Opinion

Hugh Hefner's legacy: We really read the 'old' Playboy for the articles -- and here are 11 of the best

A selection of stellar short fiction and essays by notable authors Norman Mailer, Margaret Atwood, Haruki Murakami and Ray Bradbury -- as well as interviews with Martin Luther King, John Lennon and Miles Davis -- show that "Playboy" has more than earned its literary legacy.

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Trump and his supporters have caused a devastating mental health crisis in America, according to psychotherapists

Increasingly, the weight of the current political environment burdens the hearts and minds of Americans and causes anxiety, preoccupation, deepening depression, feelings of helplessness and despair, disgust and horror. Not infrequently, it even rekindles the embers of prior trauma for women and members of marginalized groups whose sense of hard-won safety has been shaken to the core. As mental health professionals, we are troubled by the environment of rampant dishonesty, daily disregard for civil and social norms, and threats toward vulnerable peoples and its impact on the people we work with. We are troubled by policies and rhetoric that undermine progress on environmental protection, humane immigration laws, and racial and gender equity. We believe these developments augur a regression of our evolutionary accomplishments and a dismantling of the quality of life for all Americans.

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Master of Distraction: How Trump suckers the media with his 'stand or kneel' tweets to divert attention from his train-wreck presidency

You would think by now the mainstream media would have figured out how Trump operates.

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Here are 6 of the most disturbing Halloween costumes for the right-wing

It's that time of year again, where creative Americans craft Halloween costumes that are straight out of the pages of the year's pop culture and political hilarity.

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Why Colin Kaepernick matters

Every year at about this time, I veer away from most of the liberal aesthetes with whom I mingle in the chattering classes. My newspaper reading and smart-phone clicking takes an unexpected detour from politics, opinion and arts. The pro-football season is approaching, and my guilty pleasure, my second religion, must be indulged.

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It's time to examine the words and the origins of our National Anthem -- another neo-confederate symbol

Confederate war memorials are just the beginning.

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Paul Krugman: Republicans are America's pre-existing condition -- and they're killing us

New York Times columnist Paul Krugman blasted the Republican Party's latest bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA) on Friday as "incompetently drafted" and teeming with "obvious, blatant lies."

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'Can Trump read?' Hilarious 'investigation' mocks the president's struggle with the written word

"I believe Donald Trump can't read," said The Root's Michael Harriot on Friday, citing the president's mangling of the name of Namibia during a speech to African leaders at the United Nations this week.

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Conservative Catholics jettisoned church teaching in favor of a distinctly Republican cafeteria Catholicism

The phrase “cafeteria Catholic” first gained currency in the mid-1980s to describe—mostly disparagingly—progressive Catholics who pick and chose from church doctrine, following the precepts they like on poverty and peace while ignoring those they didn’t like on sex—particularly regarding birth control and abortion, homosexuality and divorce.

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Ivanka Trump's latest admission proves the rotten apple has not fallen far from the tree

In what is likely to be hailed as a brave admission, Ivanka Trump told talk show host Mehmet Oz that she had suffered from postpartum depression in an interview set to air Thursday. A clip released ahead of the episode’s broadcast shows the first daughter briefly discussing the emotional difficulties she faced after the birth of each of her three children. Asked why she chose to divulge such private information in such a public forum, the presidential adviser said she was moved to discuss the topic because it “is something that affects parents all over the country."

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We traded one of our most disciplined presidents for the most undisciplined president

Conservatives like to talk about virtues. In 1993 William Bennet’s The Book of Virtues appeared five years after the end of his stint as Ronald Reagan’s secretary of education. In 1994 historian Gertrude Himmelfarb, of the conservative Kristol family, praised the virtues of the Victorians in her book The De-Moralization of Society and decried the decline of virtues in the twentieth century. The first chapter (more than 80 pages) of Bennet’s book is entitled “self-discipline,” and Himmelfarb praised that virtue in the Victorians.

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The consciousness of comedy has changed in the age of Trump

The unexpected appearance of former White House press secretary Sean Spicer at the Emmys this past Sunday first elicited gasps of shock, then titters and even laughs, and then, especially on Twitter and in media post-mortems, cries of outrage.

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World citizenship is more popular than you might think

Has nationalism captured the hearts and minds of the world’s people?

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