QAnon has rapidly spread from a fringe conspiracy theory to a mainstream belief, with some adherents expected to win Republican congressional seats next week. QAnon will take over the Republican Party if not combatted aggressively, and Republican Congressman Denver Riggleman of Virginia is standing up to do just that, by co-sponsoring a House resolution condemning it. We invite our TOPLINE readers to join Evan McMullin and me for a conversation with Rep. Riggleman about the dangers of QAnon on Thursday at 7pm ET. If you agree with us that there is no place for conspiracy theories like QAnon in our political discourse, please sign up here for this important Zoom event. We hope you'll join us. —Mindy Finn

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Doing business the Trump way

Back in 2008, Donald Trump and his family hoped the Trump International Hotel & Tower in Chicago would cement their company's reputation as one of the world's marquee developers of luxury real estate. Instead, it became another disappointment in a portfolio filled with them. The Chicago experience is a textbook example of the Trump MO—strong-arming major financial institutions and exploiting the tax code to cushion the blow of his repeated business failures. Since 2010, lenders have forgiven about $287 million in debt that Trump failed to repay. The vast majority was related to the Chicago project. —The New York Times

MORE: Jennifer Rubin: Four big constitutional fixes we need —The Washington Post

Protests and violence engulf Philly

Pennsylvania's largest city was wracked by mass demonstrations for a second consecutive night on Tuesday over the fatal police shooting of a 27-year-old Black man on Monday. About 1,000 protesters marched through the streets of West Philadelphia demanding justice for Walter Wallace, Jr.

Whitmer: Returning to civility and shared values

"I grew up in a bipartisan household, with a dad who worked for a Republican governor and a mom who worked for the Democratic state attorney general. This was a time when, as the late Rep. John Dingell wrote in his last words to America, leaders 'observed modicums of respect even as we fought, often bitterly and savagely, over issues that were literally life and death.' Our leaders knew that at the end of the day, we are all Americans; we all deserve to be treated with humanity and respect. And they were bound by their calling to public service." —Gretchen Whitmer in The Atlantic

Ed. Note: Gretchen Whitmer is the 49th governor of Michigan.


MORE: Trump lashes out at Whitmer as crowd reprises 'lock her up' chant —The Hill

'He's jealous of Covid's media coverage'

As President Trump tweeted again this morning to complain about the heavy media coverage of the coronavirus pandemic, the White House took the unusual step of including "ending the coronavirus pandemic" on a list of the Trump Administration's first-term accomplishments. Despite nearly half a million positive cases of COVID-19 being diagnosed in just the past week, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy made the claim yesterday in a news release highlighting the administration's science and technology achievements over the past four years. —CNN

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Johnson & Greenblatt: Political violence must be thoroughly condemned

"Above all else, our national leaders must, through their own words and deeds, put this nation back on the path toward recompilation and a more perfect American union. ... Leaders who command the national stage actually do have the ability to lead and to set a climate for the nation. Leaders who refuse to condemn hate and bigotry lower the bar for all the rest of us, make the previously deplorable acceptable, and—for the dangerous few who lurk among us—make violence inevitable." —Jeh Johnson and Jonathan Greenblatt in The Hill

Ed. Note: Jeh Johnson is the former secretary of Homeland Security, where he served from 2013 to 2017. Jonathan Greenblatt is CEO and national director of the Anti-Defamation League.

MORE: The White extremist group Patriot Front is preparing for a world after Donald Trump —BuzzFeed News

Global roundup

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is urging the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan to respect a U.S.-negotiated ceasefire that fell apart minutes after its implementation on Monday, when Azerbaijan accused Armenia of launching artillery attacks. Pompeo and other officials held weekend discussions in Washington with the foreign ministers of the warring countries in an effort to reinforce two previously negotiated ceasefires to halt the fighting over the contested territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. —The Hill

MORE: Treaty to prohibit nuclear weapons passes important threshold —The New York Times

Brandom: It's time to get serious about power and accountability

"[U]nderneath it all, we need to rethink the way we relate to our government. Politics isn't a TV show, and it's not a debating society. The more we focus on the daily circus, the harder it is to keep an eye on what the government is actually doing and hold it accountable for the ways it's falling short. We need to focus less on which leaders are rising or falling in power and more on how their actions are impacting the world at large. We're making real moral choices with real impacts on people's lives—all of us, as a country, together. Facing an ongoing pandemic, ecological crisis, and economic collapse, the stakes have rarely been higher." —Russell Brandom in The Verge

Ed. Note: Russell Brandom is the policy editor at
The Verge.

A race to kindness

There's no arguing that the coronavirus pandemic has left the world reeling, but it's also taught us some invaluable lessons about the nature of perseverance, the courage of conviction, and the gift of compassion. Few are more dedicated to those ideals than North Texas 5th-grader Orion Jean, who is on a mission to donate 100,000 meals to those in need by Thanksgiving. 

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!

Concerning the new 6-3 conservative-majority Supreme Court, it makes me sick that LGBTQ people now have to worry that the rights they fought so hard for could potentially be taken away. I'm worried for my friends and for everyone this affects. They all deserve so much better than this. —Lauren A., New Jersey

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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