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Why the Hunter Biden pardon is ‘justified’ according to legal experts

President Joe Biden's announcement that he is issuing a full pardon for his son Hunter Biden sent shockwaves throughout the media on Sunday, with many on the right expressing outrage and many on the left—although not all—defending his decision. Some legal experts, explaining why the charges should never have been brought, say Biden is right to issue the pardon even after having said he would not.

While many are looking at this through a political lens, not a legal one, President Biden explained both the political and legal aspects in his announcement.

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'Did The Onion buy you too?' Enron apparently announces rebirth in baffling new video

One of the country's most infamous corporations made a surprise return exactly 23 years after its stunning collapse.

Enron Corp. collapsed Nov. 28, 2001, when Dynegy Inc. backed out of an $8.4 billion takeover deal, plunging what had been the world's largest energy trader into bankruptcy four days later, leading to the prosecutions of top executives and prompting new regulations on financial accounting, but a company bearing the same name announced its return with a video posted on X.

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'Right thing to do': Producer of election fraud movie '2000 Mules' apologizes

The producer of a movie claiming the 2020 presidential election was stolen from President-elect Donald Trump has issued an official apology for "inaccurate information."

In a statement on his website, 2000 Mules producer Dinesh D'Souza apologized to a Georgia man who he accused of a "crime" as the movie showed him depositing ballots in a drop box.

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'Not entitled': Conservative lawyer gives civics lesson in effort to tear apart Trump plan

A conservative lawyer dismissed Donald Trump's insistence on installing political appointees who haven't been properly vetted.

The president-elect has threatened to sidestep the Senate confirmation process by installing nominees during congressional recesses, and some of his advisers have urged him to skip FBI background checks in favor of private security firms. But conservative attorney Gregg Nunziata said that would be unwise and would violate the founders' intentions.

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Fox News host: 'Donald Trump would have pardoned Hunter Biden'

Fox News hosts Lawrence Jones and Steve Doocy argued that President-elect Donald Trump would have pardoned Hunter Biden after President Joe Biden did the same thing.

While reporting on the pardon Monday, Fox News correspondent Madeleine Rivera noted that Republicans in Congress "have found no concrete evidence of wrongdoing by the Biden family."

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'Makes me nervous': Elon Musk's business rivals reportedly in fear as his power grows

Tech billionaire Elon Musk now finds himself one of the most powerful non-governmental figures in American history — and it has a lot of his critics and business rivals worried of reprisal under a Donald Trump administration, reported the Wall Street Journal.

The two men grew close during the 2024 election campaign, with Musk — now the richest man on the planet through his Tesla electric vehicle company and government contract-funded SpaceX firm — bankrolling much of Trump's field operations. Trump in turn appointed him to head up an informal task force he has called the "Department of Government Efficiency."

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Trump's movement 'more fragile than it seems' — and is about to implode: analysis

The Atlantic's George Packer believes there are important lessons that Democrats need to take away from President-elect Donald Trump's victory in the 2024 election.

However, he also believes that Democrats need to avoid overestimating the strength of Trump's electoral coalition, which he believes could split relatively quickly.

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GOP will 'tear itself apart' trying to push Trump agenda through Congress: analyst

Donald Trump is entering office with a Republican-controlled Congress — but one of the most fragile in modern history, wrote Hayes Brown for MSNBC.

And it's one he says Democrats can easily exploit.

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'Degrading finale': NY Times columnist lays into Biden 'hypocrisy' after son's pardon

A New York Times opinion writer denounced president Joe Biden's pardon of his son as the sort of "naked self-dealing" that has soured so many Americans on politics.

The president had insisted he would not pardon his younger son Hunter Biden if he was convicted on three felony charges related to his purchase of a gun while he was a drug addict. But that's exactly what he did Sunday with less than two months left in his term, and New York Times conservative columnist Bret Stephens said that actions shows there's no wonder Democrats lost the election.

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'Insane rants': Ex-FBI deputy head gives blistering putdown of agency's potential new boss

Former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe on Monday trashed President-elect Donald Trump's decision to nominate political henchman Kash Patel to be the next director of the FBI.

During an appearance on CNN, McCabe argued that Patel is "clearly not" qualified for the job, and he said that "he doesn't have a fraction of the qualifications that any former FBI director, chosen by any president, has."

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'Stoke the flames': Expert pinpoints the words that trigger MAGA

By Alex Hinton, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology; Director, Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights, Rutgers University - Newark

“No profanity.”

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'How stupid I was': Scam fleeced $600k from victim who believed she was FBI asset

A woman opened up to The Washington Post about an elaborate scam that cost her $600,000 in life savings in the first part of an extensive series launched on Monday.

"Sweepstakes and Nigerian letter scams once dominated fraud prevention workshops," wrote the Post's Michelle Singletary. "We’ve read about pyramid and Ponzi schemes, tech support and telemarketing swindles. And pig butchering — a type of investment scam in which the target’s stake is steadily 'fattened up,' usually in the form of cryptocurrency, before the rhetorical slaughter — is a growing concern."

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'They make you feel small': The surprise backlash that drove some Dems to Trump

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. brought some Democrats on board with Donald Trump among voters who mistrust medical experts.

The political scion's unconventional views on medical science have raised concerns among experts over his nomination to oversee the Department of Health and Human Services, but Kennedy's beliefs appealed to some voters who mistrust doctors and scientists in the wake of the Covid pandemic, reported the New York Times.

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