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The Washington Post 5 most read articles 2 August 2016

SimpleDon

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I recently subscribed to the Washington Post web site, primarily because it is free for 6 months for six months and only ~$4 a month after that for Amazon prime members.

I don't have a handle on the political leaning of the paper's opinion columnists other than George Will, stogy conservative, Dana Milbank, a man after my own heart who has been described as "extravagantly contrarian" and Eugene Robinson a liberal.

The paper under Katharine Graham was establishment Republican with the notable exception of Watergate, which was just good journalism, following the story wherever it lead, a seemingly widely abandoned concept today. After Graham died the paper like so much of Washington at least partially turned to the "Washington Consensus," the idea shared by members of both parties that no intelligence existed beyond the beltway, there is no reason to look any further, that we need to impose austerity because the national debt is going to bankrupt the country if Social Security doesn't do it first. But since the Iraq war and the general ineptitude of the W.Bush administration leading to the 2008 recession and the election of Obama turned the paper into a pretty reliably liberal paper.

Anyway I was reading the opinion pieces yesterday when I saw this,

W Post most read.jpg

And this,

W Post artical list.jpg

I can't remember any faster dissolution of regard for a national office candidate. Only Thomas Eagleton or Gary Hart come to mind.
 
Is that a picture of MLK right before he was assassinated next to the article "Its not too late to Dump Trump."

C'mon, what the hell man? Not a good picture choice!
 
I can't remember any faster dissolution of regard for a national office candidate. Only Thomas Eagleton or Gary Hart come to mind.

I read the Post regularly, and those articles aren't much different from what they've been writing for months. They write about Trump in the same way they'd write about any other alien species.
 
Is that a picture of MLK right before he was assassinated next to the article "Its not too late to Dump Trump."

C'mon, what the hell man? Not a good picture choice!

Yes, it is MLK. It is a rather tortured article about how the author was in the National Civil Rights Museum when Trump was trashing the Khans.

It is here, but I will give you the guts of the article.

Leaders such as King believed that history has an arc, determined by the appeal of freedom and the Author of freedom. And their vision of human rights became an inseparable part of the American story: a nation that declared high ideals, then was judged by them, and now is motivated by them to expand the circle of inclusion, protection and promise. ...

I happened to visit the National Civil Rights Museum at the same time that a presidential candidate was attacking the mother of a fallen American soldier by employing an anti-Muslim stereotype ...

My point here is not that Trump is a classless, egotistical sadist — though that case is strong. It is that Trump’s view of nationalism is based on culture, ethnicity and exclusion. It does not even matter if suspicious outsiders have made what Abraham Lincoln called “so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom.” Their faith, in Trump’s view, is foreign and immediately associated with stereotypes of oppression and violence. The same is true with Mexican ethnicity, which Trump has identified with sexual aggression and murder. Trump is not merely indifferent to the language of racial and religious inclusion; he is actively hostile to the premise.
 
I can't remember any faster dissolution of regard for a national office candidate. Only Thomas Eagleton or Gary Hart come to mind.

I read the Post regularly, and those articles aren't much different from what they've been writing for months. They write about Trump in the same way they'd write about any other alien species.

So I have gathered. Also very funny.
 
I think the answer was acceptable to the question. He explained why the image was chosen...it still seems a careless choice but not entirely out of left field.
 
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