by Philip Rosenstein on Feb 13, 12:06 PM
The Trump administration's game plan is to undermine and discredit the news media. For many, the tactic remains deeply cynical and dishonest - and we're only three weeks into what has become an official media paradigm.
by Philip Rosenstein on Feb 10, 12:44 PM
From the #DeleteUber campaign to Nordstrom being squarely at the center of a budding White House scandal, ignoring the strongly divisive political climate is impossible. It will find you.
by Philip Rosenstein on Feb 9, 12:16 PM
The first two and a half weeks of the Trump Presidency was spent fighting with the press corps - a battle likely to persist throughout his term, further eroding the integrity and importance of a free press.
by Philip Rosenstein on Feb 8, 12:44 PM
Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren was prevented from speaking on the floor of the United States Senate for invoking the words of Coretta Scott King, Martin Luther King Jr.'s widow.
by Philip Rosenstein on Feb 7, 12:20 PM
The global community is fraught with fear and uncertainty at what a Donald Trump presidency means for the established world order. Despite all the doom, a number of countries chose satire to introduce themselves to the U.S. president.
by Philip Rosenstein on Feb 6, 12:54 PM
In both 2016 and 2017, odds defiers abound. Starting with Leicester City winning the English Premier League, which began the season with 5,000-1 odds to Brexit and the presidential election of Donald Trump. Statisticians, odds makers and pollsters just can't get a break.
by Philip Rosenstein on Feb 3, 12:10 PM
Congressional leaders, however, who at first resisted, but eventually fell in line behind the Republican nominee, have been forced into a moderating role, aware that diplomacy is not usually entrusted to unskilled and unapologetic TV personalities.
by Philip Rosenstein on Feb 2, 12:27 PM
From CNN's creation of a new investigative unit to Reuters leadership telling its reporters to think differently about reporting on the White House, Donald Trump is having a deep, unsettling impact on a free press.
by Philip Rosenstein on Feb 1, 2:16 PM
Among the most convincing arguments for conservatives in voting for Donald Trump was the vacancy left by the late Justice Antonin Scalia and the future of the Supreme Court.
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