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Why this conservative veteran quit the Republican Party | Column – Tampa Bay Times

I used to describe myself as a life-long conservative Republican. I do so no longer. In fact, I became a far more independent political thinker during the thankfully shortened reign of Donald J. Trump. Tragically, my former party is today led by those who favor pale skin over people of color, and those who prefer Christianity over other religious choices, or none. Any number of individual Republicans may not be racist, but the partys policies undoubtedly are. Any number of Republicans may not be hard-core Christian evangelicals, but the party prostrates itself before their altar.

Both positions are antithetical to our republic and founding instruments, the Declaration of Independence and Constitution. Neither document mentions the superiority of either skin color or religious preference as essential to our governments proper functioning. In other words, the American Republican party has become anti-democratic. President Abraham Lincoln would have been horrified at this turn of events.

There were many reasons why the Framers did not establish any of the many permutations of Christianity as a state religion. The most important is that when one religion is given ascendancy over all others, it inevitably becomes a tool of the state. Look no further than modern-day Iran or Saudi Arabia for the near-perfect example and clear warning. Theocracy is not a form of democracy. However, it is often joined-at-the-hip with various forms of government involving hereditary nobility and vicious dictatorships, which were despised by the Framers. They strove for something better: The worlds first constitutional republic a noble aspiration that we have yet to fully realize.

I am stunned at the numbers of Republicans who are either barely closeted or vociferous white supremacists. I am also stunned at how many of these same people profess association with the Christian evangelical movement. Despite the inherent and startling contradictions, racism and messianic Christianity have somehow taken-up residence within the same arch-conservative movement. There is little doubt that Jesus of Nazareth would have been horrified.

The embrace of such obvious inconsistencies creates a sharp departure from reality. The truth is sacrificed on the tabernacle of belief, serving the self-image of the believers. Nothing could be more self-serving, and at the same time, more emotionally comforting for the acolytes. Also, nothing could be more insidiously hazardous to the country.

The Republican Party seems all but lost to reason. Their tribalism and twisted slogans were on fullest display on the 6th of January at the U.S. Capital Building. Wrapped in the American flag, and with God on their side, the insurrectionists attacked the heart of our democracy the Peoples House. And they did it at the behest of the most self-serving individual to ever occupy the White House the progenitor of the Big Lie that he won the election that he so clearly lost.

One persons vanity and ego have never been more prominent in the long history of our nation. Yet, Republican Party stalwarts continue to say, Trump represents our values. If so, we are indeed in big trouble. The Republican Party today despite all denials is not only racist in character, but massively invested in multiple forms of voter suppression, militarism, the primacy of one religion, serving the best interests of the wealthy 1 Percent, and perpetuating an in-your-face false patriotism that possesses a clear predilection for violence.

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I have never in my life been more concerned for our Republic. More than anything else, the likes of Jefferson, Franklin, Washington, Adams, and Madison were persons of reason. They created a secular government as the best hope for their progeny: us. Secularism and reason are the twin pillars that have sustained our nation for well over two centuries. The Republican Party has all but abandoned both. The Framers would be horrified to see what has happened to a major American political party. I know that I am.

Robert Bruce Adolph is a retired senior Army Special Forces soldier and UN security chief. He formerly taught university classes in both U.S. Government and American History. He is a frequent guest columnist to the Tampa Bay Times, Atlantic Perspectives Magazine of the Netherlands and the Military Times. He is also author of his publishers number one best-selling book, Surviving the United Nation: The Unexpected Challenge.

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Why this conservative veteran quit the Republican Party | Column - Tampa Bay Times

Hillary Clinton takes shot at progressive Democrats, suggests …

Former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton took a shot at progressive Democrats this month, appearing to blame them for the inability of the Democrat-controlled Congress to "get things done," and suggesting they could be the cause of potential party losses in the 2022 midterm elections.

During an interview with MSNBC's Willie Geist that took place earlier this month and aired in part on Thursday, Clinton implored Democrats to start thinking about the party's ability to win elections overall and not just in deep-blue districts where they were assured victory.

Geist turned the interview's attention to the topic, asking Clinton what she saw as the current state of the Democratic Party.

Hillary Clinton called for Democrats to think more broadly about electoral strategy and not just what worked in deep-blue districts. (MSNBC)

"I think that it is a time for some careful thinking about what wins elections, and not just in deep-blue districts where a Democrat and a liberal Democrat, or so-called progressive Democrat, is going to win," Clinton said. "I understand why people want to argue for their priorities. Thats what they believe they were elected to do."

HILLARY CLINTON IS BEGGING DEMOCRATS TO CONSIDER HER AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO BIDEN: DEVINE

"Look, I'm all about having vigorous debate. I think its good, and it gives people a chance to be part of the process," she added. "But, at the end of the day it means nothing if we dont have a Congress that will get things done, and we dont have a White House that we can count on to be sane and sober and stable and productive."

Virginia Republican gubernatorial nominee Glenn Youngkin speaks during his election night party at a hotel in Chantilly, Virginia, Nov. 3, 2021. (REUTERS/ Jonathan Ernst)

Clinton's comments come on the tail of a Republican upset in Virginia's gubernatorial election, as well as amid a massive wave of Democratic House members announcing their pending retirements.

Tensions between progressive and moderate Democrats also appeared to reach an all-time high this month as President Biden's signature Build Back Better agenda hit a wall. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., infuriated liberal colleagues after he announced he would not support the massive spending bill passed by Democrats in the House, effectively killing it with all 50 Senate Republicans also in opposition.

HILLARY CLINTON TEARS UP READING WOULD BE 2016 VICTORY SPEECH

Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., speaks at a press conference outside his office on Capitol Hill on Oct. 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C. Manchin spoke on the debt limit and the infrastructure bill. (Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

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Progressives blasted Manchin after his announcement and called on Biden to instead use executive action to implement parts of the legislation.

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Hillary Clinton voter gets 35-to-life for killing bandmates wife in argument over 2016 election: report – Fox News

A California man who supported Hillary Clinton for president received a maximum sentence of 35 years to life in prison this week after being convicted of killing his bandmates wife in an argument over the 2016 election, according to a report.

The slain woman was holding the couples 2-year-old child at the time of the Jan. 10, 2017, incident, the Press-Enterprise of Southern California reported.

After revealing he had supported Clinton, defendant John Kevin McVoy Jr., 40, was told by the bandmate, "Get the f--- out of my house," according to prosecutors.

HILLARY CLINTON IS BEGGING DEMOCRATS TO CONSIDER HER AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO BIDEN: DEVINE

McVoy then fired a shot at the bandmate, identified as Victor Garcia, striking him in the head, the Press-Enterprise reported. Garcia spent months in a coma afterward and required two brain surgeries plus physical therapy to relearn basic life skills, the report said.

A second shot struck Garcias wife, Susan Garcia, killing her, while one of the other bandmates was trying to disarm McVoy, the report said. The child was not hurt.

Two other bandmates were at the Long Beach home for a practice session at the time of the shooting, according to the report.

During the trial, which ended in November with McVoys conviction, his defense attorney had argued that the defendant shot Garcia in self-defense, claiming Garcia had made threats to McVoy and grabbed a can opener that McVoy thought may have been a knife, the Press-Enterprise reported.

Hillary Clinton is seen in Paris, June 30, 2021. (Reuters)

The jury deliberated for four days, acquitting McVoy on two counts of attempted murder regarding Victor Garcia and the child but finding him guilty of murdering Susan Garcia, the report said.

McVoy apologized to the family and claimed he felt remorseful about the shootings.

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"I think about this every day," he said, according to the Press-Enterprise.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Laura Laesekce sentenced McVoy to 15 years to life for killing Susan Garcia and to 20 years for a firearm enhancement, the newspaper reported.

The case was already underway before liberal Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascon issued a mandate against enhanced gun charges, the Washington Examiner reported.

In addition, he was ordered to pay $8,000 in restitution to the court, with a separate restitution hearing to be held March 1 regarding the victims funeral and medical expenses, the report said.

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Hillary Clinton voter gets 35-to-life for killing bandmates wife in argument over 2016 election: report - Fox News

Take off the news, "Hillary Clinton involved in cannibal network." The draft that shocked the former first lady – Libero Quotidiano -…

a stripping news, for him channel 5, On the legendary December 30 episode Marco Camisani Calzulari He talked about some fake political news that was launched in the middle of the election campaign and spread contradictory conspiracy theories, almost absurd, but unfortunately some believe.

Videos on this topic

One of these relates to my past Barack Obama. And the last thing he wanted Hillary Clinton Take a tour cannibals. A pizzeria could have been identified as a place where people who were part of this fake network were found.

Here is a video of Striscia la Notizia

Besides, we know very well, there are many Rumors about Covid ani vaccines. One of these news claims that a chip Thanks to that in the not too distant future we will all remain under strict control. This is also clearly nonsense. But many still think so. In short, watch out for scams and also pay attention to what you share on social networks.

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Take off the news, "Hillary Clinton involved in cannibal network." The draft that shocked the former first lady - Libero Quotidiano -...

The top political books of 2021 – Yahoo News

Stack of books, blurry background

Political readers were treated to a number of notable titles this year centering around some of the top news stories of 2021, including the early months of President Biden's administration, the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and the imprisonment of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

From Bob Woodward and Robert Costa's eye-opening reporting in "Peril" to Hillary Clinton's political fiction debut, here are some of the most memorable political books of 2021.

"Midnight in Washington: How We Almost Lost Our Democracy and Still Could" by Adam Schiff

Rep. Adam Schiff's (D-Calif.) book, which was first announced in April and published in October, details his perspective of former President Trump's first impeachment as the chair of the House Intelligence Committee and his view of where American democracy stands now.

In "Midnight in Washington," Schiff writes about his front row seat to the probe that stemmed from a whistleblower report following a phone call between Trump and the Ukrainian president and resulted in the House adopting two articles of impeachment against Trump. Schiff uses his experiences to argue that the Trump presidency left lasting damage on American institutions and the Republican Party that will take years to rebuild.

"For all his cynicism and shrewdness, Trump could not have come so close to succeeding if his party had stood up to him, if good people hadn't been silent, or worse, allowed themselves to become complicit," Schiff wrote in a statement announcing the book. "I wanted to relate the private struggles, the triumphs of courage, but more often, the slow surrender of people I worked with and admired to the shameful immorality of a president who could not be trusted."

The congressman traces his inside account all the way to the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, leaving readers with big questions about the status of democracy in America.

"Peril" by Bob Woodward and Robert Costa

Story continues

In arguably the biggest political book of the year, The Washington Post's Bob Woodward and Robert Costa interviewed more than 200 people and crafted more than 6,000 transcript pages into a striking picture of the Trump administration, the 2020 election, the early months of President Biden's presidency, the Pentagon and Congress.

The book, which features many eyewitness accounts and transcripts of secret calls, emails, diaries and other personal documents, included revelations that set off fireworks in politics and the media this year. Woodward and Costa detailed claims that Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley called his counterpart in Beijing to offer assurances after the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) referred to Trump as a "fading brand," and Biden ignored warnings from Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Secretary of State Antony Blinken on the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan, among others.

"Peril" is the third book Woodward has written detailing insider accounts of the Trump presidency, following "Fear: Trump in the White House" and "Rage."

"While Justice Sleeps" by Stacey Abrams

The first of two novels on this list, Stacey Abrams made her political fiction debut this year with a thriller that follows a clerk for a Supreme Court Justice who discovers evidence of a possible conspiracy involving some of Washington's biggest power players.

"While Justice Sleeps" centers around Avery Keene, a law clerk for Justice Howard Wynn, who learns she is to serve as Wynn's legal guardian and power of attorney after he slips into a coma. Keene learns that Wynn was secretly researching a very controversial case before the court and that Wynn had reason of suspecting a dangerous conspiracy unfolding in Washington.

"A decade ago, I wrote the first draft of a novel that explored an intriguing aspect of American democracy - the lifetime appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court," Abrams said in a statement announcing the book news in 2020, just after the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and President Trump's nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to replace her. "As an avid consumer of legal suspense novels and political thrillers, I am excited to add my voice into the mix."

It was announced in May that an NBCUniversal unit acquired the rights for a small-screen adaptation of "While Justice Sleeps."

Abrams, who has been a vocal advocate for federal voting rights legislation and announced her second bid for the Georgia governorship earlier this month, is no stranger to fiction - she penned three romance novels nearly two decades ago under a pseudonym that will hit bookshelves under her own name in 2022. She is also the author of two nonfiction books, "Minority Leader: How to Lead from the Outside and Make Real Change" and "Our Time Is Now: Power, Purpose, and the Fight for a Fair America."

"Navalny: Putin's Nemesis, Russia's Future?" By Jan Matti Dollbaum, Morvan Lallouet and Ben Noble

In "Navalny," the authors examine one of the most talked about world figures of 2021 and what his story says about modern Russia.

The book details the story of Alexei Navalny, whose return to Russia in January of this year and subsequent detention after being poisoned sparked massive protests calling for his release. The authors probe not only Navalny's story - and his showdown with Russian President Vladimir Putin - but his complicated image as a political figure, which ranges from democratic hero to traitor of his country.

"Lucky: How Joe Biden Barely Won the Presidency" by Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes

"Lucky" traces Biden's unlikely road to the White House that culminated in the 2020 election and examines how he pulled off a win that almost no one, including many members of his own party, believed he could achieve.

The Hill's Amie Parnes and NBC's Jonathan Allen include insight from both Democratic and Republican key players to unveil the full story of how the race unfolded. The book features detailed accounts of the race's major turning points, from securing the endorsement of House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.), to the Black voters in South Carolina who saved Biden's campaign when it was on the verge of imploding, and how Biden managed to successfully steer his bid through the coronavirus lockdown in March 2020.

"Inside Biden's campaign, there was a sense that, for the first time in ten months, the political winds had shifted away from his face," reads an excerpt about Biden getting Clyburn's endorsement. "For all of the breaks that had gone Biden's way, there had been only sporadic interruptions in a firestorm of failure. He had survived getting in the race late, campaign infighting, pathetic fundraising, and finishing fourth, fifth, and a distant second in the first three states on the primary calendar. He had benefited from the spiking of the Iowa poll, the caucus debacle, debate-night drubbings of Buttigieg and Bloomberg in consecutive states, and so much more.

"And yet the Clyburn endorsement was different from the rest: Biden had worked for it over the course of years-developing a relationship with Clyburn and his late wife, tending to a Charleston dredging project as vice president, and visiting the state for as long as he could remember."

Allen and Parnes are also the authors of "Shattered: Inside Hillary Clinton's Doomed Campaign."

"State of Terror" by Hillary Rodham Clinton and Louise Penny

Hillary Clinton's fictional co-writing debut with novelist Louise Penny centers around a new U.S. presidential administration that is faced with an international conspiracy posing a serious terror threat following a tumultuous time in American politics.

"The book started really out of a conversation that Louise and I had," Clinton said in an interview just before the novel was released in October.

"I asked, 'What's your nightmare?'" Penny said.

"State of Terror" begins with a new administration whose president appoints one of his political enemies, former media conglomerate head Ellen Adams, to be secretary of state. When the U.S. is faced with a serious terror threat, Adams, her team and young foreign service officer Anahita Dahir have to work together to defeat the conspiracy planned out by an international cohort that has taken advantage of an out-of-touch American government.

"This is a wake-up call for anybody who cares about America, the world," Clinton said.

"Chief of Staff: Notes from Downing Street" by Gavin Barwell

In "Chief of Staff," Gavin Barwell provides a riveting inside account of his time as Downing Street chief of staff to former Prime Minister Theresa May. Barwell became May's chief of staff just after the 2017 general election, when the former prime minister lost her overall majority in Britain's Parliament, and became her righthand man for the next two years.

Barwell's sheds light on the significant transformations within British politics during the last few years and on May as a leader during a time of political strife in the wake of the 2016 Brexit referendum. He writes about being with her during every moment ranging from meeting Trump to responding to the Grenfell Tower fire tragedy and being at the center of Brexit negotiations with leaders including Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn.

"The Long Game: China's Grand Strategy to Displace American Order" by Rush Doshi

"The Long Game" focuses on China's emergence as a power player on the world stage, how the country has achieved that status and what the U.S. should do about it. Doshi's book comes at a pivotal time as China, the first American adversary in over a century to reach 60 percent of U.S. GDP, is quickly growing into a global superpower.

Doshi draws on Chinese government documents and leaked materials to reveal a modern history of China's political prowess since the end of the Cold War. The author details the country's carefully executed strategy to remove the U.S. from the global pecking order and explores how various major events, including the 2008 financial crisis, the 2016 election and the coronavirus pandemic, have altered China's view of and response to American power.

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The top political books of 2021 - Yahoo News