RawStory

Opinion

Why Trump is right, and wrong, about killing off the Trans-Pacific Partnership

President-elect Donald Trump is right: The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is a damaging deal and deserves to be killed off.

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How to bridge the political divide at the holiday dinner table

We are a divided nation; that is an understatement. What’s more, we increasingly hear we are living in our own “bubble” or echo chamber that differing views cannot penetrate. To correct the problem, many are calling for people to reach out, to talk and above all, to listen. That is all well and good, but what are we supposed to talk about? We can’t hope to listen without a topic for finding common ground.

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Here are 5 steps Obama can take to thwart Trump and advance the liberal agenda

In February of 1801, President John Adams faced much the same dilemma that Barack Obama faces now. Under the Federalist regimes of Adams and his predecessor, George Washington, the United States had made a great deal of progress in certain areas. The young nation had established the supremacy of the Federal courts over those of the states, reformed a defunct financial system, rebuilt the US military, and, perhaps most impressively, managed to remain neutral in the wars of the French Revolution that, under the ascendant tyrant Napoleon Bonaparte, were quickly spreading across Europe, the Caribbean, and Latin America. Yet despite these accomplishments, the election of 1800 saw Adams and his party swept out of office by massive margins in favor of Thomas Jefferson’s Democratic-Republicans, who promised an end to Federal control over finance, strengthening of states’ rights, and a pro-France foreign policy that threatened to engulf the still-fragile young Republic in an emergent world war.

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Let's never stop booing Mike Pence and this entire Trump administration

Mike Pence went to see "Hamilton" on Friday night, and because he is a horrible monster who has relentlessly dehumanized and opposed the rights of LGBTQ people and women, and will be the vice president in an administration that ran on a campaign of racial bigotry and misogyny, an administration that is now filling out with anti-Semites, racists, homophobes and Islamophobes, people booed him. The audience chose a completely reasonable and incredibly mild way to show displeasure with someone who has dedicated his political career to systematically disenfranchising millions of people.

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Here are 6 despicable things President-Elect Trump has done in the last week alone

It has been one of the longest weeks in human history and the Trump presidency has not even begun yet. Any notion that reasonable, well-intentioned people should give him a chance—hey, maybe he was just kidding about all that hateful, bigoted stuff he spewed on the campaign trail—was immediately dispelled. One of his first official acts was to name Steve Bannon, the anti-Semitic mastermind of the racist, “alt-right,” fake-news website Breitbart, to chief propagandist and horse’s ass whisperer. The president-elect dodged the media, regained control of his Twitter account and proceeded to confirm all of our worst fears about him.

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Resistance isn't futile: Robert Reich outlines a progressive agenda for Trump's first 100 days

Here’s the First 100 Days resistance agenda [with thanks to Alan Webber]:

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This post-election violence is not normal -- and it is un-American

A friend of mine who has dual Israeli-American citizenship tells the story of entering an elevator in Jerusalem shortly after a bullying right-wing government had taken over the country.

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Some of the stunning similarities between Richard Nixon and Donald Trump

In the winter of 1987, Pat Nixon was watching real estate developer Donald Trump on the Phil Donahue program. Trump had been invited on the daytime interview show not only to promote his book The Art of the Deal, but to discuss his thoughts on how to solve the problems that were ailing America. The former first lady was so impressed with Trump’s performance that her husband, former President Richard Nixon dashed off a quick missive to the multi-millionaire. In his comments, Nixon said that based on the enthusiastic observations of his wife, the 38th President of the United States believed Trump had a great career in front of him not only in business, but in politics as well. “Whenever you decide to run for office you will be a winner!” Nixon wrote.

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Here's the real reason Trump won: White fright

Many presidents have assumed the reins of a divided nation, but we’ve never seen anything like the reaction to Donald J. Trump’s 2016 presidential election.

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In this moment of distress, California offers us hope

With the dust from the 2016 Presidential election now settling, Americans are shocked and unhappy and it appears that a re-alignment is on the way. Exit polling data revealed that both Trump and Clinton were viewed unfavorably by the electorate and a majority of voters stated that they distrust both candidates. A third of voters had serious concerns and reservations about their choice in booth and a quarter stated that their vote was in explicitly a protest vote in opposition to the other candidates.

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Election rage shows why America needs a new social contract to ensure the economy works for all

The recent U.S. election exposed two major intersecting fault lines in America that, if left unchecked, could soon produce an era of social and economic upheaval unlike any in our history.

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A political scientist explains why there's no reason to keep the Electoral College

Because the Electoral College is a peculiar method of selecting a public official, one never employed to select any other federal official, it is quite natural to seek to understand why the founders created this mechanism. The explanation is not as straightforward as one might expect, however, at least partly because the Electoral College was the subject of little discussion during the ratification debates following the convention.i Indeed, the lack of attention to the Electoral College led Alexander Hamilton to observe that “the mode of appointment of the chief magistrate of the United States is almost the only part of the system, of any consequence, which has escaped without severe censure.”ii

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Three good reasons to worry about Trump having the nuclear codes

Among the more alarming aspects of Donald Trump’s election is that he will soon have command of thousands of nuclear weapons. This poses a new and unknown threat to global peace and security, but it also provides an urgent incentive for all states to join the humanitarian initiative to ban nuclear weapons.

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