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Why MAGA’s combo of anger and despair makes the movement so dangerous: analysis

In his New York Times column and frequent appearances on MS NOW, journalist David French isn't shy about attacking President Donald Trump from the right. Like other Never Trump conservatives — from attorney George Conway to MS NOW's Nicolle Wallace to The Lincoln Project's Rick Wilson — French believes that Trump and the MAGA movement have been terrible for the GOP and terrible for conservatism.

But French examines MAGA's belief system in his December 14 column for the Times. MAGA, according to French, believes that Trump is fighting to save the United States from a "death spiral" — and that combination of anger and "despair" is one of the things that makes MAGA and the "New Right" so dangerous.

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How Trump uses 'Christian values' to win over Evangelicals while living like Emperor Nero

As more of the Epstein files are released, reminding us of President Donald Trump’s close association with Jeffrey Epstein and the young people he abused and trafficked, as well as the president’s ongoing array of misogynist insults and actions (like calling journalist Catherine Lucey “piggy” and name-calling Marjorie Taylor Greene to the point where she jumped ship), what keeps coming to my mind are the sexual exploits of authoritarians throughout history. As a scholar of the New Testament and the origins of Christianity, I have a special interest in the lives of the Roman emperors—in particular, the notorious Emperor Nero.

According to historians of antiquity (trigger warning here!), Emperor Nero was known to use and abuse many people, especially women, allegedly murdering two of his wives and his aunt while sleeping with a Vestal Virgin and—yes!—his mother before he killed her. Roman politicians and historians held back remarkably little when considering Nero’s excesses. Perhaps the most famous of those writers, Tacitus, shared how Nero “polluted himself by every lawful or lawless indulgence.” Cassius Dio, author of 80 volumes of Roman history, describes Nero skulking around Rome at night “insulting women,” “practicing lewdness on boys,” and “beating, wounding, and murdering” others. And Suetonius, the most famous biographer of the Caesars, claimed that Nero had invented a perversion all his own. At public games he was hosting, he would put on an animal skin and “assail with violence the private parts both of men and women, while they were bound to stakes.”

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'Really weird': CBS News host raises eyebrows with 'surprising' topic of lawmaker grilling

CBS News raised "ideological" concerns over the weekend as one of its hosts grilled a GOP lawmaker about why more isn't being done on an issue that's important to those on the right.

Margaret Brennan of CBS News, who butted heads with JD Vance during a debate during the 2024 presidential election, on Sunday interviewed U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, M.D., (R-LA). In the course of their discussion, she grilled him on a topic that many analysts and observers found to be interesting.

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'Life after Trump': Analyst says GOP ditching president 'faster' than ever seen

President Donald Trump was openly rebuked by Republicans this past week on several fronts, and in such an open manner that one analyst argued GOP lawmakers are already eyeing “life after Trump.”

Journalist and CNN host Manu Raju asked a panel of experts on his “Inside Politics Sunday” show whether Trump was “losing grip” on the Republican Party, citing several recent instances of the president being openly defied by GOP lawmakers.

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'Might lead to violence': Republican senator goes to war against Trump's plot win midterms

Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) openly condemned President Donald Trump’s push for GOP-controlled states to redraw their congressional districts Sunday – laying equal blame on Democratic Party leaders’ retaliatory efforts like in California – and warned that continued gerrymandering could ultimately “lead to violence.”

Trump launched what some have referred to as the “redistricting wars” in June when he encouraged Texas state lawmakers to approve new congressional maps, and in a manner that the Trump administration hoped would give the GOP five additional House seats. That push sparked a wave of mid-decade redistricting efforts in both GOP and Dem-controlled states, and one that Paul warned could produce deadly results.

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Epstein's friendship with MAGA titan ended with 'one last eerie message': analysis

Jeffrey Epstein maintained regular and sometimes daily contact with MAGA influencer and former Trump official Steve Bannon leading up to Epstein's 2019 arrest, and transcripts recently compiled by journalist Ellie Leonard show their exchanges ended with Epstein leaving “one last eerie message," Leonard wrote Saturday.

Much has been reported on the friendship between Epstein and Bannon, with last month’s release of around 20,000 files from Epstein’s estate revealing that the two had far more than a professional relationship.

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'Unqualified': CBS News' Trump-backed boss roasted for massive Erika Kirk TV campaign

The editor-in-chief of CBS News was hit with strong pushback his weekend after heavily featuring Erika Kirk, and the editor-in-chief Bari Weiss herself, in the network's coverage.

CBS has included numerous features on Erika Kirk, the widow of the slain MAGA commentator Charlie Kirk, and even aired a town hall in which the last man to speak to Charlie Kirk confronted Erika about Donald Trump's behavior.

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'Absolute legend': Observers hail 'hard as nails' man who wrestled gun from mass shooter

The mass shooting in Australia Sunday was thwarted, in part, by what appears to be a man wrestling the suspected gunman to the ground and taking his firearm, a video of which has gone viral on social media and garnered praise from thousands.

“Absolute legend,” wrote Jonah Goldberg, editor-in-chief of The Dispatch, in a social media post Sunday on X.

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'Referee stunned': Internet erupts in ridicule as Trump makes 'worst coin flip in history'

Donald Trump on Saturday shocked the internet when he gave what some have dubbed a non-traditional coin flip at the Army-Navy football match up.

Trump can be seen on the video awkwardly tossing the coin, which doesn't appear to have actually flipped to the other side.

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'Start rounding them up!' Conservative commentator blames mass shooting on peace activists

Conservative commentator and U.S. Army veteran Jim Hanson took to Fox News Sunday to lay blame for the deadly mass shooting in Australia targeting its Jewish community on critics of Israel’s military siege on Gaza.

On Sunday, at least 11 people were killed and at least 29 injured after two gunmen opened fire at an event on Bondi Beach celebrating the start of the Jewish holiday Hanukkah, according to BBC.

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Trump's break with big MAGA star could 'hand a Democrat the seat': Georgia GOP leader

The chair of a major Republican Party committee in Georgia is sounding the alarm that President Donald Trump’s messy break with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) may end up handing her seat to a Democratic candidate, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday.

Once one of the president’s most loyal and vocal supporters, Greene has grown increasingly critical of Trump in recent months, having openly criticized his administration’s approach on health care, its reluctance to release files on Jeffrey Epstein, and it’s military and geopolitical support for Israel amid its siege on Gaza, which a number of human rights organizations have labeled a genocide.

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'Not what they voted for': Why swing voters are leaving Trumpism in droves

New York Times writer E.J. Dionne Jr., says a great many Americans who helped put Donald Trump in office have absorbed what’s happened since.

“They may not be glued to every chaotic twist of this presidency, but they do pay attention and have concluded, reasonably, that this is not what they voted for,” said Dionne.

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Leaked Trump Admin memo hints at cuts at VA: report

A leaked Veterans Administration memo reveals staffing reductions at facilities serving former military members, The Washington Post reported Saturday.

Under the leadership of former far-right GOP lawmaker Doug Collins, the VA is planning to eliminate up to 35,000 positions, The Washington Post reported. The agency has already faced persistent criticism for inadequate staffing levels, which have contributed to extended wait times for veterans seeking care.

The VA responded, confirming that 25,000 cuts were being made, but that they were all open roles, many of which were created during the COVID pandemic, and that they would have no effect on the quality of care. An administration spokesman said no actual employee would lose their job.

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