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Month: May 2019

The constitutional system is not built to resist Trump’s defiance of Congress

The constitutional system is not built to resist Trump’s defiance of Congress

Jeffrey Toobin writes: Our constitutional system never contemplated a President like Donald Trump. The Framers anticipated friction among the three branches of government, which has been a constant throughout our history, but the Trump White House has now established a complete blockade against the legislative branch, thwarting any meaningful oversight. The system, it appears, may simply be incapable of responding to this kind of challenge. [Continue reading…]

Trump’s interest in Ukraine investigations viewed as ‘a front of a domestic political war in America’

Trump’s interest in Ukraine investigations viewed as ‘a front of a domestic political war in America’

The Washington Post reports: As President Trump and his inner circle appear increasingly focused on Ukraine as a potential tripwire for Joe Biden and other Democrats, officials about to take power in Kiev are pushing their own message: Leave us out of it. Supporters of Ukrainian President-elect Volodymyr Zelensky — who is expected to take office in the coming weeks — said in interviews Saturday that they feared they were being pulled into a domestic political conflict in the United…

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Inside Syria’s secret torture prisons: How Bashar al-Assad crushed dissent

Inside Syria’s secret torture prisons: How Bashar al-Assad crushed dissent

The New York Times reports: Syrian security officers hung Muhannad Ghabbash from his wrists for hours, beat him bloody, shocked him with electricity and stuck a gun in his mouth. Mr. Ghabbash, a law student from Aleppo, repeatedly confessed his actual offense: organizing peaceful antigovernment protests. But the torture continued for 12 days, until he wrote a fictional confession to planning a bombing. That, he said, was just the beginning. He was flown to a crammed prison at Mezze air…

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The U.S. has slashed its refugee intake. Syrians fleeing war are most affected

The U.S. has slashed its refugee intake. Syrians fleeing war are most affected

The Washington Post reports: Mariam Rastanawi fled Homs, Syria, in 2012, hoping to escape a protracted civil war amid fears that remaining in her native country would amount to a death sentence. Seeking refuge in the United States, a country she saw as sympathetic to her plight, she and her husband waited years in exile without a permanent home. In March, they were shocked to learn that they were being admitted to the United States as refugees, and their spring…

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California’s latest weapon against climate change is low-tech farm soil

California’s latest weapon against climate change is low-tech farm soil

NPR reports: Before leaving office, Gov. Jerry Brown set a goal for California to be carbon neutral by 2045. That will likely mean not just reducing carbon emissions — from electricity production, cars and buildings — but also absorbing carbon that’s already in the air. California’s Healthy Soils initiative is now in its third year, and it’s designed to be part of the state’s climate strategy. A state report finds that farms and forests could absorb as much as 20…

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Rudy Giuliani plans to enlist Ukrainian support to help Trump get re-elected — updated

Rudy Giuliani plans to enlist Ukrainian support to help Trump get re-elected — updated

The New York Times reports: Rudolph W. Giuliani, President Trump’s personal lawyer, is encouraging Ukraine to wade further into sensitive political issues in the United States, seeking to push the incoming government in Kiev to press ahead with investigations that he hopes will benefit Mr. Trump. Mr. Giuliani said he plans to travel to Kiev, the Ukrainian capital, in the coming days and wants to meet with the nation’s president-elect to urge him to pursue inquiries that allies of the…

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In Trump’s America, good Samaritans get arrested

In Trump’s America, good Samaritans get arrested

The New York Times reports: Teresa L. Todd pulled over one recent night on a dark West Texas highway to help three young Central American migrants who had flagged her down. Ms. Todd — an elected official, government lawyer and single mother in a desert border region near Big Bend National Park — said she went into “total mom mode” when she saw the three siblings, one of whom appeared to be very ill. Struggling to communicate using her broken…

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Why I do not hate Donald Trump

Why I do not hate Donald Trump

Jim Baker, former general counsel of the FBI, writes: Politically, the current approach, anger and hatred, isn’t working for President Trump’s opponents: The president’s poll numbers have remained roughly constant over time. Some 90 percent of Republicans apparently support him. Morally, those who view the president as crass, hateful and demeaning do themselves and the country no favors by exhibiting such behavior to any degree in their own words or deeds. The evidence suggests a new approach is needed. I…

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Trump is a business failure. Is he a tax cheat, too?

Trump is a business failure. Is he a tax cheat, too?

Lily Batchelder writes: The latest bombshell Times story on the president’s tax history confirms what we already suspected: Donald Trump is a terrible businessman. Despite inheriting more than $400 million and being bailed out by his father at critical junctures, he managed to lose (or at least claim tax losses) of more than $1 billion over a decade. The latest story also shows how we do a terrible job of adequately taxing the wealthy. The 400 richest Americans often pay…

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Now for sale on Facebook: Looted Middle Eastern antiquities

Now for sale on Facebook: Looted Middle Eastern antiquities

The New York Times reports: Ancient treasures pillaged from conflict zones in the Middle East are being offered for sale on Facebook, researchers say, including items that may have been looted by Islamic State militants. Facebook groups advertising the items grew rapidly during the upheaval of the Arab Spring and the ensuing wars, which created unprecedented opportunities for traffickers, said Amr Al-Azm, a professor of Middle East history and anthropology at Shawnee State University in Ohio and a former antiquities…

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Trump considers them terrorists, but some of the Muslim Brotherhood are allies

Trump considers them terrorists, but some of the Muslim Brotherhood are allies

The New York Times reports: In Kuwait, the Muslim Brotherhood is vocally pro-American. In Iraq, the Brotherhood’s political party has steadfastly supported the American-backed political process and still forms part of the governing coalition. And in Yemen, the Brotherhood-linked party is cooperating with some of America’s closest Arab allies in a war against a faction backed by Iran. President Trump’s proposal to designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization raises the difficult question of just whom he intends to…

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The value of attention and the cost of giving it away

The value of attention and the cost of giving it away

Franklin Foer writes: I can say definitively now that I faltered in pursuit of my New Year’s resolution. My self-improvement project for the year was to read a fresh poem every morning, before glimpsing the accumulation of unresponded email and lifting the lid off Twitter. My purpose, when I explained it to my wife and kids a few hours before midnight, was to ritualistically remind myself of emotions other than those triggered by the front page. What I didn’t say…

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Co-founder of Facebook says it’s time to break up the company

Co-founder of Facebook says it’s time to break up the company

Chris Hughes writes: The last time I saw Mark Zuckerberg was in the summer of 2017, several months before the Cambridge Analytica scandal broke. We met at Facebook’s Menlo Park, Calif., office and drove to his house, in a quiet, leafy neighborhood. We spent an hour or two together while his toddler daughter cruised around. We talked politics mostly, a little about Facebook, a bit about our families. When the shadows grew long, I had to head out. I hugged…

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Is this a constitutional crisis?

Is this a constitutional crisis?

Dahlia Lithwick writes: It is probably safe to say that this is not how we imagined America’s little fling with representative democracy would end. But on Wednesday morning, New York Rep. Jerrold Nadler described the battle unfolding between the Trump White House and Congress thusly: “The ongoing clash between congressional Democrats and President Trump over the Mueller report has turned into a full-blown constitutional crisis.” On Thursday morning, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi used the same turn of phrase, warning that…

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