71m² Modern Amenities | A Charming Small Farm House In Tennessee, United States
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Congresswoman and U.S. Senate candidate Kyrsten Sinema talks about the upcoming election with 12 Tod - Duration: 7:02.
For more infomation >> Congresswoman and U.S. Senate candidate Kyrsten Sinema talks about the upcoming election with 12 Tod - Duration: 7:02. -------------------------------------------
Tropical Storm Michael: Storm Expected to Hit the United States - Duration: 1:55.
For more infomation >> Tropical Storm Michael: Storm Expected to Hit the United States - Duration: 1:55. -------------------------------------------
Hurricane Michael Forecast: Storm Could be Major Hurricane in U.S. - Duration: 6:25.
For more infomation >> Hurricane Michael Forecast: Storm Could be Major Hurricane in U.S. - Duration: 6:25. -------------------------------------------
The mounting trade war with China - Duration: 5:38.
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NTSB: NY Limo Crash Marks 'Deadliest Transportation Crash In US Since Feb. 2009' - Duration: 2:00.
For more infomation >> NTSB: NY Limo Crash Marks 'Deadliest Transportation Crash In US Since Feb. 2009' - Duration: 2:00. -------------------------------------------
Somos U.S. Marines - Duration: 1:58.
Hi my name is Amanda Medina,
Ezequiel Chairez,
Johanna Collins,
Camilo Parody,
and I am an United States Marine.
My family is from Puerto Rico. Different
parts of Puerto Rico, but everybody's from Puerto Rico.
Both of my parents are from Zacatecas. It's a state in Mexico.
So my mom's side they're from Puerto Rico and my dad's side is from Mexico.
My family was all born in Colombia.
I went every year to Puerto Rico, I mean, it's awesome...it's a trip.
Mexico, well at least where my parents are from, is very calm. It's nothing but farmland.
There's nice buildings, a lot of mountains. It's a beautiful city.
So, the go to food that we usually use to celebrate...
Chicharrónes!
Always your arroz con gandules, your pasteles is like those are your actual foods that you eat
like every time you would go like by five o'clock in the morning your
grandparents already have that made.
It's gotta be arepas, arepas con chocolate.
Oh I eat arepas at least three times a week.
It influences me as a Marine because I constantly have to deal with situations to where I have to
put myself in other people's shoes to better understand it.
We have to take pride in our own heritage but we also take pride in the fact that we're all
Americans at the end of the day.
Just like anything I think you need that well
round of diversity.
What makes America is the fact that everybody's from somewhere
else. You know we're all a big melting pot of people from different backgrounds.
I definitely think it's important to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month just
like it's a important to celebrate any other culture.
You wanna keep the culture and the influence alive how you were taught.
So it's important to recognize the contributions of everyone that comes from a different place.
I'm here to be an American and be part of the culture and make America better.
It just shows appreciation like, "Hey, you know, thank you for being who you are."
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Hurricane Donald hits the midterm campaign trail � expect a bumpy ride US news - Duration: 3:35.
Hurricane Donald hits the midterm campaign trail – expect a bumpy ride US news
Election rallies are Trump's happy place but for Republican candidates the president's chaotic style can be a mixed blessing
Election rallies are Trump's happy place but for Republican candidates the president's chaotic style can be a mixed blessing
Rochester in Minnesota, Topeka in Kansas, Council Bluffs in Iowa and Erie in Pennsylvania all sound like quiet, uneventful towns. But each is battening down the hatches and bracing for a storm. A category 5 political hurricane, in fact. Hurricane Donald.
These are the next stops on the campaign trail for Donald Trump, hurling himself into the midterm elections with full force in an effort to energize his Republican base. But based on past experience, the US president is equally likely to leave a trail of destruction in his wake.
Last Tuesday in Southhaven, Mississippi, was a case in point. Trump's attempt to boost candidates Cindy Hyde-Smith and Roger Wicker was utterly overshadowed by his mocking impression of Christine Blasey Ford, a California psychology professor who accused his supreme court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual assault. The crowd clapped and cheered, but back in Washington there was sharp condemnation from the very Republicans who will determine Kavanaugh's fate.
Trump's presidential campaign was studded with similarly raucous rallies that thrived off outlandish and outrageous statements and crude insults and chants of "Lock her up!" The spectacle delighted his fans and captivated TV cameras. There is no reason to assume he will alter course now.
Doug Rivers, chief scientist at YouGov, a public opinion and data company, said: "The polling is very clear: the Republican party has become the party of Trump. We did work in Arizona before [Senator] John McCain died and we found McCain was 30 points more popular among Democrats than Republicans, and [Senator] Jeff Flake was at a 15% approval rating among Republicans.
"In terms of mobilising the Republican base, he's probably pretty effective. But in the [marginal] seats they need to win, I think the last thing they want is an endorsement or help from Trump."
Trump has held 39 rallies since winning election in November 2016, according to a running total on Wikipedia. But notably he hits the same safe states over and over again. His rally in Erie on Wednesday will be his 23rd in Pennsylvania since he launched his run for president in June 2015.
There is a little prospect of him staging a rally in politically hostile territory such as Illinois or New York. But in North Dakota, he could prove the difference between victory and defeat for the Republican candidate Kevin Cramer, who is taking on the incumbent Democratic senator Heidi Heitkamp.
Lanhee Chen, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution thinktank and former policy director of the Romney-Ryan presidential campaign in 2012, said: "Whether he's an asset or a liability depends on the race you're talking about. We have to be really careful to distinguish between races where his presence will in fact be quite helpful and races where I don't think it would be.
"I think he'll be very useful at motivating the base and, if that base shows up, then Kevin Cramer's going to be the next senator from North Dakota."
With polls showing Republicans facing an uphill struggle to retain the House of Representatives, and the Senate possibly also in play, Trump in Washington DC has remained relatively disciplined ahead of polling day. Last week he signed a budget bill that will avert a government shutdown despite previous threats to force the issue of funding a wall along the US-Mexico border. He has indicated that he will not fire the deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein, or the attorney general, Jeff Sessions, before 6 November, defusing another potential landmine.
But as the Kavanaugh affair made clear, sometimes the president cannot help himself out on the road.
For a few days Trump was restrained, even praising Ford's testimony as credible and compelling. Then, feeding off the energy of the crowd in Mississippi, he surrendered to his impulses. No doubt each upcoming rally will have Republican leaders and strategists on the edge of their seats, aware that they are one offensive statement away from losing another swath of independent and moderate voters in swing districts.
Henry Olsen, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center thinktank in Washington, said: "Any time the president goes out, you are creating risk because he likes to be unpredictable and is less guarded with his language than presidents are wont to be."
Campaign rallies are, after all, where he is most himself, a chance to escape the gilded cage of the White House. Michael Steele, former chairman of the Republican National Committee, said: "The president likes this more than being president, more than doing the day-to-day mundane things that a president has to do."
Midterm elections are often described as a referendum on the sitting president and Trump, more than most, will ensure it is all about him. His smash-mouth style is likely to dominate the final stretch of the campaign.
Steele added: "He doesn't have inhibitions. He's not concerned about your feelings or how tired you are or whether or not this is appropriate or presidential. So as long as the playing field is imbalanced the way it is he's going to have the advantage and, until someone stands up and goes, 'You're just full of crap' and goes at him, he's going to continue to create the environment of chaos that he likes to thrive in."
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You are not alone your reaction to Christine Blasey Fords testimony US news - Duration: 5:57.
You are not alone your reaction to Christine Blasey Fords testimony US news
[248]
The hearing dredged up painful memories for many, but also encouraged you to take action. Here are some of your stories
The hearing dredged up painful memories for many, but also encouraged you to take action. Here are some of your stories
by <span itemscope itemtype="http://schema.org/Person" itemprop="author"> <span itemprop="name">Guardian readers</span></span>
Watching Dr Christine Blasey Ford share her traumatic experiences of sexual assault had a profound impact on women and men across the US and the world.
Hundreds of women and some men got in touch with the Guardian to share their responses to the hearing last week. For many, Ford's testimony dredged up painful memories of their own experiences of sexual violence, that had often been privately endured for years. However, Ford's bravery in the face of those who were at times both hostile and disbelieving also empowered survivors; they felt that they were no longer alone and that they too had a voice.
Many felt the urge to take action, both in support of those who had been affected but also to change societal attitudes to sexual harassment. Here are some of their stories.
I am one who has been dealing consciously and therapeutically with these issues and their effects for decades. The work is ongoing. The effects linger. The triggers are there.
I believe after watching the hearing I may become more outspoken and feel a bit more free to discuss openly the pervading issues of abuse, misuse and violence against girls and women that is pandemic in our cultures and societies. We need to let each other know that we are not alone, that it is possible to heal, and that life is worth living.
If you are being surprised, triggered or bushwacked by what's appearing in the Ford news coverage, please take care of yourself. Call a confidant. Call a crisis line. Call or find a therapist. Start or continue to do the work – the work that is so essential to your own wellbeing and those you love. Be brave. Be wise. Be fearless. And know that you are not alone."
Susan Powers Bourne, poet and artist, Chester, Vermont
I went to protest the hearing with my friend Sarah. We have been engaged in a lot of activism since Trump became president. We march, we sign petitions, we send money, we write letters and we knock on doors. When it was clear there would be a hearing we immediately planned to go to DC for it.
Immediately when we got to the supreme court it felt different to other marches we had been on. There was an element of trauma that hovered overhead and enveloped the protesters. Standing next to someone with your fist held high you found yourself suddenly listening to a three- or four-line confession in a hurried low tone, about a rape, a beating, a drunken nightmare ordeal. All ages, all races were here and were doing this. Women in wheelchairs and women with strollers.
We grouped together in our black clothes and mourned the people we might have been if we hadn't been carrying around so much trauma. Ford's testimony elevated that level of trauma and made it unbearable. We had all been there. We felt her fear and we felt our own. We remembered other heavy bodies, other locked doors, other laughs. When she had finished it was as though we had been through one long massive therapy session. Things were definitely different, but not necessarily better.
Emma Gilbey Keller, 50, New York, New York
"Watching the hearings gave me a sense of catharsis that has been empowering. I'm a survivor of sexual assault who experienced rape in high school. Right after my 18th birthday I was raped by two college-age men. This was my first sexual experience and it has given me lasting pain and trauma that has manifested in addictions and relationship problems. I hid the rape for 10 years from everyone but my closest confidants, but watching Ford reminded me that I'm not alone.
Hearing her give her testimony brought back a flood of pain and emotions that I couldn't hold back. I sobbed and shook while watching her but I felt heard for the first time. The shame and guilt lessened – a sense of solidarity arose. Despite what happens, she is a hero for speaking out. The catharsis of hearing her story and knowing I'm not alone changed my life. I actually researched my options for reporting the rape after hearing her story and learned that the statute of limitations is still open. The pain is still there, but knowing there's a body of women and allies who support survivors makes all the difference.
For all the survivors of sexual assault: I see you, I hear you. As a country, this is a moment to confront a dark shadow and turn a page to a world where women are believed, survivors have a community and government who supports them, and powerful men cannot discredit women just because it's inconvenient.
Alessandra, Washington DC
While reading much of the reporting I couldn't watch more than a few minutes of her testimony. It just hurt too much. After the treatment of Anita Hill and now the partisan bickering on a subject that affects so many of us, it is small wonder the two major parties are bleeding members.
I was a victim of a sexual predator in the family. I kept silent for over 40 years. It adversely affected my entire life. My family still doesn't know. Only my two closest friends and the psychiatrist that helped me dig the memories out of a very dark place know. Until now. I have more hope that this problem will continue to be discussed and women will be less likely to have to suffer in silence for the actions of the men who prey upon them. If you have been taken advantage of sexually, speak out, whether you're a man or a woman. Rally around those who have done so.
Jim, Hemet, California
It is a deeply upsetting time to be a woman in America.
I have this message for all of the good men in this country, the men who watched and were appalled and know in their hearts and minds that the men with power are ruining our country and hurting its people: it isn't enough to be good and kind and loving and woke.
Leave your house, take action, write, fundraise, help, canvass, do more than coach your kids' soccer teams, expecting accolades. Move out of your comfort zones and get involved. Be willing to be uncomfortable and listen and learn from women. We aren't going to calm down. We are worn out, scared and need ACTIVE allies. This is too much for us. We need you, but more than just your inner goodness. Take action.
Claire (not her real name), Oregon
I was driving with my husband and we had the hearing on the radio. I already knew it would be hard to listen to, but thought I'd try it, to show support. I ended up crying and shaking. I am a volunteer with Rainn and work on their online chat. I listen to stories like this all the time and I've never had that kind of reaction. But her talk of how she's been treated since she spoke up was unbearable. Her story was my story.
I went on the hotline that night as I wanted to help those who had been triggered the way I had. The queues were higher than I've ever seen. I spoke with women who had been raped decades ago and had never told anyone. One woman was 83. It was a remarkable night, one I'll never forget.
This has shown me that we will never win if we stay quiet. We have to create safe spaces for women to come forward and share their experiences. There is a desperate lack of resources available to support survivors, successful prosecution rates are incredibly low, and rape kits sit untested for years. We need a study of lost hours to show the full cost – emotional, mental and economic. To all the women out there: I believe you. I'm here to listen to you.
Sarah, Lumberville, Pennsylvania
I feel sickened by what has been revealed about the character, objectives and machiavellian behavior of the Republican party in the House and Senate in the last two years.
I have become a political activist for the first time in nearly 40 years of being an eligible voter. I feel this country is teetering on the precipice of disaster. As an attorney, I still had lingering faith in the supreme court and the process by which justices were appointed. No more. So I want to work to ensure that, in the future, the constitution is made stronger so that it works the way it was intended to even if our public servants no longer have the good of the country and upstanding morals assumed by its framers.
Republicans: can you even distinguish right from wrong, good from evil any more? Oh wait, abortion is evil, therefore all manner of evil and deception is justified in the name of preventing it. And killing people once born through unfettered access to military-grade weapons is entirely different. I used to acknowledge our differences but respect you. After the last two years, Republicans have lost my respect forever.
Debbie Harris, mid-50s, attorney in a major US city
The testimony of Ford was impressive. I am a man who experienced violence and sexual predation as a child and teenager. I recognized in Ford's account my own lifelong fight with memories, sometimes flashbacks and frequent nightmares. I recognized in her testimony the always present fear of power, especially of assertive, domineering men in professional and social contexts.
Like Ford, the sad experiences of my youth apparently did not break me: I am a successful scientist with a coveted tenure and a very well-paid position, I am a father of three, I have a wonderful wife and many friends. Maybe the sad experiences of my youth helped me to free myself from a social milieu lacking education and caught in poverty. Now I am over 60, there is hardly a week when I do not wake up at night in tears, tired of my lifelong fighting for a normal life – whatever it might be.
We have to acknowledge what has been kept secret too long, help people to speak out, oppose domineering attitudes, and speak out ourselves as Ford so courageously did. To all victims of violence: you are not alone. Speak out and you'll get the help you need and deserve.
Jack (not his real name), Europe
I thought I was OK. I stayed away for the most part but then, piece by piece, I found myself completely immersed in it. I happened to hear Kavanaugh's response first, in the car. When I got home, I knew I had to sit and watch Ford speak. So I did. And that's when the anger hit, and it hasn't relented.
All the women I have spoken to, and everything I have read by women – we all see ourselves in her.
What's worse to me is that after hearing her testimony, I can't imagine flat out not believing her. What I think is far more likely is that the majority of the Senate committee believe her – they just don't care. I felt this way after Trump's election, and I feel that way now. Irrelevant, a piece of shrapnel, collateral damage that can be swept away for the benefit of upwardly mobile, powerful men.
Just as mothers of girls have to tell them how to protect themselves in an attack, I will teach my boys that if they ever see a man do anything that makes a vulnerable person feel uncomfortable, that they are complicit in that act if they stay silent. To speak up loudly, to be the kind of men that are true allies. Men that will never ever walk away from something they saw at a party. Men that will put their own bodies and careers at risk because women have done it for long enough. Time's up, dudebros of the world. We are coming for you, and we are angry, and we are done.
Meaghan, San Diego, California
I am a survivor. Hearing the Senate committee consider ignoring Ford's experience grated on the wounds in my soul. I am nearly 20 years older than Ford and my own experience of sexual abuse has had more time to heal through the decades. I had feared that listening to her testimony would induce vivid flashbacks of my own abuse, but this did not happen. Perhaps, if one allows enough time and gets very good therapy and supportive friends and family, healing is possible, and I wish healing for all of us survivors.
After worship on Sunday, as we went around the room to say our names, women started saying "… And I am a survivor" or "Me too, I survived". More than half the women there spoke up; later, I learned that other survivors had felt more comfortable not speaking their experience aloud that day. That experience – all of us, gathered together, speaking our truth and being supported by many of the men among us, was powerfully healing for me.
I am thinking hard about the high school culture that was accepted in the 1960-80s. I am proud of my gentle and responsible sons, and hope that all boys will have parents, teachers and social networks that foster deep friendship without seeking male bonding through violence toward others.
Rae, San Francisco, California
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America's Pledge: U.S. Mayors, Governors and Business Leaders Reaffirm That "We Are Still In" - Duration: 1:37.
When the Trump administration announced its intention to pull out of the Paris Agreement
The overwhelming majority of the American people said,
"We're still in."
I'm committed every day to building a clean energy economy.
An all electric bus fleet by 2025.
To a Los Angeles that has 100% renewable energy.
Shortly afterwards, California Governor Jerry Brown and I launched an initiative called America's Pledge.
The key word is "perseverance."
Not a one-off, but a daily, yearly commitment.
It's a coalition of cities, states, and businesses and other groups that are committed to
driving down emissions and supporting the Paris Agreement.
To have climate awareness integrated into every aspect of our businesses.
To demonstrating that environmental protection and economic prosperity are not mutually exclusive.
To making climate change a public health issue.
Together we also plan to report our progress to the United Nations,
no matter what happens in Washington.
My name is Emmanuelle Chriqui
I'm Amy Smart
I'm Jaden Smith
I'm Lance Bass and I am committed to supporting America's Pledge.
America's Pledge
We will help ensure that the U.S can reach the goals that we set under the Paris Agreement.
America's Pledge on climate is so important.
It's about more than living up to our responsibilities on the world stage.
It's about keeping our word on the world stage.
Together, we are in.
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Meet the candidates: Folasade Adeluola for U.S. Senate - Duration: 2:32.
For more infomation >> Meet the candidates: Folasade Adeluola for U.S. Senate - Duration: 2:32. -------------------------------------------
Postal Worker Unions Protest Idea Of Privatizing United States Postal Service - Duration: 2:32.
For more infomation >> Postal Worker Unions Protest Idea Of Privatizing United States Postal Service - Duration: 2:32. -------------------------------------------
How rightwing conspiracy theorists attacked Christine Blasey Fords testimony US news - Duration: 5:42.
How rightwing conspiracy theorists attacked Christine Blasey Fords testimony US news
For many on the fringe, lies about Ford are more palatable than the idea that she is telling the truth about Brett Kavanaugh
For many on the fringe, lies about Ford are more palatable than the idea that she is telling the truth about Brett Kavanaugh
Conservatives did not stand idle while the FBI completed its limited investigation on Brett Kavanaugh. While this unfolded, Dr Christine Blasey Ford has been subjected to a full-frontal personal attack, which has been taken up by all segments of rightwing media.
But while most ostensibly respectable outlets contented themselves with attacks on her credibility, others have leapt headlong into conspiracy theory.
The idea that Ford is a deep-cover operative, placed by a hidden hand to destroy Kavanaugh, circulated remarkably quickly and very widely after her identity was revealed by the Washington Post. This only intensified after her testimony before the Senate judiciary committee.
This conspiracy thinking was by no means confined to the low-traffic online fringe websites – it was amplified and further disseminated by some of the country's most prominent rightwing broadcasters. So much so that it once again raised the question of where the border between conspiracy theories and respectable conservative media lies.
A tweet by talk radio star Michael Savage – whose show, the Savage Nation, reaches up to 11 million people according to industry website Talkers – last week alleged that Ford was tied to the CIA via her brother, her father, and Stanford University.
Savage claimed that Ford herself ran a CIA internship program at Stanford, that her brother's former law firm "created" Fusion GPS (originators of the Trump "pee tape" dossier) , that the firm was collocated (and therefore connected) with CIA-aligned companies run by her father, Ralph Blasey Jr, and that her grandfather was a CIA agent named Nicholas Deak.
The tweet summarized his argument with a screenshot of an all-caps post from Savage's blog. This, in turn, was a recapitulation of the case he had yelled at his listeners several times in the days following Ford's testimony (The Savage Nation, is perennially among the top 10 most listened to radio programs in the country, according to Talkers annual "Heavy 100" survey).
He has continued attacking Ford, often using baseless claims, as the country has waited for the FBI to complete its investigation, and for the Senate to vote on Kavanaugh's nomination.
None of the claims Savage made are true, as is painstakingly detailed in a rebuttal at Snopes. Stanford has no CIA internship program; Deak is not Ford's grandfather; Ralph Blasey III was not working at law firm Baker Hostetler when it worked with Fusion GPS; her father has no relationship with most of the companies mentioned, and the one he does work for has no connection to the CIA.
But after Savage gave it a run, the conspiracy theory was, in turn, elaborated on and pitilessly hammered by Alex Jones and Infowars, who have run stories on Ford's supposed CIA connections, and false allegations about her personal life, for the last week. (Though Jones's reach has been reduced by social media bans, his website has 4.3 million monthly uniques according to traffic monitor Alexa, and his radio show has almost 6 million weekly listeners.)
Savage didn't originate the theory himself. It appears to have first been floated in a rambling piece on the notorious (and eye-searing) conspiracy site, whatdoesitmean.com, posted the day after her identity was revealed.
The post incorporates some familiar tropes and stock characters from conspiracy subculture, like Deak, whose murder at the hands of a homeless woman have long fueled speculation. A writer who goes by Sorcha Faal at whatdoesitmean.com adds some more conspiracy culture red meat by claiming that Ford's connection to Deak is via a Stanford scientist, Frederick Melges, who Faal claims was engaged in work on the MKUltra mind control program.
Were these falsehoods confined to sites like this, it would only be of interest to those with a yen for subcultural arcana. But these lies then spread through better-read conspiracy sites like Zero Hedge, who called Ford a "CIA honeytrap".
Wherever Savage read it, thanks to him and Jones, millions of Americans have heard, and perhaps believed, that Ford only came forward with her accusations because of a "deep state" plot against Kavanaugh, and by extension the president.
Other conspiracy theories about Ford have proliferated, some even more fantastical than the one Savage mainstreamed.
The influential anti-feminist and white nationalist blog Chateau Heartiste amplified theories that Ford was an FBI asset.
And as reported on Right Wing Watch, conspiracy broadcaster Rick Wiles suggested that Ford was a sleeper agent whose conditioning was triggered by the use of the word "lodestar" in the op-ed by an anonymous administration official which was published by the New York Times.
The trajectory of these falsehoods shows how quickly and broadly conspiracy theories about crucial political stories can now proliferate. The alacrity with which Savage seized on them also suggests that they have become part of the rapid-response armory for the political right.
Kate Starbird, who analyses disinformation networks at the University of Washington, says conspiracy thinking is more evident on the left and the right. She says that, as in the Ford case, "one of the things that disinformation does is to try to discredit opposition sources".
Starbird says that increasingly conspiracy theories "start from the ground up and are taken up by conservative media elites", like high-profile broadcasters. "That means they can reach a mass of people."
She says it is hard to measure whether conspiracy theories are becoming more widespread, but "most troubling is that they are beginning to get into the minds of people in power". Starbird points to General Michael Flynn's penchant for spreading multiple conspiracy theories.
And just this morning, Donald Trump continued his long history of promoting conspiracy theories when he blamed the Hungarian-American billionaire George Soros for the protests against the Kavanaugh confirmation at the US Senate. (Soros is frequently the focus of conspiracy theories, many of which have antisemitic overtones.)
So why do masses of ordinary people believe such convoluted tales? Starbird's explanation is appealingly simple: "People want to believe in their side of politics. They grab on to evidence that can support the things they believe. Conspiracy theories can help explain things in a way that aligns with their worldview."
For many on the fringe, and increasingly for broadcasters like Savage – a bestselling author, a Trump confidant, and an inductee to the Radio Hall of Fame – lies about Ford are more palatable than the idea that she is telling the truth about Brett Kavanaugh.
Influential broadcasters – whether from cynicism, credulousness, or a blend of the two – now readily spread outlandish theories in order to quiet the clanging cognitive dissonance of a particularly gullible, or committed mass of rightwing Americans. Anything, it seems, is preferable to the thought that one's party, and one's president, might be knowingly promoting an abuser to the highest court in the land.
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