Opinion

Trump wants a parade like they had for him in France -- which shows he clearly didn't get the point

Picture this: July 14, Paris. On the Champs-Élysées, the promenade that runs like an aorta through the heart of France’s capital.

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How likely is it that the Democrats will take back Congress? This historian has some answers

As America looks ahead to November 2018 and the midterm congressional elections, the issue arises as to what effect President Donald Trump will have on the outcome.

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Now we might know where Trump has been getting some of his wacky ideas

Ever wonder who’s behind President Trump’s backward energy policies? The Heartland Institute, a libertarian, climate-denying think tank, seems to be taking credit. Experts from the Koch- and Exxon-funded group took a victory lap after Trump praised “clean, beautiful coal” in Tuesday’s State of the Union address.

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Captive virgins, polygamy and sex slaves: Here's what marriage would look like if we actually followed the Bible

Bible believers are beside themselves about the prospect that marriage norms and laws are changing, but let me tell you a secret about Bible believers that I know because I was one. Most don’t actually read their Bibles.

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Rural Christian white America has a dark and terrifying underbelly

As the election of Donald Trump is being sorted out, a common theme keeps cropping up from all sides: "Democrats failed to understand white, working-class, fly-over America.”

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The Philadelphia Super Bowl riots expose a racist double standard

Everyone was bracing for pandemonium in Philadelphia on Sunday night after the Eagles won their first ever Super Bowl. The fans are notoriously passionate, after all, and some preventative measures were taken to limit the chaos (police officers even covered lamp posts with Crisco to fan-proof the Philly faithful). But just because the riots, which resulted in three arrests, several injuries, and episodes of vandalism and looting, were expected, nothing excuses the clear racial bias in the response of city officials.

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Trump and Nunes carelessly set fire to the tradition of trust between Congress and FBI

President Donald Trump’s attacks on the FBI may have reached a climax.

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What Fresh Hell?: We've got your stupid memo right here edition

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and threats of nuclear annihilation coming out of the current White House.

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This historian had a frightening thought after learning that Nunes' anti-FBI memo had been selectively edited

According to Politico Magazine, Devin Nunes, the California Republican who chairs the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, may have selectively edited data to target the FBI. Along partisan lines, the committee voted to send this redacted memo to President Trump, which allegedly proves FBI bias against him as they conduct an investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Politico stated that the Bureau then went on a media offensive, their effort to discredit the already infamous Nunes memo before its contents become known. The FBI claims that the Nunes memo contains "material omissions of fact that fundamentally impact the memo’s accuracy.”

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Are Puerto Ricans white? Fox News host Tucker Carlson thinks so

When Donald Trump slandered Puerto Ricans as being lazy and having a dependency culture, Fox News host Tucker Carlson stated that Trump's attacks could not be racist because "Puerto Rico is 75 percent white, according to the U.S. Census." This was a fallacy of the excluded middle because it ignored the fact that someone could be classed as white by one organization but treated as non-white by another, due to the way in which “race” is socially constructed in variable ways depending on factors such as time period, region and class.

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In politics, speeches matter – but even Donald Trump couldn't make the State of the Union watchable

People like to argue that there is too much performance in politics – that especially in the era of Donald Trump, political coverage is fixated on personality at the expense of policy. Hillary Clinton, for instance, was often roundly decried as a terrible campaigner, but credited with the requisite experience and policy chops to become a highly effective president.

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Donald Trump Jr. attacks Joy Reid for criticizing his dad -- and it backfires spectacularly

Donald Trump Jr. is going after Joy Reid over comments she made criticizing the president's State of the Union address. The MSNBC host denounced the "1950s-era nationalism" President Trump presented Tuesday night. "Church ... family ... police ... military ... the national anthem," Reid tweeted, calling the way Trump presented the concepts as "terms of the bygone era his supporters are nostalgic for."

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Why is so much of what Congress is learning about Russiagate secret?

Recently, Democratic senator Dianne Feinstein angered her Republican colleagues by releasing a transcript from ten hours of testimony related to an investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 election and possible ties with Donald Trump’s campaign. Prior to that release, Democrats and Republicans had been arguing about details from the closed hearing. Senator Feinstein said she wanted to let Americans see the full testimony so that they could “make up their own minds.” Her action was praiseworthy, but release of the full transcript did not make a significant impact on public opinion. Few people read the 312-page transcript. It would have been more useful if Congress had given the American people an opportunity to watch the testimony on live television. That is how the public acquired an informed understanding of the Watergate scandal in the 1970s.

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