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Joe Biden

MSNBC’s Mika blames Trump’s ‘treasonous’ Taliban dealings for Afghan chaos — but finds a way to let him off the hook

MSNBC's Mika Brzezinski trashed Donald Trump's dealings with the Taliban as "treasonous" -- but still laid blame for Afghanistan's collapse on President Joe Biden.

The Biden administration was surprised how swiftly the nation fell to Taliban forces, which officials see as confirmation of their decision to leave after 20 years, but the "Morning Joe" host said the current president owns the disaster even if it was set in motion by his predecessor's failures.

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Evangelicals melt down over GOP’s embrace of same-sex marriage

The Republican Party's decision to wave the "white flag" on same-sex marriage has left evangelicals fuming, according to a new report from Politico.

After Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel posted a tweet in support of LGBTQ rights this year, social conservatives "furiously dialed up McDaniel with complaints."

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RNC busted for deleting campaign page touting Trump’s ‘historic peace agreement’ after Afghanistan implodes

According to a report from the Washington Post's Dave Weigle, the Republican National Committee has memory-holed a page on their website that touted Donald Trump's 'historic peace agreement" with Afghanistan.

As Kabul fell on Sunday afternoon and the fingerpointing began over who is to blame -- President Joe Biden for pulling the military out or Donald Trump for negotiating the release of Taliban soldiers who have taken part in the assault on the Afghanistan capitol -- Weigle noticed a change at the website.

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US lowers flag at Kabul embassy, secures airport

The United States lowered the flag on its embassy in Kabul and has relocated almost all staff to the airport, where US forces are taking over air traffic control, officials said Sunday.

"We are completing a series of steps to secure the Hamid Karzai International Airport to enable the safe departure of US and allied personnel from Afghanistan via civilian and military flights," the Pentagon and State Department said in a joint statement.

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Politics colors return to class in US universities grappling with Covid

University campuses will see a return to in-person learning across the United States this term, but the approach to dealing with Covid-19 is far from uniform

Los Angeles (AFP) - In-person learning is back on the curriculum at universities in the United States this term after a pandemic-imposed hiatus but, like much else in the deeply divided country, how it plays out will depend largely on politics.

Mask mandates and proof of vaccination are compulsory on some campuses, while on others they are prohibited by local law, as states take starkly diverging approaches to rocketing Covid-19 infections, driven by the highly contagious Delta variant.

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Ghana welcomes survivors of 1921 Tulsa massacre

Hughes Van Ellis (R) his sister Viola Ford Fletcher (L), and family members who arrived from the US are received by the Deputy Director of Diaspora Office at the Kotoka International Airport in Accra

Accra (AFP) - Two African American survivors of a century-old massacre in the United States were in Ghana Sunday with their grandchildren at the start of a visit to connect with their "motherland."

Viola Fletcher, 107, known as 'Mother Fletcher', and her brother Hughes Van Ellis, 100, known as 'Uncle Red', are from the district of Greenwood in the Oklahoma city of Tulsa that was devastated in 1921 by a mob of armed white people.

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Donald Trump Jr faces backlash for gloating over swift fall of Afghanistan: 'Rooting against America again?'

Donald Trump Jr. gloated over the swiftly unfolding collapse of Afghanistan to Taliban forces -- and was hit was furious backlash.

The twice-impeached one-term president's namesake son blamed the collapse on President Joe Biden's intelligence analysts, and used the tragedy to attack his father's successor on a laundry list of topics that appear regularly on Fox News programming.

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'Is that a MAGA hat?' Taliban takeover of presidential palace carries 'big Jan 6 vibes'

Taliban fighters entered Afghanistan's presidential palace, sparking memories of the Jan. 6 insurrection.

Armed militants went inside the Afghan government's headquarters Sunday after President Ashraf Ghani fled the country, and a Taliban spokesman said talks on forming a new government would begin soon.

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Trump ridiculed for 'resign in disgrace' demand to Biden: 'President Kamala Harris? Sounds good'

Donald Trump demanded that President Joe Biden "resign in disgrace" for the collapse of Afghanistan, and again baselessly questioned his own election loss.

The twice-impeached one-term president issued the statement through his spokeswoman Liz Harrington, who has not yet been suspended from Twitter.

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The Pentagon mistakes behind the rout of the Afghan army

A wall mural painted on the wall of US embassy in Kabul on July 30, 2021

Washington (AFP) - The collapse of the Afghan army that allowed Taliban fighters to take control of Kabul cast a stark light on errors committed over 20 years by the Pentagon as it spent billions  of dollars in Afghanistan. 

The wrong equipment

Washington spent $83 billion in its effort to create a modern army mirroring its own. In practical terms, that meant huge dependence on air support and a high-tech communications network in a country where only 30 percent of the population can count on a reliable electricity supply.

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'Disgraceful' Elise Stefanik faces furious backlash after accusing Joe Biden of 'hiding'

Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) was on the receiving end of a furious pushback after she accused President Joe Biden of "hiding" while the Taliban advances on Kabul.

With every cable network reporting that the president has been meeting with military officials and diplomats at Camp David -- where he is spending the weekend -- Stefanik who has seen her star rise by attaching herself at the hip to Donald Trump took to Twitter to complain.

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'Did you actually tweet this?': Lauren Boebert's attack on Joe Biden blows up in her face

An attempt to tell President Joe Biden how to do his job led to Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) crashing and burning on Sunday morning after critics of the conservative lawmaker were once again reminded that she seems to tweet before thinking.

With Biden at Camp David monitoring the situation in Afghanistan, Boebert who is back home in Colorado, tweeted: "No person who calls themselves the President of the United States should be on vacation while the world crumbles down around them. The dereliction of duty continues..."

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Taliban enters Kabul as Afghan president flees: 4 essential reads

Under siege, President Ashraf Ghani of Afghanistan has departed the country as Taliban insurgents, who had seized most major Afghan cities in recent weeks, moved into their final target, the Afghan capital, Kabul, on Aug. 15, 2021.

United States personnel were evacuated from Afghanistan and, according to the Associated Press, panicked citizens aiming to escape were “lining up at cash machines to withdraw their life savings" on Sunday. Afghans now face a life not under democratic rule but under the rule of radical Islamic fighters.

The apparent fall of Afghanistan came just three months after the U.S. began to withdraw its troops from the country after a 20-year war that killed 2,448 U.S. service members, 3,846 U.S. military contractors and 66,000 Afghan national military and police.

For Afghans and international observers of a certain age, it looks like history is repeating itself.

The Taliban – which means “the students" in Pashto – seized control of Afghanistan in 1996 after capturing Kabul from various rival groups in the Afghan civil war. They established a government based on their extreme interpretation of Islamic Sharia law and ruled for five years. The Taliban regime was then toppled in 2001 by the U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan.

Six armed men in head coverings with beards stand by a road with mountains in background.

Taliban fighters at a roadside checkpoint in Afghanistan in 1995.

Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

Afghanistan experts have offered insight into the Taliban – then and now – and the United States' role in Afghanistan's collapse.

1. The Taliban regime

Have the Taliban changed over the past two decades? That's the question Sher Jan Ahmadzai, director of the Center for Afghanistan Studies at the University of Nebraska, Omaha, set out to answer in his July 2021 story on the Taliban.

Ahmadzai, who is from Afghanistan, explained that, “During the Taliban's five-year rule, women were prohibited from working, attending school or leaving home without a male relative. Men had to grow beards and wear a cap or turban."

Anyone not abiding by this code could be lashed, beaten or humiliated.

Afghans were jubilant when the Taliban regime fell, wrote Ahmadzai.

“Children started to fly kites and to play games. Couples played music at their weddings, and women left their homes for work without fear of being beaten by Taliban enforcers."

A street hairdresser in Kabul cuts a man's beard in November 2001 after the fall of the Taliban regime.

Getting a trim in Kabul, November 2001.

Alexander Nemenov/AFP via Getty Images

The rhetoric of the Taliban has moderated since 2001, Ahmadzai wrote, but he found little evidence that their extremist beliefs have changed.

“All evidence suggests the Taliban still believe in restoring their old system of emirate, in which an unelected religious leader, or emir, was the ultimate decision-maker," given authority from God.

Already, in Taliban-controlled parts of Afghanistan, Ahmadzai wrote, Taliban have rulers “have asked families to marry off one girl per family to their fighters; said women should not leave home without a male relative; and ordered men to pray in mosques and grow beards."

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