From the outside, it’s easy to find the Conservative Police Action Conference perplexing and disjointed, with its sessions about "Taxpayer-Funded Terrorism," "Unmasking the Deep State" and "Kim Jong Un-iversity." Full of fire and fury, many of these conversations reflect the most energetic—and fringiest—segment of a Republican Party that seems to be tearing itself into pieces, writes TIME's Philip Elliott. The crisis of American conservatism was everywhere on display in the three days of speeches—including an address by White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, photographed here by @markpetersonpixs—at a conference center ballroom in the Washington, D.C., suburb of Oxon Hill. Yet what plays out on the stage has implications for the bigger conservative movement. Republicans enjoyed a resurgence as the decade began, but they now have to govern in an environment that has to straddle activists who treat politics as sport, the more traditional members of the GOP who turn their noses up at such theatrics, and newcomers who bought Trump’s campaign pitches. The #CPAC speakers, seminars and the audience itself reflect but one corner of the conservative movement at this moment, to be sure. It just happens to be the loudest and rowdiest, and one that meshes easily with Trump. But it may not be as durable as its backers want to believe, and it may bend the Republican Party far afield from what made it attractive to so many for so long. Photograph by @markpetersonpixs—@reduxpictures for TIME

timeさん(@time)が投稿した動画 -

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 2月25日 01時49分


From the outside, it’s easy to find the Conservative Police Action Conference perplexing and disjointed, with its sessions about "Taxpayer-Funded Terrorism," "Unmasking the Deep State" and "Kim Jong Un-iversity." Full of fire and fury, many of these conversations reflect the most energetic—and fringiest—segment of a Republican Party that seems to be tearing itself into pieces, writes TIME's Philip Elliott. The crisis of American conservatism was everywhere on display in the three days of speeches—including an address by White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, photographed here by @markpetersonpixs—at a conference center ballroom in the Washington, D.C., suburb of Oxon Hill. Yet what plays out on the stage has implications for the bigger conservative movement. Republicans enjoyed a resurgence as the decade began, but they now have to govern in an environment that has to straddle activists who treat politics as sport, the more traditional members of the GOP who turn their noses up at such theatrics, and newcomers who bought Trump’s campaign pitches. The #CPAC speakers, seminars and the audience itself reflect but one corner of the conservative movement at this moment, to be sure. It just happens to be the loudest and rowdiest, and one that meshes easily with Trump. But it may not be as durable as its backers want to believe, and it may bend the Republican Party far afield from what made it attractive to so many for so long. Photograph by @markpetersonpixs@reduxpictures for TIME


[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)

>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する

10,516

179

2018/2/25

Danielle Sharpのインスタグラム
Danielle Sharpさんがフォロー

TIME Magazineを見た方におすすめの有名人