RawStory

Opinion

How Trump's neo-Nazi 'alt-right' fans turned me into a self-loathing white man

I'm a straight white male, and until recently I've never had any reason to feel ashamed of it. But after spending a lot of time over the past few months reading messages posted by pro-Trump "alt-right" social media users, I've come to really feel humiliated when I consider that I'm part of the same demographic as they are.

Keep reading... Show less

Ayn Rand's demented mind is best understood through the despicable 'happy ending' in 'Atlas Shrugged'

Over the past year, I've been reading and reviewing the third and final section of Ayn Rand's epic celebration of I've-got-mine-so-screw-youism, Atlas Shrugged. (See parts one and two.) Like the first two parts, it has important lessons for liberals and progressives to learn from.

Keep reading... Show less

The main problem with Donald Trump: He's a fool

By calling Donald Trump a fool, I do not wish to engage in mindless name-calling. Borrowing from the Oxford Dictionary, which defines a fool as "a person who acts unwisely or imprudently," I merely wish to say that Mr. Trump often demonstrates unwise behavior.

Keep reading... Show less

The one big reason Bernie is doing better than Hillary against Trump

Bernie Sanders says polls indicate he would fare better in the general election than Hillary Clinton. Appearing recently on ABC’s “This Week,” Sanders asked “superdelegates to take a look at which candidate is the stronger to defeat Donald Trump.” This argument has become a major justification for Sanders to remain in the race for the Democratic nomination, despite Mrs. Clinton’s commanding lead. Democrats, argue Sanders’s supporters, ought to nominate the candidate who is more broadly popular with the national electorate.

Keep reading... Show less

What Silicon Valley's billionaires don't understand about the First Amendment

Some in Silicon Valley have been threatening the ‘uppity’ press with rhetoric about journalists needing ‘to be taught lessons’. That’s not how it works

Keep reading... Show less

Peter Thiel's mission to destroy Gawker isn't philanthropy -- it's a chilling taste of things to come

What will the death of Citizen Thiel look like? I picture the tech billionaire lying in seclusion, still beyond the reach of the politicians and military chiefs who had long effectively functioned as his junior personnel, perhaps on one of the post-law, floating sea-steading platforms he’s been dreaming of building. Let’s call this one Xanadu . I don’t know if he’s actually dying as we used to understand the term – maybe he’s just uploading into the cloud.

Keep reading... Show less

Here's further proof of Trump's hypocrisy when it comes to Wall Street and government

Right after Barack Obama’s election in 2008, I flew off to Australia and New Zealand to attend a conference and take some vacation time. At the end of the long flight, when I got to Sydney, I picked up one of the local newspapers and read that the president-elect had chosen Rahm Emanuel, poster boy for corporate Democrats and the status quo, to be his chief of staff.

Keep reading... Show less

Masculine insecurities are driving Trump’s train of lies — according to science

Despite evidence that Donald Trump is a serial liar, the man continues to lie about his previous lies. While the origin of the oft-repeated joke is disputed (and perhaps funniest when told by the late, great Richard Pryor), Donald Trump treats America as if it were the wife who has just caught her husband in bed with another woman, "Who you going to believe? Me or your lying eyes?"

Keep reading... Show less

How Aristotle's ancient teachings can help you live the good life

When we think of morally upright, virtuous citizens, do we imagine boring do-gooders? Is the idea of being virtuous out-dated and old-fashioned? Or is “being virtuous” still something we should aspire to in our contemporary society?

Keep reading... Show less

Bernie Sanders opposes the death penalty for Dylann Roof and teaches us something important

Being against the death penalty isn't always easy, as it means that you can find yourself defending the lives of some truly horrible people who committed some truly horrible crimes. From this perspective, it's hard to find a more difficult person in the United States to defend right now than Dylann Roof, the racist mass murderer who gunned down nine black parishioners at a church in Charleston, South Carolina.

Keep reading... Show less

What the Founding Fathers would have thought of Donald Trump

Recent speculation about the likely reactions of America’s Founding Fathers to Donald Trump miss an obvious point: the Founding Fathers would never have encountered a Donald Trump. They loathed and refused contact with demagogues and would have shunned Trump without giving him a single thought—let alone a second one.

Keep reading... Show less

Why Andrew Sullivan's critique of the Trump phenomenon gets everything backward

British expatriate writer Andrew Sullivan recently returned to the public eye with a piece that has aroused considerable comment, some of it reasonably on point, and some bloviatingly incoherent.

Keep reading... Show less

This black leader's 130-year-old book prophetically predicted the rise of Donald Trump

Civil rights activist and journalist T. Thomas Fortune was one of the most eloquent and instrumental voices of black America from 1880 to 1928. In 1883 Fortune, who was born into slavery in Florida, relocated to New York and became the lead editor of the New York Globe (subsequently named the Freeman and the Age), which quickly became the most widely read black paper of the era. Using the paper as his pulpit he became a prominent outspoken critic of southern racism, a promoter of racial solidarity and race pride, and an uncompromising advocate for civil and political rights of African Americans.

Keep reading... Show less