RawStory

Opinion

7 ways police break the law, use threats, or lie to get what they want

Because of the Fifth Amendment, no one in the U.S. may legally be forced to testify against himself, and because of the Fourth Amendment, no one’s records or belongings may legally be searched or seized without just cause. However, American police are trained to use methods of deception, intimidation and manipulation to circumvent these restrictions. In other words, cops routinely break the law—in letter and in spirit—in the name of enforcing the law. Several examples of this are widely known, if not widely understood.

Keep reading... Show less

California's drought wouldn't be so bad if the rest of you would share some water

So, California is in a drought. That’s what everybody says. The media says it. The scientists say it. The firefighters working overtime to put out the hundreds of wildfires say it, as do the farmers trying to explain that if something doesn’t happen soon salad will just be something in an exhibit at a natural history museum.

Keep reading... Show less

Here are 5 reasons why drug testing welfare recipients is profoundly stupid

Before Scott Walker unhappily shuffled away from the GOP primary race, he tried to stand out in the crowded field with a right-wing classic: striving to make life harder for poor people who need government aid. Since July, Walker has boasted about his efforts to force every person who applies for food stamps (SNAP) to undergo a drug test. The ever-ambitious Wisconsin Governor even preemptively sued the federal government to ensure that the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which administers food stamps, wouldn't quash the program.

Keep reading... Show less

An historian explains why people like Ron Paul falsely believe slavery wasn't the cause of the Civil War

We would all like to be able to believe stories and events that we have heard throughout our life. Regardless of where we acquire them, no one likes to feel as though they need to fact check. In history as well as other disciplines, the need to corroborate the narrative is simply a given. We refer to this study as historiography. Essentially the examination of not just the history, but who is telling the history. Who are the individuals, are they objective in recording the events, and do they have biases that would alter what we would otherwise take as truth? More importantly, it is an excellent life lesson, being able to be critical in a constructive manner. In other words, not being gullible.

Keep reading... Show less

Propaganda trumps journalism in conservative media climate reporting

Isoprene: it’s a gas that helps aerosols form in the atmosphere. It’s relevant to climate change because aerosols help clouds form, which can have cooling (by reflecting sunlight) or warming (by trapping heat) effects, depending on the type of cloud. Aerosols also cause cooling by directly scattering sunlight.

Keep reading... Show less

An historian explains the real reason Republicans can't find a Speaker of the House

Republicans cannot find a Speaker of the House for one reason: they are reaping what they have sown. The base of the party has been promised for over forty years that the social issues Republicans candidates have supported will become federal policy if they are elected—and yet here we stand with abortion legal, immigration run amok, and gay marriage recognized by the Supreme Court. And then there is the oath for smaller government and lower taxes. The voters who bought into all of the Republican promises are simply fed up. They feel like there has been a massive bait and switch campaign sponsored by their own party’s leaders for almost half a century now. Thus, we have the current crisis in the House and the persistent threat of government shutdown.

Keep reading... Show less

Bernie won all the focus groups and online polls -- so why is the media saying Hillary won the debate?

Who “won” a debate is inherently subjective. The idea of winning a debate necessarily entails a goal to be achieved. What this goal is, therefore, says as much about the person judging its achievement as the goal itself. Pundits are ostensibly supposed to judge whether or not a candidate said what "the voters” want to hear. But what ends up happening, invariably, is they end up judging whether or not the candidate said what they think voters wanted to hear. This, after all, is why pundits exist, to act as a clergy class charged with interpreting people’s own inscrutable opinions for them. The chasm between what the pundits saw and what the public saw was even bigger than usual last night.

Keep reading... Show less

Here's why the CNN Democratic debate will be another circus

Citizens hoping to find rational political dialogue when they tune in to the first televised debate of Democrat presidential candidates on October 13 are sure to be disappointed.

Keep reading... Show less

George Stinney was executed for the crime of being black in the forties -- he was 14

As I write this I am sitting in a small room waiting for death. I am not on death row, but it gives me some insight into the feelings that must be going through the head of a convict, and of his family, waiting for the needle or the chair. It allows me to glimpse into the mind of Robert Glossip, scheduled to die on November 6.

Keep reading... Show less

The Bush family's War on English continues

And the Bush family's War on English continues. You are, by now, familiar with the astonishingly tone-deaf response by Jeb Bush, the nation's would-be 45th president, to last week's shooting at a community college in Oregon in which a gunman killed nine people. "Look," said Bush, "stuff happens." Like a stink bomb in the flower bed,…

Keep reading... Show less

The 'Walking Dead' spin-off promotes torture -- so I’ve walked away

I shambled into watching FEAR THE WALKING DEAD for a while -- and then my interest in this spin-off of THE WALKING DEAD came to a screaming stop.

Keep reading... Show less

Spare me this sanctimonious Australian self-congratulation after US gun massacres

Barack Obama remarked last week that gun massacres have attracted a “routine” response. I found no such response was available to me when I drove down to Roseburg from Portland last week to help cover the shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg for Guardian US. The impact of such a horrific event in a small, conservative, quite religious community was too messy.

Keep reading... Show less

The unintended consequences of police-worn body cameras

Among the Queensland government’s initiatives to address a recent string of domestic violence deaths is a proposal for 300 body-worn cameras for police to use on the Gold Coast.

Keep reading... Show less