We've heard the words "fake" and "hoax" a lot over the past few years, and, in some cases, it’s warranted. There are indeed a lot of conspiracy theories and disinformation floating around in the media environment that have been weaponized by our adversaries to manipulate Americans. Muddying the waters even more is the president, who simply labels any facts he doesn’t like "fake" or a "hoax." We know a hoax didn't kill more than 170,000 Americans this year. And as a bipartisan Senate committee confirmed yesterday, Russian interference in the 2016 election was no hoax either, as Donald Trump would have us believe. His own campaign chair, Paul Manafort, provided critical targeting data to the Kremlin through a Russian intelligence officer, in a shocking betrayal of the country. Trump should be livid with Manafort. That he is not speaks volumes. —Evan McMullin

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1. 'It's Joe time'

Democrats formally nominated Joe Biden as their presidential candidate last night during the second evening of the party's virtual convention. Instead of at a Milwaukee convention hall, the formal roll call of convention delegates played out in a combination of live and recorded video feeds from various American landmarks and landscapes. Hosted by actress Tracee Ellis Ross, the program also featured speeches by former presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton and a video package highlighting Biden's relationship with the late Sen. John McCain, narrated by his wife, Cindy McCain. —Associated Press

MORE: Stephens: On being a Biden conservative —The New York Times

2. And now for something completely different

Far-right activist Laura Loomer has won the Republican House primary in Florida's 21st District, which includes President Trump's Mar-a-Lago club. Loomer is a controversial figure. She has been banned from numerous social media and other technology platforms in recent years for making Islamophobic comments. She handcuffed herself to Twitter's New York office to protest what she said was discrimination against conservatives online. Trump congratulated Loomer in a tweet last night, asserting that she has "a great chance" in November's general election against Rep. Lois Frankel. —The Hill

MORE: Conspiracy theories make sense of a topsy-turvy world—but undermine democracy —The Washington Post

3. Hillyer: No, it certainly was not a hoax

"The investigation into Russian perfidy was not a hoax. There was no hoax. There was no hoax. Trump fans need to get this through their heads. The lack of formal conspiracy (too often miscalled 'collusion') does not obviate the importance of, or the need for, the Justice Department investigation. [W]ith so much irrefutable evidence of illegal Russian interference and so much circumstantial evidence (and, later, hard evidence) of an unusual number of contacts between Trump agents and Russians, the Justice Department would have been derelict not to investigate (even had the controversial 'Steele dossier' not existed)." —Washington Examiner

MORE: Collins, King say conclusion that Russia interfered in 2016 election should be a 'wake-up call' for all Americans —News Center Maine

4. More coronavirus relief may still happen

Under pressure from rank-and-file Democrats to secure more aid for unemployed Americans, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi suggested that Democrats might be willing to cut more from their current pandemic relief proposal to bring Republicans back to the bargaining table. GOP leaders have also hinted at a willingness to revive stalled negotiations, with Treasury Sec. Steven Mnuchin and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell citing Pelosi's decision to break out $25 billion in funding for the U.S. Postal Service from the original Democratic plan. That's good news, but the pandemic is affecting far more than the economy. —Bloomberg

MORE: How did the stock market hit a record amid COVID-19 fueled recession? Here's what experts say about the rebound —USA Today

5. Aron: If Russia intervenes in Belarus...

"Like the USSR before it, Russia would be permanently feared—or, as Putin sees it, respected. NATO's Article Five, the cornerstone of collective defense, would be rendered a fiction. The alliance might start to unravel as countries on its eastern flank sought individual 'accommodations' with Moscow. Ukraine's hesitant drift to the West would be likely to be arrested for the foreseeable future as well. It is just as obvious what needs to be done to forestall this dismal scenario: an emergency summit meeting of NATO, a quick vote to stand with Lithuania, and, most of all, the deployment of troops as fast and as close to the Lithuanian border with Belarus as the complicated logistics allow." —The Washington Post

Ed. Note: Leon Aron is director of Russian studies at the American Enterprise Institute.

MORE: Putin warns western leaders over 'meddling' in Belarus —Financial Times

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6. Coup in Mali

Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita resigned and dissolved parliament late yesterday, following a bloodless coup d'etat by an armed group calling itself the National Committee for the Salvation of the People. Leaders of the group detained him at gunpoint, plunging a country already riled by protests deeper into crisis.

MORE: Ouattara's power grab renews fears of violence in a divided Cote d’Ivoire —World Politics Review

7. Filipovic: What's behind the Susan B Anthony pardon?

"[W]hile he's paying lip service to a fighter for women's suffrage, [Trump is] working to disenfranchise millions of American women. Trump praising a woman who fought for the right to vote while undermining the voting rights of millions of Americans is perfectly Trumpian: An empty spectacle notable only for its shameless hypocrisy." —CNN

Ed. Note: Jill Filipovic is a lawyer and author.

MORE: Trump says he'll pardon Susan B Anthony, arrested for voting in 1872 —Forbes

8. A warning from counterterrorism officials

As if there isn't enough to worry about, the former head of the National Counterterrorism Center says he would not be surprised if domestic terrorist groups stage attacks in the U.S. around the November election. "It certainly wouldn't surprise me, particularly if the administration loses," said Russ Travers, who was the center's acting director before he was fired by President Trump's hand-picked acting director of national intelligence.

9. Friedman: Literally the most important election of our lives

"I damn well will get to my neighborhood polling station to see that my vote for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris is cast and counted on Nov. 3. And it is not because I am some raving liberal. It’s because I believe that America, at its core, is still a center-left, center-right country and is best governed by someone who can reforge the two and lead from there. I believe that Biden is the one who can do that best, and that is actually the source of his appeal to many Americans." —The New York Times

MORE: Here's one way Trump could try to steal the election, voting experts say —The Washington Post

10. An American Story: Sisters of Hope

Sisters of Hope founders Gladys and Jamie Scott have spent countless hours sewing and asking around the community for donations of reusable masks for back-to-school.

Ed. Note: Would you like to suggest "An American Story" from your local news? If so, please forward a link to the story to [email protected]. Thank you!
Trump interfering with the USPS is another example of the criminal liability of 45. He will be responsible for deaths of people who do not receive their medications in time, just as he's responsible for over 160,000 COVID-19 deaths due to his lack of caring, negligence, and inaction. —Marylea L., New York

Last week, my 88-year-old neighbor received an application to vote by mail for her husband. He's been deceased for 15 years. The sender? The Republican National Committee. Mail-in voter fraud indeed. For how he is playing with the USPS, he should be impeached. Again. —Carol S., Pennsylvania

The views expressed in "What's Your Take?" are submitted by readers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the editorial staff or the Stand Up Republic Foundation.

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