RawStory

Opinion

Republicans like Trump mythologize Reagan to push their economic agenda -- here's why they're wrong

Ronald Reagan’s name has been invoked in every presidential election since he left office in 1989.  Both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have already done so in 2016.   Clinton used  a famous Reagan ad from the 1984 election to attack Trump’s dystopian view of the country’s future in her nomination acceptance address to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia on 29 July: “He's taken the Republican Party a long way, from morning in America to midnight in America.” Not to be outdone, Trump positioned himself as the 40th president’s legatee in his economic policy address, delivered in Detroit on 8 August, by avowing that his economic renewal program would have as its centerpiece “the biggest tax revolution since the Reagan tax reform, which unleashed years of continued economic growth and job creation.”

Keep reading... Show less

Trumpism is a culmination of the long-developing dysfunctions of consumer culture

Donald Trump’s candidacy gives rise to many descriptors — authoritarian, bigoted, divisive. It is also the culmination of long-developing dysfunctions of a culture where market values have spread beyond appropriate limits and radically eroded citizenship.

Keep reading... Show less

Robert Reich says a single-payer healthcare system is now inevitable -- here's why

The best argument for a single-payer health plan is the recent decision by giant health insurer Aetna to bail out next year from 11 of the 15 states where it sells Obamacare plans. Aetna’s decision follows similar moves by UnitedHealth Group, the nation’s largest health insurer, and by Humana, another one of the giants.

Keep reading... Show less

Donald Trump has awoken the press -- and they're finally doing real journalism

Just about everyone now concedes that the media have it in for Donald Trump. A survey of eight major news organs during the primaries, conducted by Harvard’s Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy — one I cited in a previous post — showed that the press grew increasingly hostile to Trump, peaking at 61 percent negative to 39 percent positive at the end of the primary season. Even the conservative, Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal editorialized that he should consider quitting the race, and the normally cautious NBC Nightly News has turned reporter Katy Tur into a one-woman truth squad, correcting Trump whoppers.

Keep reading... Show less

These 8 human train-wrecks are proof that Donald Trump really doesn’t hire ‘all the best people’

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has stated again and again that one of the reasons the American people should trust him with the highest elected office in the land is because he's such a great businessman who hires "all the best people."

Keep reading... Show less

Pregnancy-related deaths in Texas show that liberals' compromises with anti-choice zealots are fatal

If Texas were to keep its latest promise to secede, it would find itself dragging up the rear on the list of industrialized nations who have been successful at reducing the rates of maternal mortality. In a study to be published in The Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the research publication for the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, new figures reveal that a woman's chance of dying  as a consequence of pregnancy in Texas are TEN times worse than they are in world leaders Iceland, Finland, Greece, and Poland, and 125 percent worse than the chance of dying in California.

Keep reading... Show less

Why Donald Trump is just a symptom of deindustrialization

Every four years, the white working class gets a fresh round of attention from candidates and the media. At campaign stops in Rust Belt cities, candidates promise to fix the economy, while pundits yet again claim that white working-class voters are the key to election victory. The pattern is being repeated this year, but this time, both the news media and social media seem especially baffled by the attitudes and behavior of working-class voters.

Keep reading... Show less

We've gorged on Trump's all-you-can-eat buffet of absurdities -- and now he has become very boring

I have a confession to make. I am tired of Donald Trump. At this point, November can't come fast enough. If we could cancel September and October, I'd do so in a heartbeat. In this, I'm hardly alone. Other pundits have said as much. Even comedians, for whom Trump is the functional equivalent of time off…

Keep reading... Show less

The white obsession with perfect victims of police violence is insulting to everyone's intelligence

It’s increasingly apparent that white Americans hate the Constitution.

Keep reading... Show less

History and social science show how to get inside Trump voters' brains

T. Harry Williams opens his celebrated biography of Huey Long with a story about the time Long went to campaign in “rural, Latin, Catholic, south Louisiana.”  A local boss was worried because Long was from Protestant north Louisiana. But when Long stood before the crowds he began by telling a reassuring story:  “When I was a boy, I would get up at six o’clock in the morning on Sunday, and I would hitch our old horse up to the buggy and I would take my Catholic grandparents to mass.  I would bring them home, and at ten o’clock I would take my Baptist grandparents to church.”  The local boss afterwards appreciatively told Long:  “Why Huey, you’ve been holding out on us.  I didn’t know you had any Catholic grandparents.”  “Don’t be a damn fool,” Long chided him.  “We didn’t even have a horse."

Keep reading... Show less

It's NOT the economy, stupid! New study shows what's really rallying Trump supporters

One of the things you can’t help but notice is that in this time of great economic despair, Donald Trump isn’t running on how he will improve the economy. He barely mentions it, his silly economic speech last week notwithstanding. In truth, he isn’t running on the issues at all, unless you think building a wall or torturing terrorists are issues. In this most peculiar of campaigns, he is running instead against the force that he seems to think really threatens America and that really has Americans lathered: political correctness.

Keep reading... Show less

At the core of Hillary Clinton’s image problem is the family's foundation

If Donald Trump has stunningly high disapproval ratings, Hillary Clinton isn’t far behind. For all that this year’s presidential election was once supposed to be a coronation, it’s become clear that the electorate mistrusts the woman Donald Trump calls “Crooked Hillary” – and that mistrust could yet derail an otherwise ideal opportunity to continue the Clinton dynasty.

Keep reading... Show less

Mike Pence is the real extremist on the GOP ticket: Just look at his trail of victims in Indiana

“I prefer a simple introduction. I am a Christian, a conservative and a Republican, in that order,” Indiana Governor Mike Pence said when he accepted the VP nomination at the Republican Convention on July 15. He is forever introducing himself with this little jingle, usually delivered with his index finger extended for “in that order.”

Keep reading... Show less