The Death of Outrage Revisited

As the nation reacted to a leaked “Access Hollywood” tape, Donald Trump reminded us that hypocrisy is a bipartisan affliction. Both Democratic outrage and the willingness of Republicans to excuse and rationalize their decision to stand behind him after Trump’s boasts of actions that are indistinguishable from sexual assault are a reflection of the deep cynicism as well as the hyper-partisanship that have done so much damage to our political culture.

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The Death of Outrage Revisited

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The Post-Trump GOP Civil War Begins

If Donald Trump is going down, he’s going down fighting. That’s the main takeaway not only from Sunday night’s debate with Hillary Clinton but also in his reaction to the wave of mainstream Republicans who are abandoning him in the wake of the “Access Hollywood” tape that came out last week. Trump is firing back at those Republicans who have decided to give up on his candidacy. While it’s not clear that there’s anything Trump can say to keep them in line the real point of these exchanges isn’t about what will happen on Election Day. Rather, these are the first shots being fired in the civil war that is looming between Trump and his supporters and mainstream Republicans and conservatives who are hoping to pick up the pieces of the GOP if the election proves to be a debacle for their party.

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In ‘Jail’ Outrage, the Left Projects

Sensible America is yet again aghast over something Donald Trump said. He has yet again violated civic decency and the norms of a functioning democratic republic, we are told. That apoplexy reached fever pitch in the wake of the debate on Sunday, and it has yet to abate. The fact that this outrage seems almost entirely divorced from what Trump actually said doesn’t appear to matter much to the outraged masses.

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Acts of War Cannot Go Ignored

On Sunday night, as Americans were transfixed by the spectacle of the second presidential debate, events occurred off the coast of Yemen that remind us of the kind of challenges with which a president must contend. Two ballistic missiles were fired at a U.S. destroyer in international waters from the part of Yemen controlled by the Houthis, an Iranian-back militia. The missiles did not hit the USS Mason, although it’s unclear if they had some internal defect or whether the ship defended itself with its suite of missile-defense systems.

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The Fruits of Lying to the Public

Back in July, trying to make sense of developments like the Brexit vote and the rise of Donald Trump, New York Times columnist Roger Cohen argued that we live in an age when people are indifferent to truth–when facts are “little annoyances easily upended.” That, however, is a self-serving excuse. The real problem is that people no longer trust the media and other gatekeeping institutions to tell them the truth, and therefore feel the “facts” provided by these institutions are unreliable things on which to base decisions. And that distrust is merited, as two recent examples show.

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Pence Throws Himself Under the Bus

The choice of Mike Pence as Donald Trump’s running mate was supposed to be more than an attempt to balance the Republican ticket with a traditional conservative voice. Given the presidential nominee’s lack of familiarity with many key policy issues, many conservatives hoped the Indiana governor would not only play a key role in a prospective Trump administration but also help influence the billionaire to adopt positions that both conservative Christians and foreign policy hawks could support. One of Trump’s statements in last night’s second presidential debate and the subsequent reaction from Pence exploded any notion Pence is and would ever be anything but a spear carrier.

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