Today’s comic by Tom Tomorrow is Post truth world:
- What you missed on Sunday Kos …
- It's a question of sovereignty, by Susan Grigsby
- Without this data on race, place, and jobs, we cannot fully understand how Trump eked out a win, by Ian Reifowitz
- Welcome new visitors and old friends: you have found 'the left,' by DarkSyde
- To stop his destructive agenda, Trump must be called an illegitimate president, by Egberto Willies
- The perennial perils of propaganda, by Propane Jane
- Donald Trump's administration needs to be stopped, blocked and shutdown completely, by Frank Vyan Walton
- Donald Trump's contemptible cabinet (with poll!), by Sher Watts Spooner
- Presidential Daily Brief: Trump determined to strike in U.S., by Jon Perr
- Democrats can learn from Rev. William Barber, and the Moral Mondays fusion movement, by Denise Oliver Velez
- International Elections Digest: Progressives hold back far-right tide in Austria's presidential race, by Daily Kos Elections International
A fragile cease-fire was back on in Syria on Monday, as buses resumed evacuating those still remaining in eastern Aleppo following days of delays, and others departed with the sick and wounded from two rebel-besieged Shiite villages in the country's north.
At the United Nations, the Security Council was expected to vote within hours on a resolution seeking to deploy U.N. monitors to Aleppo immediately in order to prevent what France has warned could be "mass atrocities" by Syrian forces and allied pro-government militias as they assume control of all of the rebel enclave.
Uh, okay, sure:
The setup is warm and fuzzy. “Girls, I got y’all some gifts,” says Steven Howard, presenting his two young daughters with prettily wrapped packages, which they eagerly rip into. The cameras then reveal what’s inside: the distinctive pointed hoods of the Ku Klux Klan. [...]
It’s a chilling introduction to “Generation KKK,” an eight-part documentary series, beginning Jan. 10 on A&E, that burrows in with high-ranking Klan members and their families. The series also takes A&E, best known for long-running favorites like “Hoarders” and “Intervention,” into programming waters more complicated — and politically charged — than anything it has shown before.
That meant finding a delicate balance between winning the trust of the Klan members and ensuring the show didn’t propagate views the network’s executives abhor.
- Zsa Zsa Gabor died on Sunday. She was 99 and over the years, had some funny lines—bear in mind she was married nine times—about love, men and marriage.
- We’re screwed: