Frontpage Commentary - 6 articles

Inside Jared Kushner's key role behind Trump's flurry of pardons

Jared Kushner, President Donald Trump's son-in-law and White House Senior Advisor, has played an important role in organizing the flurry of clemency requests the president has received as he enters the last month of his presidency.

Over the last five days, Trump has granted a total of 65 pardons and commutations, including which eliminated convictions and prison sentences for many of his own allies and close acquaintances.

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'An idiocracy based on a digital prophet': QAnon longs for a fascist military dictatorship — and they want it now

Reporter Ben Collins, in an article published by NBC News' website on December 22, takes a disturbing look at QAnon supporters who are yearning for President Donald Trump to impose a fascist military dictatorship and end liberal democracy in the United States.

President-elect Joe Biden enjoyed a decisive victory in the 2020 presidential election, winning 306 electoral votes and defeating Trump by over 7 million in the popular vote. But QAnon supporters view Democrats as their enemy and have been promoting the hashtag @CrossTheRubicon — which, in QAnon terminology, means imposing a military dictatorship. And QAnon supporters, Collins reports, are urging Trump to "cross the Rubicon" and become a full-fledged dictator.

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Was Jesus really born in Bethlehem? Why the Gospels disagree over the circumstances of Christ's birth

Every Christmas, a relatively small town in the Palestinian West Bank comes center stage: Bethlehem. Jesus, according to some biblical sources, was born in this town some two millennia ago.

Yet the New Testament Gospels do not agree about the details of Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem. Some do not mention Bethlehem or Jesus’ birth at all.

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Mental health expert: Donald Trump 'will do anything' to stay in power

Two thousand twenty was the deadliest year in U.S. history, with 400,000 more deaths than the previous year, and one American dying from Covid-19 every 30 seconds. This week, Donald Trump issued 15 pardons and 5 commutations to mass murderers, corrupt cronies, and human rights violators, in contempt of the rule of law. He also demanded changes to a desperately needed pandemic relief bill, prolonging the deprivation of millions who are going hungry or are without jobs.

This week, he "tweeted": "Our embassy in Baghdad got hit Sunday by several rockets…. Guess where they were from: IRAN…. If one American is killed, I will hold Iran responsible. Think it over." Again, he is flirting with international war.

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Trump will do anything for Saudi crown prince -- but won't call US victims of Saudi terrorism

One year ago, three U.S. servicemen were killed in a terrorist attack at Pensacola Naval Air Station by an officer in the Royal Saudi Air Force, who had been coordinating with al-Qaida operatives for years while completing a pilot training program at the base. Earlier this month the three service members were posthumously honored with the Purple Heart. Their families, however, are still waiting for President Trump to make good on what he had assured them the day after their children were killed: That he would get to the bottom of the attack, and that the Saudi royal family — specifically, King Salman himself, the desert monarchy's absolute ruler — would take care of them.

They are also still waiting for Trump himself, or anyone in the administration, to contact them.

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Paul Krugman: Congress’ relief bill is 'short-changing people in desperate straits'

President Donald Trump has been threatening to veto the coronavirus relief bill that Congress passed on Monday, December 21 because he considers its $600 in direct payments inadequate. Liberal economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman analyzes the bill in a Twitter thread, and for once, Krugman and Trump actually agree on something: $600 in direct payments isn't enough.

Republicans and Democrats in Congress had plenty of disagreements when the details of the bill were being worked out. Eventually, they agreed on $600 in direct payments to Americans, but the president expressed his disapproval and declared that $600 was insufficient. Democrats in the House, during a session on Christmas Eve Day, responded by trying to pass $2000 in direct payments, but House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy opposed. And Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell also believes that $2000 payments, which is what Trump is asking for, would be too costly.

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Americans 'steaming' with rage as Trump golfs and the GOP leaves the country to die

The White House released the president's schedule for Christmas Eve saying that he would be working "tirelessly for the American people." But what that has actually turned into is something else.

After vetoing the defense spending bill, which included a raise for military service members, and threatening to veto the COVID-19 stimulus and 2021 budget, Trump fled to Florida to golf. For months, the White House has negotiated the stimulus bill and Trump's budget, but at the last minute, the president decided he wanted to throw it all out the window.

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'Unhinged, lame-duck president wants to start a war': Warnings as Trump blames Iran for rocket attack

Anti-war campaigners are warning that U.S. President Donald Trump is on the verge of launching a full-blown military conflict with Iran after the lame-duck incumbent on Wednesday blamed the Middle East nation for a rocket attack on the American Embassy in Baghdad over the weekend, an accusation Tehran rejected as "fabricated."

"Our embassy in Baghdad got hit Sunday by several rockets. Three rockets failed to launch," Trump tweeted late Wednesday afternoon, attaching a photo purporting to show the three rockets. "Guess where they were from: IRAN. Now we hear chatter of additional attacks against Americans in Iraq."

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NY Attorney General subpoenas pro-Trump trolls for voter suppression scheme

The New York Attorney General's office has issued subpoenas to right-wing trolls Jacob Wohl, 22, and Jack Burkman, 58, in connection to an alleged voter-intimidation robocall scheme that has already led to felony indictments in Ohio and Michigan, as well as a federal civil suit filed in the Southern District of New York.

The three subpoenas, each signed Dec. 22 and obtained by Salon, target Wohl, Burkman and Burkman's consulting firm, Burkman & Associates. Prosecutors are seeking information about who funded the robocalls, including about the source of funds in the firm's Bank of America account, as well as any relevant communications. More broadly, investigators also want to see all documents concerning Project 1599, Burkman's organization, which not only claims credit for the calls in the recordings but has also been linked to a number of other political stunts the duo has carried out over the years.

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When guards are allowed to beat and rape women at a Florida prison, who are the real felons?

The U.S. Department of Justice didn’t say it, but we will: In addition to the criminals behind bars at Lowell Correctional Institution in Ocala, Florida, there just as surely are criminals among the prison guards, too. In a report released on Tuesday, the Justice Department excoriated Florida Corrections, having found that officers at Lowell, one of the largest women’s prisons in the nation, have “raped, sodomized, beaten and choked female inmates.” Investigators reviewed over 100,000 pages of documents and interviewed dozens of inmates at Lowell. They found the pattern of abuse so systemic an...

Here's why Trump advisers increasingly fear his actions as he copes with being a 'loser': report

In the United States, lame duck presidents have a long history of working with members of the incoming administration and trying to make sure the transition is as smooth as possible — even if they were disappointed by the election results. President Donald Trump, on the other hand, is still fuming over being voted out of office and refuses to acknowledge Joe Biden as president-elect. New York Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Michael S. Schmidt, in an article published this week, analyze Trump's behavior during this lame-duck period — describing the outgoing president as angry, totally self-absorbed and worried about his political future.

Trump, according to Haberman and Schmidt, "remains the most powerful person in the world, yet he is focused on the one area in which he is powerless to get what he wants: a way to avoid leaving office as a loser. He spends his days flailing for any hope, if not of actually reversing the outcome of the election, then at least of building a coherent case that he was robbed of a second term."

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Trump leaves office historically disgraced in the eyes of the public — while Biden gets high marks

Although Joe Biden's inauguration is less than a month away, President Donald Trump is still refusing to acknowledge his win and pushing debunked claims that widespread fraud tainted the election.

But while Trump seems to have convinced much of his party that the election was illegitimate, recent polls from Fox News and Gallup show his dismal standing with the population as a whole. Analyzing the data, CNN's Harry Enten stressed that Trump is leaving office with historically low marks.

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Trump unwittingly handed Dems a big weapon to wield against Republicans running in the Georgia runoffs: op-ed

Writing in the Washington Post this Wednesday, columnist Greg Sargent contends that with his threat to derail the latest stimulus deal reached by Congress, President Trump may have handed Democrats a "big weapon to wield" against the Republicans running in the Georgia runoffs.

"By abruptly calling for $2,000 stimulus checks on Tuesday night, Trump inadvertently exposed core truths about the consequences of continued GOP control of the Senate — ones that Republicans are working to conceal — and about the post-Trump Republican Party in general," Sargent writes.

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