RawStory

Opinion

Donald Trump turned in a catastrophic performance – and Hillary Clinton handled him just right

The big question going into the first debate of the presidential election was whether Donald Trump would decide to tone down the cartoonish, belligerent alpha male shtick that has carried him this far. The debate gave him an opportunity to present himself unfiltered to an audience predicted to rival that of a Super Bowl, and to reinvent himself as a calmer, more coherent candidate for the benefit of the unusually large number of undecided voters up for grabs.

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Here is what Hillary Clinton needs to say at the presidential debate

More than 25 years ago, on her husband’s first inauguration day, Hillary Clinton did something that was both eyebrow-raising and — to pick two words not often associated with this year’s Democratic presidential nominee — genuine and endearing.

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How Trump and Clinton would affect the future of global democracy

Donald Trump’s admiration for Russian President Vladimir Putin puts the U.S. perilously close to abandoning its longstanding role as democracy’s greatest proponent. In the process, Trump is challenging the already threatened notion that democracy is the only legitimate system of rule.

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How to watch the presidential debates without being emotionally manipulated

Rick Shenkman is the editor of HNN. His newest book is Political Animals: How Our Stone-Age Brain Gets in the Way of Smart Politics (Basic Books, January 2016).

The temptation to judge candidates at a TV debate the way we judge actors on a television soap opera is impossible to resist. But there is a way to move beyond the superficial aspects of a television debate. Surprisingly, it doesn’t require that you become a political junkie.

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Robert Reich: Congress pretends to shame corrupt CEOs – but does nothing to stop their crimes

Last week, Congress engaged in a bipartisan barrage of CEO bashing.

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Chris Christie should be impeached if he lied about Bridgegate

By Brigid Callahan Harrison From the prosecution's opening statements in the Bridgegate trial, we're promised evidence will show and that two people -- David Wildstein and Bill Baroni -- had a conversation with Gov. Chris Christie on Sept. 11, 2013 during which time they talked to the governor about the scheme to close lanes to the…

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Trump's strategy of using religion as a political weapon will backfire

Religion always plays a very significant role in American politics, even though our nation promotes separation of church and state. Religion affects our social debate on such issues as abortion, gay rights and gay marriage, drug legalization, prison reform, and affirmative action. And when a Presidential candidate allows himself or herself to speak out in criticism of any specific religious group and its impact on America, that candidate is entering a thicket that is hard to escape from.

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Something momentous happened with the media -- and things may never be the same for Donald Trump

If you sniff around media blogs, which is part of my job, you know that something momentous may have happened last Saturday: The mainstream media finally came out of hiding and called Donald Trump what he is — a liar. And not just any old mainstream media, but the gray lady herself: The New York Times.

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Terence Crutcher is just the latest in a long history of the killing of black men in Tulsa

Terence Crutcher was not armed when he was  shot to death by Officer Betty Jo Shelby of the Tulsa Police Department on Friday. The video of Crutcher's seeming execution was captured by dashboard cameras.

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The candidates and the media have thoroughly corrupted the presidential debates

Let’s call the whole thing off.

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It's disturbing that the deplorable violence at Trump rallies is evidently no longer 'newsworthy'

It has been widely reported that outside a Trump rally in Asheville, North Carolina, Monday night, Sept. 12, a 69-year-old woman was “cold-cocked” (her word) by an irate Trump supporter. The woman, Shirley Teter, later asked a reporter rhetorically: “Why did I get involved yesterday, at my age? Because I ran into another situation that was sickening my heart.” Ms. Teter preserved her sense of whimsy and irony, for she also asked whether “people find a Trump supporter punching her in the face deplorable.”

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Now is the time to pile on in defense of the idea that journalism requires a commitment to truth

After Today show glad-hander Matt Lauer disgraced himself on NBC Wednesday night — failing to correct Donald Trump’s lies about the Iraq war, promoting the notion that Hillary Clinton’s notorious emails constitute a serious blow to national security and repeatedly interrupting Clinton as she spoke whole sentences in response to his fatuous questions — squadrons of actual journalists stepped forward to deplore his insensitivity to truth.

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How the wealthy captured the machinery of democracy and what that means for the rest of us

Sixty-six years ago this summer, on my 16th birthday, I went to work for the daily newspaper in the small East Texas town of Marshall where I grew up. It was a good place to be a cub reporter — small enough to navigate but big enough to keep me busy and learning something every day. I soon had a stroke of luck. Some of the paper’s old hands were on vacation or out sick and I was assigned to help cover what came to be known across the country as “the housewives’ rebellion.”

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