RawStory

Opinion

'Captain America: Civil War' is an action-packed critique of post-9/11 government overreach

The long-anticipated Captain America: Civil War has just hit Australian cinemas. The latest instalment in the Marvel Cinematic Universe brings to a head a problem that has been brewing for years: whether superheroes should be directed by government organisations.

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Who would Jesus vote for? Here is what everybody gets wrong

Jesus Christ was not a socialist. Nor was he a free-market capitalist (as one would hope should go without saying). Whether or not one believes him to be the Son of God he was a first-century Palestinian Jew living under Roman imperialism, and influenced by that very specific context of pre-modern politics and apocalyptic religion. Jesus lived before market capitalism, before the scientific and industrial revolutions, before the eighteenth-century language of human rights, and before a coherent modern philosophy of materialism. That he could be thought of as either a socialist – or a capitalist – is a presentist category mistake that imposes and projects our political milieu unto the very distant past. Jesus could have been neither of these things for the simple (and one would think obvious) reason that neither of them existed at the time he lived. At most, it could perhaps be entertained that he was a type of anarchist, though a very odd one who encouraged you to pay your taxes. As a means of political rhetoric (claiming Christ for whatever your narrow partisan side may be) it exhibits a lack of critical thought and historical context.

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Bernie Sanders isn't quitting -- but Clinton acts like he left the race

After winning four of five states in the ‘Acela primary’ on Tuesday night, Hillary Clinton’s speech focused on collecting Sanders followers for November

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The effect racist rhetoric has on young Latinos -- and why all Americans should care

Luis is an upper-middle-class American-born Latino.

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From generations of infidelity and pain, Beyoncé makes 'Lemonade'

Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. But apparently a woman scorned is also the foundation of a creative tour de force.

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Here's why the #StopTrump movement isn't working

Donald Trump is the Republican establishment’s worst nightmare, but the GOP leadership can’t find a way to stop him.

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Bernie Sanders is right: Poor people don't vote and it's a problem

Bernie Sanders said something he wasn’t supposed to say : that poor people don’t vote. Although it’s true that voter turnout is inversely correlated with income, all anyone wanted to comment on was that Sanders looked defensive and deflated on Meet the Press, where he made the statement on Sunday. Lost was the fact that this is a truth we should be struck by, ashamed of even, and should do more about.

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Mexico finds it easier to focus on Trump than its own failings

This story was co-published with The New York Times. During my many years as a correspondent in Mexico, some of my best reporting happened around dinner tables. So on a recent trip back, I dined with a range of old contacts to catch up on how Mexico was handling its most pressing challenges, like the 2014…

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Beyoncé and Hillary Clinton: How two scorned women moved on

With her new album, Beyoncé became the ultimate survivor – and made her husband the most hated man in the country. Hillary Clinton could learn from her

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Robert Reich: Those who expect Sanders supporters to switch to Clinton may be in for a surprise

Will Bernie Sanders’s supporters rally behind Hillary Clinton if she gets the nomination? Likewise, if Donald Trump is denied the Republican nomination, will his supporters back whoever gets the Republican nod?

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Let's not lose sight of how historic a Hillary Clinton presidency would be for women

To announce you’re excited about Hillary Clinton is an oddly subversive act, and to suggest others ought to feel the same, even more so.

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Embracing the 'silent majority' – Donald Trump brings back the worst of 1960s America

Violence flared up again at a “New York Values” Donald Trump rally on April 10, as backers of the Republican candidate reportedly assaulted a black protestor. Several hundred protesters milled about near another Trump rally in Berlin, Maryland, on April 20. They were ready to face off with their Trump-supporting advesaries that had poured into a local high school for a rally. On the face of it, aberrations – but these sorts of episodes are now so common at Trump events that they’re rarely flattered with headlines any more.

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Why Donald Trump could change journalism for the better

It is unsurprising that wherever Donald Trump goes, headlines follow. But what is particularly interesting is just how many of those headlines involve the practice of journalism and journalists themselves.

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