Friday, 10 February 2017

Opinions P.M.: Millions have protested Trump. Here’s what they plan to do next.

Elizabeth Warren is a grandstanding phony; 'So-called judges' trump Trump; Staying true to yourself in the age of Trump: A how-to guide for federal employees; Here's how you can deal with Trump — besides drinking Everclear; President Trump showcases his media illiteracy; Is that a steeple going up on Trump’s latest property acquisition?; Statutory damages in copyright law: “On forgetting how to read a statute”; Lunch links: New Jersey implements welcome bail reforms; Five myths about Frederick Douglass; Six stunning aspects of the Flynn scandal; Washington Post bestsellers: Feb. 12, 2017; A blueprint for resistance to Trump has emerged. Here’s what it looks like.; Angela Merkel has become a Turkish dissident; A sport may be a game of inches, but politics is now a game of feet;
 
Opinions P.M.
 
 
BRIAN SNYDER / REUTERS
Millions have protested Trump. Here's what they plan to do next.
We heard from more than 900 people in 44 states, plus D.C. and some U.S. territories. This is what they said.
Elizabeth Warren is a grandstanding phony
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was right to invoke Rule 19 against Sen Elizabeth Warren for her personal harangue against her "friend and colleague" Sen. Jeff Sessions.
 
'So-called judges' trump Trump
Thus far the judges have done their job: to provide a bulwark for liberty in the face of executive overreaching.
 
Staying true to yourself in the age of Trump: A how-to guide for federal employees
Tips for federal workers who don't want to go along with every order from above.
 
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Here's how you can deal with Trump — besides drinking Everclear
For those feeling powerless in the Trump era, finding a means of connection can help to rebuild the bulwark of civil society.
 
President Trump showcases his media illiteracy
President Trump shows his media sophistication.
 
Is that a steeple going up on Trump’s latest property acquisition?
And then what would come next?
 
Statutory damages in copyright law: “On forgetting how to read a statute”
My colleague Sam Bray highly recommends Tomas Gomez-Arostegui's "What History Teaches Us About U.S. Copyright Law and Statutory Damages"
 
Lunch links: New Jersey implements welcome bail reforms
Plus: NYPD cops using illegal license plate shields, Louisiana judge and Kentucky deputy accused of racist slurs, Alabama governor likens prison building to going to the moon
Five myths about Frederick Douglass
His escape from slavery was surprisingly comfortable — and he isn't still alive.
 
Six stunning aspects of the Flynn scandal
Another White House mess.
 
Washington Post bestsellers: Feb. 12, 2017
Paul Auster's latest novel, '4 3 2 1,' debuts at No. 3
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A blueprint for resistance to Trump has emerged. Here’s what it looks like.
The situation is bleak. But it is not hopeless.
 
Angela Merkel has become a Turkish dissident
Germany might be the only country willing to help get Turkey back to democracy.
 
A sport may be a game of inches, but politics is now a game of feet
Don't be caught flat-footed.
 
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