mouth shut, silently endorsing this madman's rant. You surely deserve to sit through all this claptrap, given that it was your vote, more than anyone else's, that betrayed your state, your Senate and your country.
Kenneth Neill was publisher of Memphis magazine for over 35 years, and founded The Memphis Flyer in 1989.

Trump's State of the Union Address was a Christian nationalist dog whistle

Amid the ripping paper and misbegotten medals, Trump’s State of the Union address promised nationalism with a distinctly Christian bent.

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Can we rebuild the country after Trump?

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Trump's acquittal is invalid because he was not mentally competent to stand trial: psychiatrists

A group of psychiatrists urged Congress in a letter Wednesday to invalidate President Donald Trump's acquittal in the Senate until his mental competency to stand trial is evaluated. The letter was sent by the World Mental Health Coalition and a copy of the coalition's letter was provided to Salon.

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History shows Trump’s house of cards will eventually fall — and reality itself will get the last word

Trump has overlearned one life lesson: Impulse trumps deliberation. There have been gaps in its success but overall, it has worked beautifully. His impulsivity now reliably outwits any wit.

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Lawyers, liars and Trump on trial: Bill Moyers explains how the Republican cover-up puts America on extremely dangerous grounds

With the impeachment and trial of Donald Trump about to end in the President’s arranged acquittal by his own party, Bill Moyers called up Steven Harper for a critique of the final showdown in the Senate. Harper graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Northwestern University and magna cum laude from Harvard Law School (where one of his professors was Alan Dershowitz). For 30 years prior to his retirement, he was a litigator at Kirkland & Ellis LLP and recognized as one of The Best Lawyers in America.

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America braces for Trump's inevitable burst of vindictiveness after his Senate acquittal

Even as the Republican Senate majority finally was acquitting Donald Trump of impeachment charges, one could sense the country bracing for the retaliating boomerang to come. Trump is never gracious, even in would-be victory, and is sure to be boastful about beating the “witch hunt” of impeachment.

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Trump's mental deterioration threatens public health as much as the coronavirus: Yale psychiatrist

Fletcher Knebel’s novel, Night of Camp David, makes a mental health professional of our day envious.

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The real State of the Union: Here are 8 ways America is falling behind

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Here's the terrifying truth about Trump's hysterical, Nuremberg-style State of the Union

As Dear Leader wound up his State of the Union, and Nancy Pelosi tore its pages in quarters as she stood behind him, I had the same reaction that many colleagues out in the Twitter universe had. We all instantly recalled George W. Bush’s words at the end of Donald Trump’s inaugural address in 2017: “Well, that was some weird shit.”

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Expect the worst from Donald Trump and his cabal now that impeachment is over — and resist BS words of reassurance

This outcome was all but preordained. The Republican Party is a fully owned subsidiary of Donald Trump (and arguably of his patronVladimir Putin). Republicans in the Senate and House have publicly admitted that Trump has committed crimes against the Constitution, democracy, the rule of law and the American people.

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