Opinion

The global economy is a ticking time bomb waiting to explode

In the aftermath of the greatest financial calamity since the Great Depression, then–chief of staff for the Obama administration Rahm Emanuel made the call for aggressive action to prevent a recurrence of the meltdown of 2008.

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Trump's supporters have launched three serious terror attacks in the past five months

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 other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.

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Paying bribes to get their kids in elite schools is going to send some very wealthy people to jail

Manicure salons all over America probably enjoy a booming business around this time every year, because it’s nail-biting time for parents of high school students awaiting acceptance letters from college admissions departments. But until indictments were handed down this week by a grand jury that heard evidence in the so-called Varsity Blues investigation by the Massachusetts U.S. Attorney Andrew E. Lelling, at least 33 parents of children seeking admissions to several elite universities weren’t biting theirs.

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Did Senate Republicans stand up to Trump? Hardly — they capitulated to the right

Don’t be fooled. There has been no major insurrection in the ranks of the Republican Party.  Despite what has been widely described as a major defection of a dozen GOP senators over the president’s signature campaign issue this week, Donald Trump still maintains a firm grip over nearly every elected GOP official.

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Why Trump’s comments about the New Zealand attacks are so disturbing

President Donald Trump has issued a response to Friday’s shooting at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, where at least 49 people have been killed.

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Does anyone doubt that Donald Trump inspired the New Zealand massacre?

Words are weapons. Those weapons can be lethal.

The president of the United States gives both permission and encouragement for public's behavior, values and norms. This is true both in the United States and around the world. He or she is that powerful.

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New Zealand mosque shootings must end our collective naivety about right-wing terrorism

Tonight, New Zealand police continue to respond to events following shootings at two mosques in central Christchurch. The national security threat level has been lifted to high. Mosques across New Zealand have been closed and police are asking people to refrain from visiting.

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'A threat of fascist violence': Trump's ominous comments to Breitbart reveal his worst impulses

Speaking with Breitbart News, President Donald Trump delivered a garbled but nevertheless disturbing statement in an article published Thursday that many interpreted as a prediction — or possibly a threat — of political violence.

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Did the White House just throw Roger Stone under the bus?

It appears that President Donald Trump's longtime friend is being thrown under the bus as his trial moves forward.

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'Jesus didn't come to make us rich' — and Trump's popularity among evangelicals exposes them for what they really are: Chris Hedges

America is a country beset by junk politics. This is one of the main reasons Donald Trump is president. Junk politics is many things. It is an obsession with the "horse race" of campaigns and elections, rather than  a substantive discussion of the real issues that affect the lives of the average American and the country as a whole. Junk politics is a form heavily defined by spectacle, distraction, superficiality and novelty. It is not a space for serious, sustained, and in depth discussion of serious matters of public concern. Junk politics is personality-driven and its preferred mode of communication is short slogans and sound bites.Twitter offers a pre-eminent example of how literacy has been gutted by that platform's arbitrary limit of 280 characters or less. Junk politics is lived through and enabled by the fact that many Americans lack basic civil literacy and have lost faith in the state's ability to protect their basic rights and ensure opportunities for upward economic mobility -- or even basic economic stability. If the American Dream is dead, junk politics struck one of the lethal blows.

Economic precariousness, societal instability and personal loneliness are byproducts of an American society where junk politics rule. They are also preconditions for how junk politics has thrived in the Age of Trump.

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Who's next after Manafort? Here's where things stand with other Trump associates facing criminal charges

The week after being sentenced to almost four years in federal prison on charges of tax and bank fraud, President Donald Trump’s former campaign manager, Paul Manafort, was sentenced a second time on Wednesday—this time, by Judge Amy Berman Jackson in Washington, D.C. on two other charges: witness tampering and conspiracy against the U.S., both of which he has pled guilty to. The 69-year-old Manafort received an additional 3.5 years and was subsequently indicted on 16 state felonies in New York.

Because he was facing the possibility of around 20 years in prison when sentenced by Judge T.S. Ellis III last week, Ellis’ sentence was relatively lenient (Manafort was found guilty of eight criminal counts in August 2018, including tax and bank fraud). Even so, receiving another ten years in addition to Ellis’ sentence of almost four years could keep Manafort in prison until he is about 83.

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American capitalism has failed us: We're overworked, underemployed and more powerless than ever before

Some years ago, I faced up to the futility of reporting true things about America’s disastrous wars and so I left Afghanistan for another remote mountainous country far away. It was the polar opposite of Afghanistan: a peaceful, prosperous land where nearly everybody seemed to enjoy a good life, on the job and in the family.

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Russian spies were all over the 2016 race — and they were working for one candidate: Donald Trump

Let’s take a trip into the mind of Vladimir Putin in the Summer of 2015 about the time that Donald Trump announced his candidacy for president.The Russian president is sitting over there in Moscow, and he’s a very unhappy man. The summer before, in 2014, numerous government officials, oligarch friends of Putin, and several financial institutions owned by the Russian government had been sanctioned by the Obama administration in retaliation for Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and seizure of Crimea. Among the banks sanctioned was the Vnesheconombank (VEB), a government owned bank with offices in New York and elsewhere in the United States that Putin and his pals had used to spy on American financial institutions and to launder money.Putin had already started making moves in 2014. Russia’s Internet Research Agency (IRA) in St. Petersburg, almost certainly a civil arm of the Russian intelligence agency, the GRU, and funded by the Russian government, had already begun operating within the United States. The IRA had established its so-called “Translator Project” back in April of 2014 and within months had sent two of its agents into this country on visas obtained under false pretenses. These agents had the mission of establishing the internet infrastructure necessary to infiltrate and interfere with the upcoming presidential campaign by buying false identities, laundering Russia-supplied money, and establishing web pages and Facebook accounts that could be used during the campaign.

By the summer of 2015, Putin apparently concluded that the best way to get the sanctions on Russians lifted was to make sure that the next American president was friendly to Russia and likely to go along with Putin’s desire to have the sanctions canceled.

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