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Comedy CentralThat Donald Trump has a tendency toward pettiness is hardly surprising to those who have been paying attention to the former president's antics in recent years. (See Exhibits A, B, C, D, and E.) But a late-night outburst on Wednesday attacking Bill Barr has The Daily Show correspondent and this week's co-host Jordan Klepper declaring the former president the official "King of Pettiness."
Though Trump spent most of Thursday in a New York City courtroom (again) for his hush money trial, Klepper's co-host Ronny Chieng said that it wasn't all bad news for the former president. "After months of calling him unfit for office, Trump's former attorney general Bill Barr said he's voting for him anyway," Chieng shared. "And Trump responded with as much grace as you'd expect."
Just after 11 p.m. on Wednesday, Trump
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(First column, 5th story, link)
Related stories: THE BIG DELAY: Supreme Court poised to allow Trump Sedition trial, but not immediately... Clashing views... Trump's three appointees DO NOT recuse... Justice Jackson: Oval Office Could Turn Into 'Seat of Criminality'...
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JP Yim/GettyThe Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) is calling for MSNBC to ban Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt from its airwaves over recent comments he made about college students protesting against the war in Gaza.
During an appearance last Friday on Morning Joe, Greenblatt railed against the pro-Palestinian protests raging at Columbia University and other college campuses, describing them as antisemitic and threatening to Jewish students. He also took a shot at the two main organizations behind the demonstrations—the Students for Justice in Palestine and Jewish Voice for Peace.
"Iran has their military proxies like Hezbollah, and Iran has their campus proxies like these groups like SJP and JVP," he declared.
Read more at The Daily Beast.
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Several justices signaled interest in some protections for official acts, which could impede a swift trial in the federal election subversion case.
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(First column, 3rd story, link)
Related stories: THE BIG DELAY: Supreme Court poised to allow Trump Sedition trial, but not immediately... Clashing views... Justice Jackson: Oval Office Could Turn Into 'Seat of Criminality'... McConnell argues against absolute presidential immunity...
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Mike StobeFormer president Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed that his ongoing hush money trial constitutes "election interference," by preventing him from connecting with voters, and so, the Republican presidential nominee spent his one day off from court diligently campaigning.
Just kidding, Trump actually went golfing.
A not-so aggrieved Trump spent his Wednesday puttering around at the Bedminster Golf Club, sources told CNN. On Wednesday, President Joe Biden's presidential campaign released a succinct statement about Trump's campaign events that day: "He had none."
Read more at The Daily Beast.
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The Middle East is bracing for the possibility of regional war after Iran responded to Israel's bombing of the Iranian Consulate in Damascus with a major drone and missile attack Saturday. The attack caused little damage inside Israel, as it intercepted nearly all of the drones and missiles with help from the United States, Britain, France and Jordan. Iran's government described the attack as a defensive maneuver after Israel's unprovoked strike on its embassy killed some of Iran's top military brass. This was "a performative operation to send a message," says journalist Reza Sayah, who joins us from Tehran. But while Iran "does not want to escalate matters," Israel may be preparing to do just that. Washington, D.C.-based analyst Trita Parsi says that Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has been trying to instigate conflict between the U.S. and Iran for "more than two decades," and given that Biden has demonstrated an unwillingness to "draw any red lines for Israel publicly," these latest provocations could become a prime "opportunity" for such a war. Crucially, Iranian restraint "cannot last forever," warns our final roundtable guest, the Israeli journalist Gideon Levy, who touches on both Iran's own sovereignty and increasing global pressure for Israel to end its war on Gaza. "Gaza is still starving and bleeding, and we shouldn't forget it," says Levy.
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