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Ford’s hypocrisy on body cameras

Sen. Aaron Ford was for releasing police body camera footage before he was recorded talking with officers after his son’s arrest. Now it’s up to the Nevada Supreme Court to upload the public’s access to records.

Blame game gains steam after man’s arrest in mail bombs — ANALYSIS

Even before authorities apprehended Cesar Sayoc, a 56-year-old Florida man suspected of sending crude pipe bombs to the homes of two former presidents and other top Democrats, Washington insiders assumed the devices were intended not to kill or maim, but to advance a political party or ideology.

Trump’s tricks: How he riles the media while entertaining supporters

Critics often accuse President Donald Trump of using dog-whistles to gin up his conservative base. But really, Trump’s most effective trick is to get TV journalists to attack on demand — as you can see in cable news coverage on the caravan of Central Americans headed toward the U.S. border.

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Tao details his judicial philosophy

Nevada Court of Appeals Judge Jerry Tao is running for the Nevada Supreme Court as an originalist, because “we need to be faithful to the words of the statute and the constitution.”

Shameless: Ford exploits October 1 victims in new ad

Aaron Ford is so desperate to be attorney general that he’s willing to baselessly accuse his opponent of trading the lives of Nevadans for a few hundred dollars. To make it worse, Ford is using those who died on October 1 as political props.

Left keeps playing footsie with mob

Political violence has come to Nevada, and it’s ugly. On Wednesday, Wilfred Michael Stark, a tracker with the far-left Super PAC American Bridge 21st Century, allegedly attacked Kristin Davison, the campaign manager for Adam Laxalt.

 
The paradox of Question 6

If everything Question 6 supporters say is true, there’s no need to vote for it. Question 6 is a constitutional amendment that would require that Nevada get 50 percent of its energy from renewable sources by 2030. Nevada’s current renewable portfolio standard is 25 percent by 2025. As a constitutional amendment, voters would need to approve it in 2018 and 2020.

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