Donald Trump's New Reality: It's All Lies, It's All Rigged From Media To Polls To Voting

New York Times Runs Full Two-Page Spread of Everything Trump Has Insulted on Twitter Mediaite

The New York Times made news Monday,  running a rare two-page story listing every person, place, and thing Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has ever insulted.

The Times had archives ready to go, having long kept a continually-updated list of Trump’s insults on its website. The most recent entries in the endless list of insults include attacks on acting DNC chairwoman Donna Brazille (“Totally dishonest”), Republicans (“So disloyal”) and the electoral process (“RIGGED”).

Today The Times decided to publish the entire list of Trump insults in its print edition.

Clinton Vaults to a Double-Digit Lead ABC News

Hillary Clinton vaulted to a 12 pt. lead over Donald Trump in the ABC News/Washington Post polls, out Sunday morning. Clinton leads Trump 50% to 38%.

Donald Trump chose the two issues that are causing his dramatic polls decline to open his farce and disgraceful Gettysburg addresses on Saturday. As an expert communicator, Trump knows that the opening paragraphs of an address define its impression on listeners. Trump's fierce aggression in saying he will sue the women who have accused him of varying sexual advances and misconduct, coupled with his reluctance to say that he will accept the election result, are causing him to utterly tank in new polls. Yet, Trump presses on with the same defiant strategy.

Dear Donald Trump: I'm an OB-GYN. There are no 9-month abortion. VOX

Focusing on late-term abortions is always an interesting strategy for Donald Trump. But it is the wrong strategy. The vast majority of abortions -- 91 percent -- happen before 13 weeks. Easily accessible, free, long-acting reversible contraception has caused America's abortion rate to decline consistently.

For the record, this doctor explains that Trump's horrific visions of babies being pulled out of the womb and killed are totally false. Only 1.3% of abortions happen after 21 weeks. When one is required for very rare reasons, labor is induced and every attempt is made by medical professionals to save the fetus in a neo-natal hospital unit, regardless of health problems requiring this medical effort.

Once again, Trump takes the most contentious social issues of our time and fills them with toxic hate.

Republican Women Revolt

The Anguish of Being a Republican Woman in the Age of Trump by Michelle Goldberg Slate

Earlier this month, Michigan GOP leaders told Wendy Day, the state party’s grassroots vice-chair, that she had to endorse Donald Trump or resign. Day, a former staffer for Ted Cruz, refused to do either. In a letter to the state Republican chairwoman, she wrote, “It is important for our party to represent all of the voices in our party, not just the loudest.” On Oct. 17—10 days after the release of the 2005 Access Hollywood tape in which Trump bragged about groping women—the chairwoman announced Day’s removal from the post she’d been elected to at a state convention last year.

Hillary Clinton Headlines October 24, 2016

UPI/CVoter poll: Hillary Clinton's lead narrows to 3.07 points UPI

Clinton's Specter of Illegitimacy The New York Times

The New Yorker endorses Clinton Politico

Exclusive investigation: Donald Trump face foreign donor fundraising scandal The Telegraph UK

Trump's plan for his first 100 days in office includes suing the women accusing him of sexual assault VOX

A Ton of Floridians Registered to Vote After Hurricane Matthew, as Rick Scott Feared Slate

This election is much more than Trump vs. Clinton. It's old America vs. new America LA Times

Hillary Clinton Embraces Trump's Snide, Sniffy Commentary That She's 'Nasty'

In Debate, Hillary Clinton's Clarion Call for Women Thrills Many The New York Times

In the third presidential debate, Hillary Clinton dispensed with Democrats’ longstanding caveat that the procedure of abortion should be rare, and -- instead -- gave a fierce defense of women’s right to control our own bodies without government interference.

It was an opportunity for Hillary Clinton to speak to a new generation of younger women — and to many young men, too — by assailing Donald Trump over sexual assault and harassment accusations, saying his dismissals of the allegations against him by multiple women showed that he “thinks belittling women makes him bigger.”

“He goes after their dignity, their self-worth,” Mrs. Clinton said, refusing to take her foot off the gas. “And I don’t think there is a woman anywhere who doesn’t know what that feels like.”

Then -- in a moment that political operatives could not engineer -- Donald Trump became her bullseye, falling down the rabbit hole of his uncontrollable narcissism.  The Republican candidate has been stripped naked metaphorically as a misogynist for all the world to see. Unable to control his anger, the petulant, injured ego Mr. Trump interjected, “What a nasty woman."

Overnight, Trump's insult became a battle cry for Clintonites and a gaggle of newcomers. “Nasty Woman” T-shirts began selling on the internet. Naral Pro-Choice America advertised “NastyWoman” stickers.

A New York City man quickly set up an expletive-laced “nasty women” website that redirected visitors to Mrs. Clinton’s campaign page. Streams of Janet Jackson’s 1986 hit “Nasty” increased 250 percent on Spotify after the debate, according to a Spotify spokesman. More than 8,000 people had taken up the phrase on Twitter by midafternoon, wielding it as a badge of honor.

"Nasty Woman" Hillary Clinton Is Horrified That Trump Won't Commit To Accepting Election Result AOC Politics

And as soon as the debate ended, Trump’s "nasty woman" insult morphed into an empowering phrase. The hashtag #NastyWomen began trending on Twitter. Someone has purchased the URLNastyWomenGetShitDone.com and set up a redirect to Clinton’s campaign website — perhaps as a sly, smirky remix of Saturday Night Live’s 2008 Weekend Update sketch about Clinton "Bitches Get Shit Done":

Hillary Clinton On the One Woman Who Inspires Her To Dare Harper's Bazaar US

In 1927, Hillary Clinton's mother was sent away to endure a "bleak" and motherless childhood at just 8 years old. Here, nearly 90 years later, the Democratic Presidential candidate reflects back on the hardships her mother saw, and how, in spite of this, she grew up to be "so loving"—a mother who raised her daughter to believe she could be anything she dreamed of, even President of the United States. Along the way, Clinton has inspired countless women around the world to dare to do the impossible, encouraging young visionaries to break—not just push—boundaries. The new generation of #WomenWhoDare are those who, like Clinton, refuse to conform. Read her exclusive essay for HarpersBazaar.com and see the rest of the 2016 Women Who Dare Issue below.